in real estate transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfa sound film entitled,...

8
'i^f^: . ^ .-•^.y VOLUME-LXII, NO. 3U IFHirRSDAY, MAY 31, 1945 News Items From Antriin , The meeting of the Garden Club whiph was to. be held with Mrs. Caughey Monday evening, May 4th, •will be at the home of Mrs. Iva P; Hutchin8(>n. Mrs. Cfeorge Sawyer was in Boston over Thursday night. Her sisters, Mrs. B, G. Bames of Chapel Hill School in Waltham, and Mrs. P*. Q. little of Medford, 'accompanied her home for over the weekend. Dorothy J. Sawyer, SKD 2/c, lo- cated at the Naval Repair Base in Sah Diego, Cal., is at, home on a •week's leave. Mr. and Mrs. George Staples from Somerville, Mass. and Isabel Butter- field from Boston, were weekend guests at Byron Buterfield's. A sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific, will be shown in the vestry •of the Presbyterian Church at 8 P. M. on Friday evening, June 1st. The public is cordially invited to attend. A silver offering will be taken to help defray the expenses involved in hav- ing this film. The interment of the remains of Mr. Clinton Davis, formerly of An- trim, took place at the Keene CenJe- tery in Keene on Tuesday aftemoon of this week. Mr. Everett N. Davis, brother of the deceased, and "Mrs. Davis attended from Antrim, Mr. Bobert Davis, son of Mr.' Clinton Davis, who has been in a hospital iri North Carolina recuperating from in- juries received in Germany last win- ter, was able to have a leave of ab- jsience and be at home for the inter- ment service. This was his first leave since his retum from overseas early in March. Despite the inclement weather^ 12 ladies were in attendance at the meet- ing of the Presbyterian Unity Guild held in the home of Mrs. fVank E. Wheeler last Monday evehing. A .son was born May ai to Mr. -and Mrs. Geo/ge A. Lundberg of Yonker?, N.Y. The baby is a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Nylander. Mrs Nylander left Snn- •day to be with her daughter's fam- ily for a time. George Hastings recently enter- tained his daughter, Mrs. Ada W Cooper, of Watertown, Mass. He returned with her as far as Con- cord. 4 Mr. aod Mrs. Wesley McCInre have moved to Concord, where be has employment at the Endicott Furniture Co. j Ben Griswold has received his call and has to go June 13th. (Continued oa Page 8> Among the Churches ANTRIM Baptist Qinrch Rev. Ralph H. Tibbals, Pastor Snnday, June 3 . Chnrch School, 9:45. Morning worship, zz. The pas- tor will preach on "Wben Life Re- bukes Us." Union service, 7:00, in the Pres- byterian church. Baccalaureate Service of Antrim High School. PresbyteriaB Qmrd Rev. W. S. Reeve, Minister Sunday, June 3, Z945 Morning worship at zoijo. Ser- inon, "About Swearinjg." Sunday Scbooi at zz:45. Baccalaureate Service of the Class of 1945 of the Antrim High School at 7 p. m. in this churcb. AatriaCsalcr Ovek Serrice of Worship Snnday moming at 9.46 BeaaiagtoB CeagfefStieaal Chareh Bennington, N. H. 11:00 a. m. Morning worsbip. ia:b3 m. - Sunday Scbooi. Si .Patrick's Charch Bennington, N. H. Hoora of Classes on)Sanday 8:15 and 10 o'clock. '********mr******^**M*******Aijkm» ititiim* "W^wyyyff//JJj»j>Jj^iJ lAA/D WOAf£Af /A/ i/////O^Af t . •• < **^*t***** ***^*********^r\-r-ui^lr******'******************* 1 in Real Estate Transfer& THE CLOTHES LINE Graduation gift suggestions—for the boys: Billfolds, travel kits, sport shirts, ties, belts, tie clips. For the girls: Sheer hosiery. No girl seems to have enough hosiery these days. , • .' • •' * Just received—small children's cor- duroy overalls, sizes 1-4. This, of course, is really a cool weather item, but theise have been so scarce we thought it worth mentioning even now. Ceiling price $1.53. , a a a a. a ' Last week we spent a lot of time searching the leading wholesale cen- ters for wanted merchandise. The market, in spite of V-E Day, is still very "tight." But we brought home the bacon when we were lucky enough to get men's dungarees, men's over- alls, union suits, work shirts, dress shirts, work gloves, balbriggan shirts and drawers, boys' shorts. Limited quantity per customer. * * • We have received word that Jant- zen bathing suits are on the way to us. Should be in stock by the time you read this. TASKER'S AUCTIONEER CALL WALLACE D. MARVIN FOR YOUR SALES! 35 YEARS' EXPERIENCE ALL TlrPES OP AUCTIONS TW. 101 M«pI.Ii«r*t Ina Antrim, N. H.' PLANTS FOR SALE atthe ROAD SIDE GARDENS Tomate^PlaKts .. dosi.^ SOe FMted Tomato Plants dbz. %\ Sweet Pepper Plants doz. 40c Cdenr Plante ........ doz. 25e Pardqr Plaate doz. SOe Eggplant Plante doz. 40e Cabbage Plante each 2c BroeooU Plante each 2c Bmssel Sproate Plante each 2c Cauliflower Pfaiite .... eadi 3c An Anniials 40c Per Doz. Petonias, Asters, Ageratnm, Biarigolds, S a l v i a , Dianthus, Wallflower, Phlox, Snapdr^:«Mi, Sweet Al^ssmn, Calindula, Ve* boias, Stodcs, Soabiosa. Orders Delivered LINWOOD .GRANT North Branch There have been numerous changes iii real estate this spring. Some of them are mentioned here. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Edmunds have purchased the Harold Ayer place on the Wamer road and are now living there. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hope pur- chased the Fred Connor farm at Hemlock Comer last fall. After making extensive changes during the winter they are now living there. They have sold their home on the Bradford road to parties from New York. Mrs. Edna Bumham has purch- ased the Henniker Inn Farm. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Cames are now livhig in the Henry Skillen place which they purchased. They sold their place, the former CUnton Ellison place opposite the creamery to Mrs. Alice Belisle. Mr. and Mrs. WUIiam Shepherd of WeUesley HUls, Mass., have pur- chased the Stone House from Char- les N. Flanders. At present they come up ohly on weekends but they will soon make it thek pennanent home. The Fannie Whitcomb' place on Foster HiU, more Recently knowil as the W. W. Harris place which has been owned by Miss Janet Brown of Hartford, Conn., has been sold. MrS; Hazel Stockbridge bf New York City has purchased Mrs. WU- Uam Webster's place on High street and Mrs. Webster has bought the Charles Butler place on School street in Hillsboro. Fred C. Ward, manager of the Bamies BUnd School has purchased the Straw place on the Wamer road and wiU move his famUy there. Several other plaees have been sold but tbe transactions have not been completed. It looks as If the soldiers won't know where anyone Uves when they come home. WANTED! ANTRIM CORRESPONDENT WRITE M TELEPHONE Messenser Offiee, Hilisboro TELSPHONE 14S —DANCE— HADLEY'S BARN WEST HENNIKER WILL BE OPEN Saturday, June 2 LEGION LETTER NO. 23 To All Antrim Service Men and Women: This is V-E Day. I can think of no better way to celebrate this long- awaited proclamation than to sit down and write Legion' Letter No; 23. Naturally the news Jias filled u* with a great feeling of jubilaUoh, but smack on the heels of that, conies the sobering thought that for a great many of you, the war still, remains to be won.. So to those of you who will be •coming home from the European' theater—Greetingsr-and,three cheers, and to th^se of you who still.have much lighting to do, our thoughts and prayers for a speedy victory ahd home-coming.. Then and only then will we really nail down the sidewafks. Bob Carmichael is in the hospital at Camp Edwards recovering satis- factorily from a leg wound received in Germany. This makes the second tihie Boh has been wounded in battle. . . . Paul Dunlap (APO 86) in.the Westem Pacific area, was hospitalized with appendicitis, rejoining his outfit in three weeks after,his operation, Paul and Sidney Huntington are still able to be with ieach other occasionally although they are in different ieompanies. . ; .Bil Brownell is also in that same area and the three boys were attempthig.to contect each other. Probably that meeting has been accomplished at this writing. . . . Ted Allison and Martin Nichols were also in the process of trying to contact each other in Honolulu. . . . Ana- still another meetings this time in Italy. Helen Johnson and Helen Auger got together for an Easter Sunday dinner. Helen Johnson had been there just a few days and it was a big thrill for both of them, especially Helen Auger, as this makes the first time since her arrival overseas that she had met ahyone from home. Recently she made a trip to the Vatican City and had the opportunity of seeing the Pope as well as getting in a lot of sight- seeing. . . .Cari Dunlap, Ph.M., is on, duty at'the hospital at the Marine Airfield in Newport, Arkansas. . . . Harry Rogers (APO 403) was in Ger- many in a Cavalry Unit, according to a recent letter to his parents. Bob Nylander (Seabees) is on Leyte. . .'. Edna Linton, A.N.O. in Brazil has recently been promoted to 1st Lt., S/Sgt. James Cochrane has been pro- moted to the grade of Technical Sgt., according to an announcement made at an overseas depot of an Air Service Command baseid in Italy recently.. . : . Pfc. Harvey Black was here for a short furlough prior to heading overseas. . . . Jimmy Perkins was also in town oh a pre-embarkation fur- lough. lySgt. Neal Mallett has completed 33 missions over Germany and re- cently enjoyed a recess from his duties at an Air Service Command llest Center in England. Sirice receiving above information, Neal has arrived home on furlpugh. .... A leftter from Lt. Dorothy Knapp, A.N.O., informs us that she is located at the Regional Hospitel in Waltham, Mas3. She says it's a wonderful place, comparable to a country club and doesn't even smeH like a hospital. The boys like it so much that most of ."theni hate to leave. . . . Arthur Hills writes from Germany on April 2. Said the weather had been fairly cold where he was this past winter. Did wish He could meet up with some of the rest of the boys over there butsO far had no luck along these lines. . . . Pete Wallace writes that he has been terrifically busy handling the mail and is in a positiori to find out where the boys are, but is so busy he doesn't haye much time to get around. He. thinks, however, that he must be near Rupert Wisell. ... Bill Eades .^vTote from Germany the last of March. He also .seemed to think that he was near Rupert. Bill said he found France and Belgium very interesting and had a chance to see Paris and try out some of his '.'poor French." He said he's seen quite a few ruins since being in Germany and hoped to see a few more! He said he'd like to be in the Stetes but guessed he'd have to reside on the Continent for a little while longer. , . . Just received a letter from Sgt. Cecil Ayer from Gerniany. He'd been there a month, arriving from Charteroi in Bel- gium. He crossed the Rhine River and saw the famous bridge—the one that caved in! Said he'd also been doing a little riding around in C-47s lately, too. Also visited the famous (or infamous) Weimer Concentration Camp, a camp for political prisoners of all the conquered countries. Using his words, "It was unbelievably horrible. It doesn't seem possible that people who are supposed to be a civilized people, could put human beings through such atrocities. Fiends is the word that describes them best.!' Cecil's Squadron has received the Presidential Citetion. He says he's stilt at the same racket—trying to keep*the boys' stoniachs full. He also has acquired a Belgium Police dog, all black and two months old, and answers to the name of Blackie. If possible, he is planning on bringing him horiie with him. He closes his letter by sending regards to all his friends and hopes to see you all soon. . . . Francis Clark writes from Fort Bragg, N. C. where the weather is hbt and he puts in a full day, arising at 4:30 and hit- ting the sack at 10:00. He says it behooves them not to telk .after ten o'clock as the penalty is getting up and teking a nice run around the bar- racks five or six times. (Take care, Francis, and don't talk in your sleep). . . . Lt>Guy Clark is in England bying P-5'ls and thinks it's a beautiful countrj'. . . . Frank Dziengowski (APO 719) is now in the Philippines after spending, a rest leave in Australia, Have the following information about Charles and .\lvin Brown. Charlie, M.M. 2/c, after serving a year or more on a sniall island in the Pacific, building up a base, working twelve hours, or more a day, had Been transferred nearer Hawaii. He says he is what you might call "rock Happy" after being located where he saw nothing but rocks and Seabees, no vege- tetion of any kind only plenty of work and the hot sun. He recently had the pleasure of meeting Arlo Strutevant. They spent four hours talking over old times. Alvin, S 1/c, has been located at the Great Lakes Training Center in Ships Co. for about ten months, and is now located at ah Air Base in Columbus, Ohio. He says they test thii planes before they are flown across and his work is quite interesting. Wendell Ring writes from what he calls his dugout here on the home front. He has been in Washington since December, being put through a course of sproute starting with two and two make four up to algebra, geometry, trig and logarithms, ^fter becoming vriiat he calls a mathematical wizard, he spent six weeks in a hospital undergoing subtraction or, rather, extraction, losing in the process his tonsils and four wisdom teeth. After leaving the hospital he was given a thorough but condensed course in the art of controlling the fire of maehine giins, which included everything from five inehers on down .to the twenty miUimeters. He has three mor^ weeks of thi^ and then the futufeto look forward to, whieh, he expecte will eventuaUy merge into a view of the South Pacific, . . .Mrs. Stacy writes me tiiat Cpl. Norman (Hank) Stacy had gone back into combat after five months in a hospital in Paris. He has re- ceived the Purple Heart. Hank is with the Srd Army and Bill Stacy with the 1st Army. The two boys were hoping they would get an opportunity to see each other, and perhaps now.that the fighting is over, over there, such a meeting can be arranged. Her nephew, Pfc. Irvihg Bennett, who liyed here in Antrim a few years ago, is back from many months in the Aleutians. Norris Harriman (APO 314), is in a hospitel in England with a frac- tured fibula in the lower right leg. He was in a medical unit with the 9th Army acros>s the Rhine when it happened. He was driving a jeep when enemy fire made it necessary for him to jump for cover. In jumping from the moving vehicle, he tripped and fell, but managed to make a cellar hole. At any rate he evaded German bullete. WhUe at the evacuation hospitel, a doctor from Nashua asked him if he knew Myrtie Brooks of Antrim. Small world after all. He was flown from there to the hospital in England (Continued on page eight) (Continued on page eight) . 5 GE.^rS A COIVf News Items From Bennington .Phyllis Carroll of Benniugton. who is enrolled as a freshman at the Uuiyersity of New HampKhire, will play the part of Mrs. Hunter, headmistress of the girls' scbooi in Lucernf, Switzerland, whicb is the setting of "Letters to Lucerne." aplay to be piesented by Mask and Dagger on the evenings of May 24, 25 and 26 In New Hami»- shire Hall. Miss Carroll has an ezeelieiit backgrouud of dramatics. For four years she was a mem ber of tbe dra- matic society, "The Sock and Bus- kin," al NorthBeld Seminary, and- for two years a member of tbe Sig- ma Delta dramatic club also at Northfield, and active in both these clubs'.productioos. Sbe bai a prominent role iu Thorntoa Wil- der's one-act play, "Pollmao Car Hiawatha," which was presented at the Universitv in March of (bis yea , in which sbe proved her act- ing ability. Antrim Branch Robert Cole and Miss SallyCok spent the week-end with their grandmother. Mrs. R F. Hunt, who returned to Massachusetts with them for a short stay. Albert Barney has accepted a position in Claremont and with bis family will soou move. Mr. Barney: has been manager of the W. E. Leonard farm for five years. We aresbiryto lose good neighborfi, but wish,them .success. W« un- derstand that Al Bezio win suc- ceed Mr. Barney. Fred Waite and family of Peter- boro visited this neighborhood Memorial day. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Fischer spent the week-eud at their bom«. A very interesting program was presented by the Branch school at the cemetery on Memorial day, which showed that the teacher, Mrs. Parker, put in a lot of time in trainiug the pupils, also talent on their part. Philip O'Keefe and John Grovec are at the O'Keefe pUce. MissLauiseQ Pierce bas arriv- ed at her home for tbe summer. A. E. Richardson and danghter. .Miss Hel-n, and brother Brnest spent a portion of the week at Mt. View Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Rohr are at their summer home. George Dodge and daughter of Weare were visitors in this aeigk- borhood recently. Stacey Cole and wife of West Swanzey were recent guests at Warren Wheeler's. YOMJR OHd^-UhJL ^AR BOND DoMaM BLOCK FOR SAIS School St. — HflUbMw Inquire ARTHUR E. HOWB CUremoBt, N. B. # Grecariaa 9 Hardwar* Paints aad OU* HILLSBORO GENERAL STORE . E. C BMTd ASM •^-Sprfaf S^MUI— HM WiM. SMda, FwtUiMr, Wa Tab* aad PaUs ******'*****************i*^*i****0mm ICE BENNINGTON ANTRIM GREGG LAKE If yen want ICE Drop a Card to Donald Madden, Jr. Antriin, N. H* DELIVERIES START JUNE IS * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ' * * * * * * * * * * * * * i * *

Upload: others

Post on 06-Oct-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

'i^f^:

. ^ .-•^.y

VOLUME-LXII, NO. 3U IFHirRSDAY, MAY 31, 1945

News Items From Antriin , The meeting of the Garden Club whiph was to. be held with Mrs. Caughey Monday evening, May 4th, •will be at the home of Mrs. Iva P; Hutchin8(>n.

Mrs. Cfeorge Sawyer was in Boston over Thursday night. Her sisters, Mrs. B, G. Bames of Chapel Hill School in Waltham, and Mrs. P*. Q. little of Medford, 'accompanied her home for over the weekend.

Dorothy J. Sawyer, SKD 2/c, lo­cated at the Naval Repair Base in Sah Diego, Cal., is at, home on a •week's leave.

Mr. and Mrs. George Staples from Somerville, Mass. and Isabel Butter­field from Boston, were weekend guests at Byron Buterfield's.

A sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific, will be shown in the vestry •of the Presbyterian Church at 8 P. M. on Friday evening, June 1st. The public is cordially invited to attend. A silver offering will be taken to help defray the expenses involved in hav­ing this film.

The interment of the remains of Mr. Clinton Davis, formerly of An­trim, took place at the Keene CenJe­tery in Keene on Tuesday aftemoon of this week. Mr. Everett N. Davis, brother of the deceased, and "Mrs. Davis attended from Antrim, Mr. Bobert Davis, son of Mr.' Clinton Davis, who has been in a hospital iri North Carolina recuperating from in­juries received in Germany last win­ter, was able to have a leave of ab-jsience and be at home for the inter­ment service. This was his first leave since his retum from overseas early in March.

Despite the inclement weather^ 12 ladies were in attendance at the meet­ing of the Presbyterian Unity Guild held in the home of Mrs. fVank E. Wheeler last Monday evehing.

A .son was born May ai to Mr. -and Mrs. Geo/ge A. Lundberg of Yonker?, N .Y. The baby is a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Nylander. Mrs Nylander left Snn-•day to be with her daughter's fam­ily for a time.

George Hastings recently enter­tained his daughter, Mrs. Ada W Cooper, of Watertown, Mass. He returned with her as far as Con­cord. 4

Mr. aod Mrs. Wesley McCInre have moved to Concord, where be has employment at the Endicott Furniture Co. j

Ben Griswold has received his call and has to go June 13th.

(Continued oa Page 8>

Among the Churches ANTRIM

Baptist Qinrch Rev. Ralph H. Tibbals, Pastor

Snnday, June 3 . Chnrch School, 9:45. Morning worship, zz. The pas­

tor will preach on "Wben Life Re­bukes Us."

Union service, 7:00, in the Pres­byterian church. Baccalaureate Service of Antrim High School.

PresbyteriaB Qmrd Rev. W. S. Reeve, Minister

Sunday, June 3, Z945 Morning worship at zoijo. Ser-

inon, "About Swearinjg." Sunday Scbooi at zz:45. Baccalaureate Service of the

Class of 1945 of the Antrim High School at 7 p. m. in this churcb.

AatriaCsalcr Ovek

Serrice of Worship Snnday moming at 9.46

BeaaiagtoB CeagfefStieaal Chareh Bennington, N. H.

11:00 a. m. Morning worsbip. ia:b3 m. - Sunday Scbooi.

Si .Patrick's Charch Bennington, N. H.

Hoora of Classes on)Sanday 8:15 and 10 o'clock.

'********mr******^**M*******Aijkm» ititiim* "W^wyyyff//JJ j»j> J j^i J

lAA/D WOAf£Af /A/ i/////O^Af t . •• <

**^*t***** ***^*********^r\-r-ui^lr******'******************* 1

in Real Estate Transfer& THE CLOTHES LINE

Graduation gift suggestions—for the boys: Billfolds, travel kits, sport shirts, ties, belts, tie clips. For the girls: Sheer hosiery. No girl seems to have enough hosiery these days.

, • • .' • • ' * Just received—small children's cor­

duroy overalls, sizes 1-4. This, of course, is really a cool weather item, but theise have been so scarce we thought it worth mentioning even now. Ceiling price $1.53.

, a a a a. a ' Last week we spent a lot of time

searching the leading wholesale cen­ters for wanted merchandise. The market, in spite of V-E Day, is still very "tight." But we brought home the bacon when we were lucky enough to get men's dungarees, men's over­alls, union suits, work shirts, dress shirts, work gloves, balbriggan shirts and drawers, boys' shorts. Limited quantity per customer.

* * • • • We have received word that Jant­

zen bathing suits are on the way to us. Should be in stock by the time you read this.

T A S K E R ' S

AUCTIONEER CALL

WALLACE D. MARVIN FOR YOUR SALES!

— 35 YEARS' EXPERIENCE — ALL TlrPES OP AUCTIONS

TW. 101 M«pI.Ii«r*t Ina Antrim, N. H.'

PLANTS FOR SALE atthe

ROAD SIDE GARDENS Tomate^PlaKts . . dosi. SOe FMted Tomato Plants dbz. %\ Sweet Pepper Plants doz. 40c Cdenr Plante . . . . . . . . doz. 25e Pardqr Plaate doz. SOe Eggplant Plante doz. 40e Cabbage Plante each 2c BroeooU Plante each 2c Bmssel Sproate Plante each 2c Cauliflower Pfaiite . . . . eadi 3c

An Anniials 40c Per Doz. Petonias, Asters, Ageratnm,

Biarigolds, S a l v i a , Dianthus, Wallflower, Phlox, Snapdr :«Mi, Sweet Al^ssmn, Calindula, Ve* boias, Stodcs, Soabiosa.

Orders Delivered LINWOOD .GRANT

North Branch

There have been numerous changes iii real estate this spring. Some of them are mentioned here. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Edmunds have purchased the Harold Ayer place on the Wamer road and are now living there.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hope pur­chased the Fred Connor farm at Hemlock Comer last fall. After making extensive changes during the winter they are now living there. They have sold their home on the Bradford road to parties from New York.

Mrs. Edna Bumham has purch­ased the Henniker Inn Farm.

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Cames are now livhig in the Henry Skillen place which they purchased. They sold their place, the former CUnton Ellison place opposite the creamery to Mrs. Alice Belisle.

Mr. and Mrs. WUIiam Shepherd of WeUesley HUls, Mass., have pur­chased the Stone House from Char­les N. Flanders. At present they come up ohly on weekends but they will soon make it thek pennanent home.

The Fannie Whitcomb' place on Foster HiU, more Recently knowil as the W. W. Harris place which has been owned by Miss Janet Brown of Hartford, Conn., has been sold.

MrS; Hazel Stockbridge bf New York City has purchased Mrs. WU­Uam Webster's place on High street and Mrs. Webster has bought the Charles Butler place on School street in Hillsboro.

Fred C. Ward, manager of the Bamies BUnd School has purchased the Straw place on the Wamer road and wiU move his famUy there.

Several other plaees have been sold but tbe transactions have not been completed. It looks as If the soldiers won't know where anyone Uves when they come home.

WANTED! ANTRIM

CORRESPONDENT

WRITE M TELEPHONE

Messenser Offiee, Hilisboro TELSPHONE 14S

— D A N C E —

HADLEY'S BARN

WEST HENNIKER

WILL BE OPEN

Saturday, June 2

LEGION LETTER NO. 23 To All Antrim Service Men and Women:

This is V-E Day. I can think of no better way to celebrate this long-awaited proclamation than to sit down and write Legion' Letter No; 23. Naturally the news Jias filled u* with a great feeling of jubilaUoh, but smack on the heels of that, conies the sobering thought that for a great many of you, the war still, remains to be won.. So to those of you who will be •coming home from the European' theater—Greetingsr-and,three cheers, and to th^se of you who still.have much lighting to do, our thoughts and prayers for a speedy victory ahd home-coming.. Then and only then will we really nail down the sidewafks.

Bob Carmichael is in the hospital at Camp Edwards recovering satis­factorily from a leg wound received in Germany. This makes the second tihie Boh has been wounded in battle. . . . Paul Dunlap (APO 86) in.the Westem Pacific area, was hospitalized with appendicitis, rejoining his outfit in three weeks after,his operation, Paul and Sidney Huntington are still able to be with ieach other occasionally although they are in different ieompanies. . ; .Bi l Brownell is also in that same area and the three boys were attempthig.to contect each other. Probably that meeting has been accomplished at this writing. . . . Ted Allison and Martin Nichols were also in the process of trying to contact each other in Honolulu. . . . Ana-still another meetings this time in Italy. Helen Johnson and Helen Auger got together for an Easter Sunday dinner. Helen Johnson had been there just a few days and it was a big thrill for both of them, especially Helen Auger, as this makes the first time since her arrival overseas that she had met ahyone from home. Recently she made a trip to the Vatican City and had the opportunity of seeing the Pope as well as getting in a lot of sight­seeing. . . .Cari Dunlap, Ph.M., is on, duty at'the hospital at the Marine Airfield in Newport, Arkansas. . . . Harry Rogers (APO 403) was in Ger­many in a Cavalry Unit, according to a recent letter to his parents. Bob Nylander (Seabees) is on Leyte. . .'. Edna Linton, A.N.O. in Brazil has recently been promoted to 1st Lt., S/Sgt. James Cochrane has been pro­moted to the grade of Technical Sgt., according to an announcement made at an overseas depot of an Air Service Command baseid in Italy recently.. . : . Pfc. Harvey Black was here for a short furlough prior to heading overseas. . . . Jimmy Perkins was also in town oh a pre-embarkation fur­lough.

lySgt. Neal Mallett has completed 33 missions over Germany and re­cently enjoyed a recess from his duties at an Air Service Command llest Center in England. Sirice receiving above information, Neal has arrived home on furlpugh. . . . . A leftter from Lt. Dorothy Knapp, A.N.O., informs us that she is located at the Regional Hospitel in Waltham, Mas3. She says it's a wonderful place, comparable to a country club and doesn't even smeH like a hospital. The boys like it so much that most of ."theni hate to leave. . . . Arthur Hills writes from Germany on April 2. Said the weather had been fairly cold where he was this past winter. Did wish He could meet up with some of the rest of the boys over there butsO far had no luck along these lines. . . . Pete Wallace writes that he has been terrifically busy handling the mail and is in a positiori to find out where the boys are, but is so busy he doesn't haye much time to get around. He. thinks, however, that he must be near Rupert Wisell. . . . Bill Eades . vTote from Germany the last of March. He also .seemed to think that he was near Rupert. Bill said he found France and Belgium very interesting and had a chance to see Paris and try out some of his '.'poor French." He said he's seen quite a few ruins since being in Germany and hoped to see a few more! He said he'd like to be in the Stetes but guessed he'd have to reside on the Continent for a little while longer. , . . Just received a letter from Sgt. Cecil Ayer from Gerniany. He'd been there a month, arriving from Charteroi in Bel­gium. He crossed the Rhine River and saw the famous bridge—the one that caved in! Said he'd also been doing a little riding around in C-47s lately, too. Also visited the famous (or infamous) Weimer Concentration Camp, a camp for political prisoners of all the conquered countries. Using his words, "It was unbelievably horrible. It doesn't seem possible that people who are supposed to be a civilized people, could put human beings through such atrocities. Fiends is the word that describes them best.!' Cecil's Squadron has received the Presidential Citetion. He says he's stilt at the same racket—trying to keep*the boys' stoniachs full. He also has acquired a Belgium Police dog, all black and two months old, and answers to the name of Blackie. If possible, he is planning on bringing him horiie with him. He closes his letter by sending regards to all his friends and hopes to see you all soon. . . . Francis Clark writes from Fort Bragg, N. C. where the weather is hbt and he puts in a full day, arising at 4:30 and hit­ting the sack at 10:00. He says it behooves them not to telk .after ten o'clock as the penalty is getting up and teking a nice run around the bar­racks five or six times. (Take care, Francis, and don't talk in your sleep). . . . Lt>Guy Clark is in England bying P-5'ls and thinks it's a beautiful countrj'. . . . Frank Dziengowski (APO 719) is now in the Philippines after spending, a rest leave in Australia,

Have the following information about Charles and .\lvin Brown. Charlie, M.M. 2/c, after serving a year or more on a sniall island in the Pacific, building up a base, working twelve hours, or more a day, had Been transferred nearer Hawaii. He says he is what you might call "rock Happy" after being located where he saw nothing but rocks and Seabees, no vege­tetion of any kind only plenty of work and the hot sun. He recently had the pleasure of meeting Arlo Strutevant. They spent four hours talking over old times. Alvin, S 1/c, has been located at the Great Lakes Training Center in Ships Co. for about ten months, and is now located at ah Air Base in Columbus, Ohio. He says they test thii planes before they are flown across and his work is quite interesting. Wendell Ring writes from what he calls his dugout here on the home front. He has been in Washington since December, being put through a course of sproute starting with two and two make four up to algebra, geometry, trig and logarithms, ^fter becoming vriiat he calls a mathematical wizard, he spent six weeks in a hospital undergoing subtraction or, rather, extraction, losing in the process his tonsils and four wisdom teeth. After leaving the hospital he was given a thorough but condensed course in the art of controlling the fire of maehine giins, which included everything from five inehers on down .to the twenty miUimeters. He has three mor^ weeks of thi and then the futufeto look forward to, whieh, he expecte will eventuaUy merge into a view of the South Pacific, . . .Mrs. Stacy writes me tiiat Cpl. Norman (Hank) Stacy had gone back into combat after five months in a hospital in Paris. He has re­ceived the Purple Heart. Hank is with the Srd Army and Bill Stacy with the 1st Army. The two boys were hoping they would get an opportunity to see each other, and perhaps now.that the fighting is over, over there, such a meeting can be arranged. Her nephew, Pfc. Irvihg Bennett, who liyed here in Antrim a few years ago, is back from many months in the Aleutians.

Norris Harriman (APO 314), is in a hospitel in England with a frac­tured fibula in the lower right leg. He was in a medical unit with the 9th Army acros>s the Rhine when it happened. He was driving a jeep when enemy fire made it necessary for him to jump for cover. In jumping from the moving vehicle, he tripped and fell, but managed to make a cellar hole. At any rate he evaded German bullete. WhUe at the evacuation hospitel, a doctor from Nashua asked him if he knew Myrtie Brooks of Antrim. Small world after all. He was flown from there to the hospital in England

(Continued on page eight) (Continued on page eight) .

5 GE.^rS A COIVf

News Items From Bennington

.Phyllis Carroll of Benniugton. who is enrolled as a freshman at the Uuiyersity of New HampKhire, will play the part of Mrs. Hunter, headmistress of the girls' scbooi in Lucernf, Switzerland, whicb is the setting of "Letters to Lucerne." aplay to be piesented by Mask and Dagger on the evenings of May 24, 25 and 26 In New Hami»-shire Hall. •

Miss Carroll has an ezeelieiit backgrouud of dramatics. For four years she was a mem ber of tbe dra­matic society, "The Sock and Bus-kin," al NorthBeld Seminary, and-for two years a member of tbe Sig-ma Delta dramatic club also at Northfield, and active in both these clubs'.productioos. Sbe bai a prominent role iu Thorntoa Wil-der's one-act play, "Pollmao Car Hiawatha," which was presented at the Universitv in March of (bis yea , in which sbe proved her act­ing ability.

Antrim Branch Robert Cole and Miss SallyCok

spent the week-end with their grandmother. Mrs. R F. Hunt, who returned to Massachusetts with them for a short stay.

Albert Barney has accepted a position in Claremont and with bis family will soou move. Mr. Barney: has been manager of the W. E. Leonard farm for five years. We aresbiryto lose good neighborfi, but wish,them .success. W« un­derstand that Al Bezio win suc­ceed Mr. Barney.

Fred Waite and family of Peter­boro visited this neighborhood Memorial day.

Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Fischer spent the week-eud at their bom«.

A very interesting program was presented by the Branch school at the cemetery on Memorial day, which showed that the teacher, Mrs. Parker, put in a lot of time in trainiug the pupils, also talent on their part.

Philip O'Keefe and John Grovec are at the O'Keefe pUce.

MissLauiseQ Pierce bas arriv­ed at her home for tbe summer.

A. E. Richardson and danghter. .Miss Hel-n, and brother Brnest spent a portion of the week at Mt. View Jr.

Dr. and Mrs. Rohr are at their summer home.

George Dodge and daughter of Weare were visitors in this aeigk-borhood recently.

Stacey Cole and wife of West Swanzey were recent guests at Warren Wheeler's.

YOMJR OHd^-UhJL ^AR BOND

DoMaM

BLOCK FOR SAIS School St. — HflUbMw

Inquire ARTHUR E. HOWB CUremoBt, N. B.

# Grecariaa 9 Hardwar* • Paints aad OU*

HILLSBORO GENERAL STORE

. E. C BMTd A S M

•^-Sprfaf S ^ M U I — H M WiM. SMda, FwtUiMr, Wa

Tab* aad PaUs

******'*****************i*^*i****0mm

ICE BENNINGTON — ANTRIM —

GREGG LAKE If yen want ICE Drop a Card to

Donald Madden, Jr. Antriin, N. H*

DELIVERIES START JUNE IS * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ' * * * * * * * * * * * * * i * *

Page 2: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

^s^ mm

WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS

Japanese Mobilize Home Guard: -MotkkaL Brobleim Prggs AlUei: Draft Eased for Men Over 30

.Released by Western Newspaper Union. EDITOR'S NOTE: When ebtnlbas sre expreited in these eolamns. ther are those of Vtitern Niwsilrer u"on" Siws fulysis and not necessarOy of (bis newspaper.)

PAPER BALLOONS: Drop Bombs _ As a result of tiie appearance of balloon, borne bonibs in'^fie" West," the army and nayy have undertaken •an. -educational• -public -safe^?-«am-paign m coopetEftloii "With" schools and civic organizations in the region to protect civilians against the dan­ger of the explosives.

Although no military threat, some live bombs may have descended to the ground in isolated regions and wooded areas, or lay concealed be^ neath melthig snow, thus necessitat-hig the utmost caution on the part of civilians. In informuig the pub­lic of the danger, the army and navy said the prevention of mishaps was of greater importancie than the mere acknowledgment to the enemy that the bombs had drifted to the U. S. mainland.

Bome by balloons of gray, white or greenish blue paper whh a diam­eter of 33 feet, the boinbs are of no rnilitary significance because . of their scattered and aimless appear­ance, the army and navy said. Be­cause of their haphazard nature, nei­ther are they, to be viewed with alarm by the public, the services added.. .

Washington Di9CSt; Tfoop"S1it;to Ihetacif i c :

Biig JobKTitli Human Side Need io Finish Fi ht Against Japanese Prevents

Wholesale Release of Vets; Move Win Tax U. S. Shipping,

By BAUKHAGE New* Analytt and Commentator,

NEWS BEHM

Weeks afi«r U. S. conquest of island, isolated Japs continue to hold ont in cave positions on Iwo Jima, forcing marines to hole them out in laborious process. Here, one Leatherneck cocks grenade while buddies stand by to cover him.

PACIFIC: Bolster Home Front

With, heavy aerial, bombardment' heralding the approach of Ameri­can forces to the Japanese homer land, Nipponese officials took meas­ures to strengthen enemy ifesistance even as rumors persisted that they were seeking an easy way out ot the •war now that Germany's defeat ret leased full U. S. military, might for the Pacific. ,

Tearing a page from the Nazis' tattered book, the Japanese govern­ment ordered the organization of 20,000,000 students and an agrarian militia into a specially trained home guard reminiscent' of Hehirich Himmler's ill-fated "volksturm." At the same time, steps were taken to crush pacifist sentiment and punish persons failing to turn in pamphlets dropped by U. S. bombers.

Japan sought to bolster the home front even as U. S. ground troops pushed the enemy, back farther on bloody Okinawa, 325 miles from To­kyo. Progress remained slovir and •costly as the attackers were forced to move in the open under heavy small . arms fire of the eneniy , to clean them from strong, cave posi-

, tions dug in the hilly terrain. De­spite Allied superiority, the Japs continued to send aircraft against U. S., shipping, with some vessels sunk and damaged.

Gen., Alexander Mar Aal Tito

British to Vote Again At the heiiihl of his popularity aft­

er the defeat of Cermnny. ITinston Churchill led the Con.'cnative. party into Britain's first jtcnerul election in JO years folloiiing the Labor party's failure to postpone thc voting until autumn iihen enthusiasm enolcd and it stood a tivttvr chnncr of uinninn. Inrrnfcd oicr the sclii'diiUni: of the rlrctionf. the l.nhorites uithdrr-iv from the tCrifilition eiivrrnment, leading to Chiirrhill's' rosi^fintion «.< primp min-iftrr. HoiH-irr, he nsm-d to head n tr-miinrnry rrsimr until thv outcome of the itoxt liti'liilim:.

DRAFT; Yoiinpcr .Men to Go

Coupled with tho reduction of the size of the army, the services' re­quest for younger men has resulted in the easing of the draft on men ih the 30 to 37 years age group, with those engaged in essentia! activities virtually deferred indefinitely.

With draft calls scheduled to be cut 30,000 a month to 90,000 after July 1, 45 per cent of those to be inducted will be 18-year-olds, 33 per cent 19 to,25, and 22 per cent over 26.

Because of the services' insistence on younger men on the ground that they respond more; readily to mili­tary training than do those over 30, 4-Fs in the 18 to 25 age group will be re-examined in the light of changed conditions since V-E Day and the possibility that some may have Improved in health since their rejection. Release of vets and dis­placement of older persons from

. other war work also will allow the induction of men ui the 26 to 29 claiss previously deferred because of their engagement in necessary in­dustry.

In considering deferment of men 30 and over, local draft boards were given the liberty to determine the importance of registrants' occupa-tions. Men previously deferred, however, will not be able to switch jobs without their boards' permis­sion.

EUROPE: Thorny Problems

Diplomatic replaced military prob­lems as Europe returned once more to peace, with ulti­mate disposition of the Istrian penin-stila and major port of Trieste at the head of the Adriatic sea between Italy and Yugoslavia tem­porarily crowding t h e troublesome Polish question into the background.

Coveted and held by Italy because, of its commercial' im­portance to central Europe, and claim­ed by Yugoslavia because, of its large Slovene population, Trieste became one of the early trouble spots of post World War II when Mar­shal Tito moved his Partisans into tiie territory and British Field Marshal , Harold Alexander accused him of trying to back up his demands for it by force.

With Allied troops also moving into the Trieste region to take over the port area to assure shipment of supplies to U. S. and British oc­cupation forces in Austria and southern Germany, and Alexander alerting his men for eventualities, there was an electrical tension to the situation until Tito finally backed down and indicated his will­ingness to talk the things over. • But if the, Trieste incident ieemed

to come off smoothly, the Polish question continued to stick out, like a sore thumb, with Marshal Stalin reiterating that the Moscow-spon­sored Wars.iw provisional , govern­ment must remain the core of any reconstituted regime and e.\-Prc-mior Stanislaw Mikolajczyk declar-ing that a communist dominated

i administration was unacceptable. I Leader, of the Polis'n Peasant i party, and respected by Moscow, ! Mikolajczyk,charged that until Rus-i sian troops ahd secret police were i removed from Poland no free and j open elections could bo held 'to de­

termine a representative gbvern-Iment.

FREIGHT RATES: ^ Territorial Equality

First major victory in the: South and West's fight for equahty iri freight rates, • the Interstate Com­merce commission ordered rail charges for manufactured and high­er grade goods raised in thie East and lowered in the foregoing terri­tories to bring them in balance.

Until a permanent system can be set up, roads were directed to temporarily raise the so-called class rates 10 per. cent in the East and scale them down 10 per cent in the South and West. Though Gov. Ellis Arnall (Ga.) said that the South would continue to press for other readjustments, the ICC action placed both the South and West in better position to compete with the East in hidustrial producUon.

Confined to manufactured and higher grade goods, the freight rate revisions do not apply to bulk sbip-m'ents of such commodities as coal, livestock, lumber, grain, cotton and sand. At the present, the South and West enjoy lower rates en these items.

HOME FRONT: Reconversion Groundwork

Until supplies of steel,' copper and aluminurh and other material are established .in rnidsummer, the War Production board .has been setting, up the machinery for more civilian goods output so that manufacturers will; have a clear field when they get the "go" sign.

In preparing the.ground for the resuniption of civilian goods out­put, the WPB anhounced plans for production of 200,000 cars by the-end ot 1945; 530,000 refrigerators; 700,000 washing machtaes and nu-. merous common utility items.

At the same time, WPB removed the quota limitations from the out­put of farm machinery and parts, with. all manufacturers with over a $500,000 volume of business in 1941 compelled to submit. their produc­tion schedules for approval, how­ever. In revealing that output will be limited solely by material and manpower available, WPB an­nounced restrictions had. been tak­en off a large. list of rubber-tired equipment including wheel-type trac­tors, combines, hay balers, corn'pick-ers, beet, cotton and vegetable thin­ners, mowers, threshers and corn huskers.

Though 1945 output.of 200,000 new automobiles is expected to rise to a rate of 2,000,000 annually by 1946, little of the early production will.be available to other, thah essential users, what with the present stock­pile of cars down to 8,000. Although none of the new models will be rad­ically changed from 1942, 'they will sport new fender arrangements and ornamental trim and incorporate im­provements in carburetion, braking, distributors, oil filters and water coplmg.

As in the case of automobiles, most of the early refrigerator production will be set aside for. such essential users as hospitals and blood banks, it was said. In line with its anti-inflation program, OPA ^\'ill strive to keep prices at the,1942 level, plus allowances needed for covering high­er material and wage costs incurred since.

With postwar demand for washing machines set at 5.800,000, plans for production of 700-.000 units this year will represent a drop in the bucket. Should manufacturers be able to get additional materials, motors and parts without priority help, howev­er, production may be expanded be­yond the 700,000 level.

i Of equal importance to home-I makers is WPB's .removal of re-I straints on production of electric i floor and table lamps, ironers and i driers, coat hangers, bathtubs, mop

wringers and pie plates among numerous other conimonplace util­ity items. •

HARD COAL: New Pact

Operation of hard coal mines vir-' tually returned to normal as the War Labor board considered a new anthracite contract awarding work­ers underground travel pay and shift differentials for the first time in the industry.

Concluded by United Mine Work­er Chieftain John L. Lewis and oper­ating companies as the govemment tobk over hard coal mines after a three-week walkout, the. new con­tract granted employees $1.13 for 45 minutes of underground travel time. Workers on the second shift would receive 4 cents an hour more and those on the third 6 cents.

Other features of the new contract call for an increase in vacation allowance from $50 to $75 and over­time rates beyond 7 hours a day and 35 hotirs a week. Like the soft coal contract recently okayed by the WLB, the hard coal pact is de­pendent upon government approval and increase in price to cover added costs.

FARE ENOUGH FOR EVERYBODY, SAYS USDA

WNT7 Service, Union Trust BnUding, Washington, D. C.

' The American vocabulary has been enriched by a new word which has burdened the notebooks of war department stenographers in Wash­ington for a long tinie. 'When I was in San Francisco I saw its meaning graphically illustrated.

The word is "redeployment." No, i didn't make a typographical er: ror. Reiemployment we have heard about before. ReDeploymeht is dif­ferent. And in that word, as in Hauptmann's "teari" can sparkle "all the joy and all the sorrow of Uie world."

This new word isn't hi any idic-tionary. And in all the echomg acres of lhe Pentagon I could ftod no of­ficial definition of it but to.its Cur-rem application it simply, means shilthig a lot of American boys out of the European theater of war where the ctirtahii has gone, down. That process is caushig many a headache ui the Pentagon. It will cause many a heartache at hohie ami abroad. It will cause some hap­piness, too.

For the boys and'the i&milies of the soldiers and sailors who are cast for the second act in the tragedy of World War II (and that is most of them) redeployment means heart­aches. For the others it means hap­pmess. But whether they go back to Main street and take up the plow­share or the pen, the hammer or the School, book, or whether they go on to freish battiefields, it is a head-ache as well as. a heartache for the high command.

Heartache, Headache For Officers

Before writhig.this article I had a long conversation with one of the highest.of the high coinnriand and I can tiell you redeploynient is both headache ahdiieartache for him. He and all his officer comrades who have sons and grandsons, of their. Own fighting at the front want them back as much as any rear rank,pri­vate's mother, dad, sweetheart or wife, wants him.

But few outside those more or less Ultimately concerned realize the me­chanical implications of nianaging this major migration of history in the moving of more than three mil­lion men.

, Have you any idea how long the mere physical process of simply loading soldiers, one after another, on ships and sending them back to America would take?

I do not have oflficial figures al­thoiigh they should be released shortly, but I have an estimate on good authority, of the" time which would be required to transfer three million men now in Europe across the Atlantic to east coast ports. As­suming that the transport facilities available were devoted exclusively to this mission, perhaps three hun­dred thousand men a month could be carried home. That would mean that 10 months would be required to transfer them all, And, of course, that is a fantastic supposition, since ships as well as men, are needed in the Pacific and so are ships to carry the endless supplies which the army of the Pacific will require to carry on all-out warfare. .

Redeployment, materially and morally, is a tremendous task and, as a riesult of personal conversations with the top men upon whom its twin burdens rest, 1 can assure you that the question of morale is, if. anything, the greater of the two in their consideration.

There is no question that the suf­fering'and the repercussions of the leng^y sefparation of young men from their normal life will become greater, now that "V-E Day has come arid gone. The army high eommand knows this and that is why so much time has been spent on taking every possible step to minimize the suffer­ing which this slash th&t'cutd across the heartstrtogs of America's social life, will cause.

I happen to know that busy with the terrifie burden of bringing Eu­rope's war to a successful termina­tion and beginning the final portion of chapter two. General Marshall hhnself for many long months has spent hour after hour of his crowd­ed days and interrupted nights working on this problem.

The over-all food supply for civil­ians in 1945 will be from 5 to 7 per cent smaller per person than last year's record consumption — but about 2 to 4 per cent above the aver­age level in 1935-39. the department of agriculture reported, with most foods in good sujpply, only meat will be relatively short. Difficulties of distributing the smaller supplies of some foods among civilians will be increased.

The reduction in over-all civilian fobd supplies from last year comes principally in the supplies of pork, lard, butter, other fats and oils, sug­ar, and canned fish. Smaller sup­plies of these foods greatly increase the problems involved in their dis­tribution throughout the country. Larger noncivilian requirements than hi 1944 are in prospect this year for canned fruits and vegetables, evaporated milk, and chicken, so supplies may be shorter.

WORKERS'BENEFITS Revishig unemployrnent compen­

sation laws to increase weekly ben­efits and lengthen their duration, a score of states have acted so far this year to insure an adequate standard of living for workers and their families through a reasonable period of reconversion, and to mini­mize deflationary effects of unem­ployment.

Minimum benefits in most of the states were increased along with maximums, with the range between the two about $10 in most states.

Everybody Mttst Play the ciame

There are some phases of this shift of our main war effort from one side of the world to the other .which inany do. not realize but for which they must be. prepared. In the first place, it will hie no easy task for those who have fought tiie good .fight in Europe to be trans­ferred to the Pacific without a chance of furlough in between. Some will have that privilege but riot all. Arid even for the lucky ones the sec­ond parting will be hard imless the families play the game.

There is another group who will see Amerioa's shore but will not be allowed even to touch American soil. They are the ones who will pass through the Panama canal on a non­stop trip to potots to tiie East..That will be a tough experience-^to see Old Glory wavtog from flagstaffs to the Canal Zone and to watch its colors fade in the distance. It sini­ply cannot be helped.

But perhaps, temporarily at least, the hardest-test of patience and self-discipltoe will fall upon those who know that they are to be dis­charged, but who, because war takes the priority and the fighters must go first, can only sit and wait to Europe.

Aside from the personal anguish which this delay will mean, it is boimd to raise a clamor from mo­tives natural' enough but nonethe­less selfish, of thbse whose economic situation is suffering froni the neces­sary delay to reinforctog our civil-ian manpower with the soldiers whose services are nb longer needed but who cannot be moved back home imniediately.

Before General Gregory, in charge of the great housekeeptog depart­ment of the army, the quartermas­ter corps, left for France to antici­pation of V-E Day, I had a long talk with this gray-haired, fatherly man who is loved by his cbmrades with a warmth of affection that oufglows the well-eariied, stars on his shoul­der-straps.

. When I talked to him about re­deployment, although he is respon­sible for the physical rather than the moral welfare of the soldier, it was, of the latter of which he spoke first.

How are the folks at home gotog to take it? That was the question bn his tongue, just as it had been to the minds of the high oflficers aiid oflficials with whom I had talked be­fore.

I learned a lot from General Greg^ ory and his aides about the tremen­dous industrial effort, which it takes to produce what the army wears and eats and with which it is shaved and laved and sheltered. , As long as there is a man in uniform he must be fed and clothed and furnished supplies from helmets and raincoats to socks and shorts to say nothing of a thousand odds and ends including writing paper, soap (they have a kind that will Serve to wash clothes as well as bodies, and shaye with too, and lather m .salt water), tobac­co, bug-powder, cigarettes, band­ages, shoelaces, razor blades, matches . . . ad inflnittim.

Thousands of men clad in woolens required by-European weather will have to be supplied with cotton for the tropics. Thousands movtog from the tropics toward the more north­erly latitudes of the Japanese is­lands and China must have woolens to replace their cottons.

Meanwhile, they will have to con­tinue to wear and io wear out what they now have on.

Another factor is the length of the Pacific "pjpe-lmes"—the great dis­tances from base to front. The "turn-aroimd" time of the voyage of ships is longer -than the voyage to Europe and there must be enough supplies at hand for the troops to cover the period between each de­livery.

All this will require conttoued manufacture by private industry for military tise fbr a Ibng time which

.means that much longer to wait for flnal conversion to civilian produc­tion.

This is why this new word "re­deployment" is not a happy one and why it holds withto it so many head­aches arid so many heartaches which will try the coolest heads arid strain the stoutest hearts.

Releaaed jby Weatern Newapaper Ualoo.

KAISER SETS PACE IN RECONVERSION PLANS

SAN FRANCISCO.—The Pacifle coast has about the same postwar worry as the rest of the coimtry but to niore accentuated and positive form becaiise of the vast expansion throughout 'the state to planes, ship­yards and other war todustries.

The Kaiser shipyards todustry, for example, has been lostog about 5,000 employees a. month. The last four pages of theii: newspaper in its last issue contained want-ads of ^yorker8 seektog ride - shartog automobile seats to return home. Theh: yards payroll at Richmond near here has been cut from peak employment of 93,000 down to 49,000 already (and it has had 500,000 different persons, eniployed to the past four yeairs).

I rnet the emperor of this most fabulous accumulation of American industries during the war, Henry J. Kaiser, and' talked with him for more than an hour. His.is npt orily the-largest but most varied of all the na t ion ' s strictly new war en­terprises and con­tatos lOO' todustries.. Thus he also . has the biggest of all the problems of re-conversi(»i and I was toterested to ascertaintog how he would meet i t

He is a crisp, heavy-set man with a knowledge of what is needed and with unlimited ideas of how to do the job. He has both bustoess hope and faith—a confidence that the imagtoation of the American people wiu devise methods of carrying for­ward our todustrial postwar system and faith that it cannot fail.

What he—aggressive lone wolf to­dustrial fighter that he is—thtoks the country needs primarily is compe­tition. The first postwar todustry' to which he is turning his attention is, naturally, shipptog. He was gro\yling about another busmess leader who made a speech a few days back advocating scrapptog of the. American merchant marine. We ;xow have more ships than any na­tion ever had on the seas, (number is a military secret) and he thinks they should be used. This will re­quire government subsidy to his optoion because competing Euro­pean Itoes have subsidies. I judge that he has iri mtod American ac­quisition of the trade which Japan formerly had to the Orient. He did not mention a current rumor that he may build postwar ships for Russia, although I saw him shortly after he left Molotov.

Benry i. Kaiser

BARBS by Baukhage

Coiigress is gotog to look toto the question of sugar, betog diverted into the manufacture of bootieg whiskey. Meanwhile tipplers say that a lot of sugar is being diverted toto alcohol to dilute good whiskey.

The conservative is a man who has somethtog to conserve to which he isn't too sure he has h legal titie. A radical is a guy who hopes so.

Ely Culbertson, former bridge ex­pert, attended the San Francisco conference and gave suggestions. (Not bad ones, either.) He also ob-j'ected to lack of leadership by the Americans. He diidn't like the veto of aggressiye action by the security council.

a a a A woman is known by the enemies

she makes (for her husband).

HAS MANY PLANS The: nation also needs, 2,000,000

Jiomes, low cost homes, and he sees in this field vast opportunities for •postwar activity, in his opinion.

Transportation should be entirely revised. A lower cost fare should be worked out on the railroads. . Speed highways s!-.ould be extended, as the nation in the future will continue to • move out-from the cities. Ho sees opportunities for building-lower cost cars in the automobile industry (which he does not believe is com­petitive now) and great possibilities in development of health facilities for the people. He would promote health facilities in every possible way to a scope amounttog to a na­tional industry.

Herie is a man with ideas -. nd the kind of energetic imagination which conceives new Ventures when old ones fail. He is now in metals, cbn-ceivtog a riew magnesium alloy for steel, a new kind of plaster, gyp­sum, planes, chemicals. BEUEVES IN COMPETlTlbN

He is also to coal and steel, and in each todustry he attempts to mato­tato a competitive spirit. He keeps three offices to Washtogton instead of one and thus promotes greater work energy among his own em­ployees—and, of course, more pr> duction.

I suspect his bwn reconversion plan is already well under way. There is much •well-advised talk about him expanding toto jtoreign production to Latto America and elsewhere.

His enthusiastic spirit is symbolic ot the feeUng among other bustoess men with wh^m I talk throughout this area. In this respect it is some­what different from' the East where the trend runs to pessimism or doubt, although labor is gotos home to droves. . Everyone out here flgures the Jap war..to take another year (my guess is somewhat less tiian that) and sees San Francisco and the Pacific coast as gateways to the newly opened island empires of the Par cific ahd the Orient. We may ex­pect a doubling of our trade west­ward, and perhaps more.

There is much rematoing ot the forty-niner' gold Strike anibition among these bustoess people arid I would not be surprised it they meet their postwar problem which is hea'i^er than any other. section, aa well as any another.

Page 3: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

ml":' -—-. , : . . . . ,^^i '^i5^<'r'wsrir ' 'TSU^-'V•. ' • •• •->'•'•' — * » • /•••• rv........f—^-r-w-«"...•-,,-... ....• <-..•,-•- . . l y .

wtfT iiiiiM!;-- •'%***-»'»'>•••'*' .-...-....

1' ••r . . ..»•. . - ^ ^ j . . . . . .

l-'.^;;'»v. >5;^t53Ja • • ' - > • • * . , ' . - « ' i t a 4 M ^ •*• , ' , . , ;» . V'*;

i—iHi anwma. r-:.'.:tiMt^r. Jtei fe i««t mk '»»«y »

• It

Our (Juota in the 7th War Loan is

BUrB/GGER BONDS -onrfMore of Them!

^i ip!' .

. f .><5^

• Read that figure again, neighbor. It's not just a lot of numbers pulled out of a hat It's our share, your share, in the mighty 7th War Loan.

Does it sound big, neighbor? Well, those Superforts that are plastering Japan are big—and cost plenty. Battleships are big—and cost m>/-/io»*. The job our fighting men are out to finish is big—and die cost is staggering.

So of course our job is big. But we can do it if you and every other pa* triotic American in this city buys a BIGGER bond than before... or invests a BIGGER portion of income in War Bonds now/

Twp Drivas in One By this time last year, you had al*

ready subscribed in /wo War Loans. This 7th War Loan is like /wo drives in one.

Study the chart below. See what your country expects you to do in the 7th War Loan. Remember, you are part of America—a part of America's might!

f4^4f.**t^

•aaiem?^»it:M

'vsr;;.'.

J^5i^;Wiy;iW*?»i..«ii^•yi^v;'.^V••:•;:;•;^*;.•^^^^

nNO YOUR QUOTA,... A N D AUKE ITI

W YOUI AVRAM WAM

mMOHraiS)

or life

iiS9 335-iM aiO-235

200-2.10

1M.200

140-110

100-140

UndwIlOO

Y O V t r a O O N M WAI MNS QUOTA » t

(CASHVAUH)

ise.oo l i M S 112J0

n.7s 7S.0O 37JO II.7S

MATUUTY vAimor

TTN W A I lOAN iOHbSlOUOHT

$2M soe 17S ISO 135 100 SO as

Your Wor Bonds Are Like nifMY CASH

War Bonds m* yeur *«fMI invMlment. Saf» in princijMl... sof* in'Mtum. Yeu 9*1 %Afot every $3 yeu

mc/mrssmfm/ ' ' ' ^ l i ^ a ^ l W R I SSiimSS Jp

W A R LOAN

• This is an official U. S. Treasury advertisement prepared under the auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising CouncU

ABBOn COMPANY A N T R I * teAUTY SBO^E ANTRIM FRUIT STORE ANTSSil STAtiONERY COMPANY

BUTIERFIELD'S STORE CiriTER'S MARKET FIRSTNAtlONAtSTORE WAllACE K. FLOOD TEXACO STA.

THE GOODELL COMPANY LAMBETH PRODUaS CORP'N MAPLEHURST INN JOHN B. MAYRAND

MESSENGER PUBUSHIRG CO. PUBUC SERVICE C«. OF N. a SOUTHWESTERN N. H. TRANSPOR­

TATION CO. . :.-:&

Page 4: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

'.m» "-'• X,' ik-^^.—„^. ,^ l^ ,

•*•'•• i ' ' ^ ' ! . • . — • - • - • "•:~ -

jszl iNTRiai REPORTEB TkuBSPAY^ MAY 81, 1945

jjft^ggjffM***************^*******^*"**''****" Mrs. Z. Taylor Bercovitz pi New York has arrived at her sumnier home on Clement Hill for the summer. - —Brrand-Mrsr &.-ArPoKng-o£-Ph j delphia are at their home, The Long

4'Housc.-—-^. ~=^-« ''—^-^:—

EYEGLASSES QjSi CREDIT

Mrs. Lillian I. Marcotte of Hills­boro spent one day last week at Pine­hurst Farm.'

1 Sgt. and Mrs. S. Fred Cooper o f , III frrrniinrfrfrii 11 rrrrrr frrrrrrrrrrrrr'r-'r i...,^^****** Cambridge, Mass. spent the weekend -

^ ^ --.: It : . - - i . ut tVioii. Vinmo nn f:iem*«nt Hill. Ouf readers are asked to consult

thia directory when in need of pro-

f e n i e n a l services or merchandise.

MEAT AND EAT AT

ROY'S DINER Accommodatmg 100 People-Booth

Fountain and Counter Service

L"Mttke this Your Headquarters When ShUpping in Manchester" _ Ca£ L A K E AVE. and ELM STREET

4

NO^l^TER^jd^R. CARRYiNG CHARGES

^^ TAiE~XYEAR T<}PAY "" -

ANTRIM REPORTER J. V a n Hazinga , Editor

r U B L I S H E P T H U R S D A Y S

FLORALIA FLOWERS "All Types of Floral Designs"

CUT FLOWERS — POTTED PLANTS Wedding Bouquets Funeral Designs

Flower Novelties Dish Cardons

"Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere"

29 HANOVER STREET, ^IANCHESTER f.^.^.^^^***************************

t C a r o n ' s F u r n i t u r e E x c h a n g e

Used Goods of the Better Kind

N. H. HEADQUARTERS FOR RANGES AND HEATERS

O. L. HAZELTON - H. S. STEVENS, Prop.

Dealer in GRANITE A.V.D MARKLE

MONUMENT* A.ND MARKERS Corner Elm and .•Kuburn Streets

at their home on Clement Hill.

Mrs. Harold G. Wells, and.Mrs. C. Harold Taylor were in Peterboro on Sunday. They visited Mrs. Wells ' aunt, Mrs, Mary E . Bader, at the MacDowell Colony, and Mrs. C. A. Macalister, a former Hillsboro resi­dent.

Plans are being made to hold Old i Home Day the last Saturday in Au- j gust. Carlton M; Shervv'ood is chair­man of the committee.

Mr. and Mrs. William P. Wood .of Concord spent the weekend at their home. Twin Elm Farm.'

Xonnan Cote, seaman 1 /c , of Bos

SCOTT JEWELRY CO. 978 Elm Street Manchester, N, H.

FROM

AVAILABLE FOR TAXI SERVICE

AL FOLLANSBEE

Tel. 47-3 Hill'fbbro

West Deering

Upper Village

j Miss Mary E. ColbuTn of Revere, i Mass. spent the weekend .with her '. parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Colbum. ! Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Stimpert and I friends oif Newton, Mass. spent Sun--'day a t their home in town. .- , V Mr. and Mrs. Charles Young and ' son, Charles Fisher, and Mrs. Edith

HILLSBORO.-fJHHr-Business Not ices . 10c per l ine .

Resolut ions $2.00. Card of T h a n k s , . $1.00. ; '

Reading Not ices of e n t e r t a i n ­m e n t s , or soc iet ies w h e r e a r e v e n u e is derived from the s a m e m u s t b e paid a t 10c per l ine. Count 6 wordB t o t h e l ine a n d s e n d c a s h i n ad­vance . If all the job prhxttaB i» done a t t h i s office, o n e free n o t i c e will be g iven .

Extra Copies . 5c each . s u w U e d only w h e n c a s h a c c o m p a n i e s t h e order. „ ,

Entered a t post -of f ice a t Hilte-boro. Ni H., as second-c la s s m a t t e r .

.MANCHESTER, N. Phoiiu 6SU ,

H .

i "As Good OS New at Half thc Price"

I 38 BaisGE ST., MANCHESTER, N . H .

^************ » * „^,a.ft.»********** \

. N o m a n ^ o i e , seaman I / c , o x o p s - i Lt. Joseph Silverman' has been B«rns of Benmngton, Vt. , were at ton. spent the weekend with his par- .pending his furlough with his ^-ife the F.sher Farm for the w e e k e n ^ ^ ents, Mr. and Mrs. Archie. Cote, a t U n d daughter, Dorothy Lee, a t the Allen Ellis ,s a business visitor m t h e i r h o m e i n the Manselville District. , home of Mr. and, Mrs. Peabody. ( Bojtor. "^'^l^l!^;^^^^^--^^-^^,y^^^

T E R M S :

ONE YEAR, paid in a d v a n c e , S2.00; 6 MONTHS, pa id hi a d v a n c e , $1.00; 3 MONTHS, paid to advaaice^

THtESDAY, MAY Sl, 1945

#•#^#«##«#>#^#^r#•#«#4^^#^4N^^<#>4^'^4i»^>^>^#^#>'<''<^'^

Y , D .

N e w & U s e d F u r n i t u r e C o .

A H Y AMOUNT BOUGHT — SOLD EXCHANGED—DELI%-ERED ANYNVHERE

"See Us First and Save"

1206 E L M StBEET ' MANCHESTER Phone 49S7

RECORDS — SHKET MUSIC — BAND INSTRUMENTS — PIANOS

W m . L . N u t t i n g , I n c .

- Manchester — Nathua

Bverythinp in Music

103-4 Elm street 7S Main Street

Seventy-fouir dollars vvas the total 1 \Ve are sorry to hear o f the pa.ss-1 ««A:..A.4'^-M/^MA *\ta s a i a A.f TTneft tv . .Spnls ! I r 1VTu' tj>.MV.&..4. T3uKK o a l * l v M n n -

r dollars was the total We are sorry to hear of the pa.ss-; ^^^^^ McAlister, attended the Bacca-received from the sale of Easter Seals , ing of Mr. Herbert Babb .early Mpn-1 ^^^^^^^^ service held at the High in Deering, as reported by the; chair- day morniiig. I c . i — i -i— t u - TWav«n..ini Sarvines

jijuijij-f j j j j i i r r r r r - - * --'•"'»•"-*****''^

1; F o u m i e r ' s

' H i l l s b o r o F u r n i t u r e M a r t

;l Foa BETTEB VALUES FROM

FACTORY TO YOU

I 1211 EL>T ST.. M A N C H E S T E R { i'hone 778

^*********************************

G o o d m a n ' s B o o k s t o r e

BOOKS - r STATIONERY OFFICE SUPPLIES

Mail Orders Solicited

23 HANO\-ER ST., MANCHESTER. N . H.,

man, Mrsi Marie H. ^yells, and she wishes to thank everyone Avho con­tributed to this worthy cause.

]Hr. and Mrs. James Nally have sold their home. Hillside Farm", to Mr, and Mrs. Carew of Warner, who will move here soon.

Oltjttrrtf Notea Furnished by the Pastois o(

the Different Churches

Trade With Confidence at

C H A S E ' S N E W HAMPSHIRE'S LARGEST

FURNITURE STORE

Busy Since 1892

ROOKING - ASBESTOS SIDING

INSULATED FIRE SIDING

SHI2T METAL WORK

H a r r y D . L a f l e y G o . , I n c .

AmoskcaR >Iill

MANCHESTER. N. H. - Tr.L. S3S9 ^

^^^^.^.^^.a**-********* (

HARKO TIRE CO. Wholemle — Retail TIRE RECAPPING

Vulwmixing and Repairing

5 6 9 E l m Street- — Manchester Phone 8420

******* T H E C L O T H I N G M A R T

For Savings on Ywir Next S U I T - Tol- CO.ST — OVI-.KCOAT

I Sec i's First

I 36 MERRIMACK STRKKT. MASCHESTEK

I Next to Ricc-Varick Hotel

i^^^**t

^^.^.^^************''

M. A. NOURY Featuring

MULTI-FACET DIAMONDS

HALLMARK JEWELER

824 ELM STREET — MANCHESTER

HILLSBORO

Meth.jdist Church Notes " T h e F r i e n d l y C h u r c h "

R e v . M i l o F a r m e r , Pastor

S u n d a y , J u n e 3 , 1945

9:30 a. m. C h u r c h S c h o o l Adul t B i b l e S t u d y Class .

10:45 a. m. M b r n i n e w o r s h i p

a n d

Joseph Leazott has bought the late Frank. Chase place in Green Hill, and is making, extensive repairs there . .

. The Community Club is holding a Baked Bean sujiper at Puller Hall, Saturday. Everyone is invited.

Mr. Robert Davis from Massachu­setts has purchased the Babb place on the East Washington road,. Mr. and Mrs. Davis and small son will take possession sometime in June. Mr. Davis is a grandson of Mrs. John Davis. . Mr. George Hemming was a busi­ness visitor in Pittsfield Saturday.

Mrs. Dewey O'Brien i s at her home for a few days.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Peabody spent a few days with Mr. Peabody's father and mother at the Bickford place.

Kenneth Cranei is carrying the mail a few days for Alfred Babb.

Mr. A. J. Charest from Medford,

D; COHEN JUNK DEALER

Peterborough

S«nd a card if you have ecrap

iron or wa»te paper

School, also the Memorial Services for Pfc. Nelson Davis at the Sniith Memorial Church, on Sunday.

Merton Smith of Nashua is spend-ing his vacation at the Clark home.

Mr. and Mrs. Althite of Newton, _ ^ ^MWiK^wi Mass. have purchased the Worth Farm from S. F. Langdell_of j | i l fprd .

SILAS A. ROWE, Auctioneer, A g r i N s ' ^ ^ N C E Henniker, N. H. Concord Office: 77 North Main St.

W o o d b u r y & M c f L e o d , I n c .

U'e .Specialize in Fine.

DIAMONDS — WATCHES ,— JEWELRY

Expert Watch Repairing

36 H-ANOVER STREET, MANCHESTEIS Phone 1645

'^^^^^^**************************^

1 0 : 4 5 a . Ui. iTAWiuiuR , . w . , - - . r - toJl, i ' iaso. n>~. . . . — , - —

Spec ia l m u s i c . S e r m o n topic . L e i ' s " I Farewell Reception to Rev, and Mrs F a c e F a c t s , " j c o a d .

6:00 p. m. Y o u t h F e l l o w s h i p . 7:00 p ni. E;enin>; w o r s h i p .

Go.'<pe! s o n g and serv ice . S t r n i o u topic , "Verdicts , of Hi.story."

M o u d a y e v e n i n j ; , 6:30, the La­dies ' A id wi l l ho ld a covered d i s h s u p p e r in t h e Munic ipa l ' bal l . M e m b e r s are urged to br iug a friend.

— O F — • , • •

PERSONAL PROPERTt — HILLSBORO, N. H. T h e subscriber w h o h a s sold h i s large h o m e , i s n o w e m p l o y e d o a t o f

t o w n , t a m U y mov ing i n t o smaUer quarters, wi l l c lose o n t a large a m o i m t ot househo ld goods a t publ ic auct ion o n

SCHOOL STREET, FRIDAY, JUNE 1 , 1 : 0 0 P. M. T h e r e wil l b e m u c h m o r e t h a n w e shaU a t t e m p t t o l i s t i n t h i s a d -

Mr. A. J. Charest i rom jaeaioru, ygrt i sement w h i c h h a s b e e n a c c u m u l a t i n g for years , a n d t o s a v e t h e Mass. called on friends here Saturday. • j^g^ printers w h o are working day a n d n i g h t f rom s e t t i n g t y p e a n d

M « Aii,ip Worthlev from Arling- i usj^g their supply of paper, w e urge y o o t o a t t e n d th i s s a l e : Glenwood range, s m a l l used eledtrio s tove , ice refrigeratori d i n i n g -

room set , table, s ix c h a i r s a n d buffet ; mi s s ion tab le a n d t w o cha irs , b r a s * bed, o ther beds, isprings* oak chamber s e t , o ld couch, s t e e p l e d o c k , p i c -tuFfis books etc

I t i s expected t h a t w h e n t h e y beg in t o pick u p s o m e Ant iques w i l l

bc found. ^ TERMS CASH FBAKK P O Y D

Mrs. Alice Worthley from Arling' ton, Mass. w a s . h e r e to. attend the

I Buy War Bonds TODAY-

McLANE 8C TAYLOR FCRS OF /;/.s"/v.vcr/o.v

Open Thiirs. to 9 P . M . — Open .Sat. to 5:30 P. M.

642 WILLOW STRi.fcT, MANCHK>TER

• i^hone l.S.=().- IS.M

Your FUl i COAT is Valuable Have it IJopaii-ed, liemodelod ,

and Stored witli

BEMIS SC CO. I'lirrier.s Sir.cc 1'.'21.

1140 KLM STRI.I.T' .M,\N-C1!F.STI;R'

Smith Memorial Church Notes Rev. Frank A. M. Coad, Pas tor

S u n d a y , J u n e 3 . 1945,

10:30 a. 111. MortiiiiiJ wor.'-hii>. i T h e >ervice wil l be l o i u h i c t c d by ! Rev> W o o d b u r y .Stowell of l i e n i n -

k e r , Mr.s Stoxvel", .-o'.oisl. Mrs . Joh'i H(Jli.<„o!K»i>i--l

W a t c h for each Sntul ly >erv ices in tl i is pfijjer.

, II a. ni. C h u r c h School . M i . s s Uuth Kv!ev ,S i iper in l - -ndei i l . -

M a r y ' s B e a u t y & C o r s e t

S h o p

Ry.M. HAIR WICS AND FKKNCU TRANSKOKM.STION

18 H.inovcr Street — Street Floor

GRIFFIN TIRE CO. Expert Service, on

RECAPPING — VULCANIZING DUtribater ier

PENNSYLVANIA New Tiret and Tube*

22 Spruce Street Manchester . Phene 992

V E N E T I A N BLIND L A U N D R Y

W e Clean and Repair All Types of VERKTIAN Bt.INDS — TAI'F.S AXD

CORDS A U O FURNISKI.D Expert Picture l-raming

M a n c h e s t e r

P a i n t & W a l l p a p e r C o .

^^,.s4,^^*t****a**t't***************'*

P. A. DUPUIS "Our Business is Moving"

LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE MOVINC B Y V A N — AC;KNT FOR

NATION WIOF. MOVTRS FoKNiTinffi STORAGE AND CRATING

1268 ELM ST.. M.^^•CHESTER Phone 73

j j^j j - f r f r * * * * * * * ***'*-*-**^*'**

C o b b a n

W a l l p a p e r 8C P a i n t S t o r e

.•J Comt-ktc Line of PAINTS AND W.M.M'.M'LKS

PAINTEKS' Stjri'UiKs

M.-WCHKSTF.K, X. H.

Eitabliahed 1895

LEMAY BROS. Jeweleri and Optometritti

Three State Registered Optometriii Expert Repair Work

Jewelery Modernization 1217 Elm St. Manchekter. N. h

Deering A very plea.«ant surpri.se party was

held la.«t Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mr.s. Floyd Han-cy on Clement Hill in honor of the birth­day.': of .Mr. and Mrs.'S. Clinton Put­nani. The cvcninR was pleasantly •spent in card playinjr «nd games. Dainy rcfro.jhmcnts were .served by the hoste.-i.s and the guesUs departed at a late hour wn.shing Mr. and Mrs. I'ulnam many happy returns of the day. They received some lovely Kifli* from their freind.s, several of whom were .present from Hillsboro.

.Mr.oand Mrs. Charles Woodin of Manchester were callers, at Pinehurst Farm one day la.st week.

Prof.. Charle.s McConnell and a friend o f Boston spent .several days at his summer home Kist week.

St. Mary's Church R e v . Char l e s J. Ledciy, Pas-tor

Kcv. Fredr ick C. S w e e n e y , Ass t .

Snv.diiy Mas<, 7:30 and 9 a. ni. Vesi )et>, 6 p. ni.

• H o l v d a y s Mass , 5:30 and 7 a. ui.

Deering CommuDity Church S e r v i c e s at Deer ing Center

S u n d a y , J u n e 3 , 1945

i i i i . ni. Morniuj; wor.ship. Sc;

mon b; Mr T h u r s t o n . C h n r c b S c b o o i .

iAe you'll get your new car?

"A few cars may be coming As it gets older it is bound

10:30 a. ni.

"The Bible Speaks" L i s t e n to V o i c e cf r r c p h t c y ,

S u n d a y n iorn ing at_ 9:30. on tbe t'olUnviiij; s iat ion>: W I . N I l , i34f 'K; W . K N K , 1290K; W H K B , 7 5 0 K ; ;<ii(i S u n d a y e v e n i n g , 6:30, \ V H ) S , 1050K. , , ,

HENNIKER

C o n g r e s a t i o n a l Cburch Notes

R e v . W o o d h n i y S t o w e l l , Pa.stoi

. S u n d a y , J u n e 3

10:30 a, tu. Service, of w o r s h i p and .scrnion. R e v l u l g a r Story of H u d s o n wilt preach .

10:30 a m. C h u r c h School .

A pub l i c fanii ly nlRlVt s u p p e r will he held by the W o m e n ' s S o c i ­e ty on J u n e 6 at the A c a d e m y hal l .

Methodi s t Church Notes R e v . Ear l F e l l o w s . Pastor

10:45 a. "? S e r v i c e of wor.ship and s e r m o n .

12 ni. Sut iday Schoci!.

to need more attention.

Don't neglect it! Bring it

"HOME" for service.

• • We have the mechanics

who know your car best We

have genuine Ford parts.

We pledge you the very best

I

off the assembly lines in six

to nine months, but it will

be a long time* before they

are produced in really large

quantities", says Judge Fred

M. Vinspn, Chairmaii of the

Office of War Mobilization

and Reconversion. service possible. Let us help

• • So, your present Ford you get all the "extra" mil^

still has a long way to go. that Ford W t into your carl

YOUR FORD DEALER W E H A V E MANY JOB OPPORTUNITIES POR W A B V E T E R A N S

M

Page 5: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

^-r

AXTRIM KEPORTER. THURSDAY, MAY 81, 1945 P a g e S

£ LASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT

All advertisements appearing under this head 2 cents a word; minimum charge 35 cents. Extra

"^'Insertions 01 same aJSv. 1 cent a word: minimum' charge 20 cents. PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. I

Poultry men are having a lot of : trouble with minlc Just now in tbeir • poultry yards. Yes, you can protect your flock from these feUows. The

(continued on page 8) ',

FOR SALE

—New gas combination, new lot of ranee burneis for .sale. .J . B Vaillancourt. Hillsbbro. 2 l t f

FOB SALfcJ—Coal or,wood bttraing circulatiug heater. Uused one' sea­son, excellent condition. 1. D.; Ad­ams, Henniker. 22-23*

—Rabber Stamps for every need, made to order, 48c and up. Messen-icer Jffice. 2tf

—Greeting cards for ajl occasion^. Come in aild look them over. For sale by^iisabel Gay, The Cardteria, 47 School St.; Hillsboro. 5«tf.

FUK KENT

FOR RENT-^l-'uriiished house at Loon, lake on black road. VVrite or call Walter E Gay. 19tf .

sor Mrs. Charles Chase and two chil­

dren spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nelson.

Mr. and Mrs. John CranstOn ahd Mr. and Mrs. Oscar AUebaugh of Cranston, R. I. spent a few days this week at North Star Camp.

Mrs. Elba C. Nelson was a visitor

Sp Colu

from Worcester, Mass., got a nice laker out of Nubanusit Lake in Hancock. This, was a 12 pounder . but not hi It with the one caugnt >» Concord last Saturday. Sunday, April 29 by a Milford mahi Mr. William Tappley went to: his that went to 22 pounds and was 391 Naval Training Center on Monday.

S i S e f t a v e ^bSen f a k £ ' f r ? m l ^'•- ''^'' »^'' '» "' ^0^*°"' ass. pounaersnaye oeen lanen. « q m , ^p^^^ ^^^ . ^^^^^^ ^^ ^j^^ j ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^

ANNO UN CEMENT!

H O W A R D W . H E N N I N G

Carpenter — Btiilder _ "Since" 1928"

LOWER 3?IH,ACE_HlLLSBORO R. F. p . 3 Box 4Z~T -

ortsmen s mh

By GEORGE S. PROCTOR N. H; Conservation Officer

FHONE 104 WILTON, N. H.

Well, the first week of the trout fishing for 1945 has gone by and what a week. The ftrst da,y we checked 263 men and women fishing and what a limit day it was. Since then, we have had too much rain, the brooks are very high and the fish-

ig is nbt quite so gciod. It was much better than the first week in 1944. Not so many fishing but the trout were better, bigger and

' more of them. All New England was repiresented on my brooks the first day of the open season. Many of the mills were short handed that Iday.

Well, they tell me that a man

MAHHEWS'BARBER SHOP Next to Crosby'* Restaurant

Opan Cloiad Mon , Tues., Thurs. 8 a.m. 5:80 p m Wednesday 8 a.m. Noon Friday Sa .m. 8 p m . - ' Saturday 8 a.m. 10 p.m.

that lake! this season. That's fish' ing if you ask me. _

Ran in this other, night to th'e regular meethig of tne Granite Fish and Game Club of Milfbrd. This Club has added a score' of members since I was down last and what I like is a bunch of young fellows. They have great plans for the summer mohths. They own their own club house, have 143 paid up members and money hi their jeans. More power to them.

Sorry to amiounce that the dog we were asking about last week as lost was found in an •Open well somewhere in Peterboro. '• Mainy a nice' dog, cat and even cattle have been lost in these open wells the past few months.

Rumor has it that another Fish and Game club is to be formed ih Nashua very sobn.

Several hundred more pheasants were released ih southem N. H. last week. These were planted hi Cole's, Barnard's and my district. This will be a help.

It woh't.be long nbw to the thne that you will be cutthig your grass and be sure to report ih if a hen pheasant is killed or badljSbiJured by the cutter bar. We salvaged a lot of eggs last year that would havie been lost. If the hen is not hijured she will come back to the nest.

Well,'I heard from the grandson in California and "Don" has made his 1000 potmds of paper and will be hi Une for a medal as a Cub Scout. "Don" tells me that he won a helmet for selling bonds the last time. He Uves in Glendale. .

Here is a letter from a party, who'. forgot to sigh their name. I will* answer the question here. No, you cannht get damages for your ber­ry bushes as porcupine are not pro­tected, in fact they have a price i of two bits (2Sc) to you on their j head. Get some trapper to come| in and trap them out for you. Sor- i ry you enplosed a stamp but nu name.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nelson. Mr. Daniel Strickland of Keene is

spending a few days with his mother, Mrs. Theodore PoWers and family.

LISABEL GAY'S COLUMN

(Continued from page one) Mis.s Bessie MacDonald of

B rook fine, Ma.s.s , spent the week­eiid with liisr aunt. .Mr.s Annie C. Fuller, who returned with bet niece to stay over Memorial day. The>- were accompanied by Mrs^ Edward Aim and soii Edvvard, who will visit relative.s in Bosiou aud Wellesley,

, Harl Tiuin, Mr. and Mrs. Rob. erl Eioh of Loweli, Mass., Mr. and Mr.s. Abram Flint, Billerica, Mass., Mrs. H. C. Smith, Mis.-, Hope Stiiith, Mr. and .Mts.. Frank Cous-en.s nd daugliter of West Newton, Mass., Mr. acd Airs. Freeman Sar­gent, Siinapee; Mr. and Mrs, Jphn Beau and family of Lebanon were Sunday visitors of Mr, and Mrs. Maurice Barnes.

Misses Vurlyne and Ulla Ells, worth arrived home late; Saturday nigbt after a 17 day trip by motor from SweetwHter. I'exas. Vnrlyne and her .sister. Mrs. John Pilking-

C A R P E N T E R (30 YEARS REGISTERED)

OPTICIAN "On the Sqaare" Henniker Leave Watch and Clock work

'at WALLACE'S DRUG STORE

ton, spent the winter in the south­west. . Helen will come home la­ter depending upon her husband's orders and wheie statioued.

Miss Gladys Ciaig of, Nashua is speuJinK a week wuh .Miss Lora Graig at the Craig farm in Antrini.

Mr.--. Harrie Dunsmoor of Bos ion Was a guest of .Mrs. Pearl FliiU for a few days last week. Mr. and .NIfs Frank Duusiuoor of Manchester visited his sister ou Saturday.

Mis.ses Lois PoweU and Pdtricia Phelps were .sent as delegates to the Vou til Convention held in Ha­verhill, Ma.ss. > ".

Mrs Janet Sharhy and Miss Mary Normnndin attended thei circus in Boston on Saturday.

In one HiUsboro mairket the store cat is doing its best to help out the meat shortage. First the little beast brought in a sniall snake, whicli caused .a flutter und fltirry among the women employ­ees. The excitement had barely subsided when again the cat came stalking in pioudly carrying a. live rat, resulting ill more vociferous ani pioldnged excitement. The fate of the cat or its • prey is un-known to me.

Mrs. Nellie Widger. is visitiug her sister, Miss Harriet Knowlton, in Magnolia, Mass,

Lt. Arthur T. Davis, Jr., of Amesbury, Ma»s ', was a week-end guest iat the home of Frauk Rum­rill.

.Mrs. Ruth Sanborn underwent ac operation for appendicitis at tbe Memotial hospital on Saturday Mrs Julia Gibson visited her on Sundav and found her as well as possible. '

Mrs Evelyn Rowe Hollis of Henniker is to be the new organist at the Smith Memorial church.

School street was given a little excitement on Suuday evening when a big branch of a tree in front of Eugene \yilliams' house fell taking wires with it, so that lights weut out and electricity* stay-e i off for an hour and twenty min­utes. The Publih Service men worked fast and it was found later the branch had heen burned by the wire which wea ened it. May­be our radios will be quieter now.

Miss .Mildred Moore of Wo­burn, .Mass., "-coil Kendall of Mel­rose and RaN.niond Bennett of Westover Field'were Sunday guc-ts of Mrs. jAuies Leach.

Miss Olive Colby and Mrs. Leo­ta .\Iiir.>>liall of Hosion attended the

jbicc,:il;!ureate service 011,Snnday .- s •the latter'.s (la'.ialiter Tlielina was' one ot' tile <;r;uUi;ites.

Arthur 15i;i''>vii aiic! friend nf Boston cilliril on Walter Gay on Friday.

Mrs. Georye Tewk>lury and ciiildren ;ire piiinniiij; to .>-]H-ii(i the suihnu-r r.i onr vicinity while Mr. Tewk>hnr\. who has been teM.cli. ins niai'iial tr.iitiii'ijj in .Ashland

Business-^cle Our Home Town Directory

iiiia»iBiBiBiBiHnn«iBiaiBiBiiBiB»iBiBiaiaiaiw^Bi

Business firms Or professional peo­ple who wish to participate in this program are urged to phone the Mes­senger office.

E/G. & W. L. HOPKINS .. GR.\NITF, STATE, A.ND

. WIRTH.M6RE • FEEDS

HILLSBORO -..GUEli.NFIELD Phone 92 .. Phone 2401

For Professional servire of any kind consult the Business Directory.

********************************* VAN, THE FLORIST Cut Flowers, Floral Work

Telephone 141 Church St. Hillsboro, N. H.

t*******;a^^^^ta******************^

f**************************a*^tf.^^ ,

Hil l sboro Feed Company Hn.LSBORo —- HENNIKER Tu... 52-4 TEL. 36

Bailey's. "Penhaiit Brand" . TESTED FEEDS

Dairy Rations, Stock Feed, Poultry Feeds, Seed Grain, Field

• Seed and Flour ******************a^^^^-^^^^.^.^^.^^t

*******************************trti

HILLSBORO STAMP Co. ' DR. H. C. BALDWIN

HILLSBORO, N . H .

U. S. and Foreign Stamps Bought and Sold

Also on sale at Butler's Store ^^****************

HILLSBORO DAIRY HENRY a MARTIN

RAW AND PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM

., BUTTER — GOTTACE CHEESE

SCHOOL .ST. , HILLSBORO PHONE 37-4

f*^^**^*****^********************^

Bill's A u t o Service , W. H. ROACH, Prop.

F O R D SERVICE AND PARTS

General Automotive Repairt Battery and Ignition Service

'Towing HILLSBORO— PHONE 113

HALLADAY'S STORE

GENERAL HARDWARE • SPORTING GOODS

DUPONT PAINTS KITCHEN AND GLASSWARE

, HILLSBORO, N. H.

DR. A. A. MUIR CHIROPRACTOR

H o u s e a n d Office v i s i t s a t 71 Main Street HilUboro, N. H.

Phone 171 a-auMi 1.1.luLUuul,. 1.1 I 1.1,»I URt

E. KURTZNER Watchmaker & Jevreler

HILLSBOBO Binr^T i i i t 'TMi I "ifi'

N. H. S33I

Contractor*

********************************* ALVIN A. YEATON

COAL AND COKE PHILGAS

Ranges

77 .M.A,L\ ST.

Heaters - Refrigerators Antiques

HILLSBORO r*********.a******t^r.t.^^^^^^.^^^^.^^.^tt.

Membera ot unli.tank eraw on Luzon manhtndJa gun into ridie position from which Ihey etn lay direct Sre on Jcp ,-. • t

MANHANDLING A GUN STRAmS UHiFORM fABRtCS, TOO!

Pacific fighting demands Herringbone Twil l -

to keep pace with wear and tear. You can

help. In pne week you can make enough yarn

for 2976 uniforms. Come in and take a job

today—you'll earn while you learn.

the \y\>\. school.

vi-ar, iUtetici.s .smmner

HENNIKER ^******************************** 2 Friendly Socony Service ? "On the Si}iiar,-"-i HF.XNIKKR, X. II.

.•\I;TIIOKIZKII TIRK INSPECTION

Tixr. Rvx'.vpi'i.vo " A . V / ' 'i-.m RoHr.ij".

ll'ill: <i .\!iu\ii:ti'r C!u\-!:-u,'-'^*****^^^^t****************.t

MATTHEWS

Funeral Home Hi l l sboro Lower Vi l lage

Under the personal direction of

F R E D H. M A T T H E W S

Sympathetic and elpcient sctiice tDithin ihe means oJ al!

AMBULANCE Phnne Upper Village 4-31

S. A. ROWE .-ircrio.xr.F.k

•kK.\I. K.ST.VTE If You bc.«ire to Buy or Sell

Call — Write or Phone Residence: Henniker, Tel. 63

Concord Offiee: 77 X. Main St. Tel. 2829.

1142 OilhCM,

902 henr* left our mills

ot Nos&na le fifht ior TOU.

WIU reu help flU iheir place*?

Apply:

la Nashua—Mondor Ihrott h Friday from 7 A. M. imlil 5:30 P. M., Sotttrdor 7 le 1:30. Employmeai Department corner Chettnul & Faetery Streets. Ot Jaelnen Oiflee. 137 Canal St.. Mon. throngh Soi 8 A..M. to 12 Noon.

lAppllcaats now employed ia an essenttol indastty must bring statement of crvoIlabiUty). •

Speeial busses, carryiag the sign "Nashna Mfg. Co." ' operate ior an shuts along routes from—

Manchester •lewell • BroekUae-HOUis. • WUtoa-Milierd.

Men and women ol all Divisions wear with pride

thi*"B"pin awarded tor Exeallenca

in War Production

Henniker Pharmacy

Till' Ri-.Yoll Store

Complete Prc.<crii>tion Dcp."»rtrnent SICK ROO.M SUIM-LIES — SrsnRiEs COSMKTICS — ForXTAIN .*>KRVICE .

. \E\VS1' . \PERS. — I'KRIfjDlCAI.S

HKXXIKKR. X. H.

THE GOLDEN RULE IS OUR MOTTC

WOODBURY FUNERAL HOME

Up-to-Date Equipment Our service extends to any New

EnglandState

Where quality'and costs meet your own figure

Teieplione Hilisboro 71 D*y or Night

Stephen Chase Mason and Plastering

Contractor C e r h e n t a n d Brick Work

F o u n d a t i o n s a n d G e n e r a l M a i n t a i n a n c e

Phone 48-4 P. 0. Box 201 BENNINGTON,.N. H.

A. M. WOQD CONTRACTING AND

BUlLDIiNG

Tel. 43 '' Hancock, N.H.

E. D. HUTCHINSON

CARPENTER Custom Work — Millwork

Carpenter shop at Lower T i l lage Tel , 17S

Insurance

^ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * i

W h e n In Need o f

FIRE INSURANCE Liability or

Auto Insurance Call on

W. C Hills Agency Antrim, N. H.

INSURANCE FIRE

AUTOHOBILE LIABILITY

SURETY BONDS

Hugh M. Grahani Phone 59-2L Antrim. N. H.

. B a n g e and Power Burners

Cleaned and Repaired —^

Vaciium Method Cleaningr

WILLIAM J. DUMAIS Tel. 7-2 Hil lsboro, N, H .

BUSTER DAVIS BUILDERS'SUPPLIES

Lumber, RoU C.oofing:. Shingles, Doors, Windows,

Hardware, Etc.

Glazing-^ Shopwork Prices Reasonable

PHONE 195 HILLSBORO

C. H . T E W K S B U R Y

Contracting & Buildirig

Cement Work — Interior

Decorating

T e l . 127 Hilltboro, N. H.

Page 6: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

—• If..,. .~,-l» y. ... t^-f^'*"' -m

Churcli Accommodates but Three People at One Time

Of the many little houses ol Worship scattered abput the United States, probably the smallest i the stone structure located At_Cov, ington, Ky., and known as Monte Cassino. About 6' f6et wide and 8

,leet deeg, it_ can accomrppdate S persons at a time. VVIUMH are several kneeling benches and an altar.

On land adjoinhig his home st Sparta, Wis., Paul Wegner built a small church of stone and steel so that persons of any faith would have an opportunity to worship any time. It seats 12 persons. An 8 by 14 foot church at Wood-bridge, l4. J., was built to ac­commodate 18 perspns.

At Festina, Iowa, a Catholic church seating eight persons is the scene of services Held once year-ly. It was built years iago by a veteran of French wars who voy­aged to the United States and set­tled in lowai.

GLASSIFIED D E P A R T M E N T AUTOS, TRUCKS & ACCES.

WRITE US FOR DETAILS and prices on newparts for Chevrolet passenscr eafsxind trucks. PALL G. JORDAN, E. Nartbfleld, K a » . Tel. 900.

WANTED—ANTIQUE AUTOMOBILES 1895-1915. Cas, Stc;im. Electric. MUSEUM OF ANTIQUE AUTOS, Prlneeten, Mass.

MISCELLANEOUS SHIPPfaD C: O. D. (PARCEL FOST)

Can get you repair p.irts. any make stoves, lurriaCes, 'watcr-Jronts; doors, covers, ash pans. Kard-to-set parts a specialty. Send name, number, manufacturer, if. wood or

• '• r iH( eo.il. Shotguns. es, new and used can-' jRht, sdld. traded.

BrooUlBC. N. H. vas. doRS,' puppies, bought, sdld. traded. Lovla W. infraham, - ---

Quia Pieces —SmaU Blocks — 500—SI.35. Remnants Varlctis slie's^Bundle — SI,SS. Gift with order. Mrs. U. FERGUSON, 317 N. Kent St., St. Paul 3, .Minn,

POULTRY, CHICKS & EQUIP. BANTAMS—D, Cornish, O. E;.B. B. games, SpanRlc O. E., Golden Scnbrights, White Leghorns. SS each. Game Hybrids S2 each. Egss—Show 'm:Uines 20c each,

VICTOKV BANTS 10 West St. - .Milford, Mass.

REAL ESTATE—BUS. PROP. Country Store. Nicely stocked. Rood fix­tures, ndw opcr.-iting. Old, wellHjstab, busi­ness with modern up-to<late home. Aut> m.itlc he;it, bath, lights, fireplace. Attrac­tive price, terms. Trade for good farm. Oscar Warren, Owner, Roxbury, Vermont.

T R A V E L

fctiiiWiiiWiH mmnihmi^r^ViSBS SjSas. For Constipotipn> Sour Stomach I f i i n r hpoti

Dyspepsia • Heodocho -Heart­burn -Biliouinesior Distressing; Gas, use lime-lestod R l-PANS Tabules. Contains 6 doctor-preser'ibad medicines. Soothing. Ooos not grip*. Cuicl<tv relieves and aids elimination. Al Horn- druafliit lOc.-35c.alnd 75c,

tor your Gar den

T*b»ce* Bjr-Ppoduit* A Ch«mle«l C«pp.

lne»P|MrJit*d LoulwllU2. Kentucky

WOMEN'38to52' arc JOU embarrasMd by

JIOTFUSHES? 4^L<Vir vou euScr from hot flitshes,

^^"'rccl weak, norvous, hlshstrunc. a bit blue at n.-nrs—due to thc func­tional, "ir.itldlc-a-c" period peculiar to women—try this K!"f»t mcdleino-^Lydl.'v E. PinJ£Jiax."s Vri^et-iblc Compound to relieve such symptoms. Pinkham's Compound jinj-s NATURE. I f s one of the best knnwn medicines for ttus purpose. FoUow label dlrcetlotu.

Looking al

HOlLYWOOir

SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS

Two-Piecer to Wear All Summer Party Frock for a little Girl

Fresh Fruits, Berries, Sugar—Easy Pie»

Satisfy Appetites

OWL'S HEAD CAMP ' .PcnobRcott Bay, Maine

Boys S^H. L.ind nnd wiiler sports: riding, riflery, Kv.iinming. fishing, etc., Moduratc rates. Write for illustmrcd folder. Kalfih Chester, Box LIS, ICockland, Maine.

dnd DiQ.f)p.. JhmL

LjuB Cbambers' Polaf-StTiBf Means

I ried Sausage Cakes >ith Corn Jellied Cabbage Slaw

Biscuits with Honey or Jam •Strawberry Omelet

- Beverage •Recipe Given

%VNU-2

Kidneys Must Work Well-For You To Feel WeU

S4 hours every dtjr, 7 days rrerr week, Mver itapping, the kidetjrs filter wsst* matter from the blood.

It more pebple were aware ef hdw th* . hidnen BBUSt eoaataatiy remove sur­plus fluid, esocH acids asd ethw'wast* aatur that eaaaot stay m th* blood viibeut iajurr to health, thert would be better uaderstandlnif ef wAy th* whole lyitea Is upset whea kidneys fait to tusetiOB properly.

Bureinc, icaaty or too frequent arias-tlea soBetimes. warns that riomfthing is wrong. You may nulTtr nagging back­ache, headaches, diz>ln'«s, rhcuaatia Bainn, getting up at elghm, swelling. _

Why not try Dwxn't Hillt'! Yea wm ba using a SAedicine rrcomnendfd tht country ovtrJDoan't alimutate the fuae-tloB of tbt kidneys and help thea t« flash out poisonous wasM fron th* fcleod. They eeauia nothing harafuL Get Doan't today. Us* with eeafidiae*. At all drug store*..'

DOANSPlLLS

21—45

Easy Dessert: Yon need go ho further than a bowUul of Inscious, rosy-pink strawberries. Pl in or sug> ared with cream tor a perfect sum­mery dessert.

Desserts are nutritious' but they are served mainly for' morale. Fruits, sparkling with their glori­ous colors, give a fitting close to a heavy .meal. On the other hand, heavier desserts give a rich flavor to an otherwise simple meal.

Desserts take care of the sweet tooth, that craving for soniething ut­terly delicious. No longer do they require only sugar. Substitutes have been developed that give E)ies, cakes and puddings all the goodness of former times but do not dip into the sugar canister with a big scoop.

Desserts can give you part of the important protein riequirement for the day if they're made with cereals. Add fruits to cereal and yoii have a flourishing as well as appetite-appealing dish.

Apricot Torte. ?.i cup melted shortening 1 cup brown sugar 1 cup sifted flour 1 teaspoon soda 14 teaspoon salt 2 cups quick-cooking oats

Sift flour, measure, then sift again with soda and salt. Add sugar and oats. Mix in melted shortening and blend well, Pre.ss half of the mix­ture into a shallow pan. .Make a filling by mixing 2\'> cups 6f cooked, slijghlly sweotoncd apricots with Vt cup of the fruit juice and flavoring with 1 tablespoon lemon juice. Pour this rnixture over the oatmeal mix­ture and top with remaining oatmeal mix. Bake for 35 minutes iri a mod­erate (350-dcgreo) oven. Cool and cut into squares and serve with cream or lemon .sauce.

"Frozen Strawberry Omelet. (Serves G)

1 pint strawberries, hulled and washed

1 tablespoon sugar 3 eggs separated 6 tablespoons powdered sugar Mash strawberries and granulat­

ed sugar. Let stand to draw off 'juice.. Beat egg yolk.'! until thick and lemon col­ored, and egg whites until stiu. Drain juice from berries .iand add berries to egg

yolks. Fold powdered sugar into egg whites and combine the 2 mix­tures. Add about 4 table'spoons of the berry juice. Pile lijghtly in the tray and freeze.

Date-Nut Pudding. (Serves 6 to 8)

2 eggs 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon baking powder \i teaspoon salt H cup sugar 1 cup dates, chopped 1 cup nuts, chopped Vi teaspoon vanilla

Beat eggs until very light. Com­bine flour, baking powder. Salt and sugar. Add tb beaten eggs, dates, nuts and vanilla. Stir until well blended. Spread'evenly on a wcU-greascd papcrlined pan (square).

Bake in a slow (32S-degree) oven 40 to 50 minutes until U browned. Serve warin with top milk or whipped cream.

Two favorite, novel pies come in for their share of honors as desserts. Notice the use of just the single crust to save fats:

. Chocolate Chip Pie. (Makes 1 9-inch pie)

1 baked pie shell , 1 tablespoon nnflavored gelatine H cup cold water iVt eups milk

' 3 egg yoUcs ^ eup sngar ^ teaspoon salt ' ''. '-H teaspoon nutmeg

^ teaspoon .'vaailla 3 egg whites 3 tablespoons sugar Soak.gelatin in cold water. Scald

milk. Add slowly to beaten egg yolks. Add the % cup s'ugat, salt and nutmeg. Cook in a double boil­er oyer hot water, stirring constant­ly until mixttiTe coats a spoon.. Add soaked gelatin and vanilla. Chill until slightly thickened. Beat egg whites until stiff, then add 3 remain­ing tablespoons of sugar. Fold into gelatin mixture. Pour into baked pie shell. The top may be piled high with whipped cream and sprin­kled with semi-sweet; chocolate, grated, or just topped with the choc­olate.

•Note: % cu|) of strong coffee may be substituted for % cup milk, if so desired.

Kobert cnmmlagi

Lynn Says:

Thrifty Tricks: Cream leftover vegetables and serve them piping hot over split, buttered biscuits.

Stretch out the strawberries by adding a bit of rhubarb when you make them into a isauce. The color will be rosy-red, the flavor delicious served over cottage pudding, plain cake or dump­lings.

If you are low on fruits for coffee cake fillings use last win­ter's jams, jellies or marma­lades. For a quick coffee cake batter, butter the pan, line with orange marmalade and pour bat­ter over it.

Cook potatoes with their skins on whenever possible to save val­uable iron. Experiments show that potatoes lose about ID per cent of their iron in the cooking water.

Moderately Easy Dessert: Top simple cupcakes with fruit or ber­ries and serve with plain cream or whipped as a finishing touch to a light meal.

Pecan Pie. (Makes 1 8-inch pie)

',i cup butter or substitute Vi cup sugar 1 cup liglit corn syrup 3 eggs 1 cup shelled pecans 1 teaspoon vanilla

• ' Cream the butter, add the sugar, syrup and beaten eggs. Mix well,

and add pecans, vanilla. Pour into an unbaked, pie shell and bake for 45 minutes in a ^moderate oven.

1^. These cookies ^^ are.dark, spicy

and sweet. The combination of sugar and molasses will help save the.sugar stamp:

Vl cup shortening Vi cup sugar

j 1 egg' I Vi cup molasses

) 4 teaspoon baking soda Vl teaspoon salt j

I '4 teaspoon allspice j I " Vt teaspoon cloves I i Vt teaspoon mace I

Vi teaspoon cimiamon Vl teaspoon ginger 21/4 cups sifted flour

Cream shortening and sugar, then beat in egg. Mix soda with mo­lasses until the latter foams ahd add. Sift salt, spices and 21 cups flour together and add to flrst mix­ture. Force through cookie press or drop by spoonfuls on greased cookie sheet. Bake 10 to 12 minutes in a hot (275 to 400-degree) oven.

"Brown and Whites" are the an­swer for a sugar-eaSy confection,. These are attractive and better-than-good tasting sweets and yet they don't use a speck of your lim­ited sugar supply. Older people are extraordinarily fond of this confec­tion because it isn't too sweet.

Brown and Whites. 24 cooked prunes 6 marshmallows 2 (1-ounce) squares dipping chocrv late Pit prunes, lay open and place

on waxed ;paper. Cut marshmal­lows into stHps, about four to each. Melt chocolate; dip strips of marsh-mallow, one at a time, into choco­late to half cover, then place in center of prime.' , i

n*l*at*d by Wtstera Newspaper Union.

ROBERT CUMMINGS is one man in Hollywood who's not only

happy—he's got documients to prove itl

Wherever it is he keeps such things, Cummings hs(s three pieces of paper, all signed and sealed, Which would be to any one a tea-sonal U guaranty of happiness.

The first is his newly acquired marriage license, the party of the second part be­ing e x - actress Mary Elliott ("ex" because she promised Robert to give up _her career when they were married).

That document als6 is signed by Bob's mo]ther, Mrs. Buth Cum­mings, who at 71 is an ordained minister in the Science of Mind church in Los Angeles. Mrs. Cum­mings performed uie wedding serv> ice at Missibn' Inn, Riverside.

The second document is a four-year term contract with the Hal Wallis productions which guarantees Bob the opportunity of reestablish­ing himself in pictures. The kid's been a\yay from the screen for'two years, serving as an air flight in­structor with; the United States air forces.' //e's Cot Eiierything

•The third bit of paper is his medical eertifleate attesting that he passed the air forces' most rigid examination with points tb spared thus Cummings ofiicially is healthy, he's in love, and he's got a good paying job.

"Those papers mean a lot to me, he said, "but they wouldn't guaran­tee a thing except for my philoso­phy."

It's a little odd to talk to, Bob ab6ut philosophy. His words and thoughts just don't seem to fit his face.

At 37 he looks like a college sopho­more. He hasn't the sign of a night club bag under his eyesi The make­up man doesn't have to camouflage a network of crow's feet. His voice is pitched in boyish enthusiasm., He eveni stammers, ocpasionally, when, words bottleneck and jam in their eagerneiss to overflow. He's the type grandmothers describe as "that nice young man!" •, On the set of "You Came Along," where. Bob is making his screen reappearance fot- Hal Wallis, Bob's mind took a philosophical turn.

"Tardiness, I think, is the cardi­nal sin," he said. "People who got a lot of bad breaks usually have only themselves to blame. It's be­cause they're most always a few beats behind the 'normal rhythm of life, and thoy (;et into trouble be­cause they're always hurrying to get caught up." -

A simple, thing like getting up in

Simple Two-PIecer PERFECT answer for every ^ summer need—a simple two-piecer ,witii a crispk clean-cut air. Use bright checkad or striped fab­rics, trimmed with the boldest of ric rac. .

Pattern No. 1319 Is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14. short or three-quarter sleeves, requires 3'!'s yards ot 33 or 39-inch material;, 2 yards rie rae fpr trlihmins.

Due to a,n unusuaUy targe demand and eurzent war condiUons, sUghtly more Ume is required In filUng orders for a few of the most popular pattem numbers. ,

Dainty Party Frock '

SHE'LL look, as bright as a.nem penny in this dainty pa rtj

frock. Gay. little ruffles and nbv elty buttons on ah. al-6irer flora print make it as pretty a dress as you'll see.

Pattern No. 1390 Is designed for sizes a, 3, 4, 8 and < years. Siza 3 requires ITi, yards of 39 or 39-lneh fabric; 2 yafds ' maehine-made raffling to trim.

Send your order to:

SEWINO CIBCLB PATTEBN DEPT. IUM SizUi Ave. New Yotk, N. T .

Enclose 29 eents In eoins for eaeh pattem desiired.

Pat tem No , . . . . ; . . . . , S i z e , .

Name ,. . . . ; • . . ' •

Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • '

^Vhen food has been oversaited, the. pot may be covered with a damp cloth and the food steamed tor a few minutes.

.'—•—' Ground raw potato can be added

to meat balls and hamburgers to make a (little meat go a long way.-

Old doors which have settled un­til they scrape the floor, can be improved by pulling out the hinge bolts and sotting a small washer between the halves. The door will be raised the thickness of the

! After using a scrubbing brush, : rinse it in cold water and then turn ; the bristles downward. The wa-, ter will run out and the brush, will • dry quickly.. If allowed to dry on ! its back the water will soak into the Wood and thus loosen the bristles. •

—•— If electrical appliance cords

have switches on them, all con­nections and disconnections should

; be made with the switch turned ' off. This saves the metal prongs land outlets from "sparking," ; which eventually wears away the ' metal.

the, morning a half hour earlier than i washer is necessary. Bob believes, would | straighten out most people and change the course of their livcS. It's Worth Trying

"It's this way," Bob explained. "Ybu approach your day unhurried. You have the opportunity of plan­ning your course of action. No need to ru.<;h and fumble. Each task gets the benefit of your com­plete mental and physical energy. Your w;ork improves, no matter what it may be. Your projects begin to.succeed. The result is that peo­ple begin to look at you and say, 'What a lucky guy he is!'

"It's timing, that's all." Bob declares that iacting isn't

nearly as important to him how ! Keep a common pair of pliers " . I V ° " " "i ' ' T. u,„,, .„; in the kitchen and you will flnd

"The mam reason I'm back l y „3„ for them. They lift front of the camera now in 'You ^^^ \^^ ^^ ^ ^^ jj ts off the Came Along is that be govern-! j.^.^^ ^^^ j ^ ,,5 out of fish, un-ment feels itwil aid the war ef-, • ^ ^ f bottles and nu-fort and that's the only kind of ^ other things, pictures I want to appear m for the .-"AUhough Bob's contract with Wai- i Disraeli Had Preference

( lis is for fouryears, he is at liberty i JTQ^ j;jg «(3pg„ ^ r m s ' 1 to act only by permission of the i ^ •• —

army air corps, from which he has been granted leave. When the picture is finished he expects to re­port back for active duty.

It's a far cry from the time when I first saw Bob, then an unknown, working with Deanna Durbin in "Three Srr.jrt Girls" at Universal. At that time I saw him in two small scenes, but the kid had something and I wondered where in the world they'd been keeping him all this time, I told Bob that day that he eventually would be making $4,000 a week. He blushed and laughed it off.

Parenthetically I might add in a typographical aside, "Bob, I told you so!".

• • • It's Too, Too Bad

Bill Goets is doing a slow burn over Orson Welles' antics. If Orson doesn't feel like it, he just doesn't show up for work on "Tomorrow Is Forever." His sponsor got fed up. That's why Herbert MarshaU is do­ing "This Is My Best," Three techni­cians who've been devoted to him walked out on his last shpw. . , . Charles Koemer seeks the impos-

, sible. He's trying to flnd a young Ronald Colman forJ'Power of Dar'/.-ness." Rosalind RusseU's next for RKO will be "Sister Kenny."

^Vhen preparing any tart fruit like cranberries or gooseberries, use a little salt, and.it is surprise ing. how little sugar will sweeten the berries. 'The salt also brings out'the flavor.

If adhesive or gummed tape ber comes too, stiff to use, soften it With two tablespoons of warm wa­ter aind half a teaspoon of glycerin.

A little paint or shellac will tum coffee, baking powder and cracker tins into excellent kitchen contain­ers.

SADDLERS AND PONIES Kasy ridlns. Euud mfinnurcd saddlo tiorM's, ull-Eurposo lurKt) ponies, lurso and suall Shetland punii'a, lot tilack, KUOW white,sorr>'I,cli<"stnnt und fancystxitiid; slilppol Ringly In cratcii by express. ,—-How old aro chUdron you want pony lor? |j,\tl!!ractiun fully Euaramood on toi rty days trial at yuur unn bumo or your money baclc. HOWARD CHANM.CR ClMfttsii, Iowa

i Ready to be Enjoyed/

Benjamin Disraeli was intro­duced one day tb a celebrated inn­keeper.

"We've met before," announced the owner of the hotel. "You were a guest at my inn several years ago."

"Sorry, I don't seem to recall," said the prime minister.

"How could you forget the 'Roy­al Arms' ?' • insisted the man. "Just think back. Remember the attractive barmaid who \yorked there? Let me see now, it's about flve years since you were in the 'Royal Arms.' "

"I have no recbUection of stay­ing there," replied the British

• stetesman. "It!s more likely I would have remembered it, if I had been in her arms."

J^^^dSy^ Kellow's Riee Knspies equal

. the whole Hpe train is oesrly all the protective food ele­ments itOttta. essential to huxaaa' nutritieo.

FOR Q U I C K RELIEF F R O M

TIRED, ACHY MUSCLES • SKtf Joints

SLOANS LINIMENT

Page 7: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

, — . . . . • ^ . . ^ p ^ - •',\v:^*N» V «t v./ '/amnti' • • * •

^J*^ John TBE STOBT TBUS PABt The Ameri.

can troops arrived at Adaab, a seaport ia Italy, with Major Victor Joppolo, tbe AlBcot olBeer ia eharse. Serseast Bortb, an M.P., wae in cbarge ol leearity. The Major tet ont to n la the tnut of the dtiseni and promised to repUce the torn teU stolen by tbe Nads. General Marvin, chief of American forcci ia that tectloB, became earased at tbe carts oa road leadlns Into the city aad ordered the Major to keep them ont of Ute.eity. Bearihjt that the city coald not get wa­ter without' the eartt. Major Joppolo told Captain PBTTU to let them enter the elty. Parris, l^ protect himself, re-' ported the matter to headiniarters. The letter wat held np in the pfllee.

CHAPTEB V i n

"Giuseppe," the Major said, "1 want to see Tina'is father because you said he was the most respected of all the flshermen. I want tp start the fishermen going out again, so that Adano will have something besides pasta and tomatoes and eSS-plant to eat. That's all there is to it."

"Boss, you're a kid Giuseppe." "Giuseppe, do you want me to

get another interpreter?" "Okay, a boss, you're not a kid

Giuseppe." . "I do want to see the old man.

Will you fix that ter me?" "That's what I'm a sorry, boss. "What do you mean?"

• "Tina's old a man Tomasino no want a see ybu, a boss."

"Why not? Did you say some­thing about my wanting to go out with his daughter?"

"Oh ho, a-boss. Old a man Toirta-sino say he never been in a Palazzo di Citta ih a life. He hate a Fascist, a crooks. He don't know you're a different. He won't a come a here."

"That's easy, Giuseppe. We'll go see him." The Major looked at a pad of appointments he had begun to keep on. his desk. "Be ready to

. go at thi this afternoon, Giusep­pe." '•

And so it happened that another precedent was broken in Adano. Never in the membry of anyone in the tdwn had an official gone call­ing on a citizen on business. Cither the citizen had come willingly to the I>alazzo, br else the citizen l}ad been arrested, and had come against his wm.

Between the time of this conver­sation and three o'clock, Giuseppe told several people about this amaz­ing flexibility on the part of the Major. And therefore when it came time for them to go down to the port looking for old Tomasino, quite a large crowd had gathered in front of the Palazzo, and the crowd fol-

. lowed the Major and Giuseppe as they walked,

"Where do these pepple think they're going?" the Major asked Giuseppe.

"Just a bunch a busybody,". Giu­seppe said.

The Major turned around. "Go home, you people," he said in Ital­ian. "Don't you have anything bet­ter to d c a t three in the aftemoon?"

But the people kept right on fol­lowing Giuseppe and the Major.

Giuseppe led the Major, and therefore the crowd, down to the harbor and past the stone pier, past the sulphur loading jetties, past the

•patent slips, past the Molo Martino to the Molb di Ponente, where the

• fishing boats were tied up. The Major sensed that he was

poihg to have a tough time with old Tomasino, so he said to Giuseppe: "Interpreter, unless you keep this crowd well .back, you will Ibse your job."

"What is an interpreter to us," people said, "wheh we have a chance to see something new ih Adano? . . . This has never hap­pened before . .' . What is the un­employment of one man?" And they kept nrioving forward.

Giuseppe shouted: "The Majbr will be very angry if you do not stop riglit here." And then he added softly: "Let us make a deal. If you stop, I will listen to the con­versation, and 1 will teH you what is said."

On this basis the crowd was will-tag -to stop.

By this time. Major Joppolo had come to the boat of old Tomasino. He recognized the boat not only by the fact that there was a morose-looking man sitting on the after-deck, but also by the illuminated inscriptionj with its letters trailing off into leaves and ^ i t s , - just under the eife-piece of the bow: Tina.

The Major jumped up onto the bow.

"All Tight, man of authority," said the morose man, "arrest me."

"I haven't eome to arrest you, Tomasino," the Major Isaid;

Giuseppe came running up.to lisr ten. He stayed on the.mole, so that fae could commute easily between actors and audience. • "Why are you wearing your pis­tol?" the morose man said. "Shoot me, go ahead, shoot me."

'*I always wear my pistol, Tonna-•ino," the Major said. .

"You have cpme to arrest me be­cause I refused to go and see the American Major," the morose man said. -^

"That is not true," the Major said. "Then why have you brought this

. informer, Ribaudo Giuseppe, who asked me to go see the American Major, and to whom 1 refused?"

, "I am the American Major, Tora-•sino."

Tomanino did not bat an eye. '"^niy 1T»V«. you brought this crowd,

if yoti were not planning to arrest me?"

"I didn't bring it, Tomasino, it just came. I don't want the crowd any more than you do. I just want to talk with you about fishing." '

"I do not believe it," the morose man said. "All men of authority are alike; You came to arrest me, or perhaps to shoot me."

" I beg you to believe me," the Major said. ' Giuseppe whistled to himself and ran bacic to the crowd. "It is amaz­ing," hie said impressively. "The Ma­jor said to Tomasino: 'I beg you to believe me.' "

" 'Beg,' " said the people ih the front of the crowd. "Amazing," " T h e r e has never been such a begging," others said. "The Mister Major is willing to be a beggar to this Tomasino."

"What did he say?" shouted peoi pie in the back of the crowd.

"He said: .'I beg you, Tbmasi-

and went to the crowd. " D o you want fish?" he asked

' •v/ . .v:=^?M^: . "The Major will be very angry if ybn do not stpp right here."

no, '" shouted• people in the front of the crowd.

"Amazing," shouted the ones in back.

Giuseppe ran, back out onto the mole.

The Major was saying: "It is this, Tomasino: I want you and the oth­ers to start fishing again."

"Why?" said the morose Toma­sino. "So we. can line the pockets, of the authorities?"

"No, Tomasino, so that you can line the stomachs of the people of Adano,"

"Hah." said Tomasino bitterly, "a benevolent man of authority."

"Tomasino, you don't understand. The Americans are different from the Fascists."

"Hah," said Tomasino."! have heard that before. The Mayor Cra-pa said he was going to be different from the. Mayor Martoglio, and the Mayor Nasta after him said he was going to be' different from the Mayor Crapa. The only difference was that the tribute and the protection money and the taxes got . higher each time. How much protection money do you want, American?"

"You have the wrong idea, Toma­sino."

"Hah," said the morose Toma­sino. "I am an old man, American. I have seen men of authority come and go. I don't believe that you are any different from all the oth-ers.

Here Major Joppolo got angry. "Old fishermani" he said, "you .will have to understand somethhig. The people of Adano are hungry. They must have fish. Do you get that through your thick skull?"

Giuseppe ran back to the crowd. "It is wonderful," he said. "The Mister Major isaid: "The people of Adano are hungry. They must have fish.'"

The people in front repeated this and then shouted at the top of their voices: "Live the Mister Major! Live the Mister Major!"

The people in back shouted: "What did he'say?"

The people in front shouted: "He tfaiiiks we .ought to have fish for our himger."

The whole- crowd shouted then: "Live the Mister Maijor!"

Tomasino bn the boat heard this, and it made him suspidous. "Why have you hired these people to come and jaer at me? No, I will not go fishing." •. •

Major Joppolo shouted to Giusep­pe in English: "Make the people go awayi They are ruining everything."

Giuseppe passed on the Major's request, but the people just laughed at him. "Now?" they said. "You are crazy, interpreter. Speaking two languages has made you crazy."

Giuseppe shouted to the Major: "I'm a can't a do nothing, a boss."

So the Major said to Tomasino: "Wait for me, Tomasino, I will show you that I mean well toward you," And he jumped down on the mole

the crowd. "Yes!" the people shouted. "Then you must go home," the

Major said. "If is not easy to per­suade Tomasino to go fishing. You must choose between this stupid gaping and having fish."

The crowd chose. Watching this unprecedented conversation and geV ting bulletins on it from Giuseppe was immediate, it was how. Eating fish was future and uncertain at best. The crowd chose staying to watch.

When he saw that he could not ar­gue theni into going home, Majoi Joppolo said to Giuseppe: "Where is the nearest telephone?"--

Giuseppe said: " l guess she's in a Port a Captain's office, I show a you."

A thrill of curiosity rSn thrpugh the crowd as the Major and Giu-. seppe vii'ent ott. What had previous? ly been the Italian Port Captain's office was now the office of the Ainerican Naval Lieutenant in charge of harbor facilities at Adano. 'This' was Lieutenant Livingston, who had gone into the Navy's V-T program early in the war, and had entered on his application blank as one of his main qualifications to be an officer and a gentleman: "Have had experience with small, boats." This experience, as a matter of fact, consisted of rowing on the crew at Kent Schopl and at Yale; At Yale,' Crofts Livingston was knovvn as a fellow who would do anything for you if he liked yo'ff, but he was rather choosy in his friends.

Lieutenant Livingston had not yet decided to like Major Joppolo. The Major had not gone to either Kent or Yale.: There was-a rumor around that he had once been some kind of clerk in the New York City govern­ment under Walker and O'Brien. Lieutenant Livingston was inclined to the opinion that it was top bad the Army had sent sueh a meatball to be administrator bf a town like Adano. And besides, when the Ma­jor saw a Navy officer wearing two bars, which anyone ought tp know stood fbr. Lieutenant Senior Grade, Major Joppolo. would address hini as Captain.

"Hello, Captain," the Majbr said when he walked into Lieutenant^ Livingston's office, "can I use your phone?" ,

"Good moming," the Lieutenant said, "what are you doing down here?" The tone of the Lieutenant's Kent-Yale voice indicated that he thought the Army oiight to stay on Army grpund, and let the Na'vy stay oh Navy shore.

"Can I use your phone?" the MST jor said. The Major was a single-minded man.

"Sure, help yourself." The Major called Rowboat Blue

Forward.

While he was waiting, he said to the Lieutenant: "I'm trying to get these fishermen organized,, got tb get rid bf a mob first,"

The Lieutenant did not look par­ticularly plea.sed with this summa­ry of the Major's activities.

"Hello, this the M.P.'s? Purvi.s? Listen, I want you to come down here. I got a mob to break up. Bring your Colt along,, I think if you fire six intb the air, that's all we'll need to send 'em home.' . We're dowh at the port, over by the breakwater on the western side. Okay, hurrj" dowri,"

The Major thanked Lieutenant Livingston for the use of the phone.

Lieutenant Livingston said: "Uh, Major, seems to me this fishing racket is more or less a Navy.deal,-isn't it?" '• .

The Major said: "Yeah. I'll be back to see you, I'm in a hurry now. Thanks for the phone. Captain, See you later,"

As the Major and Giuseppe passed the crowd on .the way back to the "Eina, Giuseppe said to the crowd: "As a friend, I advise you to go home"

People in the crowd, delighted with the mystery of the Major's hur­ried visit to the Port Captain's of­fice, mocked Giuseppe. "Poor Ri­baudo Giuseppe," they said, "speak­ing two languages has weakened his head,"

"All right," Giuseppe said, "I have advised y'ou.as a friend."

At the Tina, Tomasino was sullen again. "I see you gave your hired crowd their instructions," he said. "Go ahead, take me, what have I to losiB?"

Major Joppolo said: "They will all go home soon, Tomasbio. I have given instructions for them to be sent home.. Now, about the fishlnjg. Do you think you could get together crews for five or six boats?"

Tomasino sahi: VWho is to be the protector of these crewis? What criminal?"

"Protector?" "To-whom do the flshermen have

to pay tribute this time?" "Don't mock me, fisherman. What

are you i talking about?" "Hah," said Tomasino, a man

who could be amused with the most gruesomely sad face. "Hah, dbes the nian of authority pretend he doesn't understand the system of protection?"

Major Joppolo spoke harshly: 'What are you talking about, fisher­

man?" (TO BB CONTINUED)

Objective: Tokyo

Total WaF Might MmtSe ITbj-owli Against Japafe

Reconversion of Troop$ and Supplies From Europe Going On

Make These Dainty Hankies for Gifts

By Walter A. Shead WNU Staff Correspondent.

Xliter'i Note: Tbli It the Brtt tt thret arUelei deaUsr with the prtbUm tt aaaaptwtr, IraBtpM'taUtn and ttppUe* that wUI laet at la tht all-ett tStrt aftlBit Japan.

With the crumbling of Hitler's third Reich the victorious Allies have won the first game of a double-header in this tremendous global war. Germany's 80 millions, girded for total war, were brought to unconditional surrender by the combined might of Britain, Russia and the Ui>ited States at a cost to our forces alone of clbse to a million casualties.

• • • • • . « ''—•• ; • — ' •

It cost us three years of strenuous effort before Hitler's" legions were driven back to the soil of Germany and before we were able to deliver the full weight of.combined ground and ,air power over Germany's 225,-000 square miles of fatherland. It cost us almost a.year of the bloodi- est .fighting in history from June 6, 1944,- D-Day, before Germarty_ was crushed to her knees, her cities a mass 'of rubble.

Before us we have the Japanese enipire, proper, with 148,756 square miles of territory, but.-with an army of some four million well-equipped, well-trained troops •. scattered over four and a half million square .miles of China and another 503,000 square-miles of Manchukuo. ..'

What will it cost and how long will it take for the iinconditional sur­render of japan? How much help can we expect, of Britain? Will Rus­sia declare war against her one­time enemy? . . •

./-M 335 MIUS>1

^OKINAWA two \.

* ? 7 ^ 5870

Cost to Be as Great AsEtxropeanWar

•While np one here is. prepared to answer these questions on the nose, there are' many circumstances from which we may draw conclusions. From an economical standpoint, to bring our total might of arms against Japain -will cost approxi­mately as much as against Ger­many. While, production, of many war factories will be cut on some, items; cost of transportation and supply will considerably outweigh the same cost pn the German front. The transport problem alone will be staggeiring.

Contrary to some Opinions ex­pressed in Washington, the army supply is preparing and indeed is already moving supplies and equip-' ment,from the German theater to the Japanese theater of war. •• Plans for "this transport of men and ma­teriel have been completed for more than a year; Every piece of equip­ment, insofar as it is econbmically feasible, win be reconditioned, crat­ed and shipped to the Japanese, thea­ter. All this in addition to the new equipment,. the B-29s and the new A-26s and other equipment to be shipped directly from America.

One school of thought hero be­lieves that Japan will not stand the bombing, the loss of her cities and

defeat the Japanese army befpre the Japs Come to terms. This -will en­tail not only invasion of the Jap is­lands .but of the east and south China coast and.; will require an army of about five million men, and long months of cutting the Chinese nations into pockets for the piece­meal destruction of the Jap army. Hbw lohg this will take, no pne is {prepared to say, It will depend largely upon the Jap abflity to main­tain supply lines to her armies in China-. That this will be. a difificult task can readily be seen;

In the first place there is a dearth of railroad transportation in China. There are 200 up^to-date military highways. Distances are great. and the American navy,, likely, with the aid of a powerful British navy, will have established an airtight block­ade, not only about the Japanese is­lands, but along the China coast up ahd down the Yellow sea, the East and South China'seas. Japanese war plants in Manchukuo will come un­der the same pounding as planis in other sections and,jj,while it is pre­sumed that the Japanese war lords have built up a stock pile of raw ma­terials, it is evident that these can-hot last in a long campaign.

PVERYONE likes, pretty, deli-' ^ c a t . e h a n d k e r c h i e f s — and. the'y're so expensive and hard .to find these days!. Why not get busy with your crochet hook and some fine thread and turn out these at­tractive ones. Shown here are four hand-crocheted edgings and designs—the rose design is to be embroidered in color. They make treasured gifts.

' ' . t t t To obtain complete crocheting instruc­

tions and color chart for flve Gilt Hand- Iterchlefs (Patteni No. 5370) send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and pattem number.

\ SEWINOCIRCLE NEEOLEWORK IISO SizUi Ave. New Yorlii N. Y. ' Enclose 16 c^nts tor Patteni Vn . , , '

Admiral Nimitz, left, and General MacArthur.

her factories and utilities . . . tha t Japan will surrender before her na­tional economy is ruined as was Germany's. One'thing is certain, the new U. S. incendiary bombing tech­nique will be developed to a high de­gree against Japan. 'Where 300 B-29s are dropping 1,500 tons of in­cendiaries today, 800 to 1,000 of these sujJer-planes will be dropping more than 3,000 tons of incendiaries in the near future.' And it only takes 250 tons of incendiary bombs to bum out a square mile of Japanese cities. Those who adhere to this school of thought believe that with this stepped-up bombing from our new bases on Iwo and Okinawa, which will lay waste to Tokyo, Yokohama, Osaka, Nagbya, Nagasaki and other cities on the Japanese mainland, to­gether with the tight blockade being thrown between the mainland and the,stolen Jap empire, will bring Japan to surrender terms within the next few months;* probably by the first of 1946.

On that other hand there are those who believe it will be necessary to

Cutting Japanese Life and Sapply Lines

Recent invasion of Borneo by U. S. forces was done, not only to quench the Jap oil and gas supply from that rich deposit of oil, but to furnish oil and gas for American ships, Amer­ican tanks and planes, to save some of the long haiil across the Pacific in the coming months.

If indeed it is necessary to defeat Jap armies in China to. bring a yelp of surrender from Hirohito.and his war lords, our armies will invade China, a country of starving millions, divided within itself, with . suiTlcient manpower, but with only i a • comparatively few trained and; equipped troops. .. i

Break between General. Stilwell \ and Chiang Kai-shek, which result- '. ed in withdrawal pf General Stil­well, was said to bo over distribu- i tion of American supplies. General. Stilwell wanted these. S'jpplies for the Chinese men •\vhom he W.T.S train- j ing to fight ahd which the Chinese ; leader-seemed reluctant to commit to -showdown battle for fear he might lose the few troops upon which he could defend himself from other hostile elements within China itself.

Invasion of the China coast will not be considered a difficult nianeu- . ver by our amphibious forces. As [ a matter of fact, with the Jap navy | cut down to approximately 75 per j cent of its one-time power, with their | air power dwindling and extended ' over vast distances. General Mac- 1 Arthur and Admiral Nimitz could j pick and chpose their landing spot | anywhere from Canton on the south to Dairen on the south tip of Man­chukuo . . . establish beachheads and move inland, with the Japs prob­ably unable to reinforce coastal gar­risons. I

But transjxsrtation and long sup- ' ply lines would be more difficult to j maintein because of distances than | in the German area of war, because, as we have pointed out . . . thert are few roads and fewer railroads.

Since Pearl Harbor, we have been island hopping, moving nearer and nearer to the Jap home empire. The-crushing defeat Of the Japs in the Philippines and opening of our sea lanes there . . . the capture of Iwo and Okinawa . . . were body blows ait the Jap strategy of hblding our forces away from the homeland.

The FUmish word for auto ilea Is "Snelpaardeleeszen-darspeerwespatroHstutg."

The 1945 govemment expansion pregrom for. Increased production of mih'tary Irveic and bus tires it gtortd to tum out 21,300 addi­tions! tirts a day, or 6,000,000 a year. This expansion plus p'revibus expansions should result In the pro­duction In 1945 of more than twict as many trueltand bus tires ds wtre produced in 1941, and in 1946 about 2,': times the 1941 figure.

A vehicle driven at SO m.p.h. en average reads wean away 41 par cent mere rub­bar than If it ware driven at a steady 30 m.p.h.

'v!m?^0&^W^^^'

EEGoodfieli ^}^0m,mk ^mr —Buy War Savings Bonds—

unnuiA^A

Battle-Weary Troops to Bie Given Rest

wHh

jCicia.

Francesco Valentine, Alfredo Antenlnl

Treasure Hour Orchtiistra

Many veteran divisions in Ger­many and Italy are battle weary. They deserve a long rest. Some of them will get that rest in Europe, some of them here at home. Trans^ port of these men, their equipment, after their rest period, will take months, some say as much as six or seven months. Another period of training for an entirely different brand of warfare and readiness of

their equipment will take additional months. So therfe may be almost a year before we are ready.

In the meantime our air > attack will be stepped up, there is some reason to believe that Russian le­gions will move south from Siberia . . . Britain will have completed her campaign in Burma and so long as the Jap emperor does not give up the Reds wiQ be ready.

iuith 9:30 P.M.

'' * . Spemoradbiy

CONTI • • • •

YANKEE NETWORK in Now England

Page 8: in Real Estate Transfer&reporter.antrimlimrik.org/1945/1945_05_31.pdfA sound film entitled, "We, Too, Receive," depicting the experiences of American troops in the islands of the Pacific,

!^i^.JS^ i;f..'H;«w.v?j-!!'.'i f^^mimummu^v^MjimM. • P * » " ^ H ^ •^fv; T ^

/ •' •« AJrTfim REPORTER, THURSDAY, MAY 81, 1946

Peterboroug'H Hopkins 8C Packard, Inc. HARDWARE — CARMOTE PAINTS

'"SruKntJo Suous— HOUSE AND KITCHEN WARES.—•

LAMBERT MOTORS "The Texaco StaUoB"

DODGE and PLYMOUTH PARTS and SERVICE

Grade 1 Goodrich Tiret and Tubet

14 Main Street, Peterborough Phone .90

F. C. MERCER & CO. CHEVROLET ahd OLDSMOBILE

SERVICE and PARTS Fender iStraightening — P«inting

' Cn't"*! Camber ahd Toe-in Correction - ^ Wheel Balancing

PRESTONE ON HAND , "Peterborough -r— Phone 2 2 7

^ ^ ; ^ ^ * * * * * * t * t * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

PETERBOROUGH TEL. 320"

GENERAL MILLS, INC. Farm Service Division

LARRO FEEDS AND GRAIN " GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

FARM SUPPLIES '

ETERBQ.ROUGH,,_N-.T " — P i S k t ^ '

Keep my wants In'^iind. I want to get some young crows, skunks, quillplgs, woodchucks, long haired kittens, one Canadian gander, one California Valley quail. How Is that ^er-«ants?——-,—•— — —

ice held in the Baptist Church last ^unday moming. The various patri­otic organizations of the town at­tended in a body. The sermon by the pastor of the church, the Rev. Ralph

JiNIMiUtOCAL&. raesT^

H. Tibbals, oii >he subject , '^They Gave," was a profound and stirring

^ ^ ^ * * * * t * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Peterborough Marble 8i Granite Works

Eattbliahed 1849

. CHAJILES. J. .'\VARREN, Prop. MO.S'U.MK.NTS AND MARKERS IN

GR.SNITE AN-D MARBLE SLATE AND BRONZE

3 MAIN ST. — PETERBOROUGH, N. H.

0.a*******************************

Monadnock Lumber Co. . — LUMBER—•

Buildert^ Suppliet — Buildera' ' Hardware - ^ DuPont Painta

.Mill Work r— Intulation DEPOT SQUARE

Peterborough — Phone 4 8 4

Buy War Bond8 at this Theatre

•HILLSBORO

OUR POLICY MONDAY thru SATURDAY

Mat ,l:l5^Eve. 6:30,8:30 SUNDAY

Continuous 3 to II p.m.'

FRIDAY—SATURDAY

ROY R0BER3

•' TfllMER '

fernanifo ' ^ O l l B y DALE EVANS

( BOB NOLAN < ^THE SONS OF

' • THE PIONEERS

J. .J J -«e«i3Hau«J mnu , . , •». '

iM fnbnf s i i i i i r . t ins lll<P 0ICIE$T»

Chapter 12

'Zorro's Black Whip • »

Chapter 1 "Manhunt Of Mystery Island" • SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY

The -Great TECHNICOLOR Heart Drama MICKEY ROONEY

Donald CRISP - Elizabeth TAYLOR - A h n e REVERE

"National Velvet" WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY—-

The Screen's Supreme Adventure in Suspense

Edward G, Robinson - Joan Bennett

The Woman In The Window

On The Farm

Farm Life can be so much more enjoy­able . . and profitable when electricity does your work. Today eveiy chore, every phase of modern farming has fast, efficient, easy-to-operate electrical equipment: Milking, cooling, hoisting machine work, pumping water, poultry raising and many others. And in the farm home: Cooking, lighting, washing, water heating and refrigeration.

TODAY—inquire at your nearest Pub­

lic Serrice office for details on our new and

more liberal Line Extension Plan.

PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

4 ^ r I / - S M p o o r ( . n < j . Ta nq. ^'rw Homp\kilrc tu

where he is resting comfortably with his leg in a cast and enjoying clean sheets. In Decehiber he was traveling in a convoy of four ambulances and one-quaiter ton .vehicle from a collecting stotibn over a road considered impassable because of eriemy mines. They were en route to a forward aid station in a town that was under continuous enemy fire. The trip was accomplished and casualties evacuated. For this feat Norris received the Bronze Star Medal. . ,

Much has happened in town,,state and nation since the last edition of this letter. Foremost in the headlines was the death of our President and the inauguration of our new President Truman. Then of course the con­ference at San Francisco which is, at this writing, undergoing a "brown out" as V-E 6ay is rightfully taking its place on the radio and in the news­papers., .". . The past few weeks, the townspeople have been conducting a scavenger hunt in closets and trunks and depositing outgrown but still for the National Clothing drive to aid the crippled nations of Europe. Mrs, GoodeU has informed me that 1,400 lbs. \vas the jinal total, , . . v The Junior Prom this year was decidedly a success with Zaza Ludwig the draw­ing card. ,. . .,Last week the Antrim members of Voiture Locale 548, La wearable clothing at the house *>f Mrs. Emma Goodell, local headsuartere Societe des 40 Hommes et 8 Chevaux, held a dance at the town, hall. (Glad I could write the above and didn't have to speak it!) The proceeds of this dance were donated to a fund to purchase an iron lung to be givert to the people of Hillsborough County for use when neeessarj'. : . . Here's a little news item that concerns orie of our flighting dogs that might be of interest. "Pephka" was a beautiful German police dog owned by Mr. and Mrs. "Bunk" Hayward and loaned to the army over two years ago. Recently they received" news, that Peefka, as he was called in the seryice,'had been killed in action on the Iltalian front by a diriect hit from an enemy hand grenade. Prior to his death on-this patrol, he discovered a wire and alerted his handler, who, upon examination of the wire,.found three enemy "S" mines, which were then neutralized. Those lahd mines, had they, not been discovered, could have caused grave damage to the Patrol. His handler wrote the Hay wards, and told of the attraction he and "Pe«if" had for each otheir and credited him •with; saving his life.

Enclosed with this letter you will find a card entitling you to a year's active membership in the Antrim Rod & Gun Club. This organization has recently become reactivated with the desire that it will bring enjoyment arid relaxatiori to you boys on ybur return ffom the wars. You wiU nptice that it is made out fof the year 1945, but that date >viirautomatically become extended to cover the year followjng your return. The clubhas been busy stocking the trout streams and brooks to insure plenty of sport with the fishing rod.

(Continued.from page one) A large congregation was present

atthe united Memorial Sunday serv-

STATE OF NEW IIAMPSHIRE. Hlllsix)rough, ss.

Court of Probate To the heirs at law of the estatis

of Maria S. Fowler, late of Antrim, in said County, deceased, testate, and to all others interested there­in:.

Whereas Jatnes M. Cutter, execu­tor of the last will and testament of said deceased, has filed in the Probate Office for isaid County the final account of his administration of said estate:

You are hereby cited to appear at a Court of Probate to be holden at Manchester, in said County, on the 19th day of June next, to show cause, if any you have,, why the same should hot be allowed.

Said executor Ls ordered to serve this-citation by causing the samo to be published once each week fof three successive weeks in the An­trim Reporter, a newspaper printed at Antrim, in said County, the last publication to be at least seven days before said Court.

Given at Nashua, in said County, the 1st day of May,A. D. 1945.

Sy order of the Court, WILFRED J. BOISCLAIR

J.M.C. 22-24 Register.

So long for now, DOROTHY PROCTOR

Ne«d cash for any of tlwst pniposes? CnfCSllCV* Ms*

SPMM * ' * ' " * " ' taSaSht*-,*

haaimat makaaletatt aa liaaaa** ««•><. T«mp<y enly fcrt^aggtf

tonal. CenveniMit aim""""** • * • •*••• * • " ^ **

i&tAOniU FINANCE CO.

the br

93 No. Main Straat Ceacord

Creund Floor ToU 2131

from_the eSJct ih the "book of Reve-lation, "Tbey loved not their lives even unto death." In appropriate and beautiful phraseology, with a number of apt illustrations, Mr. Tib­bals brought to remembrance the ut­ter devotion of those who. paid the great sacrifice, and conducted with a call upon the people of this genera­tion to fulfill the great injunction ot Abraham Lincoln that begins with those words, • "With malice toward none . . ." The musical part of the service was also very fine. With Mr.-Lester Hill singing the Solo part, the choir rendered Kipling's Recessional in a fine manner; and Mr. Stanley E. Spencer and Mrs. Elizabeth Tenney sang a beautiful duet, "Love Divine, All Love Excelling."

Miss Eleanor Paige spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Wes ley McClure at Concord.

Mrs. Wesley McGlure was given a baby shower at the borne of Mrs. Erne.st WcCIure and received many iiice gifts. Games were played and refreshmeuts were fieryed.

Lt. and Mrs. Alan \ i , Swetl an­nounce the birth of a daaghter. Anne Louise. May 25tb, I945> ^t Ft- \'onroe, Va.

HILLSBOBO G U m S m S B I l i Incorporated 1889

HILLSBORO. NEW HAMPSHIRE

Member Savings Banks Association of New Hampshire

ICTORY

B U Y ViriTBD'

ONDS

DEPOSITS made durihg the first three business days bf the month draw intereit from the first day

of the month

H O U R S : 9 to 12 , 1 to 8 : Saturday 8 to 1 2

Safe Deposit BoTes for Rent Plus Tax

.00 a Yeat

a********************************

TURKISH TOWELS—79c SCREEN WIRE BEETLEWARE

TUMBLERS ^1.00 per doz.

Three Way Floor Lamps ^18.95

Derby's Department Store PETERBOROUGH, N. H.

PROCTORS GOLUMN h!gh water has driven them out of their dens and they are himgry.

Have you licensed your dog for 1945? The time is up. May 1st is the limit and May .10th the selectmen issue warrants to kill the dog and sunrunons the owner into court. Play it safe. ,

r********************************

S T A T E . OF N E W HAMPSHIRE Hillsboro, SS.

Court of Probate To the heirs at law of the estate

of Mary J. Wilkinson late of Antrim in said County, deceased, intestate, and to all others interested therein':

Whereas Bradbufy J. Wilkinsori, administrator of the estate of said de­ceased, has filed in the Probate Office for said County,' the final account of his administration o f said e s ta te :

You are hereby cited to appear at a Court of Probate to be holden a t ' Manchester, in said County, on the 19th day of June next , to show c a u s e ' if any you have, why the same should n o t be allowed.

Said administrator i s ordered to serve this citation by causing the same to be published once each week for three successive w e e k s in the An­trim Reporter, a newspaper printed at Antrim in said County, the last publication to be at least seven days before said Court:

Given a t Nashua, in said County, this 18th day of May A. D. 1946.

WILFRED J. BOISCLAIJEl, B. J. W. 21r28* Register

i***»m***************************t

DUPUIS VANS A N D TRAILERS PROVIDE SAFE MOVING

The Big Moving Vans and Trailers of Philip A. Dupuis, one of Manchester's most enterprising Movers in N?w "Hampshire^ iiaye long been a familiar sight on the highways of the many cities as well as the principal state highways.

Rated as one ofthe leading moving and trucking concerns in the State, Dupuis is equipped 1;p handle any type of job, large or small, from apartment tb houses, as well as com­mercial trucking of various kinds.

When you hire Dupuis, you can be assured ybur precious household belongings will arrive at the new home you have selected in first class condition. Dupuis's trained men handle and pack with care, and all goods are insured in transit. No piece of furniture is thrown loosely into the truck, to rattle around and to be damaged while the load is being transferred. .

£ ABOVE ALL—BUY BONDS IN THE LUCKY SEVENTH , •f^^^^^^^.^^^^^^a.^^^.a************'**************^****'**'*^fffff^^f^*

9i

COMPLETE

RADIO SERVICE — SYLVANIA T U B E S —

All Work Guaranteed

ARNOLD CASTNER Now Loeated in

CHILDS' BLDG., MAIN ST. (Next to Me*«enK«r Office)

********************************>

AFTER THE JAPS SURRENDER

We Will Open The Old Rumrill Mill To Serve You For Ydur Building Needs In The Same Manner We Have Been Serv­ing Our Customers In New England For Over 25 Years As Building Contractors And Engineers.

In The Meantime We Advise You -BUY WAR BONDS-

HEW CONSTRUCTION CO. BOSTON, MASS.

M. Murray Weiss, Treas. ^4. df