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The Herald-Press from Saint Joseph, Michigan • 6

Publication:
The Herald-Pressi
Location:
Saint Joseph, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1945. Pate Six THE HERALD-PRESS, ST. JOSEPH, MICH. THE HERALD-PRESS since 1939, Marx said, but nevertheless' there is a pipe shortage. Forty-five per cent of the production Is being sent overseas.

NOT GI --tf LITTLE ROCK, (AP). Wearing a full dress bearing an Impressive array of service stripes, Brig. Gen. H. McAlister, Arkansas' new adjutant general, Plastic Pastel Pipes For Women; Mix-Match With Spring Ensemble SEEK PRIORITY FOR 266 DOGS published by The Herald-Prea Cumpanj.

119 8UU 8t, St Jotepfc. Entered ti econd-clasj matter tor 'in the trade, says an Industry In the last three months, when the cigarette short 3 became acute, the nation's women smokers have purchased 200,000 pipes, Robert I Marx told a meeting of the National Association of Tobaoco Distributors yesterday. He said colored tobacco pouches are being made to match the vari-hued pipes. Briar root from Italy and Spain recently '-arrived-. Jh the United States for the first time -paid his first visit to the capita CHICAGO, Jan.

20 (AP) Pipes exclusively for women with dalnti RECKLESS DETROIT (AP) It was a day for the O'Connors in traffic court. Three times the court clerk called out "the people vs. O'Connor." Each time a member of the clan was sentenced for reckless driving. Sentences were recorded by docket clerk Andrew O'Connor. Sept 18.

1916 at tne pustofflct at St Joseph, Mien, under the act of Congress or March 8. 1891 bis WYNKOOP. Editor and General Manager. rmmmm Bonehead Club To Sponsor bowls, stems designed with grace building. He received an unexpected greet, ing: Doorman," inquired a Visiter "please tell me how to find' fc sales tax division." and colored plastic mouth-pieces Round-World Tour (Interchangeable to complement an ensemble) are now a "definite fac THE GAL BEHIND THE MASK! By ROBERT STORN SECRET AGENT X9 AYS National Advertising Representatives SMALL, BREWER KENT.

INC 807 Michigan Ave. Chicago 850 Part Ave, New Vort of associated PHESS The Associated Presa Is exclusive ly entitled to tne use for publication of "aU news dispatches credited to It Or not otherwise credited in The Herald-Press and also the local news published herein All right for republication of special dispatches herein reserved." SUBSCRIPTION RATFS Delivered dally by carrier, 20 cents per week By mall within Berrien county: per rear six months, 83; three months. $150: one month. 60 cents. By null outside Berrien countv: DALLAS, Jan.

20 (AP). The Dallas Bonehead Club, organization of funlovlng businessmen, has voted a priority air tour around the nation for the city pond's 266 dogs. dogs are waiting for the boneheads to pay their license fees," R. G. Alexander, city pondmaster, said today.

"And, of course, there is the matter of 266 priorities." The Boneheads had their fling at priorities yesterday when they attempted to ship a huge St. Bernard to President Roosevelt by air. Seizing on the flight of Col. Elliott Roosevelt's dog to the west coast as an opportunity for ribbing, club members, topped with derbys and wearing bibs, stopped downtown traffic as they descended on air THE MM IN IMC MA6K Yl THE OR BOONS WILM OORRE.THE flUY." 1 'aiu't iibp rruAfi tuc cams 1 TAlKft UKB A WOMAN i I JTO'Ol 0ETECT1VE 4T0RY WTWTHi't BDan CHECK 6 UCEN5 7 WltOA DORRt THI5 DOE5NT MAKE -l FK JU5T AJo ATES TOMORROW. VET- PlWEO I lines offices.

They were accompanied by the sedate St. Bernard on whose mas per year $750: six months, 84: three months. 8250; one month. 81 DAI1 EXCEPT" SUNDAY Off" By CARL ANDERSON HENRY Strain on the family tie sive head reposed an opera hat. Headed by Big Chief Bonehead Jack Estes, the 30 men pounded the counter of the Braniff Airline Agency and demanded class A priority." They didn't get it.

Then the men and the dog marched into the American Airlines office and by now the St. Bernard wore a conspicuous "priority tag on his INAUGURATION DAY 1 President Roosevelt officially and formally begins his fourth term as the nation's Chief Executive today. is Inauguration Day and we are reminded how different this is Glancing Backward I Forres avenue have gone south to Fifty-Four Years Aro collar. An American Airlines rep- from the inaugurals of the past. The a H.

Richardson, piano tuner, is at spend the remainder of the winter. Iesentative smilingly promised in Palm Bearh and other Florida! capital ceremony, "of course, is a he hotel. 'Vi tvhinmh hntfi II I I I i I 1 I Ilk I I Carl. I AHBEfWON HI HI Ofi Iff KiifMw, tt n-tev 5Q uui, uiuji i any wucu cities. "Little Nugget" is the next at- mere formality, In keeping with a The Boneheads also decided to Loomis K.

Preston of St. Rep. h-aHHinn cinM Mr Rvit is uK. traction at the Bell Opera house chancre the name of Groundhog josepn was appoiniea cnairman iDav peb. 2 to "Ground-Dog" Day.

.4,. lit Is sufficient to say that Joe and ceedlng himself for the fourth Herbert Cawthorne are the leads one ol the committees oi tne lower Qn this d0gs-would be ground-' house of the Michigan legislature would a chance and member of three others. at plane reservations. No outgoing President is maiungjin the company. way for a new personality.

Having B. F. Pixley went to Berrien been inaugurated four times, it Is Springs today on business r. Two or three carloads of St. Joan old story for Mr.

Roosevelt and seph wnt to Benton Har. for the nation. The President, as bor to see John Dillon and enjoyed It were, meets himself going and'the performance very much. VM BONDS 3 BRICK BRADFORD-And the Queen of Night By WILLIAM RITT and CLARENCE GRAY coming, was made chairman of the commit-tee on the university and member! of the committees on transportation, the judiciary and iederal relations. William McElroy of Lake Boulevard Is confined to his home by an attack of grippe.

Ten Years Ago Fremont Evans, city attorney of! St. Joseph, has yielded to the de-' mands of more than 100 Demo-i Thirty Years Ago Lack of quorum forced an.ad- I Tlllllll rVCITIMl iAmi I I tftftllk.r-fiil iiAitt iAiuir- A 1 I -tt 1 tt ttttw 1 a I 1 'In view of these circumstances arid because the traditional pomp Journment until April 12 of the IT and ceremony of peace-time inaug urals would be out of place in war St. Joseph Athletic Field association, which met with Secretary Jo-senh CVriller tn review the crats from all parts of the county who have drafted him as their candidate for circuit judge to oppose Judge Charles E. White. For time, 'today's ceremony Is therefore baseball situation.

At the April subdued and streamlined to use a meeting it is expected the fate of mUch overworked word. the association for 1915 will be Pdent Roosevelt's tenure. "SgSWartee of this city been marked, by the greatest up- -was chosen president of the Ber-heavals to the history of the mod-rien County Equal Suffrage asso-srn world. He. took office to the cln for the new year to suc-midst of a great financial depression that so demoralized world economy ton Harbor was named secretary that a second world war was to-land Mrs.

W. H. Ball was reelected u.m. mfw'ttM 'inaiimirafinn Af as treasurer. Despite the recent several months Democratic leaders have been urging Atty.

Evans to become a candidate. Amelia Earhart Putnam's ship is all set for flight but her public are in the air as far as her immediate flying plans are concerned. America's "first lady" of the air, travel weary from her epochlal so Mr. Roosevelt in 1933 came the be jolt given the Mondell amendment by the congress, the association pledged Itself to an unswerving fight to achieve, its objective. lo flight across the Pacific on the lonely Honolulu to California stretch, made known at Los Angles that she was "tired." She directed HMftN 1 J-T7 1 iwih wr ptwuri WUNUCKrUU HUW XUU Vt I UH, BUI II CAN THE 5H1F5 5 TABLECLOTH s.

AT 10 P.M. WORKED IT ALL OUT PATH 15 STREWN WITH MAnY I DIASRAM of SPACE I 6H1PCAKTMIS6 OBSTACLES ANb POSSIBILITIES SHIP AT 10 RM jHJX- OF ERROR y- AT P.M. AT P.M.l -gK IA- v3 I I rTl Kf 1 UGGS AND SKEETEB i i VT I 1 By wallv bishop UIK.E THESE) CtsjeT OCKCTLV.PJT 5JCK A ROTTEW OFJWl.r TSITJ ETTAKETT Bv PAUL ROBINSON I 1 'SV'Kl Til I 1 I l. 1 the servicing of her ocean-span ginnings of a vast social and economic revolution that has not yet run its course. As Mr.

Roosevelt begins his fourth term to Itself without precedent-America, Great Britain, Russia, Twenty Years Ago and Mrs. Max W. Stock of Mr. ning monoplane. YOUR HEALTH by Dr.

Logan Clendening China and France are united to a mighty with Fascism. It is a struggle that Is rushing toward an 'earthshaklng climax. Will Mr.1 Roosevelt's fourth term to -the White House see the return of peace to the world, a period of world reconstruction and cooperation, and I do not know how it got the colds by consistently stopping them name "the common cold." For some in their prodromal stage. vague reason the term irritates But a note of pessimism breaks; I realize it's common, but so is in with the report of other workers a solution of the baffling domestic breathing. You don't the use of A and vitamins1 prooiems uimc comront me Amen- ea by ny nouse aomg common I Si mil Corps Photo VmAVA BUT I WANT VDUTD I I INDU'EE If'AtYUUur iv i have not proved of value In preventing or curing colds.

Since colds are self-limiting, the results must be very striking before one can ascribe any influence to an agent directed towards cure. I Wary TJ. S. infantrymen crouch HTnor kiow asipTS rceavt itupsohe SJ ucwe is fsioHr in tout line i Seenouc iHtcNj can'people? We hope with deepest' breathing and common walking and v. diicerlty that peace and arn? as he i.

i. I went. The cold weather made some Hon soon cotae to pass. To the common tears come to his common President we extend our wish for eyes, so he wiped them away with the courage and strength which common handkerchief." reniilred In fha t.nrlne Hitim fViaf Why not just say Or behind a hedge as leader sizes up 1 1 rzzwz 7. MvvknA.w ry- toifh-h dozens of situation around corner in battle- Sulfa Drugs 1 scarred village Germany.

Those Mncuwrn-j I Vrf -but i-m -i rssi wulw Sulfa drugs: Sulfadiazine was the beys will win if the home front Lf I "3 -U AMrwic ffeb' 'SI preparation used by Drs. Russell' keeps them supplied. Buy more lie ahead. coryza. Cold Remedies Anyway, is there anything to be Cecil, Norman Plummer and Wilson War Bonds, u.

s. Treasury Deportment G. Smillie. They point out Jhat it Is 1 the rnmnlications of the common HIGHER PRICED CARS? aone about a cow? nave oeiore I iu. i e4 a rr-- i.

irMl Already the public Is getting whlh riiirts nf nU cold that make the trouble. The to the routine use of sulfa drugs in uncomplicated cold, now generally the common cold, and use sulfa on accepted as due to a filterable virus, only those cases in which it appears runs a course, and clears up complications may be imminent. completely in four to seven days. Patulin: Pa tulin is a form of pen- It is the secondary bacterial 1m- icillin. In a study by W.

A. Hopkins plantation which make the trouble. I of 95 patients with the common cold xious about how It will fare when the important articles on medicine new automobiles begin reaching the from all over the world and I will market Signs are not lacking that teU yu 11 co1 lV 1.1 il, remedies. Remember this is what lathis, the most highly motorized ithrbook It not necessarily nation on earth, manufacturers are; my opinion, and I do not guarantee looking to the richest ofithe statements. As Rochester says harvests.

to Jack Benny, "That's what the 'man said. The man said that." Cars by the millions are beginning, ta the first place, vaccines for to show serious signs of wear. Some, prevention of colds. Three separate Against these the sulfa drugs might and 85 others used as controls wnen operate. In 66 persons, 48 were.

solutions of patulin were sprayed treated bv sulfadiazine. 24 were un-! into the nose 58 per cent of the treated and observed as controls. treated patients recovered complete- I ni ctri- i Wi" i I There was a uniform decrease in ly within 48 hours, while only 9 per cent of the controls recovered that 1 diu owitKBJ i J- ubukave BUT THIS TIME THE CHEEP YS MAYBE THAT'S HOLD WBBTH! HOLD TJ WHAT DO- TI I Vi I I AND (DMFO0T ftEEMFJD 11 HFC ON! LOOK SACK THERE! DU SEE the secondary bacterial infections in quickly. No ill effects were observed. the nose with the use of sulfadiazine.

The doctors are opposed, however, after years seven, eight or even more reports are made in Teren towns of hard usage, are almost1 bfy observers. The DAILY CROSSWORD E5H A El (O fi 0 lUd I TTffl ready, for the Junk pile. Prosperous plants and the attempt was to re-Individuals who have been accus-jduce absenteeism. In short, the re- tomed to get a hew pleasure car sulte meat dollars and cents. I Cold Vaccines every two or three, years, are eager summary states: -No clearly for quick replacements.

Once the evident protection against the cold war Js over, it will take years to' and related acute respiratory In- reach even normal production, let1 felons could be demonstrated. 5. Vehicle 6. Pointed arch (arch.) 7. To have a mental pic-ure of 8.

University officer 1 Gazelle ACROSS 1. Measure (Heb.) 5. Girl student 9. Small wood 10. Girl's name 12.

Dolts 13: Competitor if. Malt beverage 15. Whether alone to replace ail worn out no vaccine, no, evidence of effective protection1 against either nicies. And yet, in the face of what frequency or severity or complica 21. Spawn of fish 22.

Midday meal -24. Hint 25. Bitter vetch 27. It is (contr.) 29. Music note 30.

Particle of addition 31. One of the shooting stars (Astron.) 33. Greeting 34. Fuss 35. Island off Florida 37.

Pitcher tions of the common cold coul'1 be mmiA Ilar1v tt nAnrarffil r-n11'o K-- demonstrated. Indiscriminate use 11. Foxy 17. Vine-covered 16. Craze Yesterday's Answer 38.

Canvas shelter Part of "to be" 41. Transgression 43. Epoch 18. Marbles 18. River 20.

City (Fla.) Swiss) 23. Frozen 19- Sign of water infinitive 26 Sour (Scot) 20 Strange marwi, unoer unresinctea opera- of cold vaccines now available Is not tton of the law of supply and de- the answer to the problem of indus-mand, with motorists bidding 'trlal absenteeism due to acute res-gainst one another for. early, def Uveries, there is recorded over- Dr. C. Ward Cramp-whelming resistance to the prospect ton gave a cod liver oil concentrate of appreciably higher prices for cars.

I of 150,000 units of Vitamin A and 115,000 units of Vitamin as an intimations that cars would be re- ltlal dose and smaUer doses thcre. tailed at -25 to 30 per cent above after and found in 81 per cent of SAY MBS. SODEDSf OTHER TIMES ITS BEEN: TO BE GONE "USSAND IS- VMStWT7 I 7 1 ijnn, -SCOTTS SCRAP BOOK By R. J. SCOTT THE OLDHOME TOWN By STANLEY JVEOT Sl coffer, FOOOT 0ta wthatcopfbb a 1 I tfTTA 'fV.

SECOND CUP i POT I h' IftjSlU I ymem- nG9 ihim uSWid ttL 5" 1 27. Journey 28. Lair 29. Fine silk net 32, Backbones 34 Dull pain 36. Perform pre-war prices have brought from his patients that the cold was "cur ed, abated or favorably modified." Although no claims are made for the 37 Greek remedy in cold prevention, many 70 per cent of 30,000 car owners canvassed by R.

L. Polk 6s Company, recognized, analysts of the automotive industry, emphatic declarations letter persons have in a manner avoided 40 Combats between two people 42 Fresher 44. Weights (Attic) 45. Goddess of peace that they will not buy new cars at 'the fact that at the outset produc-any such figures. tion will not begin' to supply cHre Tbls is In the face, of aff actual need, may discount the idea nd car shortage, disclosed that three-quarters of the car own -by theVfact that though ers would, or even could, go on a 1 IIIlLII ti zz 5w 2 is II II 11 XwrW rm oon vehicles were, officially registered buyer's strike.

But the mere fact; 6 47. Javelin ivay 1, M44, tnis is a shrinkage of that so many car owners are prompt 8,651,300 vehicles since Pearl Har bor, Obviously, the longer the time before replacements, the faster the rate of car deterioration, to say they will not pay these tentative prices seems to indicate a belief on their part that they will not have to do so. One of the largest manufacturers has already said that postwar cars will be "what the public wants." DOWN 1. Verbal 2. Stir 3.

Evening (poet.) 4. Surrender by formal act It is not evident that dealers are Manned at the public's' hostility to ih car prices, for to the nature of ifngs they expect to be sitting That seems to promise considerable ttyf" Knowing their and 'latitude for the purchaser. -The dolpHih buieyin a 8R2U4Hf (tP0V 5AlUK(i WtAftULA WftrftutH ty JUag rtaruru lyifllcatt,.

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Pages Available:
224,111
Years Available:
1901-1975