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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 10
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 10

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10 THE ENQUIRER, CINCINNATI, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1942 Greater Cincinnatians On Far Flung World War II Fronts With CHAPLAIN AS A STUDENT Navy Post Is Assigned To Cincinnati Physician GIRL SCOUTS To Sell War Stamps, WRIGHT PLANT To Have Bus Service Teamsters' Union Gives Order For $50,000 In War Bonds; Purchase At Rally Thursday Fifty thousand dollars in War ing from Jeeter for greater unity Made Up In Corsages, In Retail Stores On Armistice Day Thousands Being Fashioned. No parade will be staged on From Government Square Under New Permit Issued To Street Railway Company. The State Public Utilities Com A. C. Field, son of Captain and Mrs.

A. C. Field, 1244 Delta Avenue, Hyde Park, has been commissioned a Second Lieutenant in on the home front in prosecuting Bonds will be bought by American Federation of Labor teamsters of the war. The Musicians' nion will have i If Armistice Day. Just the same, the mission yesterday authorized the thirty-piece orchestra on hand to entertain the crowd, and leading historic day will not pass without Cincinnati Street Railway Company to operate bus service between Gov- entertainers playing in Cincinnati the army iir forces at Scott Field, 111.

A graduate of Hughes High School, Lieutenant Field attended the University of Cincinnati. Before joining the army he was in the Cincinnati in a ceremony at the "Win the War" rally Thursday night at Music distinction. It will be utilized to have agreed to donate serv help provide planes, tanks, ships "ernment Square and the Wright ices for an entertainment jamboree of variety acts, comedy, and vocal and ammunition for Uncle Sam's and instrumental music. purchasing department of the Kroger Company. The elder Field served with the Thirty-second Division in France in World War I The Quiz Kids of radio network fame are to make a personaP appearance at the rally, indulging in This photograph shows the author fighting men.

James D. Mullally, President of the Cincinnati Retail Merchants' Association, announced yesterday that Girl Scouts would make a one-day drive in the retail stores on of the now famous phrase, "Praise a battle of wits with a team to be Hall. Teamsters Union representatives announced the plans at a meeting of the sponsoring labor committee the Lord and pass the ammunition" named from among faculty mem bers or alumni of the University of Aeronautical Corporation plant in Lockland for the duration of the war. The permit bans carrying passengers on outbound trips whose des--tination is other than the Wright plant. On inbound trips passengers may be pickeu up only at the Wright plant, but may be discharged at any point.

The route, company officials said, will be over Reading Road, son Avenue, Shepherd Lane, and Lockland Road. A date for start of the service Cincinnati. with fellow members of the track team at Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio, in 1931 when the Armistice Day Wednesday, No Corporal Cornelius E. Humpert, on duty with a maintenance company of the Eleventh Armored Division, Camp Polk, has been promoted to Techician Fourth Grade. Mrs.

Humpert lives at 1763 Queen City Avenue. The rally is sponsored by Ameri DR. GEORGE A. De STEFANO, vember 11 to sell corsages made Dr. Gaorge A De Stefano, former Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

Starkey says Lieutenant Forgy's specialties on the track squad were the shot put and javelin throw. He was also a lineman on the football squad. His other campus activities included membership in the Y. M. C.

A. cabinet in charge of boys' work. Though Forgy was active in college affairs, he was looked upon as a quiet, studious chap, Starkey says. The segment of the photograph reproduced shows Lieutenant Forgy at the extreme left of the rear line and Starkey at the extreme right. up of War Savings Stamps.

resident physician at Christ Hospi The plan has the Indorsement of can Federation of Labor, Congress of Industrial Organizations, and Railway Brotherhood unions of Cincinnati. Admission is free of charge, and the public is invited. tal, has been commissioned a Lieu now noted chaplain was an undergraduate at that Institution. The photograph is a college memento of William H. Starkey, a college mate The bonds will JOhn barton be purchased from Gloria Stuart, Hollywood star and "cameo girl" of A.

E. Anderson, Chairman of the tenant, junior grade, in the navy and assigned to the Great Lakes Corporal Melvin E. Root, 3660 Hillside Avenue, who enlisted in the Hamilton County War Savings Speakers! who will deliver brief of Lieutenant Howell M. Forgy, the Naval Training Station. Staff, and his Public Relations the films, who will make a personal! chaplain.

Starkey is research direc war messages at the, rally Lieutenant De Stefano, a native Army Air Forces in July, has been will not be set until a certificate is Committee. "It is quite appropriate that this Dean James M. Lanrtis, national of Canton, Ohio, is a graduate of tor of The Enquirer. Chaplain Forgy made the remark during the transferred from the of Cincinnati Medi received from the state, it was said. One official said it was probable project be made part of 'Women- cal.

College. He served his intern At-War being observed dur that the service would he in opera ship at Christ Hospital. Patterson Field, near Dayton, Ohio, to Plain-field, N. it ing November," Anderson said. The corsages will consist of nine tion by the time gasoline rationing A member of Alpha Kappa Kap and then peeled down to strike an went into effect on November 22, director of the Office of Civilian Defense; Wendell Lund, director of the labor production division, War1 Production Board," and Eugene Casey, special executive assistant to President Roosevelt.

Dean Landis's talk will be broadcast nationally over the -Columbia Broadcasting System direct from pa, Lieutenant De Stefano is also a ten-cent War Savings Stamps, in was learned but added that the line was not r.ppearance at the rail to represent the Treasury Departmentvin the bond transaction. As an added entertainment feature, Phil E. Ziegler, Committee Chairman, announced that Barton, star of "Tobacco Road," has consented to appear at the rally after his evening performance. Barton, appearing in the costume he wears as "Jeeter Lester" in the play, will deliver an appeal as com- Honor Roll graduate of Ohio University, Athens, closed in cellophane. They will sell necessarily an outgrowth of the rationing plan.

where he won scholastic and athletic honors. He was named tackle American formation attacking that New Guinea base, said pilots returning from yesterday's raid. The Japanese spilled out of the clouds ''like peanuts falling out of paper sacks," said Flight Leader for $1 each. The extra dime win barely pay the cost of making them The following men volunteered One crosstown bus line and a bus on All-Onio football team Jn up, Mullally said. i IJr fa i yesterday.

He is a ground mechanic with the Ninth Air Force Service Command. He is a son of Mr. and the rally, the broadcast beginning 1936. yesieraay ior service in tne nation Miss Marlorie Manning, execu line and a streetcar line now carry passengers to the Wright plant, but armed forces: at 10:30 o'clock. The rally is to start at 8 o'clock.

tive Secretary of the Girl Scouts' organization, reported that a group CORP. M. F. ROOT only the crosstown line is restricted to Wright employees, an official NAVAL RESERVE. of adult volunteers was at worn Mrs.

Roy Root, Dayton, Ohio. Edward Fruechtemeyer, 217 West a downtown workshop making 5,000 of the corsages. Seventieth Street; Roy A. Gumm Lieutenant Richard Davis of Cleveland, Ohio, and "then there was the damnedest dogfight I've ever seen." In this scramble three Zeros were shot down and one United States P-40 was lost. TRANSPORT, DESTROYER HIT.

Thirty-three tons ot bombs were showered down by the Fortresses 3428 Hillside Avenue; George The Girl Scouts, in uniform, win County To Receive Pennant F. Corbin, 534 Findlay Street; mingle with the shopping crowds SKILLED WOMEN Needed By WAVES Occupational Classifications Of Recruits Broadened By Navy. The opportunity of enlisting In Robert A. Williamson, 370 Baum in the aisles of the stores, carrying said. It operates from Price Hill through Cheviot.

The Valley Bus Company operates busses from Government Square over Central Avenue, Colerain Avenue, and Spring Grove Avenue. The Lockland car operates from Sixth and Main Streets, out Vine Street to Lockland, where it connects with a shuttle bus. Street: Charles R. Franklin, 512 baskets containing tne corsages At Armistice Day Ceremony and inviting store patrons to buy them. Thomas Wood, Commandant of the Cincinnati Detachment, Marine Corps League, vwas notified yesterday of his appointment as national aide-de-camp on the staff of Judge Alexander F.

Ormsby, Jersey City, N. National Commandant of the Marine Corps League. Wood, who lives at 3893 Beech Street, Mariemont, is an insurance executive, with offices in the Carew Tower. and pilots reported one transport hit at Faisi and one destroyer pos Hickman Street; Orville R. Hall, 232 Congress Avenue; Albert M.

Williams, 6510 Waldorf Place; William C. Zoz, 2536 Scioto Street; James G. Bennett, 2814 Vaughn Street; Miss Manning indicated that vir Preliminary plans for observance tually every troop in Cincinnati and ditional two minutes of silent prayer will be observed. Then there the WAVES has been extended to of Armistice Day were released yes Hamilton County would be repre will be addresses by General Dana terday by William A. Castellini, sibly hit at Buin.

Three near misses on unidentified ships and near misses on another destroyer and another transport also were on the score sheet. Swift P-40's and A-20 attack sented among the patriotic young saleswomen. T. Merrill, regional co-ordinator Chamber of Commerce member Edward E. Smith, 638 Hawthorne Avenue; William E.

Brunner, 1035 Gilsey Avenue; John W. Snedeker, 1840 Clarion Avenue, and Robert of Civilian Defense, Councilman who is active in veterans' Charles P. Taft, and Dr. Claude V. Courter, Superintendent of Schools.

R. Boettcher, 3466 Cardiff Avenue, Louis H. Lenzer, gunner's mate, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman G.

At tne conclusion or the pro Cincinnati. The program will be held at the gram, veterans of World War I planes took off with B-25 Mitchell bombers in a rain squall for the flight to Lae. The B-25's slipped through to the Lae airdrome before dawn to spill 10 tons of bombs James Malcolm Huff, 4403 Clifford will donate their old helmets to Road, Deer Park; Willard G. Allen, east end of the Fountain Square esplanade at 10:30 o'clock in the morning, Wednesday, November 11. the scrap drive.

They already have Lenzer, 2248 Wheeler Street, Clifton Heights, has returned to the Great Lakes started collecting the helmets, as on the airfields and dispersal areas. Its sponsors are the 1942 Veterans Box No. 42, Bethel, Ohio; James E. Calvert, 1904 Pearl Street; Warren G. Jones, 3813 Decoursey Avenue; Peter T.

Kcdier, Kylcs Lane; Wil Pilots and crew members in this sortie included Major Don Hall of Naval Training: ton County, composed of represent- Corpus Christi, Texas; Captain Christian Petri, Cleveland, Ohio; liam R. Wever, 1343 Hermes Avenue, and Howard B. Sipple, 128 East omuun aner a ativcs of the American Legion, nine-day leave Cumminsville Veterans Association, passed at home. of Foreign Wars, and Dis it will be impractical for each man to present his own personally on Armistice Day. Representatives of the veterans' organizations will make the gift.

The 220-mm. howitzer that is now on display on Fountain Square will be donated, as well as numerous other pieces of equipment. Lieutenant Billy Day, Red Lion, women in many occupations previously, not drawn upon for recruits, Captain E. S. Root, Director of Naval Officer Procurement for the Middle West, Chamber of Commerce Building, announced yesterday.

Experienced women henceforth will be enrolled for service as cooks, messengers, pharmacists, photographers, stewards, chauffeurs, bakers, commercial artists, aerograph-ers, aviation metalsmiths, freight clerks, and chaplain's assistants. Applications will also be taken from women skilled as aviation mechanics, electrical engineers, information girls, line supervisors, airport workers, business machine operators, and librarians, Captain Root said. Women with training and experience in dentistry, X-ray, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and clinical laboratory work may enroll in a WAVES hospital corps, recently formed. Fortieth Street, Covington, Lieutenant Raymond WilUins, Homer R. Lane, Coylier Avenue, abled American Veterans.

Cold Spring, Ky. Portsmouth, Sergeant George Benfor, Milton, Pa and Sergeant Plateau Drive Gains CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE. either military road would require an immense military effort. (The Germans claimed the capture of Alagir, 25 miles northwest of Ordzhonikidze, and said they cut the northern approaches to the Ossetic military highway over the mountains. Ordzhonikidze was reported bombed.

Further advances in the mountains north of the railway to Tuapse were reported. Russian attacks south of Stalingard afid landings north of the Volga city were declared repulsed.) The Soviet position on the Nalchik Plains was serious. The Red Army was backed against the foot of the precipitous mountains which blocked their maneu NAVAL RESERVE OFFICER. Richard E. Walker, 3579 Wash Lynn Ford, Zwalle, La.

Before entering the navy Lenzer was employed by the Queen City Steel Treating a ny. is the daughter The idoa of the donation origi Hall, Petri, and Wilkins, flying H. LKNZRR. ington Avenue, Cincinnati. A-20's, ran into a fight of 20 Zeros Draft Evader Yields After Six Months Of Hiding In Forest Little Rock, November 2 (AP) Long-haired and tattered, a thirty-three-year-old man accused as a draft dodger came out of the dense Ouachita Forest of Southwest Arkansas today and surrendered to Federal sgents, after hiding out for more than six months.

Fred Hallford, agent in charge cf the Arkansas office of the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation, said the man was James Louis Sharp of Athens, Ark. (population 61); who fled into the forest April 22 and had hidden there since, never stopping overnight in the same place. According to Hallford, the fugitive told FBI agents that it "seemed like I had spent two years in the woods and with cold weather setting in I couldn't stand it any longer." He was put in jail at Nashvile, and will be transferred to the Federal authorities at Texarkana, for trial. Hallford said Sharp was ordered to report for induction into the army at Nashville April 22, was reported delinquent June 2 and was indicted by a Federal Grand Jury at Fort Smith, August 25. Since his indictment FBI agents had been scearching the forest area for him.

early in the game, but outran them nated with Frederick Galbraith Post, American Legion, and was adopted quickly by other posts. Veterans are to turn in their hel His wife, Barbara of Mr. and Mrs. and then the P-40's covering the Frank Yaeger, Bombers Rout Convov 4127 Chambers Street, mets to their respsctive organiza CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE. attack clashed with the Japanese.

Captain Ken McCullar of Bates-ville, told how his plane unloaded its bombs from above clouds tion, with their names and addresses written on pieces of adhesive tape and affixed to the hel lieved that protracted reverses during the last few weeks in at much-mauled Rabaul, New Brit mets. It is requested also that a the New Guinea ground fighting ain, and said "we could not observe The program will open with a concert by the girls' orchestra of Our Lady of the Angels School. Robert O. Weiblc, executive secretary of the state-wide scrap salvage program, will present the first United States War Production Board salvage pennant to the people of Hamilton County in recogni-iton of their success in collecting scrap iron and other metals. More than 100 pounds of scrap per capita has been accumulated in this county for war use.

Harold W. Nichols, Chairman of the Hamilton County Salvage Committee, will formally accept the award. Later he will present it to the County Commissioners who will display it on the Courthouse flag pole. Paul M. Herbert, Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, will speak on behalf of the state government.

Beginning at 11 o'clock, the tra were aue to tne fact that the Japs had withdrawn their air support Private First Class William Held, son of Mrs. Bertha Held, 3598 Cole-rain Avenue, has been advanced to the grade of Corporal. Held, a former Hughes High School student, is on duty with the First Air Support Command, at present on maneuvers in Middle Tennessee. In civilian life he was employed by the Huenefeld Company. results fully, but my Fortress dropped about two and a half tons among five ships.

We must have verability. The Germans with great tor the Solomons battle, and that BRAVERY their attempt to land a convoy In force of planes, tanks, artillery, hit something, as I saw a very shipping tag be made out for each helmet. 1 Lieutenant Colonel Sidney E. Lambert, padre of Christi Street Hospital, Toronto, and Division President of Amputations of Canada, is to speak at a luncheon at tire Hotel Gibson after the ceremonies. The Chamber of Commerce and the mortars, and infantry were ham dicated they may be trying to launch a new offensive in New high column of smoke." On the same raid at Rabaul Guinea.

Of Cincinnatian Rewarded With Lieutenant H. Gowdy of Cincin MacArthurs communique said nati reported "we dropped three Cadet S. Ray Woll, son of Edward W. Woll, 4210 Langley Ave Purple Heart Drove Truck heavies, one of which certainly Allied heavy bombers Flying Fortresses made the first attack on Armistice Day Committee are sponsoring the luncheon. scored a hit.

We could not see the ship, but after traveling many miles Harold O. Roth is Chairman of the convoy, scoring "many near misses which caused damage." From Fire Danger Zone. Private Claude Owens, 18 years old, who drove a bomb-loaded truck out of the vicinity of a fire started the Armistice Day program. toward our base we still could see the fire." It was during that assault that nue, St. Bernard, has been appointed Battalion Adjutant and Commander of head-quarters company at the the five Zeros were shot down and the convoy sent scurrying into Somewhere in New Guinea, No by Japanese planes in Australia, has been honored with the Order vember 2 (INS) American reconnaissance flights over the Buin- During midafternoon medium Al of the Purple Heart and promoted lied bombers attacked.

They scored Cincinnati Asked To Help In Oklahoma USO Party C. E. Singer, Director of the Douglass United Service Organizations Club, Lawton, looks to Cincinnati for assistance in making Faisi area today revealed one Japanese transport beached, one de to Private First Class, it was CLEVES OFFICER Is One Of 45 Army Men Recom mended For Promotion To Brigadier General. stroyer all awash, and another near hits on both transports, two bombs hitting within 15 feet of the port bow of one and two hitting within 25 feet of the other. CoastGuard Academy, New London, Conn.

A first classman, Cadet Woll ftanbnff yiinlU in enemy destroyer half submerged. Fliers returning from the latest At dusk, the Fortresses returned pre-dnwn assault reported one pos ADET 8. It. WOLL to the action again, striking the sible hit on a destroyer by Captain nia ciass ior tne Jerome Tarter of Kentucky, one ex summer term. A graduate of Roger Bacon High School, he at mering night and day at the defense lines, which still were reported intact.

But the noon communique acknowledged no fresh withdrawal following the retreat listed in the midnight report. Red artillery and mortars were credited with knocking out four tanks, 12 troop trucks, and five guns. WOUNDED FIGHT AGAIN London, November 2 (AP) is the skill of Soviet scientists and that mora than 70 per cent of Russian troops wounded in battle return to active service, completely restored in health, G. A. Miterev, Health Commisar, declared in a broadcast from Moscow today.

Recalling the tremendous loss of life during World War the Commissar attributed much of this success to the greatly increased number of transfusions which were made possible by the blood of Soviet donors. Tetanus and gangrene were "practically forgotten," he said, and not mora than one per cent of Soviet wounded actually lose their lives. (Miterev did not define "wounded," but presumably he meant men who reached dressing stations or hospitals behind the lines.) Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin W. Chidlaw, son of William M. Chid- tremely near miss by a huge bomb convoy off the soutt.

coast of New Britain. They scored a direct hit on one transport and many near hits on both. of an unidentified vessel by lieu tended Xavier University for two learned yesterday. Owens is a son of Iowa Owens, 105 Peete Street. A copy of the War Department citation, received by the soldier's father, stated: "On the morning of July 6, Private Owens, with complete disregard for his own life, rushed to the vicinity of a burning gasoline dump, which had been set afire by Japanese bombers, so that he might drive a bomb-loaded truck to safety.

"Although fully aware of the immediate danger from exploding barrels of gasoline, and also from Japanese bombers that were still tenant Glen Lewis of West Ogden, TWO INJURED Wien Train Hits Anlnniohile At Twighfwee Grade Crossing Both Are Children. A grade crossing accident late yesterday at Twightwee, 16 miles northeast of Cincinnati, resulted in injures to two children, Dolores Wingus, 3 years old, and Lorraine Wingus, 5, passengers in an automobile which was struck by a westbound Baltimore Ohio train. Mrs. Dorothy Wingus, Twightwee, mother of the children, was driving the car. She and a third child, an infant, escaped injury.

The older child sustained a skull fracture, the younger a concussion and cut on the abdomen. a success of "Ohio State Night," to be staged November 18 in honor of the 250 to 300 Ohio soldiers stationed at Fort Sill, Okla." "I thought you would like to be in on it," Singer said in a letter to Mayor James G. Stewart. "You may send telegrams, greeting cards, cigarettes, cigars, razor blades, shaving cream, soap, cookies, and rest assured the men will appreciate it. "We would appreciate it if you The transports and warships also Utah, and one direct hit on a trans- years.

Private James R. Hughett, who nort bv Captain Jay KouseK. ot were raked heavily with machine-gun fire. All Allied planes returned from the attack. Muskogee, Okla.

enlisted in the marine corps in One Allied plane failed to return law, 121 Bassett Street, Cleves, is one of the 45 army officers recommended yesterday by President Roosevelt for promotion to the rank of Brigadier General. Graduated from West Point in 1922, he entered the service immediately and has served an unbroken career with the The Japanese were trying to land from this attack. their troops near Buna, one of the two beachheads they established July, has returned for a furlough at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Hughett, 223 West Liberty Street.

Private Hug-ett is stationed at Key West, Fla. In civilian life he was employed by the Auto Sun Products would pass this announcement on Cincinnatian Is In Thick early in July when they began their to any clubs or organizations that overland drive towards Port Mores you think might be interested." in the vicinity, he drove the truck out ofthe fire zone. It was then discovered that his action had been none, too soon, as the tires were by which was checked in Ioribaiwa Ridge, 32 airline miles from Port Of Bombing Raid Again Another Japanese ship has become a victim of bombs dropped by a Flying manned by a crew which included Lieutenant Moresby on the south slopes of the Owen Stanleys. CHILEAN ACTION burned and a wooden plank which army. In January of this year he was promoted to his present rank in the Air Corps and was stationed at Washington.

According to his father, retired Principal of Sayler Park School, he returned only recently from a series of conferences in England. Private William Wulfeck, son was lying on top of the bombs already was on fire." of Mr. and Mrs. William Wulfeck, 3336 Woodburn Avenue, has reported to Camp Kohler, for Private Owens enlisted in Jan William R. Gowdy, son of Dr.

R. C. Against Axis Agents Hailed In The children were taken to Children's Hospital after being given emergency treatment by a Loveland physician. uary. Gowdy, dean of the College of Commerce and Engineering, University Official and unofficial observers here concurred in United States Navy Secretary Frank Knox's belief that the Allies had won the first round of the Solomons battle and believed that recent shattering raids by MacArthur's bombers on such Jap naval anchorages as the Buin-Faisi area in the Northern Solomons and Rabaul, New Britain basic training.

Private Wulfeck was inducted at the Presidio, Monterey, Calif. The Stalingrad scene was one of of Cincinnati, a dispatch from New TEST TO BE GIVEN Guinea said yesterday. Uh lo Army fronts Two Cincinnati enlisted men diminishing German attacks, slowed by enormous casualties. Snipers were active behind skeleton walls Washington, Where Roosevelt Hopes For Rios Visit. Washington, November 2 (AP) The rapid action by the Chilean Government in recently rounding up and prosecuting Axis agents has brought great satisfaction in Washington, a reliable source said to The dispatch, which described a have been transferred from Fort rn A -i aUinninrr at T3 i Kri 1 1 Tvf rwir Francis E.

Warren, to the the Russians credited one with Island, played an important parti Oklahoma City, Air Depot in retarding the Jap timetable for Britain, quoted Lieutenant Gowdy One hundred and eighty-two for service in a quartermaster com recapture of Guadalcanal. They said extensive damage inflicted on pany. They are Privates Elmer A Greater Cincinnati inductees have been sent to replacement training groups from the Fort Thomas re-rentinn renter. Major Harrv B. night.

President Roosevelt, in re Schwarz, 1671 Jonathan Avenue, R. Parton, Richard C. Bicker, Lawrence A Berkamever, Harry D. David H. Brinkmoeller, John .1.

Caposela William J. Carrigan, Walter R. Cheek. Frank N. Comnss, William Cordis.

James A. Couch, Wilson E. Day, Stanley K. Deremo. Robert C.

Dickinson. Americas J. Dimulo, Ralph Dzlech, William E. Elble, Otto Erpen-heck, Elmer L. Fields, Robert W.

Fielder, Willard J. Fogle, Richard Fowler. Wilbur Jap merchant and warships helped halt the enemy's drive. They be as saying; "We dropped three heavies, one of which certainly scored a hit. We could not see the ship, but after traveling many miles toward our base, we still could see the fire." Lieutenant Gowdy's parents live at 2111 Auburn Avenue.

killing 58 Germans in six days. The Russians pressed their counter-attacks northwest of Stalingrad breaking into German fortified regions on the steppes and dispersing a concentration of enemy t'oops with artillery fire, killing approximately one company. Captured documents and statements by prisoners were evidence offered by Pravda of the utter de- For Radio Mechanic Trainees Tor Signal Corps Reserve. A civil service examination for radio mechanic trainees for the signal corps will be conducted at the Signal Corps Training School, 123 -East Ninth Street, at 7 o'clock tonight, i'. was announced yesterday by D.

C. Whelan, Regional Director the Civil Service. Applicants who qualify will be appointed trainees at $1,020 a year, Perkins, Public Relations Officer, onnnuneert vesterdav. They were lieved the Japanese might be trying to put the Allied New Guinea bases out of action before resuming plying to the Chilean protest over Undersecretary Sumner Welles's October 8 address in Boston, told Rodolfo Michels, the Chilean Ambassador, that the facts concerning subversive activities in Chile, distributed as follows: action in the Solomons Piftv-acconrt' Ordnance Regiment, Catnp and Charles G. Parrott, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Howard C. Parrott, 195 East McMillan Street. Private Schwarz attended Withrow High School. Before entering the army he was employed by the Wiebold Drug Company.

Private Parrott attended West Night High School. He was a clerk for the Union Central Life Insurance Company. A Fox, Rov J. Garthaus, Jefftrson F. Gaatlneau, Victor E.

Glerlr.ger, Frank A. Giordullo, Elmer R. Hawn William M. Hlldebrant John E. Hllgefort, Ellis Hutchinson, William B.

Jones. Clinton C. Kareth, Edward H. Keenan. Gaslon E.

Bntner. N. From Cincinnati, John J. It was reported an Australian referred to by Mr. Welles could not Calia.

Carl Long. George xi. Kinear, Gmrce J. Sheamshang; from Newport, Clarence N. Morgan; from Bellevue, Johr be disputed, an informed person, who declined use of his name, said.

flanking action had paved the way for recapture of Kokoda, although no one had expected it to be so 'Amv nMvlne School. Tuakegee, Ala. Mr. Roosevelt added that he speedy, as, at last reports, the hoped President Juan Antonio Rios From Cincinnati, Daniel M. Ferguson.

Seventv-fifth Railway Operating Bat- fnmn rinihome. La. From Cin Lobe Of Ear Bitten Off In Fight, Officer Reports Rocco Marmora, 2650 Linden Street, 47 years old, yesterday bit off the lobe of the left ear and bruised the eye of his next door neighbor, George Evangelo, 50, 2652 would visit the United States and cinnati. Robert L. Hirschauer, Erwln C.

he would give him more details of Tatr- fmm Norwood. John M. Gallagher. the activities and discuss all funda Bowman Field, Loulevllle, Ky. From Cincinnati, Elmer L.

Diegmuller, Anthony Klmeau, Watt-sr w. Klare, fiuay w. K.ruse, Robert Labbe, Robert C. Lange, Michael J. Liber, Fred J.

Lindeman. Frank E. McAndrew, William T. Mcintosh, Martin W. Miller.

Frank P. Moreno, Robert M. Murray, Robert H. O'Donnell, Arthur L. Fortune, Clifford J.

Radel, William J. Rellly, John T. Rltter, Vernon E. Roth-well, Robert E. Sand, Albert Schaefer, Louis W.

Schwindel, Lawrence D. Bedwick, Ralph L. Shaffer, Roy Simpson, Elmer L. Stanley, Bruno Strehle, Maurice L. Taylor, Howard C.

Trcchter, Harold B. Tucker, Adolph P. Venutl, Robert F. Vlel, Robert V. Webster, Thomas Williams, George J.

Zenni; from Norwood, Carl N. Fischer, Elmer L. Hauclt, Jack F. Swltzer; from Bellevue, Henry J. Benkc, James R.

Desmond, Charles J. E'lers. Earl H. TIN COLLECTION Totals 36,22 Pounds In Norwood, jand upon completion of a three- month training course will be advanced to $1,440. Upon completion of a second three-month course Tthey will be eligible for active duty with the Signal Corps.

Those accepted will be enlisted in 'the Signal Corps Service. mental problems of vital interest to the two countries, the informant Linden Street, Patrolman Walter Gasper, Harvey L. Hodesn, Bernara a. Joerg, Harry Kataer, Roy B. Kaufman, Lewis H.

Kombrinck, Carl C. Moerlein, George R. Seller, Robert L. said. Davis reported.

The assault report edly took place at Linden Avenue whrmvr. from Cheviot. Lawrence Aussies still were three or four airline miles away. COMMANDOS AT LAE. It was reported that Australian Commando units are making forays against Japanese bases, causing widespread damage.

The latest was against the Lae-Salamaua area on Huon Gulf. The Aussies sneaked into a Japanese officers' mess at night and killed several with machine-gun fire, then withdrew without losing a man. I A strong force of Allied metfium Carney, George A. Schwoeppe; from and Baltimore Pike, after an argu iea.L oi tne uerman offensive in the Mozdok region, west of the Nalchik Plains where the new attacks broke out. Pravda said three tank divisions and two infantry divisions were used in the futile drive which was scheduled to take Grozny and its oil by August cross the Caucasus range and capture Baku In the first half of September.

"After reaching Baku, the war will end," the Germans were quoted by Pravda as having told their troops. The men were told also that Stalingrad had fallen. Now Pravda said the prisoners were saying: "No end is in sight. The struggle in the Caucasus is the most difficult ever fought by German soldiers and our losses in the mountains will be ten times thosa on the plains. There Is no war en Norwood, Cyrus N.

Stephens; from j)ai-mouth, Raymond Fryer. ment which began on a streetcar. Evangelo was taken to General Seventh Coast Artillery, ori nancocK, Fund Is Raised By Lodge To Entertain Elk Soldiers Members of Cincinnati Elks Lodge No. 5 have contributed more Fischer, Andrew C. Glaser, David A.

Harris, Joseph N. Haverkamp, Leroy A. Hospital. No charges were filed. N.

J. From Covington, Jonn T. Kenneay. Ninety-fifth Evacuation Hospital, Camp Breckinridge, Ky. From Cincinnati, Eugene H.

Deinlnger, Americus P. Donlsl, Kipp. warren ijipsccirio, i.na.nes a. Phlpps, Frank A. Reusing, William R.

Rippley, Stanley J. Scahill, Richard J. Schwegel, Richard A. Seeger, Paul J. Speier, Earl A.

Vasehe; from Dayton, Mel CINCINNATIANS DELEGATES. Ralph Lorenz, Hershel M. McDonald, Robert A. Reislng, Harding H. Roe, Ralph bombers attacked the Japanese-held vin M.

Allev. Robert J. Blaut, Herbert town of Dilli on the north coast of Enabling Committee To Load Two Cars With Scrap. Norwood residents collected 36,225 pounds of tin in the latest tin salvage collection under the direction of W. R.

Waddell, Norwood waste collection superintendent. Spencer Allen, Chairman of the Hamilton County tin salvage collection, said Norwood's total was "most gratifying." Allen reported that with the help of this collecticn, the Tin Salvage Committee was able to load two carloads of scrap tin between October 28 and 30, despite a strike in the Cincinnati Waste Collection De Crail Joseph R. Daley, Robert E. Eveslage, William J. Fetdman, Robert W.

Harding, Portuguese Timor, an island north Returns To His Old Love; Radio Man Joins Marines Paul Hodgea, radio broadcaster nd eommantator, originator of Train Time" and "Bus Time," has gan back to hi old love the Unit-4 flfat Marines. He enlisted yes-tr1y. Captain Guy B. Beatty an-rmmejtit at the marine recruiting flffir in the Federal Building. HM in the marines in WwM Wr I.

Now 42 years old, fm bn in Cincinnati approxl- Charles R. Hunlng. Donald j. jaci-iure; from Newport, Francis W. Duell, Carl V.

Rose, Carl H. Wocher; from Wyoming, James E. Ray; from Ludlow, Thomas P. Cravaack; from Fort Thomas, Theodore W. Frentzel, Alfred R.

Knarr, Robert F. Knecht, Carl P. Nassano, John M. Pletmann; from Bellevue, Herman J. Miller, Richard G.

Mueller, John E. O'Hara, Norbert G. Pharo, Richard J. Ranft, Henry G. 8either, Clarence J.

Thesing; from Dayton, Harry P. Reekers, Harold J. Steltenkamp, Richard C. Winter; H. Fleissaer, James M.

Hedger, Alfred J. Humphrey; from Fort Thomas, Thomas L. O'Hara, Herbert F. Pechin, Morria C. Rohlnsun; from Southgste, Lester E.

west of Australia. "The destruction was heavy," the communique said. Still other bombers attacked enemy installations in the village of Bobonaro, setting fire to barracks thusiasm in German ranks. Looking at the Caucasus oak forests, Webb, jr. than half of the $1,000 pledged by that group toward the national fund to entertain Elks In military service, Howard Doyle, Past Exalted Ruler and Chairman of the War Committee, said yesterday.

The total goal of all lodges is 5500,000. The local committee, which is collecting scrap material to be made into slippers for convalescent service men in Federal hospitals, announced through John F. Fussinger, Chairman, that 16,000 pairs of slippers already had been manufactured for this purpose by Two of the five delegates named by the Executive Board of the International Union of Aluminum Workers of America to attend the C. I. O.

convention in Boston next Monday are William Black and Charles Kaake of Cincinnati, Ray Pasnick, publicity director for the aluminum workers, announced. The Executive Board met yesterday and Sunday at the Hotel Gibson. Although employees in the 31 large aluminum plants in the country have bought $6,000,000 in War Bonds, Pasnick said they were be- Cavalry. Fort Riley, Kan. From Nor from Newport, Harold W.

Schafer, Law wood, Richard P. Reiters. rence E. Schweitzer. Tho 5nsh Farachnte Infantry Regiment.

Sea Coast, Camp Edison. Seagirth. N. J. From Cincinnati.

Odin Wilnelmy, Jr. and other buildings and strafing enemy personnel. All our planes returned. Fairfield Air Depot, Fairfield. Ohio Camp Blanding, Fla.

Irom Cincinnati, Olney J. Baker. William Bryant, George F. Bursjohinn, Jamc3 R. Connelly.

The 40Sth Englneor Utilities Company From Norwoni, Paul O. DuPritst. partment. many oi us are saying these oaks will be used for our crosses." The account added: "Winter is approaching. The mountains are already covered with snow and the prospect of another winter of war frightens th German Army Air Forces.

Atlantic City, ri. J. From NeDo J. Aloysliu In previous collections, Norwood totals were: July, 13,340 pounds; fPriv tih )-rs, residing at ine Club. T.

rtt.rg c( rjrnt Is being tn Hves. After recruit win i(rned to dif in Cincinnati. Fo-t Pelvolr, Va. From Cincinnati, Carl H. Sullivan.

Somewhere in New Guinea, No The Eighty-third Division, Camp Attpr- vember 2 (AP) Japanese Zero Hohnhorst. William T. Humphrey, William J. Kramer. Harry L.

Vigorilh: from Dayton. Ervin E. Hebel, Jack W. Llckert, Bryan O'Neill, William E. Taj lor.

August, 19,800 pounds, and September, 16,055 pounds. bury From Cincinnati, Jerome D. Ahrens, Robert 7. Baker, John 1, Bamonte, Frank fighters hid In clouds above Lae ing urged to buy more, Inmates of the Ohio Penitentiary..

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1841-2024