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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 3

Publication:
Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE THE DAYTON DAILY NEWS FRIDAY, JULY 1311 I'lan County Fair For Sew York City NEW YORK. July defense of Mo4iw last n'sfit ly declaring that only thre to four jper cent of the German raider (being- rt asainut tha capital are rea. hir.g their objectives- Ten to 111 per tent of the planes starting are destroyed, he aid. Barrage balloona and nrht that Hun nUn flyer had destroyed 1 German planes on the ground or in the a.r Wednesday with a loss of only 19 Soviet planes. One Russian air S'luadr alone as credited officially with downing 71 Orman planes and destroying B5 others on the ground aim the start of the war June 22.

S. A. LotovsLy, vice rnmmisnar of foreign affairs and Soviet spokesman, summed up the aerial 'Deaths And Funerals In The Miami Valley MRS, Mil I FIVkENBINK i SIDNEY. July 2. Mis.

Maud Anna Finkenbine, 63. lifelong ree-. ident of Shelby ded at her home on K. K. 7 Thursday morn-I ing.

Funeral eervicea will be held Saturday afternoon at the Finken-j bine residence and Rev. R. Wobus will deliver the funeral sermon, Burial will be In 1'eari cemetery, Swanders. I demolished city.) The German air force itrurk 'tie at Moscow during the night, but an official announcement ssid 'only one raider ieneirated tlie capital's defences and that it was i shot down. Another plan was reported detro)ed outside Moscow.

The first alarm aotinded at 9.45 p. in. 1 :45 p. m. e.

s. t. 'I hurs-iilay) and continued until 11:10 'p. m. The second a'arm, which jiame a short t.nie later, lat.ed about two bout, Many of Moscow's residents, anticipating a continuation of the night aerial attacks, hsd retired the airship over a neighbor' ham," related Mr.

Nannie Palmer, 7J, formerly of Thrspton, Northampton, England. "It was afire then. There ere three explosion." he sid, Robert Van Sickle, farmer, saw the plane "neaving in the air." The motoia of the bomber were buried ait feet deep and wreckage waa scattered 3lK arils. A para-rhute exit door wa found in an adjoining field. Rush and Lieut.

Warner, recently had been transferred to the "ferry command' after being stationed Tucson, An. Rush was commissioned a a reserve officer last April. fighter, a well a ground bat-teriea, are proving effective ia meeting tha a attacks, Loiovsky asserted. back to tr field aa soon a fuel is obtaitied, field official aaid. Maj.

Hubert F. Baker, contact officer for the army's "ferry com-tuand" at Patternon Field, who ident.fird the Mh Giirad crah victims, said that the plane, bearing the R. A. F. insignia, left Patterson Field, for Montreal, Canada, lesa than an hour before it plunged to earth in bright aunllght.

Witnesses reported that the ship spiraled to earth, ita motor roaring, and burst Into flame after a serie of explosion. Both bodie were burned beyond recognition. Roy Foust, on whose farm seven miles southwest of Mt. Gilead the plane fell, said the ship first indicated trouble, by nosing down, then went into a tail spin and crashed at the end of a long apiral. Foust' 19-year-old son, Ivan, waa one of aeveral persons who beard three explosion in rapid aucces-ion after the ahip hit the ground.

An English woman, who laid ah had lost a nephew in the war, watched the bomber crash 300 ards from her cottage window. "I had just turned down the wirlea and happened to look out the kitchen window when aaw BRAND-NEV CROSLEY Electric Washers With Set of New Ctlina Tubs Moscow We have a limited number of brand new totiMxo laovi raoa o. I rosier Electric Washers with all porce to undei ground shelter long before the first warning sounded. Early in the evening throngs of women and children, carring bedding and food, filed into the city'a modern si.buay ayslcm, la being used as a refuge, by government decree. The Russians again reported their own air force waa giving a 8od account of itself.

Strafing Orman ground forces and bombing airdromrs behind the tiai lines. reports from the front, a communique aaid, showed This tuwn, which usually traits about it skyscraper and subways, theatera and mucums will brag about its pigs and poultry and pinafores and pumpkins Sept. 10 when its 111-year-old county fair is reestablished. The American Institute of the City of New York which operated the fair from to ml announced revival of the exposition jenterday and offered I.VH) in prue for livestock, needlework and the cooking arts. Field House Project Is Started At Shelby CAMP 5UELBY.

July 23. -CT)A new flOOti.OOO building program that will give 3jO additional buildings to this rapidly-expanding military camp has been started by contractors The project call for a field house with facilities for boxing and basketball with bleacher for 3H0 spectator, and "2 chapel, lix (ignal communication school and several motor and ordnance shops. Camp Shelby, formerly a minor training area, has developed into a major military center. A expansion program was completed only last march. There are 17,1 1 Ohio soldiers In camp.

RrarhnTAgc Of 100 lain tubs, balloon rolla, aafety features. Specially priced at only H. In addi turn, purchaser gets a aet of new Celina tubs at no additional coat. And you don't have In start to pay until Sept. 10th.

The Cliff Morgan Co. 32 fifth St. Smolensk, but the Rusaiana never have acknowledged losa of the city. The official German new agency, DNB, reported today firea till were raging in the center of Smolensk where the Russian made a last-ditch fight, but declared nasi engineer were bringing aome semblance of order to the badly- JJL Open evenings till 9, Urges More War Aid For Chinese SAN FTvANClSCO, July Wendell WUlk.t called upon America today to redouble war aid to China ai well to Britain a wesna of preventing a Japanese attack on Kussia through Siberia. "In China'a ability to engage the energies or Japan hi our heat hop of diverting the force of Hitier'a most effective tiia li40 Republican presi-dential nominee told an overflow audience at an Americans United Ma meeting at 0OO-eat civic auditorium lait night, Japan, ha asserted, ia attempting In tteetroy free China.

trying by fore of armi to establish a mo rnd totalitarian empira in tha Far Increased aid to China now, Will. Kit (aid, will not only prevent Japan from attacking embattled Russia through tha back door, but "freed from Japan'a menace in the Pacific, ahall be able to concentrate more of our atrength ia the battle cf tha Atlanta." 'Totalitarianism will thua be urrounded, blocked on all aidet," he declared, "and the rail flood, having reached ita full, will begin to recede. "A i it fee edea, the conquered countries, firat restieas, then revolting, and the German people themselves, their faith in their leader broken under the battering of British air auperiorlty, will somehow, tome way. rid them-aelves of Hitler's tyranny. "For history proves that such forces eurvive only in expansion." Seekt While For Research On Energy CLEVELAND, July Dr.

George Cnle'a research on the life-auataining energy organ today carried the noted Cleveland aurgeon toward San Franciaro in the hope of obtaining new whale apecimeruv for atudy. Aciatra at Cleveland Clinic aaid Dr. Crile would meet whal 2THI CLIFF MORGAN mm mmm stooge The Doors Will Open Saturday at JOHN W. GKISSOM PlQl'A, July 25. John W.

Gris-mm, TO, for 27 eare a grocery clerk here, died Thursday at the home of hia daughter, Mrs. V. II. Staley. S05 Park a v.

Servicee will conducted at tha Staley home Sunday at 2 o'clock, with burial in Foreat Hill Cemetery. SIDNEY STRONG TROY, July will be conducted Saturday afternoon at Pleasant Hill for Sidney Strong, 71, former marshal there, who died in Troy hospital Wednesday night. He ia survived by his idow, Lyd.a; ail children, Mr. Catherine Gales and Mrs. Dorothy Gropner.

Troy; Mrs. Mildred Klleman, Fletcher; Mm. Daisy Townsend, Covington: Harry Strong, Casstown, and Ned Strong, United States navy, and a sister, Mr. Jemima Nunn, Pleasant Hill. MRS.

MINNIE PERSIAN PIQI'A, July 25. The body of Mra. Minnie Fisher Pursian, widow of Edward Purwian and a native Piiuad, who died at Chicago Wednesday night, will be brought here for service Saturday at o'clock at the J. and Sons funeral chapel and burial in Forest Hill cemetery. Mra.

Pursian, aa Minnie Fisher, was bom and reared here. Her father waa at one time head of the board of education and a manufacturer of school desks. She leavea two aons, Robert and John Dine of Chicago; a aister, Mra. Lola Cranston, New York, and two brothers, Frederick R. Fiaher, Indianapolis, and Edward, Chicago.

FRANK LAMBERT HAMILTON, July 25. Services for Frank Lambert, 75, retired farmer, who died Wednesday night at hi home near Somerville, will be conducted Saturday at 2 o'clock at the Somerville Presbyterian church. Burial w'ill be in Somerville cemetery. He ia aurvived by four aons, Jame and Arnold, Hamilton; Harold, Lew iaburg, and Donald Lambert, Middletown; three daughtera, Mra. Carl Beatty, Seven Mile; Mr.

Charles Moak, South Excello, and Mra. Dewey Miracle, Middletown, and a sister, Mrs. Barbara Melton, Hamilton. rr lio i I I i 1 1 1 1 rTnnr- I UKf. Ill 1 I III this is (Mic-Iialf hour later than usual I I I a a ing vessels on the weft coast and there dissect the brain and adrenal gland of the ea ani rnlfTlfU ttnr We use this 12 hour to give us time to take ADDITIONAL MARK.

DOWNS! TTTTTK 1 MM BLANCHESTER, July 2V-Ht Lewi Arhor, who was discharged from the Union army yeare ago because of rheumatism, celebrated hi 100th blrthdy anniversary today; and hi daughter-in-law said he hasn't had rheumatic pain for a half century. Woman Taxi Driver NEW YORK, July 2S. 03 Evelyn A. Barrett, 32-year-old widowed mother of one child, became New York city'a first woman taxi driver today aa a hack company sought to make replacement caused by the national defense effort. 3 Million For Ohio COLUMBUS, July 25.

Ml Social security board certification of $3,333,181 as the federal government'a ahare of for distribution to Ohio old-ege pensioner waa announced. The fund go to approximately persons for the July-August period. Wants Sea Air HYDE PARK, N- July 1'resldent Roosevelt eonfided to a press conference todsy that he would like very much to get a little aea air this aummer. Rut in these times it seems a bit difficult to do, he said. Officer Transferred WASHINGTON.

July 25. Major Myrl D. Tremelin. A. of Akron, has been transferred to Detroit, army orders showed today.

i.i.i Report For Duty Maj. Delano P. Foote, of Brooklyn, and Lieut. William H. San-deraon, of Fort Sunshine, reported for duty Thursday at Wright Field.

LIMA I'eru is buying over three time aa morh electrical apparatus from the United States a it did last year. Declare War Will End Soviet Union MERLIN', July authorized German ourre said today that "there will not be any Soviet Union at the end of tbia war." Asked why the German prees always speaks of "the former Germany embassy in Moscow" and the "former German ambassador to the U. 5. S. while the term "former" was not applied to London, Paris or elsewhere, thia source expressed belief that the press probably had a fine instinct for the realities of the future.

"There will not be any Soviet Union at the end of this war and there will not be any bolghevist regime which created this union of states," he declared. TOME i Aa, ffl mal. These organ probably will be returned to Cleveland and added to the clink'a museum of intelligence, power and personality, Declares Tree Camouflage Too Expensive NEW YORK, July 25. W-Cer. man effort to camouflage Berlin by planting trees on the capital' rooftop were appraised by tree research authority today aa "completely futile" because of physical and economic problems, F.

A. llartlett of Stamford, founder of the Bartlett Tree Research Laboratories, said effective camouflage of Berlin' 330 square miles would require more than tree which even then would be comparatively widely spaced. "This would be comparable to transplatlng German' famous Illack Forest at an expense that would bankrupt the nation," he aaid. this be done, he added, alt pirea and domes unadaptable to tree plarementa would still serve as aviators' landmarks. Says Ileal Famine In Europe" At Present "CONDON, July 25.

W-A Eu-ropean delegate of the American End Cross, Richard Allen, who ha been working in France, expressed belief in an interview today that there is "no real famine in Europe" and that auch reporta were exaggerated. He said, however, that supplies etf American food in unoccupied France would be exhausted by Aug. l. if no more were imported by the Red Cms and he admitted there was little chance, since the Orman, British and United States government have "reached no SATURDAY is the DAY YOU SAVE Cleaning Stocks at Drastic Price Reductions In Our Annual July WILLIAM HECK July 23. Wl-liam Berk, 81, former watchman at the American Aggregate Fort Jefferson plant, died Thursday at the Fred Hiirh Rest Home, near Greenville.

He ia aurvived by a foster-daughter, Mr. Marguerite Schutz, Gaberville, Cal. two brothers, Henry Beck, Greenville, and Jcsko Ilei Castine, and two sisters, Mrs Tena Petry, and Mra. Anna Sparks, both of Greenville. Servlraa will be conducted from the Miller funeral home here Saturday at 2 o'clock, with burial in the Fort Jefferaon cemetery.

MRS. SAKAH UPTON PIQUA, July 25. Services for Mr. Sarah Rebecca Upton. 83, who died at her home, 412 Caldwtll st Wednesday night, were conducted Friday at 2 o'clock at the Crow funeral home, with burial in ForeM Hill cemetery.

A niece, Mary Re-beet a Upton, of this city; a nephew and three other niece are her only aurvivor. W. PENCE WILMINGTON, July Pence, 74, reeident of near New Vienna for 12 year, died of complication at the home of hi daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Young, of Hillsboro, Wednesday following a critical illness of three weeka. He had been in ill health 14 yeare.

Funeral will be conducted at the late residence near New Vienna Friday at 2 p. m. by Rev. Ralph Knopp of Cincinnati. Burial w'ill be in Cherry Fork cemetery.

Plane Crashes co.srnxcKD raoai raci Wl porarily at Patterson Field for accelerated aervice tta. afely brought hi new type observation plane down when he ran out of tin Killed By Lightning CINCINNATI, July 2V-. Lightning killed Mrs. Esther Clacs, 'in, of suburban Montgomery. 8he had taken shelter in a farm shed.

LOOK FOR THE RED MARK-DOWN SIGNS teas while near West J.ioeriy, laie Thursday. Hi ship will be flown PRE-INVENTORY SALE (W PARAMOUNT Hi QUEEN QUALITY WHITE SHOES WHITE SHOES VALUES TO $8.50 REGULAR NOW 5185 Mil mi-. Come down to The Home Store Saturday for the FINAL DRASTIC CLEARANCES of the season. We're cutting prices on ad remaining lots before store opening at 10 A. M.

Saturday. We're clearing stocks before inventory every department is included for the Red Mark-Down signs your signals to thrift all sales are FINAL. We prrarnt a thrilling opportunity for Jou to aeriire themr famous shor al grrat saving! Don't delay tome early to insure brt ae-lrction! CLAUDETTE PLAY SHOES REGULAR VALUES WHITE SHOES REGULAR $5 VALUE Remember-SATURDAY at 10 A. Look for the RED Mark-Down Cards In Every Department Fashion loor HTIlttlE MflDME TDIIGI3;.

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Pages Available:
3,117,313
Years Available:
1898-2024