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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 19
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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 19

Location:
Binghamton, New York
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19
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19 THE BING1TAMT0X TRESS, TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 12, 1913. Laura, 1, before discovering that iFlnrtatfl Two Are Dead CARPENTER The funeral of Giles M. ATTRACTIVE DESIGNf ARTISTIC, Here's Klondike Kate's Story As She Told It to Ernie Pyle EDITOR'S NOTE: This is another of the Ernie Pyle columns from past yean that are being reprinted while Ernie rests. He wrote this one during a trip to Alaska in 1937. Labor Parley Scores Race Discrimination A.

F. Convention Votes After Charges Are Hurled by Negro OBITUARY untict of funeral arrangements be found at the start of the liyli lection under "funeral JOHN ROWE John Rowe, 72, died at 10:30 Monday at hii home In Chenango Forks. He is survived b. a sua, George Rowe of Lock-wood; five daughters, Mrs. Clifford Thnson of Lockwood, Mrs.

Don of Burdetle, Mrs. Ross "Si of Danville, Mrs. Harold welch of Penn Yan and Mrs. Louis Bneart of Watkins Glen and three Xrs, Asa Rowe of Cortland Snuel and George Rowe, both of r.ien. The body was re By ERNIE PYLE Stcambnatin' Down Ihe Yukon The Ladv Known as Lou hasn't put in her appearance yet.

But, this evening, Dawson, I sat on the deck of heard the story of Klondike Boston, Oct. 12 (P) The American Federation of Labor convention adopted today a committee report deploring race dis crimination in unions after an ex- triiaive ueuaie provoked Dy a Negro delegate's charge that some unions gave his race only the right to pay dues. President William Green, participating in the discussion, declared, "If I had my way every organization in the A. F. L.

would admit Negroes to membership on same basis of equality as whites." The convention applauded his statement. Green said, however, he felt the problem could be solved only by understandmg and education "and never through the application of force." Charles J. MacGowan of the Boilermakers, the first to reply to the accusations of A. Philip Randolph, of the Sleeping Car Porters, said he and his union had long been recognized as an advocate of nrntnfilmn x. nnr Vn 1 s.

Our international union, and itc nm 1,.. yean umiriK uie InOtegoFire Binghamton Putss Bureau Oneonta, Oct. 12 Two women, one an elderly Invalid, were burned to death yesterday when the Otego house oc cupied by David J. Bell was completely destroyed by fire. The dead are: MRS.

SARA JANE BELL. 72. In valid mother of Mr. Bell, who was confined to her upstairs bedroom. MRS.

MAEBERT LILA BELL, 38, wife of David Bell and mother of six children, who is believed to have become trapped in her mother-in-law's room when she attempted to get the aged woman out of the burning house. The six Bell children escaped injury although the two older boys, Clifford, 16, and David, 14. singed their hair when they tried to save their mother and grandmother from the upstairs bedroom. The two boys had been trapped in ineir downstairs oeoroom out escaped through a window. Mr.

Bell and the eldest daughter, Dorothy, were at work. The two teen-age boys and another daughter, Barbara, 10. rescued two younger children, William, 2, and C0L6ATE TOOTH POWDER 'E-NDICOTTT WEDNESDAY Ski-chumps! Sleigh Belles! Sunny Songs and a Host oi Easy-on-Uie-lce Honeys! Abbott and Costello 'HIT THE ICE' GINNY SIMMS, Elyse Knox Patric Knowles, J. Long's Orch. aw ENDS THURSDAY A FIVE-DAY HIT! The Dynamic Picture of Our Nurses under Pulls No Punches! C.

COLBERT P. GODDARD V. LAKE 'So Proudly We Hail' with new star. SONNY TUFTS' ENDS TONIGHT A Highly Amusing Comedy-Drama. Lavish and sparkling! GENE DON TIERNEY AMECHE 'Heaven Can Wait' in TECHNICOLOR Chas.

toburn. Laird Cregar Marjorie Main, Eugene Pallettr ENDS TONIGHT M-G-M's Spine- tingling Thriller Franrhot Marsha Gene TONE HUNT KELLY 'The Flying Gangster' 'PILOT NO. 5' Walt Disney Goes South American in His Gay Musical Hit. 'Saludos Amigos' In TECHNICOLOR 5 W1 II coming down the Yukon into this little river steamboat and iaie irom her own Hps, The Lady Known as Lou was fiction. But Klondike Kate is real.

She came to the North in 1900 to perform in the dance halls of the uew Eldorado. She came down through White Horse rapids, dressed as a boy. She is a genuine sourdough. But Klondike Kate Is no crude nugget isn today and never was despite that nickname. She is tall and straight and stately.

Almost regal. Her table steward tells me she has the finest manners, and is the most considerate, of anyone at his table. He says her manner is Jike that of a queen. Even when stie rolling a cigaret. In 1900 her name was Kate Roth- rock.

She was young and beautiful and good. It isn't true that every Klondike dance-hall girl was a prostitute. Kate had her man, all right, and lived with him. But she was a one-man woman. She was in love with him.

Everybody in the Klondike, even UJUri KnUWS 1 today, knows the story of Klondike Kate and man. 'They lived in 41 boom days Kate dancing, her man tending bar, working in stores, finally going into a little business. You would know the name of the man if I told it. He became rich and famous, known throughout the United States. And it was Klondike Kate who staked him.

It was Kate who shelled out her poke for him, because she loved him, to give him his big chance "outside. And he took it, and made good, and then he threw her down. She didn't cry or squeal. She went to work like a man. She stayed in the show business until a knee injury put her out of professional dancing for good.

And then she took in washing. And finally she homesteaded a place back in Oregon, and proved up on it. She traded that for a house in Bend. And that one for another. She built herself a beautiful garden, and a fireplace with rocks all of different kinds.

Somehow she could never learn to hate him. Even in later years, when she went to him appealingly and was turned away, even that didn't teach her how to hate him. She stayed in love, and the years passed to 10, and to 20, and to 30 and still she couldn't hate him. During all that time she never went back to Dawson. The Klondike was far, far behind her.

And then a funny thing happened. She got a letter. It was from a prospector, somewhere uo on one of the Yukon tributaries. He had seen her name in the paper. He said he remembered her from the dance-hall days of 1900, and wanted to correspond with her.

So they corresponded. And finally, the prospector went all the THE BARN We regret for lack of seating capacity, reservations cannot be accepted far Saturday and Sundays. CHINESE, STEAK, CHICKEN AND SEA FOOD DINNERS DINNER MUSIC American and Chinese Restaurant I 39 BROAD AVENUE HOTEL 106 BENRT STREET nflflHO Single, $1 dp nUUitiO Double, $2.00 op Every Room Newly Redecorated Beautyrest Mattresses Showers and Private Baths Ever; Room Hot. Cold Water Special Weekly Rate Free Parking DIAL -3tl zz way from the Yukon frontier down into Oregon to see Kate Rothrock And they were married. It was one of those unbelievably fictional things.

Johnny Mat- son had fallen in love with Kate Rothrock when she was a Dawson dance-hall girl. Samuel H. Hadley Dies: Motion Picture Pioneer Winter Park. Oct. 12 yP) Samuel Hopkins Hadley, 65, pioneer in the motion picture industry, died at his home here yesterday.

Hadley, a native of New York City, at one time was business manager for Film Actor Harry Carey and was associated with the Mutual Motion Picture Corp. He also was recognized as the inventor I of an advertising buzzer for store windows. Survivors include his widow, the former Catherine Mc- Donnel, Boston actress. Body Armor Experiment Being Tried by R. A.

F. London, Oct. 12 Following a trail blazed by the United States Air Forces, the R. A. F.

was reported today to be experimenting with body armor for bomber crews similar to the "flak suits" recently adopted for American airmen. The equipment is designed to give added protection against antiaircraft shrapnel. JEAN ARTHUR JOEL McCREA 'The More the Merrier' Linda Darnell 'CITY WITHOUT MEN' Stage Attraction In Technicolor 'DESPERADOES' Randolph Scott Claire Trevor SOMETHING TO SHOUT ABOUT' Don Ameche Jack Oakie Starts 'More the Merrier' Clinton St. Near Murray Tonight and Wednesday Tha tMnra 4ka Mapriav' IP IliVI 1116 lllwl I IVl Jean Arthur Joel McCrea 'Lure of the Islands' Robert owery Margie Hart ITS BACK! SIAS0U TUNE IN this amazing drama of Ufa behind the scenes on tf big city newspaper TONIGHT WNBF 8 P.M. Prif.nf.if IRON IZ ED YEAST oos their mother and grandmother were in the burning frame dwelling in Flax Island Road, according to state troopers' reports after investigation.

Although no definite cause of the fire was given by state police, neighbors said that the fire apparently started from an overheated chimney In the rear of the house. Maine Posses Go After Own Steak, Home Grown Greenville, Oct. 12 (U.PJ Posses of Greenville residents are going after home-grown steaks The village marksmen are bagging their own game to save red points for the more luscious cuts of meat to grace the Sunday dinner table. Lawrence Rowe nabbed a 300- pound black bear; Albert Spinney shoLJwo coons and then whirled around to fire a fatal volley Into giant hawk. The first federal land grants to assist states in setting up agricul tural colleges were made in 1862.

STTOUJaND Now! It's Terrific l'lus: 'MARCH OV TIME' AIRWAYS TO PEACE' COMING FRIDAY They're on a Honeymoon! OVE fi! now: great hits: Robert Palre Diana Barrymora Leo Carrillo Andy Devina Moah Beery, tr. Anne Gwynna ton Chaney aa tha Mad Killer fnoiiTim Allyn Joslyn Evelyn Kcyea Edmund Lowt Anita Louise COMING THURSDAY VAUDEVILLE FEATURING ROY ROGERS Broadway'a Funniest Comedian Today and Wednesday if PREMIERE Wednesday at 8:30 P. M. tm IMS I TflA Army STARRING MEN OF IHE ARM 0 FORCES Entire Proceeds of Premiere for Benefit of the U. S.

Army Emergency Relief Fund Regular Engagement Starts Thursday 33fiS3 Ends Tonlsht JOHN I.OIIKR RUTH FORD 'Adventure in Iraq1 BUT. EI.TOTT GARRY HAVES ENDS TONIGHT Brian Aherne, Ida Lupino Robert Cummfngg, Merle Oberoa) Raj Milland, Anna Neaaie Charlei Laurhton, Herbert Marshall 'FOREVER JVNDA DAV Walt Dfsney Gayciit Musical Technicolor Feature 'SALCDOS AMIGOS' Ends Tonight Charles Boyer Joan Fontaine Ths Constant Nymph M'PE VELEZ MICHAEL DUNE 'Redhead in Manhattan' HIP ENDS TONIGHT Gene Tierney Don Ameche 'HEAVEN CAN WAIT' In Technicolor Also I.ee Tracy Guy Kibhee POWER OF THE PRESS' EXDS TONIGHT Randolph Scott In 'DESPERADOES' Also the BIMSTEADS 'IT'S A GREAT LIFE' Ends Tonlcht Lucille Ball Red Skelton 'DU BARRY VAS A LADY' John Litel Alan Baxter SCBM RIVE Bsr 1 :ThpSKVS.heJ I UNFOteiTTABlf! i I mm I PATH AJ i Carpenter will be held Thursday 2:00 p. m. at the O. E.

Tuttla Funeral Home, Hallstead, Pa. Rev. Walter Proof will officiate. Burial In Hop-bottom Cemetery. ROWE The funeral of John Howe will be held at the J.

F. Rice Funeral Home. 150 Main Street, Johnson City. Wednesday at p. m.

Rev. William Henpp will officiate. Burial will be in Chenango Valley Cemetery. WALTMAN Tha funeral of Robert Blenn Waltman will be held at 3 p. m.

Wednesday at the Ernest H. Parsons Funeral Home. 71 Main Street. The Rev. Robert L.

Jacoby will officiate. Burial will be In Floral Park Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today Irom 2 to 5 p. m. and from 7 to 10 p.

WE DESIRE TO THANK our friends and neighbors for their floral offer ings, the cars jurnisnea, meir many acts of kindness and the sympathy shown us during our recent oe MADELINE FANNING. THOMAS FANNING. KENNETH FANNING, PAROLEE IS HELD FOR CsRAND JURY ON MURDER GUILT PLEA Mercer, Oct. 12 (INS) Wil liam A. Morell, 20-year-old parolee, todav was ordered held for the Mercer County grand jury, after pleading guilty before a justice of the peace to a charge of first de gree murder In the three aeatns on the Everett Wilson farm.

Janice Graham, Morell'i farm girl companion, was to be released "for the time being, pending further investigation." This indicated authorities are accepting, for the present at least, the couple's story that the girl was bound and gagged during the slayings on the farm near Mercer and was lntimi- dated in accompanying Morell on the flight that ended in their cap ture at Chardon, Ohio. The number of juvenile delin quency cases coming before 83 children's courts in the U. S. In creased 16 per cent from 1940 to 1942. Grass Valley and Nevada mining districts contain more gold quartz veins than any other similar areas in the world.

Statement of the Ownership, Management, Circulation, Required by the Act of Congress of August 24, 1912, of The Binghamton Press, published daily except Sunday, at Bineham-ton. New York. lor Oct. 1, 1943. State of New York, County of Broome, Before me, a notary public 1n and for the State and County aforesaid, personally appeared Albert B.

Encelbert, who having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the General Manager of Binghamton Press Company, Inc. and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management (and if daily paper, the circulation), of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of Aug. 24. 1912. embodied in 411 Postal Laws and Regulation, printed on the reverse of this form, to wit: I.

That the names and addresses of the generpl manager, editor and managing editor, and business manaeer are: General Manager. Albert B. En geibert, 21 Columbia Avenue, Bing namton. N. Y.

Editor and Managing Editor, Fred W. Stein, 35 Chestnut Street, Binehamton. N. Y. Business Manager.

Walter W. Horton, Arlington Hotel, Bingham ton. N. Y. 2.

That the owner Is: (If owned by a corporation, ita name and address must be slated and also immediately thereunder the names and addresses of stockholders own ing or holding one per cent or more of total amount of stock. If not owned by a corporation, the names and addresses of the individual owners must be given. If owned by a firm, company or other unincorporated concern, its name and address, as well as those of each individi'M member must be given) Binghamton Press Company. 19 Chenango Street, Binghamlon, N. Y.

That the stockholders, owning or holding 1 or more of the total amount of stock of Binghamton Press Company, are Gannett Inc. Stockholders owning 1 or more of the total amount of itock of Gannett are: Prank E. Gannett, Frank E. Gannett Newspaper Foundation, Erwin R. Davenport.

Lincoln Alliance Bank and Trust Company and Caroline Werner Gannett, Trustees UA with Frank E. Gannett, all of Rochester, N. Y. Camilla R. Bailey, Utica, New York Florence McKlnney Cahill, Washington, D.

C. Chemung Canal Trust Co. and Frank E. Tripp. Trustees under various agreements, Elmira, New York.

Frank E. Tripp, Elmira, New York. R. H. McKinney, New York, New York.

3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders owning 17r or more of the total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities of the Gannett are: Bank of the Manhattan Company. New York, N. Y. 4.

That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, stockholders, and security holders, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the comnany, but also, in cases where the stock holder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduci ary relation, the name or tne per son or corporation for whom such trustee is acting, is given: also that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securir tiel in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner: and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association. or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds or other securities than as so stated by him. 5. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publi cation sold or distributed through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the 12 months preceding the date shown above, is 47,777 Net Paid (This information is required from daily publications only.) ALBERT B. E.MGELBERT.

General Manager. Sworn to and subscribed (Seal) before me this 12th day of October. 1343. LAWRENCE O. WAITE.

Notary Public. (My commission expires March 30, 1944.) at of to be For in hire, wages, and working conditions because of race, color, creed or national origin." Mr. MacGowan said. "This auxiliary proposition," he said, referring to the separate groups into which Negroes are organized, "may not' be the entire answer but you've got to take conditions as you find them, not as you wish them." Other speakers were G. W.

Bug-niazet, secretary of the Electrical Workers; Roy Horn, president of the Blacksmiths; John P. Frey, president of the A. F. L. Metal Trades Department, and W.

Allen, president of the Telegra phers, Mr. Frey, in a sharp retort, termed Mr. Randolph's statements "most dangerous and the "great est disservice to the colored race since the Negro became a free man." Movie Studio to Choose Best Book of the Year Hollywood, Oct. 12 OT Metro Goldwyn Mayer studio reported today that beginning next spring it will annually choose the book which it considers the best of the year and offer the author $100,000 and the publisher $25,000 for the film rights. Both fiction and non-flctlon will be eligible.

The studio will also pay 20 cents to the author for each copy sold above 50,000 and up to 250,000. The Movies CAMEO "Desperadoes," with Randolph Scott and Claire Trevor, and "Some thing to Shout About," with Don Ameche and Jack Oakie. CAPITOL "Frontier Badmen." with Robert Paige and Ann Gwynne, and "Dangerous Blondes." with AUyn Joslyn and Evelyn Keyes. EVDICOTT LYRIC "So Proudly We Hail," with Claudette Colbert and Paulette Goddard. ENDICOTT 8 AT "Heaven Can Wait." with Don Ameche and Gene Tierney.

ENJOY "Heaven Can Walt," with Don Ameche and Gene Tierney, and "Power of the Press." GRAND "The More the Merrier," with Joel McCrea and Jean Artnur. ana "City WiUiout Men," with Linda Darnell. JARV1S "The More the Merrier," with Joel McCrea and Jean Artnur, ana "City Without Men," with Linda Darnell. Was a Lady," with Red Skelton and Lucille Ball, and "Submarine Base." with John Litel and Alan Baxter. REGl'S "The Desperadoes," with Ran dolph Scott and Glenn Ford, and "It's a Great Life." RIVIERA "Watch on the Rhine, with Paul Lukas and Bette Davis.

STAR "Adventure in Iraq." with John Loder and Ruth lord, ana wagon Tracks West," with Bill Elliott and Gabby Hayes. STRAND "The Sky's the Limit," with Fred Astaire and Joan Leslie. SUBURBAN "The Constant Nymph," with Charles Boyer and Joan Fontaine, and "Redhead From Manhattan," with Michael Duane and Lupe Velez. SYMPHONY "Forever and a Day," with Brian Aherne and Ida Lupino, and "Salutos Amigos." Treasury Balance Washington. Oct 12 UP) The position of the Treasury Oct.

9: Receipts, ependitures. 02; net balance. $18,718,619,881.68. For unerals. SI 50 and up.

Dial 4-MIH7. JOHN'S, Court St. C. R. BECKWITH'S SONS We telegraph flowers everywhere.

1Q8B Chenango St. Dial 3-53311 COS AS FLOWEiTSHOp- Funeral designs our attecialty. S. Washington St. Dial3-S8R3.

DILLENBECK GREENHOUSES-" 740 Riverside Drive Johnson City. V. Dial t-2038 Buy an Extra Bond. MacLEN 'S'fTSj ERS Court St DIAL 3-64B4. marTcowitz Fr.nhT5-f AMTLY DESIGNS OUH SPECIALTY Loun st, Dial 2-7868.

MOURE'S FLOWEnSlIOP Tlorlsts' Telegraph Association Member 100 STATE ST DIAL 4-3391. WAKEMAN'S "FLOWERS Member Telegraph Association 90 Chenango St Dial 2-7417. YOUR FLORIST Weddings, Funerala Our Specialty. 153 Washington St Dial 4-977T GOULD FUNERAL SERVlCETTEffi; ctent. economical.

H. Gould, Licensed Manager, 19 Grand Blvd. Dial 6-5842. ANNOUNCEMENTS Personals BRIDE IS THRILLED with the thrift of our new invitations and announcements. REMLICK.

iai st.t. A-SPECIAL "Fur coats rcmodeied7 ciii.iru, iicanru, giazea- oav au. Tip-Top Tailors. Capitol Bldg, ground floor. Dial 2-4731.

ANNA L. GREGORY. 231 Chenango Returned from New York with th latest in hats: felts, velvets, etc. ANTONE "comb-as-you-blcase" hair." cut, $1. Victoria.

Duchess. EmpresM and Foil "COLD WAVE" perma-nents, $10 and up. Sisson'f. 2-6411. ASSORTMENT OF PHOTO MAILERS at WEST'S.

130 State St. BATHS, colonic irrigation. iectxTa treatments, arch corrections; licensed graduates Dial 2-7538. BEULAH DAY. Electroloelst Post graduate; permanent hair removaL 44 Grand Blvd.

Dial 6-4158. BINGHAMTON LAUNDRY "For Particular People" ui Al, BuyWarBondsJEvery Pay Dav BONESETTER SWEET BINGHAM HOTEL. BINGHAMTON. TUESDAY. OCT.

26. JTO 4 P. M. CAMPBELL'S NURSING HOME. CENT TRALLY LOCATED.

DOCTORS' REFERENCES. DIAL 8-3208. CHAR1S offers you a personalized cor setry service. Superior workmnrshm. material and design.

Edna trunk, distributor. 815 Chenango 2-S61I. CHRISTINE, 32 Henry St. Feather cut permanent or any beauty service in. your home.

Dial 2-3045 or 7-3068. CITY MESSENGER have discontinued business for the duration, will not be responsible for anv bills con traded. L. ERWIN BARROWS. DRESSMAKING and alteration's.

5 San- tord bt first floor. ELASTIC garters on all FAMISB FOUNDATION GARMENTS. Adjustments and repairs. 2-2797. 84 Chenango HAVE your fur coat cleaned by the furrier's saw dust process.

Warner. 8 Court St. Buy War Bonds! I JUST ARRIVED Beautiful skunk and coney coats. RUSSIN RJP 1 LE BARON -On and after this data I will not be responsible for any bills except those contracted for by myself. CHARLES E.

LE BARON, 8 Newton Port Dickinson. N. Y. LILLIAN'S BEAUTY SHOP. 25 Court rreaerio permanents, (6.50.

$10 i This Above All Buy War Bondsl MEN IN SERVICE Mark your cloth ing with an Indelible stamp. JOGGERST. 116 State St. Buy Bonds 'Til Berlin's Beat MUSSO'S BEAUTY SALON 221 Press Bldg. Dial 4-3164.

1 BUY A EXTR A WAR BOND I PLACE YOUR ORDER for live or dressed chickens at Rice Quality Market. 53 Griswold St. 4-9664. RAE BELLE, 22 Blanchard Ave. Expert marcelling, dying.

Permanent $3 up. Machineless. js up. 2-8767. SAVE YOUR CAR.

Get Mobile Up-perlube Tonic Treatment Mahaney'a Socony. Main and Murray. SPENCER Coirsetiere individually de sisnea garments win relieve mat tired feeling Ruth Harding. 8-3475. SPRINGER HOSPITAL Maternity and Convalescent 18 Evelyn Johnson City.

7-5221. STELLA Beauty Shop, 607 Press Bldg. Eugene Croquignoie Permanents, 7. Dial 4-5781. BacktheBoyg With Bonds WILBUR Dept.

StoreT227Chenango. BRASSIERES: GIRDLES with ELAS- TIC i PANTIES wi Ih ELASTIC ZENIDA offers FREDERIC PERMANENTS. Beauty aids 50c. Open 9 to 9 except Wednesdays. 51 Pine.

2-8632. Lost and Found FOUND Large truck tire. Owner Identify and pay for ad. Dial 4-5780. COST Gray Angora kitten, 6 months oiq.

Kewarfl. Dial 4-5330. LOST $15 on steps in hall at 34 Lewis St. Mrs. Duffy, 4-5754.

LOST Erie R. R. pass. Owner Mrs. Charles Yeomans.

Reward. 4-5597. LOST Alligator handbag, sum o( money, prescription papers. Reward. C.

A. Williams. Arlinslon Hotel. EbST Lifetime large Sheaffer pen. iioerai rewara reiurnea to Court St LOST Black change purse containing money, oreynouna Terminal.

Ke-ward. 6-5427; LOST Vicinity Liggett's drug store. green billfold containing money and gas ration books. 4-1707. Reward.

LOST Pocketbook. large sum money for funeral expense, bonds, bankbook, in Kresge's and 10. 2-8563. Reward. LOST Man's black slipper.

Inside was child's brown oxford. 7-3452. LOST Man's white gold ring witli green stone, band broken. 4-3445. LOST Tan corduroy jacket, at tha favmon rnaay.

Finder please call Lorraine Walrath. 7-3382. Reward. Lost Ration Books LOST II and III Food Ration Books, issued to Ann Donahue, zzz rront St. LOST Food ration No.

3. Saturday afternoon, issued to Sophie Konick. 79 Brown Johnson City. i ADVERTISE LOST ARTICLES 'l The law: "Any person who finds I lost property under circumstances which give him knowledge of means inquiring as to the true owners who appropriates such property to his own use or to the use of another person who is not entitled thereto without HAVING FIRST MADE EVERY REASONABLE EFFORT TO FIND THE OWNER and return the property to him Is guilty of larceny. Section 1300" EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Men CONFIDENTIAL REPLY SERVICE You may answer employment ads with Press box numbers by use of our Confidential Service This Is how it works: To your letter attach the names those whom you do not care to reach Send your letter with the list "Confidential Service." Care of the Want Ad Binghamton Press, your guess is right your letter will I destroyed.

BAKERY SALESMAN wanted. Apply Griffiths Bakery. 150 Ackiey Johnson City. BOYS or men for picking up pota toes. Womhacker, 224 tront sst.

CIGAR CLERK Apply Arlington Hotel COST ACCOUNTANTS local industrial organization. This position requires men wim general experience and knowledge of machine shop practice and who are familiar with job order costs. Persons now engaged on war work or essential activities cannot oe considered. WRITE X-8238, PRESS. i ived to the J.

F. Rice Funeral Home, 150 Main street- Johnson city. JAMES R. MURPHY James R. Murphy of 9 Rollins rtrcet died at 3:15 a.

m. today nt his home alter a iunS wwh. is survived by his wife, Florence; daughter, Florence LaFave Mur-hv two cousins, Mrs. William unr'ris and Miss Mayme Bogan, of Stoutsville, Ohio. Mr.

Mur-was member of the Holy Name Society of St. John's Church. He was a veteran of 35 years' experience as a stereotyper at the Binghamton Sun. Funeral arrangements will be made later. MISS AUGUSTA S.

SMYTH Miss Augusta S. Smyth, 97, died this morning at her home, 74 Conklin Avenue. She is survived orpat niece, Miss Gwen New- ion of England, and two great Li, nf New York City. Miss cmtii was a member of Trinity rnKcorjal Church. The body was removed to the Ernest H.

Parsons Funeral Home, 71 Main Street, hre friends may call Wednesday from 4 to 8 p. m. MISS CLARA A. SOPER Miss Clara A. Soper, 76, died this morning at her home, 291 Robinson Street.

She is survived hy two sisters, Miss Nettie Soper and Mrs. Edith M. Phelps; a brother, L. Dean Soper, all of this city; also several nieces and nephews. The body was removed to the Ernest H.

Parsons Funeral Home, 71 Main Street. Funeral arrangements will be made later. MICHAEL PENCZAK Michael Penczak, 33, of 33 Lydia Street, died suddenly Monday night in the Binghamton City Hospital. He is survived by his father, Nich olas Penczak, and two sisters, Mrs. Arthur Hazen and Miss Katnerine Penczak, all of Binghamton.

The body was removed to the Chopyak Funeral Home, 326 Prospect Street. Funeral arrangements will be made later. COE H. STEARNS Coe H. Stearns, 87, died Sunday morning at his home in Kingsley, He is survived by five daughters, Mrs.

H. Whitman of Detroit, Mrs. R. T. Whitman of Scranton, Mrs.

H. T. Benning, Mrs. A. J.

Masters and Miss Lena Stearns, all of Kingsley; six grand children and three great grand children; a brother, George A Stearns of Camp Hill, and a sis ter, Miss Gertrude Stearns of Kingsley. The funeral will be held at the home in Kingsley Wednes day afternoon. Burial will be in Harford Cemetery. GILES M. CARPENTER Giles M.

Carpenter, 88, of Hall-stead, died at 4:30 p. m. Monday aO the Binghamton City Hospital. He is survived by a brother, Hoy Carpenter of Hopbottom, two nieces, Mrs. W.

E. Benedict of Niagara Falls and Mrs. B. F. Stine of Binghamton; two nephews, E.

R. Carpenter of Portland, and J. T. Morris of Tacoma, Wash. The body was removed to the O.

E. Tuttle Funeral Home, Hallstead, Pa. Anthony Chess Service for Anthony Chess was "eld at the Cnlpman Fnnoral Home, 300 East Main Street, En- cou, bunday at 3 p. m. The Rev.

George Capetanios officiated. Burial was in Riverhurst Cemetery George C. Hayes The funeral of George C. Hayes as held at 2 p. m.

Monday at the mntice Funeral Home. 62 Carroll weet. Rev. T. Valentine Parker officiated.

The pallbearers were tharles Ahearn, Gerald Murphy, wwge Gotts, Fred McDonald, "alter Hennessey and Earl Camp, tery Was in sPring Forest Ceme- Mrs. Ida Schutt funeral of Mrs. Ida Schutt th? ri? at 1:30 P- m- Monday at Rice Funeral Home, 150 olre. Johnson City. The ll lbeJrers were George Schutt, ocnutt, Charles Smith, uuane Webster and Robert Ward.

jjMwl was in Floral Park Ceme- Susan Cannon Truitt Mr. private funeral service for kiu Cannon Truitt was ma TklT 1 i a. Ch fl 'he Jiwt Presbyterian levHnTi Kev- Murray Ship-V "land officiated. Burial was ploral Park Cemetery, Joseph Rigan, Sr. was of JosePh R'gan.

Pechn at 1 p' m' Monday at the SuSS Home. 210 Clinton 1:30 P- m- the valc Lutheran Church. The Pallbelf W' officiated. The GazSit Martin z'och, John drew i- pohlod and An-the Burial was in unak Lutheran Cemetery. "iy officiated at the grave.

War GoTdTpiling up As Strike Continues tonsnl; 0cU 12 "Thousands Pile im uar g00ds continued to an shPPing terminals today strike truck drivers' id l-ZTeaA tover tne Southeast Mor. the Mississippi River. lDer! ban 4-400 lr'vers and fcnShi. ve Idle in st- Louis. mptus, New Orleans and Nash- tittlep4 were reported at Mk- Jacksonville, Knoxville, Montgom- cies Jackson, Miss.

affected nge lhe strike-; fO) ft rT I a. a "in iiriTTr- -t m-r i MASONIC TEMPLE Main and Murray Street, Binghamton, N. Y. WEDNESDAY NIGHT 8:30 o'Clock PUBLIC INVITED LOOK, GEORGE, I CAN (BUT, GRACIE,) SI LLX, D0NY kJUGOLE 4 THINGS ATONCES THATS ONLY 0U KNOW ONE BAR 0F SWAN IS Bright! swan's swell) ff1 mcucc I HEAR 6E0RGIE AND ME 7 FOR BABy, DISHE5, I QH mf j0CAL qq I DUDS, AND yOU! STATION. WUVE mA V.

NOTHING TO LOSE I BUT SANITY! IS Vr Vi-H'r' IDDII CANTOR jJJ? ymm swan y-1 I 4 stem sows one HORSE SHOW RODEO RAGES Saturday, Oct. 16 Sunday, Oct. 17 ONEONTA AIRPORT Oneonta, New York Write Joyce's Riding Academy for Entry Blank I.

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