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Sioux City Journal from Sioux City, Iowa • 2
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Sioux City Journal from Sioux City, Iowa • 2

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Sioux City, Iowa
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2
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2 THE SIOUX CITY JOURNAL, Monday, October 23, 1944. i 7 KILLED the country, and went to inland with various plays in the next 20 years. His mo'vie debut was in 1913 in' Damaged Goods. Blend hair reacts to hurr.id-. contracting ana cxpahairig, the reaction of red and brown r' is barely noticeable.

Only 15 per cent of our oil i to America's passenger ca -A RUSSIANS I Continued from Page One) He retired in 1937 because oi poor health. DEATH CLAIMS DR. GUY RICH (Continued from Page One) itte, a daughter Mary Beth, and a sister, Mrs. Minnie Dayelaar, all of Sioux City. TTje body was taken to the" W.

Harry funeral home in 500 AT CLOSING LEAGUE SESSION Choral Concert Final Feature of Grcuit Conference 4 UOTDL THE MPS Morningside. i Sioux City fire companies 3 and 5 responded to calls from the air i base shortly after 4:30 p. according to fire department reports 8 About 500 persons' attended here. Former Sioux Gityan, 83, Passes Away in California Dr. Guy C.

Rich, 83, former Sioux Cityan, jlied early Sunday morning in Hollywood, CaL Funeral services and burial will be ARE UCCfEP- Vie must keep on saving Used his! 7 choral concert," highlight -of the final of a two-day convention of the Sioux City circuit Luther league, Sunday afternoon at the First Lutheran church. in Hollywood. The chorus, made up of choir Dr. Rich passed througha long Residents at Sergeant Bluff who Watched the blaze from a distance said black smoke shot hundreds of feet into the air and -flames were' high. Explosiorr of the ammunition was heard beyond highway 75 more than a mile east of the air base.

One resident who was a few miles west of the base said he heard the plane and saw its odd maneuvers. Thinking the ship was in trouble, he watched it attempt members from churches in the circuit, was directed by Roy Kvam. Maurine Larson and Sarah rHanson were accompanists. Rev. Nelson Preus ofOmaha crir rn faith.

hoDe and love as identifying marks nof a Christian. "Rev. Carl Grindberg led-de- 1 to land, after which he saw smoke votions. RIDERS MAKE BENNETT; DIES (Continued from Page One,) SECOND TRIP LOW POINT. An American, jeep passes through lowest point on China's Burma road, where elevation is 2,960 feet.

three daughters figured in 11 mar riages and nine divorces. Humble fcegmnins; A tailor's in Log- WEATHER INFORMATION were only 17 miles south of Kir-kenes. Norwegian underground re ports to London said a Russian invasion of Norway, held by the Germans since the feprinjr of 1940, was A midnight soviet bulletin said that Meretskov's troops, moving across terrain often without roads, had inflicted heavy losses oh the Germans retreating into Norway. Ihe enemyraked by 'soviet artillery and red bombers, abandoned much equipment. Torpedo boats of the red fleet also sank two German transports and three auxiliary vessels in Varanger fjord, the late buPetin said.

Stalin Issues Order An order of the day by Premier -Marshal Joseph Stalin announced the fall of Nyiregyhaza in eastern Hungary, 27 miles north of Debrecen, taken Friday. It is. a 12-way road and rail junction and its capture and that of other nearby localitiescut another axis communication1 line into northern Transylvania and eastern Czechoslovakia. Pushing 13 miles northeast of Nyiregyaza the Russians captured Demecser, only 16 miles fromthe, southern Czechoslovakian -border and 40 miles from Uzhorod, Hungarian annexed Czechoslovakian town through which passes the last nazi escape route out of the imperilled axis salient Af Deme'cserthe Russians-were within 72 miles of a junction with Col. Gen.

Ivan Petrov's Fourth Ukraine' 'army pushing down through Czechoslovakia from the north. Sato-Mare Fall Near Satu-Mare, last big Transyl-vanian town still held by the enemy, already, was outflanked and on the verge of falling. The Russians took 11 localities in an arc on its approaches, including Seini, 18 miles to the east. The midnight bulletin said 2,000 Germans were slain at Nyiergy-haza, and mat a total of 3,000 enemy troopsywere killed and several thousand captured during the day in Hungary. In the drive on Budapest the Russians weremoving toward the Magyar capital from the south and southeast on a front of more than 70 miles.

Romanian bulletin told of heavy fighting only 50 miles southeast of the city, but Bennett raised $50 andwent to Chicago to join 25 Hunt Club Members on 30-Mile Jaunt to Hinton TEMPERATURES 8. Weather Bureau. ayajjdeville troupe. To get there hehad to talk his father into a mule and -turning over the 5 p. m.

DO YOU KNOW why our government had to ask you Tp-sav' used fats in the first place? It was chiefly because the Japs bad taken the Philippines, Java, Malaya the phaces we to depend on for a billion pounds of fats and oils every yearWeli. the Japs still hold those places 32 35 Twenty-five members of the ci.t h(shmd Sioux, City Saddle and Hunt club I "1 tZ TnnPtt nce 67 65 63 59 55 52 51 50 49 8 a. 9 a. m. 10 a.

m. 11 a. m. 12 noon 1 p. m.

2 p. m. 3 p. m. 4 p.

m. 6 p. m. 7 p. m.

8 p. m. 9 p. m. 10 p.

m. 11 p. m. 12 mid. 1 a.

m. 42 51 58 62 64 67 68 i ZX waTi mis. she illness a few yearsgtj; but more recently he had been in a fair-state of healthconsidering his age, and theritieai period of his last, sickness was not of long duration. Guy C. Rich was born at N.

July 6, 1861. He was graduated from the Saratoga Springs, N. school in 1880, from.the Pennsylvania? College of Dental Surgery in 1883, and from the Jefferson Medical college in 1885. To Sioux City in 1888 After having spent two iyears in Mount Sinai hospital in New York as an interne, he moved west- and established a medical practice in Sioux City in the fall of 1888. His office was in the old Toy building at -Fourth and Jackson streets, destroyed in the first tof December 23, 1904.

In the 90s he was a member of the faculty of the old Sioux City College of Medicine, teaching anatomy. He moved to California in 1912. Dr. Rich married Mrs. Katharine Weare Nason in Sioux City about 1904 and she survives him, as? do the following stepdaughters ihd stepsons: Mrs, Paul-C.

Howe, Sioux City; Mrs. James Pope, Hollywood; Jack Nason, Spearfish, S. Weare Nason, Hollywood. An Expert on Birds In an article on Ornithology in Northwestern Iowa in Iowa Bird Life (June, 1944) ir. T.

C. Stephens of Morningside college describes Dr. Rich as "the dominant 'personality in the field of ornithology in Sioux City during a period from. 1889 to about 1913." While here he collected rare specimens of bird life, and many other bird lovers brought, him specimens for identification and preservation. Upon his departure from Sioux City he turned his collection to the museum of the Sioux City Academy tf was a natural jaetress second outing of the fall season Bennett's three daughters were by hisiecond marfiager a union witiKAdnenne Morrison mat 22 years, but under an unusual plan.

They had a system of The horsemen rode to by of the Perry Creek road and on te return trip followed. the Floyd iiver for a way, cutting in back of Leeds. It was about a three-hour ride each way. Dinner was served at the Hinton community house. The horses were stabled at the Clark feed barn.

Scott Buroee. member of the living in separate households and meeting lor meals. day. Continued cool Tuesday. Fresh winds Monday! Precipitation Precipitation, none; normal pre-ciptatin, .04.

Accumulated total precipitation for the nomtn, accumulated normal- preciptation for month, 1.28; departure, minus 1.01, accumulated total precipitation for the year since January 1, 26.09; accumulated normal precipitation for the year since January 24.45, departure, plus 1.64. National Temperatures National temperatures Sunday: High Low New YSrk 55 44 Washington 57 43 Jacksonville "80 50 San Antonio l78 50 Chicago 58 34 Detroit 56 32 Bismarck 74 37 Des Moines 64 34 Duluth .58 27 Kansas City 71 44 Minneapohs 62 30, Omaha 70 36 WUliston 68, 39- Cheyenne 68 28 Denver 75 40 Phoenix 90 56 Pueblo 77 28 Maximum temperature Sunday, 68; minimum! 32. The Forecasts Sioux City and Vicinity Increasing cloudiness and warmer today. Iowa Generally fair- Monday and Tuesday. Warmer Mdnday and cool Tuesday.

Fresh winds Monday. Nebraska Monday increasing The arrangement had its disad committee, in charge of arrange cloudiness; warmer east. vantages, too. One night when Barbara 17 she arrived home at. midnight and Father Richard wknt through the preliminaries to giving her a spanking.

Barbara walked put, went to her mother's horjfie, where Sister Constance lived.1 There was a family squabble and the police-arrived. During the fracas, Bennett socked a policeman on the Boxed to Gain Strength Bennett's third wife was the former Aimee Raisch Hastings, SO WHEN YOU HEAR good news from the European fronts, remember those victories don't help our fat shortage problem. They increase it, for winning victories is a costly business that calls for more and more explosives, tanks, synthetic rubber, "soaps, medicines and other war and civilian materials that need fats in the making. South Dakota Increasing cloudiness Monday, becoming cooler in north portion in- afternoon; 20- to 30-mile per hour wind. Minnesota Partly cloudy Monday -and Tuesday.

Fejv scattered light showers north Monday. Cooler north and central portion Mon ments, said the group probaoiy will make another ride next Sunday. Other member of the committee were. Mrs. Burpee, Mr.

and Mrs. Marvin Sack, Bob Klanderud, Ted Forney and. Horace Clark. Not Entirely Useless Reader's Digest: Mom Williams ran a little tourist camp fin the mountains west of She was married to. a man of a few words and even fewer deeds.

Day after day, he sat behind his newspaper, never bothering to speak to anyone who came in. Mom worked all the time, cheerfully looking after the tourist cabins. One day I met her in the grocery. "Pa didn't eat his cereal this morning," she said. "I always try to change before he gets tired polished and brass gleaming.

Only FIUPINO a handful of civiliansfell in be hind them. The rest of Tacloban this was not confirmed by Moscow. Lippmonn Sees Risk whom he met in his stock company in San Francisco. They were wed in 1927, and the marriage ended in divorce 10 years later, His. first wife' was Grena Bennett, whom he married in San Francisco rn 1901.

They were divorced in 1903. 7 The veteran actor had a varied career before he decided on the stage. Weak as a youngster, he took up boxing and became proficient- enough to jenterthe professional ranks under an assumed name something his' family dis stayed behind "closed On the first night of the grand balL the United States -navy provided music through its softening up routine along the neighboring beaches. OuisdBrM landings were made on the threV islands at the mouth of Leyte culf and the worst Science. Previously he had or- ganized an ornithological section of the academy.

From 1889 1910 he had compiled migration reports from the United States biological survey. He also kept voluminous Tprivate records on bird life, In California he was active in the affairs of She Cooper- Ornithological club. 1 An Associate's Tribute in 'Trusting? Deicey New York. 4P) Walter Lipp- mann, columnist for the New York Herald Tribune, says that "the risk and cost of a change" in ad of anything. It makes it kind of (Continued from Page One) university in Manila beforgthe Japs came.

I told him how glad 1 was to be' back in the islands. "No, sir," he said, "it is we who are glad. It is impossible for you to And I cannot tell you how we feel." Stare Brilliant Parade During the afternoon several hundred Filipinos staged a parade in the business section of the bity. It was a brilliant affair marked by much flag waving and jubilant shouting. The celebration was completely spontaneous in marked contrast "to a "celebration" which typhoon in 10 to 20 years sWepw ministrations "during this momen tous year seems to be too great "As an ornithologist, he was primarily a field man," wrote Dr.

and declared "I cannot feel, that hard," she added, "Pa" just ain't any hand to tell you what he likes." "He certainly doesn't talk much, does he?" I -said sympathetically. "No, Pa don't talk much," Mom Gov. Dewey can be trusted now with responsibility in af me ciiy. Between the shelling and the wrath. 0f the elements the Japs lost all interest in thir majestic festivities.

By the night they were- rapidly losing all interest in Tacloban. THAT'S WHY your used kitchen fats are needed more than ever. So go righ on saving theni Save all scrapings and drippings, and justas soon as the canjis full, rush it to your He will give you 2 free red points and At for every pound. This is one of the important things you can do toward victory! In a syndicated column, Lipp- covered and quashed. He was, successively, a singing waiter in Duluth, a sailor on a Great Lakes steamer, a Buffalo, N.

dishwasher, a vocalist in a touring medicine show and a Chicago hotel night clerk. mann after, asserting "there is answered. "But," she added fondly, "he's something alive around the house." much that "can fairly be criticized in the president's conduct of af the Japs had 'staged only a few days ago. ipproted by WPBPaiJ jor hy Industry fairs," added: -Stephejfs. "He was meticulously careful and conscientious in his own identifications but not hard boiled toward beginners.

He was a delightful companion in the. field. Hjs manner might be described as gentle and This temperament enabled him to unconsciously play the role' of mentor and friend to more than one neophyte who came under his influence. Persons who enjoyed the privileges of his eompahion-shipahd tutelage will remember him-with gratitude." Bennett got his first stage part Rich British Soldier 'Killed Londdon. IJV Maj, Lord David Davies, 29, reputedly the man in the British army, has been killed in 'action with the But in criticizing the president at 18, played Broadway, toured i i i 3 i i.

The navyhas designeda flying suit containing builtin tourniquets which serve as a possible aid in the control of bleeding among wounded pilots during combat. it is necessary to remember that though he has messed up certain things and bungled -others, he has Royal Welsh Fusiliers; it was an It seems that several days before we landed the people of Tac-loban got word that the Americans were on their way back. The effect on the people was so immediate that the Japs sensed what was up. The Jap commander made a nounced Sunday, played- the leading part in forming and holding together the greatest military coalition in the history of the world. "It is Roosevelt's achievement vec cm formal announcement saying an KNUTE B.

HIGHMAN Memorial Services for- Knute I hmj allll American invasion was impos and it is a 'very great achievement hose body wasfinHeeti he, said. B. Highma an 62, found Saturday anernoon in rus sible, that a whole conyoy of American ships had beep destroyed off that 800 planes, seven carriers and 13,000 home, 1719 32d street, will be held Pope Gives Audience to K. C. of Omaha marines had been destroyed.

at 3 p. m. today at the Nelson-Berger funeral home, conducted by Rev. L. E.

Tallakson of the First Lutheran church. According Given Cold Shoulder Then' to celebrate the great Jap victory" the commander ordered to a report of Coroner J. E. We Now Wave in Stock FinESTOUE CUAHPIOI TIDES 6.00-16 6.50-16 7.00-16 Bring Your. Certificate A ID) FIRESTONE STORE 20 Fourth St.

Swanson, Mr. Highman had been Vatican City. BV-Pope Pius received Francis P. Matthews of Omaha, Nebn supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus, at a private audience Sunday. a full dress parade to be followed dead about 10 days -when the by grand ball to last for three nights.

body was found. Burial was made xaie aaxuraav in oraceiimu rain. The entire Jap garrison turned cemetery. German National Debt London. 3V-The Berlin radio out lor the parade with trappings MRS.

FRANCES PETRUCKA Funeral "services for Mrs. Fran- announced Sunday that nazi Germany's national debt totals We Fill Prescriptions Gaynor-Barstad Company ces I'etrucKa, ziio wacorao I avenue, who died Thursday after la long illness, will be held at 9 000,000,000 marks. At the pre-was official rate of exchange of 40 cents to the. mark this would amount to $126,000,000,000. mi 1 1 tyo C30TA7 I N7.

bA tl'-h VviySjfiN: I 4 -HvsM- H----- Approximately 10,000,000 radio m. today inline ui. rrancis Catholic church. Burial will be in Calvary cemetery under direction of the Winter funeral home. receivers of all types were sold in the United States during 1939, with a retail value of about 000,000.

DAVID POLESHOOK Funeral services for David IT'S NEW! IT.S? UNUSUAL! i I- Poleshook, 54, 609 Fifth street, who died Wednesday, Will be held 3 p. m. today in Larkin's funeral chapel. Burial will be in Logan Park cemetery. Mrs; Frank Hanscdm Tho TELEX CORD NOISS SUPPRESSOR of Blencoe Is Dead Blencoefc la.

Special: When the I msm 11 MHz -r fjire siren announced the opening A pry4 mt to npprtM rrd urf pre ittt qaick moTtacaU from Illar eoBaector Up tnm ta lattrmmnu Only Ib 1H It ft baattfally 4tlr to ahae tka aapvaraaec of aay kearlag' aid. Tea will waat of thaw lntrtf ala aparasaera aa aaaa a yaa aaa It! Oaly ILM Jta waTl attack It for yam. of the first war bond drive three ago, Mrs Frank Hanscom. aroused by the siren, fell and broke her- hip. Complications which developed from her injury caused her death Sunday.

She was 73 years old. A Mrs. Ho iufOWB rrhe Ansners aid a stepson' survive, The fu Whether you find him behind a counter in Des Moines or Salt neral will be Tuesday. Darldaoa BIAc flu S-liU -no knows whether you can get hotel reservations where you are going, tell you the days 'and schedules th at avoid the -most crowded buses, and gi ve you the most economical routes to all joints. Better see him today let him plan your whole trip.

You'll be lake pty, he's the besr friend of millions of bus riders the fel-low who tdiows all the answers Get acquainted. Don'r think of him as just the fellow who sells you a ticket from here to there. Consider him as the man who more comfortable. rwaja vavtitoa. a an aat'w i Bata UNION USD 6 311 Sixth St.

Phone 5-7678 HoirttEi ITQuQuan Foe! I 1 1 1 1 Vby not' break away at auadWa Cor a few pleaaaat Momenta test yoanelf bcCora a Perfecdy Marreloas FM BlsUwII. aa-Fasbioaad or Uaakattaat PM, yoafaiow.kawliicycfprarar8a rich, ajeSowtLe Perfect Mlier. Psta a kappy IVaaa- taatioa Mark at the end of a tryia day. YOU TCD CAP FICUTVV GIVinO. A.

hi 0 Ou 0M-O Out a Sioux City, Iowa A St Stale YUaT. A Jf IT LINES CaateKaoanlSairita. I.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1864-2024