ScenesAtThe Leyte Cathedral-Hospital This Is Leyte’s Cathedral-Hospital-a place of worship on a blood irenched island where hundreds of Americans and Filipinos lay woumled and dying on cots; a church that remains a church but which is also the surgical ward of an American evacuation hospital. Here a daughter of Leyte gives a helping hand. Her name is Caridad Monte jo and she goes ’bout fixing bandages and helping the wounded GIs. Sitting with her Is Sgt. Tom Parsons. The bandage swathed man is unidentified. _ m The Filipino citizens of Leyte and the nearby barrios, black ▼eiled and pious, kneel to the rites of the Mass as a badly burned army officer lies swathed in bandages just behind them. The civilians pick their way carefully past the hundreds of cots. Some kneel in aisles between the cots; others group themselves before the altar. Some fear to disturb the doctors and the wounded. Second Lieutenant Florence Vehmeier, a nurse, looks back upon a patient who lies suffering from a bullet wound in his stomach. Just back of him is s holy water fountain with a uagonsteen” arrangement made ready for surgical irrigation .. ... ■ — Within the main church, scenes like this are everywhere. Capt. D. E. Campbell, of the Medical Corps, treats a wounded man. With him is Army Nurse Capt. Catherine Acorn, who was evacuated after Bataan and Corregidor, but felt it her obligation to return. -READ THE STAR-NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS Turkey Dinner Promised Soldiers In Philippines ___ - \ By JIM HUTCHESON GEN. MCARTHUR’S HEAD QUARTERS, Philippines, Dec. 23. __/£>)—Turkey and a flood of gift packages will give Christmas some of its traditional holiday spirit for the troops and sailors in the Philippines. The distribution of hundreds of sacks of Christmas packages has been under way for more than a week with delivery to the troops up front rating a high priority. Today the Quartermaster Corps started distributing a million pounds of turkey from a refriger ation ship. By airplane, fast boat, land ve hicles and on the backs of carabaos and men, the turkey is going to the front lines. There also will be an allotment of a dozen cans of newly arrived beer to be sold to each man between Christmas Eve and New Year’s Day. Maj. Robert C. Russell, Cham paign, 111., who has one of the world’s biggest turkey peddling jobs said: “We will throw the turkey to the men in the frontmost foxholes if necessary. “Six planes are carrying turkey to the Mindoro troops tomorrow. Fast boats are taking it to the outlying islands. Also to Samar and the Ormoc front. I don’t think we are missing anyone.’’ A pound is allotted for each man both Christmas and New Year’s. The turkey will be cook ed in the mess halls before be ing taken to the front lines. Maj. Russell is a formar Chi cago advertising man. He out lined this menu where facilities are available: Fruit cocktail, turkey, biscuits, peas, corn, as paragus, pumpkin pie, hard candy. “Beer will go to the combat troops first but all will have it by New Year's, Maj. Russell said “Even if you add all this up,’ said Maj. Russell, “it won’t be exactly a Merry Christmas for the troops but the fighting men at the Pacific fronts havie had a lot worse.” ____ Infant And Children s Shoes On Critical List WASHINGTON, Dec. 22. — (/P) - In an attempt to boost output, the War Production Board today plac ed certain sizes of infants’ and children’s shoes on the critical pro ducts list. The action covers infants’ sizes 4 1-2 t0 8 an<3 children’s size, - ,, to 12. Taken because oj man * 2 shortages in the industn ? measure provides that local J duction urgency committees 1 consider the labor needs f producers when the rem.r lhe?e ol the most critical war Dro0ment5 have been met pi0oram$ m’Y WAR BOxiSs~^D~sn _ 7 —_ * 3EST WISHES ^ ^rf ■s want to take time out to enter into the gladsome 4 S2C3 holiday spirit with our sin' cerest good wishes for a very Merry Christmas and the happiest of New' Years, to all our new acquaintances and old friends. C & B SUPER MARKET Open Tuesday Regular Hours Open All Day Wednesday Many are the prayers in our hearts this Christmas day. Some pray for the restored health of a stricken loved one. Some play for the return of child, husband or beloved far from home. .... Some wish for security against the dangers with which life can be fraught. Others look forward in a hope that for all the people of all the world, suffering of all kinds may one day be ended, through the achieve ments of science, education, and truespiritual awareness among all man kind. To all of you whose prayers and good hopes spring from deephearted zealousness we say “May those prayers be answered on this Christmas Day —and for all the days to follow.” We trust that due to the unusual Christmas rush . . . the shortage of help and merchandise that our customers were not unduly inconvenienced or disappointed. We would like to have served better but we feel—and hope that you will understand. X DEPT. STORE