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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 2
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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 2

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Louisville, Kentucky
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SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 16, 1943. SECTION 1 THE COURIER-JOURNAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. Sergt. Henry M. Elder, Louisville Flier, Reported Killed In Africa 1 Cited -Recently For Downing 2 Nazi Planes 1 i LrL- SfiRSR9agRRsjSBVgRB2RSBBBaVHRBBVsjB t'gua' 1 fftfwwfaWWWflF ir 5 since January, 1942 He is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. William H. Bowles, Arnoldtown Road. At Camp Campbell. promotions have been granted two enlisted men from Kentucky.

Pfc. George L. Gohagen. of Louisville, has been advanced to corporal, and Corp. Charles W.

Barnes. Newport, has been promoted to technician fourth grade. Having completed his oasie training at Fresno, Pvt. Charles P. Noel.

is stationed at Lincoln Air Base, Lincoln, where he is studying to become an airplane mechanic. In civilian life. Private Noel was a shipping clerk in a local bakery. He is the son of Charles P. NoeL 133 N.

39th. A member of the military police at Fort Barrancas, Pvt. Fred Jecker is the brother of Mrs. Fronza Walker, 2533 Dun ImwitMrnwiWiSfe; Sanders. Bowles.

Elder. Jecker. Tiller. Henard. Murphy.

Bigg. Hartz, 19, is making the news these days instead of distributing it. A former Courier-Journal and Louisville Times carrier, he is back at sea after surviving the sinking of the cruiser Northampton at Guadalcanal. His parents, Mr. and Mrs.

William Hartz, live at 2725 Rodman. One of the first to land in Australia, Staff Sergt. Stewart B. Denton, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Stewart Denton, Shively, is now in India. Sergeant Denton is a member of an Army Air Forces ground crew. A former member of The Courier-Journal staff, Corp. Herman Landau, 217 E. Madison, has left Cavalry Replacement Training Center on the Fort Riley, military reservation to attend enlisted men's school in army administration at the University of Mississippi, Oxford, Miss.

Corporal Landau has been attached to the public relations office at the cavalry center. Reporting at the new Army Air Forces Bombardier School near Childress, Texas, Sergt. James T. Colvin, a crew chief, will assist in training other enlisted men in preparation for the school's first class of bombardier 'cadets. His mother, Mrs.

Nan E. Colvin, lives at 1769 Boiling. A month after sending two Nazi fighters to flaming death in a single air battle over the Bay of Biscay, Staff Sergt. Henry M. Eldei, 35, of Louisville, has been reported by the War Department as Killed in action December 13, on an African battle front.

Sergeant Elder, whose daring was cited in the Air Forces' official newspaper the Liberator, published in England, was a bomber radio operator and waist gunner. He joined the Air Forces last February. A former truck driver here, he lived with his sister, Mrs. Irvin Akorn, 657 Barret. His parents, Mr.

and Mrs T. P. Elder, live at Rhodelia, Ky. The War Department announced yesterday that Pvt. Alva II.

Bunch. Bryan, reported in a casualty list January 11, as killed in action in the Southwest Pacific, now is reported alive. Preparing to "prosecute the war' ather than legal cases, Branch H. Henard, 23, former city court attorney of Hopkins-ville, now is a cadet at the Saa Antonio Aviation Cadet Center. A graduate of the University of Kentucky, he is the son of Mrs.

B. H. Henard, Sr L. Daugherty. E.

Daugherty. four years ago, Clifford Norris is now "somewhere in England," and L. B. Norris, who joined the army a year later, is at Camp Polk, La. Former secretary to the Louisville director of safety, Roy J.

Murphy, seaman first class, is the son of Mrs. Mary Murphy, 1438 S. Brook. He is stationed at Norman, where he is being instructed in hospital work at the United States Naval Hospital. Glad to trade the fog of England lor the sunshine of North Africa, Corp.

Thomas H. Tabler, 24, welcomed his recent transfer. Corp. Tabler has two brothers in the service. Corp.

Leroy Tabler, 26, is at Camp Crowder, and Pvt. James Tabler, 20, is in a medical detachment at Camp Maxey, Texas. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. William C.

Tabler, 1841 Portland Avenue. Fireman Second Class Stuart E. Word of the safe arrival in Africa of their oldest son, Edward Daugherty, 22, has been received by Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Daugherty, 2816 St.

Xavier. They have also received a letter from their youngest son, Seaman First Class Laurence Daugherty, 17, who is "somewhere at sea." Ready for overseas duty. Tech. Sergt. Charles R.

Lee, 26, is a graduate of Scott Field Radio School and Harlingen Gunnery School. Now stationed at an Army Air Base at Salina, Sergeant Lee has been assigned as a radio operator and gunner on a B-24 bomber. An employe of the Ford Motor Company, before entering the service last February, he attended Louisville Male High School for one year and was graduated from Shepherdsville High School. His mother, Mrs. Sallie Lee, and his sister, Mrs.

Frank Parrish, live at 4401 S. 3d. Hopkinsville. His wife is the former Miss Mary Davis, Carthage, Term. Hospitalized somewhere in the South Pacific area.

Seaman First Class Walter Wayne Tombaugh, 19, is nursing two broken bones in his right leg and a severe cut on his left leg injuries sustained while on duty. Before enlisting last April, Seaman Tombaugh was employed by the Louisville Gas Electric Company. A gTduate of Louisville Male High School, he ia the son of Mr. and Mrs. C.

W. Tombaugh, 1037 Cecil. "Arrived safely in Africa Christmas eve. Sleeping in tents and feeling fine," was the telegram received from Tech. Sergt.

Arlis Sanders by his wife, Mrs. Arlis Sanders, Liberty, Ky. A veteran newspaperman on the staff of The Courier-Journal, Lieut. McClure James has been Pharmacist Mate Second Class Charles E. Tiller has resumed his duties in the medical corps in San Diego, Calif.

His sister, Mrs. Harold Snellen, lives at 1224 S. 32d. Declaring that the Army "makes or breaks" a soldier. Pvt.

Norman Bigg is with the infantry at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. He is the grandson of Mrs. Bettie Rush, 1722 Gallagher. A graduate of the Army Administration Officer Candidate School on the University of Florida campus, Gainesville, John P. Compton, Pikesville, has been commissioned a second lieutenant.

Seaman Second Class William F. Bowles, a link trainer instructor, is at the Navy Air Corps station. Corpus Christi, Texas. A former employe of the Stimp-son Scale Company, Seaman Bowles has been in the Navy assigned to the utilities section of the Reception Center at Fort Jackson, S. C.

Lieutenant James, formerly a member of the National Guard of Kentucky, entered the armed forces last July. He received his commission at the Officer Candidate School in Gainesville, five months after induction. One whole family in Danville, literally has turned the key in the lock and gone off to the wars. Latest and last recruit is Jack Norris, 18, who has enlisted in the United States Navy. Not to be outdone, his mother, Mrs.

Olive Norris Chapman, enlisted in the Waacs at Somerset, Ky. Both have reported to Louisville for final examinations. Mrs. Chapman's husband. Scott Chapman, joined the United States Army in December and is now stationed in Maryland.

Two other sons are veteran khaki-wearers. Enlisting about can. Four Kentuckians, three of them from Louisville, are graduates of the Hospital Corps School at the Great Lakes Naval Hospital. Terminating a six-week course of preliminary training are: Joseph Thomas Cassin, 30, son cf Mrs. Elizabeth F.

Cassin, 1236 S. 6th; Lawrence Ray Link. 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.

R. Link. 407 Fountain Court: Joseph Orvill Sapp. 18, son of Mrs. Mat-tie Sapp, 1317 S.

Floyd, and John Buchanan Clay, 22. son of Mrs. Jane A. Waddle. Frankfort.

Ky. All four are rated as hospital apprentices, second class. Trained to "keep 'em rolling," Sergt. Clarence D. Streeter, 1224 E.

Broadway, is a graduate of the tank mechanics class at the Armored Force School, Fort Knox. Britain Speaks; Navy's Stark Allied Gain Kills 152 Japs On New Guinea MayHelpOpen Poll Shows Churchill At Peak of Popularity African Maze $12,000 Reward Offered For Escaped I.R.A. Chief Belfast, Northern Ireland, Jan. 15 (AP) A $12,000 reward was posted tonight for information leading to the recapture of Hugh M'Ateer, 25-year-old chief of staff of the illegal Irish Republican Army, who with three companions escaped at breakfast time from Belfast Prison. Presumably the fugitives had i i v.

it-1 'tr' Allied Headquarters in Australia, Jan. 16 (Saturday) An Allied break-through at Sanananda, New Guinea, in which at least 152 Japanese were killed in one day's fighting Thursday was reported in today's noon communique by Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Sanananda, immediately northwest of Buna on the northeast New Guinea coast, is the only spot in all the Papuan Peninsula still held by a fragment of a Jap Army which once totaled 15,000 Jungle fortifications plus swampy conditions caused by recent rains had slowed up the cleanup drive long series of bombings near Belfast polire stations after an I.R.A. proclamation August 31 declaring the presence of United States troops in Northern Ireland wis an act of aggression and that the I.R.A.

reserved the right to use 93 Pet. of Britons Approve of Him By GEORGE GALLUP. Director, American Institute of Public Opinion. Princeton, N. Jan.

15. So far as public popularity is concerned, the position of the Churchill government in England apparently is more solid today than at almost any other time since it took office. A survey by the British Institute of Public Opinion finds that outside aid. They broke the glass roof of the prison laundry and made their way into the yard where they used a rope ladder to scale the wall during the breakfast assembly. Their flight soon was discov- whatever measures present London, Jan.

15 (P)--Admiral Harold R. Stark will return to London soon to resume command of United States Nevy forces in European waters, and perhaps to assist in straightening out the political tangle in North Africa, it was indicated here today. Rear Admiral Alan J. Kirk, Stark's chief of staff, who has been in command during the lat-ter's absence in the United States, reminded reporters at a press conference that Admiral Stark already is the official representative of the United States with the Fighting French Government here. Kirk added no details, but the fact that he introduced the subject suggested to some correspondents that Admiral Stark might be discussing the North African situation at Washington and that he might have a prominent part in seeking a solution to the political puzzle after his return.

Capt. James A. Logan has arrived to join Stark's staff, though his exact assignment has not been ered and patrols were posted im- themselves" to clear the territory of such forces. mediately on all roads out of During the bombings the British Home Office undersecretary. Osbert Peake.

declared in the House of Commons that the I.R.A. was receiving arms and explosives from "countries overseas." there. Arms, Equipment Captured. A spokesman at General Mac-. Arthur's headquarters did not amplify the official report which said that arms and equipment were captured after the forward ft a -'H, tf fied with the government's con duct of war?" Satis.

Dissat. Undec. July (after Tobruk) 41 42 November 75 17 Today 75 17 Belfast. A watch was set on the Eire border. Given 15-Year Term.

M'Ateer was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment on November, 26 for treason after a trial in which it was alleged he had plotted to set up an Irish republic in Northern Ireland. The offense was punishable by death. The son of a middle class family, he was arrested October 12 in a house near Londonderry, a U. S. naval base, where explosives and I.R.A.

literature were found. The arrest was made after a A Mortgage should never 8 8 I yi 4 I I'M positions were destroyed. Far up the coast at Mubo, which is south and inland from Salamaua, another Allied force concluded a three-day assault in Which "heavy" casualties were inflicted and the Japanese area be a burden announced. Capt. Alvam Mal-strom is here to relieve Capt.

Frederick Kauffman as naval air attache. BUY public confidence in Churchill has reached an all-time high, with 93 per cent of all voters questioned in the survey indicating themselves satisfied with him as Prime Minister. This compares with a low of 78 per cent in the dark days just after the fall of Tobruk last summer, fv War Conduct Favored. Moreover, an overwhelming number of British voters say they are satisfied with the Government's present conduct of the war. The change in their attitude on that score has been marked since last summer.

In the period immediately following Tobruk, only 41 per cent of voters questioned by the British Institute were satisfied with the Government's handling of the war. By November, when General Montgomery's Eighth Army had put General Rommel to PhoU bj Slcnal Section. Besdqaartan Armored Force. LIEUT. JOSE M.

BENAVIDES and you rrtay, by having us refinance your present mortgage, have a mortgage plan that meets your needs 3 inian Son of Ex-President of Peru Eden Is 2d in Popularity. Anthony Eden continues to be singled out by British voters as the preferred successor as Prime Minister in case anything should happen to Churchill. Sir Stafford Cripps stands next in popular preference. "If anything should happen to Mr. Churchill, whom would you like to see succeed him as Prime Minister?" Eden 39 Cripps 24 Bevin 4 Attlee 3 Beaverbrook 2 Morrison 2 Misc.

and Undecided 26 headquarters destroyed. Yesterday's communique listed Jap dead there as totaling at least 116. 'Bombers meanwhile struck far and wide, blasting targets in the Tanimbar Islands, in the Arafura Sea, harbor installations at Rab-aul. New Britain, and supply dumps at Lae, New Guinea. A Liberator on reconnaissance shot down one of two intercepting fighters over Celebes, in the Dutch East Indies, and near Lae another Liberator knocked down at least two out of six.

Has 7-Year Military Career At 22 1941, he flew to Peru for a short visit. War Board Sets Teletype Priorities Washington, Jan. 15 VP) The Board of War Communications established today a system of priorities for teletypewriter communication similar to that for long-distance telephone calls. The order is effective February 1. Priority will be given to messages which require "immediate transmission for war purposes or to safeguard life or property." Fraudulent use of priorities may be punished by removal of teletypewriter facilities.

When he returns to his own flight, this had increased to 75 per cent, and today it remains at Now Studies At Fort Knox armv he exnects to be assigned to an infantry division or to the same high figure. SAVINGS AM LOAN ASSOCIATION Sponsored and Saponin By Ibo U. S. 6otornnoit SIXTH and MARKET STS. Peru's mechanized unit, whicn consists of light tanks.

Despite vast differences Be tween the two countries. Lieutenant Benavides finds many parachuting before he returns to his home. The South American came to the Armored Force as an observer in May, 1942. He was attached to the 81st Armored Regiment of the 5th Armored Division at Camp Cooke, and went with the division on maneuvers in the California desert last August. Did Company Duty.

Lieutenant Benavides did regular company duty with a medium tank company. He enjoyed the maneuvers and feels that he gained much valuable military experience. The handsome, dapper, like Only 5 Pet. Disapprove. The vote on Churchill and on the conduct of the war follows: "In' general do you approve or disapprove of Mr.

Churchill as Prime Minister?" Approve 93 Disapprove 5 Undecided 2 "Are you satisfied or dissatis- similarities between the people Beaver Dam Man Promoted In Alaska Anchorage, Alaska, Jan. 15 W) Maj. Elmo C. Mitchell of Beaver Dam, has been promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel, the Alaska Defense Command announced today. State Receives $44M9 hi Fees For Recordings Frankfort, Jan.

15 The Department of State, aided by recording fees authorized in the last two legislative sessions, turned in to the State's general fund $44,089.38 during the last fiscal year. Reporting this today. State auditor David A. Logan said fees of Peru and the United States. He has made many friends here.

fRECQRDS Of the states he has visited- ne Studying the basis tactics course for officers at Fort Knox is second Lieut. Jose M. Benavides, son of Field Marshal Oscar Benavides, twice president of Peru. Although only 22, the Peruvian army officer has a military background dating back to 1935 when he entered the Military Academy of Peru. Two years later he continued his military course at St.

prefers California. He especially enjoyed Los Angeles, where he visited several times on three- RECORD SHOP COME IN AND HEAR ALL THE CLASSICS AND LATEST HITS! LISTEN TO "VARIETY IN MUSIC" Mon. Thru 9:45 p.m.. WINN Wm Pay fur Old Records 627 S. 4th day leaves during the period of desert maneuvers.

Bear 'Shooting Soldier The South American visitor likes American girls. able youth has hazel eyes, brown hair and a neatly trimmed mustache. He makes a striking figure fn the olive uniform of "If I can't go to parachute Back From Alcan Road I I school, he observed with a twinkle, "I'd like to be assigned as an observer to the WAACS." his country. Unlike United States officers, who wear the insignia FESTIVAL SPICE CAKE An Ideal Seasonable Dessert for the Sunday Maal of rank on the shoulders of their I I received were $59,375.39 and the legislative appropriation was 520,249.04 from the State's general fund, including $1,200 for the land office operated by the department. In addition, the department got $15,000 from its fees for its revolving fund.

The auditor reported the department's accounts were in excellent condition. This Officer Shoots blouse, the Peruvian insignia is Mustachioed Kiss Home for a fifteen-day furlough after working on the Alcan Highway for ten months six of them without sight of a white woman Sergt. Lawrence H. Pohl, 23, is catching up on steaks, the movies and "dating." I sewed low on each sleeve. Is Eager to Return.

Cyr. the famous French military academy which corresponds to the United States Military Academy at West Point. From this school he was commissioned a second lieutenant of infantry in 1939. May Study Parachuting. Since 1941 he has been in the United States, first as an observer with the 29th Infantry at Fort Bennlng, then as a student in the Infantry School at the same post and later with the 17th Infantry.

Fe is to return to his own army about April 1 after completing his course at the Armored Force School. He hopes to study Baffles Court In Divorce Suit Although he likes the United SATURDAY ONLY Fresh Apple Butterscotch Gottee Cake Sergeant Pohl, who was em AT ALL THREE STORES States and has been happy in his work here, the lieutenant is eager to return to his home in Lima, his nation's capital. He Frankfort, Jan. 15 VP) Something Besides Gun Sometimes even Kentucky's DAWN DONUT BAKING CO. ployed in the mail room of WHAS before entering the service in April, 194t, said the only time a soldier gets a steak where he's been is when he "goes out and shoots it." That means, Pohl explained, you have to track and kill a brown bear or a deer.

Bear has been home only once since coming to the United States. On highest court is stumped. Washington, Jan. 15 (JP) A girl called the O.W.I, to find out the name of a lieutenant she had met. All she knew, she said, a twenty-day leave in December, Passing on a divorce case in which 65-year-old Charles Bar 3810 Frankfort Av.

(St. Matthews) TA 6031 Southern Pkwy. At Woodlawn Fit 6034 931 8. 18th At Garland JA 6722 nett claimed his 54 year old bride refused to let him kiss her, Elephants May Be Used was that he told her he was the head of the War Department. "We had a very difficult time with that one," Miss Dorothy Kavanagh, chief of the Bureau of Public Inquiries, said.

"We told her about a Mr. Stimson and a General Marshall, but the girl told us that we were wrong, because the lieutenant told her that To Sunnlv Allies In Burma Enroll Now WHITW0RTH COLLEGE BROOKHAVEN MISSISSIPPI From Cable Dtipatchei. The Allied campaign in the jungles of western Burma FOR WOMEN 2nd Semester. 85th Year. February 1 to June A standard Junior colleee dedicated to the nienest Christian Ideals an Culture.

Preparatory. Collegiate Departments. Modern buildinfs. excellent gymnasium with swimming pool. Exceptional faculty and instructional equipment offer students every advantage.

poked fun at his clothes and objected to his mustache, the court said: "Since she didn't want to be kissed, we are at a loss to understand why she wanted the old gentleman to shave his mustache." The opinion was written by Judge Porter Sims, only bachelor on the Court of Appeals. His colleagues concurred in affirming the divorce granted Barnett in Madison County. 3 Die, 10 Missing In Torpedoing faces such heavy geographic and terrain difficulties that elephants may be used to transport supplies and ammunition, Field Marshal Sir Archibald Wavell said after making his Vs first tour of the front line area since his recent promotion to marshal's rank, a delayed dispatch from western Burma reported yesterday. "You have seen for yourself planes returned from both raids SERGT. LAWRENCE POHL He missed the girls.

MUSIC HOME ECONOMICS PHYSICAL EDUCATION SECRETARIAL SCIENCE SPEECH DRAMATIC ARTS NURSING JOURNALISM SOCIAL STUDIES FOREIGN LANGUAGES SCIENCE MATHEMATICS steaks are a bit on the tough and strong side, he said, but the venison "when you're luckv enough to shoot a deer" is good. Has 2 Brothers In Service. The youth is the son of Mr. and Mrs. August J.

Pohl, 1611 Deer-wood, and has two brothers in the service, Edward J. Pohl, 25, and Cyril Pohl, 30, the latter stationed in Newfoundland. Lawrence, or "Larry," has been based in British Columbia, where, he will tell you, the snow is three feet deep, the thermometer at 40 below, the day only six hours long "and winter hasn't set in yet." However, he said, the weather is bearable "and fairly comfortable," what with the elaborate winter outfit the Army gives its soldiers. The wardrobe includes I. Long Johns" or "grandpa's underwear" Pohl said, and the way the wind blows "makes a fellow glad he's got them on." Other weather-resisting wearables include alpaca-lined parkas, the hooded coats similar to the Eskimo jacket.

Fish Are Plentiful. Hunting is about the only recreation available, said Pohl, and shooting wolves is the favorite form of sport. He chased a wolf for a mile on snowshoes and wounded the animal, but lost him Of Ship In Atlantic a drift, he recounted. The in young soldier, who was graduated tne diffic nty of transport south- A delayed dispatch from the wards how we are forced to United States Army Air Forces rely upon sampans and dugouts in China reported that a flight (canoes) to transport supplies of U. S.

fighter planes strafed and ammunition," Wavell said in Japanese supply and transport discussing with the correspond- installations at Bhamo, northern ents the British push down the Burma, Thursday, setting fire to western coast a warehouse filled with gasoline Wavell returned to his head- drums, quatters in New Delhi, India, Three Japanese planes of a he had the job. She was still unconvinced and a little annoyed when she hung up." Navy to Interview Applicants Here A naval examining board of two Navy lieutenants and a Wave officer will be in Louisville today through Monday to interview applicants for the Waves, Spars and for Naval Reserve commissions at Room 608, Louisville Trust Building. The office will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today and Monday and from 10 a.m.

to 4 p.m. tomorrow. Kentucky Casualty Reported Alive Washington. Jan. 15 VP) -The War Department announced today that Pvt Alva H.

Bunch of Bryan reported in a casualty list January 11 as killed in action in the Southwest Pacific now is reported alive. The announcement said he was only slightly wounded. MANY OPEN LECTURER ON CONTEMPORARY SUBJECTS BY DISTINGUISHED LECTURERS AND SPEAKERS. FREE CONCERTS RECITALS. EDUCATIONAL.

TUUK3 PAYABLE tn two installments, covers tuition, library and reg's-traMon fees (oom. board, laundry and educational tours, including $325 from St. Xavier in 1937, said fisn were plentiful "but you have to catch them, too." Pohl has traveled considerably over the highway that the United States and Canada are building to Alaska and reported that the thoroughfare is in good condition and traversable "as long as our snow plows hold out." He said yesterday. force that raided Calcutta last A communique from there said night were shot down by Allied British bombers attacked four night fighters, Reuter's reported Miami, Jan. 15 (JP) Three men died in the torpedoing of a small British merchant ship in the Atlantic early in December, and a lifeboat containing ten othT ers is missing, survivors reported upon arrival here from South America.

Forty-seven persons, including two women passengers, reached safety after being in boats from three to ten days. Two torpedoes struck the ship, the second exploding just as the vessel went down. The submarine surfaced but remained a distance away from lifeboats. Japanese-occupied villages in the in a dispatch from Calcutta Akyab area daylight Thurs- India's, largest city. twa-wrek visit la Old Mexico.

Th trip wilt be aver tha fsmeas f-Amerlcan Hlfhws- tn hrsntifnl. htMorlr Meslre I'ltT. Stndents will the opportunity ef heroming better mrqoslntrd with ear nflfhhors te the south: rertptiona by htith roernment ftcll sad speciml social tors will he extended ta rou Shorter educational tours tnclnd Natrhe Pllerlmaffe. Araleo Trsll. Relltngrath Vjurdens Gulf Coast.

Historic and romantic New Orleens, the Avery Islanrt lt mines snd the alluring Bsyou Trche and Kvangelina country of l.otitslana Scholarships "re available to honor students and In the fine arts Tor catalogues, bulletins specific Information as to courses and scholarships, write to SINCLAIR DANIEL. President Whit worth College. Brookhaveo. Mississippi day with "Kod results," while The Royal Air Force fighters escorting fighter inflicted fur- that rose to intercept the small ther damage. Japanese bomber formation work was going on during the snowfall and that "we'll push on this winter." It is Sergeant Pohl's first visit home in a year, but he said he would be glad to get back to his work.

Heavy bombers also dropped forced the raiders to jettison bombs, on targets at Akyab Island their bombs outside the target villages Thursday night. All area, it was announced..

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