Bristol Herald Courier from Bristol, Tennessee (2024)

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iOTyprarTnriftiwj -guar it p-j-iSifr0ygg5T'fr' RISTOL HERALD COURIER BRISTOL VIRGINIA -TENNESSEE WEDNESDAY MORNING OCTOBER 7 1912 TWO JEFFE1S OUTLINES Deaths And Funerals LEIVIS KS Id STANDLEY WILL ASK MORE AID FOR REDS (Continued from Page One) the latest development in the situation created by Joseph letter to this correspondent (Cassidy is chief of the Associated Press Moscow bureau) urging the allies to meet their obligations fully and on time The ambassador pointed out that some ships had been lost in convoys bringing allied supplies to Russia but insisted feel that our aid has been of material He said there had been criticism because second rate material especially planes had been sent to Russia with British Hurricanes and American Tomahawks (Curtiss P-40) fighting here while the superior Spitfires and Airacobras are serving elsewhere Ruth Crane Her husband was called and went immediately to her bedside The body was returned to Pike county for funeral and burial Burial was in the family plot in the Pikeville cemetery MISS MAE ADKINS Special To The Herald Courier OWSLEY Ky Oct Miss Mae Adkins 32 daughter of Mr and Mrs Adkins of Ows ley died at her home Sunday1) after a long illness She was a former teacher Besides the parents several brothers and sisters survive Funeral will be held from the home tomorrow with burial in the old family cemetery near Owsley ELMER AUXIER Special To The Herald Courier SECO Ky Oct Elmer Auxier year-old son of Mr and Mrs Dick Auxier died at the family home here after a few days illness The child is survived by the parepts and several brothers and sisters Funeral will be held tomorrow with burial in the Seco-Whit-taker cemetery A VIRGINIA BLACKOUT WILL BE REPEATED (Continued from fa*ge One) radio stations do rot gen- lly announce test raid signals as they did earlier in the year Howard explained that too much confusion had resulted in areas not invohed in the test For he said "a listener Pennsylvania or Maiy-land tuned in to a -rful ginla station would get the announcement and quite likely would conclude the test applied io his aiea as well This happened several times in tire INTERPRETING THE WAR NEWS (Continued from Page One) a period whicn is certainly i Exactly what that means is far lrom ilc'' Chui chill coupled his warning however with an assertion that he nad nothing to add 10 the "uuefully weghed on A 1 1 1 d-hussian le-lutiuns he had already made That obviously was a lcfer-once to the Churcnill report to pi liament September 8 alter his visit to Egypt and Moscow lie then levealed a rift with Russia over allied second-1 rent delays Russians did not think that we or America had done enough to take the weight off them" he said this is not at all surprising in view of the terrific onslaughts they have withstood with marvelous Mr Churchill was then convinced however that he and his American colleague VV Averell Harriman President personal representative had succeeded in reassuring Soviet officials of loyal and sincere resolve to come to their aid as quickly as possible without regard to the sacrifices and losses involved so long as the contribution is toward That seems to be the weighed to which he has now referred One implication is that despite the Stalin-to-Cassidy letter the British leader secs no widening of the second-front rift since he spoke The other implicit in his warning against parliamentary exploration of the subject at so a time is that the hour for allied deeds to ratify allied assurances to Moscow is close at hand The only other statement that Mr Churchill has made on the subject since his September 8 speech was his recent warning against published speculation about the when and where of allied attempts to ease nazi pressure on Russia That also impressed this writer with the feeling that offensive moves might be closer than Moscow thinks Time and not much of it will tell as to that There was another Chui chill rcmaik on September 8 however which events in have since gone far to make good the Russian he re-maiked will only at this moment say it is the 8th of September On that day Russian reports told of new German non-stop attacks battering their way into the streets of Stalingrad from the west There was little to encourage belef that the city could hold out a week much less a month Yet a month later nazi attackers have jrogressed only inches Their attack from the west has failed The northwest suburbs each a Russian fortress are the mam objects of attack The nazi' left flank is in growing peril and winter is clme at hand even in the Don and Volga basins It was the approach of that greatest of Russa's allies winter that Churchill visualized Current reports from Stalingrad tell of cold winds already howling at night across the open steppes where a month ago a heat wave hampered the attackers There probably remain only a few days before the nazi high command must ieaeh a crucial decision To be caught by an caily winter in the open with a vast army to supply over wrecked highways and railroads might be disastrous A withdrawal to better protected positions abandoning the Stalingrad storming operations could be hardly less dnngeious if too long delayed Everv hour eviry day of that miraculous Russian stand amid the rums of Stalingrad is of priceless value to Russia and her allies and a growing peril to Hitler What Churchill foresaw in his is the 8th of September" comment is close to a realized hope fclen and Equipment Made Available for More Vital War Production WASHINGTON' Oct 6 rhe War Production Board deeded today to icder all sold mining halted in the United States to make the miners and tome of the equipment available jo the non-ferrous metal mines for more vital war production The move had been contemplated fn: some time and a WPB spokesman declining to be jjuoted by name reported that the board finally decided at its regular meeting today to take re action The order will be issued within the next day or so tne spokesman said and will direct all the gold mines to cease production at some date in the neac future probably a month or two hence The mines will be permitted however to remain in a condition with skeleton crews on hand to prevent flooding and other damage I First word of the decision came prom Senator Johnson (D-Colo) He and other western senators along with gold mine operators Opposed to the move met with WPB officials last week to register their protest did all we could to stop It" Johnson said heard of the order with deep His informant he added told him the action was taken but had to be done because the labor situation was critical The official referred particularly to the famous Homestake mine in South Dakota and the Cripple Creek mining district in Colorado as among those affected Johnson said nun UTS 10 STUMP SOCIAL 01 Board of Mayor and Commissioners of Tennessee Bristol meeting last night at city hall passed on first reading an ordinance designed to stamp out venereal diseases in the city The ordinance provides that afflicted persons who do not take treatment locally be sent to one of tfii state venereal disease hos-itals for treatment until cured The board heard a request for the Installation of automatic traffic signals at the intersection of Fifth and Anderson streets The board took the request under consideration GERMANS EXECUTE 10 AS RESULT DISORDERS (Continued from Page One) phases of life was tightened in Norway and Denmark and Denmark especially appea-cd concerned the prospect of having Imposed it a eertapo patterned administrations in Holland and Nor way I One Danish source here said Hitler has demanded control of the Danish police force and key pests in the ministry of justice Reuters reported from Stockholm that the palace guard at Copenhagen has been quadrupled that tension was increasing and that there was a serious rift between Denmark's King Christ and Hitler The flareup of indignation in Scandinavia grew out of harsh German measures to suppress alleged sabotage in the Trondheim region of Norway where many 3anes and Norwegians told to or were employed on German defene projects Norwegian authorities here said they had been informed that numerous attempts had been made to wreck installations of the Trondheim naval base where the German battleship Tirpitz and the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen have been docked The German answer was tire proclamation of a state of emergency along the coast from Trondheim to Bodo Public buildings restaurants and theaters were closed a curfew from 8 to 5 a was imposed and public assemblies wrn forbidden Meanwhile civilians in PROTECTS THE FAMILY FUNDS mom! MRS SMYTH Special To The Herald Courier PENNINGTON GAP Va Oct 6-Mrs Smyth 62 died at her home near here at 1:30 Monday afternoon after an illness of three months Mrs Srayth was born March 29 1879 at Pennington Gap the daughter of Mr and Mrs Myers She attended the Smyth Chapel school near Pennington Gap At the age of 12 she joined the Smyth Chapel Methodist church In January of 1895 she was married to Robert Smyth also of Pennington Gap Surviving are her husband and the following children: Merle Smyth Pennington Gap Mrs Ola Shuler Harlan Ky Mrs Bernice Hansley Knoxville Tenn Golden Smyth Pennington Gap Irene Smyth Knoxville Ermine Avon Ben Harve and Tip Smyth Pennington Gap and Lee Smyth Fort Benning Ga Also surviving are Eve brothers A Robert and Simp Myers all of Pennington Gap and Harve Myers of Dryden Va and 9 grandchildren Funeral services will be held at the home Wednesday afternoon in charge of the Rev Mehaffy Interment will be in the Smyth cemetery ELEVEN NAZI TANKS DESTROYED IN ONE STALINGRAD SECTOR (Continued from Page One) Stalingrad's resolute garrison was reported fighting amid German-set bomb fires visible for miles but there was nothing to indicate any weakening of the defense which has amazed all of Russia Increasingly colder weather gave urgency to the assault now concentrated in a settlement by more than 30000 German troops of three crack divisions Germans said the government newspaper Izvestia see time passing They fear delay They are fiercely rushing JAPS STILL RETREAT BEFORE AUSTRALIANS (Continued from Page One) voy was withdrawing forces from Buna or had attempted to land reinforcements there Australian dispatches from New Guinea said that Aussie forces had clambered up the last steep grades in the Owen Stanley to the 6000-foot high gap through the rugged mountains There was a possibility that tiie Japanese might make a stana at Kckoda some 50 miles inland from Buna But the speed of their headlong flight raised the oucsticn here that they might be repeating their performance at Milne Bay south of Buna JroiTi where they withdrew an invasion force in the face of great Allied odds VICTOR WIFE DROPS DIVORCE PLANS HOLLYWOOD Oct 6 Mrs Martha Stevenson Kemp Mature has called off for the duration her plans to divorce movie actor Victor Mature who is serving in the coast guard this most certainly mean a she added after announcing her decision to postpone the divorce just Administrator A for Cooperation in Con-1 servation Program WASHINGTON Oct 6 Rubber Administrator William Jeffers said tonight he had been given the power that I shall to carry out his program expressed confidence that the nation-wide gasoline rubber rationing and other rubber conservation regulations would with the voluntary support of the great majority of all our bu added this warning: that small segment of our population who will try to beat the game I only have this to say look out" In an address prepared for the National Broadcasting System his first since his appointment Sept 15 Jeffers said that talks with people from coast to coast and thousands of letters had convinced him that the people were better prepared to accept the rigors of war than some are likely to Jeffers urged that the people consider the restrctions arising from the need to conserve rubber a pbn whereby we can keep automobiles operating rather than to restrict their use because this is a nation on wheels and it must be kept on means of transportation in this country expanded so skillfully through the past years especially the bus and truck must be continued to its fullest to completely accompbsh t'ie necessities of our essential business life on he said aim is not to take automobiles trucks buses or farm equipment out of active service Rather our aim is to keep them in service until the day when we will have an adequate supply of rubber substitutes only hope of bridging the gap between the present and the time when these substitutes will be ava'lnble lies in faithful ccm-pl'anee with the program herein Asserting he would take the Baruch rubber report as text for the production of synthetic rubber Jeffers said: have been given all the power that I shall need tut you may be assured I will not abuse it My duty as I see it is to you the people of this country and in serving you we want to help you to help yourselves stay on JAPS SUCCEED IN LANDING FORCES ON GUADALCANAL (Continued from Page One) as small of bombers At the same time there was some speculation that the Japanese were trying through force of superior numbers to reduce the American fighter strength based on Guadalcanal to such a low level that defense positions could be heavily bombed in connection with the developing attack on the airfield Navy communique number 142 based on reports up to 5:30 (EWT) said: Pacific (all dates given arc east longitude) On October 3: A small ghoup of Japanese bombers preceded by about 30 Zero fighters attempted to raid United States installations on Guadalcanal Anti-aircraft batteries shot down two encipy fighters while nine more of the attacking Zeros were shot down by seven Navy Wildcat fighters The enemy bombers turned back and dropped no bombs One United States plane was lost but the pilot was saved During the night on October 3-4 nav and marine corps dive bombers attacked an enemy heavy cruiser and severe 1 destroyers which were engaged in landing troop reinforcements on Guadalcanal At least one hit was scored on the criusrr One of our planes was shot down but the crew was saved On October 4: Shortly after daybreak a group of navy and marine corps torpedo bombers scored two torpedo hits on the cruiser which was still smoking as a result of the previous bomb hit Army pursuit planes and navy and marine corps dive bombers bombed and strafed Japanese troeps and supply dumps on Guadalcanal During the above period there was little activity between ground forces on Guadalcanal The enemy cont nued to land rmall detachments of troops on the island under cover of The highest point in the West-era Hemisphere is at Mount AceAcagua in Argentina 22834 feet above sea level issued yesterday Nelson Parker chief state attorney for the Vreinia OPA said' today The defense rental- areas already set up and in operation in Virginia are the Hampton Roads the Radford-Pulaski and the Pet-ersburg-Hopewell areas NWVVWMWVtfWMWIWVWAAm ENT Vern Haugland Awarded Army Silver Star for Devotion to Duty SOMEWHERE IN NEW GUINEA Oct 3 General Douglas MacArthur in an unprecedented action today pinned the Silver Star award on Vern Haugland the Associated Press war correspondent who fought his way out of a New Guinea jungle after being lost for 43 days when forced to bail out of an army plane am awarding you the Silver Star as an outward symbol of the devotion and fortitude with which you have done your the allied Southwestern Pacific leader told Haugland who is recovering in a hospital here tell you how much we have been inspired by your getting back after such tribulations and Haugland dressed in army pajamas appeared to be embarrassed when the general suddenly strode into his tent shook hands and said: young man how are you Haugland said The general then took a small blue box containing the coveted award pinned the decoration on pajamas and paid tribute to courage (U Army regulations normally prevent award of the Silver Star to civilians) When General MacArthur arrived at a New Guinea airdrome the first thing he asked was is that boy and expressed pleasure when told the Associated Press correspondent was making steady progress in his recovery A lean six-foot-three native Minnesotan Haugland was lost in mountainous New Guinea after parachuting from a storm-lashed plane which ran out of fuel on Aug 7 Missionaries found him in a native village on Sept 19 and carried him to a coastal point after a five-day jungle trek Haugland came out of his ordeal delirious exhausted and fever-ridden He had managed to keep alive on berries and the juice of grass and weeds during long days and nights of incessant rains His courageous battle of survival was set down day by day in a diary he painstakingly kept like the good reporter is during his wanderings Haugland is 34 and the eighth of 11 children When he was five he moved from Minnesota to a Montana ranch and lived a robust outdoor life He was graduated from Mon- tana State University worked for newspapers in Montana and joined the Associated Press at Salt Lake City in 1936 transferring to the Los Angeles bureau in 1939 Soon after Pearl Harbor he volunteered for a war reporting assignment and sailed last January for Australia the first member of the present Associated Press staff in Australia to reach that war zone let things go until the war is over and then if Victor wants a divorce give him Mrs Mature blonde New York society woman said she would return to live in her eastern home in about one month M-focil HOME 4 Qactfttl urarteoas Service MOUNTAIN VIEW GLEHW00D CEMETERIES IT IS BETTER to buy your CEMETERY LOT when you MAY than when you MUST YOU ARE GOING TO DO II IT ONE WAY OR THE other office 610 Shelby St Phone 374 MILLIONS SATISFIED The principals of this firm have millions of satisfied customers all over America 12 6TH ST Open Sat Nights to 9 STORES IN PRINCIFAL CITIES OF Former Head of Sullins Vocal Department Was Native of Sweden Madame Edla Lund 75 for ten years head of the- vocal department of Sullins college died at 3:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon at the home of Mr and Mrs Henri Doriot 518 Kentucky avenue where she resided She had been in declining health for several years and became critically ill on Monday of last week Madame Lund the former Edla Ferngren was born in Stockholm Sweden where the foundation for her musical education was laid in the Royal Academy of Music and she later continued her studies in the Royal Opera House After coming to the United States she was married to Professor Victor Lund in Lindsburg Kansas He died several years later Two sons also preceded her in death Before ccming to Sullins she taught at Augustana College in Rock Island 111 and also gave concerts throughout the United States featuring the rendition of Scandinavian folksongs After leaving Sullins college she taught in Kingsport and about lour years ago returned to Sweden with the intention of making her home there but came back to the United States when she found the climate of her native country was not suited to her health She is survived by one brother Enoch Ferngren of Little Neck Long Island and one sister Mrs Eliza Lodin of Stockholm Sweden The body is at the Blevins Funeral Home A brief funeral service will be held in the funeral home chapel Thursday afternoon the hour to be set after the arrival of her brother here tonight The body will be taken to Chicago for burial WATKINS Funeral services for Watkins 77 life long resident of Sullivan county and well known blacksmith who died at his home at Thomas Bridge on Sunday night will be held at the Buffalo Christian church at 3 this afternoon in charge of the Rev JrV Jones assisted by the Rev Easley 'Interment will be in the Buflalo cemetery Active pallbearers will be Fred Smith Sam Webb Ray King Jim Hendrickson Wolford Miller Paul RoWc Walter Godsey and Sam Feathers Honorary pallbearers: Clyde Miller Rhea Flecnor King Earl Cross John Cross Tate Cox Dr Earl Mcody Dr Bachman Dr Denton I Kreg-ger Eads Burnette Tucker Rowe Art Malone Cross Stickley Also Galloway McClellan Bill Earhart St John Worley Fain Charlie Smith Ccpenhnver Joe Thomas eks ML Cross Ruthertord A A Burnette Bernice Jones Smith Hall Toy Fickle A Hopkins Paul Anderson Rhea Anderson Harmon Charlie Hopkins Also Charle Moore McClellan Claude Bedford Albert Utsman Emerson II R'-chnrds Eaton Guy Webb Andy Cole Clyde MiUhorn Bill Rowers Dr Long John Utsman James Vernon McClure McClure Jim Thompson Reece Shaver A Harkle-oad Webb Philip Earhart Poweli Earhart Also Judge Ferguson Stanley Taylor Ward Gardner Ncwland Sam Eanes Crossie Smith A Cox Lilley Lady Hubert Taylor John Bail Ebbie Humphres Cross Deward Droke David I lecnor Fdd Snyder and Eugene Goodvrin The body was removed from the Huff-Cook Funeral Heme to the rcsdence yesterday afternoon MRS WILLIAM GREER CALL ''prcial To TNe Iferald Courier JENKINS Ky Oct William Greer Call 60 died Saturday in St Lukes Hospital Chicago after a few days illness from a cerebral hemorrhage A native of Pike county Mrs Call was a Greer before her marriage and was prominently related over Eastern Kentucky Her fenner home was on Shelby Creek When stricken Call was visiting her sister Mrs SHOP FROM 9-4 O'CLOCK Do your shopping early Ho avoid rush hour crowds and do it by be saving oil" tires and your own "precious travel the --eus-way! ALL BUSES TERMINAL YELLOW GAS Ami G3AGH G9 Thinking Fellow Rides A MOORE STREET UMW Head Cites Record of Support Attacks Pending Tax Bill Bv JOHN FRYE CINCINNATI Oct 6 A relaxed John'L Lewis urged his United Mine Workers of America today to make greater contributions to the war effort then turned over to them an report outlining the stand on issues ranging from poll taxes to wage demands from anti-union legislation to the St Lawrence seaway Smiling and quiet amid the cheers of 2800 American and Canadian delegates to the 37th constitutional convention the UMW president announced that the international districts and locals had contributed nearly $40-000000 to the war effort through bond purchases and donations and had given nearly 70000 men to the armed services Challenging other labor organizations to match the record ne said: will carry on until our armed forces triumph and our institutions are the miners are doing and will continue to do that kind of a The report largely a resume of UMW pronouncements on issues arising since the last biennial convention hit especially hard at the 1842 tax bill now pending in Congress 1942 bill" the report said that Congress will continue to shift the tax burden to the low-income groups unless they receive clear and forceful indications from their constituents that they will be held accountable xxx "The 1942 bill will for the first time in our history force individuals earning as little as $10 a week and married couples earning $24 a week to pay federal income taxes On the other hand it will permit wealthy corporations to clear enormous annual profits on their investments be-lore paying one cent in surplus taxes" WILLKIE DEMANDS ALL-OUT OFFENSIVE BY UNITED NATIONS (Continued from Page One) which our rr'7ary leaders will The cne today however was broader and reflected impatience not only over the of fensive hostility in a worldwide scale but also ovi the rate of delivery of materiel to China and Russia and what he called the lack of clearly-defined guarantees of postwar independence and democr for the 'copies of Asia personal opinion that the time has come for an ail-out armed offensive everyuhcie by all the cie dared President Roosevelt's fact-finding emissary "We are ready to deliver some knockout punches if I can believe what I have seen with my own Willkie pointed out that his travels have covered 13 "kingdoms soviets republics mandated areas colonies and -and that he found four things common to all of them: they want the United Nations to wan the war they want the United Nations to get on the offensive now they all want a chance at the end of the war to live in liberty and independence they mbt in arymg degrees the readiness of the leading dcmocrae of the world to stand up and be unfed upon for the freedojn of ethers after the war is over This doubt kills their enthusiastic participation on our side" Willkie emphasized that defense cannot win either in the military or poltical phases of what he called a war not only of task forces but also of Roosevelt Silent On Stalin's Statement WASHINGTON Oct 6 President Roosevelt withheld comment at his press conference today on Joseph Stalin's suggestion in a statement to the Associated Press that Russia's allies "fulfill obligations fully and on Stalin also had said that the question of a second front occupied a place of first rate importance in Soviet of the current situation That was followed by reports from China in which Wendell Willkie renewed his pleas for a second front In response to a request for crrrmrnt on remarks the --id he had read only the headlines and had not thought it worth while to read the stories dismissing them as purely speculative On the announcement that Admiral William Stardlcy United States ambassador to Russia was returning to this country Mr Roosevelt commented that the admiral was coning home to report and to go back as soon as he had done so He said several diplomats we-" doinv the same thing and he s- c-i'ically mentioned L- Stein-hardt ambassador to Turkey who already is back in the United States CONSUL NAMED NORFOLK Va Oet 8 Meade Stone steamship agent here has been appointed Chilean consul at Norfolk as of Oct 1 He succeeds Sidney Ke'cv Norfolk attorney- who recently was commissioned a lieutenant in the navy Congratulatory Message From Roosevelt Read at Toronto Meeting By JOSEPH LOFTUS TORONTO Oct 6 The American Federation of Labor convention received in behalf of a great segment of American workers today the compliments of the president of the United States for a war production record which he described as splendid Labcc Secretary Perkins and Metcalfe Walling wage-hour administrator added their congratulations A message from President Roosevelt asked federation president William Green to express to the officers and delegates cordial appreciation ot all they have done to further the war "Our production Mr Roosevelt added for itself and for the working people it is splendid during my recent inspection of war activities I found the workers doing all that was laid out for them and more At every turn they gave assurance that they are not afraid of hard continuous precise and dangerous week They are walking up to it as their duty and part in the war They are proud of it "The various groups which comptise the federation will I hope make available at this time their most statesmanlike leadership Officers and of the trade union movement consecrated to preserve the freedom of humanity can serve today the whole people of this country as well as the loyal Tle delegates responded vigorously when Secretary George Meany finished reading the message President Green commenting on the words said note that he stated in his message that he not that he was informed during the trip that he made throughout the United States that the service of the workers of oir country was The executive council of -the federation brought in a supplement to its annual report declaring unqualified support of the American Federation of Musicians in its di'pute with record manufacture! and broadcasting companies and condemning the antitrust division of the Department of Justice for the suit it has brought agnmst the -union The report was referred to committee and probably will be brought back to the floor for debate and convention action in a day or two A hearing in the suit opens in Chicago on Monday ROME CLAIMS BATTLESHIP SUNK (Continued from Page One) munique quoting an Italian news agency to the effect that the identification was arrived at a process of The Italian submarine Barbari-go was credited with this exploit This ocean-going type was the same submarine which the Italians claimed last May 22 had sunk another battleship of the Maryland class near a claim still not confirmed more than four months after its publication The Italians curiously claimed to have hit both battleships in the bow Modern warships have special protection against torpedoes by a honeycomb of watertight compartments which confine the effects of a torpedo strke and it is considered unlikely that such blows would sink the ships by merely hitting them in one section MACKENZIE REORGANIZES HIS CANADIAN CABINET OTTAWA Oct 6 (TP) Prime Minister MacKenzfe King tonight announced a large-scale cab net reorganization bringing three Quebec representatives into the government and sending War Services Minister Thorson to the presidency of the exchequer court of Canada King announced that the fo-lowng would be sworn into the cabinet tomorrow noon: Maj-Gen LaFleche associate deputy minister of national war services as minister of national war services Ernest Bertrand liberal member of parl ament for Montreal Laurier as minister of fisheries Alphonse Fournier liberal member for Hull as minister of public works ALL OF VIRGINIA IS IN 0PA NEW RENTAL ORDER RICHMOND Va Oet 6 (TP) All of Virginia except the three arras previously designated by ice Administrator Leon as defense 'rental prec3 is coveted by the new rental order GLASSES ON CREDIT DEFERRED NO CARRYING CHARGE un-M-rcdepted numbr-s were reported to be flocking into Oslo One cort mental source estimated thcie were 10000(1 in the capital alone md the influx of civilians was being called second Last week this source rewted three additional food shops for Cr were omened the! windows painted so Norwegians euld not see the stocks within TSzA ESsvj PAY AS YOU WEAR THEM let shortage of ready cash keep you from getting glasses NOW Modern engraved mounting complete with TORIC scientifically ground lenses for FAR OR NEAR vision BUY DIRECT from our local factory branch and save many dollars Pay a little down a little each week 15-DAY FREE TRIAL! Convince yourself by 15 days actual test at our risk that this is the biggest bargain you ever had All lenses ground on prescription of licensed Doctor of your choice FALL FERTILIZER GRADES 1 The recent fertilizer regulation issued by the Government in the interest of transportation has greatly confused the fertilizer consumers Our agents (dealers) all have the Government regulations and rules and also have on hand a stock of fertilizer stipulated for -fall distribution The dealers of the Knoxville Fertilizer Company have carefully studied these formulas and rules and are anxious to serve their farmer friends We join them in inviting you to use their service and knowledge by calling at their place of business See our dealers Knoxville Fertilizer Company Knoxville Tennessee EASY PAYMENTS No extra charge of any kind for credit payments Price is same as tor cash "WITHIN THE MEANS OF ALL" FHOHE LflS iw f*ckCB4L HOME i VWWWMftMMlVl 300 OOO SATISFIED CUSTOMERS.

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Bristol Herald Courier from Bristol, Tennessee (2024)

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