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Show ALBERT GREENWELL ISDEAD. jj When Death comes home to us is the 1111 tlme 1X6 feel Jt mosL keenly, for It fill takes from our midst one that we hold Sill dca1' SUcl1 place beinS won by the con. ijli stnnt association and friendship in J labor. The first time the Grim Reaper Hill nas invaded the ranks of newspaper- Ijjjj dom in many months, was shortly aft- Ull er midnight this morning when Albert tjjj Greenwell, for the past year city editor of The Standard, answered his. final Hill assignment. Illl I , In the parlance of newspaper work, lilt! Xi iS AlberL's "tnlrtv-" In his life ho Hill covered the assignments for the paper ill! thoroughly. Each day of his life as we I'll! knew him he covered every assign- ill! mnt With thc greatest care whether IHl I it was for thc Interest of his qm- IjjjJJ ployer or for the doing good to his fel-low fel-low man. Ill Albert was in his twenty-fourth year and building a career which his family and the legions of friends could well i be proud. He was a young man with . good moral habits and a lover of his homo. When his brothers, William T. and Robert T., went to the .service of (heir country, Albert remained at home to -aid, comfort and cheer his mother. He was one of the city's biggest boosters boost-ers and publicity agents in the Red Cross, Liberty loan and other war work campaigns and on his sick bed he was planning the best possible pub- city for the United War Work campaign. cam-paign. Ho was one of tho American patriots "Over Here" who -went over the top many times in the Interest of tho campaigns for the boys "Over There." Thc Standard, with Its employes of every department, join tho hosts of friends of the family in the city and county iu extending heartfelt sympathy sympa-thy to the members of the bereaved family. |