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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • Page 10

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Indiana, Pennsylvania
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10
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two INDIANA EVENING GAZETTE, SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1945, Germany to Be Stripped Of Heavy industry Report of fn The Seventh War Loan Drive Phone 1218 Offices 401 Sftvlnfg A Trtut AREAS' ttEI'ORTS OF SALES THROUGH JUNE 6, 1945 Areas Payroll "E's" FaJmers, Indinmi 4,800.00 First National, Indiana Indiana 94,743.75 Blairsville P. 0. SUPREME HEADQUARTERS AL LIED EXP. FORCE, Paris, June 9j wHl be stripped ot snvinKs Trust Indiana Various industries to destroy her Indiana future war potential, through one 1 1Mlana of the principal functions of the reparations program, Ambassador Edwin W. Pauley, President Truman's personal representative on the Allied Reparations NatioiiHl announced today.

Pauley said it was the view of the United States that any German industries of a war nature which could not be removed should be destroyed. "We do not want another war to take place," Pauley said, "and we are anxious to sec that type ot equipment taken out of Germany, even though we don't want it ourselves." Pauley heads the American dele. Quota $625,000 "E's" to Individ. $35,531.25 46,993.00 3.918.75 57,408.75 33,037.50 Others to Individ. Kentucky Afternoon I.

Franklin Wilson, Now Captain Sales: $276,498.00 "Others" Q. 225,000 9,350.25 71,346.75 12,768.75 Quota $200,000 Sales: 93,471.75 "Others" Q. 75,000 I Peoples, Clymcr 14,043.75 P. O. 21,802.50 3,918.75 300.00 2,925.00 Quota $100,000 Sales: 43,950.00 "Others" Q.

25,000 gatlon en route to the initial rcpar- F. M. Cherry Tree QUWAVSIA Wk4 liV VU 14HV1C11- A atlons conference to be held in Mos- rr rrco Pl under plans laid down at the I lhv 14,306.25 Yalta Conference. an Pauley indicated that the Amerl- Alvcrcla can delegation, which just completed a lengthy survey In the American-occupied zone of Germany, was going to Moscow with a dcfin- 13,275.00 2,231.25 1,781.25 318.75 937.50 LOUISVILLE, June Downs surrendered today the 8 lrit 'M Kentucky the richest in Its 18,270.00 history, and another war-time crowd 88,314,00 tnat ma reach 70,000. I Men and women, young and oldj rich and poor, began streaming! through the gates hours before the $234,471.00 nine-race program began, unmind- fill that another drenching deluge 13201760 ml sht splash down to ruin the hopes of a good track promised for the seventh race, the Derby event.

Post time is 5:15 m. Central Wai- Time. The names of three speeders from 1717" the cast, topped by F. W. Hooper's 10,990.00 Hoop and rated as the classiest of a sparkling field of 16 three- year-olds, were on the lips of almost everybody as the probable winner of the punishing miie and a quarter race.

Tho other two Easterners were C. V. Whitney's Jeep and Henry 2,500.00 Lunger's Alexis. Quota $75.000 Sales: 32.8SO.OO "Others" Q. 25,000 Homer City S.

Bank Homer City P. O. Graccton P. 0 ite program in mind, but virtually In the dark as to the desires of Russia and Britain, the only other powers to be reprcesnted at the initial meeting. He said there had been no exchange of views.

and 18 to 20 others of the Marion Center National 35-man delegation will leave Mon- Marlon Center day for Moscow, while the re- PH.mville P. O. maindcr, all technical representatives, will continue studying the possibilities of reparations in Germany. 5,756.25 25,601.00 6,112,50 Quota $100.000 Sales: 37,409.75 Conference Wind-up About 20th d. Kennedy Defends His V-E Day Story SAN June NEW YORK, I June The United Nations Conference ward Kennedy, tike Associated Press moved a long step nearer corhple- correspondent WHO sent the' story of tion a new world charter today Germany's surrender 24 hours be- with plans for international trustee-: fore the Allies officially released It, ships virtually complete and the' says "If 1 had it veto voting formula ently final debate.

under appar- Wilacfti, son of; Also prominently considered were Mrs. Marian G. Wilson, has recent- i Fra Thursday nvi-nn rt'r could not used to prevent free Warren Wright's Pot O'Luck and ybeen Darby Dieppe, entry of Mrs. W. G.

captain. Lewis of Evarts, surprise win- i Cant ner of the recent Blue Grass stakes, With more certatly than they have shown previously most delegates are talking about June 20 as the wlndup date on which President Truman may address the conference, though some few still held hope for June 15 or 10, The pressure for speed is so great that weary delegates were called to meet tonight In a committee session dealing with the voting formula. Under this formula the great powers retain a veto control over all major decisions the proposed world security council. A preliminary subcommittee meeting was scheduled for earlier in the day. Since Russia agreed with the China and that the veto promoted to the rank of fc discussion in the council, it only re- i mains now for the small nations to EngKmd, expross eir ews on thc formula.

I All signs indicate they will accept It. The break of International trus- teeships came in a three arid one- 1 would send the flat statement tin to do over, I think story, but with the it was not passed by SHAEF censors, so the Associated Press woulfl known exactly what it Was," Kennedy made the statement in an interview with pwlght Bentel for the June 9 issue Usher. "I thought we were there as thB end of the war was news," Keinedy said, millions of people had members of their families at every day the another day of that they should Bentel repor current status was "inactive" told at the nothing more tq of Editor and Pub- the fronts and that war continued was Weather Report: Today Western Penna.i THREATENING Considers 1 cloudiness with moderate perature today, tonight and Sun- day. Not much change in temperature. train for them, and be told;" ed that Kennedy's as an AP employe nd that he had been offices "There be said now." MATILDA ELIZABETH KELLY BAKER passed laway in her late home in Saltsburg, Friday, June 8, at 10:30 p.

m. She was a daughter of Jonathan and Margaret (Johnston) Kelly and was born February 2, 1863, In Indiana County. She had been a resident of Saltsburg for 50 years and was a member of the St. John Lutheran Church, Saltsburg. Friends will be received at the family home until 10 a.

m. Monday, If nil sixteen start, it will be the as richest derby in history with a cross cars has becn ln En S-' half hour session last night. Russian value of $80,875, and with the owner smce ast January. He has objections on two points involving When he arrived in New York Monday, reporters at the pier quoted Kennedkr as saying flatly: "I'd do it again if I had the chance." "That was in dply to a question as to wether I th night. I was in the right." Kennedy told Bentel.

"I defiance, Langford Murder Case Without Lead NEW YORK, June A puzzled small army of police Investigators, still casting about for a lead to break the Langford case, placed known jewel thieves under surveillance today while examining the theory that the 63-year-old textile executive was slain by a gang seeking the fortune in jewelry which wealthy Marlon Langford possessed. The art patroness, 70-year-old widow frequently wore a $23,000 diamond and emerald bracelet and was known to have jewels, art works, antiques and other furnish- 1 ings valued at $100,000 in her Park Avenue apartment. Her husband, Albert E. Langford, was shot to death Monday night in the vestibule of the apartment when he- denied admittance to two men who said they wished to speak to Mrs. Lfmgford.

A police department spokesman said, another theory under scrutiny was "that attempted blackmail the motive." Mrs. Langford, he voice broken Rosslter P. O. Ernest P. O.

Gipsy P. O. 31,556.25 2,118.75 618.75 5,343.75 1,743.75 893.75 9,136.00 to 2 a cfuse 0 lyi lg tory in one divlsior LI Germony to Quota $75,000 Sales: 42,075.00 "Others" Q. 25,000 F. National, Saltsburg Saltsburg Edri P.

Quota $75,000 7,912,50 6,243.75 243.75 14,900.00 Sales: 14,400.00 "Others" Q. $425,000 Peoples, West Lebanon Clime P. Mcintyre P. Iselin P. 4,425.00 450.00 1,425.00 168.75 Memoria mort arto lgi? lnt0 prls ners enabled the conference com- in Eur in this food mlttee to complete approval of the manner a 1 1 Boating over any liberated coun-i trusteeship plan except for three imnK wou nav Dcen I four points held over for further lnflnltely bctte if the authorities Wilson's wife, the former', consideration.

Most important of when the body will be removed to the Robinson Funeral Home, Saltsburg, -where services will be conducted Monday' afternoon at 3 o'clock. Rev. George C. Vetter will officiate Interment in Edgewood Cemetery, Saltsburg. The deceased is survived by her husband, Nicholas Baker; four dons, J.

Homer, Mitchell. Howard N. and' Paul, all of Saltsburg; five daughters, Mrs. Cynthia King, Saltsburg; Mrs. Edith Forgie, Turtle Creek; Mrs.

Anna M. Reynolds, Apollo; Mrs. Lottie D. Fishel, Dover, Ohio and Mrs. Mary Warner, New Phila- delphia, Ohio.

Fifty-four grandchildren; thirty-six great-grandchildren be the wife the former! consideration. Most important of Eiddie Arcaro in ouest' of hk SirH 1 BPy A ta leton is residing these is the demand of Brig. Gen. Derbv trlumnh Hoon Ln Bt pl Sent wlth her parents Mr. Carlos P.

Romulo of the Philippine from" the'TtVsZ Staplet 4U teto tton that ind.pend.nc. should delegation that independence should i be set up as a possible goal for all Derby triumph. from the outside stall in the horse main starting gate. wm 0tS nncf obabl -V of'Capt. Wllsott, go'venied'under trusteeship will go to the post ns 4 to 1 second on Midway Island in the Commun- Britain and France, as and Mrs.

Patrick Stapleton, street, Indiana. Lieut, (jg) A. Gray Wilson, a colonial well as for those normal way, i keep it bottled the come out in a He said he veighed his action for many hours. "I knew if I 4u me choices. Jeep, like Hoop won a ications Division of the Navv division of the Wood and will have Arnold Klrkland in the pilot house.

Pot O'Luck is trained byt he noted Mlssourlan, Ben Jones, race horse fans know that anything Jones trains must be ready for he has won of Derbies first with Answer To Jap colonial I realized the up sent the story there would be fireworks," he said. "I other correspondents empires, oppose this, preferring the' would be higl ly indignant. After ill these things, I de- goal of self-government instead. The United States supports their position and Russia and China have accepted, it. thinking over cided to send in keeping cor ftdences.

I have been in newspaper The trusteeship plan, to both old League of Nations cover have never be man-1 ing a conflden vork for 20 years and en accused of violat- Quota $25,000 Bond Quota for County "Others" Quota for County Sa-les: 6,408.75 25,000 AMBRIDGE, June Take dates and territories which may be lieve in the sa 4,100.00 then Whirlaway and with Pensive the hull of an LST (Landing Ship put under international control ast year. Douglas Dodson will have for Tanks), sling a boom over the after this as islands cap- the mount on Wright's colt. and some special plane re- turod from purely volun- If the track remains muddy. Dar- pairing equipment, and you have' tary. No territories would come by Dippes chances are considered thc U.

as'under trusteeship supervision until better, but track conditions also will "an answer to the Jap suicide the nations holding them agreed to improve the chances of Hoop plane." i put them there. $1,275,000,00 450,000.00 County Quota Individuals $1,725,000,00 Sales County: $547,181 25 "Others Sales County: 408,114.50 Sales to Individuals: $935,295.75 dents boarded Foreign Agent, Alexis, Tiger Pebel, i The Chloris was commissioned at; The plan calls for a trusteeship! they had offlc Bymeab'ond, Air Salior, and Mi- the American Bridge Co. shipyards council of all the nations holding i purpose of only filly in the race. She yesterday. She is especially con- such territories plus an equal num-' pretty good will be the twenty-seventh filly to slructed to pull up to beachheads in of nations which did not have the German the story.

"I believe or a release, I be- nctity of agreements. kept them. case, I found myself R. and Alfred Kelly, Detroit, Mich. MRS.

ISABELLE ANN, widow of James Clawson, died at her home, 75 Elm street, Homer City, June 7 at 2:00 p. m. i Friends are being received at the i home of her daughter, Mrs. Curtis Robertson, 308 South Main street, Homer City, where services will be 5 conducted Sunday, June 10th at 2:00 p. m.

in charge of Rev. Harry C. I ihave always "But in this confronted wii a conflict of lies, and what I sidered my clity." He said tha Prugh. Interment Cemetery, Indiana. in Greenwood' HERMAN CRAIG WOLFE, hug- what I believed was band of Nellie Irene Muckle Wolfe con-i of Indiana, R.

D. 2 died in Rayne Township, June 7, 1945, as the result of an auto accident. Friends are. being received at the Robinson Funeral Home, Indiana, when the correspon- the plane for Reims ai information on the he trip, but "had a dea that it would be urrender." start through the years of the race, forward areas and start making trusteeships. Those other nations Once on boiird, he said, Brig.

Gen. Only one, Regret, poked her nose quick repairs to engines of damaged would have to include any of the I Frank Allen, Every IS Jap Citizens From Air Raids down in front and that was 30 years airplanes. a When she leaves soon for the Pa-' tn council- Only Burning Dream, the coit'ciflo, she will be by a China. Kenti'clcians are counting upon to sister vessel equipped for repair of give the 85-yeav-old Col, E. R.

Brad- aircraft fuselage and big-five powers not otherwise on tions officer, meaning Russia and said it was i iperative that we not this with anyone outside our from one; those areas affected by the enemy by frequent sobs, told the Associated air raids are very limited in scope." Press yesterday that she "was offer- He reported that "much headway" Ing. $10,000 reward to find the mur- Is being made in digging both In- derer of my darling husband." "I buried my husband today," she in a voice filled with uncon- dustry and homes underground in bomb-ravaged cities as protection against further strikes, Japanese trolled emotion. "I miss him ter- have already been warned that these ribly. If you can find the person would be extended to smaller cities who did it, you can have tho $10,000 and towns. This prediction was ful- Draft Period, Yrs.

Suggested June compulsory peacetime draft program for a trial period of five years was recommended to Congress today by Edward C. Elliott, president of Purdue University. One of the few educators to support universal military training pro- ley of Lexington his fifth victory in i Lt. Cmdr. F.

A. Cellcr. project llon ot Orlon ll the Derby, is considered the only officer for the Navy Bureau of Aero- 2 miles, doubtful starter. Trainer Jimmy nautics, said the ships will save time Smith said th'e Bradley racer would previously lost in setting up land- be scratched if tho track remains based repair The vessels will milc jdy. able to move from one airstrip statistics owners nave until 45 minutes.

to another ''as 1 fast as the Japs arc Betelguese, star in the constella- htis a diameter of group until signed, and this and to tl for its releas "I made no SHAEF public rela- told us'this was it. He the surrender was naturally agreed to e' holding of the story as in all such cases, mental reservations. I before post time to withdraw. driven away. Read the Gazette Classified naturally assumed the release would be a reasonajslo one, and I had not the slightest- idea, at that time, that the story would not be cleared in the normal way." Gen.

Bradley Succeeds Mines As Yet Head filled by today's three-way attack. and Naruo were the small cities struck by the B-29s. They are during an entire week of both near the oast end of Japan's in- Public hearings, Elliott told the land sea. Nagoya is about 30 miles! House post-war military policy corn- farther east, on Honshu's oast coast mittee: land 105 miles southwest of Tokyo. "While we have the task of At Nagoya the B-29's rained their; dreaming and doing for peace, at the explosives on a former watch andi time," he cautioned, "we fiave advertise that." Former Soldier Honored Technical Fourth Grade, John G.

Cocolin, of 795 South Grant Street, Meadville, son of Mr, and Mrs. precision instrument factory now i the solemn and continuing obliga- George Cocolin of Clymcr, has been producing aircraft engine tion of being fully prepared to pro- awarded a medal for noncombnt i Atsula plant of the Aichi Aircraft: toct all that which is ours to pro- heroism. jCo. in the city's southwest corner, tect. The experiences of the past The citation accompanying the At Naruo, on Amagasaki Harbor four years have taught us how de- medal reads in part: of Osaka Bay, the Marianas-based pendent we are upon our youth to "While performing his duties as raiders attacked the Kawanishl Air-'provide this protection." equipment servicemen, Tech.

Company's main production! At the end or three to five years, Grade John G. Cocolin witnessed for the manufacture of declared, "we shall know things the crash of a P-38 that had blown'Japanese navy fighter planes called we cannot now know and then we a tire and careened into a B-24, a "George" by the Americans. shall have learned the invaluable grader and a truck. The P-3B At Akashi, west of Kobe, the Ani-, lessons learned onlv bv exoerl- exploded 40 feet beyond these erlcani bombed the Kawasaki a Dy Oxperl vehicles and near another B-24. craft factory.

It was their second! He sueeested thnt no Both B-24s and vehicles were at the plant. lalven to retention ablaze and several men were caught Today's raiding B-29s bombed in officers Training under the burning grader and truck, daylight from medium altitude, It to rnv Tech. Cocolin dashed back and forth was the first raid since May 19 in! sion into the fire and rescued the trap- which only high explosive' bombs! were dropped. Marianas based' ped men," Cocolin was serving at Tacloban Air Strip, Leyte, at the time of rained both explosives and ntiflc Ts" scientific reserve and be relieved of accident. fire! Tito and Allies to Sign Agreement LONDON, June matie sources close on the Japanese home island twice this week.

About 450 struck Kobe training courses called for in pending legislation. If the committee had to make its Tuesday, and 450 hammered Osaka recommendation today, one influen- Thursday i tial member it would propose The Japanese broadcast made no action in response to the mention of Nagoya. and as to re-, requests of the War, Navy and State Car4dv. Riffe Being Disregarded The Distr ministration nounced that persons advertising Office of Price Adin Altoona today an- used passenj in newspapers are neglecting to include in sich advertisement the make, mode that the car This recei is designed for sale body type and selling price, togetl er with the statement "within OPA ceiling." requirement of OPA where services will be held Monday, June llth at 1:00 p. m.

in-charge of his pastor, Rev. Raymond Agnew ofr the Grove Chapel Lutheran Church, and a former pastor, Rev. Charles T. Schlotter, Interment in Grove Chapel Cemetery. MBS.

SADIE HERSHBERQER SILVIS, wife of S. T. Silvls or Rural Valley, passed away, Thursday evening, June in the Beaver Valley Hospital, New Brighton, following a short illness. She was a daughter of the late Reverend and Mrs. D.

J. Hershberger, pastor of the Pittsburgh Conference of the Evangelical Church. Tlie deceased was an active mem-' ber of the First Methodist Church of', Rural Valley and for many years was the teacher of the Women's BJble Class. In addition to many activities of the church, she was a devoted member of the Missionary Societies and served that organization as for a number of years. Beside her husband, she is survived by four daughters, and two sons: Mrs.

Harry Waugaman, New Kensington; Mrs. Howard Robacker, Erie; Mrs. Charles Huntington, and Mrs. Frank Hallman, Beaver Falls; Raymond, Kittanning and Wilmer of New Kensington. One grandson is serving with tha Armed Forces in Germany.

Three ment of Prhe Control on used cars and must be adhered to, although the new requirement does not pertain to usedjpassenger cars of Model siste 1925 or pricr. Prospectn familiar wi may obtain local War BoSrd. sellers who are not OPA ceiling prices same by contacting their Price- and Rationing Man Refused to Be Inducted, GiVenSXears two brothers: Mrs. Clara Zener, Taylor avenue, Indiana; Mrs. Arminta DeZore, Johnstown; Mrs.

Thomas C. Evans, Harrisburg and Mrs. Clara Zener, Taylor avenue, Indiana; Morrow Herberger, Cleveland, and Elbert Columbia, O. Mrs. Marie Zener Revie of Indiana, and Harold B.

Zener of Blairsville, are niece and nephew of the ceased. Services will be conducted tomorrow afternoon In Rural Valley at 3:00 o'clock. PITTSBURGH, Federal JiJdge R. BERNARD ELWOOD GRAT, 104 (East Philadelphia Street, Indiana, passed away in the Indiana Hospital as a result of an automobile accident happened Thursday on the Plumville-Home road. June M.

Gibson sen- to the British made of the war results and damage -reserve, "an departments for a compulsory train- Flanked by President Truman and Army Chief of Sta ff, George Marshall, Gen. Omar N. Bradley, 12th Army ing program to build a huge armed' roup Commander in Europe, is pictured above in tli Executive Office being congratulated by President being, "wo "use Truman after his appointment as head of the Veterans Administration. Gen. Bradley succeeds Foreign Office said tonight that an agreement would be signed with Marshal Tiio tomorrow bringing Trieste and all communications between Trieste and Austria "definitely under an Anglo-American military government." This Belgrade agreement, the source said, Is expected to "termi-, nate in a very satisfactory manner: Marines Push 1600 Yds.

on Okinawa's West Coast Continued from page one "We have heard nothing that can give us assurance we never again will need a large army," he said, asking not to named. "The arguments advanced against plan are that there will be no more for some time and that there is no need to act in a hurry. One thing is certain: the likelihood of future attack iby an aggressor nation will be less defend our- Frank T. Hines, who has held the job for 22 years. convicted induction, years in a A jury Jap Morale Photo: Beheadings on Guam induction hv since cipltu.

dispute which at one time was from cushichan toward Hanagusuku if we are ready to very threatening and critical." village in the opening move to i selves." It WM indicated the accord would sk i the easUrn nank tne 8 in Yugoslav troops leaving ncse ot which Hanagusuku Is anchor. The 184th Regiment dieted damage to two tlrfleldi on a stone fortification in and one on le island, the I parallel advance, wiping out re-! Japanese said, sistance pockets with flamethrowers The Tokyo radio, quoting Domei and grenades. jNews Agency, indirectly admitted Admiral Chester W. Nimitz hopeless position of southern ported the return of Japanese Ka- tip garrison in reporting the mikaje (suicide) pilots to the in troopi along the 450-foot 8 I Wednesday and Thursday and said escarpment were receiving only iup- ships in the United States pl'es dropped from planes, were damaged, bringing to 25 i Japanese have been split into 0 sunn and 00 damaged the announced i two The other, on casualties of the fleet in operations peninsula, is compressed in a small Bi3 3 Meeting Expected, 40 Days WASHINGTON, June President Truman expects to meet, Premier Stalin and Ister Churchill within the next days to discuss world affairs. Announcing this at his connected with the Okinawa cam-'POcket.

unable to join the major ference yesterday Mr. Truman at Sixty-seven Japanese defense line stretching the same time rejected France's' down, 25 by the tactical from Itoman town on the southwest bid for a big five meeting to ex- air command based on Okinawa, coast to Hanagusuku on the south- plore the knotty Middle Eastern Nimitz said. east. problem. Radio Tokyo, however, claimed Clearing weather which permit- He emphasized that the confer-, two "enemy warcraft of the larger ted aerial and heavy gun support of for some time and one large cruiser were the ground Allowed the include only the Wg sunk.

Two additional cruisers and Japanese to renew their aerial States, Russia and Britain, three aircraft carriers were dwn- saulU on Americr.n ftyces in the he Stated his belief that the aged in the two-day attack, Tokyo Okinawa Btine can be i fcysi- UtetwJit in-l tbt Gwotte Ptc. Mr. Gray was a George and Anna Gray and was born April 28th, 1922, son of Harry Mary (Miller) tenced D. Bandi of R. D.

2, Tarentum, to five years in prison i today on hs conviction for Washington to submit 1o induction. He was employed BS a John Sclaffner, of Meadville, on a truck operated by D. J. Df failure to report for was sentenced to five federal institution, convicted Walter Baron, (1308 Htrvard Ave.) Natrona refusing to submit to fawson Was Wounded Fiscus. Surviving are four Harold, Waterman; William, Indiana' R.

D. Joseph, Indiana R. D. 8, Clifford, Indiana R. D.

2. Friends will be received at the home of a brother, Harold Gray, House 301, Waterman, after 7:00 o'clock this eevning, until 10:00 o'clock Monday' morning when body will be removed to the Robin-f son Funeral Home, Indiana, where services will be conducted Monday i Mrs. Meivln Clawson, of Black afternoon at 3:00 o'clock. Reverend iLick, has I received word that her Harold L. Loveless will officiate.

husband, wounded with the of May 1 Pfc. Clawson, has in the in action while Marines on Okinawa, as; th. Crooked Creek Pfc. Cliiwson is attached to 6th Marire Division, his basic training at Parris Pigs are fitted with the nose to prevent doing too much damage N. ard Camp La June, S.

C.1 when foraging for food. He has been overseas six months. He the Marine service on March 27 1944. He is father' of three ihildren. saiuaro, giant cactua of Arizona, exiandj like an accordion when fill with water and can go four yearj without refilling.

Accord ng to an ancient Roman belief, it unlucky to be married i in May, H'hich was the third month at that tine. Make Church regular habit. MOOftaCAD'H Two kneel at their graves just before execution by Jap occupation forces on Guam; tfeetr crime, against Jap military. The picture was made alter Jap seizure of tttf U. S.

UklM to tekeo boa jFa? who it was distributed for "morale Crackei porcelain on the plug compression leakage, and plug: thus damaged should be replaced immediately. lamide, the saver ot many', war, was thrown Wlffeft..

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About The Indiana Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
396,923
Years Available:
1868-2006