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Rapid City Journal from Rapid City, South Dakota • 2
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Rapid City Journal from Rapid City, South Dakota • 2

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m. of will a dean ing TWO RAPID CITY DAILY JOURNAL, RAPID CITY, S. MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1941. METHODISTS OPEN MEETING TUESDAY offering taken. Main Characters Rapid City will be the Methodist capital of South Dakota Tuesday as ministers and laymen gather here for a 57th annual session of the Dakota conference.

Headlining a list e. of prominent speakers will be Bishop J. Ralph Magee. Des Moines, Iowa, head of conference. Daily programs morning, afternoon and ning will continue through Sunday, special features will be of interest to the general public.

The will be Thursday at 7:30 p. m. in the form of drama entitled "I Made My Son a Criminal." It will be free toe public, but an The play boasts two main characters, George Y. Hammond, Hollywood. the author, and Hayward H.

Johnson, Portland, Ore. The remainder of the cast of about 20 persons be local men. will The second feature will be a presentation Handel's "Messiah" by the church choir at 7:45 m. under the direction Methodi4 p. of the Rev.

Charles S. Hempstead, district superintendent. Prof. Joseph B. Holloway, of the school of music at Dakota Wesleyan university, Mitchell, will be guest soloist.

A charge will be made for admission to the "Messiah." Conference sessions open Tuesday at 1 p. m. with a meeting of the board of conference relations, followed by a of the board of ministerial training at 1:30 p. The board of lay activities will also meet, as will trustees and other groups throughout the afternoon. A district banquet will be held Tuesday at 5:30 p.

with all persons invited. An organ recital by Wynona Burkland, Rapid City, is set for 7:30 p. and a sanctuary service is scheduled for 7:45. A memorial service will open with worship led by Dean Headley, Sturgis, with the sermon by the Rev. W.

P. Slocum, Highmore, and a communion service with Bishop Magee Other speakers during the week will include Ohio: Rollin1 Walker, Delaware, Elmer T. Clark, New York City; Mrs. F. B.

Godfrey, Orlando, George L. Morelock, Chicago; Dr. F. A. Lindho: 1.

Des Moines; Badger Clark, Custer, and others. A banquet and meeting alumni and former students Dakota of Wesleyan university is set for Friday at 5:30 p. at the church. Dr. Joseph Edge, Mitchell, president of Wesleyan, will be the toastmaster, with Dr.

C. P. Hargraves, Nashville, member of the board of education of the Methodist church, as speaker. All former students are invited to attend. Three Injured In Saturday Mishaps Three persons were injured, two seriously enough to be confined to a local hospital, in two automobile accidents here Saturday night.

They are Miss Irene Peterson, 31, and Miss Helen Windle, 18, both of 308 1-2 West Boulevard, and Deciderio Solano, 64, Caputa. Miss Peterson suffered a bruised knee cap, and Solano, a back injury. They are in a local hospital. Miss Windle sustained a sprained ankle. The two women were injured when the car in which were riding, driven by Lester Carlson, 27.

815 West Boulevard, collided with a machine driven by Ben Sipoint, Rose building, at the intersection of St. Joe and Canal streets about midnight Saturday. Solano was injured when his machine swerved off the road three miles east of Rapid City in Rapid valley, and rolled over. Pair Held For Trial In Circuit Court William Stout and Leo Maxfield, Hutchinson, Kans, were bound over to circuit court for trial when they waived preliminary hearing on two counts of grand larceny before Municipal Judge W. W.

Soule late last week. The two youths were charged in connection with the pilfering of several automobiles here the night Sept. 20. They were arrested in McCook. Sept 24, and were returned to Rapid City last week.

Articles taken from the automobiles were valued at approximately $200. Godding Hurt In Trucking Accident Archie Godding. Rapid City truck driver, is in the Sacred Heart hospital. Yankton, with a badly cut ear and severe back bruises as the result of a motor accident samewhere between Sioux City, and Yankton, Saturday night. Godding was enroute back to Rapid City, driving, a semi-trailer truck of the River Milling when it crashed into a guard rail on a curve in the rain.

The cab of the truck was badly smashed. Godding, who was driving alone. was to have X-rays taken Monday to determine if he suffered any broken bones or back injuries. A Sioux Falls man picked him up and took him into Yankton. Rites Are Held For Mrs.

Ethel Smith Funeral services for Mrs. Ethel Smith, who. died Thursday at A local hospital, were held at the Baptist church Monday afternoon. The Rev. Roy Weigand, Farmingdale, officiated.

Mrs. L. A. Engberg and Mrs. J.

D. Bryson sang. and Mrs. Frank Dvorak played the organ Burial was in Mountain View cemetery. Surviving are her husband, Albert Smith, three sisters, two brothers 20 pieces and nephews.

BRIEFS WEST RIVER. WEATHER Skies were it was raining over West cloudy, and, River area Monday morning. Rain and snow were reported at Sturgis and Deadwood. Good rains were reported at Belle Fourche and Hot Springs. Rapid City measured .33 of an inch.

Temperatures at 7:30 a. m. ranged from 28 at Crawford, to 52 at Chamberlain. HOSPITALS Admittances to the General hospital include Mrs. Gale Dartt and Mrs.

C. C. Renshaw, both of Rapid City. The dismissals include Mrs. Norman Walton and daughter, Hermosa; Rowbe Goucher, Martin; Mrs.

Kenneth Gorseth, Hill City: Mrs. Everett King and daughter, Rapid City, Admittances to St. John's hospital include Deciderio Solano, Caputa: Mrs. Lyle Stevens, Mrs. Neil Johnson, Irene Peterson, Laura Ironwing, Mrs.

Adolph Anderson, Mrs. Elmer Scheidt and Mrs. Blanet Meyers, all of Rapid City. The dismissals include Mrs. Dale Payne, Vale; Baby James Meyerring, Kyle; J.

Mrs. P. Nye, Mrs. Donald Carson. Mrs.

Adolph Anderson and William Slea, all of Rapid City. Mrs. Leona Kelly will be at the Web Hill Beauty Shop for the following two -adv. BORN A girl to Mrs. Lyle Stevens, Rapid City, at St.

John's hospital, Oct. 4. A girl to Mrs. Neal Johnson, Rapid City, at St. John's hospital Oct.

5. boy to Dartt, Rapid City, at the General hospital Oct. 5. DIVORCES A divorce was granted Friday, and filed the same day, by Circuit Judge A. R.

Denu to Richard M. Condit, Pennington county, from Ethel Elizabeth Condit, on the grounds of extreme cruelty. They were married in Newcastle, Sept. 10, 1938, and have no children. Judge Denu also granted a divorce Friday to William Castle, Rapid City, from Anna Mae Gubert Castle, Rapid City, on the grounds of desertion.

They were married in Douglas, Nov. 18, 1937. and have no children. The decree was filed Friday. LICENSE TO WED A marriage license was issued Saturday to Louis Arguello, 22, and Grace Tapio, 19, both of Rapid City.

BUILDING PERMITS George M. Flier, 727 New York street, garage, $35; George Demos, 620 Farlow avenue, remodel garage, $25, and Mrs. Siver F. Holly, Quincy street, locate and repair garage, $15. TO PENITENTIARY Deputy Sheriff Ernest Bender with A.

L. "Babe" Parkinson in custody left Monday for the state penitentiary in Sioux Falls, where Parkinson serve a year for obtaining property under false pretenses. VISITORS HERE Miss Margaret Cushingham of Kealakekua, Hawaii; Mrs. Grace Knutson, Mrs. G.

Flittie and Mrs. James Watson, all of Brookings, were week-end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. F.

Knutson. LEAVES FOR WASHINGTON Col. E. A. Beckwith, state director of selective service and Major J.

F. Wethe, state procurement officer, were to leave Monday for Washington, D. where they will consult with the authorities at the national headquarters of the selective service system on budgetary matters. They expect to be gone a week or ten days. VISITS MOTHER BORN J.

Crandall, Chicago, yesterday for a week's visit mother, Mrs. M. P. Mad- SEVERE EYE INJURY Mrs. R.

arrived with her son. Amos Kellogg, who suffered a severe eye injury in an automobile accident in Boulder canyon Friday night, is "getting along all right," it was reported Monday. His spectacles broke, and the glass pierced the eyelid and eyeball, injuring the cornea. He is in a local hospital. Haskell Wellman Dies Here Monday Haskell Hiram Wellman, who had lived most of his life in the Black Hills and in Rapid City and vicinity for the past 20 years, died at his home in South canyon day morning after a two months' illness.

Wellman, a shovel man at the state cement plant since it opened here, would have been 57 years old Wednesday. Funeral arrangements are pendthe receipt of word relatives at a distance. The boy is at the Campbell funeral home. Surviving are his wife. a daughter, Mrs.

Ted Buffington, Rapid City, and three sons, Emery 'Mike" Wellman, Compton. Lloyd Wellman, Rapid City, and Jack Wellman, Lead, and nine grandchildren. Four other children died previously. Wellman was born Oct. 8, 1884, at Westerville.

Iowa. He spent about 15 years working for the Homestake Mining company, Lead, as a hoist engineer, coming to the cement plant when it was first opened nearly 20 years ago. was married June 30, 1897, at Deadwood, to Bertha Hall. Municipal Court Judge W. W.

Soule- Oscar Paulson, Rapid City, pleaded guilty to a city charge of drunken driving and was fined $100, which was suspended on the payment of $30 and that he does not drive in the county for six months. NEW YORKERS (From Page One) to bat. With the count three balls and one strike Owen, Bonham gave him what looked high pitch and Owen tossed his bat and aside' ran halfway to first base before umpire called him back and informed him it was a strike. Manager Durocher protested briefly Owen returned to the box and raised a high fly to Keller. Coscarart bounced to Bonham who threw to Sturm for the out.

No runs, no hits, no errors, one left. THIRD INNING. YANKEES Rolfe walked. Wyatt walked clear in behind the plate to protest to Umpire McGowan on the called ball and was joined by Durocher the pitcher returned to the mound and Durocher to the dugout. Henrich flied deep to Reiser and Rolfe DiMaggio firstned.

Keller grounded to Coscarart and was thrown out. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left. THIRD INNING. DODGERS Wyatt lined a double into the left field corner. Walker lined to DiMaggio, Wyatt holding second.

Riggs belted a liner that struck Bonham on the right leg below the Summary New York ab po Sturm, 1b 4 0 Rolfe, 3b 3 3 Henrich, rf 3 DiMaggio, cf 6 Keller, If Dickey, 4 2 Gordon, 2b 09 Rizzuto, ss 3 Bonham, Totals 31 6 27 Brooklyn ab po Walker, rf 3 Riggs, 3b 1 Reiser, cf Camilli, 1b Medwick, If Reese, ss Wasdell, ZZ Owen, 3 Coscarart, 2b Galan, Herman, 2b .0 0 0 Wyatt, Totals 31 1 4 27 14 2-batted for Coscarart in 7th. zz batted for Reese in 9th. Error--Reese. Runs batted inGordon, Reiser, Henrich. Two base hit- -Wyatt.

Three base hitHome run-Henrich. Double, plays -Owen and Riggs; Coscarart and Camilli; Herman, Reese and Camilli. Earned runs--New York 3, Brooklyn 1. Left on bases -New York 6, Brooklyn 5. Bases on balls off- -Wyatt 5 (Henrich, Keller, Rolfe, Gordon, Rizzuto); off Bonham 2.

(Medwick, Walker). Struck out -by Wyatt 9 (DiMaggio 2, Bonham 4, Henrich, Keller, Rizzuto); by Bonham 2 (Camilli, Reiser). Wild pitch- -Wyatt. UmpiresMcGowan (AL) plate; Pinelli (NL) 1b; Grieve (AL) 2b; Goetz (NL) 3b. Time 2:13.

Attendance 34,072. knee and caromed off toward the third base line for a single, Wyatt reaching third. Bonham went on pitching. Reiser drove a high fly to Henrich, Wyatt scoring after the catch. Camilli struck out.

One run, two hits, no errors, one left. FOURTH INNING, YANKEES Dickey knocked the first pitch back at Wyatt, the ball hitting him on the shins, but he picked it up and threw to Camilli for the out. Gordon walked, and Wyatt came running in from the mound waving his glove and shouting in protest. In a heated argument with Umpire McGowan, Wyatt threw his glove on the ground and stamped and yelled. Durocher joined in the dispute, kicked the dirt and gestured with his arms while standing chin to chin with the umpire.

The Dodger infielders came up close but after several minutes of debate Durocher returned to the dugout. As Wyatt walked back to the mound, he threw the ball high in the air and let it lie on the dirt. Then he started digging a hole in the mound by kicking his cleated right foot. Finally he picked up the ball and started to pitch. He threw three straight balls to Rizzuto before the umpire called a strike.

Then Rizzuto walked on the next pitch. When Bonham, after taking one strike, tried to bunt and checked himself the ball went wide, McGowan first appeared to signal a ball and then waved a strike. This brought Manager McCarthy running from the Yankee dugout and also Coach Art Fletcher from the third base coaching box to make a brief protest. Bonham fanned on the next pitch. Sturm grounded out to Camilli unassisted.

No runs, no hits, no errors, two left. FOURTH INNING, DODGERS Medwick lined to DiMaggio in left center. Reese smashed a liner which Keller caught on the run in left center. Owen lifted a high foul to Rolfe. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.

FIFTH INNING, YANKEES Rolfe knocked a roller to Camilli back of first and he threw to Wyatt for the putout. Henrich picked out the first pitch and shot a home run over the right field fence. 40 feet high and 300 feet from the plate. It was his first of the series. DiMaggio drove a high fly to Reiser in deep center.

DiMaggio made a big turn for second base on the fly and as he headed back to the dugout he exchanged heated words with Wyatt, who on his prevlous time at bat had thrown a high inside pitch which made DiMaggio drop almost to the dirt. The two started for each other and almost every member of the two teams and the umpires raced to keep them apart. Pence was restored with nothing except conversation being exchanged and the field cleared for resumption of the game. Keller struck out. One run, one hit, no errors, none left.

FIFTH INNING. DODGERS The crowd booed the Yankees as they took the field. Coscarart raised a high fly to DiMaggio in left center and the booed and hooted as he crowd caught it. The jeers turned to cheers as Wyatt came to bat. Wyatt flied to DiMaggio.

Walker was passed on four pitches. Riggs raised a high foul which Rolfe came in to take in front of the Yankee dugout. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left. SIXTH INNING. YANKEES grounded to Reese who Dickey, bad throw pulling Camilli off the bag for an error.

Gordon smashed a hot grounder to Reese who started a double play, Reese to Coscarart to Camilli. Rizzuto lined a- single to left. Bonham struck out. No runs, one hit, one error, one left. SIXTH INNING.

DODGERS Reiser almost knocked Gordon down with a smashing grounder but the Yanks' great second sacker threw him out. Camilli raised a high fly to Keller. Medwick slapped the first pitch back to Rizzuto and was thrown out. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. SEVENTH INNING, YANKEES Sturm topped a weak grounder to Coscarart who threw to Camilli for the putout.

Rolfe raised a short fly which Reese near field foul line just tools of third. Henrich fanned. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. SEVENTH INNING, DODGERS Reese raised a pop fly to Sturm back of first. Owen grounded out to Rizzuto.

Galan, a left handed swinger, batted for Coscarart. Galan popped foul to Sturm. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. EIGHTH INNING, YANKEES Billy Herman went to second base for the Dodgers and received an ovation from the crowd. DiMaggio was booed as he came to bat.

DiMaggio singled sharply to center for his first hit of the game. Keller hit a hot grounder to Herman who wheeled to start a fast double play, Herman to Reese to Camilli. Dickey grounded out Herman to Camilli. No runs, one hit, no errors none left. EIGHTH INNING.

DODGERS Wyatt slapped a hot grounder to Gordon and the ball took a sudden hop but Gordon managed to throw to Sturm in time for the putout. ripped a ground single between' Sturm and Gordon. Riggs raised a high foul to Sturm. Reiser fanned. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.

NINTH INNING. YANKEES Gordon grounded to Riggs and was thrown out. Rizzuto struck out for Wyatt's eighth fanning victim. Bonham again struck out. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left.

NINTH INNING, DODGERS Paid attendance was announced as 34,072, the biggest turnout of the three games in Brooklyn, contributing total receipts for the day of $161,941. Camilli lined to Rizzuto. Medwick fouled to Rolfe. Wasdell batted for Reese. Wasdell flied to DiMaggio.

No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. NEUTRALITY ACT (From Page One) ships and forbids merchantmen to travel to belligerent ports or through waters designed as "combat areas" under the act. Favor Complete Overhaul Democratic Leader Barkley was believed to side with Connally in favoring a complete overhaul of the existing law. Once the white house recommendations go to capitol hill, the prospect is uncertain. "I do not know what is going to happen," remarked Senator Nye (R- ND), an opponent of administration foreign policy, "but I do know what happened to Wilson's bill.

History could repeat itself." On the other hand, Senator Clark (D-Mo), a consistent "non-interventionist," told reporters that he had no intention of participating in a filibuster. An Associated Press poll showed 29 senators in favor of repealing the neutrality law or amending it to permit American ships to be armed and go anywhere; six in favor of arming the ships; 20 opposed to any change in the law; 18 desiring more time for study, and 23 out of Wash- ington or unavailable. Could Cause Long Delay There was general agreement that a group of 20 senators could indefinitely delay and perhaps even defeat any change in the law if they were determined to filibuster. The question of endless-talk opposition strategy was expected to be decided at a meeting of administration opponents this week. Senator Wheeler (D-Mont), one of the leading foes of administration foreign policy, was due back from speaking tour in midweek.

Associates said that shortly there- (Advertisement) "THEY CALL ME 'DOC' "When someone complains of indigestion I hand them one of my ADLA Tablets" -wrote Mr. M. of Penn. If "Doc" you he'd probably hand YOU one! Ask your druggist today for ADT.A Tablets and see how quickly they relieve gas and heartburn. after Senator Johnson (R-Calif), ranking minority member of the senate foreign relations committee, would call a meeting of all senators fighting any change in the neutrality law.

REDS STRONGLY ENTRENCHED NOW Moscow, Oct. 6 -(P)- Russia's armies were reported today entrenched in straighter and stronger positions than at any time since the German invasion began and war dispatches declared they had scored notable gains in the Leningrad and Ukraine sectors. Despite admittedly huge losses, the Soviet soldiers were said to have pushed the Germans back two to three miles at some points before Leningrad and advanced as much as 21 miles on the southwestern sector. Says Nazi Claims Fantastic Alexander Shcherbakov, director of the Soviet information bureau, announced in detailed reply to Hitler's Friday claim of 2.500,000 Russian casualties that they actually had lost 1,128,000 men killed, wounded and missing since the start of the war June 22. He ridiculed Hitler's figures as "fantastic and delirious data" and asserted the Germans have lost 3,000.000 casualties, almost as much in 15 weeks as the kaiser lost in two years of the World war.

Shcherbakov listed Soviet casualties as 230,000 men killed, 720,000 wounded and 178,000 missing. He said the Russians had lost 000 tanks, against Hitler's claim of 18,000 tanks destroyed; 8,900 guns against Hitler's claim of and 5,316 planes against Hitler's claim of 14,000. Hitler Afraid to Tell Truth Charging that Hitler was "afraid of telling truth" on German losses to the German people and thus had failed to cite a single Ger- man figure, Shcherbakov declared that in addition to the 3,000,000 casualties the nazis have lost 11,000 tanks, 13,000 guns and 9,000 planes. The fighting before Leningrad was declared in Soviet reports to have been so fierce that the ground was shaken like a cradle by German bombardment, yet the Russians said they captured a large settlement identified only as A Tass dispatch departed that tongues of flame flared up on the battle-torn fields in one part of the Leningrad front when the Germans were forced to burn their dead. Counter Attack Broadens In the southwest, where the Germans have overrun Kiev and a large part of the Ukraine, the Sovlet war said Red army counter offensive was becoming broader.

On the central front, where Russian counterattacks have regained considerable ground, the government organ Izvestia that several dozen more had settlennents been recaptured by the Red army in the past week, British Sink Three French Vessels Vichy, Oct. 6-(AP)-The French navy ministry reported tonight that three French merchantmen had been sunk by the British and said that one, the freighter Theophile Guatier, was part of an Italian convoy when she went down off the east coast of Greece. It was the previous loss of two other ships, the tanker Capitaine Baliani Et Alberta and the ton merchantman Oued Yquem which caused the ministry to accept an Italian naval escort for the Theophile Gautier, it said. The announcement said the Theophile Guatier went down last Saturday with a loss of 20 lives while rounding the southern tip of Evvoia, an island of Greece, with a cargo of tobacco from Salonika. ting Hopkins, down, but it still appeared the hard work of scaling the tower would finally free him.

Yesterday Petzoldt, Harold Rapp, Ernest Field and Warren Gorrell, veterans of dangerous mountain scaling feats, drove more iron pins into the rock wall of the tower, inching a ladder of iron rings and ropes toward the top. ALPINISTS SET (From Page One) GOODYARD BLIMP TAKES OFF TO RESCUE HOPKINS Akron, Oct. 6-(P) -The Goodyears blimp Reliance took off today Sundance, prepared to do a little aerial fishing to get Parachutist George Hopkins off his Devil's Tower perch. The trip is expected to take three days, A special bus, carrying a mooring mast, is following the blimp. SOUTH ST.

PAUL PILOT HAS DOZEN IDEAS Pierre, Oct. 6 -(AP) -Another pilot added his name to the list of adventurers seeking to bring George Hopkins, the parachute jumper, down from Devil's Tower where he has been since he landed Wednesday as a publicity stunt. A. C. McInnis, South St.

Paul flying school proprietor, was grounded here this morning by rain and fog. He said he planned to his light plane to the top of sheer cliff structure in northeastern Wyoming Don't store that old wall picture away. It may be a real Art Treasure to-day. Let's look it over together. 0.

A. VIK STUDIO Phone 753J to "see if this stuff about it being so tough to get down is really true." McInnis said he thought there were "a dozen ways a man can get down from that tower without all this fussing around," but did not say exactly how he proposed to attempt the stunt. "I'm interested in taking a look around before I try anything like landing there, and I don't propose to pull a foolhardy stunt for publicity, but it seems to me a man can get down if he goes at it wholeheartedly." Masonic Calendar Regular communication Rapid City Lodge No. 25 A. F.

and A. M. to be held Tuesday Oct. 7, 7:30 p. m.

Work in the F. C. degree. Visiting brothers welcome. Refreshments.

Francis Murray, W. M. Mark Munson, Sec. RAPID PLUMBING CO. 826 St.

Joe PHONE 196 NIGHTS 986-J QUANTITIES LIMITED NONE C. C. Anderson's Great DEALERS Cale SOLD TO Buy Now! OPEN-A-CHARGE ACCOUNT AND CHARGE IT- SAVE! ANKLETS SILK HOSIERY SPECIAL plain colors. Sizes 6 to 10. Newest Fall Shades away.

Regular 10c values. Pastel and Sizes to New Fall colors. Women's and children's anklets. A give- treasured item. We warn you.

3. don't Regular be 69c a late--get pair. yours With silk--a NOW. 47. DECORATED TUMBLERS NYLON HOSE, NEWEST FALL SHADES 20.000 9 ounce decorated tumblers.

A Nylon hose are at a premium and sale makes this Give-Away price pos- up" their stocking drawer to carry solid carload purchase of stock for this women who are wise are "stocking 27 sible-NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. them over in the days to come. 3 FOR Here's your opportunity to Save! MEN'S WORK SOX CHILDREN'S AND MISSES' COATS Smart Little Styles cial quality purchase for Anderson's Great Double breasted models with Fall Sale. A real work sock bargain. self collars, belts and belted Plain black or white Work Socks.

A spe- 8. Warm. Practical styles for school. 95 NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. backs.

Sizes 7 to 14. RAYON PANTIES CHILDREN'S OXFORDS you'd never guess they cost so little. with long wearing cord soles, elastic waist. Lace trimmed. Newest $1.39 values.

Sturdy little every. Rayon knit, fast colors all.around novelty Tearose styles. So pretty, so colorful 19 day rubber types. heels. Brown moccasin style 97 BROOMS BROOMS CHENILLE SPREADS -SPECIAL SALES Brooms.

Values to $7.95 this value. Should sell for 89c. Buy now on our Lay-Away Plan Extra Special for only for Christmas. strain. You will be amazed at 52 Charming Color Tones.

Three tie Heavily reinforced at points of wear and Beautiful New Designs. 88 BUCKETS BUCKETS MEN'S GABARDINE SHIRTS for long life. Galvanized and 29 sortment of colors. Sizes to Regular 39c sellers. Big 10 quari capacity.

Extra strong handles Regular $2.98 sellers. Large 24 treated against rust. Save at 161. Prices go up to $3.50 after this low price of only this sale. Buy NowBAMBOO LAWN RAKES BOYS' PURE WOOL SWEATERS are falling -rakes are calling you from our complete stocks.

Limited for only quantity. Buy Nowties. Extra sturdy handle. Leaves school and sports wear. Choose tongs, Regular Heavy wire reinforced Regular $2.50 values.

Ideal for 79 39c values. 33 bamboo 16.

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