Evening Star Newspaper, January 25, 1942, Page 19

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A—18 = @ards of Thanks JKINS, MATTIE. The family of m. MATTIE GASKINS To expres: qul‘fll":lvn to their nef Mll IDG their ktndntu and beautiful also to Rev. Triplett and Lht g 4 nl L‘h Gainesville. Vi many Botnerahd ‘srandmmo ‘THE ’A“ILY - o‘l*fl“ THOMAS, 1 ' Rev. Clergy and Holy Nlme clll! % Anthon! Chureh ‘members of the N friends and D!'I:IN ‘(fl’ on, ‘expressions _of ing binders’ Unios their _kind Tendered during my bereavement. WIFE, M. E. O'BRIEN. ¢ |and JENN. DR ABE B. The wife of the B. sin- te ctrey Thank the friends and: patients.for their thoughtfulness sympathy during her recent bereavement. SMITH, JEROME B. The relatives of {he late JEROME B. SMITH wish t0 thank and Lincoln Temple Church Engraving employes and the n for thelr kindness in thelr fimr@{n S"$liMs AND RELATIVES. WATSON. SAMUEL W. The hmlly of the late SAMUEL W. WATSON wish to ex- their thanks and deep appreciation e pastor, choir and congregation of e_Nineteenth Street Baptist Church, the - fl’lltlnll organizations, cl ubs &nd friends for their many kindnesses ihe iliness of our father an pathies extended me fioral"tributes sent at his death. * Braths ADERSO, EMMA. On Tuesd Elizabeth’s Hospital. leaves seven umus. Jackson, Mrs. Hallway. Freoels Angerson: ; five grand- daughters, a host of relatives and friends. ¢ Remnln; !flel}l,nl IL J H. Lowe funeral e ¥ P*Riherai Monday. January 26, at 2 pm, at Mt zlon Church. 29th between . snd O sf the Rev. Haynes omaumn‘ lnu'nem. ll Zion Cemetery. hmlher an January IMMA LKIRE, SON_ J. ‘Thursday, Samuary 55, “T040 JENISON"J. ALKIRE . of 1358 Fairmont st. nw. beloved hus- Band’of Edna' Alkire andfaner of” Leon- r enn, home, 2001 14th st n.%.. on Monday. Jan 26, &l 11 am. Iiterment Fori Lin- 7 o Smdery: 25 ALKIRE, JENISON J. A special com- munication of King David Lodge No. M. ugcnueu rnr T Tadee” 608, apolts, Ind OLFGRAM, Master. w. G PARKY, Seevetars. RANK 8- , OB Jriday, Jan No. m: Georgetown funeral home. " 31st and M ‘SelVices and interment at Arlington Na- tional Cemetery on Monday. January 26, at 1 pm. Relatives and friends invited. BARRETT, WILLIAM H. On_ Friday, January 23, 1942, WILLIAM H. BARRETT, the beloved husband of Minnie C. Barreit, iather of Cleveland Barrett and_brother Robert J. and Dangerfield Barrett, Mrs. $etty Cox ‘and Mrs. Lula, Sanders Remains resting’ at Chambers” 400 Chapin st. n.W., where service: held on Monday. January 26, at 10 latives and friends invited. Inter. flm James Barrett's Estate Cemelery, ontross. Va. BARRY, WILLIAM K. On Friday. Jan- 1942, at his residence. 1425 Euclid at. n.w, Wi K. BARRY, beloved son o! Johnnnl T. and the late Dennis H. & D*Fikieral from the abov Monday, January 26, at 8:3( i St Pauls Church, vheu w { offered ‘ai 9 am. Relatives and_Iriends favited. ** Tnterment — Ariington National Cemetery. funeral hom vm Tesidence on then, t his hnme Purdu; SEdrcE W' BEALL: Mullinix, Mrs James Hawes. ) services on Monday, January 26. at 10:30 am. from Mountain View Church, Purdum, Md. Interment church Gemetery. 'Roy W. Barber funeral director. BELL, VIRGINIA. On Saturday. Jan- wary 24. 1942, VIRGINIA BELL. daughter | of Thaddaeus Bell. She also is survived by two brothers eight sisters and other w Telatives and frien: Notice of mn;m later. Arrangements by Malvan BLAIWAS, DORA on Ssturday, Jan y 24. 1942, DORA BLAJWAS. 51 years | Detoved_ wite, of Jouenh Blajmas devoted mother of Dr.'Abe Blajwas Funeral from Bernard Danzansky & 3501 l4th st nw.. Sundsy, Janisry 25, fl!l!. ALBERTA M. On Saturday. .'unlllry 24, 1942, — 1205 New Jersey w., ERT BUSH, devoted e of 3. Penwick Bush, mother of Pauline d Almore Clark; sister of Mrs. and William and Isaiah Moore; te Also surviving are other relatives and M many I oon Sunday rmmn th A e Tsaidehae Whet services will ‘on Mondar, JABUREY 20, o8 p.m. Interment Harmony Cemeters. Bt" Tangements by McGuire. BYRD, THELMA On Thursday, January 23, 1042 THELMA MAE BYRD: daughter “of Bessie Byrd miece of Lillé Myl earbit, | cousn'_of J 24, lD’is e anua; b . age 2118, Daxote ave: n.e.. Wik CAPNER. beloved hus. Puneral m:flw:imu um P. A. A. M. please note. JOSEPHINE CAS ffe of the M alter erai services from fbe & B Hine Co. lunenl home, 291 nut ?.hl &r\no n?me &:fld T‘lell’l &ur:h. al . n.w., where mass ‘Interment Glen- wood Cemetery. TLLIAM H. On Priday. Jan- 191.’. at his home Vale, Va., 6 : Beomre A § Deipnd h“'?a.ngh‘;’um Skillman OB v‘. lnfl Mrs. Dora Crosen of Vale and Mrs. Pansy x.hne of Vien: | AT ae v Kis Tase residence. ‘om Vale Cin . Jan- p.m. lnunn nt Vale Funer: uary 28, 1942, Cemmn. day. .hnn- 24, ToEARY onunnr mmalu‘i A‘;.D LLD’ other of eetine ot Fras ve, n.W. BDILLAB. % SoME G, (EFSTRATIOS ETAS) On Baturday, January 2 T et A *Siniey “Memorial - Ho % KOUMERTAS). residence, ¢ n.w., beloved husband ol ¢ and father of George C.. 1 Mary Comert and Remains resting at the CROSSMAN, GEORGE GRANT. On Sat- prday. S nusry 34, 1042, at his residence, 2511 N, Underwood st East Falls Church, EORGE e | Yowea Bmsband of Nellie E. Crossman and faiber of William C_ Clossinan, East Flls Church. 3. P R_Taslor of Dunn * George 1. Orossman 4 RIS Ve Mo bt & Shaw of Arling- v ton. vn ’ Remains resting at his late resi- s from Crossman Meth- s Church, Va.. Monday, pm. Interment Oak- FUNERAL DIRECTORS. ~J. William Lee’s Sons Co. LL 5200 4 and Mass Ave NE Cremabonum V. L. SPEARE CO. Neither successor_to_mnor the orisi IOOSHSQ.N\a FUNERAL DESIGNS. TGEO. C. SHAFFER. Inc. AT Cor. 14th & G Eye MANNING'S [0 . 627 _Conn. Ave. GUDE BROS CO. “"’" “Pieces Nationa) 4276 “cemerony ot — AT TIME OF SORROW Call Spruce 0250, nnhlilhnunn Nattona 2802 ' FRICES. Onen mu!nn nd Sunda: ._2608. &zmanmunu Sir Faryl Alkire | Hines Co. funeral | RA' call at | loved Bnflu A ¥y jure papers please copy. nl:a THOMAS M. On Baturday, Jan- 1942, at his residence. THOMAS M. DENT, i Dent, father of Wiliiam, peat: srandfather of Jean tide and William Dent.” It Thomas M., 3d. ains may be viewed a Tunesal home, 380 Rbod Tsiand ‘Wednesday, it m. fmm the ne'r’x '"'"fn"cniun‘ terment Lincoln 26 DoNNmY‘ o denly, Fri OMAS” brother of M Renkeiy “flfih Caj "fll otrut. Apartment 29 H_ st nw Tnterment A Amn:wn N tional"Cemetery. Rindly omit ln' DONNELLY, THOMAS F. m.y‘.’ ety o5 Y, No. 14, called 1942. ll B the burpose conduct the funera owur fate brother. THOMAS P DON. NELLY. Members arée urged to attend. By order of the worshiptul master. JAMES L. PADGETT. Secretary. MRS. CLARA L. Departed this January 22. 1942, at Mrs. L. Centennial Ledse, M., h DOOCY, life Thursda tanooga. beloved ‘mother of 8. J. Maritjeren and Interment in Pittseld. 11 DRYDEN, sah.rduy. January 24, 1942, at Providence Hospital, FRI CK M. DRYI loved hlllhlnd ol Ann H Dryden ' (nee Quinm) of 1009 Tayior ove T Tuesday. January 27. at 8:3 m. jeauiem’ mass ot § ure Thierment Mount Olivet omeu:y Relatives and friends invited. NT, JAMES A. On Prid " 1942; at his residence, 803 5. M BANT. ag ye beldved husband of Mary' J."DuBant (nes asey). Puneral from the chapel of P. A. Talta- yull, h st. s.w.. on Monday. January 6, 'at 2 p.m. Relatives and friends 1 0 | vited Tnfertent in Consressional Spm- ry. DUVALL, SARAH HASKINS. mund into eternal rest on Saturday, January 24, Da2: at her residence. 1082 15th st. n.W.. SARAH HASKINS DUVALL, beloved motbrr of Mrs. Bessie Taylor Maxwell and Hobes Jonnson. grandmother "of . Harry Johnsen: Other relatives and friends survive, Re- mains resting at the John T. Rhines & Co. I chapel, and Eve sts. s.w. Notice of funeral later. ,DYSON; GEORGE. On Friday, January at Walter Reed ' Hospital GEORGB DYSON. beloved nephew wens Other relatives a Trionds ‘slso siyive. UPrionds may eal the W. Ernest Jarvis funeral church, 14 You st. n.w., after 5 p.m. Sunday, Jan- uary Jn c Funeral Tuesday, January 27, at 1 p.m.. from the above funeral church’ "Relatives and friends invited. Interment Arlington National Cemetery. 26 EDWARDS, JOHN A. Beloved husband of Alice Edwards, the son of the late Nelson and Prances Ed Funeral services from Walker Memorial e 20iH 15th SR Jan- 0% P, *Rélatives ‘and. iriends ry “3 1942, at the Alexandria Hos- FLORENCE. husband Ot Biive F- Florencs and atner st Wiiiam H. a; est Florence, Mrs. Pauline D. Mavel V. Glisso, t 2 pm. from the Cunningham funeral’ Bome, Al- exandris, Va. Interment l" Hill Cem- etery. 6 GARRETTSON, On_ Friday, Jan Methodist _‘Home, CRURCHMAN ARR N SiusbAnd of the late Baille M. Garrettson. Funeral services on Monday. January 26. at 10 am. at the Methodist Home. 4901 Conn. ave. n.w. Interment Glenwood January Whittier s 3 FIN. mother of Edward Lawrence and Walter T. Griffin Services at the 8. H. Hines Co. funeral on_'Monday, fio "o, Interment On Saturday, at his residence, 611 L HARRIS, devoted hushmd of Viola B. Harris. devoted father ot Fior rie, Ji - erick Srandfather of Giiflora L mlbhl tives and friends,~ © 5 7 uj 3 fiotice of ‘funcral later. Arransements HART, MONTEL. this e SR of Annie B. Hart. one brother, Wiliam min; of Jfin . ines Co. 3rd -nd h lll until Monday. Janua then at the above res ence: it from uaum ¢ Hope e’ Baprist Church, éw‘ Counf v cAlexsnder nmcm.iu frtetmant chiurch ‘cemese HENDERSON. JOSEPH. m- January 20, 1642, JOSEFH MENDEE Funeral -nnnd.u, :mnn 26, at 2:‘0 n,m b Cv.’s hy 2 4th st 'hv-d Danday at |hn Mnl.fid llln-ll ‘home. terment Pa: fl Joum C OII Thurld.l Jll~ .vomn C. HOCH, g et G. IM father of Jnnnh D. He = Funeral from the W. W. Deal funeral h:;u..' 4Rl gto ia lv! n. n Mon- friends invited Cemetery. JEFFRIES, MISS A. HERBERT. fay, January 23, 1942, at ber niece Mri Waiter N Irene Jefl) n. ERT JEFFRIES, Burial by cremation. Chapel. Berwyn, Ill, at January 2 t11a Tnterment Fort Lingoln On Pri. TwyD, Service at Abram t ».m. Monday, JONES, DALLA D!Dlned this life Sat- urday, January "4 devoted husband nl the l-u lhle Jones, F‘mud father of Mrs B. Jones. ma nd Jones. "Also_survi Cre Fve srand: ving. b children. one rmt—'nnd-.hud two_sisters. Mrs. Martha Dade Mit., Crimons T iends. viewed &t mfim Tesi- 5“‘ n.w., after 4 p.m. Sun- t 2 pm.. from the 8. John's Baptist cnureh.. Ar- llnmn. Va. Interment O%n gery, Arrangements by John T. ll.mn Y 0. 3rd and Eve sts. Diease take by“m“ of Imu&‘° 1ater. At “v Members of Division adicn” ‘Auxiliary. Ancient OPaer of | Eberis e eied T Rl 8 our late memi LARKIN. 2700 6th st. n.c.. Monday. Jan: Vil e o200 MEYE] on !nurdly. Jan pary 2 et e n lm reside, o7 it nw 0. ME' be- loved aunt of Miss Pelle- Mevers, Miss trene Meyers. Mrs. 3. H: Lewis, Dr. Victor Meyer Nirer George WACo. Femsios restim H Hines Co. funeral home, 290 Notice of funeral hlzr - MILLS, CLARENC SR. On Thurs- duy, Samincy 251045, 5C ne home. Quince ard, Md.. CL. M beloved husbind of Bessie Mills. Testing at his late residence. Funeral services at the Methodist Church Qulnce Orchard, Md.. Sunday, January 25. at 2 pm Interment Forest Oak Cemetery.- Gaithersburg, Md. SE. on Pr]OONEY. JAMES JOSEPH. his home. at, TR0 Snd o Narth, aningion e JANES JOSEPH MOONEY, Sr., the beloved hus- band of Emms Mooney and father of Mrs. Frances ‘M. th_and James Joseph Moones, 95, of ATIREtOn- and Ms. Selen Knee of ‘Pittsburgh. Remains resting at his late home. Requiem mass at January 26, at St Charies' Church: Burial following at Mount Olivet Cemetery. Ar- rangements by the Fitzgerald funeral home. Arlington, Va MUSGROVE, ary 23. 1943 Md. K 1> survived gy Bve 3 Charles Nicholson, Mrs_ Roland Fenning- r Dailey, Mrs. Rosie Benson ines; five sons. Charles d C.. Harry Z. Howard 8. and wuu-m & *Mussrove: oué brother, Francis usgrove. Rmnm z. On_Priday, .un- N Tis Dome. ille. B Nerat services on Monday, Jamuary 26 at 1 pm. at Salem Church ' Brook- Ville"Md. Pinterment St. Jobn's Gemetery, Qlney. Md. Roy W, Batber, funeral,di- rector NEWHEISER, WILLIAM A. On Butlll'dl!, WASHINGTON NATIONAL | £X0 The_Capital's Finest Memorial Park. 'cou 2No_Obligation; Biics” Family Flots~easonabls. KONUMIN’I‘S Lincoln Iomomls One of AMERICA’S Largest Manufacturers Saves Y.l 20 to 40% 1014 Eye St. N.W. Free Delivery In 500 Miles Krowles, Nellie Gerlack. William J.'snd James New- eises Purieral from his daughters residence. ne 'nmd-y CommUDIAtion of Washingt wn and FREDERICK M. Suddenly on | hom .| TA ars. J.m'n_.u 24, THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Buflu tevoted " iend. " Edne and dw tives and riends. 'l'.h L. & oo THR and Vste B ‘ Muzn P a:icmeu Monday, Junuary ”1 at 2o AMI fl Va. s lanlun dl!. .hn. late John hvmu L mum t Glenwood oun e " Efin Friday, January "x. 1042, at Geor ington Uni tal, mr';'l!uvno e Dermian), 30 years. beloved wife of Ranno. paiDeral from her late residence. 1304 Emerson st. n.e.. on Monday, ""“"1: fe.9:90 pm. Requlem mass at Holy om- fori at 10 a.m. latives and frlends invited. " Interment at Mount Olfver &?mu. Arrangements by P. A. Talta- ROBINSON, JANE L. ursda; January 22, 1 at b Lnu,génu 71% sster of Emm .'nhnlon. Wiilie ‘Mooney Lee? ‘mother of James <. a1 Vinoent. Frank and " Alexs and Mrs. Smith. She also furvived by many gran lnfl rea —Innfl Pr‘end may fi-n lt.v;hl Mslvan & Schey nd will be heid” Monday. Jainu: STE L. I rmens Beitims ore. SCH ROFF, WILLIAM HENR' on Priday, J 3, 2, Tiday, January 23, 1042 -n Mont[nmery ital Olney, W atand W ihe Colomia Tunéral . Jemuary 6. at 3 .m. Inter ment Rc:hflh Union Cemetery. STAPP, MARGARET A. On Priday. {anuary 23, 1942, at Gearge Washingion Uniyersity Howital, MARG! fl 1ith road Soutn. Ariin dton. FREDERICKA. % 1942, at her rellaene!' s R _Remains may be viewed from Frasiers funeral home, 389 Rhode Island ave. n.W.. Wwhere funeral services will bo held_on ‘uesday. January 27, at 1:30 p. 26 4aTONLES. SIMON. Buddenty. on Thurs- Januaty 22. 1942, at his residence. 881 AT 2% R TOWLES, be- loved husband of Mamje Towles. brother of Julia Porter. Other relatives and friends 230 survive him. Friend: late mmenee Siter 11 am ar; Runeral Monday, Jan 26. at 1 pm., from the W, Ernest Jarvis funeral church, 1432 You st nw. ‘Relatives and friends ., Interment " Arlington Nzungnl TURNER. MARTHA ELIZAB] Pfldl! Jln ary 2. call at his unday, Jan- funeral g:enflx lnvned Xnu.rment in RacllC.n On Tuesday, Jan- at her Fesidence. 500 U st, TWINE, € Jmother ‘o n Twin Ty ‘Rev. 8. L Michaux officiatin CHARLES E. Suddenly, on ‘Wednesday. January 21, 191"’ At his rell- dence; 1308 Corbin piacé n.e WALKER, beloved Walker (nee | I(ullon and (-ther of Edward uu J. Walker and Mrs. Ma Coustney eids ey Gali at the ab 8:30 a.m. Monday, L ReItives and Triends o Interment Cedar Hill Cemetery. 26 WALKER, GEORGE W. On Ssturday. January 24; 1642 e Beloved husband of ihe Tate Nellle Walker lnd h(her Of Ml!! V Walker. I services from Collins funersk l‘fll"x i DW. on Tuesda$, 30 a.m..” requiem mass s invited. Holy Redeemer Cemetery, Baitimore. 2:‘ WALKER. GEORGE. On Saturds a4, Todz, GEGRG ved £ Mary Vo Walker: Nouce ox funeral hu LAWRENCE E. On Priday, P eging A842, ai Qeorgeiown Uni- versity Hospital, ‘LAWRENCE STER of 3780 Cnestaut gt nw " beloved husband of Dorothy A. Webster. ‘Priends are lnvlt!d to_call at Gawler's 1750 P h ices nder Robinse Lucy Gough and Mrs. 5 o Paralysis Drive Dimes i:|Declarad Pledge of = (Loyally fo President Mrs. Robert H. Jackson And Douglos Fairbanks Speakers”at Luncheon Dimes and dollars for children afflicted with infantile paralysis constitute the Nation's pledge of faith and loyalty to President Roose- velt, Mrs. rt H. Jackson, wife of the Supreme Court justice, said yesterday at a luncheon held at the Hotel 2400 in honor of the Presi- dent's diamond jubilee birthday an- versary. “Only by building stronger Amer- jcans can we make a stronger America,” she declared. “In the past three years, 26,000 of our fellow countrymen have been struck down by infantile paralysis, and most of them, as usual, are children. Surely in this time of overwhelming re- sponsibility for the President, it must be & joy and a comfort to know that we of healthy America are carrying on the crusade which he so bravely began. Pledge of Loyalty. “It is by giving our dimes to the Mile o' Dimes and our dollars for afflicted children that we can send our pledge of faith and loyalty to our leader in the White House,” Mrs. Jeckson said. Lt. Douglas Fairbanks, jr., U. 8. N. R., described Mr. Roosevelt as the White Knight of those countless numbers of people all over the world who yearn and fight for a better world. He has become a symbol of the liberal, courageous new world. He is the leader of all those who aspire to a better and fuller life. He is the commander £ in chief of millions of armed citi- zens determined to defend their homes, maintain their ideals and pave the way for a just and perma- nent world peace.” Big Increase in Disease. Commissioner Mason said that in 1941 there wen'l.:)’ c‘I;es u?: hnx‘f:&cfl: alysis re) Eax\‘“éy mrul:x over 1940, while in Maryland there were 242. The Dis- trict Chapter of the Infantile Paral- ysis Foundation, he said, has re- ceived $100,704 and has spent $87,752. “With practically no ex- pense for administration, every dol- lar you.spend or every dime you contribute goes directly to help some afflicted child or some grownup,” he said. The luncheon was sponsored by the hotel and the President’s Birth- day Committee. Miss Meredith Howard was master of ceremonies. Series of Reviews | Of Best Sellers Planned A new series of monthly reviews of current best-sellers by the Wash- ington Critics’ Forum will open Feb- ruary 5 with a review of John Gun- ther’s “Inside Latin America,” by be heid o nuary 25, at 350 e nterment. Califoruia 228 WHEAT. MAJ. JOSEPH H._ On Thurs- A ‘y'mm_‘_m loved husband 1 Re- ough study of Latin the Rev. Joseph F. Thorning, pro- fessor of economics and social science at Mount St. Mary’'s College, be- Emmitsburg, Md. Mr. Thorning has made & % fairs and has recently returned from South American uncy | & Visit to several countries. Anton Lang, jr., will pre- o1 atives and | SEVO ting ‘m bome. 380 K. L ave n. re 26, at 1 pm, Cemetery. In Memortam FORD, ICES EUGENE m“"f"i tribute of the besutiful life f | 1¢ ever & sou} mmfi Ner' num on earth, Then, mother, it certain HER DEVOTED HOSBAND " AND SON. LOUIS K. AND LOWELL J. IWW¥D- BURGESS, JOHN N. lnl ‘memory of our dear hlnhlnd lnd {ather. JOHN BURGESS. n"pllnd into cumlu one year ago mm. /anuary 25, 1941 Dage of sadness still comes over s idden tears so often Memory keeps you Sleays near us. HIS DEV 2 ST no L P a L7 COPFREN, W s Fears ago today, Januers 26 165, In_our lonely hour nely, hours ot" thinking e w you dearly ‘miss you ATIE dewns :m LOVING W AND CHITDREN. ANENHOWER, ALICE G. A tribute el of G. D, 0 years ago today, w'im {rue and tender DAUG! MAMAI\H HRMANTRANT. - g, s, B o dled i toda, January 2o, 19 T Loved in Fetmembered'in death, WIFE. ¢ GARNER, GERTRUDE CECIL. In loving Jmorv of ‘our dear mother, 4 {rsat-wandmother. GER "m"" ”b.hffl. led ellnr_lrfigu 280 lodl! GATES. OTHO C. A tribute of lovl to the .memory of our dear husband and father, OTHO C. , who passed away 50 suddenty elght years ag0. todas *Tig sweet to think we'll meet again ere are no more. Ang that the ane we loved 30 well Has only gone befo! msb LOVING IFE IDNA AND SON WARD, GORDON, MARIA L. !n loving remem- brance of my dear MARIA L. GORDON: who Tassed & ago today, January 25, 19: It is so lonely without you. dear mother, d 50 sad along life’s way Life does not seem the same to me Since you were called away. HER DAUGHTER, CORMORA' V. ARNOLD, nine years HAWKINS, RUTE. In sacred memory of my loving wife RUTH HAWKINS, who died gne year today. January 25, 1941, Gone to God, leaving a lonesome pard. ISAIAH HAWKINS. * In cherished and everlasting memoryof our darling uofn'fm FA fi AND sisTERS. * KLINEHANSE, WILLIAM L. Tn Joving memory ot our den husband and father. WILLIAM L. KLINEHANSE. who departed this Jife twenty-one years ago today, Janu- ary 25, 1921. Lovee n life, remembered in death. HIS WIFE AND CHILDREN. JAMES, GEORGE TYNER. MOFFITT, CHESTER J. In loving mem- ory of our dear husband and father, CHESTER J MYRTLE M¢ AND SON, ROLAND. * FRICE, BESSIE. Whose homegoing was one year ago today, Jani Gone, but not (ommm MORRIS, WILLIAM R. In 1 - ory of our dear nulb-nd and lflu L&)( R. MORRIS, who departed this life one year ago today, January 25, 1941. Not dead to us who loved him ‘He's only re: llvll'ml .rn'l' in memory WIFE AND CHILDREN. * o o motngr, 30 l’('}-.h)ui 5 D YeATs Ag0 fandmotner | of 'UDE C] side and introduce the speaker. The review will be given at 8:30 pm, in the Mayflower Hotel. " | Boston U. Group to Give <% |Concert Here Tonight ‘The Boston University Seminary Singers, a group of 36 students for the ministry, will give a concert at 8 o'clock tonight in the Brookland Methodist Church. Dr. James R. Houghton, profes- sor of music at the Boston Univer- sity School of, Theology, is director of the organization. Dr. Houghton, a member of the committee vh!r.h fevised the Methodist hymnal, the author of “101 Hymns for Ilm. Bonds buy bombs. Stamps buy bullm Buy United States Defense bonds or stamps every payday. In Memoriam gfiw . ENT. o the a4 Sebruary 311151, nn-:{m,yz T Loved in life, loved and remembered in leat] Great. brave. loving hearts, bless you wherever you are In God’s wide universe today. ESTELLE. * STEVENSON, FRANCES (PANNY). A tribute of Jove and d"flllofl to th. memory our dear wile and moiber. who lefi"us one year ago today, January z g "Tis mother, dear. we love Who couldn't be here of nnn e e stole away to be no o' rocalve ner pay. a er ero-n he'd adore. Rest on. dear motl bor's ner. 55 ity nands wal toli nG thtul mother, of lease franc ner cternal God DEV¢ AND DA 'r IBON. AND BERTHA N. STOKES, JOSEPH C. AND AGNES ‘l‘.nf}:’oll,v.mmua H ge m:mrbf our ho tell aidees AONRe Tara anuary 24 and January 25, n{qo, nnpemveu Sleep on, dear mother and fathe In life and death, in dark and light, all e in God's cal Sound th black abyss, And he Is' there. So l¢lnln[kon Him. I make with reverent meel lerce the deep of is own, my will, Anu with nrmm from Him shall my uxu ufi fulill. DEND SOSERH ¢ BTOKES. SR O OEe VERMILLION, MINNIE E. In sad but loving remembrance of my aear mother, E. VERMILLION (nee Sweeney). lw died one year ago today, January 25, memory, dear mother, Wi linse; on forgver. HER DAUGHTER. LI STEFFLER. Detroit. Mich. WA REV. HENRY 8. memary of the iate Rev HENRT 5. WASH: INGTON. o loving husband nd father. who di this ienly one year ago ay, January lfi- 1041, He has m.n.nua his cross for a erown. Time speeds on, has passed Sifice Geath. its' sloom, Its shadows. cast. ‘Within our home. where all seemed bright And took {rom us a shining light. t t and i, -.la.m thm:_n ever wi Bere irn: ot m‘?,'l’.m Eor i 12 hegrenwe 5 nASHINGTON, WESLEY. - da; auhu eternity four years ago today, m’ ll'l# DeAr us. ] %%“"..t‘éa..m...: not, A In hth' January |l JANUARY 25, 1942. HONOR PRESIDENT’S BIRTHDAY—Mrs. Jesse Jones, wife of the Secretary of Commerce (left); Lt. Douglas Fairbanks, jr., U. 8. N. R. (center), and Mrs. Fairbanks (right) were among the guests at a luncheon at Hotel 2400 yesterday in honor of President Roosevelt’s forthcoming birthday cel- ebration. —=Star Staff Photo. REPORT TO THE NATION Third Installment of Archibald MacLeish’s Statement on Status of War Effort IV. The Joint Effort ‘The sun never sets on the men and materials of the Lend-Lease Act, passed by Congress a scant 10 months ago. It is a unique ‘war weapon. The men who fight or labor under the banners of lend-lease range from young British pilots, trained In the United States, to steam-shovel men at work on bases in the cold and fog of Northern Ireland. The materials vary from vitamins for the babies of besieged England to bombers and tanks. The theater of lend-lease is the world itself. Thirty-three gov- ernments, in addition to the Brit- ish Empire, are eligible for bene- fits. The United States, with roughly 7 per cent of the world's area and population, has pledged itself to become the arsenal of democracy for 72 per cent of the ‘world’s area and for 64 per cent of its peoples. To this end almost $13,000,000,000 has been appro- priated. Does the Axis plan a push east- ward? We are preparing for such thrust. Out of lend-lease funds, British bases are being built at Rangoon in Burma, at Karachi on the Arabian Sea; and other vital outposts on the Persian Gulf and in Eritrea. Planes already bought by the Britsih are being delivered by the Army Air Corps Ferrying Command; new planes are being purchased. Pan Amer- ican Airways has received a sub- sidy for & new route across the South Atlantic. Another lend- lease air line reaches to Iceland. ‘Trucks supplied with lend-lease fuel and oil careen over the crazy twists of the Burma Road, China's main life line. The United States Public Health Service is battling malaria among the 250,000 Chinese laborers who are building a railroad, parallel- ing the Burma Road. Wide Needs Outlined. The “relatively small trickle” of assistance—so it was described last September—can hardly be called & river now. But it is a stream and it is growing fast. Last March only $18,000,000 in lend-lease aid were given. By November, 1941, this swelled to $283,000,000 a month. A grand to- tal of 12 billion dollars has been spent, which is some 10 per cent of all we have spent for defense and war since the Lend-Lease Act was passed. The stream must become a river, a torrent, and then a flood. Training British pilots, guarding the health of thése who labor on the Burma Road, repairing war and merchant vessels—all must continue and be augmented. Planes, tanks, guns, ammunition and food must flow in even greater quantities to Russia, the Dutch East Indies, Australia, Burma, China, Africa, the Mid- dle East, the British Isles and South America. The story of lend-lease goes back to the collapse of Europe. France had been buying here. Great Britain, to a much greater extent, had been exchanging her credits in this country for munitions and other supplies. ‘The spring of 1940 brought disaster. An invasion of Eng- land seemed certain. We did not wait upon technicalities. The British received all the guns, munitions and other supplies which we could spare. The guns were of World War vintage and their value had been written down from $300,000000 to $43,- 000,000. Yet they might well have saved the British Isles had Eng- land been invaded. That summer the American people awoke to their own dan- ger and the first of the defense billions was provided, Our policy was defilned by the President— defense of the Western Hemi- sphere, continued and increasing aid to Great Britain, the free- dom of the seas, denial of ap- peasement to Hitler. Historie House Bill 1776. By now it was a joint effort. ‘The winter and early spring of 1940-41 made it apparent that the Jjoint effort would fail unless the hands of Britain were upheld. ‘The British, who had continued to buy their necessities of war, were running out of dollars. Ships were being sunk in the Atlantic at the rate of 5,000,000 tons a year. On January 10, 1941, a bill with the historic number, 1776, ‘was introduced in the House of Representatives. This was the Lend-Lease Act. It was followed by an appropriation of $7.000- 000,000. Seven months later a second appropriation of nearly $6,000,000,000 was approved. It was relatively easy to appro- priate the billions; it was infin- itely more difficult to transform the dollars into weapons or serv- ices or food—and, finally, to get them on ships en route to their destinations of desperate need. No Government agency existed to do the work. Our industrial pro- ductive system was already jammed. The shortage of ships grew hourly more grave as the sinkings continued. The first organization created by Executive order was the Divi- sion of Defense Aid Reports. Sub- sequently, the division's name was changed to the Office of Lend-Lease Administration. A clearing houke for requests for aid from the nations which are fight- ing the fight of the democracies, the Lend-Lease Administration buys nothing, produces nothing, delivers nothing. The purchas- ing, producing and delivering are done by the War and Navy De- partments, the Department of Agriculture, the Treasury De- partment and the Maritime Com- mission. The State Depart- ment makes the agreements whereby nations receiving as- sistance clearly understand their rights and obligations. The Board of Economic Warfare is consulted, as is the Office of Pro- duction Management. Final de- termination of the countries to be assisted rests with the Presi- dent. Actual exports sent abroad thus far hardly exceed $600,000,000. ‘The balance of the 12 billion dollars already spent went for services rendered, for air and other training programs in the United States, for the repair of ships, the construction of muni- tions plants. Puture exports will be gigantic when we achieve all- out war pro@uction. Big Sum for Aviation. Of the total of 2.8 billion dol- lars appropriated for aviation, 2.7 billions already have been ear- marked, and contracts up to 1.8 billions have been let. Few of these airplanes have been shipped abroad as yet, but they are be- ginning to come off the assembly lines. Other aerial warfare activities financed by Lease-Lend include the Army Air Corps Ferrying Command, new air lines across ————————————— John T. COMPLETE FUNERALS Frazier'’s Funeral Service Gives You 1. Prompt Attention 389 R. I. AVE. N.W. Mich. J795-7796 the South Atlantic and from West Africa to Egypt, new airports, the training of thousands of British pilots. For lease-lend ships and ship- ping, nearly $2,000,000000 has been authorized. On our East and West coasts, on the Gulf of Mex- ico, and on the Great Lakes 26 shipyards are turning out lease- lend ships. Existing yards are being enlarged and new ones built. Sailors of British war vessels and merchant ships have been fed and housed here while their ships were being repaired. Lease-lend appropriations for war on the land total almost $5,- 000,000,000. This will go for ord- nanee, for tanks, for miscellane- ous military supplies, and for ex- panding production facilities in the United States. All this is aside from supplying food. To Great Britain have gone guns, tanks, medical supplies, raw materials, and machine tools. These necessities are to go also to Australia, New Zealand, India, and South Africa. Several hun- dred American tanks have al- ready been in combat in the North African campaign. Aid to China is far from ade- quate. But heavy machinery of various kinds has been sent. Ma- terials for the new railroad along the Burma road have been sup- plied; also arms and ammunition. Russia is promised $1,000,000,- 000 in lease-lend assistance by June. American material has been going to Russia since July, paid for by Russia and not under lease-lend. Lease-lend shipments, still far from large enough, are expected to be stepped up rapidly. This will include large quantities of oil and gasoline. Huge Food Supply Shipped. The millionth ton of American food has safely grrived in Eng- land. This has defeated Hitler in his attempt, through submarines and aircraft, to starve England into submission. For a time this ‘was a real threat. As long as pres- ent shipments are maintained, Hitler will never starve England. More than that, with fuller ra- tions, British workers will be able to increase their production of munitions. Food for England was a pri- mary objective of the Lease-Lend Act ang is one of the most suc- cessful parts of the entire pro- gram. Over half a billion pounds of meat and fish products had been provided by the end of No- vember, 1941, in addition to hun- dreds of millions of pounds of sugar, eggs, milk, fruits, vege- tables, cereals, and grains. We Conservation of Paper Every citizen is called upon to see that not a pound of paper is wasted. Demand from every clerk that any unnecessary wrapping of packages or un- necessary use of paper bags be dispensed with. ‘Waste paper for paperboard is vital to the packaging of a great quantity of war equip- ment. Do not burn mewspapers, but, when you have saved enough for a bundle, give them to the school children who are co- operating in the defense pro- gram with the parent-teacher organization in The Star’s campaign for reclaiming old newspapers. . Any Family Can Afford Ryan have undertaken to do much more. By the middle of 1042 we will have supplied these totals: dairy products equivalent to 5.6 billion pounds of milk; meat and lard from, 9,000,000 hogs; eggs from 40,000,000 hens; 45,000,000 pounds of chicken—among other items. As a whole, food shipments will represent 6 or 7 per cent of our total farm production. ‘Weather permitting, production of those foods most needed for hu- man health will be greater than ever in our history. No touch of altruism lies in the lease-lend program. We have been sending supplies to the na- tions which have fought a delay- ing action while we were getting prepared. In exchange for lease- lend aid, American airfields have been permitted in British terri- tory in Africa; from all over the world we are getting vital supplies of essential war materials— chromite, asbestos, platinum, tung oil, tin, tungsten. The purpose of the Lease-Lend Act is military. It is a war weap- on. Methods of repayment have been left until after the war. The law says, “the benefit to the United States may be payment or repayment in kind or in property, or any other direct or indirect benefit which the President deems satisfactory.” The first benefit is to be the defeat of the Axis. Knights of St. John Ladies’ Auxiliary At the quarterly meeting of Dis- trict No. 1 last Priday in the Knights of Columbus Club, with District President Mrs. Wilfred P. Ross pre- siding, it was announced that the Hotel Statler in Cleveland had been named headquarters for the coming convention. Mrs. Eleanor Quade is chairman on reservations for the ‘Washington delegation. Supreme Trustee Mrs. G. Steuart Bingman reported that 27 new junior auxiliaries had been or- ganized since the last convention. Mrs. Catherine Walsh has been named co-chairman for the Red Cross program. The Holy Name juniors will give a dance in the Holy Name Audi- torium on January 30. They will elect officers on February 6. Mrs, Isabelle Gilroy directs the group. HUNTEMANN FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE Complete Funerals Start ot $100 RANDOLPH 0190 5732 GEORGIA AVE. N.W. WILLSON K. HUNTEMANN ANNA C. HUNTEMANN 0170 8\ COLLINS FUNERAL HOME Francis J. Collin: 3821 14th St. N.W. Telephone Randoloh 7117 _ o %78 1 coMPANY Funeral Directors 1113 Severth Street N.W. NA. 2473 Branch Funeral Home 3605 Fourteenth St. N.W. HObart 2326 For information that is Romest Reference that is reai— Just ask your meiohbor abot The Funeral Home of Desi Public Inspection Invited COMPLETE FUNERALS At $100 and Up DEAL FUNERAL HOME 4812 Georgia Ave. N.W. At Emerson St. Phone GE. 8700 Branch Home: 316 H St. N.B. Funeral Service We Keep the Cost Within Your Means In every phase of funeral direction Ryan service is qualified and equipped and guide %ou 3 day or night we are always read; any one, any time, anywhere. to advise No matter what time of the to serve nd Ryan service is as complete and pcrlect as ez- perience and skill can make i A Service for Every Cost Requirement Private Ambulance Service VETERANS’ FAMILIES Call this firm without forfeit- ing any veteraw’s fumeral ance to which you are emtitled. allow- James T. Ryan 317 Pa. Ave. S.E. ATlantic 1760-1701

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