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The Gallup Independent from Gallup, New Mexico • Page 4

Location:
Gallup, New Mexico
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ncwsorww IN UNIFORM SKI. Frank Keith, formerly Uchtd to the sheriff's office IHTU will soon return to his station northern Ciilifurniu. He was cat' 1 Jit 1 re by the death of his father-in- law, the laic "Hank" Clawson. Hmmih. Mrs.

Keith will accompany him. Pi-ie I. Rivera, 17, of Gallup, was accepted by the U. S. Navy May at its main recruiting station in Santa Fe.

He volunteered throuuh the local navy recruiting liuri. Sworn in as apprentice seaman, lie was released to inactive duty for a ten-day period, at intend of which he will be 1 to the naval training station. Headquarters of the Army Seiv- ice Forces Training Center at Camp Barkeley, Texas, announced this week the promotion of Cpl. Herman W. Bear, 11th Med.

Tng. to. sergeant. He resides at Gallup. Wilh The Fifth Army.

Italy Private Escolastico C. son of Mr. and Mrs. Escolasticn C. of Gallup, has been pni- nifiled to corpora I.

He is a with an infantry unit of the Fifth Army in Italy. Charles Merli, of the destroyer Lansdowne which was sunk in the Mediterranean, relum- ed home last night on leave. He said thai salt water ay reed with him. hut not it was mixed with oil from a torpedoed ship. "WALT DISNEY COLOR CARTOON" "LATEST NEWS" OWL SHO' TONIGHT SUNDAY thru TUESDAY CHIEF Waste (Continued from page one) able to salvage enough more pnprr In make up another carload.

Lt, IJobcrt Zerwick. who attended the meeting yesterday, said thai thd Eighth Service A re a' command in Id bring Ihren trucks and ten urn into Gallup for the two day collection and to aid with the the car. The men will lit' )illrtcd at the slate armory during heir slay here. MR. HATCH URGED that every sidont cooperate in the salvage drive.

Persons having large amounts paper on hand, he said, may elephone 6IM to leave their names md addresses so that the trucks may ic Kent for their loads. Others will asked to put what they have salvaged on the on Thursday June 1. MI that the trucks, each with four Boy Scouts to load, pick it up without ENDS TONIGHT KAY KYSER in "AROUND THE WORLD" "GANGWAY FOR TOMORROW" NAVAJO SUNDAY MONDAY Last Day "TEXAS KID" "ROSIE THE RIVETEER" EL AMETRALLADORA" WE BRING A CIIAKMINti SPOT I'OII VOUK ItKl.AXATION. nurint; tin. in 'the west's must ilistinctivt.

1 C'olTi'i 1 Shop' the uvc- iiinif MH'iil in our Dining Kooni. COCKTAIL HOUR Our I'odiliiil UuiiiKi! is America's most Distinc- livt' spol. Special I'ocktiiil hour from to each iifti'i-noon. cviMiinir in Pioneer Kmiin it's tlu 1 smiirl place lo entertain your friends Orchestra cadi evening; Hiir in C'onnectiun. NOTICE Hollywood Inn will be closed for two weeks.

Out on vacation. Mr. and Mrs. S. C.

Leal WANTED Dish Washers and Bus Boy MANHATTAN CAFE ith fou be able delay. Corps of Boy Sc uts Wednesday and Thursday. the collodion, will make a house- to- liousc canvass of the city to ask the cooperation of (he people in saving their paper and putting mi! front. Because the paper is paid for by the contractor according to grades, Mr. Hatch asked thai the various types 1)0 tied securely in bundles before it is placed out Fur the collection.

The bundles should be lied with heavy cord to prevent their being broken apart in loading. Newspapers and magazines should be sorted and tied in separate bundles, and cartons should pressed flat and bundled. Lotise scrap may bo packed in cardboard cartons. "THE NATION TODAY is beating I he bushes for paper." Bernard Marling of the Washington office of the WPB. told the meeting.

"Our number one problem today i.s paper, and there is no need to tt-ll you that the reason is the invasion. Everything thai is being Chipped for Day must be wrapped in paper lo protect il against the weather. takes 81 Ions of materials for every man in the AEF each month. All of il is wrapped in paper. Thai is why the situatioi so critical.

1 Wilh Mr. Hartiug on the Gallup visit with C. O. Ciirncs. from the WPB regional office, Denver: John Bui luu and Frank Horn of the Al- huqucrque WPB office.

A War Salvage film wa.s shown on the needs for tcrap metal, and it was pointed out that a drive for this material was expoclod in the full. Attending the ting represent local organizations were: Mr. Hatch. War Programs Committee chairman: Charles Williams of the Slate Guard: M. L.

Womlaid nd Harry Dimbar nf tin- Chamber of Commerce; Homer Powers. (-'Hint; mji'iil: Guido Zeroa. VFW; H. B. Pattfii.

Hoy Scouls: Horace Hoard- 1111111. Indian Service: Jack Eu'hman. salvage eonuniltee. and Duldi Cnimer. dealer.

COMING EVENTS SiVrutllAY Women WcHKlmrn Cin-lr-. On 111. mi-civ Saltmby. Tillll licmr Mrs. Lmiis luKlriiuuv, OtW Smith Fifth.

MONDAY Kejiular romnuiniratioM I UwlRC, No. Z2. A. F. A.

M. Monday. p. m. Work in M.

M. THE GALLUP INDEPENDENT Eisenhower At Headquarters Owight O. Eisenhower, supreme commander of Allied invasion forces, sits at his desk at Allied expeditionary lldqts. in England. He wearing combat uniform.

Social, Club and Church News II. OP L. F. E. WOMEN HOLD BANQUET The Ladies Society of the B.

of L. F. and E. held an all day meeting Friday al the I. O.

O. F. hall, beginning at 10 a. m. Mrs.

Juanita Moore of Tucson, Ihe district was present lo instruct nd grade the lodge work. A banquet was held at noon at Hotel el Rancho, when Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Nell Carlson, the local president, were presented with beautiful corsages. The lodge resumed work at the 1.

O. O. F. hail for the afternoon. Pictures were lakcn of Ihe drill learn, new members and officers for the B.

of L. F. and E. magazine. Mrs.

Frish of 3an Antonio, was a visiting The following eight new were initiated: Mcsdames Dorothy Spalding, Ruby Lance, Rose Farley, Ruth Roush. Pauline Alice Workman, Iiorease Matte, and Nellie Yurcic. ST. HILDA GUILD MEETS The St. Hilda Guild mot at the home of Mrs.

Charles Williams Thursday afternoon with Mrs. William Alexander as co-hostess. The husbands of the 1 members were guests, and the Rev. Robert' Crowder, Mo. M.

McCollum conducted an open forum. Those attending the meeting Rev. and Mrs. McCollum. Mr.

and Mrs. Charles Williams, Mr. and Mrs. William Alexander, Mr. and Mrs.

John Perry, Mrs. Hank Tav- encr, and Mrs. Cecil Pickett. (IIS BOYS ARE ENTERTAINED AT PARTY Mrs. Pele Ortman entertained with a dinner Friday night the Cathedral High graduates who are sucjn to enter the service.

Included in tliis group were: Joseph Kren, I 'atrick Reed Ferrari, Eugene Leone and Pete Grenko. Other guests were; Joe Trueba, Edward DePauli, and H. C. Meddles of Winslow. MAltRIAGE ANNOUNCED Mr.

and Mrs. F. L. McKim announce the marriage of their daughter. Betty Staff Sergeant Arthur E.

Brake in Chicago on May 9. The Rev. Alfred Painter of the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel officiated at the ceremony. Both the bride and bridegroom are graduates of Ihe University of Chicago. Mrs.

Brake is continuing her work at the Billings hospital in Chicago. Staff Sergeant Brake is located at Camp WLB (Continued irem patfe dissented John P. McWUUanu and Frederick S. Filet. concurred, however, in the portion calling for the $40 retroactive ment The two industry members who joined the labor and public groups were George Mead and Walter T.

Margetts. THE MtfNClTAL change in the contract from the old agreement which expired more than a year ago in the establishment of a portal-to-portal day of nine hours. That is a day measured from the time the miner enters the mine entrance until the time he leaves it. Under the old contract, only the time spent in work at the actual coal face was measured and the day was seven hours. In the nine hour day, the underground mine worker has 15 minutes lunch for which he is not paid.

He is "assumed" to spend 45 minutes travelling underground to and from his place of work. That leaves 8 hours for hour a day more than under the old contract. The majority opinion, written by Chairman William H. Davis, acknowledged that an investigation by a presidential committee showed the travel time to be approximately 57 minutes a day, or about 12 minutes more than the "assumed 1 figure. That meant the average miner spent 12 minutes a day in travel for which he received pay at production rates.

THE WAGE SCALE under the old contract was $7 for the seven hour day. Under the new one, it is $8.50 with the calculated extra hour of production paid for at a time and one-half rate. Davis' opinion said that while the 12-minute loss in productive time is at the expense of the operators, they will benefit in direct production to the amount they will be able to reduce the travel time in the future to the assumed average of 45 minutes or below that level. "Under these circumstancecs," he said, "the WLB is convinced that within the period of time covered by this contract travel time can and will be reduced in the bituminous coal mines, to the mutual benefit of the operators and the mine workers and to the eventual benefit of coal consumers." Referring to the southern operators' legal attack upon portal-to- portal pay and their challenge of the board's authority even to permit any operators to pay it, Davis said the southern employers "re- ism their rights to seek pertinent administrative and court rulings. We cannot force upon them a set' tlement of their law suit which we have no power to decide." Personal Mention METROPOLITAN MOVIES fitinf hfcxxf anil doiiif .1 lo MT a legs in n)limt at N.

Y. World-Tel egrain Mrs. Tom Elkins of Grants was a Gallup visitor Friday. Richard J. Boardman recently arrived here from Phoenix for an extended visit with his brothers, Bill, Harry and Ernest and other members of the family at Casa Linda court.

Mr, Boardman is a composer and teacher of music and has a sludio in Phoenix. He has also written two or three volumes of verse which have been favorably reviewed. Symphony is his particular form of composition. W. B.

Johnson returned Friday from a two weeks' business trip in the state. Mrs. WeatherUl relumed Thursday from Houck where she had been visiting her son for several days, Mrs. John Ruiz was called to Pecos this week by the illness of her mother. Mrs.

Gruber has moved to the Gordon apartments. Miss Marianne Watson left Friday for Fort Bliss, where she will visit in the C. F. Vogel home for a few days on her way to Houston to take cadet nurses' training. Marriage licenses were issued on May 16 to Charles A.

Long and Dorothy Slevin, both of Missouri; on May 17 to Enzo J. Uliana of Oakland. California and Venice J. Ferrari of Gallup. Misses Louise Hernadez and Lola Montano will leave Monday for El Paso for a two weeks' vacation.

Mr. and Mrs. Sam Arnold of Coleman, Texas, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Dave Jackson.

Mrs. Arnold is the former Betty Jean Jackson, sister of the state policeman. Mr. Arnold is a civilian flight instructor at Coleman. Too Late To Classify FOR KENT Floor polisher and floor Sander.

Hart Hardware and Plumbing Co. FOR RENT Modern 2 room apt. Inquire 208 W. Aztec. LOST Small brown dog named Hat.

License No. 99. If found phone 502J. FOR SALE Portable chicken house, new style. Phone 648.

FOR RENT Modern furnished 3 room south side, couple only. Phone 648. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday Leader of the Fighting French i driving through Gel-man' in Italy is Gen. phonse Juln, pictured enjoying quick sandwich snack He was formerly Ury commander of the Algerian' 'district ol French North CARD OF THANKS We desire to express our sincere thanks to all friends who showed sympathy to us in our bereavement through Ihe loes ol our little daughter, Janet Lucille Lane. Mr.

and Mrs. Lewis Lane and family. The LatM Family. The Bcnac Family. NOZJS Paid (Continued from page one) ation could become desperate short of heavy reinforcements without delay, and there is little to warrant the thought that they can be spared from other fronts even if they could reach him in time to save Home.

Far in the German rear up the peninsula Allied air power has been constantly mauling Nazi essential communications for weeks. That is calculated to complicate seriously the task of extricating German armies if the retreat order has already gone out. There is evidence from neutral sources that Allied successes in Italy have already stirred anti-Nazi elements of the population into sabotage activity to add to German difficulties. The German armies in Russia paid heavily for over delay in high command orders for withdrawal from positions already doomed. That also was true in Tunisia and in Sicily and it could be repeated on the Italian boot There is more than a hint that Allied Italian headquarters expects a general German retreat to start at any moment, and a race up peninsula to ensue with skillful enemy rear guad actions balking complete annihilation of the foe.

From tip to tip the rocky curve of the Carpathian mountains north, of the Danube river is nearly 900 miles long. For Sale or Lease Restaurant with well established clientele for Spanish Dinners. Excellent drive-in location. Departing fur health reasons only. See Dorothy Ortiz, Gallup Drive In of Brick FOR SALE Home Grown Strawberry Rhubarb and Asparagus.

LIVE FRYERS Open All Day Sunday 800 WEST MALONEY THE OLD QUINN PLACE SEASON AFTER SEASON In hundreds of auditoriums in hundreds of ciiiei throughout the United States and Canada, hundreds of thousands are enjoying the world's greatest musical enterainment through the Community Concert Plan. This ad sponsored by THE STYLE SHOP First fllethodist Church "THE CIIUDCII THAT'S HOMK TO YOU" Third and Aztec Street 11EV. T. HOMER TKOTTEH. Minister TELKT1IONK 71S 10:40 A.

M. Organ Recital Pearl 10:55 A. M. SERMON SUBJECT "OUR FATHER WHO ART IN HEAVEN, THY KINGDOM COME".

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About The Gallup Independent Archive

Pages Available:
97,916
Years Available:
1930-1977