......,. . - ■ • FROM Hai«« 1Z-.W —- - - - .. • L-JB1UU. I- -.MB"-. X -»1« VOL. Red ft Io Lot Ml 22, 1944. tóL ’ ' I bM|Mi SBWTMB YBAB rawww— Echoes From Last FridayTeachers' Moatinfl Hara I iwiiiiy ivviv ---- - < .h.rT,,...... -T . ............ ----- y, w1 ■ y ^^Thanksgiving ; Conservation And ‘ ; Dinner KeynoteThis" lird War Year ’ In this 1944 Thanksgiving day we» of the United States, as well a» all! of our allies, have the moot cogent| reasons to be thankful for the way I 1 in which tt»e allied service man are carrying on on all fronts. Our and forging ahead and It la only a matter of weeks, or months at the most when the would-be WC ' instore will have been a and" crushed under our rafUt naval might. Mr Mj We do not mean that th yet won, but that we all hat to thank God for the blei victory | trogesCgs irow nqRnu achieved and for the '¡Mi Messings which wo as individuals are Continually receiving. With famllie wUnen so bui Thanksgiving E a lavish feast, b a war supply shared. We can an «■ which but we should aup^liuB • Peruvians Return To Coquille Tuesday Court of Honor At Liberty Nov. 27 Advisory Committee For Veterans Mr. and Mr». W. B. Dunshee and baby daughter, Suaan Jean, who is a year and eight months aid, arrived hare from San Francisco Tuesday evening. They arrived in Berkeley about three weeks ago from Lima, Peru, where they had resided tor more than two years and a half. Dunshee had been with the Singer company down there for more than three years and his wife, the former Carol Young, flew down in May, 1M2, and they were married in Lima. Mr. Dunshee haa resigned his posi­ tion as auditor for Singer i% South America and they expect to locate Somewhere tn the San Francisco area. He will be here for ten days and his family for a longer visit. .C4^'*»5F à *