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The Evening Review from East Liverpool, Ohio • Page 3

Location:
East Liverpool, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1944. EAST LIVERPOOL REVIEW PAGE THREE Footnotes Abont Fighte: Prisoner Of War Mail Must Not Carry Patriotic Slogans FFBCTIVE March 1, mall addressed to American prisoners of war will not be delivered if it bears indorsements or slogans Intended to promote our war effort. Postmaster Ralph C. Bcnedum announced today.

German authorities recently advised the state department they wMild confiscate such mail and rather than risk that Postmasier entered the army air General Walker has aeked that senders of mail avoid use of einhellishments. A 3 Bowen, husband of protest has been filed meanwhile. Marguerite Jaccaud Bowen. These indorsements. Mr.

Bene-i 434 son of Mr. and dum said. Include stich as for the and others of like character, including postoffice cancelations reading U. Savings Your War Savings Stamps and as well as postage stamps having patriotic themes such as the and "For Also effective 1. letters properly enveloped and sealed and postal cards addressed to the prisoner of war for whom intended must be in an outer unsealed envelope, which will re- 'quire no postage, and simply addressed to of War Mall.

Mrs, George W. Bowen, 226 Carolina Chester, has been graduated as an aircraft mechanic at the army air school at Seymour Johnson Field, N. C. PARASITIC TWIN GUT FROM BODY Custodian Of Tomb Still Keeps Youth, 12, Reported Normal After Unusual Operation PrrM. Feb.

Winnipeg Triuuiie said in a copy- weight story Thursday that 12-year old Krnie Defort of Winnipeg has become a normal healthy schoolboy as a result of an operation which removed him from a parasitic twin. with two extra arms, two extra legs, an extra liver and two extra kidney.s, but with only a Richard Ward, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ward, 431 West Eighth began his boot training Friday at the Great Lakes, naval station. Me was a junior in East Liverpool High school and a member of the high school band for four years.

His brother. Pvt. Carl Ward has been stationed in England for seven months. R. Harker (left), son of Mrs.

Ralph Cook and one heart. Ernie of East Third was wounded In action In the Central Pacific, while taken by his mother last Oc- Sgt Herschel Stover of Newell (right), son of Mrs. Virgil Zeariey tober to the Mayo clinic at Roch- of Mingo Junction, was wounded seriously Jan. 19 in Italy. ester, where the delicate Cook lias the Purple Heart awarded her son was performed, the story Mary of Postmaster Renedum said no Bronx, N.

naval training sta- postage is required on either en- tion, to seaman second class in velope, but must be prepaid on air I the WAVES. She is a daughter of mail. He added, however, that Leonard Cook, Virginia Ches- stamps containing slogans ter. or patriotic themes must not be Jewish Groups Act To Rally Support For Open Palestine said. The Tribune reported that when the bandages were remnvtd rlx weeks later, Ernie was a normal boy except that he appears to have the futelllgence of a youth of 18; or 19 He was de.scribed as being well up ill his classes and a participant A talking picture, Shall Live and an address by in ail the uthletics of his grade.

State Sen. John P. Stephenson will feature a joint meeting The parasitic or partial Siamese night at 8 of the East Liverpool chapter of Hadassah and the Zionist twin was joined to Ernie at the used. Dale Emmerling, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Emmerling of La East dlstdct citizens I CToft, to sergeant ln Cuba. He wa- district organizatiou at the B'nal Israel temple on West Fifth st. The meeting is sponsored by the East Liverpool Emergency Committee for Palestine. ----------------------------------------------The sound fjlm, with Paul Muni as narrator, was termed as alfto were reminded that when sending parcels to prisoners of war the so-called label be. affixed.

Patriotic themes and slogan.s also must be omitted when sending parcels. The term of also includes Interned. inducted Jan. 7, 1942, and was employed at the Homer Laughlin China Plant 8 Albert Walters, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Stanley Walters. Reynolds to private first class at Camp Adair, Ore. James Ferrello. husliaud of Mr.s. Mary Ann Ferrello, 824 Pennsyl Richard M.

Hall, son to sergeant somewhere O. E. Hall, school board member. In Hawaii. and Mrs.

Hall, Lisbon hast Tieen awarded the Good Conduct I loving to write fo their .1 1 .1 congressmen and senators urging I Leon Rubin, chairman of the: Ccnmll.ee, en.pl,aelied’'.''"V,"-,, 11 meeting Is open to 0 organization offers an exlen- I slve record of coring for Allied He said an attempt will be madei goldiers in the Mediterranean are rally local support for the! which has been lauded by Gen. Wright-Conxpton-Taft-Wagner res-, sir Bernard Montgomery. entire Middle she said, "is using the facilities In Palestine for care of medal at the Syracuse, N. army! Marine ITc. Cliarles Wayne Hut- air base.

Hi.s wife, the formeri ton. son of Mr. and Charles Doris Neiser, is with him. Janies Floyd Cunningham, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Herman Cunningham, McCoy has been awarded the Air Medal, He is serving as a gunner aboard a heavy bomber In the Southwest Pacific. The 13th army air force headquarters In the combat zone announced the presentation for achievement while participating In aerial flights on combat operational missions of a hazardous He has served in the combat zone for 21 months, and has participated in more than 30 missions. He recently was awarded the Oak Leaf cluster. Aviation Cadet William G. McAdoo, son of Mr.

and Mrs. O. P. 807 Broadway, Weilsville, has completed his primary flight training at the Lodwick Aviation Military academy, Park, Fla. He was employed as a helper for the Pittsburgh Crucible Steel Co.

In Midland be- Hulton, of Chester, to the Hawai ian islands. Sgl. Teclin. (3) Dale K. Allison, son of Mrs.

Alice Alli.son, Railroad Chester, to Camp Cooke, Calif Lt. Richard L. Martin, husband of Mrs. Beulah Martin, Grant and sou of and Mrs. Frank 511 Jefferson Newell, to Camp Johnston, Fla.

He re ceived his commission two weeks ago. Thelma Kelly, daughter of Mrs. Bessie Kelly, Blackmore to storekeeper third class in Ihe 'WAVES at Corpus Christi, Tex. Aviation (Ic) Lester J. Grimm, son of Mr.

and Mrs, Grimm, 11U4 Etruria to the Solomons. Pvt. Charles Eggleton. son of Mrs. Margaret Eggleton, 128 Thompson to University of Illinois, Urbaiia, 111 for an engineering course.

olution, recently introduced in congress. w-hlch calls on the United Stares to its good officer; and lake appropriate measures to the end that the doors of Pale.stlne I sliali he opened for free entry of I Jews ami that there shall be full chest, the Tribune said, adding: where the regular body of Ernie Defort grew and developed fully and properly, the second body grew and developed slowly." Even before the operation the boy was described as robust, strong and Intelligent and able to play with other children, learn his lessons at school and become an i accomplished violinist. The newspaper said that to defray the cost of the operation the boy and his parents had determined to have perfoi-med. he joined a traveling show In 1939. Fi'alurcn By ROBERT HEWETT OPRINGFIELD.

111 Abraham Lincoln still lives In the mind of the man who is closest to the Great Emancipator in death. That man Is S5-year-old Herbert Wells Fay, a gray-haired Illinois country newspaper editor who for Ihe last 22 years has the custodian of tomb. While the nation prepares to commemorate the Civil war presi- 135th birthday anniversary, Kay devotes himself to his hobby collection of more than a million photographs, clippings, books and letters dealing with Lincoln's in retrospect lives in the days when Honest Abe rode the circuit to backwoods court- Iwuses or stumped the state In brawling political campaigns, Lincoln is no mythical figure to the frail custodian who has guided some 3,000,000 through the shrine In the last two decades. Poring over Lincoln's letters and newspapers, Fay finds a man as real to him as a neighbor. Lincoln Is alive least his spirit is he staunchly tells visitors.

a living force In the United States. All over the world we see people fighting for the things be stands Fay treasures 52 original letters written by Lincoln to friends and office seekers. Although he lives with enjoyment In the past. Fay has plenty of contact with the present. He has guided every president since Harding through the impressive marble and granite tomb.

HE LIVES WITH LINCOLN. For 22 Herbert W. Fay haa been custodian of tha Civil War ehrlne. ahown the tomb to more than three million. The death mask In hig hand la from hia Lincoln collection of a million President Roosevelt visited the Lincoln shrine twice, in 19S2 and 1936, and Mrs.

Roosevelt has signed the record three times, and schoolboy get the same little epeech: Is the tomb proper. Body TRIBUTE WU BE TO ABRAHAM UNCOLN NEW GUN WARS ON NAZI PLANES soldiers and sailors. Though 6.000 miles from the scene of its operations. Hadassuh conducts a miraculously efikient countrywide net-' opijortunity for colonization so that, work of hospitalization, public, the Jewish people ultimately may health, child welfare, vocational npv Clark Cooivcr 1) the icconslitute Palestine as a free; education. and youth niinisler.

will iwy tribute to Abra- and democratic commonwealth. services, which In other counlries ham Lincoln In hip sermon Sun- I Of I often are considered the at 11 a. m. In the First Metho! Mr. Rubin pointed out that the! of dlat church.

In observance of I White issued The film, Shall Live birthday, celebrated to by Neville govern- shows the Immigration and Rev. Cooper will preach on ment in 1939, an illegal of children from the I wall about was thei conquered countries in Palestine. 1 climax of the disastrous appease- sCHOOLS IN MIDLAND was a policy which ushered iwiiiflfcniiif in the Second World war. By terms of the Jewrish Immigration into Palestine would be Kuspetided completely by April, all Highly Mobile Anti-Aircraft Weapon Proved In Battle flying planes, the is credited with shooting down 14 Gennau planes during the Salerno engagement In Italy. Known to arlny ordnance as the M-16, this newest anti-aircraft weapon was demonstrated to press, radio and newsreel representatives at a suburban park from where shells were sent screaming over Lake Erie, BUY $9,000 IN BONDS Pvt.

Donald Costello has returned to Camp Pickett, after a brief furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Costello, Riley ave. CpI. Dale Thornton of Ft.

N. J. lias concluded a lu- day furlough with his mother, Sadie Thornton, Cadmus st. Cpl. Dick Estell of Ihe is spending a Unlay furlough with his parents, Mr.

and Arch Estell, 181 Center st. He has been in the service 19 mont.lis and has been stationed in Cuba for 17 mouths. A graduate of East Liverpool High in 1912, he wa.s a former high school football star. His brother, Apprentice Heamaii Ronald Estell, is taking his boot training at San Diego, Pfc. John L.

Penn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Penn of Irondale, is spending a 15-day furlough with his parents. He is stationed at Beach, Fla. Aviation Cadet Charle.s Colbert' of Field, Is visit-! ing his parents.

Mr, and Mrs.i Charles Colbert, George Chester, Pfc. Joseph Ross is spending a Accepts Resignation Of Two Instructors except In a tiny area and the Jewish population; would lie frozen Into a permanent! minority in their own national home. the An anthem, Was Glad They Said Unto (Galliralth), will he sung by the cnoir under the direc-i tioii of Mrs. Sara Gaston Riel. Mrs.

Riel, soprana, will sing solo, the Organ numbers by Miss Bernadine! Williamson will be from! (Wagner), aud (Mozart). Rev. Ckioper will continue bis discussion of Night tions" at the 7:30 p. when he will preach on Your i Missionary night will he national Assailed On Four The Emergency Committee chair- I man outlined four (grounds on 6:30 p. m.

when Mrs. O. Doak will speak. Mi.ss Virginia Belden aud Dona Richards will be co- leaders of the meeting. JAPS FAIL TO ANSWER U.

S. PRISON PROTEST Special To The Review. u. MIDLAND, Feb. than yV must not forget, Mr.

Rubin worth of War Bonds and braled at the youth meeting atl continued. that 1 alestlne was; amps have purchased by I promised to the Jews as a national! students during January, home in the Baltonr of! bringing the school year total to jl91t, and that Britain later was given a mandate over Palestine for! u. I or a Jewl.b Jewell to Midland school directors In his monthly roundup of aciivl- tles. He also announced that Dr. Which the group seeks support of "iTTennZtmll "state the pending congressional commence-i WASHINGTON.

Feb. 12-Condl- t'pp speaker. The date has not prison camp In the I solemn covenant Phtllpplries so bad that By The AuMrialeS Prtim. CLEVELAND. Fob.

uc- tkm In Africa, Sicily and Italy, a 2 0 UU-shot-a-minute, highly mobile anti-aircraft weapon was demonstrated to a civilian audience for the first time here Thursday. Col. H. M. Reedali, ordnance district chief, said the half-track carrier and Its cluster of four callber Browning machine guns Is the first highly mobile anti-aircraft weapon In use.

Its guns can be fired while the half-track Is traveling 60 miles an hour, he added. Dubbed the by newspapermen because of Its and the weapon is tiffec- tive up to 3,000 feet against airplanes and sheila travel mure than four miles horizontally, Col. Reed- all stated. The turret housing the four guns can be turned In all directions and from vertical to 10 degrees below the horizontal, ho said. The halftrack vehicle for the weapon is pnoduced by the White Motor Co.

of Cleveland. Especially effective against low- JOBS AUTHORITY PLAN FAVORED BY WALLACE By Thf MILWAUKEE. Feb. 12 Vice Henry A. Wallace has proposfHl of a authority or Jobs council made up of the very In government.

business and labor by the President to get full employment of resources and skill for the post-war period. Speaking at a Friday night rally by a grmip of Wlsconnln who said they represented no political party, Wallace said whether there will he a jobs authority or Jobs council set up will depend upon the attitude of the public. Jobs he declared, have responsibility and power, subject only to the President tind the congress, to get full employment of and skills. A jobs council would not have aiilhorlty but merely would advise the congress, the President and the public. of Lincoln lies 10 feet from Inside of north wall, 10 feet below floor, with head to west, made necessary by attempt to the body In The attempt to steal body was a sensational plot by a band of men who broke into the tomb and dragged the metal coffin from the stone sarcophagus before they were frightened away.

Let Vs Inselbric i Your Home This Modern Magic Turns Old Homes Into New Payments Can Be ranged at Low at $5.00 Per Month LAUCHLIM Conshnction Senrices Mulberry E. Liverpool CALL 805 iiicnt by f)l nations, contained in Ihe Balfour Declaration and the The resignations of Ml.ss Bernice more than 20,000 E. Craig, teacher of high at hool; are reimrtml to have died Mandate for Palestine, is foundedj vVilbur Nelson, In the first few months of their de the state deinirtment said In protests dispatched to the Jap- on the inalienable right of the; gehool Industrial arts instruc- Jewish based on an were accepted by the broken historie eonneotion. to re-, the employment of Miss Mary government Jan. 27.

constitute their National Home in wagner of Wampum, as a Copies of the protests, which re Palestine; 2 the Brltish-Amerlcan Mandate Convention In 1925, Great; approved. high school instructor at the salary i cited much of the previously ptib- of 11.700, plus state bonus, was Ushed Joint army-navy report of Britain may make no changes In Beglin, board president. In brief furlough with his Mr, and Mrs, Perry Ro.s.s. 163! Fawcett gt. He is a member of the military police escort guard at Ft.

Custer. Mich. Pfc. Harry Feldman has returned to Ft. Hanco( after a two-week furlough, and his brother, Lt.

Meyer Feldman, who recently graduated as a pilot from the Altns air base In Oklahoma, is spending ta five-day leave with his parents. and Mrs. ike Feldman. Church alley the status of Palestine without the consent of the United States government, The is a complete reversal of status and Is therefore a clear violation of Great covenant with the United States. is repugnant to the con- of the four freedoms that Palestine become the one land on earth, outside Axls-domln ated nations, where, by specific legislation, Jews are to be denied admission.

Inhumane and cruel treatment of American prisoners of war and do- structed L. A. Roach, school dlrec- manded that steps be tor, to represent the group at the Carnegie library board meeting. The appointment of Mrs. Stella Kleich as library janitor was approved.

She will succeed Mrs. A. B. Mancinl, who resignation will become effective Tuesday. Dissatisfied With Garbage TIFFIN, garbage contractor Urban Steinmetz docs not explain how he distinguighes tbe the face of disaster that! quality, but he complains that! Tokyo officially received Its damn have befallen the Jews of Europe; unauthorized persons have been Ing and even taken Immediately, were made public Friday.

The high death rate, the protests said, occurred at Camp where so-called hospital was absolutely itvadequate and prisoners of war lay sick and naked on the It apparent Friday that the Japanese government has adopted an altitude of cold disregard for the American protests. The state department revealed that under Hitler, It is unconscionable, going through the rubbish piles that they should be deprived of the here, the best, and leav hope of eventually finding peace and in the Jewish National Air. Rubin urged Justicc- ing the for him. So city council is considering plea that all garbage collectors be licenced. bothered to reply.

The rich fishing grounds of the Grand Banks produce an annua! catch of more than one billion nounds. Stop in today and inspect this swank military style Its smart military lines, its distinctive Jarman friendliness of fit make it top choice with the man in uniform or MOir sma WOO'" just another way your Gat company it helping to win thit war on the home front By Home Service, we mean our efficiently-organized group of women, under a thoroughly qualified Home Service Director, which is today Tlllinor xrifal in i a filling a vital role in advancing better nutrition and helping to show home-makers how to do home-canning, drying and storage of foodstuffs. STYliS Through the Red Cross, through the schools, through many other channels, the women of your Gas company are doing their part for victory they are very glad to be of service. Feel free to ask them any questions on foods. EAST SIXTH STRm BUY MORE WAR BONDS FOR VICTORY The Manufacturers Light Heat Co.

110 WEST SIXTH 8TBEET PHOHE 85 St) THEY MUST LAST FOR THE DURATION Buses are the arteries carrying the life blood of the community. Day in and day out they perfonn their part in the war effort and in your life. Bus patrons and the public give credit to competent operators and painstaking maintenance men behind the scenes, who with expert care operate and maintain the equipment to afford safe and efficient service. Truly these men play a vital part in the war effort. Tour Company to maintain efficient tervice tor the war-time needa VALLEY MOTOR TRANSIT CO..

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About The Evening Review Archive

Pages Available:
381,489
Years Available:
1885-1977