The Springfield Daily Republican from Springfield, Massachusetts (2024)

THE SPRINGFIELD DAILY REPUBLICAN, SPRINGFIELD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1942 7 War Is So Rough These Days Even Packets Must Learn Tricks Ordnance District Sets Up School for Study of Best 3 Ways to Prepare Army Shipments To insure arrival of arms and muniCons at their. overseas destination good condition as well as on time, packaging school for Springfield nance district resident and traveling inspectors, together with facility resentatives, has been established sler the direction GL Maj Durant Ladd, chier of the' field service tratlic and transportation branches. Global war has imposed new nighting conditions and new shipping probleis and the purpose of the intensive packaging course is to reduce spoilage through carelessness, rough handling and hazards of transportaWith troops disposed in pructically every climatic zone and ating under circ*mstances making even normal supply difficult, the task of getting materiel to the battle hes become increasingly greater. Ordnance supplies must be packed and crated to withstand the hardest kind of handling. Ordinary commercinl methods of shipment overseas olit for the duration, mOre especially aN lines are extended and new fronts opened.

To moot these conditions, it been for the army to devise packages that cult be delivered safely and in good condition from the Arctic to the tropics and under every conceivable type and method of transportation. Adequate dock facilities are an exception rather than the rule and munitions must be packed to withstand immersion in water. snow and ire, steaming jungles, desert sandstorme. lighterage and even landing front boats on beachheads and coral atolls A8 well 19 carriage China, Russia, Africa and certain countries by the most printitive means. Two types of pack A 1P being considered.

One is for domestic (shipmeh'. in which containers of either 01' solid fiber as well 415 wood can be used. and the other for overseas shipnient, which must be protected before packing by special processing, whoroughly waterproofed. cased sturdily. Stress has been laid on proper methods of reinforcing and also fastening with cement-coated mails to prevent loosening and rusting.

all cases, minimum government specifications must be met. Instructors are George A. (farratt of the forest products laboratory, department of agriculture, Madison. and an instructor in the Yale School of Forestry: Russell Meyer William Jackson from the office ordnance. Washington; Maj Willam section.

Gould, in charge Springfeld of the Armory. field serval Lient-Col HI. N. Knowlton from the Maritan (N. arsenal.

While the school will be conducted Springfield, it will include inspecand facility representatives from uhoffices in Hartford, Waterbury, Haven, Bridgeport and Wincheg- refleve distress of Female Weakness AND HELP BUILD UP RED BLOOD! Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound TABLETS (with added tron) have pain helped thousands to relieve periodic with weak, nervous, blue feel. ings due to functional monthly disturbances. Also, their iron makes them a fine hematic tonic to help build up red blood. Pinkham's 'Tablets are made especially for women wallow label directions.

MUSCULAR RHEUMATIC PAIN Soreness and Stiffness You need to rub on powerfully soothing "COUNTER-IRRITANT" like Musterole to quickly relieve neuritis, rheumatic aches and pains. Better than an old-fashioned mustard plaster tobelp breakuppainful local congestion! MUSTEROLE in a 87 MORE INDUCTED FOR ARMY SERVICE Southbridge Sends Second Batch of 58 in a Week Board 143 Here Has 29 Men Accepted Fifty-eight more men from Southbridge, equal LO the number drafted Monday, were accepted by the induction staff at hospital for the army yesterday and will De called to active duty the 17th. Of a sent by hoard 143 of this city the examiners accepted 29. The Southhridge contingent was 115 follows: Louis G. Letourneau, Stanley K.

Thorpe, (asmir Nicjadlik, Salvatore I'. Diyulio, James H. Kelly, Kaymond H. Moulton, Chester C. l'arzy Fred A.

Hajec, Raymond G. Robidat. Christy V. Thanas, Charles F. Drew, Wilfred J.

Borey; Irving R. Lussier, Roland L. Girard, J. Darling, Walter W. Prunier, Charles MacQuarrie, Julius Y.

Sadowski. Michael I. l'ickul. Dupuis, Gerald Raoul A. Spadea, Brodeur, Roland Albert N.

O. Fontaine, Bachand, John G. McGrary. Wilfred A. Gibeault, Edmund M.

Dazinet, Frank Wysucki, Albert K. Parent, Rosario Chamberlain, Roland W. Demers, Adelard Gaumond, Philbert A. Tiberio. Vincent Maciejewski, Arthur J.

Moreau, Hobert F. I Raymond M. Fitzpatrick, Roland P. Tetreault, Joseph A. Sutter.

Nicholas Rio, Antranig Kestigian) Edwin F. Holews, Emile L. Chamberland, Lawr'ence J. Holmes, Renato (). Coccia, Gerard Bastien, William Augustynski, Donald It.

Howard, Stanley C. Ziemba, Henry F. Piante, John A. Kondek, Archie k. Lamothe.

Raymond A. La Pointe. Joseph K. Mel.en. Edward I'.

Sweeney, Wilfred J. Vontaine. William I'. Carroll and Ernest E. St Onge.

The Springfield group comprised: Flavio M. Duca. Edward J. Warren A. Robinson, Arthur C.

Grenier. Frank Wiemer, Charles A. St l'eter. Florindo Longhi, Denis J. lamer, Herbert I'.

Kelsey, Gienwood W. Gore. Michael J. Coffey, George W. Schooleraft, Patrick J.

Meenaghan, Howard Haynbr, Kruest R. McNall. Henry LA Waltermire, Jr. Andrew f. Horton, Edward J.

O'Connell, Thomas E. Hammond. Lormer I'. Ihines, George W. Farrington, Arthur M.

Doyle. Louis 1. Gentile, Morris Leighton. Thomas S. A hearn, James A.

Casey. Louis W. Rimondi, Ralph Miller and Frederick J. NEWS OF SERVICE MEN specialist on airplane propellers. WHY GORGEOUS POWERS MODELS are to advised use ONLY KREML SHAMPOO! 2 Give Your Hair This 10-Minute "GLAMOUR Robert Powers, foremost thority of feminine beauty, always advises his lovely "million dollar" models to use only Kreml Shampoo.

This amazingly beautifying "glamour bath" not only thoroughly cleanses scalp and hair of dirt and loose dandruff but it leaves hair unbelievably soft, silken, keep your hair from becoming dry, a aglow with natural brilliant highlights brittle it actually brings out the nat-easier to arrange in any style. ural lustrous beauty that lies hidden There are no harsh chemicals or in your and every girl's hair. Get a caustics in Kreml Shampoo. It never bottle today! All drug and department Jeaves any excess dull, soapy film. stores.

Made by the makers of famous stead, its SPECIAL OLIVE OIL BASE helps Kreml Hair Tonic. 0 Kreml Shampoo FOR EASY SILKEN- TO -SHEEN ARRANGE HAIR The promotion of I'fc Harry Arlen of 11 College to the rank 0. corporal was announced yesterday by the public relations office at Westover field. He is serving as 1. supply with a quartermaster unit At the field.

Arlen is a graduate of the High School of Commerce, class of 1937, and Was employed by the Burroughs Adding Machine company here before being inducted January 20. J'vt Richard W. Hughes. son of Mr and Dirs R. A.

Hughes of 311 Alien street, has completed his basic marine corps training at P'arris Island. S. and expects 10 be assigned for further training 10 the New River (N. marine base. Alexander B.

Rheaume, senior operating room technician 41 a naval station, is itt home on EL short furlough. He is 'a. pharmacist second class, in the regular army, enlisting at the local recruiting station October 7. 1940. Serst Walter Irwin Looney, son of Police Mrs I'.

F. Looney of Kimmon avenue, Chicopee. has been humne on a 13-day furlough, and has now returned to MacDili field. Tampa, where is a specialist on airplane propellers. CREAM DEODORANT which safely STOPS arm PERSPIRATION.

Does not rot: dresses or shirts. Does not irritate skin. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving.o Instantly stops perspiration 1 40 3 days. Removes odors from Perspiration, keeps armpits dry.

pure, white, greaseless, 9 stainless vanishing cream. Arrid has' been awarded the Approval Seal of 'The American Institute of Laundering for being harmless to tabric. is the largest Guaranteed by Arrid deodorant Good Housekeeping selling ajar Buy a tar today Also in 108 and 594 jars at any store which Cells toilet gocas. ARRID FORMER SMITH PROFESSOR DIES Dr Elihu Grant Was Authority on Palestinian and Held Varied Positions New York, Nov. 3-(AP)-Dr Elihu Grant.

69, professor -emeritus of BIblical literature it Haverford college and an authority on Palestinlan archeology, died yesterday at Presbyterian hospital after an illness several months. -and was wax born graduated at from Stevensville, Boston uni- versity, where he was ordained 'in 1900 while serving as pastor of Revere Methodist church, Revere, Mass. He left that post and for three years was superintendent the American Friends' school at Ram Allah, Jerusalem. He was a. professor of Biblical literature at Smith college and was the author of inany books about Palestine and the Orient.

lie lived at Stamford, and leaves his widow, Almy. and daughter, Dirs John L. l'owell. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2.30 D. at the Haverford Friends' Meeting house, laverford, I'a.

ROOSEVELT AGAIN ASKS PRESIDENT RIOS TO U. S. Embassador Bowers Extends Second Invitation to 02 ean Executive Santiago. Chile. Nov.

3-(AP)United States Embassador Claude G. Bowers WAS reported in informed quarters tonight to have reiterated President Roosevelt's invitation 10 Chilcan President Juan Antonio Rios to visit the United States. I'rosident Rio announced postponement of his planned trip several a weeks dissatisfaction ago at with the a hight speech of made Chilean by United States Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles charging that Chile and territories Argentina to be were used by permitting axis agents their I operating against their neighbors. President Rios received Embassador Bowers this afternoon. at which time the envoy was understood to have extended again the invitation for him to visit the United States.

CANADIAN. ACE LESS HURT THAN REPORTED London, Nov. 3-(AP)-Pilot Officer George Beurling, Canadian air ace in the defense of Malta, suffered only a. cut hand and a had shaking up instead of A broken leg in the crash of a large plane at Gibraltar, it was disclosed today. An Ottawa (Ont.) report yesterday said Beurling had suffered a fracture of the right leg in the crash.

He arrived in England today by air ambulance and underwent 11 X-ray evamination at an RAF hossince shot down over Dalta pital. none foot had been in a cast October 14. Fifteen persons were killed in the crash of the air ferry near Gibraltar on which the was bound for home to take part in 3. victory loan campaign. The 20-year-old Spitfire pilot is credited with shooting down 29 axis planes, 26 of them at Malta.

Both Father and Son Now in Marine Corps Eleven months to the day after his son enlisted in the marine corns, Loo A. Desotell, of 38 Appleton street yesterday joined 110 as a leatherneck for active service and left for Parris Island, S. for "boot" training. Ilis son, Leo. is believed to be stationed at Samoa, where he has seen action and wrote recently he had received "scars of this one of which is on his left forearm.

Censorship forhade him to divulge more, he told his mother, Ars Myrtle F. Desotell, who has obtained job as teletype operator for the duration at the Springfield Ordnance district. Mrs Desotell. in an effort to have the whole family in services, applied for service with the WAACs, but due to a condition which, resulted from an operation the could not anprove her application. I'vt Desotell.

will be given the grade of a sergeant after be finishes training at Parris Island and goes to Quantico, where his experience as a machinist and toolmaker will be drawn upon. For the past two years he has heen general toolroom foreman for the J. Stevens Arms company. Friday night fellow workers and associates gave him d. sendoff party in Holyoke and presented him purse containing $140.

Students of Chicopee Trade school, whom he instructed at the plant, contributed to buy him a camera and case. Passengers Leaving Steamer Very Slowly Baltimore, Nov. 3-(AP)-Only a few passengers were permitted to leave the Portuguese steamer Carvalho Araujo today, among them two diplomats and' their families. At the present rate authorities have been permitting passengers to leave shipboard, it will be several days before the last of them has been cleared. Turned Down $750,000, Leaves $40,000 Estate San Jose, Nov.

3 -Mrs Mary Elizabeth White Staples, who rejected all English inheritance of $750,000 62 years ago, left a $10,000 estate at her death October 19. Relatives said that in 1880 Drs Staples and brother, Charles White, Were left equal shares in the $1,500,000 estate of an uncle, Sir Edmund White of Bath, England. Lawyers notified Charles White but not his sister that they would have to visit England to claim the inheritance. and in annoyance, Mrs Staples spurned her share, saying she had money without it. The value of her estate was indicated today in a petition for probating her will.

Drs Staples left $10,000. to Mrs Marian C. Norris, Pawtucket, R. $3000 to Mrs Adelaide Quinn of the same city, and the remainder to charitable institutions. Betty Hutton to Wed Westmore After War Hollywood, Nov.

3-(AP)-Betty Hutton, whose piercing voice and agile feet grace Paramount musical spectacles, said? today she WaS engaged to he married -after the war. The groom-to-be is l'erc Westmore. one of the Westmore movie makeup brothers: W'estmore, confined to fi hospital with influenza, plans to join the army air forces, and the marriage will he postponed until the war is over. Miss Jutton explained. It will be her first and Westmore's fourth trip to the altar.

Miss futton is from Battle Creek. Mich. The typical household bronze. door hinge enough copper for 1.187 rounds of cartridges. Army Captain Describes Escape After Bataan Is Taken by Japs Capt W.

L. Osborne Hid for Three Months Within Two Miles 'of Egemy Base Los Angeles, Nov. 3-(AP)-Escape from captured Bataan three months' hiding in the jungle within two miles of a Japanese base, and ultimate free. dom after A. perilous, storm- tossed voyage to Australia, in A motorboat were among experiences related today by Capt William Lloyd Osborne, home on leave.

am glad to say there are no Quislings among the Filipinos 1 met," Osborne said in an interview. "Thes had built evacuation huts in the jungle. away from their villages. and they hideout gave after me I one escaped for A three Bataan to Cavite in a small boat. There was a Jap base two miles away," REPORT LOCAL PEOPLE NOW HELD.

AT MANILA Springfield Couple and Holyoke Man Known to Be Jap Captives 1 Springfield couple and a Holyoke man are known to be captives of the Japanese and are believed to be staying on the campus of the University Santo Tomas, Manila, Philippine Islands. Mr and Mira Everett S. Richards are related to Mr and Mrs Clark 1. Richards of 342 Forest Park avenue. Everett Clark are brothers who married Olive and Marion Roth.

sistors, respectively, The Holyoke man is Ilerbert J. Marx, 39, son of Mr and Mrs Henry J. Marx of 58 Brown avenue. The Everett Richards were in United States in 1941, leaving for the Philippines in May. lie was district manager for the Standard Oil company of New York in Manila.

He and Mrs Richards returned to this country for six months in three years. spending most of the time in and around Springfield. They have lived in almost every section of the Philippine Islands. among the Cebu, Legaspl and Ilolo. Marx was.

plant manager of Procter Gamble, incorporated. at Manila for the five years. He was graduated Parom Holyoke high school and Massachusetts State college, class of 1923. His learned from the state department that he is a Japanese captive. Nothing has been heard directly from him' since Manila fell.

WESTOVER FIELD NEWS A contingent of Westover men will attend A dance at the American Legion hall, South Hadley Falls. Another group will attend a WCA party in Holyoke. West Springfield firemen have invited a number of men to attend their annual firemen's ball tonight. Soldiers must have their own escorts at this affair and nay ohtain tickets at the special service office at the air base Today at 11.30 a detachment of 200 men from Westover will march in a War Chest parade at Holyoke. The Westover field band will resume weekly concerts at noon today with a program of symphonic music the officers' post.

Twelve members of an force unit at Westover field have been promoted in the past few days. They are: Staff Sergt Harold A. Fox of Benton Harbor, who was made a technical sergeant; Sergis Denver J. Ruth of Blaine. Charles C.

Johnson of Knoxvilie, and Walter Shar of Philadelphia, who were made staff sergeants. Three corporals promoted to sergeants were: John J. Noles of Augusta, and Wantaghm, I. Ir.t 1. Bradley of Kingston, and Gerald W.

Matstone of South Fork, I'a. Four privates, first class, to corporals: John R. Barnhardt Denhigh. Charles Dillon of Benton, Alfred G. Dinisci of Rochester, N.

and Robert W. Harrington of Bicknell, Ind. Pyt Eugene C. Dick of Wauwatosa, was raised to private, first class. ENLISTMENTS The army recruiting station yesterday enlisted the following men and sent them to Fort C.

Kinsella: of Cherry Hill road, Stockbridge; Joseph G. Guertin of 26 Harrison avenue, North AdAms; Robert A. Foote of 71 North Holden street, North Adams; Carol M. Johnston of 26 Curtin avenue, l'ittsfield; Lee WV. La Prise of Park street, Housatonic; Ralph A.

Forrest of 71 Last street, Great Barrington; Leon A. Kegresse of Halls Ground, Clarksburg: Ralph A. Uberti of 11 Chase avenue, North Adams; James R. McClelland of Halls Ground, Clarksburg. Karl R.

Newell of 228 Elm street, Holyoke: Aldo I. Giusti of 154 State street, North Adams; Donald N. Thompson of 3 Glen street. Holyoke: Roger E. Lovejoy of 4.

River terrace; Holyoke: John J. McGuire of 50 Ha'st. street, Ware: Camille A. LeBlanc of 30 Austin street. Springfield; George Shepard street, Westfield; William WV.

Vogel ot 8 Huntington street, Springfield: Merritt F. Blanchard of 359 Springfield street, North Agawam; John Trolano of 59 Union atreet, Springfield; William R. Bryant of 719 Main street, West Springfield. Other service enlistments announced yesterday were as Springfield: Leo A. Desotell, 44.

38 Appleton street. West Springfield: Frank W. Aldrich. 25, 11 Belmont avenue. Easthampton: Stanley H.

Dale, 20, 32 Clark street. Bernardston: Frederick G. Parker, 29, Bald Mountain road. Connecticut: Malcolm Jonah, 20, Southampton: Leonard J. Fowles, 21.

Colchester: Michael B. Selavka, 21, Willimantic: Kenneth P. Pierce, 19. and Joseph W. Rogus, 23.

New Haven; Francis T. Finnucan, 21, G. Poeta, 20, and Samuel L. Frattalone, 20, of Ansonia; Rennie D. Ciccarello, 26, John F.

Tinto, 22, Bloomfield. Maine: George IT. Light, 20, Bangor. Hampshire: Frank D. Millette, 20, Woodsville.

Rhode Island: Leonard D. Marquis, 33, Woonsocket. Navy George IT. Childs, 63 Johnson street. Donald C.

Silloway, 100 Merrill road, Alhert L. Raschi, 104 Gardner street, James I. Sullivan, 175 Cuss street, Richard E. Johnson, 173 Alden street. Robert M.

Fortune, 15 Amherst street, Donald B. Norman, 60 Norfolk street. Charles P. Sweney, 96 Byers street. Robert C.

Reeves, 64 Ionia street. Robert I. Rivard of 188 Carew street, Robert E. Eisman. 28 Brookline avenue, James C.

Carmody, Greene street, Louis Chernack. 181 Massasoit street, Irving L. Goodless, 61 street, George Stenta, 49 Wilcox street. West Springfield: Frank Bartlett, 30 Oakland street, Henry C. Krepela, 25 Hillside avenue.

llolyoke: Edwin H. Thompson. 3 Glen street, Raymond F. Kennedy, 106 Newton street, Wilfred L. Provost, TURKEY EXPECTS ALLIES WILL WIN OBSERVERS THINK Inonu's Speech Sunday to Assembly Taken to Indicate Belief Tide Has Turned to United Nations By New York, Nov.

3-(NANA) petent observers of near eastern atfairs take P'resident Ismet Inonu's speech Turkish assembly on the development of the The Sunday don then noteworthy landmark in Turkish president boldly stated that. henceforth, there would be for Turkey it greater risk of being involved in the conflict than formerly. And he made unmistakably clear that aggresxion would be reststed. To express himself in such a determined manner. Inonu must have become convinced that the tide in the world struggle has turned toward the united nations.

From his capital at Ankara, equally distant from the Caucasus and the Nile, the ups and downs of the battle now in progress can be observed and followed point more of closely than Two from months any vantage. ago, with the fate of the r'ed army and of the British 8th army in the balance, 110 Turkish 'statesman would have dared utter phrases which obviously carry a forecast of German defeat. On reading the address of the Turkish president to his P'arliament, United States diplomatic circles were at first inclined to think that something similar to all ultimatum from Hitler had been received in Ankara. But no information available during the last 48 hours contirms that assumption. Recent reports refer to the massing of Bulgarian troops on the Turkish frontie in Thrace, a fact corded more than once in past months.

The grave warning which has come from the chief of the Turkish 1'e- public therefore, believed to And its justification in military evidence collected by the Turkish general staff the effect that the German high command. unable to obtain a strategical decision on the Volga and in the Egyptian desert, is bound to seck it elsewhere in the Near East--in Syra, in Iraq, or in Iran- and that no longer can hope to succeed without encroaching upon Turkish territory. encroaching upon Turkish territory. Meanwhile, the Turkish ministers, true to the spirit of the policy which they originated when France's defeat made it impossible for them to execute in full their obligations to England under the treaty of October, 1939, lare doing their best to keep the scales While in hiding Osborne learned another officer who escaped front Corregidor VAS harbored in a village some distance away. It took Osborne EL month of paddling and following tenuous clews to find Lieut Damon J.

Gause of Winder, with whom he planned the Australian voyage. First in a canoe, later in a diesel motorboat, they dodged from island to Island. Osborne related. Tropical storms ripped their sails to shreds. When fuel ran low mixed bomber machine- gunned them, but cocoanut oil--and it worked." A Jap missed.

Near Australia they were up by a boutload of Aussie soldiers. Newton street, Raymond P. Robert, 184 Homestead avenue. Chicopee Falls: Wallace M. McNeish, 13 Otis street, Fred W.

Kuzniar, 5 West Main street. TELEPHONE PRIORITY COPIES MAILED HERE Copies of the War Production board order permitting priorities on longdistance telephone calls 10 certain specified interests have been mailed to those in this area who might take advantage of the privilege, but 90 Car the program is still in formative stage, Carroll S. Parker, manager of the Springfield office of the New England Telephone and Telegraph company, said yesterday. No 1 priority calls involve disasters, enemy danger, urgent troop movements, and other incidents of like nature. Among those having the right to ask for telephone priority are ine I'resident, vice-president, cabinet officers, members of Congress, army, navy, aircraft warning service, all public officials, foreign consular and diplimatic officers, civil defense forces.

Red newspapers, press 15- sociations and communications, utility and transportation industries and any essential war industries. W. G. CHANDLER JOINS WPB Washington, Nov. -The War Production board announced today the appointment of William G.

Chandler, a member of the advisory board of Scripps-Howard newspapers, as chief of the printing and publishing branch. He is taking a leave of absence from Scripps-Howard. even between Britain and Germany. Quite recently, they made a concession to German diplomacy which it would have been within their right to withhold. In the terms of the trade was given Ankara government agreement Detober, 10.

1941. a promise the commercial pact with Englandsold to Germany, on on the expiration of that 90,000 tons of chrome would be on January 8, 1943-provided, before December 31. 1942, 18.000,000 Turkish pounds worth of armaments should been delivered from the Reich. That clause of the contract was not honored the Nazi signatory. Nevertheless, a few weeks ago, P'rime Minister Shukru Saracoglu proposed to the German negotiators to sell 000 tons of chrome between January 8 and March 31, 1943, as against spe.

quantities of war materiel. Thus, on the Turkish side, it was made plain that Turkey WaS ready to the letter of existing arrangements in favor of Germany. But German diplomacy probably never ceased 10 consider the trade conventions with Turkey less as all lend in themselves than as means of separating Turkey from the united nations. Last summer, Germany went to the length of actually handing over to the Turks railway engines, some which she is in sore need of at home. That was ably to cause the Turks to feel that the Reich was in a position to emulate lease-lend deliveries and to make Ankara forget the two destroyers delivered from American yards.

Germany is aware that she cannot win in that race. Most people doubt that to get the Turkish chrome nest year, Germany will part with the arms and ammunitions wanted by Ankara. Moreover, what stake on Russian and Egyptian battlefelds overshadows all diplomatic considerations. Germany is hound to calculate in erins of immediate military gains and to act accordingly. TRADE SCHOOL GROUP IN SPEAKING CONTEST "Education for free men." theme of National Education week which opens Sunday, was the topic of 12 student speakers at Springfield Trade school yesterday As they were u- ditioned by William k.

Ahern of the faculty preparatory to assigning them to local service clubs and school meetings. PA All schools have nOW completed preliminaries except Technical high school, w'here tryouts will be hell today. Some of the educational orators are all booked 11 and the rest of Olio calendar will he filled out within it short time. The speakers at Trade yesterday were Margaret De Malo, Theodore Bak, Rose Manzi, Edward Brosch. John Carter, Marjory Query.

Raymond Bellefeuille. Dorothy Mann. Robert Wilson, Jean Bednarz and Owen Hague. SING NING HEARS RETURNS Ossining. N.

Nov. 3-(AD) -Sing Sing 22.0 0 inmates were granted permission to hear election returns over the radio until 10 o'clock tonight. Metropolitan policemen of London have been instructed they are to wear their greatcoats buttoned on the left for four months and the right for the next four months to make them. last longer. Municipal Judge Quinn sidered the of Gerald Bates, P'ortland.

who pleaded guilty A charge of fajling to leave his same and address at the scone, of an accident. HA ordered fine. Bates countered with 3 proposal that his car be turned in for the scrap drive. The judge accepted, canceling the fine. 3 Buy U.S.

War Bonds "SALADA" 3 TEA RIGHT 3 4t FOR YOUR TASTE 471 LOWEST IN TARS THROAT 3 IRRITATING 61 LOWEST IN NICOTINE Old CIGARETTES 4. Old Gold 3 As shown by unbiased, unsolicited tests of 7 leading made for Reader's Digest Reader's Digest was not trying to increase. Old Gold sales or to emphasize the superiority of any one of the 7 cigarettes tested, when. it published its recent, report of cigarette tests. On two counts, however -in throatirritating tars and resins and in nicotine independent, TREASURE OLD MOM ALL brands fo to content -the smoke of Old Gold was ported lowest! These tests impressed many readers.

Both before and since the publica-, tion of this article, many thousands of smokers have turned to Old Gold. We urge you to try Old Golds, too. Get a pack enjoy this famous cigarette today! P. Lorillard Company- Established 1760 FROM COAST TO COAST- THE SWING IS TO OLD GOLD! 2 'b, 3 1) THE.

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