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Ann Arbor NewsInterment Will be inAnn Arbor Wednesday For

Louis Parker Jocelyn

Ann Arbor. Mich.. Feb. H—lnter-ment will be Wednesday afternoon

at 3 30 in Forest Hill Cemetery

for Louis Parker Jocelyn, well

known former school teacher, who

succumbed Saturday in Daytona

Beach. Fla. The Masonic Lodge

will be in charge of the gravesideservices. The body will lie in

state from 10 o'clock Wednesdaymorning until 2 o'clock in the after-noon.

| served their 52nd wedding anni-

versary last summer.Since his retirement, Mr. Jocelyn

had spent the winters in Florida

and the summers at Whitmorej Lake.

| Survivors Include his wife, aretwo daughters, Mrs. R. G. Schenk.Pittsburgh, Pa , and Mrs. RobertWatt, Birmingham. Mich., and sev-eral grandchildren.

Funeral Services TodayFor Mrs. Sue Witcher

Ann Arbor Mich.. Feb. 24 —Lastrites were to be this afternoon inthe Muehiig Chapel for Mrs. SueWitcher, who passed away Sun-

day. Rev. C. H. Loucks was tofllriate and interment was to be

in Forest Hil Cemetery.Mrs. Witcher was born in St

Louis. Mo.. Feb. 3. 1879. She wasthe mother of Preston Witcher,

superintendent of the city disposalplant, and had lived with her son.'or the past 10 years.

Surviving besides the son are jtwo gran children. Betty Sue anuCharles Witcher, and a brother.Harry Christopher, St. Louis.

ATTENDING SESSIONSAnn Arbor. Mich.. Feb. 24—In

San Francisco atte~ding sessionsof the American Association ofSchool Adm’nlstrators are Supt.

Otto Halsley and Principal L. L.Forsythe.

Mr., Mrs. Henry Ohrtto Reside in Akron, 0.

Ann Arbor. Mich., Feb. 24 —AfterMarch 1. Mr. and Mrs. Henry New-ton Ohrt will make tTleir home InAkron. 0., where Mr. Ohrt is em-ployed by the Goodyear AircraftCorp. Mrs Ohrt Is the formerBetty Ann Chaufty. daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Edwin Ray Chaufty. andthe couple were married Saturdayafternoon in the First MethodlsiChurch.

Mrs. Claretice Neuhaus. Jackson,

| served as matron of honor and thej bridesmaids were Janet Fisher,

; Donelda Schalble, Ann Arbor. Mrs.Robert Franklin, Demtng, N. Al-and Betsy Jane Waite, Jackson.

Lynn Townsend Detroit, former-lyof Ann Arbor, was best man and

.ushers were Mr. Neuhaus. Johni Leidy. Ann Arbor. Thomas Mc-Nlesch and John Treadway.

Double WeddingMisses Ruth Birkle and I lllie

Rtrkle, daughters of Mr. and Mrs.Elmer Birkle. Crer Rd, exchangedtheir marriage vows with Thoma3Wile and John Haehn. Detroit, re-spectively, In a Uou' 'e ceremonyFriday in the parish hall of Beth-lehem Church. Mr. Wile is em-ployed at the bomber plant in Yp-sllanti and Mrs. Wile is a graduateof the Mercy School of Nursing.Deti’.i*. Mr. and Mrs. Haehnwill live in Detroit.

Two Recovering FromCar Accident Injuries

Ann Arbor. Mich., Feb. 24James McNary, 31. 318 E. JefTersonSt., and Miss Caroline Cary. 16,717 Arbor St., are recovering frominjuries suff--?d in accidents overthe week end.

Mr. McNary received a brokenleft leg. internal injuries and lac-erations when his car was involveoin a collision with a trucx ope-ai-ed by Harley Hall, Dearborn, onUS-12 Sunday.

Miss Cary was one of 15 per-sons on a hay ride Saturday ninhton Saline-Ann Arbor Rd., when thevehicle was struck in the rear bya car operated by Neil Kern. Sa-line. Miss Carey was pitched fromthe wagon and her head struck thepavement.

PAYOFF THURSDAYKalamazoo, Mich., Feb. 24—Home

Savinrs Bank will make a finalpayoff in full Thursday to deposi-tor of money impounded since thebank holiday in 1933. The total pay-off will amount to $75,000.

, INGLEWOOD. Calif.—AP— Thenation's chinchilla breeders heldtheir first livestock show here,with 21 ranches of the UnitedStates and a few from Canada rep-resented.

Mr. Joselyn was a mathematics

teacher in Ann Arbor High Schoolfor 48 years until his retirementin 1936. Interested in athletics, heintroduced interseholastic footballand track in the sch~ol. He w s

Instrumental in the formation ofan interseholastic athletic associa-tion in 1593. and served as firstpresident of the - ate organiza-tion founded in IS S.

Mr. Jocelyn also found time towrite and his -'Jocelyn's Algebra"has been u'-ed In manv schools.

He was b rn ir.A l>any, N. Y ,

November 10. 1563. He recelven

his degree of bathelor of science

from the University or r’l'hlgan m1887 and in ISSS joined the hi~nschool faculty. His marriage to

Ada Sutherland. Ann Arbo . tookplace July 17, 1889, and they ob-

16 DIE IN RIVER TOWBOAT CRASH

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—Central Press Phonephotos

Sixteen persons. Including three women, were killed when the 170-foot towboat G. W. Mcßr.de was flung by a current against a bridgeabutment in the Ohio river at Newport, Ky. It was the worst Ohioriver tragedy in 25 years. The Mcßride was towing a fuel flat andfour barges, each loaded with 1,000 tons of coaL Top photo showsthe wreckage at the bridge abutment. The five survivors, picturedbelow, are, left to right, Raleigh B. Hinemaa, Ernest Easter, George

Harrison. George Wommer and John W. Cain.

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DAILY CROSSWORD fgfgl ¦ *

MWalKiuACROSS

1 Mandate4 Warp-yarn7 Telegraph8 Order under

seal10 Crave11 The nostrils13 Related14 American

Indian15 Decoration

for valor17 Kind of

thread18 Jewish

month20 Short for

August23. Eating

greedily27. Past28. Concealed29 Sunn

offish30. Wearing

instrument32 Female sheep33. Vigilant35. Covered

with stones38. Expressions

of grief42 Agreement43. Food in

general44 Tapestry46. Black woo 447. Withered48. Dry49. Swiss river50. A color

•OWN1 Black anc

blue2. Spheres of

action3. Damp4 Beard ofrye

5. Invigorating6 Whirring

sounds7 Aroused

from sleep9. Sesame10 Sliding piece

on wheel12. Observe16. Gently17 Food stor-

age places19 Kind of

fabric20. Fuel ;21 Exclama-

tion i22 French coin <

; 24. Wrath25 Present

time26 Turn to

the right31 Blare of a

trumpet34 Distinctive

tone35 Resort36 Sailors37 Sheath

aroundpetiole

39 Figure ofthe earth

40 Part of arm41 Pigpen

Irilrrda) • Answer

45 Weight ofIndia

46 Hearingorgan

m r xm1: p: ifIIIIpIILIII20

22 25 24 2t> 2o

iiiiiiiiiii“ S1 w 111111111111it. 5-1 77/ / 38 34 40 41

11 Il|lllll~

vMA'VwI I Ml2 24

Rural EventsOakville

Committee on defense work will; meet at Palmer School to discuss

t salvage program.FEBRUARY 25

WillisSociety for Christian Service will

serve Michigan Milk Producers din-ner in Willis M. E. Church.

RawsonvllleRed Cross Group will meet at

home of Mrs. Hammond, near Sus-terka Lake.

FEBRUARY 26Cherry Hill

Mr. and Mrs. George Gill will eatertain the Farm Bureau Club.

SalemFederated Ladles’ Society will

meet for noon day potluck dinner atthe home of Mr. and Mrs. PeterFallot on Territorial Rd.

East YpsilantlSpencer Club will meet with Mrs

Ora Bailey.FEBRUARY 27

LondonAlpha Class will meet at the Clar

ei.ee Cline home.Cherry Hill

Father and son banquet sponsoiedby the W. S. C. S.

Stony CreekOaklawn P.T.A. meeting at school.

8 P. m.

Last Times Tonight“H. M. Pulham Esq”

Hedy Lamar, R. Young

Starts Wednesday Two DeLuxe Features

A tale of love to put asmile on her lips...and jmtt l.i.gh in roust

sm YOUHg

Miss Gale Becomes Brideof Russell Hansen, Willis

Paint Creek, Mich., Feb. 24—An-nouncement Is being made of themarriage of Miss Edith Evelyn Gale,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WalterGale, 116 E. Ainsworth Blvd, Ypsi-lanti, and Russell Hansen, son of

Rev. and Mrs. Lloyd Hansen, Willis.The ceremony took place Fridayevening at 8 o’clock at the Galehome.

Rev. Hansen, general missionary

of the Sunday School Union, oft'iciat-

ed at the double ring ceremony. Miss

Lucretla Dell furnished music.

The bridal couple stood before the

fireplace which was decorated in

pink and white. The bride wasdressed In a floor length white satingown and carried an arm bouquetof bridal roses.

The bridesmaid, Miss Eda FaeHansen, sister of the groom, wore

Your Ypsilanti Daily Press Carrier Boy is a Volunteer U. S. Defense Agent

Back up the BOYSBehind the BOYS

Order DEFENSE SAI INGS STAMPS delivered to yourHome regularly each week through your carrier ho^

THE MORE STAMPS YOU BUY, THE MORE PLANES WILL FLY

an Army of Dollars marching MOW Against

lh« enemy. Buy Defense .Savings Honda and Stamps—-the quickest, surest way that errryonr can help to win thewar. Hrmember that tanka and planes and guns costmoney. .Much of tills money must come from the peo-pl®—voluntarily, in the American Vay. Mot as a gift, hutas a loan, to be repaid with interest—s t.OO for every $3.00you invest—for that, too, is the .American Way. Butthere is not a moment to lose. Your money is neededMOW

, without delay. It must be put to work at once to

defeat those who have declared war upon us—those whohave killed our people in cold hlood; and who, even asyou read this, are plotting desperately to destroy thisAmerica we love.

You needn't be rich to do your part. Defense Bondscost as little as $18.75, and you can start buying DefenseBonds by buying Defense Stamps, at 10?. When you:newspaper carrier calls to collect this week, give him youiorder for as many lOf Defense Stamps as you can efforteach week. Your signed order will be all that is necessarvto have him deliver and collect for the stamps regularlyeach week, until ordered by you to discontinue.

How Your Defense Stamp Money

Is Used to Help Win the War

J IMPORTANT ! If you hare already or-

dered Defense Stamps delivered to your

home , note is the time to have your

carrier increase the order.

To "Keep 'Em Flying." Keep on Buying

U. S. DEFENSE BONDS * STAMPS

Y / K /

V10c IN DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS

willpay for 3 cartridges25c IN DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS

willprovide a soldier's mess kit$ 1 .50 IN DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS

pays for a first aid kit$2.00 IN DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS

is what tine blanket costs

SO.OO IN DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS

will buy one anti-tank shell$ 1 0.00 IN DEFENSE SAVINGS STAMPS

will buy two steel helmets

Guard Your Country and Your I,oved Ones

FILL OUT THIS ORDER FORM ISow!

GIVE THIS ORDER TO

Tha Ypsllantl Dally Prea* Carrier Boy

Tea. 1 want to do my bit for defen a by buying DefenseStamp* avery week.I would Ilka to hav# 10c. 25c, 50c. II00 Defense SavingsStamps each weak until further notice.

Name

Address

Route No.

NEW AIR GIANT READY TO CARRY TROOPS TO BATTLE

..... ¦•fSiPPf ’its* i

JS

The world’s largest two-motored transport, the 25-ton Curtles-Condor 111, Is pictured above as It wascompleted In an aircraft factory somewhere in the United States. It is the first of several that ar*nearing completion. The big plane dwarfs a tiny Curtlss-Hawk P-40 pursuit plane standing next to it,

a blue silk floor length formalgown.

The best man was Lloyd Hansen,brother of the groom, and both hadcarnation boutonnieres.

Mrs. Gale, mother of the bride,was in brown and Mrs. Hansen,mother of the groom, wore blue tafvfeta.

'

Following the ceremony, therewas a receptipn. a three-tiered wed-ding cake featuring the refresh-ments. After a short wedding tripthe couple will reside in Ypsila'nt!for the present. Mr. Hansen was astudent at Lincoln School and atpresent Is employed at the CentralSpecialty Company. The bride was

i a student at Ypstlanti High SchooL

ErMJfBTH]LAST TIMES TONIGHT

Spencer Tracy In ‘'Sky Devil*"and “Don't Get Personal"

Wedne.day and Th'jpaday• Tl'* Trlnla 8"r, T'ln'e Bg

Spectac e of Timely Thrills ,

RaAil H

00^t«F ,i > I

And The Hilarious Feature

pbrd° n mmm v js~ aSTRIPES^MBILL HENRY ==S^Sjgsheila mnDEQEISS)

And Added to Same Programme •

tWHCNA PARK AVENUE PLAYGIRL GOES

TO WORK IN A DIME-A-DAHCE HALL...IT LOVE!

• sfw HOUR SUPPERap- ROGERS

Complete Shows 1:30, 3:007:00 and 8:30 p. m.

THE YPBILANTI DAILY PRESS, YPBILANTI, MICH., TUESDAY. FEB. W, 1*«PAGE EIGHT