Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 47, Number 36, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 19 February 1945 — Page 2
EUIXIVAN DAILY TIMES MONDAY, FEB. 19, 1945.
lti iiif
i - ...
pulsed. Therefore, the war in Department Citation this week should take a little longer to oeat
Burma-is one to hold our-com- for outstanding achievements the the JaDs it 5s because it is tar
munication and transportation nast months. Their missions are from an easy one but are confi-
facilities, "not an amassment of making records for the squadron dent it will be done.
ill V ' P 1 1 -1 .'conQuered territory. .hitherto unsurpassed in the des- We are here and soldiers are 1 'I oynuJI" ruOUSliet , Much of the fighting in Burma truction of railroads, stages, 0n other fronts because forces LIcanor 1 oyilter Jamison . . . Manager and Assistant Ldltor js scatte)ed, with little groups bridges, and communication cen- 'sizeable in those countries vowed J oe II. Adams ........... .' Editor fighting here and there, deliver- ters. The Jap is well aware of to conquer that part of the world Sullivan, Indiana ' Telephone 12 jnH their telling blows aeainst the power our bombers have but which would give them free ac-
' 1 .Tni rv.nntrnlinne Thnnoh it ic pnHpavnl-e tn rplaliatp hv sending r.ass tn th ritllPl DaltS. through
Entered as second-class matter July 1, 1908 in Sullivan, Indiana, under the Act of Congress
the Postoffice at
different fighting in a sense 'chen suicide fliers.
of March 3, 1879. otf,er fronts is none the less peri- j When the monsoons
force to trample down the rights
arrive a f every man to impose a gov-
L'ublished daily except Saturday and Sunday at 115 West Jackson St. lnitc Am mrn sir a tJ a iht ii fnivl it inn ovists with HO Pfilial t-.vh-v-.oii i nnnn Ti im afainst his
lives here as on other fronts. ' comparison in the world. Dnv dislike, to suppress and mane I neros; so cion t go-on suitenng! -. ;' ;
SPIT UP ACID LIQUIDS HOURS AFTER EATING
For hours alter every meal, a Sullivan lady used to spit up, a strong acidulous liquid. She says it was awful. At times she would j nearly strangle. Today, this lady i eats her meals and enjoys them. I And she says the change is due to '
taking ERB-HELP. Her food agrees with her. No gas, bloat or spitting up after eating.
ERB-HELP contains 12 Great
JIGN.CF A
.. X I -TV
3 a n
'if . w
4.f
666
QoldFreparalionf'andirtctedi
NONESUCH Mrs. - LUraetta Anderson
grandson,
Dewey
Mr.
United Press Wire .Service.
I
Aside from that the jungle is after day it rains with the' tern-' him a subject of the state instead ,Get this new medicineBennett's I laIt 01 near oneiDuin,
and
Earl of San and Mrs. Ted
Mr. and
National Advertising Representative: noted for its malaria carrying perature up around 120 to 130 ot the state being subject, o mm. " . , . ' ., . . v 'mosquito which every soldier is degrees. Yet somehow our bom- Everv soldier may not tell it in Ihcis and Smipson, 393 Seventh Avenue New York (1) N. Y. ' y guarding agalnst. Gen- bers 'manage to take off at "times , the same words but boiled down Subscription Rate: ... erally speaking the environment when ordinarily they would be , it means the same. The soldier !iy carrier, per week ( ., . . 15 Cents in City js n(Jt a jnvjting one( away frorn grounded. The trucks manage to has learned to appreciate his By Mail In Sullivan And Adjoining Counties: towns add all, modes of civiliza-' move down the roads, some over home and loved ones more than Six Months $1.50 tion which soldiers see on the the edge of the mountain to any of you can imagine because Month (with Times furnishing stamped envelope) 30 Cents European fronts. Here they see destruction. Mule packs take over he nas lived in a war. In the Year $3.00 nothing but the vast jungle with at several remote places, trudg- ; states your idea of i war is vague. nv Mail Flsewhere- its wild creatures', ome troops are ing wearily through the jungle, Johnnie will not be to anxious to
ycar $4 00 slatec- from ground communi- somewhere along the line a sni
Six Months Month (with Times furnishing envelope)
$2.00
cations being supplied complete- per waiting patiently for .his
Iv hv air anrt uhpre nlnnps ran. I virtim The war moves on though.
35 Cents f j d carachLltes are dronned When the Japs get a plane, a
i ,with' supplies. These are the truck crashes over the side of the SUPPLY STREAM OVER LEDO ROAD things that make the war in Bur- ; mountain, or a mule is lost, anBRINGS END OF JAPS NEARER ma a hard one and anyone who other replaces it as soon as'possi-
Spectacular successes of Gen. MacArthur on Luzon have '"as served this theater can testi-
quite 'diverted attention from the announcement that sup
. fy to these i'acts.
plies for the Chinese are now arriving over the Stilwell road,1 ,.xne Bum.d .cnm oe formerly known as the Ledo" road. While loss of Manila im- orStg'7upE plies considerable loss-of face for the Japs, the flow of new;,. forces to lhe afc, Air Trans! hie-l)lood tor the Chinese must g-ive them even greater con- po,t Command, who daily try. t't',r1, luizardous missions over the jun- . Capture several days aro of the village of Mongyu at the ,';le and over the Mimelayes, ot juncture of the Ledo and Burma roads marked the final 'he "Hump" as we say. However, elimination of the Japs from the new China-India traffic ar- during the monsoon season, rainy tery. The Japs have been pushed steadily eastward and ill0nths. there are many times southward and the survivors face almost certain extermina-)Vhen vehicle or plane can nation at the hands of converging Allied forces. Hr TT' ti, i, i j i ii r 4 m 'he soldier and the war must l ie Lurma J-(ad was closed by. the Japs in April, 1942, necessarily subsist on what supwith, the capture ot Lashio. The enemy had successfully con- piies have been accumulated if tinned, the land blockade of China until supplies began to roll any. over the new 'Stilwell route. ,H u is clear then our chief proChiang lvai-shek's joyful reaction when the road was blem is getting to the front with
opened, and his naming of it for "Uncle" Joe Stilwell, with; the supplies, and secondly to pre.
ble, because every square inch of
space must be utilized and . as ! much .traffic as can be - handled must be kept moving toward, the front in a steady stream. Man power must be available to replace all losses. This requires a smooth running organization of all departments, and that the war in Burma has meant something in cur eiiorts to liberate
China, some credit of course must
go to the
relate his experiences because some of them aio none too pleasant. He will try to forget the war in Burma as elsewhere but it will be with 'him all the days of his life. i Bv Max E. Campbell, USAAF, Burma War.
nnir stnro Cniri in r,.v, of 1 Mrs. Jonah Hopewell 01 ai meis-
Andersons Drug Store. : burg were supper guests of Mr. 'and Mrs. Iwell Taft and children
""" -' M " " 1 - last. Snturdav evening. Mi, and
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ryan of North Mrs. Ferd"Hall and Reba JenFrench St., has accepted a re- nings called during the evening, sponsible Dosition at .Tnli.t Til in 1 Miss Glen -Taft spent Wednes-
the office of the airport there. :day night with Beulah.Mae Little, Mrs. Carl Medsker of Kentla'nd, Mrs. Mae Keller of Shelburn Ind., spent the week-end at her and Mrs. Mary Ellen ,Trueblood home in Big Spring and visited, of Souix City, Iowa were Monday relatives here Saturday. night ' guests of Mr. and Mrs. f Robert Pugh. They also called Miss Janice Wilkey of Linton, ' 0!1 Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Jenspent the week-end with her aunt ' nines and family and Mr. and
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mrs. Eno McKinney.
LOCALS
C. R. Bragdon of R. R. 2, visited relatives in Brazil, Wednesday. Mrs. Claude Flater and Mrs. Blake Emerson of Spencer, Ind., transacted business and visited
organization of this friends in Sullivan Wednesday.
Miss Leabelle Bulman ot cm-
theater of operation, without such
coordination the war .in Burma could not have progressed. Until the day that victory comes the whole story of the Burma War cannto be told. There are many feats of heroism and
gallantry of which the world is
to hear, but that day will
whom lie had quatreled, are evidence of the new hone which ent Die Japs from cutting the yet
surges'through Chma. Stilwell fully measures up to the credit linc;! over which th9y move To com0 we are c0nficient of 'thatgiven him for the new land route to China lie was its do tllis our Air Forces are con- Until lt does we wVuld have yo" strongest advocate ' -'"ii. n: its stantly on the job Typical ot at home know it is our ernest . . them all is the 490th Bombard- desire, as it is youis, to have this . Lonstniction V as accomplished by. American engineer- ment Squadron, making a name , war over as soon as possible. llig units at :.a Cost that never can be calculated. Its financial. for themselves as the Burma However, we cannot leave undone COSt was about-,$1,000,000 per mile, but every mile of it is Bridge Busters, receiving i War this job to do so. If the war consecrated with the blood and sweat of American engineer-' ' ; ing units who achieved their coal throut-h iinlwlievahl ih. ' . .
stacles. They overcame mountains, rivers, nearly impassable '
lu'igies, lever, insects, disease, Japs .and dreaded monsoons
cago, spent me ween-ei.u wm. her mother Mrs, Katie Bill man of Shelburn, and friends and relatives in Sullivan. . Mrs. Gladys Bray and son, Edward, of Princeton, Ind., spent the week-end in Sullivan with relatives. Betty Cauldwell of Indiana University at Bloomington, spent the week-end at her home here. Mrs. George St.Clair of Indianapolis, spent the week-end in Sullivan. Miss Lelia'Ryan. daughter of
LIFE'S LittI TROUBLES
Alsop of South Court St
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Taylor spent Sunday in Terre Haute, with friends.
SOCIETY
Pvt. Virgil Moore of Louisiana
spent a few days with his wife, Mrs. Leona Moore and children. Mrs. Lyle Trueblood and son, Steve ,Mrs. Harold Trueblood and daughter, Judy were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Riley Trueblood and Anna. Mr. and Mrs. Barnett Jewell
rv
-CAN'T SLEEP-
No need to lie in bed tossworry and fret because CONSTIPATION or GAS PRESSURE won't let you lecp. Be sensible ?t up take a dasli of ! ADLER-I-KA to' -relieve the ptec-fure of rg intestines on uenes and organs ot the Higeaive tract, Adletika a!s; old food was-tes end gas through a comfortable bowel movement so that bov.els return to notmal size and the discomforts of pressure stop. Before you know it, you sie asleep. Morning finds you fer.lmj: clean refreshed and ready for good day's work or fun. Caution, use only as directed. Cmt Adltrikt inm your Vrutri" 0r. I Smith Drug Store.
AG. MEETING
The sixth meeting .
Graysville Agricultural
of tl Evenii
School will be held Feb. 20 b
ginning at 7:30 P. M., in the Vol
Patriotic Club , Mr., and .mis. wneu d.w-.i. . cational Agriculture room. Th'
The Woman' Patriotic Club of and daughter Mary bue were topic fm, discussion is Paints; , the Frank Neff Relief Coros No''Swests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. , e int study ec,uipnlent bo
155 will have a social and lunch. Levi Jewell. Jnas been loaned to the" Agricul
eon at the Woodman Hall Wed-! lliUT-' ew'lel or TT11 . " ture Department by Lead Indu.-.
nesday, February 21. from 1100 -native ot mis community - v -, tries Association and will be use a. m. to 2:00 p. m. A large attend-: 'tin2 Mr and Mrs- Commodore 1 in working out the demonstn
ance is desired. Bring your choice '; bmlU1- Pe IS a tou'M" "l dish, own table service, sugar for!s.mlth ,, , drink T.nHuA u;iii at' Q o-nn ! Mrs. Ferd Hall called on Mrs.
p. m. The hall Will be open at
tions. Members may participate ij
the demonstrations.
10:30 a. m.
WOLF IN MAN'S CLOT
1943 BY AUTHOR-
CHAPTER FORTY-SIX ; "I took my slippers oft' so as to creep past the trooper, and forgot to carry some shoes with me to put on once we were outside. Anna was waiting for me and went back atid got a pair of her own. I wasn't afraid of her. But when we got here fhe wouldn't talk. All day I've been trying to persuade her. But she's still half-crazy with four. Finally, when I . said if she Wouldn't tell me whatever it was she bad promised
to tell me, I was going back to the
1 hey never faltered -until thev had
their assio'.inient. A-ood share of the credit should go to Americm Ne;rvoes who composed the majority of the engineering detachments which drove ahead for the better part of two years until their task, was ;eompleteL..Ci-edit for much of the fight--ing is due tr, Chinese troops,' who 'were trained in Jndia hv Americans. It should be a cause for considerable p ide to Americans I hat the road is their idea and was carried through mainlv because of American ingenuinty and pluck. Manv .competent authorities said the road never could be built and labeled the campaign a .hopeless venture. Today, long, dust covered lines 'I trucks loaded with war supplies are rolling over the.Chim. h.'lls, through the Burnvi jungle, across the Salween Rivpr
and Up the( long road, to Klinmin. - ,1 Brent house, she stopped mc. She
FaraJlelmg the Jndia-Chinn route, for -the better o-irt of ' t X T Til i v iin nrift lv,;irtc. ,L, -i v , . , . ,V lJl-l-l'L1 P'U t Oj . I thought of the knife in the hall. its QUO nnles is an oil pipeline whicli is fully .as impj-tant Tht w. wbv it was near the door as cue truck road. Through it flows the gasoline and oil t 8,1,1 thu telephone, so Anna coaia hich are the lifeblOud Of model n war. '' ! "tch it up and prevent Drue's China now has a triple sirnplv line truck nVid nhsp ' lc"v.inf" ..' u i u . Iinf 'inr? -in line Tl,n t i t ' , l"'h load, pipe- ' 'i d0n t think she would really Hie anrt an line. They are able to carry .about '1.00,000 tons hurt me." whispered Dm again in pei'-montn. lne old road never carried more than 7 000 tnii voice that denied her words. "But per month. ' v i she threatened. Even suicide." To .7m mi'litiM ico t,,, '.. . , '. I interrupted af!tin,- ratchinjr
, ,. , " "' -iiium et:iii io oe xne uetr.nning ot the end. .Fresh Chine.se armies will be eqtr'pped Mr bases w.ll be established in close proximitv to' the Jap home islands so that medium bombers may contribute to th. cascade of bombs on enemy industries. The road slso foreshadows Allied invas.on of Jap-held China on a gram! scTe J,JacA'thur fitting the jugular vein of the Jap eml nu but the road of Uncle Joe Stilwell is a menace to Tokvo
III. hr
m J EBERHART
DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, NC.
Denz.il Jennings- and daughter, Marjorie Wednesday evening. Mariorie is able to be out after
being confined to her home by La Petite Auguille illness. La Petite Auguille Club will Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Hall receivmeet with Mrs. Wallace Springer ed the first letter in seven weeks Tuesday afternoon, February 20th from, their son, Dallas. It had m m been written January 24th and he was located in the Philippines. Sullivan Home F.c. Club Bud Riggs, son of Mrs. Han-y The SulITyan Home Economics Williams is in the Navy. He is Club will meet at the ' home of stationed in the Philippines. Mrs. Daisy Brumette, 304 South --
State St., Wednesday, Feb. 21.
DAILY TIMES OPEN FORUM
try and it is here we are trvine
to hold our own against the Japs, j
Burma lies next to China so you see it is obvious why we are here -since the Japs are In China and parts of Burma.
Letters and interviews ot . suitable nature and proper news-
mivirai ic si,iii mi v"s importance pi Burma to our
column, tnc editor reserving the right to censor or reject any article lie may deem is not suitable and proper. Articles of 500 word! or less are preferred. All articles scut to the Open Forum must be signed and address (riven, in order that the editor may know (he writer, however, the writer's name will not be published if reii in! niT
AwiM,.' n..i,iuw,i nn where 't ld been .cut. This
not necessarily express the senti- tuu.Bh job. cutting up the steeo 0.ent of the Daily Times and ttfa.8 of mountains, around their nun-, f ,ui. towering heights, through mud
pianes couia oe seen trying be
The Japanese are aw'are.ot ths
for-
,ces. Through Burma much needed supplies are routed to China, so they have succeeded in cutting the Burma road over which many of these supplies were moved t China. This was a hard blow bv the Japs. But immediately ow engineers began to build another road which is to connect with Av. ; Burma Road above the poirt
wa i
' Drue's wrist for silence. We both 1 lisloiii'd, and I was sure that a door closed so Illy downstairs. 1 The front door? Perhaps Alexia m rone. For a lonjr moment there j was no sound at; all; gradually I bei eainc convinced Unit she'd 'gone and
I that, except for Drue and mo the ' bouse was empty asain. In any case ; wt bad to get away. Hurriedly I ! whispered to Drue. She swept up her cape and put it around her ! shoulders. I took a long breath and opened the door quietly. Nothing happened. After a moment, my revolver well in hdvsnec. I poked my head out into the hall. When I was sure it was empty. I motioned to Drue to follow inc. We tiptoed toward the back stairs. ' It was just then that T realized that 1 didn't have the piece of paper with . those notes about digitalis "written upon., it. I must have dropped it in the study. I whispereil to Drue, "I've got to get .something," Mid went quickly toward the front stairs, leaving her in. the upper hull. I went' down a step at a time, ; pausiny to look and listen, and wish-' jnjr the treads wouldn't creak. Halfj way down, I wished I'd yiven Drue . the revolver; I'd forgotten I had it. , At the bottom of the otairs, I i turned into the study. Somehow it i war too silent in the house; the silence had a quality cf hushed wait-
and tangled growths so high tcbi4n,e
ing. As if from somewhere cycs-k11?;iC things w
Maud. It confirmed my feeling that Dr. Ohivery had connected the notes jibotit digital With Maud; so he had kept it a secret; he had replaced the paper in the book on toxicology; he had told Craig something of his indecision; he had referred to Maud by the use of a feminine pronoun a'nd Craig had thought that he might have referred to Drue Wrho else then had known? Aiu! had killed Chivery to keep him quiet. I turned o?er the paper; the notes on digitalis were on the other side of it. And all at once f out .'things leaped out from the chaos of seemingly unrelated fact and surmise. They strung themselves together like knots on a rope. And a fifth thing suddenly added itself: A motive for Conrad's shooting Craig by mistake and in self-defense. A motive for Conrad's murder. And, be
cause, of that, a motive for Dr. Chivery's murder which whs the paper in my hand. It wasn't all clear in detail. In fact it was l:ke a 'blaze of lijrht in a dark room. And it was just then as I stood there, stunned hv ihat
sudden cohererice and understanding, that someone laughed softly somewhere near me. I whirled around, crushing the paper in my hand and shoving it under my cape into my pocket along with a medicine box and a clipping. Alexia was standing in the doorway of the consulting room, watching me quietly, her face a pale triangle in the dusk. I had the revolver. I had only to call to Drue for help. Then I saw that Alexia had put down the knife somewhere, for her hands were empty. Nevertheless my heart was in my throat. She said suddenly, in a low, rather lazy voico, ".So it's you. Meddling again." I wanted that letter. And DrW was safe so long as I had my eyes on Alexia. I held the 'revolver so she couldn't fail to see it, even in the dusk that filled the room.
In what must have been a kind of stupehed attempt at reason I said. "Let's talk this over nuiei.lv, Mrs. Brent." . , It had the quality of a delirious undei'Matemi-!;!,.- I pluujred on, still unable to think. "I'm glad you put
the knife down. That would only
; low on their missions. Through (Editor's Note: The following ; all this, day after day, a deter- i is an interesting account of the mined group of engineers graded role of American soldiers of land 1 and blasted their way' to the I
and oh in strategic Burma, writ-, other side of the mountains, over ten by. Max E. Campbell, who la hundred miles. They were not is stationed in that theater of 1 finished. Now .that they were war with the 490th bombardment j across the mountain it must b? .squadron. Pvt. Campbell was a, connected with the Burma Road resident of Sullivan county be- without delay.
fore his induction into military service.) QI's IN BURMA WITH 490TH BOMBER SQ., Jan. 7, 1945 Somewhere in Burma is the way we head our let-
i Not nearly adequate supplies can be conveyed over this rout? and the Jap menace to it is always present, t one time -recently a force succeeded-lit reaching the Assam. JBeiigal Railroad below nearly cutting the rail link
ters home, Burma is jungle coua-, to the Ledo Road but were re-
Yet the room was undisturbed,
quit as it had been, and no one was in the niche of the windows where I bad stood. I readied it and pulled
back the curtain. On the floor lay a.
Hat piece of paper. I stooped and picked it up before I drew a breath. It was only then that 1 saw it w;.s a note, only a few lines, written on one side of the paper. It was so short a note that I read it instantly, there in the growing dusk, holding it so the last light fell through the window upon if. The handwriting was as black and peat as printing. l iiint like being put off like litis. I know whut I'm fing- I ion'l want nnuone's advice. I hat e lhe money, anH am ready to give it to you to use da tm ee fit. 31. Lhivsrt.
"Oh, would it?" she L-aid. half smiling. There was a little silence. And in the silence 1 heard the stairway creak again. .Someone v as creeping up those stairs. Drue was alone up there, and I had to den! somehow. .with Alexia ... Alexin? Suddenly in a stab-of uncertainty,- I wasn't sure. The pointed, smiling face was only a pale triangle among shadows. Was it Alexia or Nicky? If Nicky Thy. then Nicky bad never had the knife'!
It was Alexia who had that. So if this were Nicky standing there smiling at me. it must be Alexia
creeping up the stairs, with the ! position knife still in her hand. (
But an at once, JJrues voice) floated down the stai.vwa-,, th:ulx v
the dusk. She said on a note of question "Craig? Oh, Peter. Peter! Huber! What are you . . .?" Her voice stopped uncertainly. Seemed to hang there in the silence and dusk. Then suddenly she screamed. It was high and thin and terrible. And stopped as if choked off by hands. The figure in the doorway sprang toward me just as I lifted Chivery's , evolver and fired in that direction.
But the gun wasn't loaded; it clicked emptily and I flung it full at that pale, triangular face just as Alexia reached for me. It was Alexia, not Nicky. In thatsplil second of nearness I was sure of that. She swerved and ducked to avoid the revolver and I twisted part her;, she snatched at my cape and it came off my shoulders as 1 reached the door to the hall. The outside door was open and
! someone was running up the stairs;
someone who must have entered as
I evaded Alexia. It was a man in siacks and a sweater and there were sounds in the dark little hall upstairs and I ran up the stairs after that figure leaning ahead of me into the dusk. I came out into the upper hall. It was so dark that I could only see motion and hear it; a siruggie somewhere in that narrow little passage, for there was the sound oi fists, a thud against a wall and then Drue's voice, "Craig! Look out!" Then I stumbled on a chair. And at the same time got a view of figures, silhouetted against 'the zr:.y windows at the front, struggling, So I took up the chair. It .vas units light. But sturdy. It "made a resounding crack. 1 struck again but it wasn't, really necessary. One oi the dark figures paused, swayed a little, and just sagged down on the floor and lay there. I took a look at the figure or) the floor, at Craig leaning against the banister, panting -heavily, staring downward too; at Drue who was
running toward Craig, and 1 put down the chair deliberately. And then sat down in it as deliberately. And leaned back my head ..." There were noises from downstairs; women's voices came shrilly and jerkily 'to lny ears. I know dimly that Alexia's was one of them . . . But I wasn't prepared for what I saw when suddenly aware that I bad closed my eyes at something and that now a light from somewhere was beating upon my eyelids I made a determined and diliicuh effort, and opened them again. I wasn'trin the upstairs hall at all. I was stretched out at full length on the table in Dr. Chivery's examining room. Something cold and wet wa.-: on my forehead. I don't know how they got imthere. Drue im-!?ted that I v.;. ';:' but di'dn't seem to know where ! w.i,-; going and that I relaxed upon the table. - I do know that the sliced-nif vie v.: 1 had through the door into Dr.
Patriotic Club The Women's Patriotic Club of the Frank Neff Relief Corps will
ihold a social and luncheon Wed. nesday, Feb. 21, from 11 untiI 2
o clock, at the Woodman Hall.
M. J. Aikin & Sor FUNERAL HOME DuRffer "Aikin's Service Costs No More."
: ' A Masonic U$ Lodge No. 263 Sullivan Lodge No. 263 F. &. AM., stated meeting Tuesday, Feb. 20th, at 7:30 P. M. All members urged to attend, visitors welcome. Earl Handford, W. M. ) . Russell Inbody, Sec.
Your TOWNSEND PAPER Is Now On Sale Each Week At Turner's News Nook
MONUMENTS rou DECORATION DAY Because of labor shortages, anyone vjhhiujc a marker or monument by Decoration Day, May i!0lh. would he wise to place 'their order now to avoid disappointment. I am not able io make any personal calls on account of having- to do my own work. Sullivan Monument Company 11. II. Clarkson
in ll UIII 1. "I i"l l" , l" T " r ,"l " i. i, " , ,T i " ." I ii , I ' .1 '". I I 1 .1 pi. I l" i ii - i ' i n ll i -i ir- kii mi.iw i . f 0 t J ' '
x 1 II
V,e nt to- tj , . for'tb;
rATpSssible, au. - -d forces
e I ii...-. - v i v iv
and
ali the P
UI'1
I sailors ovex- ... can
and neri"" - and so "t.hat "we
spirit o
1Q Su
overseas
, this in tor.owtha.
De ,od up aix hi6 well. , ,nt
marked Mau - n foT
ii.ini.y -
an- "
"be no Bi
. II
overseas. . fflore c aRV?rte
inefB -- d ana -'r-- hGe tnrc
WP can again . have aliay , f-,avor.
parked labels, quaUty
Until- we
these until
guarante- - bad f
. ;iain but-nou-j-jpy 9
hrands iXpVi care W- t0 the .hsuig gum to help offering g"tat jea?on civilian ne eds. !oTO merit aad f 3tandard
. C nas its on.- :, .
Chivery's study both .-Uv.rvd irt.v head and brought me to a biiuiu'
s .
. -"wr. - .- - v v"
1 .
cum of I
i
I '
1
-iJSS.!2v.v.v.v.v.
it. r' Mt.. .v.v.v.v.
(To hp (ontiiui-dl Ct-t'.M'sM its' .Mlcnnn (i I'Ih,i,jm: b... ill I c.ij.v.-j.Mit.H.t.,
These wrappers will bs empty unfil further notice.
i. ni.'Mw' u; wu-w j.'.
i
