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The Morning News from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 4

Publication:
The Morning Newsi
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FOUR WILMINGTON MORNING NEWS. WILMINGTON. DELAWARE. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 14.

1944 canal, and cut the main road to the could reach the American Infantry RODNEY GAUSE J. FOUR FROM STATE VIENNA Dutch city of Aardenburg, two miles outposts. farther north. I Dive bombers caught one force of Aachen Assault Continues M. JAMES PROMOTED TO FIRST LIEUTENANT Paul M.

James, a Flying Fortress navigator with the Eighth Air Force in England, has been advanced to A BOMBED BY YANKS GIVEN CITATIONS The Germans were reported hur- I tanks hiding in some wooas rying up reinforcement in an effort plastered the area while artillery to rescue an estimated 11,000 of pm-pointed a neavy movement of their comrades who have been cut i armor on a secondary road near oft by the Canadians from escape Rhe, six miles northeast Aachen, by land from their imperiled po- The shift of German troops from sitions on two Dutch islands in the Holland to this front "PparenUy Schelde. i meant that the German high com the rank of first lieutenant, a c-cording to an anno uncement ociyi. i. Dm OZ.UUICI3M UClOjfrom his station mand ngurea me uumiwu niwunu Arnhem had eased. The bridge across the Neder Rhine He was award- Second Air Meda! Fori In northern France, the U.

S. Third Army was locked in hand-to-hand combat with the Germans in ed the Air Medal 'at Arnhem has been destroyed by Large Formations of Heavy U. S. Planes Also Strike At Silesia Area in Hungary By ROBERT EtNSO.V Associated Press Correspondent Achievements on Air Raidseeentiy for "meritorious Meizieres-les-Metz, six miles north Allied bombers, front dispatcnes of Metz, but ther: were no devel- said. The British discovered yes- opments eisewnere on xnis ironi.

Germans had aban Staff Sergt. Edward B. Szubielskl of 602 Church Street has been awarded a second Air Medal for The U. S. Seventh Army to the i ti, tne soutn doned a bridgehead on LONDON, Saturday, Oct.

14 Be tween 750 and 1,000 long-range Fif bank of the Neder Rhine west of Arnhem. The Germans continued to send south seized four villages in driving to within 12 miles of Schlucht Pass, 28 miles north of Belfort, and had the city of Le Thillot, 15 miles north achievement," in combat operations in enemy territory. His wife. Mrs. Irma James, has received the medal.

Lieutenant James was graduated from Wil teenth Air Force heavy bombers and escorts from Italy today smashed Nazi war plants in Vienna and hemmed in from three paus i were intercepted and dispersed, or of Belfort, sides. contained after landing. western Hungary, while hundreds There was yet no word that the Pol M. m- mington High School, and was a draftsman and elert.riral pniririppr i with the DuPont Company for five it i i us achievement during six heavy a dment missions over Germany and 3erman occupied Europe," it has been announced from his station with the Eighth Air Force in England. He is a gunner on a Flying Fortress in a veteran heavy bombard-ment group commanded UTRECHT IJelR.

li I status mius V7 Hettoqenbosch 111 7 i 'r I CCh NETHERLANDS jjMsf BELGIUM II ft Saiitjeilenkprchen war Hs.lll -TTtrV4 COLOGNE JfcC Eupen j- Euskirchen Combm I GERMANY 0 IL St Wi' Kfonenbutg siAiuTfcMiiis Forces in February, 1943. Americans who yesterday cleared a CMITU WII I BEQUEATHS northeastern suburb of Aachen had.11"" VVILL. DCUUtH I no Joined in the attack on the main i ESTATE TO FAMILY section of the city. NEW YORK. Oct.

13 will Smoke Pall Over City of tne lale Aifred Smith Uea in The attack rolled up from the Surrogate's Court today, divided the southeast under cover of the same estate of the former Governor and sort of artillery barrage which had 1928 Presidential nominee among ruined at least 85 per cent of the i his family. city. Divebombers wheeled over the The will, filed by V. S. Senator center of the city, blasting the gar-j Robert Wagner iD-N.

Y.i, and head rison trying to maneuver in the 0f a New York law firm, did not dis-rubble, a front dispatch said. close the exact amount of the estate A great smoke pall hung over the but said only it was in "excess of He Was Retired DuPont Company Engineer, For-1 imerly With H. and H. Firm John Rodney Gause. 72, of 1303 Franklin Street, a retired engineer of the DuPont Company's construction department and for many years an engineer with the old Harlan and Hollingsworth Company, died last night in the Delaware Hospital.

Mr. Gause had been an Invalid for the past four years. He had been seriously ill thiee days with pneumonia. Born in this city, Mr. Gause lived virtually his entire life in the old Gause family home at Pennsylvania Avenue and Clayton Street.

The home was built by his grandfather, the late John Taylor Gause. Mr. Gause was a son of the late Horace W. and Elizabeth Harvey Gause. The home was sold last year.

Mr. Gause attended Friends School and was graduated from Harvard University. He entered the employ of the Harlan and Hollingsworth Company 'after leaving college. Mr. Gause was retired from the DuPont Company about 10 years ago.

Surviving nam are: His wife, Mrs. Katharine Butler Gause; two sisters. Miss Christine Gause, at home, and Mrs. George Thomas III. of Whitford.

and a brother. Frederick Taylor Gause, Birmingham, Pa. Funeral services will be private Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock in the Wilmington and Brandywine Cemetery Chapel. Interment will be in that cemetery. of fighter bombers on the Western Front paced the bitter ground fighting with punishing attacks on Aachen and German garrisons in western Holland.

The powerful formations of heavies went as far as Silesia, pounding industrial target and railroads over which the Germans are supplying their troops opposing the Russian drive toward Budapest. It was the second successive day that the Fifteenth Air Force had dispatched unusually large forces to batter the Germans, Thursday's attack on the outskirts of Bologna having been of unusual intensity. Liberators bombed the Florids- Sergeant Siubtrlskl Casualties Continued From First Page ferred to England where he received intensive training in preparation for D-Day. Lieutenant Currier went into France a few days after the Allies struck that country. The last letter from him was mailed Sept.

12 when he told his family he was getting along fine but advised them to keep your Angers crossed." At city, but bservers on the edges still $15,000. could see the spire of Aachen Ca Mrs. Mary A. Glynn, Smith's sis Col. George L.

Robinson of Los Angeles. Calif. Before entering the Army Air Forces, Sergeant Szubielskl was employed the Electric Hose and Rubber Company. He attended P. duPont High School.

The second Oak Leaf Cluster to the Air Medal has been awarded to Serct. John D. Tavlor. 2700 Van ter, was bequeathed $5,000, and th remainder was to be divided equally among his five children, Alfred E. thedral, where Charlemagne lies.

The first American units found the Germans willing enough to surrender. In their first batch was a i dorf rail yards and nearby Austrian Smith. Mrs. John Warner, Infsntrvmen's mJLT motor works in the western quar lieutenant who received the Amer-1 Mrs. Francis J.

Quillinan, Arthur tooLs ter of Vienna where trucks, His engagement to Miss Elizabeth lean ultimatum surrender earlier Smith and Walter Smith. this week. and transport components are Buren Street, a B-17 Flying Fortress ierriu, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. waist gunner, also serving with the Amos Merriu, zoiu jetterson street, had been announced some time ago and they had planned to marry before he was sent overseas.

He was Eighth Air Force. The citation accompanying the presentation said it was given for achievement on bomb- not given a furlough before 'jeing sent overseas and had not been The U. S. First Army continued its assault on besieged Aachen wfctte ing attack enemy Europe. to the north, the British Second Army moved forward in The Netherlands He is the son of Mr and Mrs- south of Overloon.

Germans were reported shining forces from the Am- James Taylor and is a veteran of hem area toward Aachen Heavy line is battle front. i 18 combat missions. He is a gradu- Meanwhile. Hodges' artillery, with close support, administered a merciless beating to strong reinforcements who moved in from the northeast in an attempt to obey Adolf Hitler's orders to "chase the terrorist bandits off German Foil." Move in Broad Daylight "They have moved against us in broad daylight." a high-ranking officer said "and no man in his right mind would attempt such a thing unless some idiot ordered him to attack." The enemy rushed immediately into battle on arriving at the front, but artillery, fighter-bombers and TbtkstJ EFFECTIVE OCT. 15th The Majestic Restaurant 709 W.

4th St. Will Remain Open 7 Days a Week. manufactured. Rail yards 35 miles west of Budapest on the main line to Vienna were struck by Liberators. Rail yards at Szekesfehrver, 45 miles southwest of Budapest, also were attacked.

Dismal weather grounded British-based heavies, but the American Ninth and Royal Air Force Second Tactical Air Forces shuttled from French air fields to the front lines. The score still remained to be tallied, but a recapitulation of recent activity on the air front demonstrated the ever-increasing importance of the air arm for tactical operations. The R. A. F.

bomber command reported complete destruction of home since, so the marriage was scheduled to take place as soon as he returned to this country. In addition to his parents and brother. Lieutenant Currier is survived by a sister. Miss Margery M. Currier, a student at the Tower Hill School.

Private Bullock, the son of Mr. and Mrs. U. G. Bullock of Kelton, and the husband of Mrs.

Edna Lynch Bullock, was a member of an infantry unit that was in the Al- Mrs. Sackler was a charter member of the Hadassah. Mrs. A. E.

Schondelmaier The funeral of Mrs. Ann E. Schondelmaier, 72, wife of Christian Schondelmaier, Boxwood Road and Reed Avenue, near Richardson Park, will be from her home tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock with the Rev. Alex W. Boyer.

vicar of St. James' P. E. Church, Stanton, officiating. Interment will be in Gracelawn Memorial Park.

rockets drove them back before they in 1877. The class comprised only four girls, two of whom are still living. Following her graduation, she taught in the Lewes School. Later, she married James B. Cooper who died some years ago.

There are no immediate survivors. Mrs. Cooper was a cousin of Mrs. Roland G. Paynter of Georgetown and Mrs.

Walter Doughten of Wilmington. William C. Harding PRESTON, Md Oct. 13 Funeral Kleve and Emmerich. German fron lied sweep across France.

In a let- tier towns in the Niimezen area a i.c ir. o. umruiJl. fliKU illlu was inducted into the Army Air Forces i September, 1942. James B.

King, a stafl sergeant with the Eighth Air Force in England, has recently been awarded the Air Medal for his achievement while participating in sustained bombing combat operations over enemy Europe. He is a ball turret gunner on a Flying Fortress, in a veteran unit of 200 operations against the enemy. He attended Wilmington High School and was employed as a shipfitter by the Pusey and Jones Corporation before entering the service. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

James B. King of 1805 West Fourth Street. The second oak leaf cluster was awarded to another Wilmington soldier, Sergt. Otho Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs.

C. E. Johnson of 1807 North Scott Street. He is a OBITUARIES Mrs. Elizabeth Sackler Funeral sen-ices for Mrs.

Elizabeth Sackler, 74, who died yesterday at her home, 410 Madison Street, will be at the Chandler Funeral Home, Delaware Avenue and Jefferson Street, tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock with Rabbi Joseph Waldman of the Chesed Shel Emeth Congregation officiating. Interment will be in th? Jewish section of Lombardy Cemetery. Mrs. Sackler is survived by her husband, Jacob Sackler; a son, Albert Litcher, Philadelphia, and two sisters, Mrs. Bessie Pressman, Philadelphia, and Mrs.

Tillie Kalman of California. She was president of the Chesed Shel Emeth Sisterhood for 13 years and secretary of the Jewish Old Age Home for 12 years. ter to his wife, mailed Sept. 9, he attacked Oct. 8 by Lancasters and said that he expected to be in an- Halifaxes.

Oi.ler country soon. -The towns which served as ad- Formerly a resident of Kelton, Pri- vanced bases for defense of the Ger-vate Bullock moved to this city four man frontier now are so completely years ago after his marriage to the I devastated as to be useless t0 the former Miss Lynch, daughter of I enemy," the Air Ministry said. She died Thursday at her home, i services for William C. Harding, 58. In addition to her husband, Mrs.

will be conducted at his home in Schondelmaier is survived by two I Bethlehem, near here, tomorrow at sons, Joseph G. Hackendorn, East 2 p. by the Rev. A. W.

Strick-Rutherford, N. and Harry T. I land, pastor of Bethesda Methodist Hackendorn. Wilmington; two Church, Preston. Burial will be at daughters, Mrs.

Mark Deakyne. Wil- Federalsburg. mington, and Mrs. Maurice Cook, He was the son of the late James Mrs. Elizabeth B.

Lynch, West American heavy bombers "severely Grove. Pa. He was employed in the damaged" six war plants in attacks Purchasing Department of the Du- 1 on Bremen and Osnabruck Thurs-Pont Company when called into the da v- Army May 10. 1943. Private Bui- of flotilla of about 100 lock was sent overseas last May.

barges in the Schelde Estuary were He is survived bv his wife, his i lV R' A' 0ghter boraber parents, the tw0-year-old daughter, 'hlch flew about 800 sorties Tilurs- waist gunner on a Flying Fortress New Castle; one brother, George D. E. and Sarah Caulk Harding. He is i jn a heavy bombardment group jjcrry, wumingcon; iu granaenn-: survived oy ms widow ana tnree commanded by Col. George Y.

Jumper of Natoma, CaUf. dren and five great-grandchildren. daughters. DEATHS Before entering the Army in Helen Ann Bullrvk- a hrnth.r Mrs. Maude A.

Fouracre Mrs. Emma C. Boyce January. 1943. he was employed by ard Bullock, Kelton, and a sister the Railway Express Agency here.

I Mrs. Edward Brooks. Ocala. Fla. He Front He received Mils dinner's ftnu tt r.

I Will. Mrs. Maude Allen Fouraere, South SEAFORD. Oct. 13 Funeral serv- Broad Street.

Middletown, who died ices for Mrs. Emma C. Boyce. 78. at her home -en n.imcu me XVCIlIIt'tt isquHie, Thursday, will be buried widow of Albeit L.

Boyce of Blades! Fort Myers. in November, 1943. schools and was graduated from 1 Continued From First Page this afternoon with services in the U'n will be held from the home of her Spicer Tuneral Home, Middletown son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and r- at- 1 rtVlnolr Tv.

4 BIRTHS w- to resume. Slow and steadv progress Corporal Morgan, son of Mr. and was made in Hurtgen Forest south-! Mrs. C. Hiram Morgan, died Sept.

east of Aachen, 22. He was a member of an ar-! Both Allied and Axis sources re- t.lh uc rrank Taylor, Blades, Sunday I Forrest Cemetery, Middletown. i afternoon at 2 o'clock with the Rev I Mrs. Fouracre, the wife of Arthur David Campbell, pastor of Blades! Claude Fouracre, was born in this Methodist Church, officiating In- The Memorial Hospital Son. Mr.

and Mrs. Claude Ware, Penn Grove Oct. 13. Daughter. Mr and Mrs.

Ralph Fisher. 911 East Seventeenth Street city and moved to Middletown 20 terment will be in the Blades Cem morea envision in, france and had ferred to activity in the Geilen-been sent overseas in December of Kirchen area 12 miles north of last year, arriving in North Africa Aachen. A German military com-on Christmas Eve. He took part in mentator said the American troops the fighting in that country and in had been CLOSIC Suddenly. In this city on Octo-ber 13.

1944. Ben Clnsic. of 301 Poplnr fvreet. aged 41 years. Funeral services will be held at The Chandler Funeral Home.

Delaware Avenue and Street, on Sunday afternoon Octoher 3 5 at 1 o'clock. Interment at LombardT Cemetery. SACKLEF In this rity on October 13 1P44. Elizabeth, wife of Jacob Sackler ased 74 years. Funeral services will be held at The Chandler Funeral Home.

Delaware Avenue and Jefferson on Sunday afternoon. October 15. at 3 o'clock. Interment at Lombardy Cemetery SHORT In Laurel Del. on October 12 1P44.

Charlotte Stroupe (nee Wirrt. wife of Minos O. Short, of 171 North Delaware Avenue. Laurel. Del.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral services at the Windsor Funeral Home Laurel, on Saturday morninc October 14 at o'clork. Further services and interment at the Nfethodist Cemetery. Christiana. Del. at 1:30 o'clock.

WILLIAM On October 12. 1844. at her late residence. 308 Lighthouse Road Gordon Heights. Cera wife of William E.

Williams. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the services at the William E. Haines Funeral Home. Twenty-fourth and Market Streets, on Monday afternoon. October 16.

at 1:30 o'clock. Interment at Riverview Cemetery etery. mis. uoyce aiea at me nome ol Oct. 13.

years ago. Besides her husband, she is survived by three daughters. Patricia Maude, Annie Louise, and Carolyn Maybelle Fouracre, and one brother, Claude Allen of Ferndale, Mich. Mr. and Mrs.

Taylor yesterday Daughter. Corp. and Mrs. Clar- ftttf before being sent to England sibly for a grand-scale assault" on 5l iiiiiiiiiiiB 'Ss morning iouowing an illness of ence Scheel, McDaniel Heights, i training ior me m- the flat lands to the Rhine. aoout two years.

Besides her daugh- i Oct. 13. iuu rrance. ter, Mrs. rayior, she is survived by Daughter, Mr and Mrs.

William Before entering the Army in Au- Bethesda Methodist Church at Mid-! lw, oth" daughters, Mrs. Harry I Bellman. Newark. Oct. 13.

gust. 1942. he was employed by the Sun Oil Company at Marcus Hook. A brother, Corp. Thomas Edward Morgan, is stationed in the Medical Corps to England.

Another broth dletown and had served more than aandRf HaU 18 vears as oreanist resienine a few 1 Hltchens of near Blades. Two 10d Marsh Road. Oct. 13. orgamst' reslenln8 few grandchildren and two great-grand- i Daughter.

Mr and Mrs. Arvid Ells- months The Canadians along the sea clearing out the Schelde Estuary approaches to the port of Antwerp gouged out gains in bitter fighting on the Estuary's south banks. -Main Road Cut Their comrades to the south, widening the perilously slim bridgehead across the Leopold Canal, fought into the outskirts of the village of Eede nearly a mile from the ago. cnuaren also survive. worth, New Castle, Oct.

12 er, Elmer M. Morgan, enlisted in the Delaware Hosnital Son. Mr, and Mrs. William G. av and is now at the Naval Train Capt.

Caleb R. Smith MILFORD. Oct. 13 Funeral for Capt. Caleb R.

Smith. 93 Bronowiez, 308 Townsend Street, 1 station at Sampson, N. Y. Oct. 12.

Son. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mc- i SUGAR COUPONS END OCT. 31 RIVERVIEW CEMETERY CO.

BURIAL LOTS FOR SALE Our representatives are always ready to give detailed Information. years old, who died yesterday morn- Benjamin Closic The funeral of Benjamin Closic, 41, a scorekeeper at 301 Poplar Street, who died yesterday in the Wilmington General Hospital, will be from the Chandler Funeral Home, Delaware Avenue and Jefferson Street, tomorrow afternoon at 1 o'clock. Interment will be in the Jewish section of Lombardy ing at his home here, will "be he-IJ GiLloway, Carney's Point. Oct. 12.

Issuance of ration coupons for Sunday at 2 p. at Lof land's Fu-' nsPlal sugar for home canning and pre- neral Home. Milford. Interment will anl Mrs. James serving will terminate Oct.

31 in be in the Odd Fellows' Cemetery phitwor.h, 107 West Thirteenth Delaware, it was announced yester- oncci. uii. OaV. Consumers who mar renniro For many years previous to his re Wilmington General Hospital i SUgar for this puroose and have not Daughter, Mr. and Mrs.

Charles made application for certificates of Lowe, 514 McCaulley Street, Oct. 13 purchase may do so at their local war price and ration boards before Surviving Mr. Closic are his wife, Mrs. Jennie Closic; a daughter, Sybil: a. son.

Joseph; his mother, Mrs. Fannie Closic; two sisters. Miss i Bertha Closic, Wilmington, and Mrs. that date. FOR MANY YEARS Sfiverbrook Cemetery has had an enviable reputation because at Its beauty.

We take pride making Bilverbrook a Delaware Institution. Silverbrook Cemetery Lancaster Are. at DuPont Road ni at. Son, Sergt and Mrs. Lawrence Rimel, 305 Delamore Place, Oct.

13. Son, Mr. and Mrs. William Delikat, 529 South Harrison Street, Oct. 12.

If Your Child Is Coughing Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding that your child is to be benefited and you are to like its quick action in allaying the har-rassing cough without upsetting the stomach or you are to have your monev back. No narcotics. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis tirement, he had commanded a sailing vessel. He was the oldest member of Crystal Fount Lodge of Odd Fellows.

Captain Smith is survived by two daughters, Miss Mabel Smith of Mil-ford, and Mrs. Gertrude Porter of Baltimore, and one son, Eugene of Atlanta. Ga Two grandsons and one granddaughter also survive. John O. Davidson ANGOLA, Oct.

13 John O. Davidson, 60, farmer of near here, died today in The Memorial Hosrjital. UNDERGOES OPERATION The condition of Dr. Mitchell Greenwood. 400 Philadelphia Pike, who underwent an operation Tuesday at The Memorial Hospital, was reported as favorable last night.

His office is at 918 West street. Deaths Elsewhere MACON. Oct. 13 (FiV. S.

District Court Judge Bascom S. Deaver, 62, of the Middle Georgia district, died today." Edward Jaffe, Coatesville. and a brother, Samuel Closic of Wilmington. He was a member of Adas Kodesch Congregation. Mrs.

Charlotte C. Cary Mrs. Charlotte C. Cary. 80.

of Mount Dora, who had been making her home recently with a I'm the guy who looked at you from a U.S.O. poster some time ago. Tm the guy for whom you and millions of others gave and gave so generously. I'd like to tell you what was done with your money. The money you gave last year helped give the boys the tonic of entertainment a personal appearance by Jack Benny in Africa by Gary Cooper in the South Seas and by lovely wemen stars in remote placea where just the sight of a feminine face is enough to make up for weeks and months of loneliness and isolation.

atres govern Let freedom ring on Uncle Sam's cash register! Buy U. S. War Bonds and Stamps! Wilmington, after a 10-day illness. son, Charles A. Cary of Talley Road, died yesterday in the Delaware Hos- He was a son of the late Willis S.

ARKET AT 24 ST. and Margaret Green Davidson. pital. Mrs. Cary was the widow of George F.

Cary In addition to her PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 13 fP Alexander L. Rogers, 65, Woodbury, N. former Gloucester County, N.

prosecutor and past president of the Gloucester County Bar Association, died last night. MONTCLAIR. N. Oct. 13 (Py The Rt.

Rev. Mgr. Edward Morgan Farrell, 67. named domestic prelate by Pope Pius XII in 1941, died today at St. Vincent's Hospital, where he was operated on Tuesday.

son, she is survived by three grand-' children, George F. Cary II, of Bath, Mrs. J. C. Rea, this city, i and Campbell Cary, serving in the i Navy, and three great-grandchil He is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Anna Mae Green Davidson; a daughter, Mrs. Carlton Dorman of Angola: two grandchildren, and a sister, Mrs. Harry T. Wilson of Lewes. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at Conley's Church, near Lewes, in charge of the Rev.

F. H. Truitt. Interment will be In the adjoining cemetery. McCrery 2700 WASHINGTON ST.

Our Funeral Cosrs Meet Present Day Conditions Your dollars have helped make possible the 3,000 U.S.O. Clubs in the Western Hemisphere and the countless Camp Shows all over the world. But, this year the job is bigger 19 worthy local Wilmington and Delaware Agencies have joined with the U.S.O., the United Seamen's Service, War Prisoners' Aid and all our Fighting Relief Agencies in One Campaign. dren. The funeral will be from the Chandler Funeral Home.

Delaware Avenue and Jefferson Street, Monday night at 8 o'clock. Interment will be at East Machias, Me. Mrs. Margaret V. Shearer LEWES.

Oct. 13 Mrs. Margaret V. Shearer of Lewes, 78, widow of Charles Guy Shearer, a lifelong resident of this town, died last night at the Beebe -Hospital. She had been ill several weeks.

Her husband died Peninsula Deaths Mrs. Cora Smith DENTON, Md, Oct. 13 Funeral services for Mrs. Cora Smith, fie. i widow of William W.

Smith, former manv "So. Give Once 7 Bailiff in Ridgelv, were held in her i oul VIVU1s ner are two sons, home in West Denton today at Rowland Shearer of Cald- Give Generously p. -ith the Rev. Thomas J. well, N.

William Guy Shearer of Verona. N. and one sister, Mrs. 1 Marshall Bertrand, widow of a Dela- ware River pilot. Mrs.

J. Lyons Richardson of Lewes is a niece. Funeral services will be held Mon- i JAMES BUFFINGTON Funeral Director Res. 3 S. Cannon Drive EDGE MOOR GARDEN'S Ih.

H. O. 6436 BUSINESS WIL. t-2921 Turkington, pastor of Grace Meth-: odist Church, officiating. Burial was in Denton Cemetery.

Mrs. Smith was the daughter or the late Henry C. and Sallie Xnotts UNITED WAR FUND OF DEIAWARE day at 2 p. at the Melson Fu- I Bradley of Queen Anne's County Mr. and Mrs.

Smith removed fmm neral Home, Lewes, with the Rev. NOTICE! IF YOU HAVEN'T SENT THAT OVERSEAS PACKAGE yet and are too busy to shop around just stop in or phone us we are ready to work all night tonight, tomorrow and Monday nites to get them out we have SALTED NUTS FRUIT CAKE, CANDY, POWDERED ORANGE JUICE And Other Things He Wants Natural Food Centre 706 KING ST. Phone 3-2310 Open 8 to 8 Ridgely to Marcus Hook, then Nelson Rightmyer, Episcopal to Denton, several years ago. She rector- In charge. Burial will be in is survived by one brother, Charles i the family plot in the Lewes Meth- W.

Bradley of West Denton, and one dist Cemetery. tep-daughter. Mrs. Frederick J. I Friends may call at the Melson Wright of Denton.

i Funeral Home Sunday night be- tween 7 and 9 o'clock. OUR WIDE RANGE OF "I WAS BOUGHT THE 'PERPETUAL' Buy that home with our Direct Reduction Home Loan It offers the extra benefits of pre-payment. This means that you can repay your Loan as rapidly as you wish without additional cost to you. You'd be surprised at the savings this feature offers. Speak with our financial experts today and youll see that you will really profit from this modern home financing plan there is no red tape.

Perpetual Savings Loan Ass'n. PERPETUAL BUILDING 201 WEST NINTH STREET MEET ALL Mrs. Sarah Waples Cooper LEWES. Oct. 13 Funeral services were held in St.

Peter's P. E. Church today for Mrs. Sarah Waples Cooper, 85 years old. who died on Tuesday REQUIREMENTS Wear Your Blue Feather With Pride FARMERS BANK of the STATE OF DELAWARE WILMINGTON: 9th Shipley 3rd Market DOVER GEORGETOWN Membtr Federal DeposH Insuianct Corporaiios DR.

HUMPHREYS' glorious relief for common PILE AGONY Humphreys Ointment (formula of Dr. F. Humphreys i promptly helps to relieve itching, painlui piles, reduce Inflammatory swelling and helps nature heal faster. Humphreys" costs only 50e with special rectal pipe. 7 years of success: All drugstores.

Yea TMANfiOON in the Loamy Home. Philadelphia. The Rev. Nelson W. Rightmyer of- ficiated and interment was in St.

Peter's Cemetery. Mrs. Cooper, a native of Lewes, i was a member of the first gradu-j ating class of the Lewes High School rUNEBAL DIRECTORS taMtuwasttwraaa mom sat.

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