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News-Journal from Mansfield, Ohio • 10

News-Journal from Mansfield, Ohio • 10

Publication:
News-Journali
Location:
Mansfield, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE MANSFIELD NEWS-JOURNAL1 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1938 PAGE EIGHT FORCED TO CLOSE Is It Romance, Miss Baker? Auto Door Strike Leaves 8,600 70 BOY SCOUTS SIVEN AWARDS Sattler, Joseph Hewston, Clarence Silcott, Verne Myrland, William Dietrichson, Edward Arlin. Thomas Letizia, Fred Jones, Ralph Stanton, Robert Harbaugh, Edwin Davis, Larry Bergstrom, Dean Sams, Richard Fnddell, Eugene Batson, Packard Workers Idle. DETROIT (rP) The Packard RAIN AND COLDER ON WAY Another November "heat wave" was in the making today, but the weatherman said it would be short-lived, probably ending with lain and colder weather by Saturday night. The temperature mov-ed up to 71 degrees at noon, 14 degrees above yesterday's high. Continued mild temperatures were predicted for tonight, with cloudy skies and rain due Saturday afternoon or night.

Motor Car company plant was closed and approximately 8,600 Richard Bittinger, William Zim Advancements, Merit Badges NEW WOODLAND WATER PROJECT NEARJLYREADY 150,000 Gallon Water Tank Gets Coat of Paint, New Pumps Being Installed. The $75,000 Woodland improve-merit in the Mansfield water distribution system was nearing com employes sent home today because of a shortage of doors, usually supplied by the Budd Wheel company, where a United Automobile Workers strike is in progress. The Budd plant remained in operation today when 400 of the 1,100 employes reported for work. merman, Morton Frankel, William Maxwell, Daniel McMichael, Robert Curry, Robert Meese. James Edwards, Floyd Myers, Robert Pore, Richard Perez.

David Gibson and James Curry. The court was the first of the winter season, and was presided over by J. Leo Hartmann, chairman, M. P. Wolcott, W.

J. Biss-man, W. J. Harrison, L. A.

Ott and C. I. Kimmel. INONU TURKEY'S NEW PRESIDENT Former Premier, Long Friend of Ataturk, Elected by National Assembly. ANKARA, Turkey Gen.

Ismet inonu was elected by the national assembly today to succeed his late friend and long-time comrade, Kemal Ataturk, as president of Turkey. Ataturk, who died yesterday, once said of Inonu a performer and strong man in his own right that "he is my conscience he is always ort the alert and finds out what is wrong and criticizes me." The new leader, known as the "military bookkeeper," was Premier for 13 of the 15 years that Ataturk was head of the state. The strong-willed, deaf little Pasha was chosen at an extra CITY PAUSES Presented at Mansfield Court of Honor. Seventy Mansfield Boy Scouts were given advancement and merit badge awards at a local court of honor last night in the lodge rooms of the Elks home. Thirty-two of the scouts were advanced to the rank of Second class, 10 received their First class rank, and 28 others were presented with merit badges.

Those advanced to First class were Jack Daum, Joseph Hews-ton, Charles Palmer, Ned Painter, Thomas Letizia, Robert Kiamy, John Besch, Larry Bergstrom, Wayne Sweval and Jack Shill. Second class: William Houk, Donald Faugl, Robert Erndt, Thomas McMenamin, Edward Eder, Edward Bush, William Mil-litella, Henry Ford, William Hal- SAWYER TO ROOSEVELT CALLS FOR BIDS Board to Open Estimates on New Junior High Dec. 9. With plans and specifications for the new Johnny Appleseed Junior high school tentatively approved by regional PWA officials, the Mansfield board of education today asked for contractors' bids on the $450,000 building, a part of the city's $1,000,000 school program. Bids on the construction, plumbing, heating and eelctric wiring for the structure will be opened Dec.

9, and Supt. W. L. Miller ON ARMISTICE Bombs Explode, Drums Roll Again on 20th Anniversary of End of Greatest War. (Continued From Page 1) pletion today.

Only a handful of workmen left on the job were putting the finishing touches on the storage tank and winding up tl.eir work on the installation of the booster pumps at the reservoir. WPA workmen early this week completed the new high speed main connections on Lexington avenue and Cook road and employes of (he Chicago Bridge and Iron Works were painting the huge water tower both inside and out Meanwhile the Purdy Construc fc'jl yr i iii.nii"'"" -ir ordinary session of parliament sit day in its 20th observance of Armistice day. Defeated Candidate Reveals Phone Talk With President CINCINNATI UB As a footnote on Tuesday's election, Democratic National Committeeman Charles Sawyer defeated candidate for governor disclosed today that President Roosevelt telephoned him early Wednesday to ascertain the trend of voting. "It was about I a. said Sawyer.

"He asked me how things were going. I told him I thought we were licked." "And," Sawyer grinned, "we were, weren't we?" The keynote of addresses Is It romance, Miss Gloria Baker? So goes the report, but we wouldn't know. The other half of the reported romance is tion company was engaged in the said actual construction probably throughout the country was national defense. Not since firing would be started before Jan. 1.

The board will ask for bids in December on the new John Simp installation of booster pumps designed to maintain a greater pres sure in the Woodland area. Ready By End of Month. ting in Ankara, Ataturk seir-made capital. STILL CONFIDENT DES MOINES, la. U.R) J.

II. Milroy, Republican state chairman, predicted today that former Senator Lester J. Dickinson, will win the U. S. senatorial contest over Sen.

Guy M. Gillette, incumbent Democrat, when an official canvass of Tuesday's balloting is complete. ceased on the western front in France Nov. 11, 1918, has this country and its citizens been so preparedness-conscious. The president was to speak from Arlington at noon after ceremon Bob Topping, sportsman.

Miss Baker is one of the richest and most beautiful of New York's society girls. The two are shown dining in New York. 1 EX-PISTOL CHAMP DIES ZANESV1LLE (JPi Dr. Melvin Reeve Moore, 75, retired dentist and former national rapid fire pistol champion, died here today. He had practiced dentistry in St.

Louis for 47 years. labrin, Jack Spicer, Mike Sperts-zel, Robert Wynn, Ward Barrett, Jack Marshall, Paul Robert Hilborne, Harold Reece, Richard Jerger, Albert Miller, William Erdcnberger, James Petroff, William Bechtler, Robert Schneider, Robert Zoll, Robert Kochheiser, John Colby, Richard Ritchie, Donald Ritchie, William Rowe, William Daum, Robert Huber and George Snyder. Merit badges: Jack Carr Dar-rell Smith, John Stutz, Richard CARNEGIE CUTS TIN PLATE PRICE Alvin C. Mock, city engineer in charge of the project, said that the first water probably would be son Junior high school and razing of the old John Simpson building is scheduled to begin soon after the first of the year. Bids on the razing of the old building and construction of the new one will be requested at the same time.

ies at the tomb of the unknown turned into the new link in the soldier. Last year the Agricultural Experiment station at North Carolina college examined 4,500 samples of soil submitted from 1,100 North Carolina farms. Gen. John J. Pershing, leader of the American forces in France "prompt and vigorous" strength ening of national defense in an armistice day statement.

It was his first formal statement since his recovery from a recent serious illness. liy Jewelry He warned that the current Rate Reduced SS Cents On Ton By Order. PITTSBURGH (INS Prices for tin plate were reduced 35 cents per 100 pounds today by Carnegie-Illinois Steel corporation. The new price, effective immediately and applicable to all shipments for the remainder of this year and the first quarter of 1939, is $5 per base box of 100 pounds for U. S.

coke tin plate as compared with $5.35, the old price. Transportation charges at the time of shipment will determine the delivered price during the period, the corporation announced. Any changed on other tin mill products will be announced later. world situation "is as menacing as at any critical time in history. system shortly after Thanksgiving.

Mock explained that the tower had been given a leak test this week and found to be satisfactory. The huge basin is now receiving a special coat of rust resisting paint on the interior while two coats of aluminum paint is being applied to the exterior. When the paint has set, the tank and mains will be flushed out with sterile solution. Mock said. The contract for the tank was awarded to the Chicago firm on its low bid of $14,790 while Purdy was awarded the contract for the changes to be made at the reservoir pumphouse and the installation of the pumps on his bid of $1,025.

The other $64,000 was used to purchase the pipe for the Lexington avenue-Cook road line and furnished employment for nearly 200 WPA workers for the past three months. KING PLACKS WREATH LONDON (INS) With memory vividly reawakened to the horrors of war by the recent European crisis, Britain today commemorated the 20th anniversary of the armistice by paying homage to her million war dead with greater solemnity and reverence than ever before. HOSPITAL NOTES Bare-headed thousands stood in silence as King George VI, In the name of the empire, placed a General Hospital. Admissions: Cletus Baker, R. D.

4, Shelby; Henry Carmal, 177 wreath of red Flanders poppies at the base of the cenotaph, the nation's Unified, war memorial in Whitehall here. Grace street; Mrs. James Deloff, 224 West Sixth street; Faye Wool- TALKS TO PUPILS ley. 40 West First street; Mrs. Karl Seymour, 183 Newman POTENTIAL SALE 1,000 CARS A DAY street; William J.

Boldt, 53 Gibson avenue; Mrs. Samuel Faulkner, 118 Vi North Main street; Virginia Price, 414 Chevy Chase road; Mrs. Robert McCready, Lucas; Mrs. John Yirga, 102 Daisy street; Mrs. Herbert Altaffer, 214 South Adams Professor Addresses Madison's Armistice Day Program.

Prof. J. O. Winger, professor of business administration at Manchester college, North Manchester, was the speaker at an Armistice day program this morning at Madison high school. Several patriotic songs were presented during the program by the band, and the Girls' Glee club directed by James Weber, supervisor of music at the school.

At 11 a. m. taps were sounded Mrs. Daryl Ransom, 3 West First street. Detroit Survey Shows 64,279 Will Buy Autos In City.

DETROIT (INS) Optimism, incorporated in the prediction that Detroit families will buy 1,000 new and used automobiles a day from now until the end of the year, was the keynote of the Detroit automobile show opening today. Willis H. Hall, board of com Releases: Mrs. George Rhodes and son, 49 West Second street; Mrs. Glenn Moore and son, 72 Heineman boulevard; Mrs.

Joseph WE ARE NOT GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Kemp and son, 146 Stewart ave in the building, and the student body observed a two-minute period of silence. nue; Mrs. Harmon Miller and son, Loudonville; Marion Baker, R. D. Mrs.

Shrader, Ontario; Patricia Albert, 5 West Second street; Philip Pendleton, 176 Bartley avenue; Cecil Brokaw, R. D. 2, Bell-ville; Barbara McGinis, 18 Home avenue. This Is a Money Raising merce economist, told 1,000 salesmen at a Masonic temple breakfast that a "one-in-five" sampling of 350,000 families in the city indicated 64,279 cars will be sold in the next 60 days or, a little better than 1,000 cars a day. Not more than 10 per cent of a farm's flue-cured tobacco marketing quota may be transferred, according to a recent AAA ruling.

ismu ini uj UU fflMEUM SALEI MirIt CAM Acclaimed by Europe's Famed Designers! Priced almost as low as the lowest! YOU GET A GIFT FOR COMING! For Every Lady Entering the Store For The Auction Every Afternoon and Evening There Will Be An Attractive FREE Gift! But You Must Be In the Store Before and 7:30 P. M. EVERYTHING MUST BE ENTIRE STOCK DIAMONDS WATCHES SILVERWARE CLOCKS JEWELRY NOVELTIES DISHES GLASSWARE LAMPS. BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS-ANNIVERSARIES BIRTH DAYS --WEDDING GIFTS DIAMONDS Ladies' and Men's Rings, Wrist Watches, Bracelets, Scarf Pins, Broaches. EVERYTHING MUST GO! We Ask You to Come and Inspect Our Stock and See the Large Selection of Merchandise That You I IgHj Can Have at row CE! Every Article Guaranteed As Represented laaaaJ -juci rmv-vi Jk vz- mz- "This new Studebaker ia the closest approach to perfection I have yet seea in a motor car.

It is as 1 unction ally beautiful aa marble in the Louvre." "My work demand a constant arching for greater beauty nd legance That ia perhaps the reason the Studebaker with its thoroughbred appearance appeals to so greatly $ean Uateit R. Barbas, Managing Director CTYLED by Raymond Loewy, ace designer of the Broadway Limited famed visu-alist of New York's 1939 Vi'orld's Fair! The magnificent new Studebaker Commanders and Presidents for 1939 are so far in front they make all other cars look dated! But see for yourself! See why these great new Studebakers have been acclaimed by Europe's best design authorities as a triumph of keen, vigorous lines, deep-bedded comfort, a hundred and one points of luxury finish! And imagine it cars of Studebaker prestige and performance built by Studebaker master craftsmen at prices that challenge the lowest! Try Studebaker's new steering wheel gear shift lever it's standard equipment! See the new 10-point "Climatizer" the new, simplified automatic gas-saving overdrive they're optional at small added cost. Low down paymeat easy C. I. T.

terms. AUXTER MOTOR CO. STARTING 80 STARTING 2 P.M. y) sales 7:30 P.M. DAILY 2 dVoW EVENINGS MV I EXPA-0N REMODELING UuU LA REMODELING sale JEWELRY CO.

sale NOT Going Our 83 N. MAIN ST. NOT Going Out of Business MANSFIELD, OHIO CMiIh of Business uml at tha suparb good taa oi th. Stadabakar interior RayMoad Loawy has mad tarn harmoniaa baauh-I ally with aia aniqua astarior "It is truly gratifying to one' a instincts for good taste to see this new Studebaker. It is an achieve meat ok which its designer amay luUhably be proud." fierce Gerbcr 220 PARK AVE.

W. MANSFIELD, OHIO -4 2..

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