The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 February 1944 — Page 2

\

Giri Is Faithful Red Cross Worker

I One reporter owed the gwemment] j jJjg BANNER

IS24810, another was entitled to a, ^ and

the 1

Among the faithful attendants *“ j Q alr ,y ga i,j he would investigate.

in

eii Cross surgical dressings 100m in the Masonic Temple is a high school pupil who has just passed her fourteenth birthday. Mary l^et Zie}: man has earned her Bed Cross pin for one-hundred hours of Red Cr HS production. During the KUmn i months, Mary Lee came to surgical dressings several times a week, but while school is in session she comes every Monday night. Monitors in charge have reported that it is never necessary to re-make any of M iry Lee’s bandages and that she is quick and accurate. She began edmin,- to surgical dressings with her grandmother some months ago and her knowledge that she was making ti rt-al contribution to the war effort as well as her desire to earn her 100-hour service pin, have

ki pt her steadily at it.

Attendant-, at surgical dressing the past w ek has been far below the number of work places provided. There are 45 chairs for workers and attendance numbers for respective cessions are as follows: 25, 9, 24, 16

16.

Mis. Joe McCord, instructor in charge of surgical dressings, in making a plea for additional workers, announce; that the work is in no way difficult, and there are always monitors on hand to assist new-com-ers. Open hours are as follows: Mon(ir.ys 2-1 7,::0-9:.':0: Tuesdays, 2-4: W ednesdays, 9-11 a. m.: Fridays, 2-4. Mrs. John Tennant, in charge -n Monday cv nings, remarked that cf the six perrons present January 31 two had driven from north of Brick Chapel.

$248 10, another was entitled to a _ i refund of $ir>.88. Other results were | j a d< bt of S12.55 and refunds of $8 2d j

> and $9.21.

District Collector Thomas V

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1,19*4^

^o€?ieiy

Herald Consolidated

"It Waves For Air* 8. K. Karid"U. rubllsher

f/BPB’S OUiCK

- ^

Legion Officers In Washington

•WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 (UP)— More than 200 top American Logic: officers headed by National Com riander Warren H. Atherton, began a series ol important meetings hen today to foster passage of desired veterans’ legislation and to plan for :• st-war activities. Opening the conferences wert meeting on National Defense, Naval affairs, the Merchant Marine, Civil inn Defense, and national legislation The committee on legislation headed by Maurice F. Devine o r Man ; hester, N, H, will seek way: of spurring passage of the Legion’. 1 ‘ Omnibus Bill” which would consol i late all veterans’ affairs in th Veterans Administration, A spoke* man predicted the measure's approv al by both House and Senate committees this week. The high point of the five-day session will be a National Rehabilitation eonforejice to be held Wed nesday and Thursday. Another im port ant session will be the Thursday organizational meeting of the Legion's new Labor Relations Committee. The conferences will conclude Friday and Saturday with meetings of the "Commission on Post-War America'’ headed by former assistant .'Secretary of War Louis Johnson.

German Offices New In Breslau

LONDON. Feb. 4.—(UP)—Rep its reaching London said today that important departments of the German government were abandoning bomb-ruined Beilin and were being re-established at Breslau. I'li. diplomatic correspondent of the London Daily Mail said all principal departments had been evacuated from Berlin and Breslau. Neutral dispatches described Be - lin is a dying city, disintegrating under th? Stepped-up allied aerial pounding. In three major raids since last I hursday, allied airmen have dropped 5,600 short tons of bombs on the German capital. It was reported that the" latest raids brought the city much nearer final disaster, and that although 2 000000 of Berlin’s 5 000,000 population .already have been evacuated there was a serious shortage of living accommodations.

FIGURES NEVER ERR, BUT TAX EXPERTS CAN FIGURE

ALLIED FLIERS SCORE BLOWS ON JAPS AT RABAUL

Rntered In the pontofflee at Greer. | castle, Indiana as second class mail

natter under Act of March 8. 1878

Subscription price, , *5 cents per week; $3.00 per year by mall In Putnam County; $3.50 to $5 00 per year

by moil outside Putnam County. 17-19 South Jackson Street.

Try 3-purpo** Va-tro-nol. It (l)shrinks swollen membranes, (2) soothes irritation, (3) relieves transient nasal con-

gestion... And bringsgreat-

cr breathing comfort. %

You'll like it! Follow

directions in iuider. VA'TkO H01

Judith < rltohlow Bride Ol David Williamson

Spain Must Put "Cards On Table'

AT FIRST SIGN OF A

WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 (UP)—The Spanish government, after four years

Mi. s Judith R. Critchlow. dough- cf hjde and scek diplomacy with the

Mrs. Joyce Monnett spent weekend with P. H. Downey.

TWO AIRFIELDS, Vi MORE ENEMY PLANES HIT BY ALLIED AIRMEN

A BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY

Even when he corrects us he knows where he wants to lead us, it is into green pastures and beside st.ll wat< is: Rejoice in the Lord.—Phil.

4:4.

And LOCAL NcW$

nvizEvs

Mrs. Virginia Perkins is confined

to her home by illness.

Charles Trail, north Madison street, is confined to his home»by ill-

ness.

ADVANVED ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. New Guinea, Feb. 1 — i UP) —Allied airmen have knocked out, temporarily at least, two airfields at Rabaul, it was announced today as a communique disclosed that possibly 42 more Japanes? planes were shot down In new blows to neutralize the enemy’s last remaining major base in the Southwest

Pacific.

Fighter-escorted heavy bomber? dive bombers and Torpedo planes, raided Rabaul Saturday for the fourth consecutive day and th? 27th time during January, the communique said and shot down 21 and possibly 6 others of 50 Japanese interceptor fight rs and destroyed 12 others on the ground. Allied loses were

described as “minor’’. j Mr. and Mrs. Claude Bailey spent Reports from the South Pacific j Sunday in Terre Haute the guests of disclosed that the heavy attack left | Mr. and Mrs. Roy Earlle. two of Rabaul’s airdromes unservice-i ,,, ..

There will be a practice meeting of |

A navy spokesman for Adm 1 the Morton Chapel No. 356 O. E. S. William Halsey said seven holTlh I Wednesday evening at 7:30. Officers >

craters were left in the Lnkunai field ! f’* eels, ‘ ke present,

runway, while Tobera airdrome also j Th( , choir of the First Baptist was blasted heavily. ( Church will meet thi* evening at 7:00

It was the first time in the cease-

Women’s Club meeting scheduled f. ir Wednesday. February 2, has been

cancelled.

Gene Crawley of the U. S. Navy, is home on a ten day leave visiting with

wife and friends. ’

ter of Mrs. Lester Critchlow cf Indianapolis. and David E. Williamson, , son of Mr. and Mrs. Delano William- — j son of Cloverdale, were united in the l marriage Saturday afternoon at one j o’clock at the Presbyterian Manse. The single ring service was read

by the Rev. V. L. Raphael.

Those attending the ceremony were Mr. Williamson’s mother, Mrs. Lura Williamson of Cloverda’e, Mrs. Maxine Williamson, also of Cloverdale and Miss Georgia Critchlow

of Indianapolis.

Cpl. Raymond R. Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill, is at home on

a 10-day furlough.

City Policeman Logan Woodrum is reported quite ill at his home on

south Jackson street.

Greencastle Chapter No. 255, O. E S. will meet in regular session Wed-

nesday evening at 7:,'!0.

Earl Fisk Auxiliary No. 54 will meet Thursday evening at 8 o’clock at American Region Home. Mrs. Leon N. Snyder will be hostess to the Mt. Meridian W. S. C. S. at the home of Mrs. Ray Vaughan, Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock.

Harold Flint, U. S. Navy is home on leave visiting his parents. Mr. and i Mrs. Tom Flint, north Jackson

I street.

+ + + *

Home Ee Leaders Attend Training Meeting

less pounding of the airfields that any of them had been temporarily

knocked out.

The new Allied blow brought the ] four-day toll of Japanese planes de

stroyed or probably destroyed to 16 1 (birthday with a delicious supper, and the number knocked out of ac • 1 3'he table was spread for the follow-

o’clock at the home of Lillian Turner, please not the change of time and

meeting place.

Sunday evening, Jan. 30. Little I < -' or l )8 . w iU be present at a meeting .iBilly Fitzpatrick celebrated his 5tn j Monday afternoon at 4:30 o’clock in

1 Harrison Hall, which is being sponsored by Delta Phi Eta Girl Scout

Mrs. Nettie F. Miller of Bairebridge and Mis? Reah Miller of Indianapolis have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Miller on east Anderson street. Miss Miller is a Junior in nurses training at the Robert Long Hospital Indiana University. Miss Sarah Jean Colville, a representative from the Cadet Nursing

at

Uon in the southwest Pacific during January to 582 destroyed and 178

probably destroyed.

Meanwhile, medium bombers

corted by fighters, hammered at i

supply lines to New Guinea by fighters and leaving a 500-ton ship in flames at Hansa .Bay, between We-

wak and Madang. The fighters'

ing guests: Mr. and Mrs. Mara ('lousier. Emanuel Neese, Mr. and Mrs. Ora Fitzpatrick. Billy Fitzpat-

sorority. Anyone interested is asked to call Anita Williams at 631.

His birthday

RATIONING NOTES

os-! i ick, Jane Fitzpatrick.

is Feb. 1. I —

1 To facilitate the home canning of

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. | early fruits sUgar , tMnp No 4 o of B ' lk ' Union were M • j Book becamc vaIid on February 1,,

mil Mrs. Charles Cline of Poland,; 1944 it win be good for five pounds i ley, Mrs. Stanley Sears. Mrs. Leroy

The Home Economics Club leaders met for their first training meeting of the year. Miss Eve Gahle. home management specialist, presented ‘Time and My Hands.” The homemaker needs to plan her time to get more done, although reports show she spends from 51 to 61 lours a week doing her work. It is more profitable for women to work outdoors or in other activities. The extra cash received may be put in bonds and used to replace equipment

later.

In 1944 the only answer which will enable women to do more is to see that her motions produce the most. Remember that in making our motions count does not mean working harder but seeing that each waste motion is cut out so that our work becomes easier and faster. To accomplish this each woman must decide for herself that she is willing to use her head to save her feet, her hands and her body motions. She must also be willing again and again to question tier way of doing things and ‘‘push herself” into improving her way and using that

improved way.

Those attending were Miss Helen Smythe. Mrs. Mary Anderson, M:s. Kate Anderson, Mrs. Eva Zimmerman, Mrs. Myrta Tate, Mrs. Evelyn Yanders, Mrs. Beatrice Sutherlin, Mrs. John Torr, Mrs. John W. King, Mrs. Dennis Jones. Mrs. Floyd Eastham, Mrs. Chas. McCullough, Mrs. Clyde Carrington, Mrs. Mary Hand

wrecked four barges off Madang on the return flight. The lull in ground activity on New Guinea continued, although Allied ground forces, supported by air parols which strafed enemy positions, were moving west fnom Sio along th-’ Rai coast and nearing Reiss point.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Slavens and daughter of Greencastle, Mr. and I Mrs. Charley Cline of Belle Union. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stahl and family of Belle Union and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Johnson and family of Green-

castle.

"Black Widow” Is Njw Amy Plane

OAKLAND, Calif., Feb. 1, Army Air Force official looked to the “Black Widow,’ army’s newest twin-engined

(UP) today ' the night

jf sugar to be used solely for canning j fresh fruits and will remain valid 1 through February, 1945. This five j pounds will be a part of the maxim- | um allowance permitted under the j 1944 program, which will be an-

• nounced at a later date.

MEATS

| Red stamps numbered “8” from ■ “A” to “M” in Book 4 are f^r 10 points each for consumer purchases from farm slaughterers. These stamps are not yet valid at retail

CLEVELAND. Feb. 1.—(UP) — Five reporters of the Cleveland Press went to the Northeastern Ohio Internal Revenue District office today to learn how government tax experts figure out those mathematical problems. Unknown to the deputy collectors, the reporters presented five identical statements of income with tax payments and claimed deductions to five different experts. The results should have been the same, but—

fighter plane, as the answer to allied demands for “round-the-clock” action in enemy skies. In the first elose in fection of the P-61, official name of the formidable ■ombat plane, reporters permitted to view it yesterday found it to be bigger than the P-.'i8 and looking almost too large for combat duty. Carrying heavy armament and special equipment which make it u tough, offensive-defensive weapon, -ho P-61 has a fairly long range, a nigh rate of climb and great power, it is equipped with two Pratt and vVhitney motors hut beyond that army officials would reveal no further details. Lt. W. A. Heinz. Little Rock. Ark. Fourth Air Force Public relations officer said the ‘Black Widow” ha I ;one through its first combat tests ■succesfully.” The plane will be manned by a new kind of fighter team a pilot and ralio observer, both specially trained for night flying. This type of crew saw action with the RAF in the spring -cf 1941. although it is comparatively new in the U .S. army air

forces.

The idea of developing specially trained night fighter groups was that of Lt. Ool. Winston W. Kratz. Bt. Louis, commanding officer of the IS 1st. Night Fighter group attached to the Fourth Air Force. Kratz considered the “father of night fighting in the United States," got his idea while serving in Britain as a training officer with the 8th Fighter Command. "Night fighting was the answer to the night bombing of Britain by the Germans after the Luftwaffe found day raids to costly,” he said. “It was there the Air Force began to realize the war was a 24 hour battle and that planes couldn’t go clown with the sun.’ | These crews now are being pre-1 pared to fulfill the need for round the clock action and in the P-61 they have the first special weapon needed to give new power to night operations, Katz explained

Funeral services for Henry E. I Marsh who passed away at the home j of his daughter, Mrs. Maude Kirk- j ham, 18 Highland street, were held; | .it Hall Christian Church at Hall, Tnri.. Monday afternoon at 2 p. m. Scrv-1

ices were conducted by Rev. Groves i ^oriig and can be used only for the of New Ross, Ind. Wilhite’s Under- j purchase of meat from farmers who hikers of Martinsville were in have slaughtered for sale. Farmers charge. Mr. Marsh made his horn ' s H> n g meat are to fill out Report . .th three daughters, the past 2 1-2 I BVirm R-1609 which may be obtained

years, his wife, Mrs. Cora Jane Patrick Marsh having passed away, Jan.

8, 1956.

Pvt. and Mrs. Ross E. Coleman and son Paul Edward of Detroit, Michigan and Mrs. William L. Hendrix and

son Jon of Boston. Mass., were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul I Oaleman of Roachdale. Sundav guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harold N. Coleman and daughter and Maurice Coleman and son Ffrillip of Indianaprlig and Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Coleman and son Robert of Greencastle.

1 .ivx&at

% 4m wWb

a..; A*. T V S r—■;-T-. ,JL- .2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 U E 13 14 IS 16 17 18 19 20 21 (1 23 24 25 26 27 28 29

REMEMBER THEBR ....

BIRTHDAYS ANNIVERSARIES WEDDINGS AND OTHER SPECIAL OCCASIONS WITH

Gifts And Greeting Cards

FROM

SAM HANNA'S BOOK STORE

>y writing the local office of the War Price and Ration Board. The stamps collected for meat sold are turned in to the local board at the time the

report is made.

RATION REMINDER Remember our hoys on the battle fronts when rationing seems trouble- ■ me. Rationing is sharing and helping every one to have their fair

share.

JAPS UNDERSTAND ONLY LANGUAGE OF THE SWORD

WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—(UP)--Bullets and bayonets and bombs are the only language the Japanese can understand. Tne State Department made that clear today with the publication ^f new chapters in the continued story of Japanese cruelties committed not only against prisoners of war but also against civilian internees. N.ither threats of retaliation igainst Japanese prisoners in American hands, the promise of certam punishment after the war, nor appeals that she abide by her pledged w rd, the State Department disclosed, have swerved Japan from the 1 campaign of abuse she launched against her hapless captives in the early weeks of the war. The State Department story was released la lie yesterday by Secretary of State Cordell Hull after an hourlong conference with President Roosevelt. It added new horrors to me account of war camp atrocities published by the army and navy last Thursday night. The army-navy account revealed the mass murder of more than 7,700 American and 14.000 Filipino heroes of Bataan and Corregidor. The Stale Department release went less into statistical detail, but it itemized “categories of abuse and neglect” to which not only war prisoners but I also civilian internees were subjected by their “brutal” and “barbarous” and “depraved" captors.

Why Not Try Banner Want-Aiif?

Alter, Mrs. Willis Scobee, Mrs. Val online Hanlon. Mrs. Claude Glover, Mrs. Joe B. Wright, Mrs. George Totten. Miss Ethel Schachtel, M?s. Charles Bruner, Mrs. Ivan Ruark, Mrs. Everett Fanner, Mrs. Andrew Sutherlin, Mrs. Charlie Hendrica. Mrs. Milton Kloetzel, Mrs. Lloyd Houck, Mrs. Ethel Lydick, Mrs. Dan Rowland, Mrs. Henry Ewing and Mrs. Everett Ellis.

■p + + +

Delilah Miller P. T. A. To Meet Friday The February meeting of the Delilah Miller P. T. A. will be held Friday afternoon at 2:30. There will be a candle-light service in observance of Founders Day. Miss Talbott will give the program. Corinthian Class To .Meet Tonight The Corinthian Class of the Methodist Sunday school will meet tonight at 8 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Chas. McCurry, east Washington street. Mrs. E. L. Baldwin of Bloomington will talk about her tfrip ta South America. A good attendance is desired.

-r -i* 4*

Limednlc Community Circle, To Meet Limedale Community Circle will meet with Mrs. Homer Branham, Thursday afternoon at 2 o’clock. The devotions will be given by Mrs. Charles McCoun. Roll call will be quotations from Lincoln by Mrs. Harry Godfrey. The program on “Our Fir°t iPresident” will be given by Mrs. Basil Sanford.

Allies, today faced a stiffened AngloAmerican policy Jeterminyd to make it choose unequivocally between real neutrality or an outright alliance with the Axis. Military and diplomatic circles here foresaw no attempt to bring Spain to the Allied siefe as an active belligerent on grounds that in her present position she would be more of a liability than an asset. * But pressure already is being applied in the form of an oil embargo to make Generalissimo Francisco B’ranco guarantee that he 4 will give no further aid to the Axis. If such guarantees are not forthcoming, and soon ,the Allies were believed ready to take action that might be just short of rupture of relations. Spain is aware that the United Nations control the Atlantic and would have little trouble in blockading her effectively, cutting her off from sorely needed supplies. Reliably but unofficial quarters close to the government, however, were confident that Spain would never let her relations with the Allies get to such a point because she would have everything to lose and nothing to gain by it. The only econojnic help Spain can look for must come from the Allies. Great Britain a.nd the United States played along with Franco for years tolerating his abuses of Spain’s professed neutrality. That was during the period of the great offensives in the Mediterranean. But now that the Allies have control of virtually al! of the Mediteranean area, it was said, they can afford to become much tougher. Secretary of State Cordull Hull told his press conference yesterday that he had nothing to add to his statement of last Friday announcing the cassation of oil shipments to Spain. It was assumed that he still was awaiting a reply to his protests that Spain in interning Italian ships shipping war materials to Germany, allowing Axis agents to operate freely in Spanish territory, concluding a financial agreement with Germ any, and refusing to recall all of its “blue division" from the eastern front where it has been fighting the Soviet Union. Hull said last week the state department, failing after repeated attempts to get satisfaction from Spain on the charges, had decided to suspend further oil shipments pending a complete reexamination of Spanish policy. Some hop*? of an early settlement was seen in the long conference between U. S. Ambassador to Spain, Carelton J. H. Hayes, and Spanish foreign minister Francisco Gomez Jordana immediately after the oil shipments were stopped. It was believed that nothing else upon which Spain must depend on the outside world would bring her to heel as quickly as shutting off her oil supply. Spain has no oil of her own and has been totally dependent upon tin? British and Americans. But further steps could be taken, if necessary, since Spain is dependent upon thus hemisphere for meat, grain and cotton ,and upon great Britain for

coal.

USE Mfr TABLETS. 3ALVL NQii Qtfipj

for a speech-making tour thfo Oregon, Washington, Monta

na . I'tts l

Minnesota, Idaho, and Iowa. ,■«„ 3

New York Feb. 20, hia 0 ^1

ing to

innounced today.

Willkie will speak chiefly fo r Fourth War Loan drive but it understood he also would make ?ral political speeches. He also expected to confer with Repub|. ( leaders in the seven western statijl

ALLIES BELOW

ROME

(Continued From o nfJ /iously, he had withdrawn eletr.i

of the Hermann Goering Panzer’,1 vision and the Third Panzers (^1

he Cassino battle line to the

On the main 5th Army front;* niles below Rome, American,

md French troops knifed into .C-QR S T azi Gustav line witii me le wa ury, pushing the Germans hacka: l)r th o

lumber of points from Cassin

he Tyrrhenian coast. FOR

V'*. -I« -I- -J- -1- 4* ♦ ANNIVERSARIES ♦ 4- 4* -S- -k f 4- •>- -l- J- -k 4* + 4Birthday John Dietrich, east Poplar street, 79 years today, Feb. 1.

Corporal Charles Eugene Keller i? home on a two weeks furlough visting his mother and other relatives. Corporal Keller is stationed with the United States Amy in New York He is the son of Mrs. Mayme Leslie of this city.

Tou can get «penaur results Banner ClaiuifUil \rr

C. M. Schauwecker, M. D. 13 E, Washington St.

Wishes to announce the following changes in office hours:

Week Days — 10:30 to Evenings — 7 to 9 Sundays — 1 to 4

Telephone 40, office, or Telephone Information.

Front reports indicated the & foot

mans had abandoned most of

irepared positions inside Cassino i* #verd vere withdrawing into u., hills poR dud that stronghold • >rsee, Simultaneously, Canadian units f goo* .he British 8th Army went inti in Fal

ion along the Adriatic coast imashed their way north .hrough stiff enemy opposition. Allied warplanes hammered ■nemy all along the battlefront ;tiong formations of i ■ .] ripped up Nazi airdromes in m

•astern Italy and th? Austrian FOR in an effort to hamper the flow A 40. German aerial reinfon . mento uth L

Rome.

FOR

FOR

mothj vy. Gc

Niol

eridia

There was no let-down in thefe

merett

man resistance along the me, however, although front

latches revealed that the Naz FOR fenses had been breached at st -ars o key points. 00 o’c

FOR ars ai is. Bai

FOR ning i

CUR 80VS WITH mi C&f,0i

F °R

fcjVJ 1 " c

A new recruit at the U S N'in Training Station, Great Lake*, E inois, is Harold M. Decl r. 17, (I

south Locust street, d-wnen.',^^^

Now undergoing "be*it” i ainin|. FOR

FOR

on tii

nditio

aMadsetj

INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Hogs 9 000: mostly steady except 330-400 lbs., 15c higher: 160-200 lbs., $13-$13.25; 200-330 lbs.. $13.80; 330400 lbs., $12.50-$12.65; 100-160 lbs, $10-$11.25; sows mostly $11.25$11.75. Cattle 2.200; calves 600; steeis, heifers and cows steady to strong; bulk of steers mostly good grade |13.7&-$15.35; bulk heifers $12.50$13.75; cow top $12; common and medium $8.50-$10.75; canners and cutters $6.25-$8.25; vealers strong to 30c higher, top $16.50. Sheep 500; opening about steady; few lots choice lambs $16; good and choice 82 lb. fed westerns $15.50.

is being indoctrinated int i Nan uck e and is being instructed in Seai-iMigh, ship, military drill, and naval r. cedure. Soon, he will be vcia-"

Bain

FOR

ies of aptitude tests to deter whether he wall be select, 1 to atw one of the Navy’s servi* *e:iool‘ will be assigned to active duty IFOR sea. ellie I The new address of Pvt. He

FOR

Alvora Robinson, 357378!''! is Co

ectric

204th Bn., 63 Regt. I. R. T. C

Blanding, Florida. Pvt. Robins' 1 * ^ a ’

the husband of Mrs. M v Klla ft’

inson and the son of Mi and M? poR Horace Robinson of Fillmore. stef!.

The new address of Roi rt R< ; arm. Robinson A/S, is Co. 20. U. !.•

T. S„ Great Lakes, 111. R. > rUO 1

FOR

son of Mr. and Mrs. Hon - •

of Fillmore. Idg *’ The new address of P. F. C. Can por E. Boswell is Anti-tai,! x>r. 1

A. P. O. No. 28. C/O Postnn ' ter ’

York, N. Y. He would lik , “ ^’j

much to hear from friends and

lives.

Last rites for Mrs. W. F.

WAJ 1 •y hoi

ork.

illraoi

were held Tuesday after "0

WA»

th? Cloverdale Met ? idi c t ’nun iy hoi charge of the Rev. Meredith anJ[, ox 5 C. M. McClure. Burial was in Cloverdale cemetery. T? ’’*’ ' li -' 'VAb brief service at the horn' on S’ lodern ary street in charg? lr -

WILLKIE PLANS TOUR NEW YORK, Feb. 1.—(UP) — Wendell L. Willkie will leave Friday

nant.

Navj ished

NOTH K OF m"'

Nolle* Is in?, by glvi >wn. lb I-MI’ Hell has li. ■ 11 lb' — Judes of ths Circuit Co WA?

State "f Indiana

tor of tho (State of Lav? an. 1 man, late of I’ntiiain <’" ____ Said . stale is sutij.o-.-l WA? Freda E Wrl*ht. x W ,

IV Bonl* ■’ wi

No. S207. j_ j Onicr Akers, Clerk of ln d O circuit Court. ]• overs. Cli.ise tluriiliiK. At torn?.' vm

ride 8<

PRESCRIPTIONS PURE DRUGS PROMPT SERVICE

FOR

nlace.

,-ce. U

’4350.

FOB

’iouth

'ioui*e,

mg ho llhrlsti

Mullins' Drug Sto« If

* 05 no