The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 12, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

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    Thm OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Ovqan. Friday Morning. Jnn 12, 1942
FAGE TWO
Second Front
Put on Plan
Visit of Molotov to
Sign Agreements
Is Revealed
(Continued From Page 1)
signed Thursday a mutual aid
agreement providing tor reciprocal
assistance In the winning of the
war and for cooperation In prae
Mrai measures to "create a bet
ter world hereafter."
The latter agreement is similar
In all essential respects to the
lend-lease agreement signed on
February 23 with Great Britain
and on June. 2 with China. Final
determination of the terms of US
Bid to Russia, and "of the benefits
to be received by the United
States in return" Is to be de
layed until the "extent of the de
fense aid is known."
"The agreement." the state
department said, "reaffirms this
country's determination to con
tinue to supply In ever-Increasing
amounts aid to the soviet
anion In the war against the
common enemy. The agreement
also provides for such recipro
cal aid as the union may be in
a position to supply.
"But no matter how great this
aid may prove to be, it will be
small in comparison with the
magnificent contribution of the
ioviet union's armed forces to the
defeat of the common enemy."
In .announcing Molotov's visit
to Washington, the White House
Issued a statement saying:
"In the course of the conver
sations, full understanding was
reached with regard to the urgent
tasks of creating a second front
In Europe in 1942. In addition,
the measures for increasing and
speeding up the supplies of
planes, tanks and other kinds of
war materials from the United
States to the soviet union were
discussed. Further were discussed
the fundamental problems on co
operation of the soviet union and
the United States in safeguarding
peace and security to the freedom
loving peoples after the war."
Both sides state with satisfac
tion the unity of their views on
all these questions.
The language thus left de
liberately open the Question of
exactly what was the under
standing reached as to a second
front. There have been reports,
however, that Russia was dis
satisfied because no second
European front had been es
tablished, and the fact that an
understanding had been reached
with her was hailed enthusi
astically by members of con
gress. Chairman Connally (D-Tex.) of
the senate foreign relations com
mittee, calling It very helpful,
said "Russia is our partner in this
war a gallant partner, shedding
her blood and spending her treas
ure, and I approve of any prac
tical cooperation with her."
Anthony Eden, the British for
eign minister, described his gov
ernment's pact with the Soviets
as directed "against Hitlerite Ger
many." It contains no mention of
Japan.
To observers in this country,
however, there seemed little rea
son to doubt that Tokyo must
view with foreboding this disclo
sure of closer understanding be
tween Moscow, Washington and
London.
The White House did not make
known what officials accompanied
Molotov here. Presumably, how
ever, there were high representa
tives of the red army and navy
since it was announced that those
participating in the conversations
for the United States included
Gen. George C. Marshall, the ar
my chief of staff, and Admiral
Ernest J. King, the chief of naval
ftrwrntirna and mmmandfr in
chief of the fleet.
Other participants Included
Maxim Utvinoff, the soviet am
bassador; Harry Hopkins, the
lease-lend administrator, and
Secretary of State Cordell Hull.
(It was announced in London
that those participating in the
conversations there included Gen
eral Issayev, representing the red
army, and Admiral Kharllamov,"
representing uie rru navy.;
Molotov, 52, is the hight-hand
man of Premier Joseph Stalin in
the soviet government During his
stay here he was the guest of
President Roosevelt at the White
Hou..
Flag Parades
Set Saturday
(Continued from Page 1)
age despite heavy damage la
the, Java sea battle.
President Roosevelt will ob
serve the day at the White House
where Mexico will formally ad
here to the United Nations pact
In a ceremony.
. Sixty thousand, are expected to
' watch a military pageant staged
by picked soldiers from 17 divi
sions Jn " Ktzar i stadiunv San
Francisco, tt ft double ceremony
tailed Flat Pay-MacAr thur
Pay." Thi frcgram will be short-
x waved to Pacific forces.
At' Fort " jiiaienry, - Baltimore,
'; JJLkjot Howard Jackson wOX make
. 'It symbolical- presents Uog or a
tag to General MacArthuT on a
; Kational broadcast. The flag, made
.by 50 . women working: in the
i Baltimore flag house, will be
shipped by plane to Australia. ;
Crew Rescued From First Ship Torpedoed in NW
cVT v(:- " W
' ft A N y
P3 fe' ft J,
The first torpedoing of a US merchant ship off the coast of the Paelflc northwest was officially an
nounced by the US navy after the
safely to Port Angeles, Wash., and
off Neah bay and Cape Flattery,
those In a lifeboat was effected by
The others, adrift in two rubber rafts throughout a stormy night, were sighted by a coast guard plane
and. picked up by a naval craft. The man who died from exhaustion and exposure was Stephen
Chance, negro second cook snd bsker. Two men were seriously Injured by the explosion. This photo
shows part of the rescued crew shortly after they were brought shoreside. J
H3) ED E IP
in thm
CLEVELAND-(P)-The street
department put in a detour sig9
while repairmen were doing a re
surfacing job, but motorists didn't
pay much attention to the warning.
A foreman solved the problem
by erecting a substitute sign which
reads:
"Good Americans will detour
damn Japs won't."
Everybody is detouring now.
CICERO, Ill.-(j5VThis city,
former hideout for Chicago's
gangsters wants the world to know
its citizens are buying ammuni
tion for America, not, rods for
racketeers.
Officials announced that indi
viduals have pledged to buy $3,
000,0000 in war bonds and $3,000,
000 more would be bought by the
community's three banks, eight
building and loan associations and
the schools.
CAMP CAT J. AN, Calif.-(P)
When Private Leon Custer wrote
to his girl friend back in Wichita,
he requested that she send him
"all the town's dirt"
"Dear Leon," Miss Margaret
Hogue replied in due time, "en
closed please find some of Wichi
ta's dirt. Sorry I couldn't dig
around more. With spades and
hearts, Margaret"
In the envelope was a dainty
handful of Kansas top soil.
CAMP PENDLETON, Va.-(JP)
Pvt. Joseph E. Vas, 26, of Aliquip
pa, Pa., walked into the camp post
office and laid cash on the line
for a $1000 war savings bond.
"The country," said Private Vas,
"can find a lot more use for the
dough right now than I can. And
ten years from now that thousand
bucks will come in plenty handy."
Private Vas' brother, Michael,
a coast guardsman, was lost on a
torpedoed ship last January.
Michael's insurance wont to Jo
seph, who immediately bought the
bond.
DETROIT--Add to the cas
ualties of war the comical French
boxcar and locomotive of the
American Legion 40 et 8.
Voiture 102 here has decided to
put its train largest and oldest In
the state away for the duration
Tank-Borne Red
52 -
-3v i- r w' -
"IZ ft
- " ' t - .
J j,: -int.,
' '. v ' ' :. :
ik-borne detachment of red army men advance against a German
position on Russia's western front Troops are transported on top
of tanks to the point of action, then go Into battle on foot, supported
by the tank. This picture waa
ship's captain, Lyle G. Havens of
reported that only one man had
according to US Senator Homer T.
Knot Peterson, master of a halibut
H E g
Neua
to conserve oil, gasoline and tires.
The boxcar fund of $500 will be
used to buy war bonds.
ALBUQUERQUE - (Jf) - J. B.
Gravlee, grey-bearded sheepherd
er, came to town for his regular
supplies.
"And some sugar," he told the
grocer.
"Your ration card, please."
"What's that?" was the puzzled
response.
News travels slowly in the hills
where the sheep are.
MATAGORDA GUNNERY
RANGE, Tex.-(;p)-Proud of his
aim, Maj. Gen. H. R. Harmon
landed his plane to inspect a tar
get he hrJ riddled with machine
gun bullets.
But the target plane pilot mis
calculated and dropped the sleeve
in the bay 200 yards offshore.
The general, chief of the Gulf
Coast air corps training center,
peeled off his uniform and swam
for 45 minutes in an unsuccessful
search for the target.
CAMP LEE, Va.-(P)-The Camp
Lee quartermaster school sur
prised John B. Boyer with a fare
well party to wind up his 30 years
in the army.
umcers presented rum witn a
traveling bag and gold watch and
praised his record, especially the
fact that he had answered sick call
only once in 30 years.
When the veteran sergeant fi
nally got a chance to speak, he
said, "Thanks for the sendoff,
boys, but I have already reenlist
ed for the duration."
ST. LOUIS-(;P)-Religious edu
cational workers need to look after
the girls left behind by soldiers
marching off to war, an Episco
pal conference was told.
"There is a lot in that song about
sitting under the apple tree," said
the Rev. L. W. Clarke, student
chaplain at the University of
Minnesota.
"There will be a lot of apple-tree
sitting unless we help these young
women find usefulness and diver
sion in wholesome ways."
LINCOLN, Neb.-(;P)-A "Mike"
Lebrato of Cody, Neb., has
change his name to Americus
Infantry in Action
radioed from Moscow to New York.
San Carlos, Calif- brought his crew
been lost. The submarine attacked
Bone of Washington. Rescue of
schooner out of San Francisco.
Liberator and he's In the army,
he informed Secretary of State
Frank Marsh.
He wanted his cattle brand re
corded under his new name, but
said he couldn't pay the $1 re
newal fee because his army pay
was needed to support his mother.
"Sure, Mike," said Marsh, who
paid the fee for him.
TOLEDO, O., -iF) Sworn in
as an American citizen, a woman
paid her $1 fee in federal court
with a half-dollar and two quar
ters. The half was counterfeit.
She remained in Uncle Sam's
good graces, however, when she
showed to the satisfaction of
court clerk George Blossom that
she didn't know the money was
bogus.
PHILADELPHIA, -(- When
you order French fried potatoes,
get them with peelings.
That's the word of dietician
Paul O. Sompson of St. Louis,
who told the Lions club the peel
ings contain important food prop
erties, and added:
"The chef is startled but after
he samples a few he eats them
that way himself."
PLATTSMOUTH, Neb., JP)-
J. W. Grabill, Plattsmouth jewel
er, used a wire to loosen the dia
mand setting on a ring. The wire
slipped, cut his finger, and when
he bandaged it he could not find
the diamond.
Six days later an infection de
vellwd. When the finger was
opened, out popped the diamond.
CAMP BLAND ING, Fla.. -P)-
Private James W. Chandler,
bugler in the 74 th field artillery
brigade, says he can please every
one with horn tooting except i
certain dog.
Whenever he sounds a call,
dog squats at his feet, points his
nose skyward and wails a mourn
ful accompaniment.
The louder he blows, the loud
er the dog howls.
Chandler says he doesn't mind
the competition, "except that it's
come to the point where soldiers
get up to the wail of the dog and
not the bugle blast"
SPRINGFIELD, 111., -iff)- Po
licemen had been told that a new
telephone in the station would
ring only for an air raid alarm.
The telephone, in an ante room,
was surrounded by signs: "Do pot
use this phone," "for emergency
use only,, and "in case this phone
rings, notify the sergeant on
duty."
At 2 a.m. a sergeant and two
patrolmen jumped up hastily
when the phone rang.
The sergeant nervously raised
the receiver.
"Hello," he said.
"Hello," said a feminine voice.
Is George there?"
First Aid Cards
Ready at Office
First aid certificates for the
classes of the following instruc
tors are at the Red Cross office
and may be called for there, of
ficials announced late Thursday:
Phoebe Busick, classes of April
and May; Earl LaFond, class of
March, April and May; P. L.
Clark, class of May; Charles
Crary, class of March; Flora D.
Donnelly, RN, class of May; Mar
garet L. GrewelL April classes;
Dorothy Rowe, class of May.
Claude C. ReinoehL class of
May; Frances A. Kintz, class of
May; Jeanne DuBois, class of Ap
ril; Madeline Morgan, class of
April; Lloyd HockeU, class of
April; Lee C. Roake, class of
April, and Aileeh Westphal, class
of April and May.
Allied Attack Told
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS,
Australia Friday, June 12.ff)-
Ailied airmen shot down a. four
motored Japanese , flying boat
during another attack' on Rabaul.
New Britain, : where fires t were
left raging, and a Japanese fight
er plane also was destroyed when
four, of them 'attacked , an aerial
reconnaissance ' unit ' over " New
Guinea, General MacArthur's
i headquarters announced Friday.
German Drive
Fails to Gain
African Battle Better
For Axis; Chinese
Hold Chuhsien
(Continued From Page 1)
wear down Timoshenko's remain
ing manpower and war material.
Both opposing armies in the
Ukraine were reported strong
despite the losses of the bitter
fighting in May.
From Sevsstapol, a thorn In
the side of any German attempt
to push from the Crimea to the
Caucasus, Russian dispatches
said the Germans were hurling
whole divisions into repeated
attacks which disregarded
losses In a desperate attempt to
capture the red fleet naval base.
Red Star declared that the Rus
sians, under almost incessant at
tack for seven days, were holding
on stubbornly in their original
positions. Some hill top positions
had been lost in earlier fighting,
but the Russians said they were
recaptured in see-saw combat
Soviet dispatches acknowledged
that the Germans had "tremen
dous superiority of numbers" in
the air battle over Sevastapol, but
said Russian planes still were go
ing up to battle and soviet ground
defenses were holding up despite
showers of bombs by the thou
sands.
Tass said Russian fliers defend
ing Sevastapol shot down 29
planes and damaged IS others in
the past few days, while anti
aircraft gunners were credited
with knocking down 20 more.
The Russia reported destroy
ing another 20 German planes in
a raid on a German airfield back
of the Sevastapol front.
By The Associated Press
The nasi enemy and his Ital
ian accomplice were luckier
Thursday in the Cirenalcan
sands, for the Free French who
had withstood a fury of attack
on the mile-square plateau of
Bir Hacheim, "well of wisdom,"
were withdrawn Wednesday
night on British orders. Loss of
the strong point removed the
main southerly threat to the
nasi supply line; it was a dis
tressing reverse, but, in that
trackless sea of sand, not a
decisive one.
While America's flying, fight
ing men of Midway and Hawaii
were telling of the victory over
Japanese transport and war fleets,
Japan's leading civilian naval ex
pert, Masanori Ito, made a slip
of the tongue in a broadcast in
terview which must have dis
tressed him later He told the
Japanese they "should not be
disappointed at the loss of. two
aircraft carriers." The Japanese
had admitted only the loss of one
and heavy damage to a second.
Actually, on the basis of US an
nouncements, three enemy car
riers probably were destroyed.
In eastern China the forces of
Free China still held the walled
city of Chuhsien, main Japanese
object at present in their offensive
aimed at getting control of all the
railways. Moreover, regular and
guerrilla forces of Chiang Kai
Shek were menacing the advanced
enemy position in western Cheki
ang with repeated attacks behind
the Japanese forward lines which
are thrown around Chuhsien.
House Passes
WPA Money
$336,000,000 Said
Provision for
400,000
(Continued from Page 1)
said that unemployment had been
greatly decreased as a result of
the war stimulus to industry.
As finally passed, the meas
ure carried $280,000,000 in di
rect appropriations, plus re
appropriations of $56,000,000
left unexpended from last year's
allocations. The appropriations
committee has estimated that It
would provide for an average
of 400,000 persons a month on
WPA, starting July 1.
The republican minority, with
about 15 exceptions, voted almost
as a solid bloc in favor of the
reduction proposed by Taber, and
was joined by between 30 and 40
democrats.
The house also rejected, 106 to
87, an attempt by Rep. Hare (R-
SC), to prevent the WPA from
carrying on educational, cultural,
recreational and industrial train
ing projects for the fiscal year
beginning July 1.
By standing vote of 91 to 88, the
house then turned thumbs down
on a motion by Rep. Wiggles-
worth (R-Mass) to hold the agen
cy's funds down to $100,000,000
for the balance of 1942, rather
than give it $280,000,000 lor the
next 12 months.
Three Treated by
First Aid Crew
Salem first aid car was called
Thursday night to the residence
of O. E. Zimmerman, 83, on Port
land road after Zimmerman suf
fered , a heart attack. He was
resting .easily later, first aid men
reported.
v Linda Lee Barker, 1510 North
17th street, was treated for a dog
bite on the hand Thursday after
noon while. Billy Schwab, 8, of
Portland, visiting on route six,
was treated for, a brokOn left
arm fractured between the el
bow and shoulder and taken , to
the Deaconess hospitaL
'Fisheye9 View
;
4.
V
Ensign G. H. Gay (above), 25, a
torpedo-plane pilot of Houston,
Tex., had a "fisheye' view of
the violent sea battle of Mid
way and at Pearl Harbor told
the first eye-witness account of
the naval engagement between
United States and Japanese
forces. Ensign Gay said that he
had Just launched a torpedo at
a Japanese plane carrier when
his plane crashed into the sea.
While he floated, carefully con
cealed under a cushion from
his wrecked plane, Ensign Gay
said he watched a line of burn
ing Japanese ships pass by. He
told of a thunderous and highly
successful attack by American
dive bombers and torpedo
planes on Japanese aircraft
carriers.
Military Pay
Boost Passes
Senate Sends Measure
To President; More
Than Doubles Pay
WASHINGTON, June U-(ff)
Congress dispatched to the presi
dent Thursday the military pay
adjustment bill which would
raise the minimum pay of soldiers,
sailors, marines and coast-guardsmen
from $21 to $50 a month.
Congressional action on the
measure was completed when the
senate approved by a vote of 69 to
0 the scale favored by the house.
The $50 base rate had been as
sured Monday when the senate on
the motion of Senator LaFollette
(Prog-Wis) rejected a suggested
compromise of $46 a month.
The bill would raise the salaries
of all members of the armed ser
vices up to and including second
lieutenants and ensigns. Officers
of higher rank would get in
creased rental and subsistence al
lowances. If President Roosevelt approves
the legislation, the new rates'
will become effective as of June 1.
The present scale for seventh
grade enlisted men, which takes
in buck privates, is $21 a month
for the first four months, after
which it is advanced to $30. Thus
the new scale would mean a $29
increase for fresh recruits.
New base wages for the other
grades would be:
Sixth grade (private first-class,
second-class seamen, etc.) $54.
Fifth grade (corporal, first-class
seamen, etc.) $66.
Fourth grade (sergeant third
class petty officers, etc.) $78.
Third grade (staff sergeant
second-class petty officers, etc.)
$96.
Second grade (first sergeant,
technical sergeant, firs t-class
petty officers, etc.) $114.
First grade enlisted men (mas
ter sergeant mates and chief
petty officers) $138.
Second lieutenants who now
receive $1500 a year would be in
creased to $1800.
2500 Pilots
A Month Set
Navy to Increase Rate
Of Training From
Recent 600
(Continued From Page 1)
high overall level production
in the case of many individual
types of aircraft far above the
most sanguine expectations en
tertained at the inception of the
program.'
Vinson paid tribute to the valor
and efficiency of the naval avia
tion forces, as demonstrated in
the engagement in the Coral sea
and at Midway island.
"For years," he said, "the house
naval affairs committee has fav
ored the utmost development of
the navy's aviation forces both
afloat and ashore, and it is evi
dent that this confidence has
been well justified.'
He declared that the test of
battle offered the true measure
of the efficiency of men, methods
and machines, and added:
"Our naval pilots have met this
test not only with unsurpassed
gallantry, but with the precision
that is acquired only by repeated
practice ' during long months of
training.!'
Blaze Extinguished
The Salem fire department was
called to the Central apartments,
482 State street late Thursday
night to put out a blaze which
caught, on a 'davenport- cushion.
Little damage was reported.
Britain and Russia Promise
Mutual Assistance; Former
Premier Praises Results
By DREW MIDDLETON
LONDON, June 11 JPh Britain and Soviet Russia have
made an historic pledge to keep an armed peace against-Germany
after the nazis are beaten in this war and have renounced
territorial greed or meddling in the internal affairs of other na
tions, the government announced Thursday. - .
Disclosing the terms of a solemn treaty designed to last for
at least 20 years, the British for
eign secretary, Anthony Eden,
told the house of commons the
story of last month's trip to Lon
don and Washington by Vyache
alav Molotov, and of the conver
sations which in both capitals
resulted in a "full understand
ing" on "the urgent tasks of creat
ing a second front in Europe in
1942."
Russia, is was understood,
made a major concession under
the persuasion of the United
States ambassador, John G.
Winant She agreed not to press
her earUer demand for a guar
antee of her pre-war Baltic
frontiers.
The parties promised:
1. "To afford one another mili
tary and other assistance and
support of all kinds in the war
against Germany and all those
states which are associated with
her in acts of aggression in Eu
rope." 2. To enter no negotiations with
a "Hitlerite government or any
other government in Germany
that does not clearly renounce all
aggressive intentions, and to
make no separate peace whatso
ever with Germany or her allies.
3. After the war, to "take all
measures in their power to ren
der impossible the repetition of
arrression and violation of
peace by Germany or any of
the states associated with her
in acts of arrression in Europe;"
to give each other full military
support in the event Germany
resumes the fight after the war.
4. "To work together in close
and friendly collaboration after
the reestablishment of peace for
the organization of security and
economic . prosperity in Europe
They will take into account the
interests of the United Nations in
these objects and they will act in
accordance with two principles
Of not seeking territorial aggran
dizement for themselves, and of
non-interference in the internal
affairs of other states."
5. To give each other all pos
sible economic assistance after the
war and to Join no coalition di
rected at one or the other of the
signatories.
A foreign office communique,
read to the house of commons by
Eden, contained the reference to
a second front. For obvious rea
sons, there was no elaboration.
Japan nowhere was men
tioned in the treaty - because
first she is not at war with
Russia, and secondly, Russia,
fully involved in a fight for life
on her European frontier, is
loath to give Japan cause for
war.
It was clear, however, that
plans were laid for pounding nazi
Germany into submission between
two fighting fronts, probably
within a year. Solid assurance that
both the United States and Brit
ain plan to open, at the right time,
a European front and relieve the
nazi pressure on Russia was given
in the talks between Molotov and
the British and American chiefs
of staff.
The Anglo-Russian treaty, em
bracing more than five-twelfths
of the world's surface and nearly
700,000,000 of its people, marks
the emergence of the Soviet Un
ion from isolationism and in its
final form represented a sacrifice
by Russia in the interests of in
ternational harmony.
Both in parliament and in the
chancelleries of the exiled United
Nations, the terms of the pact re
ceived outspoken approval.
While the house of commons
still was cheering Eden, white
maned David Lloyd George, the
premier of World War One, rose
to his feet and said in the respect
ful hush that followed:
"As one who labored over 20
years age to establish geod un
derstanding between Soviet
V
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JOE'S
OrEN SATUKDAY, NIGHT TIL 9 At O'CLOCK 1
Russia and this country. I felici
tate the prime minister and the
foreign secretary and the gov
ernment apoa the accomplish
ment of this treaty. Had It been
a fact some years ago, many
grave blunders would have been
avoided and not only that, but
this war never would have oc
curred.' (The reference obviously was to
the fateful days of August 1939,
when the Chamberlain govern
ment and the Russians negotiated
in an atmosphere of mutual sus
picion before the Soviet Union
abruptly signed with Germany,
the non-aggression pact which
precipitated the nazi invasion of
Poland.)
A United Nations spokesman
said the present treaty "guaran
tees the war not only will be won,
but the post-war peace as well."
G. A. Collins
Made Major
Operations Chief Has
First Commission
At Camp Adair
(Continued From Page 1)
holder for a water tube boiler,
has managed several large mining
operations in the west, and served
at one time as the chief -engineer
for the California Redwood asso
ciation. Last year he organized a
gold mining enterprise in British
Columbia, designed a 4000 cubic
yard gold dredge, directed the
manufacture of the machinery and
set it up 500 miles north of Van
couver in the Cariboo district.
Major Collins' family consists in
addition to Mrs. Collins, of two
sons, Grenold Collins, chief pilot
for the Bristol Bay Air service at
Anchorage, Alaska, and Richard
G. Collins, manager of the Brit
ish Columbia mining operation.
92 to Leave
Salem, Draft
(Continued From Page 1)
Antonio Martinez Alientos, Ed
ward Bert Stanton, jr., William
Daniel DeCew, Gilbert Raymond
Fish, Vincent Edward . Drabic,
Clarence Nickoli Skang, Jack R.
McCoy, Wilson Alpin Bauman,
William Pearce, Roger Lloyd
Johnson, Clyde Art Brock, Orville
Foy Ward, Merlyn Frances de
Geer, Ralph Everett May, Allen
F. Pankalla, Douglas J. Treiber,
Lloyd Merle Bergseng, Floyd An
ton Larson, Frank Kenneth Neff,
jr., Phillip Sheridan Magai, Theo
dore Ralph Foreman, Bayn Luck
ey George, Alford Robert Nolan,
jr., Fred Herman Lundquist,
Charles Christopher Robinson,
Ole Voster, Harold Frederick
Neuens, Henry Joseph Mehling,
Edward Allen Taylor, Edgren
Mark Twedt.
Warren Thompson Pickett Fred
A. Johnson, El win Van Doty,
George Howard Earhart, Robert
Herman Cutler, George Henry
Windedahl, Herbert Victor Helms,
Harold Elbert Compton, Creigh
ton Fax Lawson, Archie Daniel
Schultz, Otto Emil Olson, Virgil
Edwin Sorenson, Rudolph Kerry
Kalina, Erich, Walther, Jasper
Carl Gordon,, John Otis, Mast Ar
thur Harold Boggs, Chester Alex
ander Hickok, John James Cary,
James Barron Fitzpatrick, Paul
William Beecher, Clarence Bar
ton Costa, Richard Franklin Mar
tin, Edward Eias Paalanen, Mel
vin Mitchell Marr, William El
wood Stark. -
viiiAr
I chos my ewrt fabric, pick
the pattern I went, the color
shade, the style . .-. and when
it comes ta fit . . . man! It's
hard to beat a s of Nash
Custom Tailored Clothes.
(1
H
Upstairs Clolhes Shop
442 State Street
Entrance Next te Quelle Cafe