TWO THE MESSENGER, OWENSBORO, KY. WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1942 AXIS ARMIES OF ROMMEL DIG FOR DEFENSIVE (Continued from Page One) dwindling and Tuesday quiet prevailed. In this lull losses, heavy on both sides, were being counted, and a study indicated that while there had been some shifting positions no appreciable gains in territory had been made. A British regiment operated for a time in mine fields which had been cleared in the Del El Dhib area by courageous South African engineers. This regiment, escorted by tanks, finally returned to its original position.
After having driven south through a maze of minefields and hearing only occasional bursts of artillery fire breaking the lull which has set in since the heavy July 26-27, I listened to of themstories some of the British troops who did the heavy fighting in the Del El Dhib area. They had set out at midnight on July 26 with the South African engineers who made the gap. Under the brilliant light of a full moon every man passed through the gap with fixed bayonet and faced successfully a hail of machine gun fire. Many expressed surprise when they found German troops in the front line with Italians behind them, the reverse of the usual Axis desert tactics and perhaps indicative of the German view of this situation. Almost at the start of first charge which began on west the side of the minefield, a Sergeant R.
MAdams with six other men encountered sixteen Germans whose machinegun fire they had weathered. "We charged them with our bayonets but they had their hands in the air surrendering before we got near them," the sergeant anywhere. took them prisoners, sent them back with two guards and then went forward again." MORTUARY Hazel Lee Kinney Hazel Lee, five year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Kinney died at her home in Inkster, last week.
Her mother was formerly Miss Jessie Henning, of Owensboro. Funeral services were held at the Methodist church in Inkster Saturday, the pastor the Rev. R. Foster officiating. was in Glenwood cemetery, Mich.
wBurial William Penn Johnson William Penn Johnson, of Quakertown, and father Mrs. Elsie Johnson Powell, of Owensboro, died at his home recently according to word received here. He was a descendant of a pioneer family that came from England in 1698 to join William Penn's colony in Fennsylvania. Funeral services and burial took place in Quakertown. Mrs.
Necie Laffoon Necie Laffoon, 71, died suddenly from a heart attack at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Carlstadt Robinson. Mrs. Laffoon lived with her daughter and Mr. Robinson.
Besides the daughter, two brothers, Mote Teague, Providence; Will Teague, Mannington; sister, Mrs. William Franklin, Providence, and grandson, Roy Charles Robinson, of Madisonville, survive. Funeral services were held in Good Hope church, near St. Charles at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Burial was in the church cemetery.
Virgil Henry Brewer Funeral services for Virgil Henry Brewer, 51, who died at his home, 805 East Twenty-first street, at 10:45 a.m. Monday, wil be held at the Delbert J. Glenn funeral home at 2:30 p.m. today, the Rev. Robert E.
Humphreys, pastor of the First Baptist church, officiating. William H. King Funeral services for William H. King, 79, who died at 1:30 p.m. Monday at Hopkinsville, will be held at the home of his son, Homer King, 1224 Werner avenue, at 4 p.m.
today, the Rev. F. T. Carby officiating. Burial will be in Elmwood cemetery.
Mrs. W. Timbrook Funeral services for Mrs. W. F.
Timbrook, 67, who died at her home at Sorgho at 3 a.m. Monday, conducted from the Sorgho Baptist church at 10 a.m. Tuesday by the Rev. D. 'Arthur Dailey.
Burial was in the Sorgho cemetery. Funeral Wednesday Greenville, services for Mrs. R. W. Batsel, widow of the former editor of the Greenville Leader, who was killed Monday afternoon by lightning in the bath room of the Rev.
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One trial convinces. Only Also and $1.00. ZEMO To soothe itching, burning skin, apply medicated liquid ZEMO- a Doctor's formula backed by 30 years continuous success! For ringworm symptoms, eczema, athlete's foot or blemishes due to external cause, apply ZEMO Complete Line Indian Bracelets DIAMONDS WATCHES AT PARDON'S JEWELRY STORE On 3rd opposite Court house home at Lone Oak, near Paducah, will be held here Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Full details have not been arranged. Mrs.
Batsel has been employed in the recreation department of the WPA the past few years, and only recently had been transferred from Bowling Green to Murray. She is survived by seven children, Lee Hill Batsel, a recruit in the air corps, and Billy, Barbara, Linda, Nancy, Rebecca and John Batsel, who live with their mother, also four brothers, Paul Henson, Greenville; born and Joe Henson, in Detroit, and George Henson, who lives in Arkansas. Miss Annette Batsel, of Owensboro, is a niece. BRITAIN'S NEW SECRET WEAPON USED DURING RAID (Continued from Page One) bombers sent over the Reich are lost, Harris said, and with everincreasing Allied bomber strength, "we are going to scourge the Reich from end to end if you make it necessary for us to do so. You cannot stop it and you know it.
"It is up to you to end the war and the bombing. You can overthrow the Nazis and make peace. It of is revenge not true but that we shall plan a certainly make it impossible for any German government to start total war again, That is as necessary in your interests as in our own." The broadcast was in German and then put on the air in more than a dozen other European languages. MEREDITH RAPS A. B.
CHANDLER: (Continued from Page One) figuratively slaps us in the face with the proposition that it is no violation of moral conduct for a senator to accept a gift from a war profiteer." (The Truman committee, investigating war contracts, and the War Production Board have cleared Chandler of charges that he exerted influence in obtaining contracts for Ben H. Collings, Louisville, and of violating metal priorities). Meredith, whose speech was read over station WHAS by Assistant Attorney General Jesse Lewis, asserted that "any one who does not recognize that a dictatorship has been set up in the once proud state of Kentucky is blinded by prejudice or refuses to look the facts in the face. The chief instrument through which this (dictatorship) has been accomplished is Chandler. On top of accepting a swimming pool, Chandler then made the "shocking disclosure" that he was placing his campaign in charge of the "plunder bund at Frankfort," the attorney general said.
Chandler opposed assessing state employes for campaign funds in 1935, helped pass a law against assessment in 1936, Meredith said. Now, he continued, every "decent citizen of this commonwealth should feel outraged the efforts of the plunder bund to raise a slush fund for Chandler from the meager salaries of state employes, when they are already contributing so patriotically to the war effort." Meredith made only brief mention of Brown, a former congressman whom he described as "opposed to political bossism. He opposed the sales tax on the food and clothing of the poor." Brown has also advocated, Meredith said, "return of government by the people and that means and methods be employed to bring benefits of government to the working man and farmer." He said Brown had never accepted a gift of value from any person having contractual relations with the government, nor has he condoned the assessment of state employes or violation of the corrupt practices act. Identifying the pool as the fundamental issue in the campaign, Meredith said "Chandler has wilfully chartered the course of his leadership." 28 Frenchmen Are Killed By Germans Vichy, (P) -The Germans announced the execution of 28 persons at Lille on conviction of a series of offenses, including sabotage, possession of weapons and communistic activity, Tuesday. Most of those condemned were mine workers in the little region.
At the same time French courts at Douai, suburb per of Lille, sentenced two persons life in a prison for stealing ration cards, and 28 others to a total of 40 years in prison. Most of them also were miners. Delayed advices from Courtrai, also in the Lille region, said an unspecified but considerable number of persons had been arretsed as hostages after five fires were started in one night. The German announcement dedeclared that a number of persons arrested "for sympathy" and was that radios and bicycles were being confiscated. SINCE 1883 Ballard's Snow Liniment has been an inexpensive aid in relieving the discomforts of Muscular Congestion that accompanies Sprains, Strains, Bruises, and Muscular Soreness from over-exertion or undue exposure.
In 30c and 60c bottles. Mills Brothers. -Advertisem*nt SAYS COMPULSORY SAVINGS PLAN IS NEEDED IN U. 5. (Continued from Page One) method of computing individual income tax liabilities in those states.
Joint Return Hit The committee was reported to have voted 9 to 6 to consider this proposed change while voting 14 to 2 against a treasury suggestion that the new $6,271,000,000 tax bill be amended to require joint returns fo: maried couples in all states. Such joint returns were calculated to add $420,000,000 to revenues by forcing many taxpayers into brackets carrying higher rates. Chairman George Ga.) announced the committee had decided to disregard a treasury proposal for federal taxation of the income from state and municipal bonds--a potential producer of had left open for further action the question of taxing income from fuissues. The latter proposal would yield little in immediate revenue. While the community property state tax proposal was yet to be reduced to formal terms, Connally contended it would have the effect of disregarding a public policy of dividing the famliy income and property between husbands and wives in Texas, California, Louisiana, Arizona, New Mexico, Idaho, Nevada and Washington.
He told reporters it was "an attack on the community property states that constitutes an assault on the progressive law that recognizes the equality of women in the possession of property acquired during marriage." As he explained the proposal, it would make the recipient of earned income liable for the tax on the full amount of that income, instead of permitting him to credit one-half of it to his wife, as is directed by state law. The treasury argued that the present provision permitting the division of income for tax purposes in these states would deprive the government of $87,000,000 yearly if carried over into the new revenue bill. Treasury experts who declined to be quoted by name said that in a community property husband who earned $10,000 salary, for example, and reported $5,000 of that amount as his wife's income, paid only $965 tax for both under the present law. In 40 other states, however, a husband earning the same salary paid a tax of $1,305. Senate Group Seeks to Meet Sub Menace Aviation Experts Called in Probe of Air Transport Plan Lewashington, (P)- pressed Senator today Josh for speedy committee consideration of his proposal that a fleet of giant planes be built quickly to carry cargo and troops to overseas fronts.
He was unable to get his witnesses to Washington in time for a hearing today before a senate military affairs subcommittee, but arranged for the hearings to start tomorrow morning. He told the senate yesterday that "desperate haste" was needed. Lee, declaring that air-borne transportation offered the "only possible chance we have of winning this war," said it was "folly" to continue to try to "build ships faster than Hitler can sink them." He proposed diverting part of the nation's shipbuilding capacity to the construction of flying boats and said that more than 10 per cent of airplane production should be devoted to transportation. Hitler devoted that much to air transportation, he said, and "our communication lines are many times longer than Hitler." He would leave the type of ship and the number to a special supply agency composed of the secretaries of war and navy, the war shipping administrator and Chairman Donald M. Nelson of the war production board which would be authorized to act under the resolution.
Invited to appear today were Henry Kaiser, west coast shipbuilder and advocate of a diversion of shipbuilding capacity to giant plane construction; Capt. Eddie backer, World war ace and president Eastern Air Lines; Glenn L. Martin, Baltimore, manufacturer of the Martin bomber; Alexander De Seversky, aviation authority and bombsight designer; Theodore P. Wright, assistant chief of the WPB aircraft section and airplane designer; Roscoe Turner, Indianapolis aeronautical company president and speed pilot; Robert Thach, Washington attorney, formerly with Pan-American Airways, and Grover Loening, pioneer designer and technical consultant for the WPB. GRANDFATHER DRAFTED Cincinnati, (AP)-A grandfather at 44, Frank C.
Madden will enter the army next week. Madden, who was kept out of the navy in the last war because of a bad foot, has two daughters, one with three children, and his only son, George 24, is with American troops in Northern Ireland. A Price Hill draft board inducted Madden Friday, and he's using the first part of his pre-service furlough to break in a new man on his bakery truck route. Berne, not Geneva, is the political capital of the Swiss Confederation. Says Educated Japanese See Long War and Eventual Defeat street parades and celebrations in Singapore.
My few contacts in the early days of my internment with servants and guards gave the impression they needed propaganda shots in the arm to override the conviction of despair and national suicide. Thus the April 18 raid by General Doolittle's airmen constituted a tremendous jolt to the public because the people returned to their earlier depressive tendencies. I have reason to believe that the feeling is widespread among educated Japanese that the only salvation lies in elimination of the military clique which brought on the conflict. The population warily and with seemingly unbounded patience waits in line for meager rice rations and vegetables and eggs when and if there are any. Sugar and meat are only a memory.
Most people concede that the war with the United States will be long, and all harbor a haunting fear of Russian attack in the north and consequent large-scale bombing attacks upon Japan's flimsy cities. To assuage the fears of the public, the Japanese press often refers to the soundness and sincerity of the Japanese-Russian neutrality pact. Color Contrasts Make Big Difference In Getting Job Done By JAMES MARLOW AND WILLIAM PINKERTON. New York. (Wide World) -Looking for a bat in a coal mine at midnight is no harder on the eyes than the tasks set before workers by some bosses who mean well but forget that color contrasts make a difference in getting a job done.
Good lighting in a plant or office is not enough. extreme example of bad situation is a man working on a black object against a black machine. That can cause eyestrain. Eye-strain can cause accidents and lower morale. Faber Birren, industrial color consultant writing in the current Dun's Review and Architectural Forum, says: "A worker standing at a lathe may suffer eyestrain by trying to discern a piece of dark metal against an equally dark and oily background.
"An increase of illumination may afford little if improvementfor the dark metal may still lack sufficient contrast with the ground. "A simple coat of paint applied to the machine, however, may do the job perfectly. A black button on a white card may be as visible under one foot-candle light as a black button on a black card under a thousand foot-candles. "Illumination is not enough, for it lacks significance without contrast in color." Birren notes that there are many strange inter-relations between ease of seeing and the functioning of the human body. "Where there is eye strain," he says, "physical reactions are to be noted in a generally nervous condition, increased muscular tension, more rapid blinking of the lids, decreased heart action, headache, i nausea, fatigue." Green River District 4-H Club Camp Program At Hogg Camp Gets Started Club members from nine counties, leaders, and staff members attending the annual Green River District 4-H club camp at the George Warren Hogg Memorial Boy Scout camp, east of Owensboro, settled down to routine for the week Tuesday, the organization of the club having been perfected Monday afternoon.
More than 200 campers are enrolled. The register, including campers, leaders, members of the state staff, county agents and home demonstration agents, follows: Green River 4-H Campers Breckinridge, Martha O'Reilly, Thomas Marion Elswick, Leo O'Reil- ly, C. B. Severs. Crittenden, Charlotte Dycus, MaLaird, Grace Shelby, J.
C. Green. Daviess, Lucy Tichenor, Martha Virginia Hale, Mary Louise Simpson, Ida Myrl Mattingly, Mitzi Wilson, Kathleen Schenk, Anna Ruth Riddle. Doris Hunt, Susie Marie Pike, Nancy McIntyre, Martha Rowland, Marian Wright, Betty Allen Bell, Lois Poole, Barbara Wagner, Betty Wagner, Mary Catherine Ayer, Mamie Sampley, Martha Kelly, Jessie Myrel Chrisler, Margaret Griffin, Sara Robertson, Clara Bell Horn, Helen Boswell, Elizabeth Ann Poole, Jean Gordon, Dolly Horrell, Shirley Horrell, Patsy Weller, Dora Nell Schenk, Jane Jones, Dorothy Moseley, Betty Sue Taylor, Marie Simmons, Hazel Wilson, Joyce Hay, Beverly Donovan, Mary Rone, Margaret Ann Shelton, Lavon Leigh. Roger Sumner, Norman Hendrickson, Maurice Hale, Charles Adam Baird, Murray Hale, Marnell Thomas, Lloyd Miller, Glenn Miller, Houston Miller, Lloyd Waite, Billy Coons, Bobby Sloan, Bobby Wood, Wm.
Allen Unsel. Leaders. Mrs. D. B.
Gordon, Mrs. Mildred Braner and Miss Martha Coons. Hanco*ck, Frances Morris, Eva Mae Morris, Ann Mason, Charles Louis Goff, Roy L. Emmick, Tommy Emmick, Joe Greathouse, Robert L. Henderson, Walter Toler.
Henderson, McLean, Ohio Henderson, Marie Moss, Betty Triplett, Eloise Brann, Martha Ann Butler, Mary Roberts Crafton, Martha Jean Allen, Cledith Bowling, Joe Wade, Donald Allen, Elliott Cates, Fielding Williams, Billy Eustis, Jack Crafton, Billy Agnew, Carl Douglas McClure, Dick Crafton, C. B. West, Billie West, James Milton Crafton, Herbert Meeks, Tuman Swearer, Walter Taylor; leader, Miss Martha Lindsey. McLean, Lee Ann Leet, Mae Kathryn Blackford, Patty Johnson, Clarice Bell Tichenor, Wilma Faye Hudson, Virginia Allen VanCleve, Louis Blackford, Carl T. Donahoo, Charles Boulware, Jimmie Stiles, John Thompson, Raymond Walker, Carson Hudson, Wayne B.
Pannell, Ranny Ayer, Bobby Ayer, Jimmie Dame, A. Warren, Cullen Austin, James Rowan Hoover, Gene Tichenor, Bill Wright Hale, Kirtley; leader, Miss Wilma Vandiver. Ohio. Barbara Fay Magan, Beverly Jane Magan, Katherine Louise Barnard, Gladys Barnes, Eloise Ridley, Mary Jo Ridley, Betty Lou Vaughn; leader, Mrs. R.
A. Magan. Richard Dillman, Raymond Hunt, Billy Ray Miller, Dan H. Miller, Billy Martin, James Martin, Dale Midkiff, Raymond D. Ridley, Billy Schroeter, David Schroeter, Kenneth Dale Tanner, Kenneth Thomas, Welburn Vanfleet, Donald Taylor Barnes, Noel Vernon Brown, Willie Burgess, Clifford Coppage, Wayne Cecil Crow, Willard L.
Crow, George Duvall, Alfred Ford, James S. Gillespie, James P. Henson, Billy Hoover, Ben M. Johnson, Clyde Danks, Tommie Barnes. Webster And Union Webster, Ruth Powell, Ruby Higginson, Dolores Chandler, Helen McGrew, Chiquita Baker, Alice Allen, Zoe Watson, George Branson, Cleo Higginson, Carmen Higginson, Frank Whitney, John Raymond Narvell, Joe Allen, Wendell Ashby, John Jenkins, Wayne Wilson, Joe Waggener, Jerry Blackwell, Billy Wayne Asher; leaders, Miss Inola Allen and Pat Fraiser.
Union, Ruby Dorris Lovell, Ella Mae Lovell, Mary Louise Lynn, Betty Lynn, Agnes Clements, Margaret Henshaw, Dorothy Henshaw, Rayburn Lovell, James Hanco*ck. State Staff 'W. Jones, McKenney, recreation camp manager; leader; Carl Miss Olive Seaton, song leader; Miss Ida Ayer, nurse. Agents Attending Breckenridge, Kenneth Brabant; Crittenden, O. M.
Shelby; Daviess, Venice Lovelady, Susan Word, J. E. McClure, Albert Isham; Hanco*ck, Charles L. Goff; Henderson, Leone Gillett, H. R.
Jackson; McLean, Mildred Roberts, Leroy Northington; Ohio, Louise Nunnelley, Morton Henshaw, assistant county agent; Webster, Mary Jordan Odor, Wheeler; Union, Dorothy Hill, Robert H. Ford. The camp will continue in session through breakfast and assembly Friday, when awards for the week will be distributed. REVIVAL AT HOPEWELL revival meeting is in progress at Hopewell Methodist church in Ohio county Services are being held at the church each evening. The Rev.
Edward Prentis is pastor of the Hopewell church. Rev. R. B. Prentis of Columbia, is delivering the sermons.
The revival will continue through next week. The public is invited to attend. 24 Negroes Will Leave On Saturday For Induction Into United States Army Nineteen colored selectees of Owensboro and five from Daviess, coun- ty will be inducted into service on August 1, according to announcements made by the two selective service boards. This is the largest colored contingent to leave from Owensboro during this war. Those leaving for service in the army from Owensboro follow: John Wesley Bond, 802 Indiana avenue, Jeffersonville, Ind.
John Sherman Riley, 814 West Eighth street. John Henry Spolden, 923 West Fifth street. James Ernest Thruston, 902 West Eighth street. William Thomas Simmons, care Carl Brown, Bloomfield, Henry Sims, 1509 Hall street. Ophine Muffett, 524.
Elm street. Robert Edward Hall, 525 Elm street. Nathaniel Walker Deal, 2326 West Eighth, Lee street. Jackson, Route No. 3.
James William Fields, care W. W. Miller, I. C. R.
Fulton, Ky. George Edmund Valentine, 615 Poplar street. STATE FARMERS ARE FACED WITH LABOR SHORTAGE (Continued from Page One) tucky, bringing their families. He said many farms face a tenant shortage for next season, and that the land was much better than that in southeastern counties because it is level and doesn't require "hill side farming, chiefly with a hoe." Cleveland declared fall planting did not present an acute problem. A phase of the farm labor shortage that has come to the attention of the state agriculture department is that of Kentucky's comparatively new sorghum industry.
William G. Harris, administrative assistant in the department, said county cooperatives produced 35,000 gallons of sorghum last season and that the department could market 150,000 gallons for them this year, but due to lack of sufficient labor, he expected that "at the best 50,000 gallons would come from this year's crop." GERMANS MAKE NEW CROSSING OF LOWER DON RIVER (Continued from Page One) along the whole curving front of the big Don bend. Infantry and mechanized forces were said to have crossed on a broad front east of Rostov). Nazis Rush Reinforcements The entire Russian press stressed the gravity of the hour, and Pravda again maontann' implied plea for a second reporting eleven new German divisions moved into Russia from France and Holland. The army newspaper Red Star called on civilians to be ready to take up arms, saying: our generation.
Germans "The fate of depends on Russia, conquer us, the generation now five to ten years old will spit upon us when it is grown up." At Voronezh, 300 miles north of Rostov, the Russians again had local successes "somewhat improving their positions" and inflicting severe casualties, the Soviet cmmand said. The main German thrust was directed south of Rostov along the railway which crosses the Caucasus to Baku, the great oil center still 700 miles from the thunder of battle. Marshal Semeon Timoshenko's armies were believed to be stil mainly intact after a month of rear guard attrition. All dispatches stressed that Timoshenko's retreat was not a rout but that the Red army was slaughtering the driving Germans who advanced over heaps of their dead and rubble shattered tanks, cannon and other equipment. The sizeable army of the Caucasus had not yet been reported in action.
COURT NEWS Police Court Isaac Downs, 53, Livermore, and Harley Holmes, 37, of 700 block River front, charged with being drunk, were each fined $10 and costs by Judge John F. Wood in police court. Ralph Lester, 40, of 1500 block Guenther alley, also charged with being drunk, was dismissed. The forfeiture on the bonds of Bernard Johnson, 28, and Mary Johnson, 21, both of Louisville, was set aside and the charges of assault and battery against them were reduced to breach of the peace with Bernard Johnson being fined $25 and costs. The charge of assault and battery against John Bond, 29, negro, of Jeffersonville, was reduced to breach of the peace and he was fined $15 and costs.
Real Estate Transfers John W. Miller and others, to Mrs. Bess M. Cary, lot in St. Ann street between Second and Third.
Evie Burd to James Tinsley, 6.8 acres of land. John Lawry and others, to J. Carl Mattingly, two lots in Owensboro, between Fourth and Limbeck streets, and between McBride and Fourth. U. S.
Commissioner's Court Charles Edward Devine and Victor Ray Jackson, each 15, Owensboro boys, were arraigned Tuesday before U. S. Commissioner Morton Holbrook on a charge of transporting an automobile stolen from the Harry Holder Motor to Terre Tips For Tired Eyes 1. Hold reading -natter about 14 inches from face. 2.
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25 years success. Get Lavoptik today. At all drug NEXT WEEK IS Chesterfield Ham Week! Haute, on July 14. They were held to the November term of United States district court under $300 bond each. Captain William Vogel and Lieut.
J. H. Heal, of the Owensboro police department, made the arrests. BUTYLENE IS BASE FOR SYNTHETIC OIL PRODUCTION Washington. (AP) -The Gillette committee, continuing its investigation of the nation's synthetic rubber program, heard testimony Tuesday that butylene, a refinery gas, was the most desirable base for production of synthetic rubber from oil.
Senator Thomas (D-Okla), one of the farm bloc sponsors of synthetic rubber from grain alcohol, said the testimony of an agricultural expert indicated a large amount of rubber also could be manufactured from that source, although it might cost a little more. The hearings will be concluded today. Thomas said they were intended to clarify the possibilities of synthetic rubber production SO that the public could be informed of the situation. William Farish, president of Standard Oil company (New Jersey), told the committee that butylene was substituted for oil as a raw material when the federal government wanted the production of relatively large quantities of butadiene. He testified that his company expected to complete one plant for production of butadiene, basic ingredient of rubber, October 1 and a second plant about November 1.
Both obtain butadiene directly from oil. HIGGINS FAILS TO REGAIN CONTRACT FOR 200 SHIPS (Continued from Page One) 000,000 through abandonment of his plant. Admiral Land, who followed Higgins to the stand, said he was frankly "skeptical" of Higgins' assertion he could build a ship in 274,000 man hours. He added that after absorption by the commission of $65,000,000 involved in completing the Higgins yard, Higgins' construction would represent "the highest cost per ship to be constructed under any of our contracts." PERRY SELECTEES REPORT Tell Twenty-four Perry county selective service registrants have reported for army induction at Evansville. They are: Claude Lester Cash, Clarence E.
Kress, Fredric Hargis Briggemann, Eugene Polk, Noble Jasper, Irvin Lee Ramsey, Edward Paul Schneider, James, Elden Riddle, Connor, Clarence McCallister, Leroy Ray, Delmar Alvey, John Dhonau, Andrew Van Conia, William Franklin Clark, Leroy Wagner, George W. Bauer, John Allen Kraus, Charles R. Williams, Augustus H. Doogs, Fred Goffinet, Andrew U. Brown, Donald Cevelius Howell, Bruce E.
Polster. MALCO TODAY and THURS! Master of smouldering passion makes violent love to his gals, but is tender as a baby with her! 20th Century- Fox presents Jean GABIN Ida LUPINO Anoon tide Thomas MITCHELL Claude RAINS Mountain Big Game" A Sports Short In Technicolor STARTS TODAY! STRAND FOR TWO DAYS! BOB'S A GOOD SKATE! He and his pet he falls for a and becomes the man a thrilling spy plot! BOB HOPE MADELEINE CARROLL My Favorite Blonde COMES THE CAVALRY" In Technicolor William Albert Flowers, West Kentucky Voc. school, Paducah, Ky. Lonnie Maddox, 812 Alexander alley. Manios Johnson, 318 Walnut street.
Smith Doss, 1411 East Ninth street. Hugh Frank Talbott, 512 Plum street. Morton Lee Gilbert, 1514 Rear Prentice street, Louisville, Ky. Transferred from another local board for induction is Robert Taylor, 1023 West Fifth street. Those leaving from Daviess county follow: Walter Winstead, Route No.
1, Stanley. James Monroe Ayers, Utica. William Hanley, Route No. 3, Owensboro. Arthur Edward Jackson, Route No.
3, Utica. Edwin Porch Morrow Green, Route No. 1, Maceo. Barbecue and PicnicStanley, Aug. 1, on grounds of St.
Peter's Church. Supper only will be served: beginning 5 p. m. STARTS TODAY! SEVILLE FOR TWO DAYS! She was trembling, with he was just TREMBLING. Male ANIMAL de OLIVIA HAVILLAND with FONDA HENRY A JOAN LESLIE JACK CARSON.