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The Maryville Daily Forum from Maryville, Missouri • Page 1

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Vol. 33 No. 13 of Associated Press, NEA and ABC MARYVILLE, MISSOURI WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 24, 1942 Pounded as the Nodaway Democrat in 18) 414 North Main 8t Rommel Starts Many Vocations Listed Among Men Rubber Collection Pll Iff HP 1 I ra V. I THE WEATHER To Talk Pacific Chinese Successes War Against Jap Drives riamong move laking Instructor flying Uurse Is Slow in East ff uuuauuu rL MISSOUEI TOKECAST Somewhat warmer todav and nijM; scattered thundersliowers night and in the' west portion ti o. afternoon.

LOCAL 'OBSERVATIONS ivcpwieu oy Huang toward tgypt The names of ten men taking the Claude Cecil Morean 34 vp nf 1.1... i elementary and secondary aee of r.m.. it-UCi oays inat rOpUlOUS (By the Associated Press, Areas Near Bottom in Canadian Prime Minister to Attend Conference Called by FDR. China reported growing success in the bitter five-year-old war with Japan today as Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's armies wptp nf. Ali-N i Bombardment vxlle School of Aeronautics' 'were pation givm: HaroM Edwto Dutton- Indicates Battle nf Fmmr announced this morning by Capt.

E. 26 years of aee, of St. Joseph, form- I gyP director- Tlle men wh erly a sheep salesman for the I. F. IS Under Way.

are takmg the courses, Capt. Schultz Dutton Sheep Commission Co. in Reckless Nazi Attacks Drive Wedgejn Reds Germans Bring Overpowering Strength to Bear Against Sevastopol. Onslaught Constantly Increasing in Fury MOSCOW (JF) Reckless charges by hundreds of Nazi tanks followed by infantry have driven a wedn Into WASHINGTON UP) ficiallv tn 11 record, 103 d.rei i aiiu, ere moauy oiaer men ana are joiepn. 'preparing for work as flying in- In Secondary Course Roosevelt today called a special back the western claw of a Japanese meeting for tomorrow of the Pacific princer, captured three key points Axis Forces Collection Drive.

1.52 Pounds Per Capita WASHINGTON The petroleum industry war council reported to President Roosevelt today that 200,881,000 pounds cf scrap rubber had been collected in the first six days of the national collection drive This was 1.52 pounds per cap- itructors rather than combat ser- Enrolled in the secondary course are: James Weldon Riney, 31 years Flying and classwork for the cf age, of St. Josenh formeHv a wincii rrime mister ana muea or wounded 4,000 of Great Britain and anese. Arc Moving Up Coast Plane Is Forced courses began last Saturday. time study man for Armour Prime Minister iMacKenzie King of Chinese headquarters said the Canada will attend- Chinese armies in Kiangsi province (By The Associated Press) presidential sec-1 had recaptured Kweiki, thus re- Field Marshal Envin Rommel's a nose enrolled in the elementary Bruce Lotis Pellett. 28 years of age, are: Erling Stanley Fiskum, of Atlantic, formerly in the oil 34 years of aee.

of Kansas CAtv hnsine th. vi o.i.. of. DowninOatfield victory-flushed legions started a retary, in announcing the call, did Pulsing the eastward Japanese drive not say for what purpose the meet- i wMch had come within 50 miles of flanking sweep around the British formerly a photo-engraver with the years of age, of Jefferson la fo'rm- ing was arranged. There was to cIosinS the strategic Chekiang- armies drawn up for the defens Holland Engraving Co.i-Harrv Rus- erlv a Drintt-r with the fhiof Drmt.

Instructor Bassett and Stu have been, however, a regular meet- railway. of ypt. The equivalent in tons was 100,438. Missouri's collection was pounds, or 1.84 pounds per capita. The figures are for the Red army defenses on tha Kharkov front in the Ukraine and ing of the council today.

other Chinese troops were report- sell Cole. 33 years of age of Fairfax, ing Co. of Perry, la. formerly an aircraft factory inspect- Arthur Marion Tousley, 31 years or for Douglass and North American of age, of Chillicothe, formerly man- bringing overpowerinr strenrth dent Jack Holman Escape Injuries. Of Special Imoprtance 10 nave seized two outposts of as announced that MacKenzie 1 Jauan.ese-neld Kwangfeng and were to bear against the far-outnumbered wiiiMiuo, ixooeri amrnen agtr or an A food Store I June la-20.

Kyle, 22 years of age. of Graham, there; Everett T. Harrington. 33 I defenders of besieged Sevastopol in Two flyers from the Marwffle King was en route here for he QescnDeQ 35 now directly menac- meeting. Special importance was I itself.

believed to be attacked to the meet- KanSfenS 13 an important base me Crimea, ine Kttssians conceded the State 1 years of age, ol Unionville, formerly WASHINGTON School or Aeronautics. Instructor a grocery store owner there. Secretary Ickes, the petroleum co day. At a single point on the KhftTknv Ean Bassett of Skidmore and stu ing because of his planned attend-! 'mg A violent all-night bombardment by Axis artillery indicated that the battle of Egypt may already have started today as the British re- 1 ported that "very strong" enemy columns of tanks and motorized in-' fantry were racing along the coast) toward the Egyptian-Libyan fron- tier. Field Guns Active All Night While definite word was lacking! that Field Marshal Erwin Rommel ordinator, leported to President front, the Germans massed 200 tanks in an onslaught which began on June 22.

first anniversary of the Mrs. Beck Bound Teeth Requirements i Roosevelt today that the scrap rub-jber collection drive the first su ance, since Canada is usually repre- eastprn Phfria an Pvince, in sented in council meeting by its minister here. Leirhton mJL Phmese sald the attack on aays was very disappointing ir BeidPs t-if TTnitprf -wanKieng was part of a maneuver liesiaes tne united States, Great dent. Jack Holman, escaped injury about 11:30 o'clock yesterday morning when a plane in which they were making a cross-country flight was forced down because of motor trouble seven miles northeast of Wathena, Kas. Damage to the plane Over for Trial F7" ArmWH! populous states in the east i to cut on tne Japanese army which Britain and Canada, other count and south, and best La the war west attempting to complete its con- represented on the council are i wer, iveopen ases ern states.

German invasion, and has been increasing constantly in fury and force, said Russian dispatches from the battlefront. Press Toward Sevastopol Dispatches to Izvestia from besieged and hard-pressed Sevastopol New Zealand, China, the Kiangsi railway leading into central Exact figures on the Hearing Reveals Under- Netherlands, and the Philipomes. iviiina. only a 50-mile stretch re- as sngnt. They had been making a cross- it was said that the Canadian 1 mains Chinese hands.

Writers Investigator army servlC5 under the Selective1 Had launched his offensive into the ancient land of the Pharaohs, military observers pointed out that a heavy artillery barrage usually signals an mminent land attack. Throughout the night, dispatches county flight as part of an elementary flight training which Holman Was Here on Case. cies will have their cases reopened, I chairman of the petroleum mdust- declared that the fight for" the important port "continues with un- abating ferocity" and said "superior is taicmg as a private student. The Dependent's Pay Chairman Henry N. Moore of the flight, was from here to Lawrence.

to St. Joseph and back. They cuemy xorces are iuriousiy pressing toward the town." The government newspaper's ac Bin Now a Law British defense lines and en-my patrols stabbed repeatedly for "soft court to stand trial on charges of arson, following an all-day prelim- just landed at Rosecrans field St. Joseph a few minutes previous tries war council, who accompanied Ickes to the White House, aaii Lhe over-all collection total was "encouraging," Ickes commented. Puts It Up to People "This is putting it up to the people to determine whether they want spoLs.

local boara announced today. New minimum requirements of the army, he said, allow a registrant to be accepted even though he is without upper or lower teeth if corrected or correctable by artificial dentures. to tne lorcec: landing. News on Shipping At the last regular weekly meeting of the council a report was made on the Midway and Aleutian battles and indications iater were given that some good news on the shipping situation might be expected. President Roosevelt arranged meanwhile to receive today the Dispatches from Cairo, headquar- i hBra-B iw.h Hike to Servicemen's Pay Provides for Allotments count said thousands of German dead littered the battlefields after every attack against the Soviet-held bastions at which the Germans have hurled tanks by the score and infantry in waves.

Plane Noses Over The difficult landing was made by assett in a field spotted with a ters of Gen. Sir Claude Auchin-1 Russen Nobiet and Defense Attorney leeks imperial command, said Axb Bruce DuBois of Grant City Mrs armored forces were swinging Beck was charged with setting fire southward on the Libyan side of i to a house at 1203 East Fourth the frontier, apparently intending street on March 14. in an attempt Chairman Moore again named I to run their cars or not, by turning registration dates and places for in rubber. to Families Netherlands Ambassador, Dr. A.

young men from 18 to 20 years of If it is not turned in enough to Germans Are Checked At Sevastopol, the overwhelming heavy growth of elders on the farm of Don Manviile. In landing the plane nosed over onto its back, breaking the propeller, throwing the motor mount out of line and ill sign up in the fifth military needs and to strike into Egypt many miles be- to defraud an insurance company WASHINGTON (f) President Roosevelt signed the Service men's Loudon, and that country's Foreign Minister Eelco Van Kleffens. who low the Mediterranean coast in the which held the policv on her house- "tration. registration will Pay and Allotment and Allowance smashing part of the tail assembly. recently armed in this country.

Later in the day he planned to receive young King Peter of Yugo force of the German offensive was indicated by a report that the Nazis sent two divisions of infantry (up to 30,000 men) and numerous tanks into the attack in a single narrow strip. some extent civilian needs we'll have to get the rubber some other way." Boyd said that Nevada was first in the list of states based on the number of pounds of rubber collected per capita, that Montana was second, om today, paving the way for financial aid to dependents of fighting men and reclassification of married men for the draft. slavia and to have dinner with the hoi of outflanking the British. hold goods. Dlac- the office of the local Light German-Italian forces en- The climax the hearing came ard the Courthouse- are: gaged the British west of Salum, following the testimony of Deputy I 27' 8 a' m' 10 5 p' June 28' in the coastal area, in an evident Sheriff Ray O'Grady.

His state- t0 4 p' m': June 29' 8 a' m' attempt to mask Rommel's flank- merits brought to light two triris I p' m-; June 30- 7 a- m-to 9 P- m-ing scheme. made here bv Gen. Ralph E. Tru- I the youne men reentering in Mch Enemy Movement 1 man, arson investigator for the Na- tb? Wth registration, only those It was expected that Rommel 1 tlonal Board of Fire Underwriters, wh rett toe oi 20 years on lhe only explanation of the sudden stopping of the motor so soon after the takeoff was an improperly labelled fuel line cutoff, which did not indicate a closed position. Cat.

18-year-old monarch at the White The infantry crept forward under Oregon third, and Arizona fourth. Schultz of tha School here Providing for federal payments to supplement allotments from service men's pay checks to support then-dependents, the legislation also con-tarns a provision enunciating a con camouflage and through ditches and shell craters behind the tanks, but the Sevastopol garrison managed to establish a flankine fire that J. C. Ferritor Dies at ao-aea, said thaj. the iancjing by In would launch his main blow around Not satisfied with his answers from 77.

auojeci to New York and other populoi Fori Maddalena, 50 mUes south- uraav acout truman's visits, At- I 77 "7 nu'' 1iWc states near the bottom. structor Bassett was all that saved both men and the plane from serious injuries. His Home at Moberly, Mo. E. L.

Ferritor of Maryville re Trest of Salum, and Blr El Sheeea, 1 tomey DuBois put Prosecutor Nobiet am tne remainder Creates Supply Agency checked the enemy. Then a counterattack forced the Germans to retreat, said the Russian account. 30 -mfles farther 4.uUv on tne stand- Trf jelc military ser-. agriculturexommittee The plane was a five cylinder ceived frri tvlo-ir nf rl.afl. Ufuch enemy: movement was ob-1 Seek' an Accomplice birthdav appr0ve4 legislation-ioday -to- create urns apparently was on a penin-ila In tSe bay north of SevastoDOl.

gressional policy that selective service should "not break up the institution of the home." Separate Rejjstratjon Groups To carry out this policy, Congress wrote into'the bill authority for selective service officials to defer any and all categories of men having dependents with whom they maintain a bona fide family relationship in their homes. where the German high command claimed Russian "remnants" were annihilated h'fe'brother C. 66" years of age, of Moberly. who died this morning. Mr.

Ferritor, who was born at Glenwood, was a retired tram dispatcher, operator and trainmas- erved southward from i wnen why ne asked Tru- a rubber agency to have supreme British imperial headquarters said, i man to nelD wltn the case. Nobiet rtf I authority in the field of increasing Gambut lies 45 miles west of the SUd he had mn into difflculUes rUDllC OlflClAlS rubber production from Egyptian border. and wanted Trumans help in locat- agriculture and forest products. A Cairo communique said British mg accomplice whom he thought Called 111 Draft MaV I Tne President would appoint a mobile columns roved the desert 1 Mrs- Back- AUer repeated 3 director whose duty it would be, the Wiihams of Cameron, formerly an instructor who recently completed an instructor's course here and now at an army school in Texas. The plane is leased for use here.

Plane Hauled Back Here The plane was dismantled last Assault in 2Wh Day At another point north of Sevasto west of the main British lines ves- 6 uurmg, nOIa I Heir legislation sam. to "make available which the conversation got heated, the earliest possible time, an pol the Russians mustered the strength to recapture a hilltop, but rday and engaged small Axis' night by members of the airport staff and hauled back to Maryville He is survived by a sister, Mrs. A. W. Enis of Moberly, with whom he made his home, and two brothers, iMOoiet stucK to nis guns and would nmTr adequate supply of rubber 1 which.

forces beyond Salum, Egyptian bor- Under this provision, members of the House Military Affairs committee said, selective service probablv not ten wno suggested calling in 1 1 when added to rubber being sup- by truck. Capt. Schultz expressed his grati- "mml; w- antJ Axis Troops Fresh aD' Irnav retain tHB plied bv other agencies, will be Prosecutor Nobiet disclosed hto I sufficient to meet the military and while serving wouia set up separate groups i the registrants now in class An Italian war bulletin, claim-j uen. iruman nad first come here 7 J' 7 1 civuian neeas." Gen 77 Jlsouri tnree. in the first group would be mg Uis seizure of 33,000 prisoners! nn in the fall of Tobrnk, reported Jti 'If thp law am icoteiuajr.

Enough for Mlitary supreme the law, tne Germans stm poured more ma and machines into the assault now in its 20th day. On the Kharkov front the story was similar. The Germans apparently are oblivious to immense losses as they throw in ever greater numbers of tanks, planes and infantry, but they still have not managed to achieve any real success, declared Red Star. oUU the meantime, a Dioneer eliminating deiay which is so im-1 portent in th3 pilot training pro-' wm fbe he at Conception gram. He said Manviile was parti- oU7T arrangements a Jim Myers case.

On his second str7.ute to carr' the duties of the perimenter in synthetic rubber have not been completed. lotai activity oi vIti vnich Noblet said was about ms absence, a dinerent a senate agriculture subcommittee cularly cooperative, placing all his Mr. and Mrs. Ferritor and Mrs. E.

facilities for hauling at the disposal though a field of le" ty 9" tlus after" nnnn fnr MViherlv Than mora -ininnri the liyers, 7-7 "JC a wees later, it was disclosed by the picocmcu, that the country had sufficient i Egyptian-Libyan prosecutor that he and Gen. Tru- i CDur sald- I materials now to produce enoi The British said Axis armored man had questioned the following lt su8Bested the situation created elastic for military needs forces moving up along the Medit-, people regarding the case: Warren by the war ''ma' call for action by The senate group seeking official army paper. men with a working wife, the next men with a non-working wife, then men with one child and on down the line. Before any men in class three would be inducted, all eligible registrants from classes one and two would be called. The allotment and allowance provisions apply to men in the army up to and including the rank of line sergeant and in the navy to men up i to and including third class petty officers.

Attack Gains in Vigor While the defenders of the be erranean coast were relatively! Beck and his wife, Mrs.jour method of producing an abundant fresh, since they had not been en-! Delbert Burson, Mrs. Frank Spencer, i But necessarily the policy domestic supply of rubber from al-gaged in the fierce assault on To- i Mr. and Mrs. C. W.

Kabel, Hubert i oi state law to aid, not impede, cohol derived from grain, heard Dr. bruk. and said Rommel's big push Sell, Charles Irwin, Mrs. C. E.

Cook, our common defense. All citizens i o. P. Sweeney of the Iowa State Mrs. Mary Killion Dies: sieged Crimean port of Sevastopol staved off defeat, the strong attack in the Kharkov area began Monday and has gained in vigor ever since, the Russians said.

First Class of Air Raid Wardens Finishes Course Services Are Thursday Funeral services will be held rpu. I Aid to Two Group; tgypt ana tae buez canal i Jim ook, v. VBzowme') ue encomagea, nowever i couege of Agriculture, predict that 'was expected to start when these I man and wife, Fire Chief Jim New- Possible, to aid their country unless more rubber were produced reinforcements had reached the ton- Firemen Elbert Barnes, Claud Tne court ruled on the question to permit continuance of present forward zone. Stults. Harlan Strong and Ivan whether military sen'ice by public means of locomotion "our culture Dispatches hinted that British Haimon.

He admitted they had not i officials constituted the holding of will collapse." in this countv has been enmnieteri They Provide fr financial aid to 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon at the Price funeral home for Mrs. Mary under the instruction of Walter of Peents. defined class A and class B. In the form- warships were maneuvering off an5'tning new by these m- two puonc positions of profit an Finke. Most of the men in this class Ann Killion, 87 years of age, who died at 1:10 o'clock this morning at are wives and children and form I A Girl Scout Trainin? from outside of Maryville and coast, prepared to turn their devas-; vestigations.

unconstitutional act. tatinK fire ori the Axis invasion Mrs- Beck's 1x111(1 of S1.5 was The opinion said that tne lamily home, seven miles north er wives entitled to alimony; in the latter are parents, brothers, sisters class now is being organized to be composed of Maryville persons. west of Parnell, following an illness Course to Be Given Here of five weeks. Rev. L.

B. Day, pastor and grandchildren. inose wno completed the are: 'armies. 1 signed by Mr. and Mrs.

Faye McKee I would apply to service in the regu- who were on her preliminary bond. lar army by "those who have chosen i i I military service as a career." But it Bernetta Lusnman Warned i Elmer Mumford to Get said they should distinguished To Girls' State Office from miIitiamen and "citizen sold- 10 Uin Jiate Uince, WmgS a Hymg Officer iers who are in mOltaiy sen-ice only In cases where a service man has class A dependents, the deductions oi tne Christian church of Pickering, will officiate. Burial will be ir the Gaynor cemetery. A special Girl Scout training course will be offered at STC July 7 to 11 inclusive. Arrangements have been made with the regional head- from his monthly pay are manda "The enemy is supporting his troops with large numbers of aircraft, raiding many advanced lines of our defenses and the adjoining rear," said Red Star.

"Our fliers patrolling over the front area are repulsing the enemy in the air they are greatly assisted by our reinforced anti? aircraft defenses. "The Germans are using big tank masses to clear the way for then-infantry. Tanks Are Massed "The enemy is sustaining heavy losses in war equipment and manpower but continues to increase the weight of attacks and in one sector succeeded in wedging somewhat into our defense line. "Simultaneously the Germans attempted to break through in other Delbert Icke. Glen Mehaffey and E.

L. Hagen, Barnard: A. J. Mer-tens. Conception Junction; Vincent Enis.

Clyde; A. O. Ruggle and De- -s born June 28, 1854. in tory and amount to $22. To this the government adds J28 for wife and in time oi war or emergency." vvayne curtm, Conception: W.

F. FULTON, Mo. (JP) The governor of the third annual girl's state is Betty Jean Sherwood, Excelsior S40 for a wife and one child, with $10 additional for each child after Muuuviu, auu lu mi. ana m.a icini appueu miss Margaret Adams, field adviser Mrs. Earl L.

Mumford. Maryville, is i to draftees. Many Missouri county on the national staff, to teach the Tompkins, Robert Stanton and W. Minard county, and was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Bannister Bond. She was married April 24, 1873, at West Grove, Ia to William Killion, who died October 27, 1934. Mrs. Killion, who was the first; $20 for a child but no wife. lucmuer or a nass oi student oi- 1 uiuata nave oeen cauea tne course aain.

isimo; Charles Reynolds. Springs, elected over May Wyatt of fjcers' aviation cadets to be draft. Most of them have resigned shw tBa n. i and $10 for each additional child uity to neaa tne Amei graduated soon from the Air Force their public offices, but not all. In bers of the community are eligible! Legion Auxiliary's week-long Ray Files and Hugh Ellis, Guilford; O.

L. Mutti, Lyle Dlmer, David Martin, S. S. Browne, Glade Traster and Ira Newlon, Hopkins. member of the Christian church rf Stockton some casesaeputies have carried on to take the course at a registration citizenship project.

and no wife. First Payment in November The deductions for class dependents are optional with the ser 7,7 i iee oi ou cents. Those who are mter- 6'uuatc win oe commis- ine court ruiea specilically that ester! shonlrl rnlt njn nTri. Miss Sherwood was sworn in with other officers last night by Judge E. M.

Tipton of the state supreme sioned as second lieutenants vice man and amount to $22 monthly the Circuit Judge Ray E. Watson ofippitt, director of personnel for To Cut Out Horse Show sectors, bringing into action groups if there are no class A dependents women at STC, or Mrs. Louis Gram, At the American Royal and $5 monthly if these are class A local Gir Scout leader. Two groups Air Force Reserve and will be given Jasper county did not vacate his the coveted silver wings, symbolic of ofiice by entering military duty, the aeronautical rating of pilot. Watson went on duty with the They will be placed on active duty National- Guard in 1940, but has to du tanKS each.

"They met with no success, however, and after stiff encasement. dependents. The federal payments oi classes will be organized, class dependents are $15 for KANSAS CITY -4p Curtail from 4 to 6 o'clock in the afternoon, at Gaynor, had lived at the present residence sixty years with the exception of thirteen years spent in Pickering. She is survived by three sons, C. A.

Killion, Brisbane, A. P. Killion, of the home, and Lloyd Killion, Gaynor; three daughters, Mrs. G. T.

Logan and Mrs. S. V. Florea, Parnell, and Mrs. J.

D. Morton, Graham; one sister, Mrs. Callie Rey-nolds. Seattle, twenty-six grandchildren; twenty-two great-1 grandchildren, and two great-great uieir new lann witn tne Army since returned to the bench. Special one parent, $25 for two parents, and ment of the American Roval Live tne other to be decided later.

only a few of our units were compelled to retreat and take up new defense lines." judges served in his absence. stock and Horse show to" exhibi- 5 for each brother, sister or grand- child designated for i id. tion of only stock on way to market Miss Adams will arrange to hold conferences with those who wish to make appointments with her while she is here. She advises persons who For the first time the Soviet In Before entering the final and advanced course at Stockton Field, Aviation Cadet Mumford completed 20 weeks of nrimarv and basir. train Administration of the legislation as recommended today bv a com Sheridan Building Burns formation bureau told today of night combat about the Crimean citadel mittee named to study the question of whether the show should be held.

plan to enroll for the course to have court. Elective officials also include June Matthews, Sullivan, lieutenant-governor; Madeline Lytle, Kansas City, secretary of state; June Eloise Young state audilor; Frank-ie Holland, Quivers Lake, state superintendent; Norma Jean John, Jefferson City, attorney general. Peggy Berger, Richmond Heights, state treasurer; Dorothy Ingwersen, Montgomery City; Barbara Park, Kansas City; Maurine Rothman, St. Louis; Loretta Metzger, St. Louis; Beverley Cochran.

Kansas City-Josephine iLaBarbera, St. Louis; and Bernetta Cushman, Maryville, justices of the supreme court. ing at Visalia-Dinuba School of i "Pi- of unknown origin, destroyed a Girl Scout handbook, though it Harry Darby, president of the is vested with the secretaries of the navy and the war department. The payments are effective as of June 1, 1942, but first payments, including accruals from June 1, are not payable until next Nov. 1.

grandchildren. not required. I Royal, said committee's sueges- saying the outnumbered Red army men, marines, sailors and guerrillas, fought on against the Germans' through the hours of darkness. Aeronautics, Visalia, and Merced a smail one-room building belong-Field. Merced, Calif.

ing to Mrs. Clara Hague on her pro- Cadet Mumford is a graduate of Pertv Sheridan about 2 o'clock No. 5 Stamp Is Good the of directors. Mrs. Florence 'Rush and Mrs.

Pickering high school and a former Sunday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Charley M. Wood of Maryville at- azi gams in the Kharkov region apparently were limited for the noon Student Of Northwest Missouri Ktnto RalDh Brocan.

who were resirlintr In after- Vnr 7 Pmiinl unQer UK Pr0Posai entries would 1-Or fOUndS Ot JUgarbe limited to showing of carlot fat and feeder cattle, individual fat Teachers' College. He was a senior the building, were not home at the wnul-u lunerai services tnis communique reported no material changes overnight on the mainland. Jake Wiley Hurt Again Jake Wiley of Pickerine. who suf east of when he went into service. time of the fire.

When the blaze was at al- aul cemetery, the sugar stamp wui eo into sIppk fat lomhc ft discovered the roof was falling effect after midnight Saturday, the The horse sh nn. nr tho Mr. and Mrs. A. B.

Davis of Guil- and although Mrs. Hague' Ray Dull and dauehter SanHr. sugar rationing board announced standing events of its kind nation- ford have as their guests their. was saved it was badlv damaeed. ally, also would be eliminated.

and Mrs. F. A. McKee spent from Saturday until Tuesday in Lincoln. today.

This stamp, the' board announced, will be effective for one daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and not covered by insur- Mrs. Lloyd McClintock. of Alma. Blessed Events month and will be good pounds of sgar.

Mich. Additional week-end guests fered a fractured neck last fall, fell from a ladder yesterday afternoon at the lumber yard at Pickering and suffered a slight neck injury. Mr. Wiley, who also suffered several bruises and cuts, was brought to a doctor in Maryville for treatment. He was taken to his home and today is resting as well as could be cu, itn Mrs.

luii. They were accompanied by Mrs. R. B. Montgomery, who visited her danht.

Th committee, neaded by R. J. Kinzar, secretary of the American Hereford Associations, said the action was recommended because ol war conditions. were Mr. ana Mrs.

E. Nutter of Jean. Among the June enrollees at the Jolley, and Mr. and Mrs. J.

H. Nutter and children, Carol and Joe, Russell in Bomber Plant J. V. Russell, son cf Mr. and Mrs, E.

R. Russell of Maitland. has been employed for the last seven months Mr. and Mrs. Glen Trullinger have received an announcement of the Suspend Nutrition Class The nutrition class, scheduled for Tuesday afternoon at the Elks club With Mrs.

David Suetterlin as instructor, will be indefinitely postponed because of the lack of interest, acordlng to Frank Moore, coordinator of Civilian Defense classes. Also, some of the members of the class have been unable to attend the class at this time during the gardening and canning season. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Birdw.li Chillicothe Business College, Chillicothe, is included Miss Darlene Root of Maryville.

birth of a "son, Bruce Nelson, June ot Rockwell City, la. Mrs. J. E. Nutter is a sister of the late Mrs.

A. McClintock of Guilford. by the Curtiss Wright Corporation to Mr. and Mrs. J.

Milan Shell Ravenwood spent today with their daughter. Mrs. David Suetterlin, and Mr. Suetterlin. at St.

Louis. He is a-graduate of the Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kine of Evan- Graham high school, class of 1940. Mrs.

Paul E. Hunt of Green Cove prings, arrived today to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard New, and Staff Sgt. Hunt's parents, Mr.

and Mrs, E. E. Hunt, and other relatives. Oats, wheat corn hail storm- Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Goff weTe in of Los Angeles, formerly of Maryville. Mr. and Mrs. Shell were formerly employed at the Maryville Electric Light and Power company. ston, 111., are visiting Mrs.

King's He works in the department turning Nsared by GRAY happy ending, adv. Mound City yesterday on business, out four-motored bomber planes. brother, Irvin Bartram, and Mrs. Kramers have bought Bartram of Maryville. of old rubber to Newspaperese Ne srRBCHIVE ewspaper!.

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