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The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 17

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

RATIONING TIME TABLE- SUGAR Stamp No. 13, Ration Book Ont, valid for fivt pounds through August IS. Stamp No. 14 bocomti valid August H. Stamps Nos.

IS and 16 valid for fivo pounds of canning sugar each through October 31. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Canntd, froitn, dritd products controlled by Ration Book Two. Blue and stamps valid through Septtmber 20. SHOES Stamp No. 18 valid for ono pair of rationed shoes through October 31.

-READ THIS EVERY DAY MEAT Controlled by Ration Book Two. Red stamps and valid through August 31. Red stamp valid August IS. BUTTER. CHEESE, EDIBLE FATS AND OILS.

CANNED MILK, MEAT AND FISH Controlled by Ration Book Two. Red stamps and valid through August 31. Red stamp valid August 15. GASOLINE coupons No. 7 valid for four gallons through September 22.

SttonwreH of th CaUu CCCC SAN FRANCISCO, AUGUST 13. 1943 17 Look Girls-It's Frank Sinatra! York traffic at a speed of as high as seventy-five miles an hour. IS PAST LIFE SAVED 81 Hypnotized Hoy drug to the laboratory for a necessary thirty-minute "warming" process, and at 9:10, it was administered to litt' Patricia Arriving at the hospital, at 8:38 p. Doctor Collitti rushed the OFFERS PUZZLE II DRUE Pencillin Rushed to N. Child THEFT 18 reading time 15 seconds the war and a store! With 7 Hours to Live Regains Memory NEW YORK, Aug.

12. (INS) Medical science today credited the oldfashioned magic of hypnotism with restoring the memory of 11 year old Leo Van Voeckle of Elmhurst, N. Y. After Iyeo was found In a parked car and could not recall who he was, Dr. Anthony Toto tried hypnotism.

Bringing the boy's subconscious mind into the open he caused hint to tell his name and address. Today, although Leo is still in the hospital, he is happily reunited with his parents. Officials Bog Down in Maze NEW YORK, Aug. 12. (INS) of Conflicting Evidence on The story of a race against death, In which a supply of the Grsnt it Sutter Oregon Hospital Kidnaping new drug penicillin was secured and administered within a period of five and a half hours, to save the lifq of a 2 year old child, was revealed today.

The child was Patricia Malone. which is so scarce as to be al Yesterday afternoon at 3:40, her most unobtainable, was held out father, Lawrence J. Malone, tele phoned the New York Journal- as the only hope. American and said she had only Through a series of phone seven hours to live unless she calls, it was learned that the E. R.

Squibb and Sons research labora could get penicillin. Last night at tories at New Brunswick, N. 9:10, the medicine was administered. This morning, Patricia still was fighting for her life, had a supply. Dr.

Chester Keefer, with every passing hour increas ing her chance of survival. BREATH TAKING SPEED. Boston surgeon and WPB member, had direct authority to order release of the drug for civilian use. Reached by telephone, Doctor Keefer expedited the release of the drug by telephoning H. A.

Holiday, director of the Squibb mmm Events moved with breath tak ALBANY Aug. 12. (AP) Confused officials attempted today to trace through a jumble of names, events and marriages the private life of a woman charged with the abduction of an infant from an Albany hospital. Linn County District Attorney Harlow Weinrick and other authorities knew for certain the woman was found with tiny Judith Gurney, stolen from a hospital nursery crib when two days old; she admitted taking the child after going nine months of pretended pregnancy; she was formally charged with child stealing. More than that, thej could be sure of little as conflicting incidents in her life unraveled to present almost as baffling a case as the kidnapinng itself, which ran for a week without a tangible clew.

WHICH HUSBAND. Weinrick had her in Linn County Jail in lieu of $5,000 bond, but did not know her right name nor which of two men is her husband in the eyes of the law. She told Weinrick her name is Catherine Wright, her age 26. Cotton, the most modest of fabrics, is suddenly the most strategic of all. 70 of all cotton cloth production is needed by the armed forces.

This means that the cottons you buy must be carefully washed, carefully ironed, conserved and valued. Sheets and shirts, underwear and aprons, everything from your bedroom curtains to your car upholstery is made of a war-vital fabric they're cotton! But, you say, the military need is for sheets and surgical dressings, for towels and uniforms. How can that mean 70 of all cotton? There are scores needs civilians never know of. Cotton for shipping sacks, field hammocks, tire cords. Cotton for shell carriers, bases for collapsible lifeboats, pontoons, fire hose, self-sealing gas tanks, and that's only the beginning.

Cotton is the number one war textile. CONSERVE IT! THE WHITE HOUSE, RAPHAEL WEfLt COMPANY SAN FRANCISCO ing speed, between 3:40 and 9:10 with newspapermen, doctors Government officials and police in New York, Washington. Boston firm, via the Journal-American HERO WORSHIP Out of a big crowd of screaming 'teen age girls who scrambled to see Frank Sinatra, radio crooner, these were among the few fortunates who succeeded in getting cloie to the singer when he arrived in Hollywood to make a movie and sing in Hollywood Bowl, Police had to rescue the handsome young entertainer. Apsrwiated rrp Wirpphnto. switchboard.

DASH THROUGH CITY. At the newspaper's request, New York's police commissioner, Lewis J. Valentine, provided a motorcycle escort to New Brunswick and back. Dr. Dante Collitti, staff surgeon at Lutheran Hospital, dashed to the laboratories, Wife 'Persuaded' by Mate To End Own Life, Jury Says and New Brunswick, N.

all cooperating in cutting through red tape and obtaining a supply of the drug, to save the baby from death. First, the city editor of the Journal American verified Ma-lone's statement that the child lay near death at Lutheran Hospital in Manhattan, suffering from a dread blood disease, the staphlocci type of septicemia. Sulfa drugs and two blood transfusions had not helped. Penicillin, a new "miracle drug," LOS ANGELES, Aug. 12 accompanied by reporters, and secured a supply of the penicillin.

The return journey, made in a ing self administered, apparently furnished by John J. Engle and taken under the influence and persuasion of said John J. Engle, and we find this death to be a suicide." car accompanied by a police car Sergt. Jesse Wright, stationed at I with screaming sirens, cut through New Jersey and New OCD Assists Hunt for Boy ChicagoDistrictCombed For Kidnap Victim CHICAGO, Aug. 12.

(INS) Armed with descriptions and photographs, civilian defense workers on Chicago's west side extended their house to house canvass to other communities today in the search for 2 year old Howard Freeman and a woman accused as his kidnaper. The woman, Mrs. Natalie Palmer, was charged with kidnaping in a warrant issued by Judge Charles S. Dougherty of felony court. More than 200 leads were "Suicide under persuasion." After hearing testimony and listening to notes left by the woman, a coroner's inquest jury today returned that decision in the death of Mrs.

Susan Jane Engle, 47 yqcar old invalid. Mrs. Melissa Wanderlich, sister of the dead woman, who lived with her, said Mrs. Engle and her husband, John Engle, San Francisco photographic supply company employee, broke up recently after twenty years of marriage and Engle brought suit for divorce in Reno. Mrs.

Engle had been despondent, she said, and last Friday drank poison, dying instantly. "When you get this letter you may gloat with arrogance and self satisfaction because you have made me pay in full," Mrs. Engle wrot in a note to her husband. Handwriting of the note was identified by Mrs. Engle's sister-in-law, Mrs.

Angelina Black. The note was signed, "The Cripple." The jury verdict was "Poison turned in by OCD volunteers since the case broke last Friday, but police said that thus far none had given any indication of the whereabouts of the missing woman and boy. Private and Mrs. Vern Free Camp Adair near here, believes he is her husband. But a Long Beach (Calif.) cafe worker, whose first names are variously Harry and Woodrow and who has gone by Morgan and Moran for a surname said that so far as he knows he still is her husband.

TELLS ANNULMENT. She insisted their marriage had been annulled. He said he had not been informed officially either of an annulment or a divorce. Weinrick had an alleged certified copy of the annulment on file in Multnomah County, Ore. The names on the document were Kathryn Moran V.

Harry Moran. Weinrick said all the names except Harry appeared to have been written over erasures and Multnomah County Clerk A. A. Bailey in Portland reported original papers on file under the same number as that on the document was a divorce decree in the case of Caroline Mayei V. Harry Mayer.

S.P.Will Scrap Tahoe Branch Line Southern Pacific Company an man, parents of the missing child, believed that Mrs. Palmer had kidnaped the boy to pose as a mother in an effort to evade a search by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Young Cyclist Killed Eleven year old Jack Wendt, 1 I I n'omniy Austin" C. C. Colyear Dies LOS ANGELES, Aug.

12 (AP) Curtis C. Colyear, 68, founder of the Pacific Coast Wholesalers' Association and long a business man here, died today. of Walnut Creek, was killed yesterday afternoon when he lost control of the bicycle he was riding and crashed into a truck and trailer on the Walnut Creek-Danville Highway. nounced yesterday that it has applied to the Interstate Com nierce Commission for authority to remove the tracks of its Lake Tahoe branch line, extending from Truckee to the lake, a distance of about fourteen miles. The company will continue to take care of passenger traffic by bus from Truckee to Tahoe, as is now being done.

save a life! JSP Fr Relenting Actress Sues Mate Again HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 12 I I i (INS) One reconciliation having failed, Kathleen Williams, screen actress, today filed a new divorce suit against her millionaire Argentine husband, Martin de Alza-ga Unzue. The actress charged her wealthy husband had been guilty of "extreme cruelty" toward her since their marriage in Santa Monica, last November 25. overtime dresses that work for a living! 9.75 to 10.95 Just unpacked a whole new batch' of our own beloved "Tommy Austins!" Slim tailored classics that preside at a desk or take you on to dinner with equal poise. That know there's work to be done, jobs to be filled, and more women filling them! Sizes 12 to 20 in new Fall fabrics at the Whits House and nowhere else in town! CASUAL DRESSES SECOND FLCC SPEND YCUfc CHANGE CN STAMPW 9.75 our "Grant Avenue" furore dress slim, sleek, easy to get into! 12.95 Memorable as the first night of a leave practical as a uniform.

It goes on like a coat saves hair and make-up mussing. It has a special curved back inset that does incredible things for your figure. Wear it for rigorous duties or rendez-vous, and bless the day our "furore dress" ws born! Black or brown rayon crepe. In sizes 12 to 20 needs blood donors. Th 1 new 40 mln- hurt V- From 11:00 to 5.00 mi: mini nm RAPHAEL WEILL COMPANY SUTTER.

POST. GRANT A I JAN FRANCISCO Quiz Kill, 7, Ui is Movie Contract CHICAGO, Aug. 12. (INS) Joel Kuppernian of Chicago, 7 year old mathematics wizard of the Quiz Kids radio program had a movie contract today, guaranteeing him a starting salary of $2,000 a week. The contract was approved by Probate Judge John F.

O'Connell who authorized the youngster's father, Sol, to sign with Jack H. Skirball of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio. Youngest member of the Quiz Rids, Joel now is in the second grade but is studying algebra at home with his father. He expects to leave soon for Hollywood. Should the studio take up several options, Joel will receive S3.000 a week for his second picture, $4,000 a week for his third, and $3,000 a week for his fourth.

GRANT AVENUE DRESSES tiii; WHITE HOUSE RAPHAEL WEILL 6 COMPANY SUTTER. POST. GRANT AVENUE SAN FRANCISCO SECOND FLOOR SPEND YOUR CHANGE ON WAR STAMPS!.

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Pages Available:
3,027,640
Years Available:
1865-2024