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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 12

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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12 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1911 What 7)n Thpvtihnn? ..1 SIY-IMV SERIAL, Army Explains Many By Margaretta Bruzktr Part III: Peter Haven Learns a Little About Dana's Abductor and Follows a Lead to Disaster r-pHE semiannual luncheon of the vv car there often. He was a big shot gambler who owned a place up the river which had been raided several months ago. "The name of the place?" asked Peter. 'Valley Stables." At the hotel Peter inquired about Valley Stables. THE CLERK said: "Swell joint up the river but it's closed now a man named Meyer owned it but I haven't heard of him lately.

It's 10 miles up the river close to the shore. It used to be a fine old residence before Meyer bought it." There was some difficulty about renting a car which delayed him and it was afternoon before Peter started off. He was too sensitive about past failures to divulge his plan to anyone and felt quite capable of making this attempt alone. Besides, this might prove a wild goose chase. It started to rain as Peter turned onto the river road.

The sky was sullen and the hills which arose to the left were blanketed with mist. The buildings which clung to them had all the appearances of old feudal dwellings. As Peter drove on the mist thickened and blurred his vision. He drove many miles and then turned off onto a cross road which led toward the river. More than once he cursed the impulse which brought him out on this deserted back road.

Finally a sign loomed up. Valley Stables. There were stone columns heavy locked iron gates and a brick wall which rose high and menacing through the mist. Peter climbed out to reconnoiter. The gates were securely locked and barbed wire covered the wall.

The place was lonesome and sinister as viewed through the gates a sprawling house on a flat stretch of ground bordering the river. gates close. A man jumped into the car and it went away. PETER looked through the gates and could see a faint glow which immediately disappeared. Someone who left the car had gone into the house.

A door had opened and closed. He followed the wall which made a sudden curve down toward the river. He fell onto a bog and waded up to his shoetops in soft slime but reached the end of the wall. He clambered back to springy turf and moved swiftly back toward Valley stables. The place looked as impregnable as a fortress; the windows were high and shuttered.

He circled the building. There was no sign of life in it. He had luck when he circled the second time; he stumbled and fell flat on an old-fashioned outside basement door. There was a padlock but the nails which held it could be loosened. He lifted one door carefully and stepped down the stairs below and let the door down over his head.

He almost suffocated with dampness and stale air as he felt his way cautiously to the foot of the steps and found with his pencil flashlight a door which led directly into the basement. This door would be obstinate and he saw that it had a spring lock. If he had something flexible he searched his pockets and drew out a thin steel nail tile and inserted it between door and casing. He felt the lock slide back and the door swing open. The basement room was dark and empty; with his flashlight he saw hot-air ducts leading across the low ceiling in all directions and through them he caught the sound of voices, too faint to distinguish words.

Ahead was a stairway which led upward. With his hand on his gun, Feter mounted the steps. Now there was no sound but his own breathing, then he heard a scurry of rats in the basement beneath him. And then a silence, ominous and thick, as his finger touched the door at the head of the stairs. Then the door burst open and the glare of a flashlight blinded him as a jeering voice with a guttural accent said: "Come in, Mr.

Peter Haven, we've been waiting for you." (CoryrlKht, '44. Chicago rally Ntws, Inc.) (Continued Tomorrow.) PETt.R paid the proprietress of the hamburger stand for thr lunch. He couid see she was terrified and curious. "Just another interrupted elopement," he said and wondered if she were stupid enough to believe him. He missed the-Ous while he was in the telephone booth telling the state police to check the number of the car picked up on the highway for speeding.

He left a call for a Cincinnati hotel. It wasn't long before he picked up a ride with a truck driver, who came into the lunchroom for cigarettes, and reached the city at 4 o'clock in the morning. He got a room and went to bed and was awakened by the ringing of the phone. The car had been located and was now in a down town garage. He could examine it there if he liked.

His search netted nothing. The attendant who took him up the ramp to look at it watched him curiously. He couldn't prove that the girl went unwillingly with the two men. It was up to him to prove that she did that she had some connection with them; some reason for the statement she made that they planned to kill her. He was at a dead end.

He went back to the hotel and called Washington and found that the two men might be two who were under suspicion. He must find them and the girl, Dana who was closely associated with them. They had visited her in the small town where she lived. It was up to him to prove what part she played in their game which was known to be helping Nazi prisoners to escape. The FBI needed actual proof this girl could give it could he get it? Peter swore he would.

It stung his pride to fail but deep in his heart he knew that he was more worried at the moment about Dana Hall's fate than about the capture of her confederates. He had gleaned one bit of Information at the garage. The man, named Meyer, who owned the black car was known and had parked the WITH RED CROSS IN ENGLAND taker did volunteer work with the Cincinnati Junior League and the New York Defense Recreation Committee. She attended the College Preparatory School and is a graduate of Howe-Marot School of Thompson, Conn. TWO WINNERS NAMED In Oratorical Contest For Girls Of Catholic High Schools.

Miss Ruth Willke, Hamilton Avenue, and Miss Nancy Brock-man, 3574 Outlook Avenue, Hyde Park, were winners over six other girl contestants yesterday in an Ma. GEORGE W. CREELMAN, one of the founders of Kee-waydin Camp, Temagaml, Ontario, Canada, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frederic S.

Shaffer at their residence at 14 Garden Place. He Is being greeted by many Cincinnati friends. Tonight at 7:15 o'clock boys Interested In Keewaydin will gather with their parents at the Shaffer residence. Mr. Creelman will show movies of canoe trips, will answer questions and will tell of his experiences over the last 40 years in the Canadian North Woods.

Keewaydin is different from most camps in that only a small part of the summer is spent in camp proper. The entire camping body divides in groups and goes off on canoe trips, striking out across country, carrying their supplies with them and paddling and portaging along trails through almost Virgin territory. Trips are not as strenuous for the younger boys as for the older, and the healthy atmosphere soon conditions the individual so he takes the work in his stride. For older campers the physical development and self-reliance acquired has proved to be ideal preinduction training. More than 500 Keewaydinites were I cfficers in World War I.

The record is ever, more impressive in World War IX. Mr. Creelman will spend several days in Cincinnati before returning to his residence at Lakeville, Conn. HOME OX LEAVE. Lieutenant William Kelly was welcomed in town over the week end for a visit with Dr.

and Mrs. Victor Ray. Lieutenant Kelly returned to Cincinnati from Fort Sill, where he received his commission at the Officers Candidate School. BARBIE RANDOLPH BELL. The name Barrie Randolph Bell has been selected by Mr.

and Mrs. Harry E. Bell (Caroline Matthews) for their daughter born Saturday at Christ Hospital. WELCOME VISITOR. Mrs.

Charlotte R. Lackman of New York City will be welcomed to Cincinnati in early April when he visits her son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Kermain W. Lack-man.

Mrs. Laokman is now in Cleveland, where she is visiting her eister, Mrs. John C. Chapin. MASS VBOXFl ELD WEDDING.

The marriage of Miss Ruth Bon- lield, daughter of Mrs. Helen Bon- field, to Petty Office Second Class! Donald A. Massa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arcnur R.

Massa, will be sol- emnized at 8:30 o'clock this morn- ing at Our Lady of Grace Church in Pries Hill. Rev. Frederick Bien will officiate. fThe maid of honor will be the bridegroom's sister, Miss Patricia Maryland Massa. Mr.

Bernard A. Kieporte will be best man. The wfldding breakfast will take place at the Western Hills Country Club following the nuptial mass. Mr. Massa and his bride will reside at Charleston, R.

where he Is stationed wit a a night fighter squadron. I Women At War Committee will A be held on Tuesday, May 23, in the Hall of Mirrors at the Hotel Netherland Plaza. HONORING COMTOSERS. Plans have been completed for the tea which the Woman's Committee of the Glee Club of the University of Cincinnati is giving from 3 to 5 o'clock on Thursday at the Hotel Netherland Plaza. Guests of honor will be Robert Childe, Jacques Wolfe, Geoffrey O'Hara, Sherwood Kains and Dr.

Merrick F. McCarthy. Hostesses will be Mrs. Ellsworth Ireland, chairman; Mrs. Robert S.

Alter, Mrs. LeRoy Ballinger, Mrs. Benedict N. Smith, Mrs. Albert P.

Strietmann, Mrs. Rudolph Mrs. Dwight Hinckley, Mrs. Benjamin C. Van Wye, Mrs.

O. Slack Barrett, Miss Norma Elizabeth Geier, Mrs. Carlos Schott and Mrs. Justin Rollman. Messrs.

Childe, Wrolfe and O'Hara will be the guests on Thursday of Dr. Merrick Fifield McCarthy, who brought these composers to Cincinnati to accompany the Glee Club at its appearance tomorrow evening at the banquet, one of the highlights of the convention of Music Teachers' National Association and National Association of Music Schools being held in Cincin- nati this week. Mr. Kains, director of the Glee Club, has included on his programs some of the songs of Dr. McCarthy, the musical scores for which were written by these composers.

Mr. Wolfe, who set to music Dr. McCarthy's widely known "British Children's Prayer," is the composer of "De Glory Road'' and numerous other songs based upon Negro spirituals. He is a Rumanian by birth, but came to this country as a small boy and was educated in New York public schools. He served as a bandsman in World War I and played the clarinet in the Coast Artillery Corps Band at Frtrt "Hamilton in whirh Pprrv laved oboe and saxo.

phone. He is also composer of "Shortnin' Bread, "Gwine to Hebbin," "Hallelujah Rhythm," "Betsy's Boy," "The Hand Organ Man," "The Ballad of John Brown," "Fighting Man," "The Prairie's Calling Me Home" and many others. He collaborated with Dr. McCarthy in writing of the thrilling "Star of Courage," recently introduced. Mr.

O'Hara, a Canadian by birth, became a naturalized United States citizen when he was 22 years old. He is a writer of songs and operettas, among his best known songs being "Your Eyes Have Told Me So," "Tennessee" and the World War I favorite. "K-k-katy." One of the most popu lar of his works is "Give a Man a Horse He Can Ride." Mr. O'Hara is a lecturer on music and an authority on the music of the Navajos. Mr.

Childe for the last eight years has been a member of the NBC staff in Chicago, where he is orchestral and chorus director. He is a native Cincmnaran and a graduate of Wyoming High School. He received his early musical training at the Conservatory of Music. He holds a degree from that institution and received his AB degree at Harvard. His main interest is in symphonic composi- oratorial competition at Our Lady! Ga- where he was pastor of of Angels High School, St First Christian Church.

Miss Willke is a student at Ourj Er. stauffer was pastor of Nor-Lady of Angels, Miss Brockman at c-iristian churcn from 19:2 Ursuline Academy. was the first of a series of to 1922 and of Street Chr.s-three local elimination ccntests for tian Church, Washington, from Catholic high school students under, 1922 to 1925 before going to At-auspices of the Catholic Students' I janta Miss Janet H. Whittaker, daugh-; ter of Mr. and Mrs.

Hugh Whittaker, has arrived in England to 3erve staff assistant with the American Red Cross. Before her Red Cross appointment, Miss Whit Nurses' Aides Additional trainees are needed to complete registrations in two Red Cross Nurses' Aide classes now being organized. An afternoon class, scheduled to begin on March 27, will meet each week on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 1 to 4 o'clock. A morning class will have its initial meeting on April 3, and class sessions will be conducted each week on Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 9:30 to 12:30 o'clock. These classes will be instructed at the Red Cross Teaching Center, Wellington Tlace, Mount Auburn, and In local hospitals.

Additional information can be obtained and registrations will be taken at Red Cross Nurses' Aide Service, University 2150. tions, and he has written two symphonies. FROM DWIGHT SCHOOL. Miss Sally Ernst will be welcomed home Sunday for a week's vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

William Ernst. Miss Ernst is studying at the Dwight School at Englewood, N. J. SPECIAL GREEK SERVICES. Holy Trinity Church, 2108 Vine Street, will conduct special serv ices at 11:30 o'clock Sunday to celebrate the 123rd anniversary of the declaration of Greek independ' ence from the Turks.

St. Nicholas Church, 3212 Reading Road, will hold separate services at the same hour. IN WOMEN'S CLUBS POSTMASTERS' PAY VOTED. Washington, March 21 (AP) House passage sent to the White House today legislation putting fourth-class postmasters on nn annual salary instead of basing their income on the volume of business transacted. The legislation also provides allowances for office rent, fuel, lights and equipment.

The salary scale ranges from $72 for offices having receipts of less than $50 a year to $1,100 for those with receipts exceeding $1,100 but less than $1,500 a year. 4. Of Air Corps Terms London March 21 (AP) For the benefit of the man in the back row who reads about "groups" of United States Army Air Force oomDers flying sorties or "mis sions" and wonders what they mean, here is a glossary of opera tional terms provided by the Euro pean theater of operations of the Army: Flight Three or more aircraft. Squadron Two or more flights. Group Three or more squad rons.

Wing Three or more groups. Division Composition unlim ited, depending on the number of wings available to be assigned to it. Air Force Also unlimited. Mission Ordered operation against the enemy such as dropping bombs, strafing- ground troops and ships, dropping parachute troops, flying diversions (missions intended to draw the enemy away from the main objective), taking photographs, etc. Sortie Accomplished bv a slnele 'air craft when on an ordered op eration it enters an area where the enemy's defense usually is active, or on a mission in the course of which the plane is subject to enemy attack.

If a reconnaissance plane flies over enemy-held territory it accomplishes a sortie. A thousand sorties could mean one operation by 1,000 planes, two operations by 500 planes each or one plane making 1,000 trips. MINISTER Dies In Atlanta Dr. C. R.

Stauffer Formerly Was Pastor Of Church In Norwood. Dr. C. R. Stauffer, former Cin-cinnatian, died yesterday in At- He is survived by his widow; a daughter, Mrs.

Dorothy Holland. Camp Crowder, two sons, Rev. Clarence Stauffer, Fort Lauderdale, and RkV. Paul S. Stauffer, Frankfort, his parents, Mr.

and Mrs. W. C. Stauffer, and a sister, Mrs. Clint Rhodes, Dixon, Illinois.

Services and burial will be in Atlanta tomorrow. MRS. MARGARET BUVINGER. Short Illness Is Fatal To Member Qf symphony Committee. Mrs.

Margaret Allgaier Buvinger, 2S11 Work Road, Westwood, died fit rhrist Hosmtal vesterdav after a short illness. A graduate of the University of Cincinnati Teachers College, Mrs. Buvinger was a member of the Symphony Committee, the West-wood Women's Club, Daughters oi the American Revolution and the Needlework Guild. She is survive! by her husband, Wilson J. Buvini-'er, superintendent of the Buckeye Foundry Company; a daughter, Miss Helen A.

Buvinger; a son, Private First Class Wilson Buvinger, senior medical student at the University of Cincinnati, and two sisters, Helen and Jennie Allgaier. Services will be conducted at 2 o'clock tomorrow at Westwood Methodist Church, with burial in Spring Grove. PHILIP FITZPATRICK. Rites To Be Held Tomorrow For Eetired Streetcar Canductor. Services will be held for Phillip Fitzpatrlck, 1916 Highland Averuie, retired streetcar conductor, at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning at St.

Xavier Church. Burial will be in St. Mary Cemetery, Hamilton. Mr. Fitzpatrick, who was 83 years old, died Monday after a short illness.

He was employed by the Cincinnati Street Railway Company for 40 years before his retirement 13 years ago. Mr. Fitzpatrick is survived by his widow, Mrs. Julia Geygan Fitzpatrick, and a daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Booth, Dayton, Ohio.

Associated Press Wireprwto. "ONE-MAN REGIMENT." Lieutenant Rcbert W. Curry, 26 years old, White Sulphur Springs, W. the 37th Division's "One-Man held a vitally important pillbox on Bougainville single handed against violent Jap attacks for six hours, killing 50 Jjps, meanwhile telephoning information and ordering artillery fire directly on his position. He later led a tank-supported infantry assault which destroyed a Jap force, taking over command on a dare.

1 rrm0 SUPERFLUOUS HAIR MOLES and WARTS Permanently Kcmuvrd by r.ltr(elt MISS M(M)Rt. 107 Kaca St. Bids. Room 3iil PA 1143 (Uoen.trd Stale Mrdlrai Hoard) Drink Talawanda Always. Bacteria-Free! TaUwanria'i eryUI rlrr-nrm uid lively refreshment aprlnx from It nat-nral purity and mlnrral rnntrnt.

It tett the ume today aa It did 40 year aKft vi hen IM mperlnr qnall-tlr wtin lite (irnnd Trie Award al the SI. Iul Kxtwwltltin. Ynnr family nlll appreciate Talnwanda. Only fur 12 hair-fallna refrUeralor bottle. delivered.

I all MA In Tht water Naturt intended you to drmfc Suddenly he heard a car ap-l proachlng fast from behind him. Peter jumped into his own car and backed onto the road, ran on a little distance and drew off into a tangle of shrubbery'. He heard the car stop and the sound of the gates opening. Peter stole back close to the wall, trusting to the fog to hide his movements. He was almost upon the car when he saw it; just In time to hear the recollection for members of the IBarat Association at the Convent the Sacred Heatt, Clifton, on Sunday.

According to Miss Helen J. Bacchle, President, who is In jcharge of reservations, the convent bus will be at Clifton and Ludlow Avenues at 1:30 o'clock to enable members to arrive in time for the first conference at 2 o'clock. Exercises will close at 8 o'clock. Training School Auxiliary. The Mount St.

Mary Training School Auxiliary will meet for luncheon at 12:30 o'clock tomorrow in the school auditorium. Mothers' Training Group. Miss Hazle T. Cairns will give two talks under auspices of the 'Mothers' Training Center Association today. At 10 o'clock this morning she will address a group at IKilgour School on "Imagination and Its Relation to Truth Telling," and at o'clock at the Emanuel Day Nursery she will speak on "The Emotional Development of Adolescents." Street Railway Auxiliary.

The annual dinner of. the Woman's Auxiliary of the Electric Street Railway and Motor Coach Employees will be held at 6 clock tomorrow night at Quebec Gardens on Quebec Road. Mrs. Albert Woesner is in charge of reserva tions. may Itaynn with ruffle, trim, vvnim, aqna and rose.

Long sleeves. Sites 311 to 44. 8 I 3rv 'k' -V( I pj N.r Rayon crep with sleeves, tucked front. hit. I IX II M) nen add new Mission Crusade.

Boy contestants will display their talentj today at Purcell High School, with the third elimination contest scheduled for tomorrow at Seton High School. The six finalists are to compete April 2 at the Hotel Netherland Plaza. The prizes are War Bonds and scholarships. CITY IN BRIEF Child Matches Fire Firemen under Marshal William Beckner put out a blaze yesterday afternoon at the home of Melvin Dorst WSj Mount Hope Road, Price HilL Damage to furnishing was estl- mated at $25. Marshal Beckneri said that the lire was startea oy Dorst's 4-year-old daughter, who was playing with matches.

Gets Year On 50th Arrest Clarence Henderson, 48 years old, homeless, was sentenced to one year in the Workhouse by Judge George E. Tebbs yesterday when he was convicted of being an habitual offender. He had been given 30 days Monday for street begging. Detectives testified that Henderson's record shows he has been arrested 50 times. One of his specialties, they said, is selling fake diamond rings.

Burglar's Loot Is $67.50 William Rosenecker, 51 East Clifton Avenue, reported to police that his home was entered yesterday through an unlocked window. Arti cles valued at $56 and $11.50 in coins were stolen. BLOOD DONORS LISTED 12 And 13 Donations Eed Cross "Bank." To Additional lists of Greater Cin- cinnatians who have donated blood the Red Cross 12 and 13 times iwere announced yesterday at the local Blood Donor Service. Twelve-time donors are: Paul L. May, 2732 Ashland Avenuf, Cov- lnEton.

Vincent Feldman. 3203 Ob servatory Road; Mrs. Florence Elliott, 1178 Hills Drive; Mr. Lillian urati, 2533 Trevor Place: Albert Gudberlft. 3920 Llewellyn Street; Edgar K.

Harden, 6636 Afton Avenue; Charles risner, us lower Avenue; Willis Vance, 3442 Stettlnlm Ave-nue; William J. Fritsch. 2810 Warsaw Ave rut: Nelson Maham. 3854 Marburc Ave nue; Miss Carrie Glover, 923 Philadelphia Street, Covington, Jack Eken, 6501 Coleridee Avenue: Raymond Heiit. 810 West Seventh Street, Covington, Ky.

Miss Elsa Chambers, 3342 Wabash Avenue; mis Matilda Boettcher. 1127 Queen City Avenue. Chris Klein. 3039 Feltz Avenue; Sara Kruke, 3545 Lee Place; Mr. Bernadatte Allen, 19 East Ninth Street; Philip Walter Eicher, 925 Grand Street; Juliua Fey, 2140 Baltimore Avenue.

Carl Mueller, 2966 Massachusetts Avenue: Walttr Spangler. 3919 Grove Avenue, Norwood; Mrs. Ethel Hill, 1945 Catalina Avenue; Albert Zienerlnk, 14( sycamore Street: Charles Roll, 6345 Heitzler Avenue; John Pauly. 405 Patton Street. Covington, Mrs.

Ella Loheide, 410 West Liberty Street; Gerrard Kuhn. 6009 Erie Avenue; Edward M. Schoeme. 140 Mulberry Street; William J. Ruff, 3717 Berkley Circle; Nick Nimersheim, 7000 Plainfleld Pike; C.

8. MacKenzie. 129 Parkway Avenue; I Mrs. jMizaoein neiBt'ter, owot viwiam Mtreet; irwin Hcnuue, io otniruin Street: Andrew Heisler, 1535 Pullan Avenue: John W. Addison, 7466 Dawson Road, Madeira, Ohio: Raymond Richards, Box 202.

Station Alfred Dressman, 111 Beechwood Road, Fort Mitchell. Ky. Mrs. Rose Cromley, R. F.

D. 10, Box 259-C; Frank Schmalz, 208 Calhoun Street; Wil liam Caldwell, 2863 Massachusetts Avenue; Mrs. Ethel F.ller. 6214 Stella Avenue; J. W.

Kimmerlle, 3533 Woodburn Avenue; Miss Catherine Madden, 2012 Pearl Street, Covin cton. Kv Mrs. Virginia Knecht, 3419 Ossage Avenue. Thirteen-time donors: William Lohrum. 1015 Vine Street; Jo seph Sepate, 1624 Hewitt Aver.un; Herman RaooaDort.

711 mngeway Avenue: mrs. Ann Pennington, Compton Road; Harold Youmans, 2214 Highland Avenue: Miss Carrie Rauckliorst, 960 Philadelphia Street. Covington, Ky. Vincent Franeia, 1606 Pleasant 8trt; Everett Eckert. 1384 South Jefferson Avenue; Bernard Schuler, 30 Chalmer Lane, C-reenhllls; John Corcoran.

6M East Pearl Street: George Flynn, 1036 Woodlawn Avenue; Mrs. jSliisibith Roopcr, 4438 Brazee Street; Bryce Schurman, 2913 Lookout Circle: William Pagano, 3671 Hillside Avenue; Mrs. Charlotta Mecliler, 142 Calhoun Street; Joseph Vaient III, 2823 Euclid Avenue; George Stcrman, '1712 Fioral Avenue. Norwood; M. J.

Golan, 324' East Fourth Street: Mrs. Iris Bur- well, 880 Avenue. Reading Is To Have Vote Upon $50,000 Tax Levy Citizens of Reading will be asked to pass a $50,000 special tax levy early in June for the repair of Co lumbia and Jefferson Avenuesand several small streets, it was an nounced at a meeting of the City Council last night. Mercellus Juenke, City Clerk, said the streets were in need of repair because of heavy traffic from war plants. WOMEN OF HYDE PARK and Clifton Methodist Churches will be hostesses for a luncheon of the Women's Auxiliary of Goodwill Industries tomorrow at the Goodwill Sattlement House.

The day's activities will open at 10 o'clock with the season's final sewing session. Members of the Board of Trustees of the Goodwill Industries, whose annual meeting will be held tomorrow, will be luncheon guests. Mrs. Thomas Hayhoe, President of the Auxiliary. will announce committees for a spring tea to be held next month.

Club Of Good Cheer. Miss Grace Chapman, President of the Club of Good Cheer of the Church of the New Jerusalem, Walnut Hills, has appointed Mrs. John Dodd general chairman of a rummage sale to be held tomorrow in the basement of the parish house at the corner of Oak and Winslow Streets. The sale will open at 9:15 o'clock. Hyde Park Literary Club.

Professor C. B. Hoffman of the University of Cincinnati faculty will sho.v his colored movies of Alaska at a guest-day luncheon of the Hyde Park Literary Club tomorrow a the Hotel Netherland Plaza, Terrace Park Garden Club. Arrangements of forced blooming shrubs will be displayed by members of the Terrace Park Garden Club at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the Community House. Hostesses will be Mesdames Cecil Duell, J.

P. Osborne and Harry i Miller. Presbyterian Missionary Society. Rev. and Mrs.

Benjamin Adams, former missionaries to Korea, w-ill appear in Korean costumes when they address members of the Missionary Society of North Presbyterian Church at 8 o'clock Friday night. The program is open to all North Church families and their friends. Barat Association, Rev. Leonard J. Vonder Brink, pastor of St.

Malachy Church, Mor row, Ohio, and St. John Church, Foster, Ohio, will conduct a day of Mexico Is Planning To Make Penicillin For Public Interest Mexico City, March 21 (UP) A little-known phase of the good- neighbor policy was revealed here today when President Manuel Avila Camacho decreed that manu facture and dissemination of the "wonder drug." penicillin, is "of public interest and for the general health of the republic." Simultaneously, the American Embassy revealed that a special three-man Penicillin Committee of the Embassy has, since last December, obtained sufficient units of penicillin from the United States to treat "about a dozen and a half cases" in Mexico. Other American republics have received limited amounts of the drug through similar channels, an Embassy official said. The Embassy Committee also has been instrumental in clearing high- priority materials used in the pro duction of penicillin, and it Is known that at least one American company here will begin manufac turing the drug in sufficient quantity by April 1 to treat about 50 patients a day. The President's decree today announced formation of a three-man Mexican National Penicillin Com mittee to administer all phases of the drug's manufacture and dls tribution and ordered anyone possessing penicillin here to make themselves known to the committee.

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