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Clarion-Ledger from Jackson, Mississippi • Page 10

Publication:
Clarion-Ledgeri
Location:
Jackson, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

LEGALS Foreign News (Continued From Page Six) Believe TtotNbi jrjjjjjjj; CI ARIONLlbOIl Page 10 Tuesday, May 2 City News 15 THE MOST UNFORTUNATE. LETTER IN THE ALPHABET bidder reiardlm of trot of rurfletef. The attention of Bidders is directed to the Special Provision governing selection and employment of labor. The minimum wage paid to labor employed on this contract per hour shall be: Skilled Labor, 75 cents; Unskilled La-Dor, 30 cents; and Intermediate Grades 40 cents. Plans and Specifications are on file in this office.

Proposals may be secured upon payment oi S5.0O, which will not be refunded. Certified check or bid bond for ftvn percent 5) of bid, payable to STATIC OP MISSISSIPPI, must accompany each proposal. Bidders are hereby notified that any proposal accompanied by letters Qualifying in NOTICE Notice Is hereby sttven that scaled bids wil be received by the Board of Commissioners of the Miss. State Penitentiary until 9.00 am CWT Tuesday May ah 1944 at which time the follov-'in? listed items wUl be purchased. All bids must be FOB Farchman, Mss and state tete or approximate date that delivery can be made after rccefpt of the order.

The board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Bids should be tn letter form and mailed to the Secretary a Parchman. Miss. Please, have toe word marked on the outside the envelope. To Be Puchased IS CABH alwa ys a peer evEZ tN QANG6R ANO IN HSU.

ALL THE TlfAB Severe Erosion Caused By Heavy-Rainfall In State State College, May 7 a losses from erosion have been experienced in the hill section of Mississippi this spring on bare and unprotected fields because of heavy rainfall. On one of the plots of the Mississippi Experiment Station where accurate measurements were made the loss during March was 1-6 inch of topsoil. Rainfall at State College for March was 9.25 inches, an amount exceeded only six times since 1889. A bare plot, equipped with catch basins for the measurement of runoff, showed a soil loss of 11 thousand pounds per acre on tions Building and as executive officer of the U. S.

War Ballot Commission, answers his mail including letters from Colonel Cutler. Four Ft Depsite all the Army howls for 4-P's to get into war plants, it remains a fact that physical examination in many plants is so stiff that they can't get in. In fact, the physical in some plants is stiffer than in the Army. Many a patriotic 4-F has worn out shoe leather making: the rounds of war plants, only to find that he can't get in. A punctured eardrum, for instance, is considered just as important in a war plant as in the Army.

In recent weeks, belated steps have been taken to relax some of these physical restrictions, but much still remains to be done, so grourld invasion. Aviation failed in this task in the past because it did not have sufficient bases. It was a very long flight, for instance, from North Africa to the Romanian oil fields or to Southern Germany and Austria. But now it is only a short flight from the Foggia airfields to these objections. An allout invasion, according to the air power advocates, is by no means certain to succeed since the objective of the Allies is not merely a strip of land along the Atlantic Wall, but the German frontiers themselves.

The supporters of "the defeat Germany by air" theory are, of course, all in favor of a limited any manner the conditions under wmcn the proposal is tendered will be considered at Irregular bid. and such proposals will not be considered in making the award. The Public Roads Administration hM advised that tha War Production Board will issue Form GA-1456 allotting materials for the project. E. D.

KKNNA. Director. April 27, May 2. 6. Mrs.

Carl Smith of 514 i had as her guests over the week-end, her two sisters, Miss Maggie Smith and Mrs. Jessie Smith of TaUulah. her brother, William Smith, and Mrs. Smith; and her daughter, Mrs. James Shelby of Meridian, who was formerly Miss Marie Smith of Jackson.

On Sunday, the group enjoyed a picnic luncheon at Livingston park. Lieut. Robert A. Statler, of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, has been visiting friends and relatives in this city. Pfc.

Edgar L. Schornick, of Cleveland, Oklahoma, recently visited the War Memorial Building in Jackson, Groceries, Lard. Shoes. Dry Goods, Hardware and wagon materials. W.

CROOK. Sec. May 1. i 3 MISSISSIPPI STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed bids will be received by the State Highway Commission, at Jackson. Mississippi, until 10:00 o'clock A.

Central War Time, Tuesday, May 9, and shortly thereafter publicly opened Construction of Grading. DrlMnaae Structures. Bridges, and Alternate Types of Bituminous Surface Treatment on 2.833 miles of the Grenada-Cofteeville hiehwav in Grenada County, known as you can't blamo a lot ot ine 4-rers if they aren't in war plants. HP Cf MILK CAN ENPANGER EARTH 7h A POTTLE Of MILK SEPROPUCE-S0 8mCf THAT IF NO PlEP IN 24 HOURS THC WOULD S'flOW INTO A MASS THE SIZE OF THE EARTH MRS. TOM GRISSOM To relieve distress of MONTHLY Mrs.

A. W. Perrine. annd Mrs. W.

J. Wiggs. who reside in East Orange, New Jersey, were recent Visitors in the capital city. March 18-19. 20 thousand pounds per acre March 5 thousand pounds per acre on March 27-28.

6 thousand pounds per acre on March 28, and 10 thousand pounds per acre on March 28-29. The total soil loss for the month from this bare plot was, 53, 128 pounds, or nearly 27 tons per acre, or 1-6 inch of fertile topsoil. The soil-saving action of a buffer strip of heavy vegetation was shown on several rotation plots which had been partly spaded before the rains of March 18-19. Rains totaling about 2 1-2 inches on these 2 days packed the spaded portion but caused little runoff. Russell Woodburn, acting head of the agricultural engineering department, who conducts the work in erosion control in cooperation with the Soil Conservation Service of the U.

S. Department of Agriculture, thinks the readings made after the 5 1-2-inch rains of March 26-29 are especially significant. On a vetch plot on a 7 1-2 per Another diiiicuny wmcn War Manpower Commission might well dig into is the fact that anyone can quit work in a vital war plant but, without a certificate of availability, cannot transfer to another war plant at least, not until after a 60-day period. In other words, you can step out of an aircraft factory or a synthetic rubber plant and go to work in a barber shop or at a bootblack stand, or just loaf at home. They are not essential industries.

But if you want to switch to a munitions plant, you can't without a certificate of availability (which you probably can't get) or without waiting the required coolmg-Oil period of 60 days. Senator "Pappy" O'Daniel Senator 'Pass-the-Biscuits-Fap-py" O'Daniel has devised a unique income tax proof method of getting money for his anti-administration radio broadcasts in Texas. Texas STOOD PERPECTLy STILL FOR 2HR6 AND LET A HIVE OF BEES SWABAA ON HERARAV Female Weaknes Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Is made especially for women to help relieve periodic pain 1ith weak, nervous, blue feelings due to functional monthly disturbances. Taken regularly It helps build up resistance against such symptoms.

Follow label directions. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S Kii' TRAN5VLANIA neck. -wm- NMCGP it A AAOSOUIT MAY BREED 169 875 000,000 OTHER MOSOUTOCS mm A BREED OF KOWL THAT MAS WO EE ATM 15 Walter May and Euthel Cone, of Mendenhall, Simpson county, made a business trip to Jackson yesterday. Mrs.

Floyd Bryant, of Suffolk. Virginia, recently visited in this city. Miss C. Madeline Hewes, of An-dover, Massachussets, has been visiting friends and relatives the capital city. Mrs.

C. EL Bradfield, of Mont-dair, Hew Jersey, recently made a business visit here. ON Access Road to Air Support Command Base, on Federal Aid System. Project No. DA-WR! 16 (1).

Principal items of work are approximately as follows: ROADWAY: LUMP SUM Clearing and Grubbins. 8.04 Acres Random Clearing and Grubbing. 434.0 Sq. Yds. Removal of Concrete Pavement.

LUMP SUM Removal of Old Bridge (Station 524 plus 13.5). 53,311.0 Cu. Yds. Unclassified Excavation. 714,850.0 Sta.

Yds. Haul of Excavation. 409,535.0 Units Haul of Selected Material (Roadbed Topping and Loamy Top-soil). 39.295.0 Cu. Yds.

RoaQbed Topping (O.P.M.. 40,320.0 Sd. Yds. Reconditioned Roadbed. 3,360.0 Cu.

Yds. Stabilizer Aggregate. 285.0 Cu. Yds. Gravel Surface Course (Semi-Gravel).

3.646 Ft. BM Untreated Timber. 2,866.0 Cu. Yds. Loamy Topsoil.

99.623.0 Set. Yds. Sprigging. 3.374.0 Sq. Yds.

Solid Sodding. 7.68 Tons 4:8:4 Commercial Fertilizer or Substitute, 33.0 Lin Ft. 18 inch Vitrified Clay Pipe Culvert. 111.0 Lin. Ft.

24 inch Pipe Culvert. 294.0 Lin, Ft. 18 inch Pipe (SidedrainK 23.63 Cu. Yds. Class Culvert Con- 365.0 Lin.

Ft. Guard Rail Removed and Reset 20.0 Units Guard Rail Posts. 3.248.0 Lbs. Reinforcing Steel. 41.0' Units Right-of-way Markers.

10.0 Tons 2 inch Dense Graded Cold Plant Mix Primary Course. 4.67 Tons lVi inch Dense Graded Cold Plant Mix Wearing Course. 14,167.0 Gallons Tar or Cut-back Asphalt for Prime Coat. 36,960.0 Sa. Yds.

Alternate Types of Double Bituminous Surface Treatment. BRIDGE ITEMS: 84.000 Ft. BM Treated Timber. 430.0 Lin. Ft.

Treated Timber Piling. 169.0 Tons Dense Graded Cold Plant Mix Wearing Course. Contract Time: 150 Working Days. BASIS OF AWARD: The award of this contract, if made at all, will be made on the basis of the lowest bid by a qualified Before he became benator, ne used to get contributions by pass-incr a small wooden flour barrel t-iT-nno-Vi hiK audience after nutting Mississippians at War Two Marine recruits from Jackson, are training together at the Marine Corps rifle instruction camp in San Diego, Calif. Marine Private Paul J.

Mooney, husband of Mrs. Dora Inez Brock, 306 Millsaps helps find a comfortable sitting firing position for Marine Pvt. Harold H. Caner, son of Mr. and Mrs.

LE. Caver, 1648 Robinson St. on a show. Now, however, he gets Mr. and Mrs.

John A. Fappadas, who reside hi Houston, Texas, toured the War Memorial Building yesterday. contributions ior a "campaign ui Ortiirotin nfnr the ournose of dis Mrs. H. R.

Miller, Mrs. J. R. Tackett and Mrs. Nell Miller, of Mount Olive, Covington county, were visitors to Jackson last seminating truthtful information regarding Governmental matters." This, according to Texans, is just a high-falutin way of saying that the money is going to pay to help "Pappy" O'Daniel say what he wants on the radio.

And since tho mnnpv is for "education," it cent slope, all of which had been spaded except the lower 20 feet, the runoff was only 2.7 percent and the erosion was only 52 pounds per acre. A plot having a few annual' weeds, also on a 7 1-2 percent slope, and all spaded except the lower 18 feet, showed a runoff of 36.2 percent and a soil loss of 1676 pounds per acre. The bare plot on a slope of 9 percent, not spaded, showed a runoff of 73 percent and a soil loss of 41,280 pounds per acre. This means that in only 4 days of a very heavy rainfall the bare plot lost nearly 21 tons of soil per acre. Though data for April are not yet ready for publication, it is thought that the continued heavy rains had the same general effect moderate losses on protected slopes, but heavy losses on bare and unprotected slopes.

Capt. J. O. Reeler, of this city, visited his family over the weekend in Cleveland. Bolivar county.

probably can be deducted from in come taxes. Miss Aline On inn. of ClnrksHnl. The Clarion-Ledger Is Authorized To Make the Following POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS Subject to the action of the Democratic primaries. For Mayor LELAND SPEED WALTER A.

SCOTT (For Re-election) For City Commissioners (Vote For Two) CHARLES L. GRAVES FTJLGHAM HENRY FRED THRASHER O. A. WELLS L. J.

(Laurie) JACKSON OTTO CHAPMAN W. E. PLEASANTS McWILLIE ROBINSON R. C. FALLIN B.

SHARRON W. W. PARKER C. H. (CHARLIE) WARREN WALTER R.

LEE is spending a few days here as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. HempfaUi.

Certainly the form letter regarding funds is very carefully phrased with an eye to income taxes. Here is the letter which "Pappy" has prepared so that folks will send the dough to him: "Mr. Garfield "Crawford, Treasurer of Common Citizens Radio Committee, Great National Life Building. Dallas, Texas. "My understanding is that Common Citizens Radio Committee is on era tjpri in a famnaicn of educa Mrs.

H. I. Rueff. who has been the house guest of her daughter, to Centreville, Wilkinson county, for the past two weeks, returned to her home in the capital over the weekend. invasion to give the air forces important air bases in France.

This, they say, would assure an Uninterrupted continuity of the air offensive against the European continent. But it is much safer from every angle to try to reduce the Reich by air bombardments than by amphibious operations. The last three months of air punishment are already being felt by the Luftwaffe. If the Russians were to join in this air offensive by destroying the important industrial area between the Oder and the "Vistula Rivers, the success would come even quicker. For the time being, this industrial region which is much closer to Ruussian bases than to those of the Allies has escaped raids and it Is from the factories located there that the Germans draw their war material for the eastern and southeastern fronts.

Most American military leaders reject this theory, not necessarily because they find it unsound but because ot the definite pledges given to the Russians at Teheran. They feel that any change In the Anglo-American strategy would be considered by our Russian associates as a breach of contract and Prime Minister Stalin would consider himself free to stop fighting. The Moscow periodical War and Working Classes, which frequently interprets the views of the Kremlin or the general staff, sounded a warning against predominantly air war. It said in its last issue that "So far the Soviet people and its armed forces are doing everything to prevent a further prolongation of the war. To secure a complete victory joint operations of the Armies of the Soviet Union with those of Great Britain and America are essential." The writer adds that "The concentrated blows dealt to military targets in Germany by the Allied aircraft are harbingers of the invasion.

However, military operations of our Allies against Hitler Germany have not developed up to now The armed forces accuumulated by our Anglo-American Allies have paused in every direction." The article ends with a warning that "those who do not want to bear the responsibility for further protraction of the war must do everything to insure that the enemy is not given one extra day's respite This article represents very clearly the Russian point of view which was so forcefully presented to President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill at Teheran by Premier Stalin. And it is a typical Russian point of view. The USSR with its inhabitants is nowhere hear as much concerned over the loss of manpower as is Great Britain with its 44,000,000 people. Mr. Churchill is reliably reported to have favored at the meeting of the Big Three a continuation of the round-the-clock air offensive against the Reich, supported by a number of military offensives through the Balkans and other areas of the Mediterranean.

The lack of a definite showing by the Allied air arm made the point of view of Premier Stalin prevail. Since Teheran, however, the British report far more satisfactory and decisive results against the Reich. The sequel is that the whole matter of an all-out air offensive is once more under consideration in England. This does not mean that the British intend to forsake the land offensive for that from the air and go back on their given word. They merely place the new results under the eyes of those responsible to make the final decision.

1 Ml I 1 tion for the purpose of disseminat ing truthful mtormauon regarding frnvf rnmental matters. Mv under E. A. Milton, who for thirty years has been connected with a local insurance company, while residing to Canton, has moved to Jackson. standing in making the contribution is that mine and an otner guts wll be used solely for such purpose.

"I will appreciate it if you will acknowledge receipt of this contribution on a copy of this letter enclosed herewith." (Copyright. 1944, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Ole Miss Awards 4 1944-45 Scholarship University. May 1 Four scholarships for advanced study in the 1944-45 session have been awarded by the Graduate Council at the University of Mississippi, according to an announcement Monday by Dr. D. R.

Hutcherson, dean of the Graduate School. Students who receieved the awards and the departments in which they will study are Reade Washington of Gulfport, senior in the College of Liberal Arts, Spanish; Gertrude Pepper of Vaughn, Liberal Arts senior, English; Mary Cooper Miller of a 1 graduate student, physical education; and Alonzo D. Welch, graduate student, English. SPREQ PEP LOW? MAKES fAIMTIHCfttUBt Pfc. Paul Mooney Pfc.

Harold Cover Miss" at the time of his enlist ment. mf ivfaw you see Ttut Stfij Marguerite Taylor Brown of Tay If your back pains, leg pains, loss of normal Pep and energy, puffy eyes and dizzy feeling come from a simple temporary non-systemic, non-organic kidney condition needing diuretic action, try Sen San. Your kidneys are Nature's main way of taking the excess acids and poisonous waste out of the blood. Sen San stimulates the flow to aid the removal and thus relieve the aches and pains. Sen San has been used by thousands on the guarantee to satisfy or money back.

If you do not feel improved in 10 days, see your physician. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND (Continued From Page One) lor, has been promoted to First Lieutenant with the Army Nurse Corps at Camp Shelby. Lt. Brown is a graduate of the Baptist Hos pital in Jackson. Her husband, Capt.

C. W. Brown is serving PAINT Your Home With Our L. P. PAINT CITY COAL.

LUMBER CO. $41 Bailey Ave. Phone 4 8371 Do you strain to hear? Do your friends have to make an elfort to talk to you? SON TONE can help you. 9 out of 10 can bo helped. Have your ears tested, as you do your eyes.

A Sonotone fitted to your particular needs will give you the closest approach to natural hearing available. Private consultation bmhoi in your home or our EDkEe office. Phone fiiir for appointment. Call or write for free in formative booklet. Sergeant James C.

Honea, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Honea of Montlcello, was the man behind toe scenes at an Easter Sunrise Service to New Guinea last month.

Accordng to the reports his great initiative and ability produced the equipment, and prepared the lighting, sound and staging for a very impressive religious service in his organization. A graduate and football letter-man of Montlcello High School. Sgt. Honea was a movie projectionist for nine years before joining the Army. Now serving with the "49'ers," a fighter unit with an enviable combat record and two presidential citations, he is somewhere in New Guinea with General George C.

Kenney's Fifth Air Force. Pvt. Buster Swain of Fulton and Private Hilton Sullivan of Magee, Fifth Army anti-aircraft crewmen trained their sights on a Messer-schmidt 109 and sent it limping home to crash behind the lines, right into the lap of its Jerry brothers. So goes the story of these two Cadet Nurse Lavelle Shannon returned to the Baptist hospital Friday afternoon after spending two weeks vacation with her parents. Mr.

and Mrs. W. S. Shannon, of Greenwood. Mrs.

T. D. Murphey. of Wilmington, North Carolina spent several days to this city recently. A.

8. Reed, North Central Mississippi Director of Vocational Education, wUl return to his home to Water Valley Thursday after spending several days to the capital city on business. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Q.

EUUs, of Jackson, recently returned from a short visit in the Water Valley home of Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Gore, Sr.

Mrs. Ralph M. Randerson, of Pecatoncia. Illinois, has been visiting in this city for several days. Joe Thompson and Joe K.

Laird, Vho reside in Bassfield, near Prentiss Jefferson Davis county, recently returned home after a abort stay in the capital city. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Taylor, who make their home in Guff-port, made a tour of historic spots in Jackson while here for a few days.

Sarah Keein, of Balto, Michigan: and Libby Mccarber, of Charlotte, North Carolina, were recent visitors to Jackson. Mrs. Love Berry, of Shivers, Simpson county, recently made a shopping trip to this city. 2nd and lats add soosos tueadv. Miss Jeanette Brown, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Brown, of Greenwood, recently graduated from a local business college in this city and has accepted a position with an oil company here. Miss Beatrice Lack, of Rule-vine. Sunflower county. visited friends and relatives to Jackson and Mize last weekend.

operate with the railroad brotherhoods and the CIO to elect George P. Miller, and they're not going to change their plans for Green. Writes To Himself How complicated Government is geting is illustrated by Colonel Robert Cutler, who writes letters to himself. Cutler is executive officer for the U. S.

War Ballot Commission in the Munitions Building. He is also the Secretary of War's coordinator for soldier voting, in the Pentagon Building. In his latter job, he writes letters to Colonel Cutler at the Munitions Building, then drives to the Muni- SONOTONE OF JACKSON Deposit Gtv. Bank Bids. Jackson.

Miss. Without obligation, I would like to know more about Sonotone. I Name Address Furnit PFC H. Childress of Flora, and PFO Lester L. Davis of Lor-man, have been awarded the good conduct medal for exemplary behavior, efficiency and fidelity.

Childress, 23 years old, was inducted into the servce on a n-uary 11, 1943 and is the son of J. H. Childress, of Flora. Davis, is 30 years of age, was inducted Into the service to December, 1942 and is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Leland Davis of Lorman. lire Baby Chick Prices Reduced Clayton's Annual May CHICK SALE BEGINS MONDAY, MAY 1ST Send For Prices Mississippi Hatcheries "LAWN BROOMS" Garden Rakes Spading Fork I. S. BAENES 424 W. Capitol St.

Phone 4-8116 Watch and Clock Repairs Quick Service Work Guaranteed Berry's Watch Shop Corner Capitol and Gallatin St. IVY WONDO Poughkeepsie, N. Y. It may be true that "A kiddy divey." but triplet kids born to "Eve," a five-year-old goat owned by Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Morris, are too young to eat ivy. So bottled milk is prepared for the kid who loses the race for the mother's supply. Mississippi Gunners who downed a Messerschmidt in a Germans Front Yard. "About dawn," relates Swain, "twelve German planes attacked our position on the A 1 11 i Fifth Army's Anzio beachhead. The ack-ack was terrific when they came out of the sun, diving right over our position.

We held our fire until the planes were very 1 w. Picking our target, we let the have it. We got hits both in the tail and fuselage of one. The plane started smoking and broke formation, heading for home." But that day that the Jerry never made it. Losing altitude rapidly, he flew back over his own lines and plummeted down to earth beside the "Boys from Berlin." Constant shelling keeps the two Mississippians ducking as the craterpocked earth around their gun will prove.

"But when German planes are in the air, we forget about shells-we've got a job to do and we're doing it," says Sullivan. Sawin and Sullivan have been overseas eleven months, keeping the skies over Africa, Malta, Sicily, and Italy free of Boche planes. Hllll -'at'-- Wm. Robert Vancleave Gulf port. Miss.

April 30 Wm. Robert Vancleave, 85, nurseryman said to have introduced the sac- 9) Miss. HELP THE BOY SCOUTS SAVE ALfc WASTE PAPER FOR SATURDAY, MAY 6 PICKUP National Hide Pur Co. Opposite Faircroonda East Pearl Street Jackson. 103.

Mis- Staff Sgt. Carlton L. Frather of Bethany, recently became the proud possessor cj two oak leaf clusters, awarded him while serving in the South Pacific Area. In lieu of an additional Air Medal he was given the clusters for service as an assistant aerial radio operator from November 28, 1943 to January 22. 1944, and the second was given for services as assistant aerial radio operator from January 25, to February 7.

INSPECTOR INSPECTED Jamestown, N. Y. Defense plant guards seized a man seen looking at the plant through binoculars. He proved to be an inspector of smoke stacks. Mr.

and Mrs. N. S. Addkison. 1031 Pecan announce the m2L of a dauSnter.

on April Learn To Earn lyour business course "will pay for itself in EXTRA EARNINGS With Spring Construction Living Room Suites $169.95 Spring Seat Davino $99.95 Spring Seat Chair and Ottoman $37. 5 Breakfast Suites $24.95 High Chairs $5.95 75 ib. Ice Refrigerator $47.75 Kitchen Cabinet $47.50 Gas Ranges $68.95 3 Pc. Bed Room Suite $59.95 3 Pc. Large Post Bed Room Suite $119.95 3 Pc.

Veneer WaL Bed Room Suites Pc. Man. Bed Room Suite $169.95 4 Pc. Mah. Bd Room Suites $249.95 We have stock of good used Refrigerators, and Gas Ranges.

Have a complete stock of Gold Seal Congoleum Rugs, Quaker Rugs and Birds Rugs in sizes 6 9 to 12 15. Smith Furniture Co. 206 W. Capitol St. Dial 2-0571 in a few months after you complete lit.

stan now to l.tAKf iu iuuut. VITAMINS Sick Room Supplies SEED CORN Hastings, Mosby, Jarvis Prolific Tenn. Red Cob, Shoepeg Soy Beans Mamloxi, Arksoy, Laredo Sorghum Amber, Orange. Honey Drip Hgari, Sagrain STAF-O-LIFE QUALITY FEEDS FEEDS a vis -Mr. and Mrs.

L. T. Foster, and Miss Tommie Foster, of Tchula, ncarJLexinRton, veiled to this city last Thursday. Mrs. Jack Huff, and little son, ot the capital city, spent last week With relatives to Laurel.

WHOLESALE RETAIL GLASS Automobile Glass Furniture 'Tops Mirrors Mississippi Glass Inc. 414 E. Pearl St. Phone 2-0334 Jackson. Mi-v R't Mostlv Jackson Commercial College Mississippi's Best Equipped Business School i suma orange in this section, died at Two other Mississippians who received the Oak Leaf Cluster were Staff Sergeant Walter J.

Taylor, of Jackson, and First Lieutenant John F. Freel of Jackson. Taylor received his award for services as an aerial radio operator gunner from February 7 to February 15, 1944. and Freel received his cluster for services as navigator from July 5, 1943 to January 3, 1944. Prescriptions In Business 44 -Years Serving Jackson 27 Years ENROLL NOW harkson.

Miss. Phone 2-0483 SEED FEED STORE Phone 2-0853 519 E. Pearl if New classes now forming. Quick training, prompt placement, handsome incomes, early security. Get fret Bulletin.

Im Si Jib Mrs Seth Hobert. of Jackson, visited Saturday her mother, Mrs. Cora Coker, who resides in Flora. Jessie Beaver, who is connected with the Union Circulation JSew York City, is spending several days with his uncle, A. J.

Chapman and family, 514 Juicidi street. lira, H. Williams, of Magee, Is spending this week visiting her sister here. 434 E. Capitol the home of a daughter, Mrs.

R. Roy Woodward. He was a native of Yazoo County, and formerly resided in Pascagoula, where he was street collector and mar-shall. Three daughters, Mrs. Ethel Earr, Hattiesburg Mrs.

Roy Wood-wood, Gulfport, Mrs. Nellie Ferguson, Little and a son. a brother, John P. Vancleave and John M. Vancleave, survive, also a sister.

Sarah Fergusion. Little Rock. The funeral was held here Sunday. 4-6517 Droit CO. Business LOANS Major Edgar L.

Walker of Camden is now in England serving as Executive Officer of a Fighter Bomber Group. He will br remembered by many Mssissippians as a former coach and athletic director at the University of Mississippi, and later, for a period of four years, as a member of the coaching staff at Princeton. It was from Princeton that he volunteered for service with the Air Corps two years ago. Major Walker went to England in March as executive officer of one of the Squadrons of the Group, but has recently been made Executive Officer of the Headquarters group. Harold Smithson.

of Durant, was a Jackson visitor last Tuesday, when he spent the day with friends and relatives. Many business men firms and large corporation often find it helpful to borrow money from the Jackson-State. We are always glad to receive such applications for credit. "3 Ijtlf It Wit) Grow With Us Take These Home With You FRENCH BREAD CHOCOLATE ECLAIRS CREAM PUFFS APPLE TURNOVERS COFFEE ROLLS DOUGHNUTS and others! Baked Fresh Daily Mrs. Marks Jenkins, of this citv, was a visitor in Newton last weekend in the J.

S. Jenkins home. E. L. Willet.

who resides in Yazoo City, attended a state superintendent's meeting of the R. E. A. in the capital city Saturday. STOMACHS FIRST Chicago The building was blazing merrily but the crowd which gathered didn't take time to watch the firemen ply their hazardous business.

They were busy raking cans of tinned rationed foods, packages of razor blades and bottles of asDir- Funeral Service Information We offer but one type of service in every case the best that heart and hand can provide. Wright Ferguson FUNERAL HOME 601 N. WEST PHONE 2-3636 ANYONE man or woman who lias to look after the many details incidental to maintaining a home, will find a bank account of greatest convenience. Deposit Guaranty Bank Trust Co. Member Federal Reserve System and F.

D. I. C. From the world's largest bombardier school a now class of the ''world's best bombardier-navigators" was graduated recently, culminating eighteen weeks of intensive training in the art of spearheading the invasion with bombs. The two Mississippians included in this group were John Williams, son of Mr.

John B. Williams of Gulfport, and Leroy Q. Gresham. son of Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas L. Gresham of Myrtle. Williams was attend tag Olc national bank PphArm rtP, Qjuttcm Member Federal Reserve System and F- D. I. Cm to out of the gutter.

The fire was in a wholesale crocery store..

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