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Pensacola News Journal from Pensacola, Florida • 3

Location:
Pensacola, Florida
Issue Date:
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3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I FHONE 214! THE JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14. 1942! THRES Quick Response Identity of Amnesia Victim Is Established Opening Gun Is Fired Here In Waste Gathering Paper, Metals And Cotton Will Be Collected (CONTINUED jFROM PAGE ONE) i Public Co-operates In Tire Rationing Program in County Tire rationing board of Escambia county reported yesterday the public was co-operating fully In the the rubber shortage, that no favors were being asked and that to date no one had asked toe a new tire when it was not urgently i needed. Applicants re required: first to have their tires checked by a tire merchant to establish whether it may be retreaded. If a new tire is necessary a purchase order must then be obtained from (he board and the buyer must fall within a rigid government classification of persons vital to national defense. Donald Nelson Named Czar Of War Production Roosevelt Creates One-Man Control Of Vast Output (CONTINUED FROM PACE ON!) derson, the price administrator, all of whom are members af 5PAB and will serve under Nelson on tha new board.

Nelson originally came into th mobile on the Scenic highway near Mallory Heights which had an automobile certificate issued to George TTUliam Stone of Cedar Falls, luted as an employe of the Clav Equipment companr of Cedar Falls. Via short-wave radio through Oshkosh, Sheriff Mayes contacted Mrs. Stone, who supplied to the Civic Beaufy Is Theme Of Rotary Guest Mrs. Ochiltree Tells Club Morale Aided By Bright Landscapes Attractive landscape designs, highways with artistic vistas and beautiful gardens are help to the morale of a warring nation, Ro-tarians were told yesterday by Mrs. Paul Ochiltree, president of the Miami Beach Garden club, and guet speaker.

Jlri. Ochiltree, who has lectured extensively and managed many flower shows in South Florida, wa introduced by Mrs Kennedy, president of the Pensacola federation of garden club. The jruests were presented by, John P. Murphy, program chairman and member of the beautilication committee. a vegetable garden may be arranged artistically, the speaker broucht out, indicating that lor an economical supply of food mi ny private gardens would likely be planted during the "war.

Mr. Ochiltree praised efforts by the club and other civic organization In planting shrubbery along highways. "Approaches to a city are as Important as the down town district for impressing a tourist," she said. The road between Palm Beach The identity of Lt. (jgl George William Stone, TJSNR retired, amnesia victim under treatment at Navy hospital, was definitely established yesterday.

Going- first to the state employment office here Monday, Stone was then sent to the police station where he told questioners the last thing he could remember was "coming to" on the roadside east of the city Saturday morning, with his shoes off. When notified, the Navy got in contact with Mrs. Stone. She wired that Aviation Cadet Howard G. Ervin, now stationed here, could positively identify Stone.

Ervin was taken to see the man and said that he was Stone, with whose son Ervin had attended school. Meanwhile deputies of Sheriff Howard Mayes located an auto- Body Found In Bay Unidentified Accidental Drowning Verdict of Officers When efforts to identify the decomposed body of a white man found floating in Pensacola bay yesterday morning proved a failure, the body was buried. L. B. Morgan, justice of the peace, viewed the body and said there was no evidence of foul play and no inquest would be held.

He signed a death certificate of "accidental drowning." The body, floating near Coir.man-dancia wharf, was first sighted by L. railroad workers and a McNeil 'Funeral home ambulance was summoned to remove it, Sherrlt i Howard Mayes reported. 1 Deputy Sheriff R. A. Salmons, who investigated, said the body was badly decomposed.

He said the man was about 6 feet one inch tall, weighed about ISO pounds. had false teeth and was gray- haired. i Officials of the McNeil Funeral home said the body was so badly decomposed they could not hold it for- a lengthy effort to establish, identity. DON'T 1 I i i sheriff virtually the same informa- tion she gave the Navy here. Mayes said automobile apparently had not been molested, although it was off the highway in a blackjack thicket.

The Nary said Stone would be treated at the Navy hospital un- til he regains his memory. A World veteran, he received flight training here and was among the pioneer aviators, being No. 111. It was announced Mrs. Stone was.

en route here. The sheriff was told Stone disappeared from Cedar Falls January 7. C. of C. Slates Annual Banquet Governor Holland Has Accepted Invitation T.

S. Kennedy, president of the Pensacola Chamber of Commerce, yesterday, said the date of the organization's first annual membership banquet has been set for Friday. February 6. The affair will be held in the San Carlos hotel at 7:30 p.m. Kennedy said Governor Spes-ard L.

Holland has accepted an invitation to attend the banquet and will be the principal speaker. Mrs. Holland will accompany her husband. Members will be guests of the chamber of commerce and are ex. tended the privilege of bringing their wives and guest.

A charge of Hi per plate will be made for those other than members of the group. Reservations may be made -at the San Carlos hotel. Mayor L. C. Hagler Is chairman of a committee in charge of arrangements.

Hunter Brown will act a master of ceremonies. Kennedy said all members of the governor's staff In Pensacola will be invited to attend the banquet. FORGET! Try Procter government as a doUar-a-year man from the Sears Roebuck company, where he was executive vice pres ident, to take charge of government purchases for defense. Later as th old defense advisory council was succeeded by OPM and SPAB was superimposed upon the latter, he waa given direction over priorities. He is 53.

and a native of Hannibal, Mo. He is tall, bulky" and bespec-; tacled. He is noted among his associates for a knack at going directly i at problems and obstacles and easing i or pushing them but of the way. No Extension In Tag Buying Tomorrow Will Be Final Deadline Time limit for the purchase ct 1943 auto tags will not be extended beyond Jan. 15, lt was announced yesterday by John R.

Jones, county tax colctor. The order waj Issued, by Governor Holland. Less than half the tars hart been purchased by autoista in Escambia county. Jones said his office would remain open uaetil midnight Thursday, If necessary, to accommodate the public Well do the best we can," he said, -but it is a physical impossibility to distribute the remainder of the ll cense plates by the deadline Tags may be obtained at branch. distribution centers at Garrett store In Century, the Cross Roads la Walnut HiU and the Naval Air station.

Dont waste; save repair. Gamble's Hew Soap! eaths WALTER JACKSON HAMMAC iWalter Jackson Hammac, 59, died Monday night at the Pensacola hospital. jHe leaves his widow, Mrs. Minnie Hammac; five sons. Calvin Ham-mac of Pensacola, Hilrey and Ber-nlc Hammac of Winter Haven, Walter and William Hammac of Lakeland, four daughters, Mrs.

Mattle Boy in ton of Pensacola, Mrs. Addie Mae Stephens, Misses Gainell and Joyce Hammac, all of Lakeland: one brother, John Hammac of iflomatan, and one sister, Mrs. Annie Godwin of Canoe, Ala. The funeral cortege will leave Fisher-Pou chapel at 1:30 pjn. today, and services will be held at the Goulding tabernacle at 1:45 with the Rev.

D. L. Welch officiating. Burial will be in Hammac cemetery at Foshee, Ala, at 3:30. Pallbearers will be George Black-mon, Tom Smith, F.

B. Biggs, Alton Smith, William Blackmon, and Charles Grissett. JOHN MA RUE iJohn Marue, 62, died Tuesday night at his home, 318 West Inten-dencia street, after a long illness. Mr. Marue was a former employe of the Florida state road department and a member of the Woodmen of the World.

He leaves a brother, Edward Marue of Esthonia; a niece of Es-thonia, and a nephew, Eddie Marue of New "York city. Funeral arrangements will be an-, nounced later with Fisher-Pou directing. TOM MULDOON Tom Muldoon. a resident of Bell-view, died at the Pensacola hospital Tuesday evening following a short illness. He is survived by his family; his mother, Mrs.

Miley Muldoon; 'five sisters. Mrs. R. E. Lee.

Mrs. T. J. Pettersen, Mrs. T.

J. i Donaldson. Mrs. L. Howski, and Miss Alene Muldoon, ef Pensacola.

Time of funeral services will be announced later. Waters and Hib-bert are hVxharge. German Desert Army to Fight Unexpected Stand Is Taken by Enemy CAIRO, Jan. 13. (AP) The Ger man desert army, in flight for 300 miles took an unexpected stand tonight at the base of the Gulf of Sirte on a line running due south of El Agheila.

'Pursuing British vanguards made immediate contact with this main force of the enemy remaining In North Africa, at a point which still is more than 300 miles short of Tripoli, the main axis base. Far back, near the Egyptian frontier, a Scottish regiment from the Transvaal stormed and cap tured Salum and put 7.000 to 8.000 isolated Axis troops in Immediate danger of destruction. Salum is a key to the stubborn holdout garrison at Halfaya (Hellfire) pass, which begins its ascent some seven mues to me souuieast. Bodies of Fliers Sbnt to Homes i Bodies of two naval aviators who were killed about seven miles north of the city Monday when their plane "spun in" at a low altitude. were shipped to their homes at 101:20 last night.

tThe crash victims were Ens. Russell Vroom Adams, Jr, 25, of Maple- K. and his passeneer. av iation Cadet Francis Allen Rafferty, 21 of Los Angeles. They were at tached to Squadron 1-A at Corry rieid.

jEns. Roland N. McMackin will accompany the body of Ens, Adams ar(d the body of Cadet Rafferty wUl bej escorted by Aviation Cadet Gerald M. Richerd. rst Aid Classes For Wardens Held First-aid classes for air raid wardens were held at the city Jail with Polce Officer Glover Lott as instructor, and at Zelica Grotto with Red Cross Instructors led by Wallace Kihg, last night.

Qounty precinct wardens met at the city Jail. They Included East Pensacola Heights. Brownsville, Myxtle Grova, Warrington. Ferry Pafs, eBach Haven and Pleasant Grove. City precinct which met at the Grotto included Noa.

12, 26, 29, 46, 49. 60 and 42. Will Hear Of Honolulu Raid i- Ouest speaker at the A. meeting at the Annie KL Suter school at 2:30 pin. today will be Mrs.

P. M. Mastrogtacomo, recently returned from Honolulu. She will speak on war conditions there. Glade Wright, assistant fire chief, willj talk, on home defense tiring' air raids.

The public is invited to attend the meeting. Defense Force Must Attend Drills Here Although attendance thus far has been 100 -per cent, Capt. John Lewis Reese, commanding officer of Company E. Florida Defense Force, said yesterday that owing to the wartime basiS on which his command is now operating, no excuses would be accepted for failure to attend weekly Tuesday night drill sessions. NEURITIS RllllVI PAIN IN FIW MINUI1J Ta relieve torturing pa: a ef RbeuBiatunn Neuhtia, Neura'ra.

or Lumbago in a few Jinatea, ret RITO, the cplendid formula. ved by taouMOda. Dependable no optatea. Dora the work euiciiy. Mttut rt rvf cruel pain, to your aatiiractioa.

in tew sumitee or ywir money back, ton aer. Asa tout 4ruSMt today for on tail (wuaatan. Is Secured To Clothing Appeal Need Warm Bedding For Poor, States Sister Martina Many Pensacoliaas were quick to respond yesterday to an appeal made by Sister M. Martina, direc tor of the Associated Catholic Charities, for clothing and bedding for the needy. Sister Martina pointed out yesterday warm bedding and clothing was needed to distribute among the needy doe to the ex treme cold weather of the last, few days.

She said the response to her appeal appearing in the Journal "was very good and many needed articles were acquired." i. "Although" we don't want to ap pear greedy or never satisfied, we could use more of these articles," the sister said. "Our shelves were virtually bare," she pointed out. "We wish to extend to the pub lic our sincere thanks and appreciation for their help toward this matter and wVre grateful," Sister Martina said. Those wishing: to make contribu tions of clothing and bedding may deliver them, "if possible, to head quarters at 20-21 South Palafox street, or if this is impossible, telephone 2653 and arrangements will be made to pick them up.

The agency takes care of all persons in need regardless of creed of race. County to Buy Another Boiler Cooper Authorized To Make Purchase Escambia county's board of commissioners yesterday authorized Commissioner James M. Cooper to take the necessary steps toward the purchase of a new boiler for the courthouse. Discussion of this matter held the attention of the commissioners for the majority of the session. The board alsb received reports from the state prison inspector which showed conditions generally good in the county convict eamps and the county jail, although it noted prisoners in the county Jail complained that the doctor did not always see them when he was needed.

Other routine matters were discussed and decided that another meeting will be held Thursday afternoon. Richards Seated As Camp Commander F. D. Richard, was installed as commander of the Co. W.

F. Williams Camp, United Spanish War Veterans, succeeding John H. Tark-ington, who was installed as trustee. Other officers installed by O. A.

Bailey new adjutant and quartermaster, were Ed Wynn senior vice commander; W. B. Strickland, trustee; R. L. Slatten, patriotic instructor and historian; John W.

Mann, officer -of the day; Willam Whalen, officer of the guard; John A. Webster sergeant major; W. quartermaster sergeant; William Neal, senior color sergeant; and J. H. Heaps, Junior color sergeant.

Film Executives -Barred From Offices NEW YORK, Jan. 13. (JPh-The treasury department In a sudden move today ordered suspended from office and barred from company premises five- executives of General Aniline ds Film corporation, long under Investigation for possible German influences. In addition, the order forbade any company officials or employes from communicating with the suspended men without prior written consent of a treasury representative. The men suspended were Rudolph Hutx, a director; Hans Aickelin, a vice president and former director;" William H.

von Rath, vice president and former secretary and director; F. W. von Meister, plant manager at Johnson City, N. and Leopold Eckler, assistant vice president and plant manager of the Agfa-Ansco division at Binghampton, N. T.

Kabler Is Given Another Honor The North Sea Mine Force association, a group of war veterans who laid more than 76,000 mines along the Norwegian coast during the last World war, yesterday made Lieut. Comdr. William L. Kabler an honorary member of the organisation, Comdr. Kabler, who received international commendation after he and his crew of a little seaplane tender shot down a Japanese plane, damaged another and brought the lr vessel safely Into port although badly crippled by enemy gunfire, is a native of Bristol, and was formerly attached to the Pensacola Naval Air station.

He married Miss Elaine Dickinson of Pensacola in 1330. Woodmen Intall Officers Tonight live Oak and Hickory lodges of the Woodmen of the World will hold a point installation of officers In the K. of P. hall, Gardeh near iBaylen, at 7:30 pjn. todaj T.

F. Westmark, field representative an-j nounced yesterday. I Don't waste; save repair. i but any individual troop or member of any scout troop that he person-I ally would likei to have collect his or her bundle, "The owner ctf this warehouse will buy any waste nd scrap brought in i at the market price available in this vicinity at the time it is brought in, convert and bale the waste and scrap at cost and turn over to the organizations designated by the caller or the collector which ever the case may be, the profit from the sale of the baled waste and scrap, i -2. Let it be clear that this telephone has: been put in use for; the service of the Escambia Coun- ty Defense council who will have i free use of the warehouse, but It it in no way excluded your personal sale of (waste and' scrap to other junk dealers.

"In the event any other dealer wished to offer free telephone service and warehouse space, he may do so and his number will be gladly published alorsg witht any other waste and scrap news. "3. In the event an individual wants to personally receive the cash profits for the sale of waste and i scrap, he may fio so by delivering lt i personally to tie above address. "4. A cash prize was offered by I one of the loeal industries to the troop doing the best Job of collect- "5.

Wednesday, January 14. at 5:15 p.nt., in room 1000, American i National Bank; building, there will be a meeting of all Boy Scout mas-t ters and assistants fOr the purpose of working ouC the final detail for the collecting iof waste and scrap, in Pensacola asid vicinity." The Salvation Army will collect i paper only on; Tuesdays and Fri-I days. Call 3718 or 9746. i i Mrs. A.

R. Patterson, president of the County Council of Parent-i Teacher associations, has appoint ed a chairman who will select a committee to handle collection of old metals. Owen Gregory, Boy Scout execu tive, asked all persons to contact Boy Scouts in their neighborhood to collect old paper, or to phone Boy Scout headquarters. The junior chamber of commerce, through Edgar Pfeiffer, president, is to collect old metals. Their committee consists of Bob Todd, Ed Varborough and T.

G. nofton. Many of the i schools already are collecting old paper and others plan to do so. Teachers are supervising; the respective collections. Acting as coordinator for Lara Sanchez, secretary of the defense council, Frank Allen conferred with junk dealers, scoutmaster and oth-i ers to work out details of the planJ He said that the scouts had started a paper collection campaign several weeks ago, were: well organized and had collected a ton and a half of paper.

i Colled Books i For Army, Navy Three Centers Are Named Here Books are being collected throughout the country ithls week for libraries for service pien and In Pensacola three collection centers have been named. Anyone with books, recent tech- nical, fiction or of any subject i matter, is requested to leave them either at the municipal advertising board, 24 West Garden street, the chamber of commerce, 37 East Garden street, at the Y.M.C.A. 400 North Palaf ex. I Persons unable to carry the books may telephone 4(126 or 5383 and Boy and Girl Scouts) will call to carry them to the cenaers. i Magazines are not being asked for at this time.

Technical" or acientlfic books! dated before 1935 will not be useful. Miss Lucia Tryon, city librarian and chairman of; the drive, requests that donors "look over shelves and pick out those hooka which can be spared for the bqya in service. These books will be used in the libraries and reading rooms of stations and camps and recreation centers." Girl Reserve Club Will Meet Today I The Girl Reserve club of Pensa cola high school, sponsored by the Brent buidtog USO club will hold a reorganization imeeting at 3 pjn. today in the parish house of the Christ church. The Reserve club is composed of younger members of the Y.W.C A which has membership of more than 3O0.0OO In the United States and 39 foreign: countries.

In addition to club members. Miss Mae Denham Partridge. Miss Hazel Sanpster and.M&s Eleanor Walters, faculty members the high school, and Mrs. Marion; T. Gaines and Mrs.

W. J. Noonan. will attend. Miss Madonna Untreiner will render several violin selections.

MEETING POSTPONED Conrad A. Conley, director of the Pensacola Trade chooL announced yesterday that the meeting of the state advisory committee on defense vocational -j training, which as to be held Ihere Friday, has been postponed unUI the following Friday. all 3 hinds of wash! British Still Falling Back In Malaya Sector U. S. I Forces Score On Luzon; Dutch Smash Tarakan Wells (TURN TO PACE THREE) was more air power drew this official statement in London: "There i no official authority for statements, regarding air strength in Malaya which appeared in certain papers today.

It is not in the public interest to disclose air force strength in this or other theaters of war, nor is it- the custom to di- vulge movements of aircraft." In Russia, the grand Soviet ot-f ensive at the center. still was the dominant action, although Red troops in fact held the initiative from the- far north down to the Crimea. Soviet ski troops were smashing at the German salient at Orel, 200 miles below Moscow, in co-operation with a parallel drive further to the north which was reported to have outflanked Rzhev, the upper anchor of a main 'German defense iine that already had been breached. This maneuver about Rzhev was designed to1 imprison about 100,000 Germans still holding Mozhaisk, the one surviving German salient within a 100-mile radious of Moscow. As to Orel, where 200,000 were said to be standing, the British understood that the town had in fact already been recaptured by the Russians.

The substance of all information from the central front was Hit-! ler's Rzhev-Vyazma-Bryansk line was no longer an effective force and that a general German retirement back to a Sine; running through 1 Smolensk, about Jialf-way back from Moscow to the" western Russian frontier, could be expected. The Germans meanwhile, in pursuit of the: curious mood of candor and frank melancholy that had of late fallen upon them, broadcast over their Own radio a dispatch of a Nazi war reporter which said plainly that German reinforcements were very scarce and sometimes were both too little and too late. Moreover, this extraordinary dispatch said almost as plainly that high mobility of the Russian forces were greatly worrying, if not terrifying, the As an example of this, the Nazi correspondent write: "Early one bitterly cold morning we saw approaching a long column of dogs. I They were white Polar dogs pulling white sleds on which were i riding Siberian anlp-. era in coats and masks.

i "They came like a flash, emptied machine-guni against our ines and before we could reply they were out ef sight. "We became tired and colder, but the Russians i allowed no respite finally, we were relieved by reinforcements attacking the Russians from the' rear then we escaped." In the African campaign the surviving Axis army of Libya- which bad retreated a total of 300 miles took a stand at the base of the Gulf of Sirte and it appeared that the British Viw had another chance to let fall the last fatal blow that previously had been interrupted by! unfavorable weather. Meantime In extreme eastern Libya, near the Egyptian -rontier, the British stormed and seized the hod-out Axis position of Salum and appeared to hold, the sword over Germanj and Italan troops there. I Again therti was evidence that the Axis was preparing an attempted invasion ol the British Mediterranean Island of Malta, most likely in an effort to remove that most troublesome bar to the dispatch of troops to Africa, Gull Point Will Have Mass Session i A mass meeting of the residents of the Gull Point community will be held at pm. today In the office of the chemical plant for the purpose of setjting up a civilian defense Tiger Cages ters To Play Murphy Pensacola High's scheduled basketball game iwith Bay High in Panama City night was postponed until a later date.

The Tigers will play Murphy of Mobile here Friday 'night. i BLASTS! HURT FOUR NEW ORLEANS. Jan. 1J. (AP) Four men sere injured, one possibly seriously.

In a series of explosions that fired an oil barge in the Mississippi river here today and sent clouds of heavy smoke over the harbor. MY TOWS IS ARE FAR r7T SINCb I CHANvbU TO DUZ. and IMami Is cluttered with a "gar-ten art gallery of bill posters and hot-ricg stands," she said, but a legislative act sponsored by the federation of garden clubs is rapidly eliminating such public "architectural horrors." In contract the highway approach to Fort Pierce is "strikingly she said, attributing much of the success of the beau tifiratinn to Mrs. Don Blandinf, former wife of George Palmer Putnam, nationall known publisher. Two poems, from the book, "Florida written by Don Blanding, globe-trotting new husband of the landscape designer, were read by the speaker.

They were In wittily imaginative vein, one descriptive of the southern Negro's philosophy of relaxation while fishing and the ether of the personified life of male and female spiders in bright colorations. Lt. Comdr. Henry Bell Hodg-kin, former Rotary president and Christ church rector now on active naval was introduced fry President J. E.

D. Tonge. FraiT Phelps, Jaycee chairman of the Army, and Navy committee, urged the ciub to donate books to Collectors In the current Victory Book campaign, to enlarge the library for service men. Guests included Harry F. Baker, visiting Rotarian from Minneapolis.

Harry Wrighton of and Jim Rhuddy of Jacksonville, guest of Hunter Brown. WARDENS TO MEET 1 All air raid wardens of the Ferry Pass, community are urged to attend a meeting at 8 p.m. today to be held in the Olive Baptist church. ACHING STIFF SORE For Quick ReliefRub On I ired -Kidneys Often Bring Sleepless nights rwtfST a ymir kidneys contain 15 Tnilaa ef tin ti-besnr hl(r hi--'o beln to purify th Htxxi and ken yott healthy. When tbey gmt tirod don't work right in th daytiroa, many peopie bars to ret up nighta.

requent or aramv paw.iK wills amartm and buroinf omctimao ahnwa tber la aometbmff wronf vitb ymir kidneys or bladder. Don nejtlar lh Miij Hon and lcm valuaMa, restful aieap. bo dmorrier kidney function prmui Tmor.oua matter to remain in your blood, ia inay mum nac-gina backacDa. rbuxnati pnw, ri n. loea of pep and oarra'V, under tba ayaa, aaadaebea and tin senega.

Vin wait! Alc your drorziat for Dona's Tills, ol aureewf ully by miiiiona for over 40 jeara. 1 hey stvn haprty relief and will bip tea 15 ir ilea of kidnev tuhaa "nab out poia-eua irom your blood. Cat Dona uia. IP r.oTicn relief SU't. SHIS.

IASTINZ MCIB INDIGESTION No need to suffer the tortures ef add indigestion and other acid r.ach discomforts ny longer. 'ot yoa can get Bisma-Re. Here it a tout action product that is helping thousand! obtain relief. Bisma-Rex la aold only at Rexs.il Drug Scores. Try It today.

Marreir II. You owo It to yoursolf. Yea you've just got to see how easy washday is when you use DUZ for everything in your wash. Suds I That 'a the first thing DUZ does! Builds more ends faster than any of the other 4 leading granulated soaps. Suds that last up to twice as long.

And then just see what those DUZ suds can do! Towels! The grimiest, dirtiest ones come out up to 25 whiter with DUZ than with many soapa we've tested. Work-clothes 1 Like child's play with DUZ. It cleans 'em easy. Pretty Rayon UndUs! DUZ turns 'era out bright. It's safer for colors than strong granulated soapv And far safer on hands.

Wonderfully sneez-fro. No clouds of Irritating dust to make you sneeze. Yea, DUZ does everything! See for yourself next washday. i 4 (Mf duz is KAUYSAFB I EVkN FOR PRETTY UT Al RAYON i i -u i3tioizs! rrh FOn VtSHSS, TOO DUZ DOES EVERYTHING Sgvickt TAsrt Skinvzz to S) MANY MOKE CUTS IVTN TOL'Sff HAHtSI 1HITU Ls? svvs-so cxsAsz-wiTHG'jr mi so son MVCHfASTZXl ANO SMOOTH 1 7.

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About Pensacola News Journal Archive

Pages Available:
1,990,058
Years Available:
1900-2024