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The Express from Lock Haven, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Publication:
The Expressi
Location:
Lock Haven, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MALUKU Mihioi MANY MILES BTOBAOE BATTERIES AB nutdlmn bttterr. Will flt Ford nUimoMh, Bolck, rlimontb. Chevrolet Pontlw, Xieh. Vallj- Guaranteed. AB Frlce, alubed T.

Bedrock. BICYCLE SADDLE BAGS Leatherette Finish Complete BREAD KNIFE AND CUTTING BOARD SET BICYCLES Mazda Scaled Replacement Itam Units FOR MOST CXRS OK SALE 85c CAMP FIRE GRILLS Bike Parts AXLE CONES BEARINGS Each Pirt Otlter Futi At Honey Saving Prlcet. H400. H402, BATTERY CARRfER HANDLES nflw to prevent nr ott 'B-83. METAL SIGNS Durable litborrapfa flnUb.

Choice of for Sutft For Beat. Imt, JEoomc, For N. AUTO STORK I OUR STORE HOURS: A. M. to 6 8 A.

M. to 9 P. M. SATURDAY: A. M.

to 10 P. M. I 134 Eait Main Lock Haven, Pa. BUY U. S.

WAR BONDS AND STAMPS May Pay Colleges j. Education Cost i WASHINGTON, nation's colleges and universities: may be paid by the government the actual cost instructing vet- I erans rather than the lower but customary tuition fee. I This prospect was furthered by i new developments in the veterans' education field. The Veterans' Administration i has appointed a four-man advis- ory committee of and has announced it will hold in abeyance the setting of any gen- eral policy on paying tuition until. after the committee makes recommendations.

And Rep. Rankin (D-Miss) has sent to the Veterans' Administration the text of a bill he has introduced requiring paj'ment of "actual cost" (up to S500 a year). Rankin says this was the intent of Congress in the I. Bill of a that his measure is designed to insure that interpretation. Lock Haven Express, Thursday, August 31, 1944 Rom where I sit Joe Marsh Recipe for a Perfect Marriage Dee and Jane Cuppers celebrated their Golden "Wedding Anniversary last Saturday.

Having so many friends, it seemed like half the town stopped in that evening to pay their respects. Little Ida. Moffat brought a home-made poem to read, called Lore Endnring. Bert Childcrs fiddled "Silver Threads Among the Gold." Will Dudley made a speech and proposed a toast And as I watched that toast- Dee with his glass of beer. Jane with her thought to myself: There's a recipe for happy marriage.

Two folks with different tastes-no doubt an honest fault or two-who through the years have learned: to live in tolerance and understanding. From where I sit. Dee and Jane arc a mighty good to ycnng married people ot today-an example ot how moderation, tolerance and understanding can build lasting happiness and soUd homee. No. 92 of a Serial Cop)riglit, 19i4, Bmanf liuhutry The first U.

S. manufactured -locomotive to I to be lowered by crane to rails on the dock at reach France in the present war swings off a ship I Cherbourg. (-AP Wirephoto from Signal Corps) Reborn Poland Lublin Center Of New Life For Poles Of All Races And Creeds LUBLIN, A Poland unbroken in spirit alter five years as a Nazi slaughterhouse gropes courageously today for a new life of freedom and peace. In Lublin, 35 miles behind the Red Army front and 700 miles from Moscow, a provisional government of Poles exercises wide authority without the appearance of foreign interference. Catholocism continues as the stale religion and priests teach Jn the public schools.

Church lands and property are untounched. A peasant market thrives in an open square where the Germans had razed to the ground a section of Lublin's medieval ghetto, and' the only control on prices there is the law of supply and demand. Poles Drill For Army Thousands of young Poles, most of them in civilian clothes for uniforms are scarce, drill in the cobblestoned streets under grizzled veterans of guerrilla for a Polish afiny that is expected sooruto be a half million men and iitomen. Women carry in all branches of the national defense except actual A few score Jews, all that are left of the prewar ghetto population of 40,000, never can efface the memory of the German terror but in this new PoIand-'-whose National Committee includes a prominent are no barriers of race or creed against. them.

Anti-aircraft guni bark on the i outskirts of Lublin and high flying German observation planes are a daily sight. The stench from the infamous Majdanek I Hull Says Allied Position Unchanged Secretary of State Hull said today that Germany now is evidently desirous of a negotiated peace, but that the. Allied position for unconditional surrender is too well known to require reiteration. Hull also declared that the American government has constantly in mind that Hitler' and some of his henchmen may try to escape from Germany" to neutral countries. The government, he said, is working on that- problem.

Hull recalled to his news conference that President Roosevelt appealed to the neutrals a year ago not to furnish refuge to any Nazi leader and that- the. British made similar overtures. prison, damp, it is estimated. 600,000 or more victims of Nazi sadism were put to death within v.iew. of Lublin's cathed- i "becomes nauseating reminder when the wind is-from' the east.

Dr. Emil Sommerstein, gray- bearded like an ancient patriarch and the'only Jewish member of the Committee of National Liber- tion, says: "There' were three and a half million Polish Jews before the war. Now, counting emigration to Russia, Palestine- and other countries, perhaps 300.000 still live. Some 60,000 young Jews were compelled to in German war industries at Lodz What has happened to them we don't know. Thousands Killed "We know the more than 300.000 Jews in Wai-saw were nearly all killed.

Of 107,000 Jews in Lwow about 2,000 survived Here a little more than 50 Lublin's 40,000 Jews are registered as alive. For 42 years a Zionist, I'm proud to say our neu government has promised in fac as well as law to make no distinction between Jews and non- Jews." Bishop Joszef Kruszynski Lublin emerged from his spartan- like quarters adjoining the bomb scarred cathedral. "We had 400 priests in the diocese before the war," he related "Sixty were executed by the Germans and 1 more than 150 were sent to the Dachau and Oranieh- burg concentration camps. AH of course, without formal charges merely because they were Polish Catholics." Soldier, Jap Prisoner, Thinks Parents Alive ALBUQUERQUE, N. Sgt.

E. Chavez of Albuquerque, held captive by the Japanese, mailed a card home from a prison camp in the Philippines. "I look forward to seeing Mother," he wrote. "Father, be sure to keep my a'uto in good order." Tile sergeant's father died foui weeks ago. His mother died last year.

Shoes for ALL the Family I COMFORTABLE, HUSKY for active young feet Junior Comfort ind foot health for growing children. Rubber OXFORDS Moccasin toe bals or itraight lip bluchers. Rubber heels. Comfortable! Sizes'! to 6. GIRLS' MOCCASIN OXFORDS Soft yet rugged glove leather with composition rubber heels.

Sizes STURDY LEATHER 2.49 U.S. Pit. Off. AT Smart Back-to-School Togs! First choice for -Fall Misses' Crew-Neck Classic Wool, ray- IB QO on, in fine gaunt 1 knit. Pastel 34-40.

Misses' Warm. Sweaters Classic or sloppy slip- Oft over. to match. Size 34-40. Jim All-wool cloth fronts, a plain and herringbone.

I 'Knitted back, sleeves. leys' Winter Warm Sweaters Wool Slipover. Jfe Oft Herringbone, plaid suede cloth fronts. Reg. V.

S. Pat. 08. i a ft Are Good Outdoor Sports POPLIN COSSACK AC KIT Weather, protection: slide fastener closing, storm- scaled pockets, adjustable cuff and side straps. BOl'S' ALL-WOOL CASUAL COATS and collar in solid color suede with the blues and browns in the sport weave front and back panel.

FABRIC AND LEATHER SPORT JACKCT' Sturdy fabric, cape leather raglan sleeve. Knitted i cuffs and bottom in multi-colors. Zipper. 6 to 18. BOYS' ALL CAPE LEATHER COSSACK JACKET Full rayon lining.

Two slanted slash pockets, one change pocket. Zipper front. Good Value! 6-18..

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About The Express Archive

Pages Available:
95,440
Years Available:
1931-1973