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Home > Documents > E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

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-■ V- PAGE FOURTEEN jMattrb i^H tpr lEufttins" iinalb MONDAY, AUGUS’t 11, 1988 About Town Manchester Gafden'vCliib mem- bers interested in planning another flower arranging course in- \'1ted by Miss Mllllcenl Jones, president, ' to njcel with her at Roaedale, Bolton Lake, tomorrow. The meeting will begin at 10:30 a.m.„ and members are asked to provide their own sandwiches. Beverages will be served. Those attending should also 'bring flow- ers and containers. William T.■^England, son of Mr, and Mrs. George .1. England of t:i4 Spruce St . has been drafted and is at Et. Dix, N. J. He graduated from the University of Connci J.icnt In June, having majored in govern- ment. He was arlmitteri to the UConn .School of Law and had ex- pected to begin studies in Septem- ber. His wife, the former Alice O'Rourke of Greenwieh, Is a leac li- er in Ellington Their home is on Upper Butcher Rd . Rockville Richard .1 Risiev, Mamliesler dancing teacher, has returned from New..York where he studied latejit teehnifiues m all phases of dance education Me attended the annual convention of the Dance Masters of America and studied under manv famous artists and attended elasses at the .Iiine T a i- lor Scheiol of Daneing Mis studio is at 72 E renter St Engagement (iaudct-Selsky Mrs, Esther GmidCl. 78 Blreh SI, announces the engagement of her daughter. Carol Ann, to James Setsky of Broad Brook, son of Mrs. Aimj Setaky of Broad Brook and lohn Setsky of South Windsor, Mias Gaiidel 1." also the dangn- ter of d a te Gaildel of Union, She attended Manchester- schools snd IS employed by Mancheslei Modes. Her fiance. Is employed by C'on- I solidst'ed Tobaeco Co. in Broad ■Brook. No date has been set for the j wedding j I --------- --------------------------------------------- I Diskan, and Leon Dobkin and Ab- ner N. Adler, all of Manchester. ■ This group also owns the Creatfleld Country Hpirfe and Hospital for ; Convale-scenta now under ronstriic- , lion on Vernon St. Dr. Guy Miller and Dr. Harlan ^ Gephardt of f3ilcago surveyed ■ Wealvlew Manor recenll.v while In the Slat*. Cf'eatfleld ia expected to open i about Nov, 1, ' j Carori'Colbert Wedding X Personal INolices In Momoriam In Jftvtnf m»mrirv r>f rmr mcjh*r unH frt.ndnmth»r Hnr«l> Rr.|in^e,n « ho r88?<*ri Aiiirii8f <> pr.7 I>>vinK m-mcrir.a nrv««r A * tlruf* *ovj> f-ri #uif! »ln\g pngia In fiur pt fcifiii.e* mcmfuiea Of nn^ we* Irtxrfj niirl N)int Pr»n nnd flfiujrhu Miss Donna Hart, who waa fjraduatoM yeslenlay from St. >Krnncifl Hoapital Bcliool of Nura- ing. will hr married HalurdA-y. m .1 jfst Bridgcfa (’hunh to Robert .1. Upton Jr . 11 Park St. She haa re- if-rntly br*'n the giieal nf honoi at. arrvrrai ml.arrllaneoua ahowrra Ann> ftrNervr ('apt Lauinva R I..rohard, .'Ifi Hamlin Si . ta at* I trndinc artivr dirtv training: at I f Urorjf (» Meade, Md , with thp 20fi7lh ARSU Civil Affaira and Militar\' ('rovrrniiH»nt School. Th#' V^’illiiiK VVmkrrn of liir I South (*hiiich will hold a.n all-day I arwing nir^'tlnff Wfdnrada\ brpin- runs at 10 o'rlofk A potluck luncheon will be arrvrd at noon \^c,slvic\i Manor Siirw*yr<l by AM.\ \Vr.st\iPU .Manor near DaniPl.son la 1 of IR tonvalr^rnl homra,tn thr nation i hoarn to be atiiv/ cd b\ ihr Ainrncan Medical A.aan. '!‘lir 'onvalraiont home la rnan- ag'cd hy Miarlr.a K Miiilhiiil, foi- irx^rff-uri |p,p,|y .Mnni'hralri 11 la owned and fBihjiv ■ hv hr a l':iicrnr Davta .<nd A, Klmer Truckers to Help iBoosl Blood Bank: Truck dilvrra and tbflr help«ra j are heinj: counted upon to ffive Ihr local blood bank a. much needed , hooat when thr Red (hoaa Rlood- t mobile cornea to f’cntrr Thurrh Wednead.iy from 1.30 to 6:,30 p.m. A nationwiftr effort ia beinjj rmadc hy the tnuking Irntiiatry I q bolater blood lollertjona at a Hme ' vhen many would-be donora are On vacation. National trueHing of- flclaln and the loi al Red ('roaa of-1 file are lint all trmUmen in the area informtiiK them of thi*' ' heed fon blood and the local time .a<hrdiile I>o(al offnials point out how- e\ei. that donoi.'^ flo not have in: have a truckman a phy.airpie In or- ffer to aid the blond procram. Any adult \cith normal, health can Join m t hia ii feaa ' Inc ' aiiae Bolincr Sp<*ukcr ' At (;OI» Parley A tty .loijm W i; Itoltner will hr the keynote speaker lonjglit at th e’ Kaat Hartford Republiran nomi- nating fonventmn to be held bv that town I'omniiUee Roltnei. who, IS the Kepubluan fandidale ffo Slate SenHlm from, the Koiiilh Senatorial,, iM-itiicl i ‘ was invil.eil to make the kevn^dp afldre.ss by Kant Hartford Touri, (’l)airman Anihonv .1 Polydi*' The Kaat Hartford Town ('om -' ' miflee will hohl tire i fmventinn In 'the Town Mall stHitinc at R Main oifler of himine.ss \^il| he Ihe noini- nation r»f farvlhlale.^ for the .State , 1 ..e^iala I lire 7- - - f' i-> ’• 2*- .c' L ■ ' ' "f-, v^V;. ‘t? it.' Rottner^ Quits Buildin^Unit SI Atty. John S. G. RottnerK Re- publican candidate for the St^ e Senate, has resigned as a m em )^ of the .School Building Committee, which he lias served alrice Ita crea- : tlon In 1948’. ' ' Tn a letter to Mayor Harold A. Turkington, Rottner said he ex- I pects the campaign for. thd Fourth District Senate seat to take an in-1 creasing amount of his time as the election nears. As B resylt, he said, ‘T have come to the reluctant conclusion that in fairness tn the' School Build- ing Committee, I should submit my j re^nstion." . | Tne letter, dated Aug. 8, was re- i leased today. It will be up to the I Board of Directors to find a fe- \ placement for the Manchester a t-; torney on the School Building Committee. | Rotary to Bring Synipliony Here J . . TTie Hartford Symphony Orches- tra will play a pops concert at Manchester High .sr-hool stidlto- rlum Oct, 8. Manchester Rotary (Muh is spon- I soring the orcheslra'.< visit here. ! Rclai v annually sponsors a concert ! to raise funds used by the club for community service snd financing of Rol|(iry projects, such as Youtir Week, a trip to the U.N.. the .Sen- I lor Dawn Dance, and the annual j painting conlest. Ijtst year the club s)iou.soied the I U.S Marine Band here and two veara ago presented the Yale Glee I Cluh In a concert. Dr. Harold Barrett la chairman 1 of ths club’a ways and mMns com- mittee. H«.s«ld today, ths program win be msida up,o( rp^uested _aa- .lections.' AnyohAwho would like to hear a partlcularwymber may send their requesiC>-^«-^ii>9k::at-hls home, 120 Lakewood CirclXor should, phone, him. The proggaih..,'wtU be, drawn up within two weeks'? Dr. Barrett said advance ticket Arrahgementa may be made -with Mli.S. MAUltlCE ARTHUR CARON ieorliiK lUioU) AND BONUS BUYS! Hiqh Fidelity Records Lowest Prices LARGE SELECTIOA Potterton's ISO C'-enlrr Rt., ( or. of (Church Mu»* ('fliol AniiP ('olbort. claugh- tor nf Mr and Mm. Richard P (kilbpjt. '43 ArdmoiP Rd,. and Mauiii-^ Arthur (’aron, ann of Mr, and Mra, Arthui Cflinn, 18R Chp.^- Ipt S t. Ka«L Hailfiud. wpir mar- i ipfl Satunlay in .St. .larnca* ( ’hun h at 10 a m. TIip rp< tor. thp Rev, .John F. Hannon, performed Die cfiemonv at a nuptial Maaa. Palma and whlt^ gladioli weie ( liii.n h decora tion.a. in Jade gieen taffeta. The filled bfxlh e had a di aped neckline. .She wore a pi< Lure hal of jade green horaehair and c arried a fan of pink Bounliful roaea. The hrldeaniBlda’ gowna w’ere of peppermint gieen taffeta. Th^*y wore picture hata of the aair.' col- or and CRM led fana of pink Klf ro.ae.‘ . .Mrs ('nlberl aelecled ff)i* hei' daughter'a wedding a blue lace .•rheath with <tat-k blue*, acc’osaorie.a. The mother of the bridegroom wa.s NOTICE THE OFFICE OF DR. ROBERT .S. .‘jAllTH 5:il E. center S'I\ WILE RF/CLOSEI) FRO.M AUO.' 9 TO AUO. 19 BONUS BUY! FRiSH • . TINDCR • YOUNO - - NOTICE WE WILL BE CLOSED FOR VACATION AUG. 11 Thru AUG. 15 OPEN SAT.. AUG. U VIC’S SODA SHOP i.Mi . mihhi . p: tpkf . The hnde, who wa.a ekcpi'led to attiied tn a gray meUllIf aheatlr Die altar and pieaented in marriage with black ac-( eaaoriea Roth moth- ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re<epllon for- R.S gueata waa hMd a! 1 p.m. in the flainhow Club halliotim. '• hich waa decorated ih gladioli. When tin- i-iniple left by auto for; a trip to r*anadR. the brlrle wa.a wearing a Nile green en.aemble. white a< ceaaonea and coraage of miniature yellow roaea and atepha-| noils 'Phev' will he at home to their i hv her father, wax attended hv her Hi.atei, .Mra. (leorge Cormack of Kenatnglon, a.a matron of honor. .Ml.aa A^lherta Kllen (’olhert, an- other aialer. 'sa.** brirleamaid \VTla<ui K F'olfv of Ka.al Jlart- fiiifl waa hr.al man and uahera were (Jeoige Yrnmg of Ro.alon. Mn.a.**,. ,anrl (Jeoige ('oitnack of Kenalngl on 'I’he l)irde'a gown nf while nvl'»n wa.a deaigned u'lth a filtefl hodicf. put t 1ail ne< IDine and ahor I aleevea. The iMiuffant aklil, tiered in em- hr ouler efi oi gii n7.a t er rnina ted in a hi wall tr ain Her veil of illtiKion u « augtif l<» a < rf)\^'n of pear la and Hhe carried a < reacent boufjiiet of nhlte fenlhrrerl cainahon.a and .al e p h n n n t i.« with dia< ena foliage. 'Phe inard of hnmu’ ua.n gowned friemla afler .Sepi l.% at l.^'^ H i l l - j ciest A\e,, Weal llartfoi'd. , *Phe bride a graduate of Man-I ( lie.Mler High .'School invl Morae * BuaineHa ( ’ollege. ra employed aa a| aeY r«lnr\', by the Trnx’elera In.aur-, ance (V» The bridegroom attended* Nolle Dame and gradiiated from I Ro.aliin ('ollege fJe la emploserl tnj the engineering department of the Plait and Whitnex- Amraft. ANSCO FILM 127-120-620 Rtg. 3 for $1.50 3 For 9 7 c PINE PHARMACY 6B1 renter HI.—Ml 9-9814 CHICKEN rMiJy-to-cook 2H TO 3 IBS whoft, splits quart9r$d or cut up LB GRAND EATING Cantaloupes j ARGF ,SIZF 2 FOR 43 A&P LEADS AGAIN NEW . EVERYDAY LOW PRICES .... \ \ \ JA 2-5750 AMESITE DRIVES Insfalitd By "Connecticut's Loading Paving Contractor" First In t{uallt.v — p'alrest In Price — Pnstest In Service NO MONEY DOWN — TERMS ARRANGED CALL 'The THOMAS COLLA Ml 9-5224 Co.' FOR SAFETY’S SAKE And Longer Tir* Wear Drivt In For Our FREE Front End, Broke and Shock Absorbwr Inspec- tion. Uiirk done' by experts on all- eonventinnsl makes of enrs. MORIARTY BROTHERS 80I-SI8 Center IStreet Telephone Ml S-.'M 't.'V Satin BIsrk Top Nesler For .'-ale In 8 t.sllon Palls »7..S0^FREE DEUYERV SERXICE •m" r up to 14c lesi than yoar ago prieosi 69 ‘ - 73 ‘ - J 7LB 3 LBS $1.99 3 LBS $2.13 3 LBS $2.25 tHI oust SIISNIlt S Mcirtt tis X«MMNV >uper Markets C(PIWD4MI 1000 PIlAiUL'S X.KI *'. • THE NEW, ECONOMICAL WAY TO BUY MILK Now ynii ran be sure of haxlng plnnty of uhit^lesonie^illiutrltluus milk In the refrlgrrallnr ulien .vmir rhililren want ,l| anil by buying milk In this half gallon sire spare saver you saxe monr.v. ORDER VOIR.S TtlUAV FROM VOI R WIITKIE ROUTE RAIJQSMAN w .CAI.I. MI *-88«A. - LOOK MOM IT'S HERE! HOMOGENIZED MILK iN THE HALF GALLON CONTAINER DAIRY 14 WALKIR ST. Ml 3-B34B 1 "" GENERAL TV^ERVICE Days M ' OK A Call ^ Mgllta ilAsOD Plus Parts TBU Ml 8-MM WINDOW SHADES Green, White, Ecru Woshoblc HOLLAND FINISH <4% aA Made to Order With Yonr Rollera *TJLL UNB OF CUSTOM VENETIAH BLINDS E. A. lOHNSON PAINT 00. 723 Main St.. Tel. MI 9-4,501 WHAT A VALUE! NEW FALL and WINTEI / HNEST QUALITYXOnONS and SYI^ETICS Values 99e>Yo. to‘$1.49 Yd. fl .-.-I yd DRESS LENGTHS LENGTH Every piece Is a famous name fahrie. drip dry print.s, novelty wesvea, miniature plaid ginghams,'ivy league drip dry stripei. YOU WILL WANT SFVKUAL LFNOTHS AT THIS LOW. LOW PRICF We welcome charge account.^: Oreen Trading Stamps are given with ca.sh sales and also to customers who pay their charge account withiji fifteen (1.^) davs after hilling date. AMPLE FREE PARKING IS. J W .IU U cost M anchistir C onn * CORNER MAIN and OAK STREETS ■1*' •X Lowest Prices Anywhere! . . . i. FACTORY PRODUCED-SOLD DIRECT NOW A COMPLETE GARAGE Just 6 Sections, roady-to-erecti Special . One-Cor Model 10' R 30' foctory Solet' nol lllui. NO MONEY DOWN - 5 YEARS TO PAY i-.- . 'V^'l Select the ttyla that suits you best. we engineer it into customized sections to meet 'your require- •ments os to placement of doors, windows, roof, choice of exferior siding, etc. Reiutf; -Custom de - sign, efficiently produced by precision foctory methods to give ypu the very finest in materials and worlimonship’ at vo/ume prices. CALL COLLECT! UNiversity 5-1181 GENUCMEN: rieoiv send me your valuable free booklet that contDini e complete selection of Garage Models, Floor Plans 'and Oescriptioni. C-117 ' Non.. .................................. ................................ ...... . tireef, ....... ................................................. ................... . Stole ....... ..................... Fhene ................... ............ .. VJeft Ceeat'i Factory on Sunday ' 0 COAST LUMBER Corp., Hamden, Conn, Bloodmohile yisits Center Church Tontorrow, 1 : 30 ^;fyr 6 : 30 p. m. Areraar* bally Net'PresB Rub for Om Week Baded dime 41. MM 12,701 Member ot Use Audit Bareaa.ef Oienlatlea Manche»ter~-^A City of Village Ch^rm The Weather roneM t ef ,0. 8. yVeetber OnreM .Weriner this evening, tshowere. flrandershowers Inte 'tonight, tow new SS. Wedneedny shtTwere'enr> ly, rlMiring, lens hamid In nfter- noon. High In 80s. VOL. LXXVII, NO. 266 (CInsNfled AdverttOng on Pnge it) MANCHESTER. CONN.. TUESDAY, AUGUST 12. 1938 (FXIURTEEN PAGES) PRICE FIVE CENTS les W aahington. Aug. 12 (i<P)— 9 Jou have to be careful.” Teamster preaident James R. "Hoffa testified today he has rMeired gifts but “no cash money” from a Detroit labor relations consultant with whom he discussed labor con- tracts. He said he received The gifts from George Kamenow who the * took the Fifth Amendment when asked whether he had been a go- between for employers in in- ' lence deals with Teamster ofn«ials. He also bnlked at givIngNietails of his financial transactui including He said use of broad'powars by hia predecessor, Dave BiKk,- led to ^ck'a fall'from power. (Beck was convicted oY mlauie of union funda). "I airy you are not tough enough to get rid of, theae people,” Ken- nedy aatd. \ . Will Follow Ylonatttutlmi *'I don't propotc to act tough,” Hoffs replied. "I Will follow the constitution.” -N. Hoffa protested th at' the com- mitte waa leaving the impression that ‘Tm controlled by gangatera. I'm not controlled by them." He said accused union officials should have'a unlor. trial. . . Edward Bennett Williams. Hof- with unionists fa's counsel, broke in to argue that *“ ’’Congress does not get rid of its members accused of criminsl acts , until all legal appeals have been] exhausted. Sen. John L. M(:Clellan ,( D-Ark(, the committe chairman, retorted: U.S. Fires N-Mis site In Pacific Honolulu, April 12 (A*) The U.S. blasted off a guid^ j mi.ssile with an atomic war' head today from John.alon Is- land. The flash lit the skies | so that it was seen by maiiyi in the Hawaiian Islands, 7()0 miles to the northwest. The warhead apparently was put aloft on an Army Redstone rocket. That was the t,\'pe mia.sill. need in a similar teat at Johnston Island on Aug. Then were varying estimates on the altitude reached by the warhead in the first lest. Some experts'^ believed it bla.sted off st aligmty more than 40 miles in the ,afr. far above any.previous known level for a --nuclear explosion. I\ lU.S. to Pull Back Some Of Marines t?r- I United Nations, N. Y.. Aug, 12 (^P)—The United States an- Inounced today a token with- d get rid of him. Perhaps you ahd Mr. Hoffa wouldn't.” lellan said -Hoffa was per- Washington, Au' Teamsters president Hoffa denied today Afl'aid to throw the hoodluihaj ^ had a crook working for me and officials with Criminal records out of his union. ' “I'm not frightened by anybody,” the bouncy Hoffa roared. “I do not frighten easily." Robert F. Kennedy, counsel to the Senate Rackets Investigating Committee, had asked whether Hoffa was "frightened of these people.” Hoffa conceded the Team-sters constitution gives him exfraordin- ary powers to eject hoodlums but he added: The flringA'are reported, to be , . , , pari of the effort to develop an drawal of a Marine battalion anti-missile r.ii.ssile. Such a mis-| from Leliaiioil l)Ut the action sile using a n.iclear warhead would not seem destined to satis- be detonated against enejny inter- continental ballistu missiles while kt , i v ,■ i- • thev were Ih pace. pro-Na.s.ser Arab Nationalists. ............... 'Hie American announcement U.S. Pacific Commaml Head- t,ie battalion will begin pull- petuatflbt crooks in the union bv j a u i i o u n e e d the explosion v;;''' -tomorrow 'ih'c hia refusaf^lo fire them'. | occurred at 12:,% s.im Hawaii lime. ,p,, v:.N, General "This haa^h^en a sordid aitua- Thousands of roortop observers Xsscwblv's emergenev session on lion and you W the man in Hawaii saw the flash from the Middle Es.sl charge.” McClellan tojd Hoffs. " I n - T h e mbye obviously was intend- ed to take the :^^e off Soviet charges nf aggresMdn in I-ebanon. But Piavda. the Moscow news- paper. took a pot shot at Sei'ietary General Dag Hammarakjold's plan to ease Middle East tensions. Its Officials CaUed In Bet Bing Inquiry Indianapolis, Aug. 12 (/Pj—Open warfare flared today among Terre Haute, Ind., officials t i a federal grand Jury went into its second day investigating a shattered multi-mlllion-dollar gambling syn-’ dlcate which oh'ce operated in,their elly. The first shot waa fired "by 'Vigo County Prosecutor John R, Jett when he waa subpoenaed last night as a witness. Jett accii.sed Terre Haute May- or Ralph Tucker, unsuccessful Democratic candidate for gover- atead of taking action“>pu a r e . p e r - o f Honolulu, turn to a rose petuatlng the aitiiatioft.'K color and gradually fade -Admits InacHnn ' ' Edward von Geldern, a Hono- Hoffa acknowledged he has dane fURincer, said he corn- one of hia Tenne.ssee Heutenants "** ______ ''mllei'. ' u.sing four methods of com- on Page Thirteen) „„ t^e heels of <'i ilioism was lhal_ Hammnrskjold | la leport'-'ov a 15-nation U.N. Sci- withdrawal of i jentific Ccifnpiittee Sunday that even a slow 'increase In world 15,000 American | I radioaclivitv fibni nuclc.'cr tests '' Ue*>anon there are about i 'and other source.- endanger man- ^.OOO British paratroopers in Jor- | I kind's futufe he.nllh. X Mrt.seow wants them all, While agreeing unanimVfuslv that i ; even the smallest amount.s ffL,radi- T'” ' Communist party newspaper I ation may cause harmful -geitoUc warning that Foreign! land perhaps physical -effects. tHe Minister Andret Gromyko will op-j ___ - ' eommitlee- tumid down a Soviet **’ ® P'"" before ' a bookii joint above the Terre demand that they call for an im- emergency..jesalon of the ae- Haute Reslauaant ami ahid he ! "’*4iate^end to nuclear teats, , ...tim .a hi. nUc TTie Pacific Command warned HamfRarRkj(nd outlined nia plan Plans President to Speak Tomorrow Morning Wasliington. .Xug. 12 t/P)— President Eise.nhowcp will go hofoi'o (he United N'alion.s emergenc.x' assembly (dmoYrow for a majnr address outlining the United States progrram foT the Middle Ka.st. Announcing this today, (he White House said Eisenhower plans t(> fl\ to .New X'ork tonighjt, leaving XX'ashington about 6 l).m. EOT. F’ress Seeietar.x .lanies (’. Hagerty said the President will j address tlie assemltly tomorrow morning, probably shortly after it i-onvenes at 10 a.m. EDT. Eisenliower will stay overnight at the Waldorf Astoria Ho- tel in New 'X ’ork. He plans to fiv liaek to, Wa.shington shortly after s^ieaking- at the special assemhly session. In announcing the President’s plans, Ihe White House gave out no information regarding the jiature of the pro- posals he will niake for political end economic stabilization of j the .Mideasl. ' ------- HHgfilys BLUnminremenL uRmr shortly aftci / Sci rcl*ry of Sl»te ; O —f a — V I « n e Dullca arrived in New York to lake j AAl. l l c l l l l ' A Cl I. ft I rlutige of ll\e I'.S.‘delegation plan-1 I itlng for the emergency a'a.sembly aesaloM. The ilet i.sion for the Preaident j . to go til New York apparently grew i I out ot/ ' rerommenditlona from i Hussein Near I Dulles./ J ’h’l u '‘ h "*v 1-ondoh, Aug. 12 .e’ .-A u th o m a - he hqtirded his plane for New York i informants said today the thnl/ he would feporl bai k this nvu..v. __________ _ u.. u.j ,;v >XPo>l «»■ « '"••jBHUah government ha-s had official l afiernoon on the aitnfillon he_found .Middle East that an army harked uprialng would have raided it if he had; ........ ""r.;; ------------- ------ ; l.at F,-id' known. ' yesterday of a pos.sible nuclear lest „ Tabbert emphasizef! that calling,j the Terre Haute officials as wit- ' nesaea did not imply the govern- I menl regarded them aa either betr tors or otherwise connected with the syndicate. '.Today’s grand Jury se.ssion will bilng back a group of waitreaaea, postal clerks and Treasury agents who waited Ih vain yesterday for I a chance to testify, i The entire dayWas taken up by Tabberl'a briefing of the jury and nor two years ago. and Police J^ief Frank Riddle Of refusing to | ' ' Vr om' " i nUr nM ^Revenu’e M.vor 6,v.a r-h i.f S’" ” '- '^<1 ^^e raid that broke If Mayor Tucker and Chief Rid- establi-shmenl. Prince Jones, a porter who (Continiied on Page Font, rmpreme Court Rejerts Terms Of Ouija Will It call* for "U.N. ec- onomic aid Yo needy Mideaat na- tions and aik)K.Arab nations to reaffirm pledges lA nonaggreaalon ^and.nqptntarfereno* nveach other’!, ■“rffYlillrs, X •'•r Pravda'a attack was (‘bptained In a commentary by two I'hgcial correspondents in New York b*hd- lined "Backstage Maneuvers of American Diplomacy.” Pravda did not reject the entire plan. It said there were aome pro- posals that require careful study. British Foreign Secretary Sehvyn IJoyd, left, WR’fks with l.tnllcd Nations Protocol. Chief John dc Nouc who greeted Lloyd on his arrival at tdlgwtld Airport today for tomonow's specialm eet- ing of the U.N. General Assembly., f AP I’holofnx). Needs Medical Aid i (Cnnlinued on Page Thirteen) die had gone along with hia aiig- geatlona, the prosecutor said, the International bookie Joint could have been closed long before fed- eral agents shut it down in a raid last Nov. 29. Jett also is a Democrat biif long has been a factional foe of Tucker. The ma.vor waa not available for comment. Subpoenaed with Jett was Vigo County Clerk Mra. Catherine M. Fee. The prosecutor and clerk were ordered to appear here Aug, 22. with records of all gambling investigations and convictions in their county. , U.S. Attorney Don A. Tabbert said three other aubpoenaes' were out for Terre Haute residents but not yet sen’ed. I^ was generally be- lieved two of them were for Mayor Tucker and Chief Riddle, but Tab- bert refused to confirm this. TOe mayor could not be located last night, dhlef Riddle said he had received no subpoena and saw no reason why he. should be called. Riddle denied knowing there was Hartford. Aug. 12 i/P) - Cprihectl- cut’a highest tribunal today de-] dined to give aiih.stanre to heirs' niaterlalized from the spirit world. W7' || 1~|1 --------- cleaned up the syndicate roo’me I S'«P'eme (;,nurt of errors In i V C i L l C m S lla ilS IICKMCO up me sjnnicBie rooms i , bate court at Bethel committed no error In lejectfng the so-called "miija-board will” of Mrs. Helen Dow Peck. (Continued on Page Thirteen) 33 on Missing Japan Airliner Mrs .Perk's will provided that, after bequests of Sl.OOO each to two women who had been long-time sei'vante, the residue of her estate Goiirt Fight for Place bn Ballot Hartford, Atig. 12 (jpi—Dedar- -)«-i ijic iQsiuup III iipr i , »x_»s . or. tn nn« Inhr Col. L-n-k..'' .... I***! th lS , rUllng SHMlCkS Of go to one .lohn Gale Forbes x..„ 'U ..._______ his heira if lie were found to be Hitler," Mias Vivien Kellems said today she will go to court to chal- lenge a state decision barring .her Tokyo. Wednesday, Aug^ l.Y ./Pi dead. A Japanese airliner carrying 33 ' She told intimates that, "John , „„ ,w. u.ii-. <u. persons, including one AmerRan Gale Forbe.s lesolved out of spare" ! a.^rlace on the ballot for the was lost and feared crashed In sometime ........... ,, , „ Japane.se coastal waters. i erated a ouIJ« l>b«i=a to which she tion'by T c X .w 'J I f StM . MM P. Allen refusing her a place on the ballot. World o f Tomorrow-—1 Science to Provide Items netlme after 1940 as she op-■ 9"*' ' , , ,, ted s o'.ija-bft-Ri'a to which s h e ',? ” ';; All-Nippon Airways said Rboard had been devoted since 1919. I Hon by Secretaix of State Mi its niissing DC3 were 3 crewmen i Papers found among her effects and 30 passengers including one after her dcHlII in 1955 dontatned non-.Iapariese listed as Howard 'references to "Forbes” to her oon- Kreiss. The Japan Broadcasting tacts with him and. according to Corp. reported he was with Kreiss I the Supreme 'Court, “of him mnui- 4 Co., I jO m Angeles. festlng himaelf to her physlcslly The lost , airliner reported at , snd advi.sing her.” p.m. last night about 100 , Mrs. Peck, a native of Kansas. liX'aa the widow of'Frank Peck, a floaradale, N.V., insurance broker who died thete in 193.Mesvlhg her an estate -of more than *150,000. She hutlt .T home in Bethel in 1940. Flint, MlbU., Aug. 12 '/T '. Police across the cognlry were alerted today to enlist ftt%pllal snd doctor a.ssistance iiTThe Hatch for Her- man Klcrdorf, des<’ri(h*4 as the key , to the mystery of hlV . iiiiionist ! nephew’s human lorrh dcalhj^ Stale Police said a heart rmull- I Hon requiring pain killing nlthi,- I glycerine pills might force the 68- ! year-did fugitive to seek aid from ; a doctor or hospitafl. Herman, onetime Detroit Team- sters union nffleial,-dlsapt;^rrd a week sg,o, Monday, tliei.same day his nephew Frank Kieitioif ap- peared at a hospital, with burns that caused his death four days later. Frank was a TeaniAters busi- ness agent In Flint. The Intensified search for Hei- mhfi came after authorities le- ves'led that a check had been eashed for 81,700. Herman received j Ih/i e. and the declaibn on Etsen- I hOwer'a action would ha, made at ] that lime. , Dulles, fresh from' a 25-hilnule j session with Elsenhower was aak- [ed whether the President mxd 1deflnllelv derided to mske a per- ■|Sonal appearance before the 81- ! nation asemhly meeting, either to- imorrow <>» Thuraday. ! "No, It's not yet decided." Dulles jansweted. "I discussed It with him this morning. ” Hktrller. after a group of Coii- greas memhcis had received a jh.leflng from Dullis. .Sen, John .1. I Sparkman iD-Alai said he got I the Impression Elsenhower. would ’ make the irlp. Dulles told the group about th* sliateg'y he will follow In Ihe U.N. 8:37 (rnntlniied on Page.Thirteen) Of a Teamsler-reglsleted Cadillac. Pidire had hoped ii would give them a lend to Ihe missing man. But .\s.sl P i o.acrutor .lei uiue K. Bill I V said the check went lluough .several haiiri.s heftuc II was l aahed and iiiu.sl of the iiiouey was turned m'cr In Hei man’s son .lark Oakland County Proseculor Frnl. crick 7,iem said'he learned of l)ie ctieck rashing last Thuraday but did not release inform'atloii on it unuT jfwrsons, involved in the trans- arllon liid been queslloned ............... .................................. Michigan Ally. Gen. Paul Adams Lloy<l apd,,other visiting foreign had derlaTed that Herman Kiet. polirjd chiefs during his slay In doiT a role in Ihff'KHse w a s ’ the k-iyy S>w York as operating chief of whTch will break tlit* myalery wide ______ , (Conllnued on Page Sevieii) Only one man Is now in custody tn the case and a hearing is sel for rgi g-s s • tibnorrow on his deinahd. for tree- 1 u lu v is io ii, K a u i o Thompaon, U. a"'(,SuS.sion SchccJulc'S against King Hussein of Jordan ia imminent. The British Foreign Office would not comment-hut infnrmanla said the warnings also have reich- ed western diplomatic n-fastons here. The U.S. embassy In Amman last Saturfi^jV Urged A'merican depend- ents to quit Jordan. The first Americana'-iriew out today. While takihig the reports aeiHbus- ly, ’ western aiithorltic.s concede that even official Intelligence re- ports from the JltteFy .Middle East could be the product of the cur- rent Esst-West nerve war. .Some of the rival political forces in the region hsve an Interest In At the ajrport DuII m aairi : "ifUnUilninfi: n hiph .tatr of ten” foiea«w R^freenionl dn the Gen-| while Mldille eral Aaaemhlv to ealabliah what I Rffaira are debat^ he railed •pracUcfi and conatnica the United Na- live development In the srea 11*"”* Oeneral Assembly, which will make peace and well i Ih. such a situation an upsurge being more sssuretl,'' i of rumors snd slsrms based '/i The Secretary said ha probably ' H<;Hon as well ss fact would seem would confer with Soviet Foreign ' Inevitable. Minister Andrei Ornravko. Bril. | B'H 'ven allowing for theaa.pos- Ish Foreign Secretsi v SelwYal*"’'’''*** <l'*P'h*hg sense 'ofconcern in this capital among western and pro-western diplo- mats ahniil Jordan’s fate. One British informant said; "Since bur troops wept in .Tuly 16 there have been three knovm attempts to kill the king. News Tidbits C'ulltfd from AP XX'irffi ' .Socialist Parly Chairman Mo- aabiiro Suzuki of Japan acnisea (NOTE—Ever since he's had *8>m*iijnant celia, Othe? drugs halt poa^ man Haa enjoyed Imaginative flighta ln|o the future. With an AP nrience*ezpert at the controU, take a trip through the wonderland of tomorrow. This ta the first of four articles on the shape of things, to come In irarloua fields.) By ALTON U BLAKB.HLEE (A_P Science Writer) It a-on’t’ be,tomorrow, or even 10 rears from now. But someday barraaament of not being able to remember aomaone’a name", or that foreign language you learned in col- lege. . , , Or they give Jwi an immediate grasp of all the detaila of a busi- ness venture^ or help your son col- lect an "A'' bn hia school exam. For special occaaiona, there are forgettery pills, to Ibanish or dull the memory of some - • tragic event. cancerous growth, preventing them from ever getting worse or dan'- geroua, so people llvev out healthy normal lives. iJfeapan at IM Average lifespan now is 100 years of healthy, robust; ■vigorous Mrs. Allen said she was acting under 1967 legislation which aai.d that the nominating party must have polled at least one per cent of the vote In the election next ! previous In order for Us candi- ' OJtea to be eligible for places on ; the ballot. •' Tltla Would serve to bar Mias Kellems. who polled 8,201 votes as a write-in candidate for U.S. Sen- She was Inteiesled In niemsi i '•‘"® than , the lielep.ifljiy snd lrt hej', will she , !deied that-K “Fo-bes” and hi.shelrs|, f Uv Stonlngton manufac- i were not found alive the residue nf ! ' her "'ststo v/ns to be used lo'cresfe I 1 .U . .u i j- a “John .Oale Forbes Memorial P" , th»l the 19.571lit»m«IUte Ihreat to land. Fund"’ to tinance investigation of t un can t legally 'be retro- S x r^kels wil roar- Into apace "telepathy among the Ittsane for .V"''® 'I'ftion results. I durinjf the Oct '* "f the their undeistarding and cure " ) '7 ''* Legislature can’t, go back ami at Danger Island In the .South In the anoointment of a ■•suit-|-'*'’‘’Xhan8e Ihe score In the mtd- able institution or Individual” tn > H'e game, she added, carry-on the reseai'ch, Mra. Peek*! Mias Kellems said the situation ‘‘amacki of Hitler" aa she recalled dom .................... ........ .. ....................... ^ ...... Ho la Jack' ^ ....... , It tiie day nf jila. fligrit for'the sale ITa'amstei-a business agent,'who Was •granted a writ of habeas i or|)iis .vcaleiday bV.Clji uit Judge .Stephen Neyv 5'ork, Aug. 12 'Ah Tele- iJ. Roth.'A healing was sel foi 10 '’'"ion and radio networks an-| jam tomonow. timincfd today these plana for cov-1 j Thompaon waa jailed lR»t week- crage of the emergency session end for investigation of aiaon in Hie United ■■Nations Generali I the fire at a S'llnl dry cteanei ’a \asemhly which starts tomorrow: where police say Fiarik Klcidorf, UBS and NB(7 Will monitor eon- 56, anfferett hia («tal hums .'imiraisly and interrupt regular ! If Tliom'p.snn I k to be retained programa on both TV and radio , in custody, Adanu) muai pi'ovc evj-’ for on-lhe-apot coverage aa de- drnce against, him .In the blare. | vetopmants warrant. the United Ntatea of trying to do- ;othei'Wisc, Thompson will be freed ABC radio will broadeaal con- mlnate the ,voild with nuclear He whs arrested On Adams' orders H weapons. . .Vhe .season a seconiu tropical ,alnrin. Becky, awiiling far out' In the Atlantic, poaea no (Continued on Page Four) Didn’t Train, Pills revive your faulty memoryr A quick mvallow aave, you the e ^ b reak th ro u g h s alao make It poasible for you to> get a new heart, glands; akin, kidneys tvill directed that her exeinitora, , how the one-time German rtlcfator would establish rulings and\make them retroactive In order to punish certain persona. ...... Hitting again at the I'ecent leg- islation. she added; life. Some old-timers are atili h a v - 1 I ® f c e every- Inr a ball at nearlv 1.50 i lO H erniH n t^l0aretl i 0"* Into either the Republican or w 1 ' ■!-! | Lhe Democratic party. That’s not (Jl 5 Lirnsn l/eallis , nec cent of the voters who are in- dependents.'' The law should help ing a ball at nearly 1.50. Heart dlaea-e is conquered! Med- ical aclehtista ' can tell you how tb eat and live to'prevent coronary Pacific.. .Movie Actress Hedy I..amarr’a separation agreement with her oiltnan husband grants her a life income of at least 88,000 a month. Grp,tin ■ of Democratic Benstora | demand .tne -Navy promote Rear | Adm. II. G. Richover ... . “.All t'o-, lombla la waiting for me,” 'JO-y’ear old Mlaa Liiz Marina Zuluaga,. liiias Universe, says as she board, plane at Idlewild mioiilfly throughout the day and Judge Roth approved the writ into the evening alt- meetings, amid hints ^ calling a grand Jury starting at 10:30 a m. lEDTi. into Ihe case and as the search for ABU television has tic plans. Herman Kierdorf, conunued iin- Miitnal Radio"also broadcasting availing. all meeting* in fu,!!. In addition Herman vanished prior to his .has set up a roundtable review I from 9:35 to 10 o'clock night- ((Vmtlniied on Page Keren) Bulletim from the AP Wires TAX ( I T REJECTED Ytaahlngton, Aug. 12 tPie—The Senate loda.v rejected 61-89 a ptnve in cat the 20 per rent; cahaict tax to 1.0 per ceat- Seas, (ierir'ge \V. Malone (R-Nev) and ,\Ian Blhle (D-N>vl offered the proposal aa an amendment to an excise tax hilt that had kept the .*4enate working until close to midnight last night. (OfHitInued oh Page Heven) 'Iv. U.S. Explains Refusal \To Recognize Peiping or lupga when your own organa became damaged or worn out-giv - ing tisBites from health'y, persona ; |.-)ve pe 5 ‘‘**"La pan he trans-j injured in the head-on prash abo'it planted to live 4n your own bodv.-J7 am, ' ' Some people pt efer purely mechan-1 Toxverman Fied Roth, .I*. Glen SlerllngUm, N.Y'. Aug. 12 upi I A towerman who admitted forget- f ting to atop one of t\x-o JSrIe ta il-' road passenger tralhs that collided yesterday h.os been cleared of pny culpable negligence. Five pe;aohs died and .36 were (Continued m Page Three) Other ap^ial drugs ouniuiBie » u.i.y . . Iiiciuury. , HOXX-ever. Diet. AUV. John F. ' Peeaiitenf Eisenhower's’ sirnaYiii* wMk creative! " t Skahep requested ^epurity officlala SecreUry of A7onimerce ^IncUir North Cfoleb^okv. .In ‘**•’•1* 1 * jto coiiUnue their (nveatightlon. Weeks called the bill "the beat • *11**'*P‘**** teenager accepts offer p * 2 * ! ' l * I said Ymder .oath that he yet ” oY Judge, even swap—hia fcng aide- Communist Hungarian border i B.v JA.ME.S MAKMIW .•menl, uhiiaually free of morallz- guardx open fire on two Austrians (AP, News Analyst) |ing, except for One broild splash of j across the barbed x*-Ire fences: Wasbington, Aug, 12 U’- The j wishful thinking. "And in one spot marking the AuaJro-.Hungarian j United Nations' 81 member's may I it's a little less than Candid.' , I frontier. ,ihave to pause 1ft their ding-dong! It's wishful thinking for the de- Sovlel Union ..rgjes'ta I'Ji.. pro- .fight over the .Middle East, alait-! partmeut to say It holds the view ‘ *•*!* •Jl***’** raW by 800 East Gcr-||ng tomorrow, while' they waltz! that Communis( rule in CThina I s ' I man Coinniuniat police on a. village ! nr.pu.hd once more with ^ e old; not permanent. There's nothing, 6^gX|airkt* 4klTlf 8 Jk V^aataxcl •*" . question of mehibersiiip for Red j solid to indicate otherwise. \KUIIipi tflllin rT481CU; (|lol. William A. Stebbini of; auna. [ And it a a little lest than ckndid i I'lki- _ S M ®o*^***'*L“,". VL. U ,na»»e<l aaslatant ; Every lime' this came up due-' In explain’lhg American support ' irm ierrog raill rammander of the 4,3rd TnfanUy,viously the United .stales lined up j of Cltiang Kai-shek’s .Nationalist i ..g’~ . - . nivUlofi, Which includei Natloiiftl) ^nouj^h ,votci to keep ihe Chlneac on Formoaii—to speak • Washington. Aug. Ij'C Pi Com-! " "B e J'o m Vermont,. Con- Reds otit. It can probgblv do so of the .Nationalists' growing pow-| ................................................. But the .Slate Department, :,er Without adding Chiang couldn't expecting trouble, has Just f stand five minutes without Amer- i out k 5,000'Word document lean hfip. . I outlining the'U.8. poaiUon.ion the* For,a uhHe''in 1950 after the i issue. ' —■■ Red.a drove Chiang .off the main NAl’TILfS C«EW CITED -Portland, England, .Aug. 18 I.T1-—The men of the NautUua sailed Into this Brttlah port to- day and weAie awarded • the \Prealdentlal Unit Citation for ntetr epic voyage under the North Polar Icecap. A gala wei- rome'-aw-AMM the big atom pow- ered 1.74. ailh cnilaing Into this British pitrt its first landing since sailing under Ihe .Arctic ■ Icecap. D rup cure or 'prevent mental ill- j.»ort on the rim of a crater on the h neao, ox* correctly 'chertilcal faults! moon, or staying* awhile, at either b Mthin the brain or body. BrainTc- ; the Hotel Satellite or Hotel Or- ti learch hiia fathomed myateriea of '^ '“" **■■' . . ■■4 (he cliemical-elecrrical workings of ib« brolii and Us faculties, OfUjeer no lohger holds any ter- w ra fioms drugs kill or p^stt away biter, the plush, rival .spacC-plat- forms circIUtg-the earth. The beautiful view of the Itoss (Cast M Patgis Two) had been o'dered t<S stop the west- ; TTie program, started 24 J-ears ! buma for a dlamasaol of speeding bound train while an. eaatbound tgo. permits the United SUtea tqf/^argea. iF^n by-paaoed affreight, _ negotiate agreeihcnta to cut tatiffa f FBI aganta aay they wrtll remain The train’w hich.. was ^ hax'e on imports In retuim for sin)tlar!as “observers'' while police and folur ! conc«f«dqhs from/oQtef. nations on ’ been helij at iSuffem. N.T., ___ ____________ _____ ____ ___ miles feast of hfer*,. wrsnt through jJkmi'H^h'.’'gb«fii. they admit. (OfeikitoBfed o a P ag* TW*) '' i,.. ... (CfeattaaM m rago twaj. .’tv volunteer-searchers try to solve the diaopixarapee of 2-ysar-old Dfebbife Aim Orifeenblll In Oliva HIU Ky.-' , r— '.'’Y This 1* in part a flat exptana- land and to ForiUbaa --ilh e Trti- tlon and ih part a kind of quss-; man's administiation's policy vraa tlon-Bnd-answar-'‘ .explana.t|p.n -of one (>r non-InteiTerenca 'in, the why ihhe: Uojted Slates refuaea fo ! Chinese civil war. This meant leav- recognlM'the Red Chincae aa' the l ing. Chiang to-hia fate, law^l government of China, and : PoUity liineluuiged .therefore opposes a seal In the This abruptly changed when the V.N. for- them. ‘ Reds entered -the Korean War. UtUa U m Than CUadId 1. —— It's a prstty cold,'rsalls(ic docu-1 . (CMItoMd Voga tw\ i -.1 NEW RIG GE.MS T H B T r New York. .Aug. IS iA5—'fhett nf 8S7.000 la Jewels Irani a h#-. lei lobby showroae, matehlng' in daring thr burglary‘of 8166,000 In gems from Tiffany's on Hun'- day, (IBS m ealed t tiiday. The OS'TiOOO in gems was stolen three Siutda.vs ago from a display by fan Cleef and .Arpela Jetveir.e firm in the lobb.v of thr Hotel Plaza, but the Ikeft had not been made public. CZECHS FREE AMERIC.AN A'lenna. .Aug. IS i.P— Txife' trienda of abducted John Bach- man Hardcastle ;oM today the ' 83-yr«r-old student, from N o ^ ■ytilf, Tran., had been releas^ by Communist CtMchoalfex-akU au- thorities. B u t’a .preoa affleer at tke 'U.S. Bmboaay. eold he (sas unable to cMfimi thK **A9,1. eoM say bx! we bone It's tme” Ibfe peqea nAkor said. Thfe frtsndi ■[ feto^ tn their ntnnr, hnwnvnr.
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Page 1: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

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PAGE FOURTEEN jMattrbi Htpr lEufttins" iinalb MONDAY, AUGUS’t 11, 1988

About TownManchester Gafden'vCliib mem­

bers interested in planning another flower arranging course in-\'1ted by Miss Mllllcenl Jones, president, ' to njcel with her at Roaedale, Bolton Lake, tomorrow. The meeting will begin at 10:30 a.m.„ and members are asked to provide their own sandwiches. Beverages will be served. Those attending should also 'bring flow­ers and containers.

William T.■^England, son of Mr, and Mrs. George .1. England of t:i4 Spruce St . has been drafted and is at Et. Dix, N. J . He graduated from the University of Connci J.icnt In June, having majored in govern­ment. He was arlmitteri to the UConn .School of Law and had ex­pected to begin studies in Septem­ber. His wife, the former Alice O'Rourke of Greenwieh, Is a leac li- er in Ellington Their home is on Upper Butcher Rd . Rockville

Richard .1 Risiev, Mamliesler dancing teacher, has returned from New..York where he studied latejit teehnifiues m all phases of dance education Me attended the annual convention of the Dance Masters of America and studied under manv famous artists and attended elasses at the .Iiine T a i ­lor Scheiol of Daneing Mis studio is at 72 E renter St

Engagement(iaudct-Selsky

Mrs, Esther GmidCl. 78 Blreh SI, announces the engagement of her daughter. Carol Ann, to Jam es Setsky of Broad Brook, son of Mrs. Aimj Setaky of Broad Brook and lohn Setsky of South Windsor,

Mias Gaiidel 1." also the dangn- ter of d a te Gaildel of Union, She attended Manchester- schools snd IS employed by Mancheslei Modes. Her fiance. Is employed by C'on-

I solidst'ed Tobaeco Co. in Broad ■Brook.

No date has been set for the j wedding jI --------- ---------------------------------------------I

Diskan, and Leon Dobkin and Ab­ner N. Adler, all of Manchester. ■ This group also owns the Creatfleld Country Hpirfe and Hospital for ; Convale-scenta now under ronstriic- , lion on Vernon St.

Dr. Guy Miller and Dr. Harlan Gephardt of f3ilcago surveyed ■ Wealvlew Manor recenll.v while In the Slat*.

Cf'eatfleld ia expected to open i about Nov, 1, ' j

Carori'Colbert WeddingX

Personal INolicesIn Momoriam

In Jftvtnf m»mrirv r>f rmr mcjh*r unH frt.ndnmth»r Hnr«l> Rr.|in^e,n « ho r88?<*ri Aiiirii8f <> pr.7I>>vinK m-mcrir.a nrv««rA * tlruf* *ovj> f-ri #uif! »ln\g pngia In fiur pt fcifiii.e* mcmfuieaOf nn we* Irtxrfj niirl N)int

Pr»n nnd flfiujrhu

Miss Donna Hart, who waa fjraduatoM yeslenlay from St.

> Krnncifl Hoapital Bcliool of Nura- ing. will hr married HalurdA-y. m.1

jfst Bridgcfa ( ’hunh to Robert .1. Upton J r . 11 Park St. She haa re-

if-rntly br*'n the giieal nf honoi at. arrvrrai ml.arrllaneoua ahowrra

Ann> ftrNervr ('apt L auinvaR I..rohard, .'Ifi Hamlin Si . ta at*

I trndinc artivr dirtv training: at I f U ro rjf (» Meade, Md , with thp 20fi7lh ARSU Civil Affaira and Militar\' ('rovrrniiH»nt School.

Th#' V’illiiiK VVmkrrn of liir I South (*hiiich will hold a.n all-day I arwing nir^'tlnff Wfdnrada\ brpin-

runs at 10 o'rlofk A potluck luncheon will be arrvrd at noon

\ c,slvic\i Manor Siirw*yr<l by AM.\\Vr.st\iPU .Manor near DaniPl.son

la 1 of IR tonvalr^rnl homra,tn thr nation i hoarn to be atiiv/ cd b\ ihr Ainrncan Medical A.aan.

'!‘lir 'onvalraiont home la rnan- ag'cd hy Miarlr.a K Miiilhiiil, foi-

irx^rff-uri |p,p,|y .Mnni'hralri 11 la owned and fBihjiv ■ hv hr a l':iicrnr Davta .<nd A, Klmer

Truckers to Help iBoosl Blood Bank:Truck dilvrra and tbflr help«ra

j are heinj: counted upon to ffive Ihr ■ local blood bank a. much needed , hooat when thr Red (hoaa Rlood- t mobile cornea to f ’cntrr Thurrh

Wednead.iy from 1.30 to 6:,30 p.m.A nationwiftr effort ia beinjj

rmadc hy the tnuking Irntiiatry Iq bolater blood lollertjona at a Hme ' vhen many would-be donora are On vacation. National trueHing of- flclaln and the loi al Red ('roaa of-1 file are lin t all trmUmen inthe area informtiiK them of thi*'

' heed fon b lood and the local t im e .a<hrdiile

I>o(a l o f f n i a l s point out h ow - e \ e i . that donoi.'^ flo not h a ve in : h a ve a t r u c k m a n a phy.airpie In or- ffer to aid the b lond p ro c r a m . A n y adult \c ith normal, h ea lth can Join m t hia ii feaa ' In c ' aiiae

Bolincr Sp<*ukcr ' At (;OI» Parley

A tty .loijm W i; Itoltner will hr the keynote speaker lonjglit at th e ’ Kaat Hartford Republiran nomi­nating fonventmn to be held bv that town I'omniiUee

Roltnei. who, IS the Kepubluan fandidale ffo Slate SenHlm from, the Koiiilh Senatorial,, iM-itiicl i

‘ was invil.eil to make the kevn^dp afldre.ss by Kant Hartford Touri, ( ’l)airman Anihonv .1 Polydi*'

The Kaat Hartford Town ('om -' ' miflee will hohl tire i fmventinn In 'the Town Mall stHitinc at R Main oifler of himine.ss \ il| he Ihe noini- nation r»f farvlhlale.^ for the .State

, 1 ..e iala I lire

■ 7- -

- f 'i-> ’•

2*- . c 'L ■'

■' "f-,

v V;.‘t?

■ ■

i t . '

Rottner^ Quits B u ild in ^ U n it

SIAtty. John S. G. RottnerK Re­

publican candidate for the S t^ e Senate, has resigned as a m e m )^ o f the .School Building Committee, which he lias served alrice Ita crea-

: tlon In 1948’. '' Tn a letter to Mayor Harold A.

Turkington, Rottner said he ex- I pects the campaign for. thd Fourth

District Senate seat to take an in-1 creasing amount of his time as the election nears.

As B resylt, he said, ‘T have come to the reluctant conclusion that in fairness tn the' School Build­ing Committee, I should submit my j re ^ n s tio n ." . |

Tne letter, dated Aug. 8, was re- i leased today. It will be up to the I Board of Directors to find a fe- \ placement for the Manchester a t - ; torney on the School Building Committee. |

Rotary to Bring Synipliony Here

J . .TTie Hartford Symphony Orches­

tra will play a pops concert at Manchester High .sr-hool stidlto- rlum Oct, 8.

Manchester Rotary (Muh is spon- I soring the orcheslra'.< visit here.! R clai v annually sponsors a concert ! to raise funds used by the club for

community service snd financing of Rol|(iry projects, such as Youtir Week, a trip to the U.N.. the .Sen-

I lor Dawn Dance, and the annual j painting conlest.

I jts t year the club s)iou.soied the I U.S Marine Band here and two

veara ago presented the Yale Glee I Cluh In a concert.

Dr. Harold B arrett la chairman1

of ths club’a ways and mMns com­mittee. H«.s«ld today, ths program win be msida u p ,o ( rp^uested _aa- .lections.' AnyohAwho would like to hear a partlcularwymber may send their requesiC>-^«- ii>9k::at-hls home, 120 Lakewood C ir c lX o r should, phone, him. The proggaih..,'wtU be, drawn up within two weeks'?

Dr. B arrett said advance ticket Arrahgementa may be made -with

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Mu»* ('fliol AniiP ('olbort. claugh- tor nf Mr and Mm. Richard P (kilbpjt. '43 ArdmoiP Rd,. and Mauiii-^ Arthur ( ’aron, ann of Mr, and Mra, Arthui Cflinn, 18R Chp. - Ipt S t . Ka«L Hailfiud. wpir mar- i ipfl Satunlay in .St. .larnca* ( ’hun h at 10 a m. TIip rp< tor. thp Rev, .John F. Hannon, performed Die cfiemonv at a nuptial Maaa. Palma and whlt^ gladioli weie ( liii.n h decora tion.a.

in Jade gieen taffeta. The filled bfxlh e had a di aped neckline. .She wore a pi< Lure hal of jade green horaehair and c arried a fan of pink Bounliful roaea.

The hrldeaniBlda’ gowna w’ere of peppermint gieen taffeta. Th *y wore picture hata of the aair.' col­or and CRM led fana of pink Klf ro.ae.‘.

.Mrs ('nlberl aelecled ff)i* hei' daughter'a wedding a blue lace .•rheath with <tat-k blue*, acc’osaorie.a. The mother of the bridegroom wa.s

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The hnde, who wa.a ekcpi'led to attiied tn a gray meUllIf aheatlr Die altar and pieaented in marriage w ith black ac-( eaaoriea Roth moth-

' era wore orchid nor.aagea.A re<epllon for- R.S gueata waa

hMd a! 1 p.m. in the flainhow Club halliotim. '• hich waa decorated

ih gladioli.When tin- i-iniple left by auto

for; a trip to r*anadR. the brlrle wa.a wearing a Nile green en.aemble. white a< ceaaonea and coraage of miniature yellow roaea and atepha-| noils 'Phev' will he at home to their i

hv her fa ther, w ax a t tended hv her Hi.atei, .Mra. ( le o r ge C o r m a c k of K e n a tn g lo n , a.a m a t r o n of honor. .Ml.aa A^lherta K l len ( ’olhert, a n ­oth e r aialer. 'sa.** b r i r leam aid

\VTla<ui K F 'o l f v of Ka.al J la rt - fiiifl waa hr.al m an and uahera w e re ( J e o ig e Y r n m g of Ro.alon. Mn.a.**,. ,anrl (Jeo ige ( ' o i t n a c k of K e n a l n g l on

'I ’he l) irde 'a g o w n nf w h i l e nvl '»n wa.a dea igned u ' l t h a fi ltefl hodicf. put t 1 ai l ne< ID ine and ahor I aleevea. T h e iM iuffant a k l i l , t iered in em - hr ouler efi oi gii n7.a t er rnina ted in a hi wall tr a in Her veil o f illtiKion u « augti f l<» a < rf)\^'n of pear la and Hhe ca r r ie d a < reacent boufjiiet of n h l t e fen lh r re r l c a in ah o n .a an d .al ephnnn t i.« w i th dia< ena foliage.

'Phe inard of h n m u ’ ua.n g o w n e d

fr iem la a f l e r .Sepi l .% at l. ' H i l l - j c i e s t A \e ,, W e a l l l a r t fo i 'd . ,

*Phe bride a graduate of Man-I ( lie.Mler High .'School invl Morae * BuaineHa ( ’ollege. ra employed aa a| aeY r«lnr\', by the Trnx’elera In.aur-, ance (V» The bridegroom attended* Nolle Dame and gradiiated from I Ro.aliin ('ollege fJe la emploserl tnj the engineering department of the P la it and Whitnex- A m raft.

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VOL. LXXVII, NO. 266 (CInsNfled AdverttOng on Pnge i t ) MANCHESTER. CONN.. TUESDAY, AUGUST 12. 1938 (FXIURTEEN PAGES) P R IC E F I V E C E N T S

les

W a a h in g to n . A u g . 1 2 (i<P)— 9 ‘J o u have to be careful.”Teamster preaident James R."Hoffa testified today he has rMeired gifts but “no cash money” from a Detroit labor relations consultant w i t h whom he discussed labor con­tracts. He said he received The gifts from George Kamenow who the * took the Fifth Amendment w h e n asked whether he had been a go- between for employers in in-

' lence deals with Teamster ofn«ials. He also bnlked at givIngNietails of his financial transactui including

H e said use of broad'powars by hia predecessor, Dave BiKk,- led to ^ c k 'a fall'from power. (Beck was convicted oY mlauie of union funda).

" I airy you are not tough enough to get rid of, theae people,” Ken­nedy aatd. \ .

Will Follow Ylonatttutlmi *'I don't propotc to act tough,”

Hoffs replied. "I Will follow the constitution.” -N.

Hoffa protested th a t ' the com- m itte waa leaving the impression that ‘T m controlled by gangatera. I'm not controlled by them."

He said accused union officials should have'a unlor. trial.

. . Edward Bennett Williams. Hof-with unionists fa 's counsel, broke in to argue that *“ ■’’Congress does not get rid of its

members accused of criminsl acts , until all legal appeals have been] exhausted.

Sen. John L. M(:Clellan ,( D-Ark(, the committe chairman, retorted:

U.S. Fires N-Mis site In Pacific

Honolulu, April 12 (A*) The U.S. blasted off a guid^ j mi.ssile with an atomic war' head today from John.alon Is­land. The flash lit the skies | so that it was seen by maiiyi in the Hawaiian Islands, 7()0 miles to the northwest.

The warhead apparently was put aloft on an Army Redstone rocket. That was the t,\'pe mia.sill. need in a similar teat at Johnston Island on Aug.

T h e n were varying estimates on the altitude reached by the warhead in the first lest. Some experts'^ believed it bla.sted off st aligmty more than 40 miles in the ,afr. far above any.previous known level for a --nuclear explosion.

I \

lU.S. to Pull Back Some Of Marines

t ? r -

I United Nations, N. Y.. Aug, 12 ( P)—The United States an-

Inounced today a token with-

d get rid of him. Perhaps you ahd Mr. Hoffa wouldn't.”

lellan said -Hoffa was per-

Washington, Au'Teamsters president Hoffa denied today Afl'aid to throw the hoodluihaj ‘ had a crook working for meand officials with Criminal records out of his union.

' “I'm not frightened by anybody,” the bouncy Hoffa roared. “I do not frighten easily."

Robert F. Kennedy, counsel to the Senate Rackets Investigating Committee, had asked whether H offa was "frightened of these people.”

Hoffa conceded the Team-sters constitution gives him exfraordin- ary powers to eject hoodlums but he added:

The flringA'are reported, to be , . , ,pari of the effort to develop an drawal of a Marine battalion anti-missile r.ii.ssile. Such a mis-| from Leliaiioil l)Ut the action sile using a n.iclear warhead would not seem destined to s a t is - be detonated against enejny inter-continental ballistu missiles while ‘ kt , i v ,■ i- •thev were Ih pace. pro-Na.s.ser Arab Nationalists.■ ............... 'Hie American announcement

U.S. Pacific Commaml Head- t,ie battalion will begin pull-petuatflbt crooks in the union bv j a u i i o u n e e d the explosion v;;''' -tomorrow 'ih'c hia refusaf^lo fire them'. | occurred at 12:,% s.im Hawaii lime. ,p,, v:.N, General

"This haa^h^en a sordid aitua- Thousands of roortop observers Xsscwblv's emergenev session onlion and you W the man in Hawaii saw the flash from the Middle Es.slcharge.” McClellan tojd Hoffs. " I n - T h e mbye obviously was intend­

ed to take the :^ ^ e off Soviet charges nf aggresMdn in I-ebanon.

But Piavda. the Moscow news­paper. took a pot shot at Sei'ietary General Dag Hammarakjold's plan to ease Middle East tensions. Its

Officials CaUed In Bet Bing Inquiry

Indianapolis, Aug. 12 (/Pj—Open warfare flared today among Terre Haute, Ind., officials t i a federal grand Jury went into its second day investigating a shattered multi-mlllion-dollar gambling syn-’ dlcate which oh'ce operated in,their elly.

The first shot waa fired "by 'Vigo County Prosecutor John R, Je tt when he waa subpoenaed last night as a witness.

Je tt accii.sed Terre Haute May­or Ralph Tucker, unsuccessful Democratic candidate for gover-

atead of taking action“> pu a r e . p e r - o f Honolulu, turn to a rose petuatlng the aitiiatioft.'K color and gradually fade

-Admits InacHnn ' ' Edward von Geldern, a Hono-Hoffa acknowledged he has dane fURincer, said he corn-

one of hia Tenne.ssee Heutenants "**______ ''mllei'. ' u.sing four methods of com-

— on Page Thirteen) „„ t^e heels of <'i ilioism was lhal_ Hammnrskjold |la leport'-'ov a 15-nation U.N. Sci- withdrawal of ijentific Ccifnpiittee Sunday thateven a slow 'increase In world 15,000 American |

I radioaclivitv fibni nuclc.'cr tests '' Ue*>anon there are about i'and other source.- endanger man- .OOO British paratroopers in Jo r- | I kind's futufe he.nllh. X Mrt.seow wants them a ll,

While agreeing unanimVfuslv that i; even the smallest amount.s ffL,radi- T '” ' Communist party newspaper I ation may cause harmful -geitoUc warning that Foreign!land perhaps physical -effects. tHe Minister Andret Gromyko will op-j

___ - ' eommitlee- tum id down a Soviet **’ ® P '"" before 'a bookii joint above the Terre demand that they call for an im- emergency..jesalon of the ae-Haute Reslauaant ami ahid he ! " ’ *4iate^end to nuclear teats, , . ..t im .a h i. nUcTTie Pacific Command warned HamfRarRkj(nd outlined nia plan

PlansPresident to Speak Tomorrow Morning

Wasliington. .Xug. 12 t/P)— President Eise.nhowcp will go hofoi'o (he United N'alion.s emergenc.x' assembly (dmoYrow for a majnr address outlining the United States progrram foT the Middle Ka.st.

Announcing this today, (he White House said Eisenhower plans t(> fl\ to .New X'ork tonighjt, leaving XX'ashington about 6 l).m. EOT.

F’ress Seeietar.x .lanies (’. Hagerty said the President will j address tlie assemltly tomorrow morning, probably shortly after it i-onvenes at 10 a.m. EDT.

Eisenliower will stay overnight at the Waldorf Astoria Ho­tel in New 'X’ork.

He plans to fiv liaek to, Wa.shington shortly after s ieaking- at the special assemhly session.

In announcing the President’s plans, Ihe White House gave out no information regarding the jiature of the pro­posals he will niake for political end economic stabilization of

j the .Mideasl. ' -------H H gfilys BLUnminremenL uRmr

shortly aftci / Sci rcl*ry of S l»te ; O — f a — V I « n eDullca arrived in New York to lake j A A l. l l c l l l l ' A Cl I. f t

I rlutige of ll\e I '.S . ‘delegation plan-1 I itlng for the emergency a'a.semblyaesaloM.

The ilet i.sion for the Preaident j . to go til New York apparently grew i I out ot/ ' rerommenditlona from i Hussein NearI Dulles./J ’ h’l u'‘h " * v 1-ondoh, Aug. 12 .e’ .-A u th o m a -he hqtirded his plane for New York i informants said today the

thnl/ he would feporl bai k this nvu..v. __________ _ u . . u . j, ;v >XPo>l «»■ « '"••jBHUah government ha-s had officiall afiernoon on the aitnfillon he_found .Middle East

that an army harked uprialng

would have raided it if he h ad ; ........" " r . ; ; ------------- ------ ; l.a t F,-id'known. ' yesterday of a pos.sible nuclear lest „Tabbert emphasizef! that calling,j

the Terre Haute officials as wit- ' nesaea did not imply the govern- I menl regarded them aa either betr tors or otherwise connected with the syndicate.'.Today’s grand Jury se.ssion will

bilng back a group of waitreaaea, postal clerks and Treasury agents who waited Ih vain yesterday for

I a chance to testify, i The entire dayW as taken up by

Tabberl'a briefing of the jury andnor two years ago. and Police J^ ie f Frank Riddle Of refusing to | ' ' Vrom' " i nUrnM ^Revenu’e

M .vor 6,v.a r-hi.f S’" ” '- ' <1 ^ e raid that brokeIf Mayor Tucker and Chief Rid- establi-shmenl.Prince Jones, a porter who

(Continiied on Page Fon t,

rmpreme Court Rejerts Terms Of Ouija Will

I t call* for "U.N. ec­onomic aid Yo needy Mideaat na­tions and aik)K.Arab nations to reaffirm pledges lA nonaggreaalon

^and.nqptntarfereno* nveach other’! , ■“rffYlillrs, ■ X •'•r

Pravda'a attack was (‘bptained In a commentary by two I'hgcial correspondents in New York b*hd- lined "Backstage Maneuvers of American Diplomacy.”

Pravda did not reject the entire plan. It said there were aome pro­posals that require careful study.

British Foreign Secretary Sehvyn IJoyd, left, WR’fks with l.tnllcd Nations Protocol. C hief John dc Nouc who greeted Lloyd on his arrival at tdlgwtld Airport today for tomonow's sp ecia lm eet­ing of the U.N. General Assembly., f AP I’holofnx).

Needs Medical Aidi

(Cnnlinued on Page Thirteen)

die had gone along with hia aiig- geatlona, the prosecutor said, the International bookie Joint could have been closed long before fed­eral agents shut it down in a raid last Nov. 29.

Je t t also is a Democrat biif long has been a factional foe of Tucker. The ma.vor waa not available for comment.

Subpoenaed with Je tt was Vigo County Clerk Mra. Catherine M. Fee. The prosecutor and clerk were ordered to appear here Aug, 22. with records o f all gambling investigations and convictions in their county., U.S. Attorney Don A. Tabbert

said three other aubpoenaes' were out for Terre Haute residents but not yet sen ’ed. I^ was generally be­lieved two of them were for Mayor Tucker and Chief Riddle, but Tab- bert refused to confirm this.

TOe mayor could not be located last night, dhlef Riddle said he had received no subpoena and saw no reason why he. should be called.

Riddle denied knowing there was

Hartford. Aug. 12 i/P) - Cprihectl- cut’a highest tribunal today d e-] dined to give aiih.stanre to heirs 'niaterlalized from the spirit world. W7' || 1~|1---------

cleaned up the syndicate roo’me I S'«P'eme (;,nurt of errors In i V C i L l C m S l l a i l SIICKMCO up me sjnnicBie rooms i ,bate court at Bethel committed no error In lejectfng the so-called "miija-board will” of Mrs. Helen Dow Peck.

(Continued on Page Thirteen)

33 on Missing Japan Airliner

Mrs .Perk's will provided that, after bequests of Sl.OOO each to two women who had been long-time sei'vante, the residue of her estate

Goiirt Fight for Place bn Ballot

Hartford, Atig. 12 (jpi—D edar--)«-i ijic iQsiuup III iipr i , »x_»s .or. tn nn« Inhr C o l. L-n-k..'' .... I***! thlS, rUllng SHMlCkS Ofgo to one .lohn Gale Forbes x . .„ 'U ..._______his heira if lie were found to be Hitler," Mias Vivien Kellems said

today she will go to court to chal­lenge a state decision barring .herTokyo. Wednesday, Aug^ l.Y ./Pi dead.

A Japanese airliner carrying 33 ' She told intimates th a t, "John , „„ ,w. u .i i- . <u.persons, including one AmerRan Gale Forbe.s lesolved out of spare" ! a.^rlace on the ballot for thewas lost and feared crashed In sometime ........... ,, , „Japane.se coastal waters. i erated a ouIJ« l>b«i=a to which she tion'by T c X . w ' J I f S tM . MM

P. Allen refusing her a place on the ballot.

World of Tomorrow-—1

Science to ProvideItems

netlme after 1940 as she op -■ 9 "* ' ' , , ,,ted s o'.ija-bft-Ri'a to which s h e ' ,? ” '; ;

All-Nippon Airways said Rboard had been devoted since 1919. I Hon by Secretaix of State Mi its niissing DC3 were 3 crewmen i Papers found among her effects and 30 passengers including one after her dcHlII in 1955 dontatned non-.Iapariese listed as Howard 'references to "Forbes” to her oon- Kreiss. The Japan Broadcasting tacts with him and. according to Corp. reported he was with Kreiss I the Supreme 'Court, “of him mnui- 4 Co., I jOm Angeles. festlng himaelf to her physlcslly

The lost , airliner reported at , snd advi.sing her.”p.m. last night about 100 , Mrs. Peck, a native of Kansas.

liX'aa the widow o f'F ra n k Peck, a floaradale, N.V., insurance broker who died thete in 193.Mesvlhg her an estate -of more than *150,000.She hutlt .T home in Bethel in 1940.

Flint, MlbU., Aug. 12 '/T'. Police across the cognlry were alerted today to enlist ftt%pllal snd doctor a.ssistance iiTThe H atch for Her­man Klcrdorf, des<’ri(h*4 as the key

, to the mystery of hlV . iiiiionist ! nephew’s human lorrh dcalhj^

Stale Police said a heart rmull- I Hon requiring pain killing nlthi,- I glycerine pills might force the 68- ! year-did fugitive to seek aid from ; a doctor or hospitafl.

Herman, onetime Detroit Team­sters union nffleial,-dlsapt;^rrd a week sg,o, Monday, tliei.same day his nephew Frank K ieitioif ap­peared at a hospital, with burns that caused his death four days later. Frank was a TeaniAters busi­ness agent In Flint.

The Intensified search for Hei- mhfi came after authorities le- ves'led that a check had been eashed for 81,700. Herman received

j Ih/i e. and the declaibn on Etsen- I hOwer'a action would ha, made at ] that lime., Dulles, fresh from' a 25-hilnule j session with Elsenhower was aak- [ed whether the President mxd 1 deflnllelv derided to mske a per-

■|Sonal appearance before the 81- ! nation asemhly meeting, either to- imorrow <>» Thuraday.! "No, It's not yet decided." Dulles jansweted. "I discussed It with him this morning. ”

Hktrller. after a group of Coii- greas memhcis had received a

jh .leflng from Dullis. .Sen, John .1.I Sparkman iD -Alai said he got I the Impression Elsenhower. would ’ make the irlp.

Dulles told the group about th* sliateg'y he will follow In Ihe U.N.

8:37

(rnntlniied on Page.Thirteen)

Of a T e a m s l e r - r e g l s l e t e d Cad i l la c .Pidire had hoped ii would give

them a lend to Ihe missing man.But .\s.sl P i o.acrutor .lei uiue K.Bill I V said the check went lluough .several haiiri.s heftuc II was l aahed and iiiu.sl of the iiiouey was turned m'cr In Hei man’s son .lark

Oakland County Proseculor Frnl. crick 7,iem said 'he learned of l)ie ctieck rashing last Thuraday but did not release inform'atloii on it unuT jfwrsons, involved in the trans-arllon liid been queslloned ............... ..................................

Michigan Ally. Gen. Paul Adams Lloy<l apd,,other visiting foreign had derlaTed that Herman Kiet. polirjd chiefs during his slay In doiT a role in Ihff'KHse w a s ’ the k-iyy S>w York as operating chief of whTch will break tlit* myalery wide ______

, (Conllnued on Page Sevieii)Only one man Is now in custodytn the case and a hearing is sel for rgi ■ • • g-s s •tibnorrow on his deinahd. for tree- 1 u l u v i s i o i i , K a u i o

Thompaon, U. a " '( ,S u S .s i o n S c h c c J u l c ' S

against King Hussein of Jordan ia imminent.

The British Foreign Office would not comment-hut infnrmanla said the warnings also have reich- ed western diplomatic n-fastons here.

The U.S. embassy In Amman last Saturfi^jV Urged A'merican depend­ents to quit Jordan. The first Americana'-iriew out today.

While takihig the reports aeiHbus- ly, ’ western aiithorltic.s concede that even official Intelligence re­ports from the JltteFy .Middle East could be the product of the cur­rent Esst-W est nerve war.

.Some of the rival political forces in the region hsve an Interest In

At the ajrport DuIIm aairi : "ifUnUilninfi: n hiph .ta tr of ten” foiea«w R^freenionl dn the Gen-| while Mldilleeral Aaaemhlv to ealabliah what I Rffaira are d ebat^ he railed •pracUcfi and conatnica the United Na-live development In the srea 11*"”* Oeneral Assembly, which will make peace and well i Ih. such a situation an upsurge being more sssuretl,'' i of rumors snd slsrm s based '/i

The Secretary said ha probably ' H<;Hon as well ss fact would seem would confer with Soviet Foreign ' Inevitable.Minister Andrei Ornravko. Bril. | B'H 'ven allowing for theaa.pos- Ish Foreign Secretsi v S e lw Y a l*" ’' ’''*** <l'*P'h*hg sense

'o fc o n ce rn in this capital among western and pro-western diplo­mats ahniil Jordan’s fate.

One British informant said; "Since bur troops wept in .Tuly

16 there have been three knovm attempts to kill the king.

News TidbitsC'ulltfd from AP XX'irffi

' .Socialist Parly Chairman Mo- aabiiro Suzuki of Japan acnisea

(NOTE—E ver since he's had *8>m*iijnant celia, Othe? drugs haltpoa^ man Haa enjoyed Imaginative flighta ln|o the future. With an AP nrience*ezpert a t the controU, take a trip through the wonderland of tomorrow. This ta the first of four articles on the shape of things, to come In irarloua fields.)

B y ALTON U BLAKB.HLEE (A_P Science Writer)

It a-on’t’ be,tomorrow, or even 10 re a rs from now. But someday

barraaament of not being able to remember aomaone’a name", or that foreign language you learned in col- lege. . , ,

Or they give Jw i an immediate grasp of all the detaila of a busi­ness venture^ or help your son col­lect an "A '' bn hia school exam.

For special occaaiona, there are forgettery pills, to Ibanish or dull the memory of some ■ - • tragic event.

cancerous growth, preventing them from ever getting worse or dan'- geroua, so people llvev out healthy normal lives.

iJfeapan a t IM Average lifespan now is 100

years of healthy, robust; ■vigorous

Mrs. Allen said she was acting under 1967 legislation which aai.d that the nominating party must have polled at least one per cent of the vote In the election next ! previous In order for Us candi- 'OJtea to be eligible for places on ; the ballot. •'

Tltla Would serve to bar Mias Kellems. who polled 8,201 votes as a write-in candidate for U.S. Sen-

She was Inteiesled In niemsi i '•‘"® than , thelielep.ifljiy snd lrt hej', will she ,!deied that-K “Fo-bes” and hi.shelrs|, f Uv Stonlngton manufac- i were not found alive the residue nf !' her "'ststo v/ns to be used lo 'cresfe I 1.U . .u i j -a “John .O a le Forbes Memorial P" , t h»l the 19.571 lit»m«IUte Ihreat to land.Fund"’ to tinance investigation of t un can t legally 'be retro- S x r^ k e ls wil roar- Into apace"telepathy among the Ittsane for .V"''® 'I 'f t io n results. I durinjf the Oct ' * " f thetheir undeistarding and cure " ) ' 7 ' ' * Legislature can’t , go back ami at Danger Island In the .South

In the anoointment of a ■•suit-|-'*'’‘’X han8e Ihe score In the mtd- able institution or Individual” tn > H'e game, she added,carry-on the reseai'ch, Mra. Peek*! Mias Kellems said the situation

‘‘amacki of H itler" aa she recalled

dom.................... ........ ......................... ^ .. . . . . Ho la Jack' ^ ....... ,It tiie day nf jila. fligrit for'the sale ITa'amstei-a business agent,'who Was

•granted a writ of habeas i or|)iis.vcaleiday bV.Clji uit Judge .Stephen Neyv 5'ork, Aug. 12 'Ah Tele-

i J . Roth.'A healing was sel foi 10 '’'"ion and radio networks an-| ja m tomonow. timincfd today these plana for cov-1j Thompaon waa jailed lR»t week- crage of the emergency session end for investigation of aiaon in Hie United ■■Nations Generali

I the fire at a S'llnl dry cteanei ’a \asemhly which starts tomorrow: where police say Fiarik Klcidorf, UBS and NB(7 Will monitor eon- 56, anfferett hia («tal hums .'imiraisly and interrupt regular

! If Tliom'p.snn Ik to be retained programa on both TV and radio , in custody, Adanu) muai pi'ovc ev j-’ for on-lhe-apot coverage aa de- drnce against, him .In the blare. | vetopmants warrant.

the United Ntatea of trying to do- ;othei'Wisc, Thompson will be freed ABC radio will broadeaal con- mlnate the ,voild with nuclear He whs arrested On Adams' orders Hw eapons.. .Vhe .season a seconiu tropical ,alnrin. Becky, awiiling far out' In the Atlantic, poaea no

(Continued on Page Four)

Didn’t Train,

Pills revive your faulty memoryrA quick mvallow aave, you the e ^ b r e a k t h r o u g h s alao

make It poasible for you to> get a new heart, glands; akin, kidneys

tvill directed that her exeinitora, ,how the one-time German rtlcfator would establish rulings and\make them retroactive In order to punishce r ta in p e r s o n a . ......

Hitting again at the I'ecent leg­islation. she added;

life. Some old-timers are atili h a v - 1 I ® f c e every- Inr a ball at nearlv 1.50 i l O H e r n i H n t ^ l 0 a r e t l i 0" * Into either the Republican or

w 1 ' ■!-! | Lhe Democratic party. T hat’s not(Jl 5 L irn sn l/ e a ll is

■ , nec cent of the voters who are in­dependents.'' The law should help

ing a ball at nearly 1.50.■ Heart dlaea-e is conquered! Med­

ical aclehtista ' can tell you how tb eat and live to'prevent coronary

P a cific .. .Movie Actress Hedy I..amarr’a separation agreement with her oiltnan husband grants her a life income of at least 88,000 a month.

Grp,tin ■ of Democratic Benstora | demand .tne -Navy promote Rear | Adm. II. G. R ich over.. . . “.All t'o-, lombla la waiting for me,” 'JO-y’ear old Mlaa Liiz Marina Zuluaga,. liiias Universe, says as she board, plane at Idlewild

mioiilfly throughout the day and Judge Roth approved the writ into the evening alt- meetings,

amid hints ^ calling a grand Jury starting at 10:30 a m. lE D T i. into Ihe case and as the search for ABU television has tic plans. Herman Kierdorf, conunued iin- Miitnal Radio"also broadcasting availing. all meeting* in fu,!!. In addition

Herman vanished prior to his .has set up a roundtable reviewI from 9:35 to 10 o'clock night-

((Vmtlniied on Page Keren)

Bu lle timfrom the AP Wires

TAX ( I T R E JEC T ED Ytaahlngton, Aug. 12 tPie—The

Senate loda.v rejected 61-89 a ptnve in cat the 20 per re n t ; cahaict tax to 1.0 per ceat- Seas, (ierir'ge \V. Malone (R-Nev) and ,\Ian Blhle (D-N>vl offered the proposal aa an amendment to an excise tax hilt that had kept the .*4enate working until close to midnight last night.

(OfHitInued oh Page Heven) 'Iv.

U.S. Explains Refusal \To Recognize Peiping

or lupga when your own organa became damaged or worn ou t-g iv ­ing tisBites from health'y, persona ; |.-)ve pe

*®5 ‘‘**"La pan he tra n s-j injured in the head-on prash abo'it planted to live 4n your own bodv.-J7 am , ' 'Some people pt efer purely mechan-1 Toxverman Fied Roth, .I*. Glen

SlerllngUm, N.Y'. Aug. 12 upi I A towerman who admitted forget- f ting to atop one of t\x-o JSrIe t a i l - ' road passenger tralhs that collided yesterday h.os been cleared of pny culpable negligence.

Five pe;aohs died and .36 were

(Continued m Page Three)

Other ap^ial drugs ouniuiBie » u.i.y . . Iiiciuury. , HOXX-ever. Diet. AUV. John F. ' Peeaiitenf Eisenhower's’ sirnaYiii*wMk creative! " t Skahep requested ^epurity officlala SecreU ry of A7onimerce ^ In cU ir North Cfoleb^okv. .In

‘**•’•1* 1* jto coiiUnue their (nveatightlon. Weeks called the bill "the beat • *11**'*P‘**** teenager accepts offer p * 2 * ! ' l * I said Ymder .oath that he yet ” ” oY Judge, even swap—hia fcng aide-

Communist Hungarian border i B.v JA.ME.S MAKMIW .•m enl, uhiiaually free of morallz- guardx open fire on two Austrians (AP, News Analyst) | ing, except for One broild splash of jacross the barbed x*-Ire fences: Wasbington, Aug, 12 U’- The j wishful thinking. "And in one spotmarking the AuaJro-.Hungarian j United Nations' 81 member's may I it's a little less than Candid.' , I frontier. ,ihave to pause 1ft their ding-dong! It 's wishful thinking for the de-

Sovlel Union ..rgjes'ta I 'J i . . pro- .figh t over the .Middle East, a la it-! partmeut to say It holds the view ‘*•*!* •Jl***’** raW by 800 E ast Gcr-||ng tomorrow, while' they waltz! that Communis( rule in CThina Is '

I man Coinniuniat police on a. village ! nr.pu.hd once more with ^ e old; not permanent. There's nothing,6^gX|airkt*4k lT l f 8 Jk V ^aataxcl •*" . question of mehibersiiip for Red j solid to indicate otherwise.\ K U I I i p i t f l l l i n r T 4 8 1 C U ; (|lol. William A. Stebbini o f ; a u n a . [ And it a a little lest than ckndid iI 'lk i- _ S M ®o* ***'*L“,". VL. U ,na»»e<l aaslatant ; E v ery lime' this came up due-' In explain’lhg American support '

i r m i e r r o g r a i l l rammander of the 4,3rd T n fan U y, viously the United .stales lined up j of Cltiang Kai-shek’s .Nationalist i..g’~ . - . nivUlofi, Which includei N atloiiftl) ^nouj^h ,votci to keep ihe Chlneac on Formoaii—to speak •

Washington. Aug. I j'C P i C om -! " " B e J 'o m Vermont,. Con- Reds otit. It can probgblv do so of the .Nationalists' growing pow-|■ ................................................. But the .Slate Department, :,er Without adding Chiang couldn't

expecting trouble, has Just f stand five minutes without Amer- i out k 5,000'Word document lean hfip. ‘ . I

outlining the 'U .8 . poaiUon.ion the* F o r ,a uhHe''in 1950 after the i issue. ’ ' —■■ Red.a drove Chiang .off the main

NAl’T IL fS C «EW CITED -Portland, England, .Aug. 18

I.T1-—The men of the NautUua sailed Into this Brttlah port to­day and weAie awarded • the

\Prealdentlal Unit Citation for ntetr epic voyage under the North Polar Icecap. A gala wei- rome'-aw-AMM the big atom pow­ered 1.74. ailh cnilaing Into this British pitrt its first landing since sailing under Ihe .Arctic ■ Icecap.

D ru p cure or 'prevent mental ill- j.»ort on the rim of a crater on the h neao, ox* c o r re c tly 'chertilcal fau lts! moon, or staying* awhile, at either b Mthin the brain or body. B ra in T c-; the Hotel Satellite or Hotel Or- ti learch hiia fathomed myateriea of ' ^ ' “" **■■' . . ■■4(he cliemical-elecrrical workings of ib« brolii and Us faculties,

OfUjeer no lohger holds any ter- w ra fioms drugs kill o r p^stt away

biter, the plush, rival .spacC-plat- forms circIUtg-the earth.

The beautiful view of the Itoss

(Cast M Patgis Two)

had been o'dered t<S stop the west- ; TTie program, started 24 J-ears ! buma for a dlamasaol of speeding bound train while an. eaatbound tg o . permits the United SU tea tqf/^argea.iF^n by-paaoed affreight, _ negotiate agreeihcnta to cut tatiffa f F B I aganta aay they wrtll remain

The train’w h ic h .. was ^ hax'e on imports In retuim for s in )tlar!as “observers'' while police andfolur ! conc«f«dqhs from/oQtef. nations on ’ ‘ ‘been helij at iSuffem. N.T., ___ ____________ _________ ___

miles feast of hfer*,. wrsnt through jJkmi'H^h'.’'gb«fii. they admit.

(OfeikitoBfed oa Pag* TW*) '' i,.. ...(CfeattaaM m rago twaj.

.’tv

volunteer-searchers try to solve the diaopixarapee of 2-ysar-old Dfebbife Aim Orifeenblll In Oliva HIUKy.-' ■ , r—

'.'’Y

This 1* in part a flat exptana- land and to ForiUbaa - - i lh e Trti- tlon and ih part a kind of q u ss-; man's administiation's policy vraa tlon-Bnd-answar-'‘ .explana.t|p.n -of one (>r non-InteiTerenca 'in , the why ihhe: Uojted Slates refuaea fo ! Chinese civil war. This meant leav- recognlM 'the Red Chincae aa' the l ing. Chiang to-hia fate, law ^ l government of China, and : PoUity liineluuiged.therefore opposes a seal In the This abruptly changed when the V.N. for- them. ‘ Reds entered -the Korean War.

UtUa U m Than CUadId 1 . ——I t 's a p rstty cold,'rsalls(ic docu-1 . (CMItoMd Voga t w \

i -.1

NEW RIG GE.MS T H B T rNew York. .Aug. IS iA5—'fhett

nf 8S7.000 la Jewels Irani a h#-. lei lobby showroae, matehlng' in daring thr burglary‘of 8166,000 In gems from Tiffany's on Hun'- day, (IBS m ea led t tiiday. The OS'TiOOO in gems was stolen three Siutda.vs ago from a display by f a n Cleef and .Arpela Jetveir.e firm in the lobb.v of thr Hotel Plaza, but the Ikeft had not been made public.

CZECHS F R E E AMERIC.ANA'lenna. .Aug. IS i.P— Txife'

trienda of abducted John Bach­man Hardcastle ;oM today the

' 83-yr«r-old student, from N o ^ ■ytilf, Tran., had been re lea s^ by Communist CtMchoalfex-akU au­thorities. B u t ’a .preoa affleer a t tke 'U .S. Bmboaay. eold he (sas unable to cM fim i th K **A 9,1. eoM say bx! we bone It's tm e”

Ibfe peqea nAkor said. Thfe frtsndi ■[ feto^ tn their ntnnr, hnwnvnr.

Page 2: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

1 ■.

PAGE TWO MANCHES'i'Utl EVE^l^G HERALD. IIAMCUESTBR. CONN« !RDESDAY. AUGUST 12. 1958

World of Tomorrow—‘1

Science to Provide Unbelievable Itenis

(OonUnued from Page One) '

and galaxies from there ti simply breaUi'taklng, worth the t r i p Itself, everyhne says.

This thought prompts you to look at your newspaper, delivered electronically to your home, to check the latest position of. the space-ship expedition to Alpha Centaurl, the nearest star to our own'sun. Traveling at nearly the speed of light, it's bean gone four years now, and Is getting close to the star. Will the expedition find new planets, peopled with crea- ture.s like us, there or farther out?

Mr. Harris lands in his b'atk yard next door in his Btrap-oll' helicopter, which Just brought him from the Dallas rocket-port Three hours ago he was in Anlarcliia watching the Olyinpu w i n 1 e i gantes. He sped home by rocket ' plane.

You yourself w a t c h e d the OiympIc.H over worhlwide TV, | whose Signals bounce off an Karth satellite hung 22.000 miles out In space.

80 Minutes to London \YoiTd prefer to put your feet up

and watch the new hit show m I.X)ndon tonight on TV. Hut you'll probably have to take the half- i hour ride over there with your ' wife - - she"a been restless aboiil ' "never getting out of this house i and never going any place.. ' '

StandardHOLLYV^OOD

W H IIl CHAIR

Easily con- vsn ed from resr-wheel to front-w heel propelling, or lo all Vinch

' siieri.$72.00

HeRyweeS Om Tellet C«aaw4 Fits over average toiletbb'wl. Sturdily co n ­structed. F.siilv clesned.

$51.00

WELDON DRUG GO.AuthaHzbd Dealer

801 MAIN ST.— Ml it-OSZI

Housework is no I'hallenge, you agree. An electronic brain really runs the house. You set the con­trols or program the night before. Then it automatically wakes each member with musi ' at his desired hour; adjusts lights, temperature and ail-conditioning, through day and night, even Hutoinatiially sig­nals the HUloiiiatlc controls to cook dinner I Incidentally, those synthe­tic steaks are getting to taste like the real McCoyi.

.Superhighways are auloinatlcally rcgiilaled too An electronic high­way guide lakes over control of your car and you can nap as you breeze along.

There are electronic exercising hiachinea lo help keep you phy- alinlly fit But doctors are urging you lo get out Into the freah air moie for ganiea or hiking. In use imiscira iiiidei your own power.

Weniher ConlrolH s (ai (jaaier lo plan outdoor ac-

livilles Weather predictions are alinoKl 100 per i enl ai curate for weeks In advance Damaging alorms. iiiiliidlng tornadoes. are sleeted nwsy or killed in Infancy Ihi'oiigh the new si'leni'r of weather conlrol

The whole world has abiindfint elei liii (lower lo run industries ami ei'en fai ms I| comes from ( oiUiolleil ll-fiislon. and from direct laiiping of the power of Ihe sun. Your work week Is 10 lo 20 hours. de|iending on your own i hoh e Some like to kee(> busy.

Abimdanie Is banishing tensions Slid you see no thresi 61 war now. Social psychologlala gave us Insight m i l ) whni makes people and groups lick, how to help them gel along logelh^r

Some wi'llera rail this the flolden Age of Knowledge

Others are saying, vnii haven't seen anvihing yel

roMOHIlOW: Man's Kale—I iil fornillv',’

Negro NoiiiiiiHted

Hy Tiff: ASSfK'IA'rFin I'llESS( r i opubl l cAnn m ft

mul rn flom pfi rjuu lid fitrfi lo Ihp lloH m ' o f n rp r fR rriliilivp fl

And 16 rAndidHlfB to .SIa Ip.SfriAlp,

URrlfoifl IlopublUAnA for thr first llnir In thr ritv's historv. Moinlrintcd r Npk>'" lliclr fRiidi- dfilc for RtatP rrpi'fi.'^rntRtivr Hf in thr Urv. .1 HInnton Mlilcld.s of nnhrl A M K f ’himli HIn mnnliiK mRtr In Atty, Kridinnml U’ Knopo.

The 'IVrnlory of Wyomtnif wnn orKAHlzfd In \Hi\H. nnd it war ad* rnllind lo Ihr Union in 1800,

Didn’txSlop Train, Towermaii Cleared Of 5 Cranli Deaths

(Continued from Pnge One)

AUGUST

SPECIALS3 -T R A C KExtruded Aluminum

STORM and SCREEN

Roth's tower without receiving s BignsI to slop.

"I forgot It,” he said. 'I,4iter, Roth said, he tried to

warn the train by radio but re­ceived no ariswer, A freight train, Roth said, heard the call and an­swered before the crash.

The tracks parallel a stretch of Highway 17 where (lollce cars have troiihle receiving raiUo calls.

The wreck spot la ahoiil 40 mllea from New York Clly. Police blame the difficulty on iron ore in rock cuts along the way,

Roth was released from <)ues- tlonlng after Moses completed his Inijulr.v.

Roth has been with the railroad for 11 years and has worked for Ifi months In tile Siiffern signaltow er.

AIJ Ihe dead were A,honrd the ea.itijoii..d I rain bound ff'opi Mon­roe, N, V , to Hoboken. S ^>,Thls 4-eiu train rnel Ihe 6-rar w"esl- boiind train fror Hoboken to Poft ■lervis, ,N Y., with aiieh force that the lead ears were all but fused to one another In a Jagged maas of wreckage. '

The dead paaaengeis were Psu- llne Cronon, Tuxedo, N. Y,, and Robert L. Yoeliman, 41. Warwick, N. Y. Their criiahed hndlea had to be ('111 from the wreckage.

The other dead were engineer Samuel Nardo, 60. Glen Rock; Klreman Michael I Welsh, 26, ,/eraey n iv , N. .1 , and ticket eol- leetor Charles D, Mllehell, Union Clly, N. .1

Twenty-five of the Injured were detained at hoapltal- and three were In poor condition today at Good Samaritan Hospital, SufTem. They are Clifford. P, Covart, 63, Matamoras, Pa.7 engineer; George .Sutton, Port .lervta. conductor, and Crane Vandermark, 42, Mata- moraa, a hremnn All were on the westbound train.

Saltonstall Asks Arab Refugee Aid

Washington’, Aug. 12 lA’ i Ben. l,Ayerelt Saltonitall IR-Maas) ad­vocated yeaterday a 6-polnt Middle Kaat program calling for resettle- menl of Arab refugees and their compenaatlon for lost properly "at the earliest opportunity."

Raltonelall, chairman of the con­ference of all Republican Senatore, also told the Senate "There la room for more people In Israel without overcrowding and without expan­sion of tier territory." He advo- <aled:

t. ('ontlnuoui direction of "every facet of our pollclea" to support of Hie fact that "Israel la here to stay "

2. lamg range (mllclea duel led to , the end Ihai the Arab atatea Hi'lileve lliolr desire for recognlllon as "Indeiiendenl. self governing na.

I Ilona.1, I'm elenl lug etfiirls lo work out

a (lenreliil setllemcnl helween larnel and l)ie Arab alales wlllioiit which "llieie will never he s re­laxation of llioae lenaloiis and a grealei op[ioitimlly for freedom and economic oppoiiiitilly In this Impoilnnl area of the world."

4 Reseltlemani of Arab refugees and compen'aalIon foi' lost property.

6 Unlleil Nations giiiiianlees of hoiiiidarles of all iiallons In llie Middle Knal

e Private and piililic aid to I reate more I cade, ciilliiia and education In the entire area.

U.S. Explains Refusal To Recognize Peiping

(Oofitlmjed from Page One)

Ever since, under both Ih*. Tru­man .and Eisenhower administra­tions, U.S. policy has been the same: Nonrecdgnlllon and oppo­sition to a seat instha U.N. for the Reds,

Here la ihe U.S. explanation for refusing recognition;

It's to this country's Interest not to recognize the Reds. If the situation changes, and if it would be to Uie benefit of this country to change its policy, it will do so.

Without using this exact lan­guage, the department said the Reds outlawed themselves by their attack in Korea and by breaking agreements and promises since then.

Further: The Chinese Reds are breathing down the necks of llieir Aslan neighbors and want to com- miinlze the continent. Thla coun­try has lined up with the non- Commiinist nations and is doing what It can through economic and rhllltary help lo keep them non- Red

To give the Reds diplomatic recognllloii would give them pres­tige they d&n't have now. Increase their Influehce). bewilder the non- Cornmunlal Aslans, make them un­certain of A mericaH policies, and perhaps weaken their stance to Peiping.

And, If this country gkve the Reds recognition, it would lekd. to a U.N'; seat for them. Thla woilld mean turning over Chlang's seal to thenri and, eventually, the end of his government.

Then the department dWelt on questions that have been raised about the wisdom of this American policy. And It gave anawera. They went this way:

Privilege— Nut RightDon't the Red (Chinese, since

they actually run mainland China, have a right to American recogni­tion 7 N’t). Such recognition is a privilege, not a right. This country can grant It or withhold It.

Hut how can thla country "Ig­nore" a government which controls all mainland China and rules over 600 million people? The depart ment said the Commimlsla who run (Thina are only 2 per cent of the population and besides, be I'suse of lhair brutality, have caused a lot of popular unrest.

(This Is not one of tha depart menl'i beat argumenta. Only a small percentage of the Russians are Communists, yet the Reds Iheje control over 200 million peo­ple and this country, despite Soviet Communist bnitallty, has recug- nlzed the Kremlin regime for years!

Might not recognition of Rod (5hlna eventually weaken the ties helween Red oHilna and Russia? The de|)si tmenl • said there's no

i^avidence to support tills iMlief and argued at length to the contrary.

Wouldn't thla country widen ifa trade by recognizing Rfd (Jhina? The department doesn't think much of trade poasibilitiea with the Red Chinese.

E A S T

KillT Polly rwrt;

“The Vikings”'•TOI IillK ST (M N IN

TU.MIIMTDNF*’Tonitp— niimp^r ('hib Nil<>

Wrd,. ‘ 'RO('K-A-BYI>: IIAnV*

Ch.h:rn unj,, n rm B

KNDM 'rONKillT Kirk lliiugifla • .Tony Tnrtit

Compromise VotedOn Trade Program

(Continued from Page One)

As Anally passed by the Senate yesterday, 72-18, the compromise comes pretty cloiie to what the President wanted. Its central pro­visions are these:

The program Will be extended fotir years, a 'longer extension pe­riod than ever before. Eisenhower asked for Ave years.

The measure gives the President authority to cut tariffs up to 20 per cent. Elsenhower asked for 25 per cent.

In one key provision, Congress Is gWen tlV! power to ayerride, by a two-lhirds vote, a presidential decision lo reject a Tariff Com­mission recommendation for ,1m- port quotas or higher duties In­tended lo protect c home Industry. Up lo now, the President has been free to act on such recommenda­tions without any congressional veto.

The admlnlsli'BlIon did not fight this provision In the bill, presum­ably on the theory that a two- thlfds vole usually la hard to must­er.

In final passage. 40 Democratic Senators ahd 32 Republicans voted for the compromise. Six Democrats and 12 Republicans voted against It.

Elsenhower has called the recip­rocal trade program essential to U.S. prosperity and an Important factor In maintaining free world security.

But for the past six months the extension bill has stirred opposi­tion from those segments of Ameri­can Industry that claimed tariff cutting was destroying them by letting cheaply-made foreign prod- iict.s compete with theirs.

Examples of these Industries are pottery, textiles, f I n e glassware nlcyclfs, and certain branches the coal and oil Industry.

of

MAN5FIELDmr 9! -9m xfar.kiNo IS rku kvinO! •

"THE FLY"

■SPACE MASTER X 7‘"W «l,. "I.K l'TtlAN DKII (ilJK "

"FRA U LK IN r Teek.

ENDS TONIGHT!"THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI"

r'Coinr 6:30-9: ISIn

81TARTS TOMOKHOW!A HAPPY SUMMICR iSHOW!

Hob Hope I l>Avid Nivra“ Paris I “ Silken

Holiday” Affair”

S h ein w o ld ,on B M d geDON’T BLOCK SOlX •

IN N O ^ U M P DBFSNSK By Alfred SM nwold

It's easy for the declarer to handle a long suit without biocklpg, it since he can p t i exactly whal he has In the. shit in both hands. The defenders may- have more trouble ;with thla sort of problsutl’.

WelL opened the Jack of zpades, and declarer played low from the dummy. Froiri hla point o f view, this was a rouMne hold-up play. He would take the ace of apadea as late aa possible and then hope that the ace of'diamonds was held by the player with the short apades.

East couldn't afford to play the queen of spadeb at the first tHck for faar that South had the Hin^ uni would then be able to win three spade tricks. West therefore won the first trick with the Jack of apadea.

West now made the mistake of continuing with a low spade, and declarer played low once more from the dummy. East won with the queen and now had to shift to a different suit. This gaye declar­er time to knock out the ace of diamonds, allowing him to make his contract with an overtrlck.

Should Read .SituationWest should easily read the ilt-’

uatlon when his Jack of spades holds the first trick. Obviously, East has the queen of spades, since otherwise South would win the first trick.

West must lead the king of spades at ths second trick to avoid

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South, dealer Both aides 'vulnerable

/ NORTH^ d h A 9 6

W Q 10 5♦ 10 9 8 4♦ K Q J

IVEST EASTdh K n o 7 5 dh Q 3 ¥ 9 6 2 ¥ 8 7 4 3¥ A 5 ¥ 7 3 2¥ 8 6 S ¥ 10 9 4 3

SOUTH ■ ■ " ¥ 8 4 2 ~ ¥ A K J

¥ K Q I 6 ¥ A 7 2

floMh Wait North Eaat I NT Past 3 NT Fait Pau Pass

Opening lead — ¥ II

blocking, the suit. It Eaat'a queen la a doubleton, this play la needed. If East started with three apadea, he can play the queen on West’s king, and the suit will be.unblock­ed. ■

Tlila defense would assure West four spade tricks and the ace of diamonds. The contract would be defeated by one trick.

Daily QuestionPartner bids one notrump, and

tha next player pasaei. You hold:

S p ad e»-k , J, 10, T, 8; Haartt— 9, 6, J; DUmonda—Aj #: Club#— 8, a, 6. What do you aayT

Anawer: BIO three apadea or two notrump (a cloae declaion).T^ie important .thing la to make a atnmg effort t o reach game. I f you bid only two apadee, your

Sarthar la eapectad to paat, smd probable game will be mlaaed.

" MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN., rU^SDAY, AUGUST 12.-1968_ PAGE THREE

(Copyright turee Corp.)

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w.- P

Coventry f

Smith, Mrs. Heckler Win Nominations

Boyden r . Smith Sr., incumbent,-^Bection of tuwfi tre directly lif- U d Urt. 'Alma L. Heckler, tvere - ■ - •nominated aa candidate! for repre- aentativ* to the General Aaaem- bly at the RraubUcan Caucaslaat Bight at the ^bertaon SchooU

Smith received 77 vote# and Mri. Heckler 71 votei .during a conteat for the nominitlont. Uos, era for the aeata' were Otto C. MUler, Incumbent Who received 70 votea and iljra, Evelyn Wenner, who rtgelved 48 votea. There were 18&'patty elgctore present. Vot- -lAg was by . secret oallot. Three votes were voided by the counters because two contained only one name each and one was a blank.

The meeting h&d been instruct­ed by party chairmen John F. Chappelle, that each ballot .must contain two names.• There was no contest as candi­date for Judge of probate or con­tests for Justices of the peace. Respective motions were passed that tho secretary cast one vote for each candidate.

Elmore A. Turkington, incum­bent, was nominated aa Judge of probate. Candidates for Justice of the Peace will be filled by Lieroy M. Roberts, H. Wilbur Stevens, lAwrencs C. I^tlmer: Chappelle, Anton M. L,assen and Joseph Mo- tycka.

Smith will be seeRing his second term in the'coming election. He has been a resident'of Coventry alnce 1937 and resides )vith ,hi» wife in Lakevlew Terrace; The couple have 4 married children. Smith is a retired builder. During his first term In the legislature Smith served as a member of the Rules and Penal Committees.

As a member of the rules com­mittee he was a delegate to the National Legislative Conference at Oklahoma City; Oklahoma, last' October. He will be a delegate again this year on Sept. 15 through 20 at the Hotel Statler in Boston. As a member of .the Penal committee he made numerous business trips to the prisons throughout the state.

Mrs. Heckler ia presently serv­ing her second term on the board of education and her first cerm ls its chairman. She is a past presi­dent of Coventry Grammar School P.T.A. and an assistant director of the Tolland district P.T.A./Mrs. Hsckler has been a resident for the past 15 years and Kves on Brewster St, with her husband and two school age children. An older son is stationed in Koiea with the armed fo)*eea. Mrs. Heck­ler is a graduate t)f the School of Commerce and Business Adminis­tration in Rocilester, N, Y. She has had 13 years of business experi­ence in the personnel purchasing and cost accounting field.

Both Smith and. Mrs. .Heckler are members, of the Repubheart Town Committee.

To Combat OdorThe Board of Health has taken

definite steps to correct and con­trol the' objectionable, unpleasant odors created by results of opera­tions at the Connecticut By-Prod­ucts Co. located 6:\ the Hop River Rd„ according lo Alvin R, Goodin, board public relations chairman. Thla is with the consent of the Board\of Selectmen.

Numerous complaints have been

Hebron

Ij&ylors Honored On Anniversary

fected; however, there are more homes ih, the Town of Columbia than locally affected.

During July the board made 18 investigations into health hazard conditions. Of thia 12 were of sep­tic systems. New installationa were required in six instances be­cause of inadequate or defective s y a t e m s which caused odora, breeding places of insects, or oth­er unsanitary conditions. Five of the 18 Investigations have not been completed, according to Goodin.

Soouta on Canoe TripExplorer Scout Post 64 with

Post Advisor William B. potch- kiiss left Sunday from Welles Falls, Vt„ for a canoe trip down the Connecticut' River. Accom­panying^ the Scouts, John Fardal, Gordon ’ Fardal, Steve Wllltama, Raymond McKinney, Keith Rose, Miiton Risley and David Mills are Hotchkiss’ two sons, Do-jglas and Bruce. The trip is being made with four canoes. Overnight camping will be .along the river bank.

Depending on the weather and progress, the grou}) plans its last stop at HolybKe, "Maas., over the coming weekend. They will be met there by Mrs. Hotchkiss and an­other local resident Tarnishing transportation.

The group was transported to Vermont Sunday by Mrs. Hotch­kiss, accompanied by the Hotch­kiss’ daughter, Sandra, and Alton Pierce.

Several Scouts, along with P(>at Advisor Hotchkiss, are experienced canoers, having made simiiar'liips down the river in the pasL Iii con- rtection with earnma ftejd badges.

Boaraxinembers hayC checked the towr^-dump and have found conditions there greatly Improved since this project has come under' its supervision. The Boat'd of Health was ci'dated last .vear. Rub­bish' Is being" buried and burned as soon aa possible by the caretaker after it ,1* being left 'thore by resi­dents and collectors.

The board . has completed its proposed 1958-59 budget which will be pi-esented b.v John F. Chap­pelle;' chairman, and Goodin a t ' a private hearing with the Board of Finance at 7 p.m. Aug. 26 at the Town Office Building. This budget includes proposed appropriations for the local heAllh director and deputy sanitarian Derations.

Coventry Police Pslrpl monthly businesa meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18 at its office in the Patrol Building on Main St.

Court CasesSix cases were disposed of in

iuHlice. court Friday night as fol­lows: Raymond Strickland. 50. of Tolland Rd., drunkenness, 5ned {20.. and breach of peace, not guil­ty. and ^apoleon Simpson Jr., 46. of Worcestar. Mass., failure to keep lo the right of a rotary, {12.

The following were each fineii {6 for disregarding stop signs: Mrs. Paiiline Morris, '35. o f Windsor; Mrs. Mabel C. Sprague. 39, of Ger­ald Park; Eugene K. Moriarty, 53. of Wllllniantic; and Mrs. Mary Gabbey, 35. of Mancfie.sler.

St. .Tilde Council No. 4313, KofC, will have a business meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday at St. Mary’s Ro­man Catholic Church hall. Plans

received continually conceining j ” '' ** famil.v’ anmial picnic will bethis condition which is considered a health hazard. Board members have made a thorough inveatiga- tion. Town Prosecutor,A. Harry W. Olson Sr. has been contacted, according to Goodin. He advised the matter be taken up with town counsel and that legal steps be taken to correct and control the situation. Olsen has the author­ity. to issue a restraining order of operations, according- to Goodin.

The company ' manufaitures eommercial fertilizer from chicken wastes. The odor, distinguishable from about a mile from the plant, varies in strength fr»m time to time, (ccordlng to Goodih. Several homes located' in the Hop River

discussed. TTie soefal meeting of the Council of Aug. 26 will be omitted.

Manchester K v « n I n g Herald Coventrj- correispnndent, Mrs. F. Pauline Little, telephone Pilgrim 2-0231.

Radio Sale* ClimbNew York Mamjfacturers' sales

of home, clock, and portable radios totaleri 10,400.000 units during fis­cal 19,58, an Increase of 17 per cent over the previous year. Their sales of automobile radios declined 14 per cent, from 5,000,000 units lo 4,800,000.

DAR membera attended "Open. Houae" Sunday afternoon at tha Governor Jonathan^ Trumbul} Houae. Mr. and Mrs. 'Charles Tay­lor celebrated their 16th wedding anniversary at the time;

hire. Taylor it the curator of the Governor • JonatAi^ Trumbull Houae.' A purse was presented to the Tayloys by the members. Mrs. Albert W. Hilding acting as donor. There will be a benefit Silver Tea at the Governor Trumbull House Wednesday, Aug. 13, front 2 to 6 p.m.

Hostesses in Colonial attire from the local DAR chapter will be in the house to greet guests..

Refreshments will be served in the Wadsworth Stable by members of the State Governor Jonathan Trumbull House epmmittee, o f which Mrs. Hilding is cJialrman, appointed by the state regent. The State Chapter is not to be con­fused with either ' the Lebanon chapter or the Col. Henr>’ Cham­pion chapter. ■ m

The Wadaworth Stable wasq Jmoved from Hartford a few yeats ago through the generosity of .Miss Katharine S. Day of Hartford.

In the building are stored many articles of interest t The old New­comb Iron collection; old ox cart, a very old loom, the Oldest of ’ Its kind recently given lo the society by Mrs. Laura Loomis of Manches­ter, to be on jlisplay in the stable.

There will also be a sale of gifta for various occasions, on the "This and ’That" table.

library NewsPhotographs of peisonnel and

places shown in the 250th celebra- U6n pageant wlli be on view for one more week at Douglas Li­brary. Orders will be taken thr6ugh Saturday, Aug. 16. then turned over to the Young People's Fellowship.

More library news is ' Utat Scientist's'Choice, " a portfolio of

photographs in science, has been loaned to the Douglas Library for the month of August. Besides these unusual photograDhs. selected and described by leading scientists, there , is a brochure called "Using Your Camera in Science," a useful guide for the amateur photograph­er. Camper's Guides, "Tips for Trips," and a leaflel on picnic areas in Connecticut may be con­sulted at the library, whose hours of opening are Thieadaya and Fri­days from 2 to 6 and 7:30 lo 9 p.m., and Saturda.vs from 10 to 1 p.m.

PersonalsDr. and Mrs, Edward Gerbor of

Marion. Ohio are visitors o f 'th e doctor's parents, in Naugatuck, and expetd. to return here and vlalt Mrs. Gerber’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Hilding. before re­turning 1(3 Ohio.

Mrs. Robert Stack Is'making her' home hire with hei' brothers, Sam- ueband FJdvfsrd Hilding, since the death pf her husband.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Smith plan to leave Saturday on a three weeks’ trip t« Europe, by plane. They will visit their son-in-iaw and daughter. Mr. an^Tirs. Albert Bll- lard. in Holland. Iwfure'returning.

Mrs. Charles P. Miuor. Hebron’s town clerk, is spending a week with her mother, Mrs. Alice Thompson, and sister. Mis. Martin Crotty, in Cambridge. Masis. Dur­ing her absence her place in the town clerk’s office will be taken by Mrs. BMward A. Smith, Tnesday and by Mrs. Everett H. Porter, TTiursday. The office is not open Wednesdays.

Church Schedules —The Congiegational Church committee has arianged for united .seiwlges of the Hebron and Gilead Chuichea during the Rev. Herbert W. Dickerson's vacation, begin­ning Monday of this week. Officiat­ing the first two Sundays in the Hebron church, will be the Rev. j Herman J. Reisslg. D. D . Aug. 17, and the Rev. Dr. Reginald Helf- ferich, Aug. 24.

The next tts’o services will be held St Gilead. The Rev. Howard C. Champe. former pastor there and in Hebron.- will bificisla Aug. .31, and the last date will bt filled later on. Mr. Dickerson will resunrie his pulpit duties-Sepl. 14.

The Rev. Douglas F. Pimm will also take up hia vacation again this week. Next Sunday local lay readers will officiate, with Mr. Hadley Hill aa preacher. 'There wiU be qnornlng prayer and sermon at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m., Today. 'lYies., at fitSO.pJn-Hebron, hhd Amston will try It out on the ball field. Thursday it will be' Ams­ton v . Gilead. '

Manchester E v e n i n g Heenid Hebron corraspondent Mias Susan Pendleton, \ telephone ACndemy 8-S454.

L o c a iS to c k sQuotations Pumlthedd^

Cobum Jt MIddlebrook, Im 'Bank Rtocki

Conn. Bank ahd TrdstCo. .................. ...... 39

-First National .^ank of Manchester'"'.. . . . . 27

Hartford ^ tio n a ,Bank 0 Trust Co. SSi-i

Manchester Trust . . 58

42

31

3563

Bolton

Fife Insurance Coni|>anlesAcMia Fire .............. 64 6(Hartford F ir e .......... 164 17(

alional ........... 79 8(Phoenix ...................... 68 7]

Life and Indemnity Ins. Cos. Aetna Casually . . . . 137 14(Aetna Life .............. 202 ■ 2t;Gonn. General ........ 312 32'Htfd. Steam Boiler . . 99 10'Travelei-s .................. 82 81

ihiblic litllltlrsConn. Light & Power 21' i 2; Hartford Electric Lt. 62 6'Hartford Gas Co. . . 40 'j 41Souther.. New England

Telephone ........filanufactiiring

Arrow, Hart, Hcg.Associated Spring Bristol Brass . . . .Collins, ...................Dunham Bush . . .Em-Hart ........ ..Fafnir Bearing .Landers. Frary, Clark 14 N, B. Machine . ..North and .iudd .Russell Mfg..........Stanley Steam . . .Terry Steam . . . .Torringtbn ..........U.S. Envelope, con U.S, F.nvelope, pfd ■Veeder Root . . . . .

The a"Bove quotations are not to bo con.stnied as actual markets.

. . 39 41CuiDiinnle.. . 53 56. . 18'i 20‘a. . 9>, 11. . 9 3 103. . 61i 7 \. . 54 .57. . 64 67irk 14 16. . 30 33. . 24 27. . 16 19, . . 36>a .39'i. 1.5.5 16.5. . 2,5>, 27 'j. . 21 23. . 12 14

. . . 49 52

Ita lian S p m M arks f ^ a s t O f SM n au riceThe Ita'ilan Feats of St. Msurico

Churep'^on Sept. 13 at the church grouhds will have at miicK of the atnu>.sphei« of "old Italy" as its

^riahionera can generate;^ Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Armen-

tano, general chairmen, report It will open at 10 a.m. with celebra­tion of Mass in honor ,pf St: Maurice.

One of the Italian touches will be the trattoria (snack bar on this side of the Atlantic) which will set up shop in the Rectory meeting room. "Despite the act that Mrs. Martin Lynch, chairman Of this project, sounds as if shq,hails from Irish stock, the trattoria will fea­ture, pizj», grinders,, homemade Ualis'n cookies arid paatries, Jemon ice ahd coffer.

Mrs. Lynch will be Resisted by Mrs. Arthur Scanlon, Mrs. Gordon Calkins, Mrs. 'Vincent Krzesicki and Mrs. James Ijirala.

Italian handiwork la also' ex ­pected to show up at Mrs. Keeney Hutchinson's booth where hand­made ai'Ucies will be sold. She will bo assisted by Mrs. Ernest Aspln- wall and Mrs. Anthony Msneggis. Mrs. Hutchinson would appreciate hearing from parishioners who are making Items for thia feature of the FeSla.

OOP ronli-rms > ominattonsTho Republican party endorsed

the six candidates who filed for nomination to run for election In November at its cauLUS.,IaRt night at the Community Hall. The 17 membera who attended named Dorothy R. Mllie aa candidate for State Representative and John Swai).son. Laura Tooniey, Ray­mond Calhoun, Charles Warren and Eugene Gagliardone aa Jus­tices of the peace.

l>enio<Tats Bet- 'Osuoua Date The Demorralic Town Commit­

tee set Ang. 18 for the dale of the party caucus at its meeting lost night at the Community Hall. They will also make' nomlnatlon.s for the Leglalature and Jusllceo of the peace.

Tha OomMi^tta will b » hotta to the Tolland County Democratic Aaon. when it meets in Bolton on ' Sopt. 18.

Town Chainrna:) Vincent Krze- aickl may be contacted for ticheta. to the aaaociatlon'a pibnic in Hen­ry t^rk, Rockville, on Aug. 24. Candidates for office on the state ticket are expected lb attend -the all-day event.

Barbecue ItenervattAuMrs. John Erickson and Mra.

Goldsnider, both of Bouth Rd’.', are taking reservations for the chicken barbecue at United.' Methodist Church on Aug. 23. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Lee II are.-generai chair men of the event.

Personal NotesMr. and Mrs. Carl Daley of

Salem, Mass, are visHing tfils week with-the family of tfieir son, ttie Rev- Carleton T. Daley of United Methodist Church.

Norman Blssett, 9-year-o1d son of the Rev. and Mrs. William C. Bissett of East St. Johnsbur.v, Vt.. and his dog. Deacon, are guests of Douglas Chandler, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Theodore W. Chandler Jr. of the Congregational Church.

Fire DrillThe Bolton Volunteer Fire De­

partment will hold its regular drill meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. at the firehouse.

Mancheotar Bx'ening Herald Bol ton iMirrespondent, Doris M. iPital la, telephone Mitchell S-,5546.

Kellems Plans Court Fight for Place on Ballot

GIVE HEB

CHRISTIAN DIORAVAOABLE AT '

WELDOirS.^M l MAIN S IB B E I

Krporta ExaggeralpdNew York (Ah—Reports of large-

acsle conversions” of Japanese to Judaism are "exaggerated and un­founded," say\ Gustav Stern, a .lewlsh communal leader, just re- tiuned from a visit lo Japan. He said there "a small group of Japanese intellectuala who are in­tensely interested In Judaism and Israel." • ;

(Ooutlnaed from Paga Ona) ,

them establish a new party if theywish."

Mias Kellems said that Mrs. Allea'a lUggeition that sh$ cah get on the bajlot by retting 11,138 petition signatures u no help.

"The legUdatUre made it very difflcul( to gat signaturea by vot­ing. heavy penalities for anyone who gets wrong signatures in er­ror." the Stonlfigton woman said.

The only way the signatures could be obtained. Miss Kellems ssid. would be for her to travel personally around the state and get signatures "of 11,138 stgna- tuiea from people 1 know," with the job to be completed by Sept. 2.

That, she said, would be a physi­cal Impossibility.

Had' the Legislature required petition signatures representing only one-half of one per cent of the vote cast for that office at the last election, the Job would be much easier.

Miss Kellems Said she may lie in her court appeal with that of, An­thony Martino of Waterbur\r who announced he ia going to court to test a similar niltng which bars lilm from the Senate race on the Socialist ticket.

"After all. we are contending the same thing. " Miss Kellems added. "It would be logical for us to have Joint court action in t-his mailer.

Mias Kellems, If she qualifies, will be pitted against US, Sen William A. Purtell, West Hartford Republican, and former Congress­man Thomas J. Dodd, West Hart­ford Democrat.

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Sea your Ediel Dealer <o<{ay. See how little it tikes-to own-a M W Ediel with all these advanced (aatures: New oxeluinH Tele- huek Drift. New SOf or SLS kp V-rS EtUel onpint. Now etif- mtfjutHni brakto. Now contour trait.

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Page 3: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

PAG6 FOUR

A

UANCHESTEB EVENING HERALD, BIANCUESTEIl. CQNN« TUESDAY. AUGUST 12, 1968

^ '/i. •

-V

•' "I

UockviUe-Vernon

B u n k e r H ill M arch ers A sked to L ead P a ra d e

Nike News

Th» IT National G u ar tim en who^medialely, honored Vernon by marchlne to ‘Bunker HUl last weekend, will be yaked to lead the. mammoth pa­rade which will climax the town'*ISOth anniversary celebration Sept.30. l i t e mSn are expected to accept the honor which will mean a m a n h of only one and one-tenth mile*, compared to a bllalery 90 mllei to Boston.

The line of m arih , originally aeheduled to circle from Orove St. down P rospect and up Union, has been changed to a direct downhill route, Ijeaving Grove SI , promplly a t S p.m., the parade will move down F.aat Main and l-'nlon Hie. to Maple St.

The .permanent band stand on Middle Rd. will be used aa the.re- ■vlewdng itand. and a 20-mimite speaking program will precede the parade.

aa the cUai will be started within a wiek.

I J fe Saving Claaaea.Iimior and Senior Life Raving,

claaaea w'lll be held before the sum­mer la over If there la 'siiffieient intereal. Berger said today Those interested In life saving leasona ahoiild alao register with the pool cashier

(Tilldren'a Track MeetA ehamplonahip track meet for

hoys and girla will he the feature of the park recreation program Friday. Miaa Caroline Skinner, program director, la planning spe­cial altracliona for each remainingFriday m the aeaaon to a t t r a c t : , - ^i hildirn w-ho have not been attend-1 U ?-? ' ! * . ;mg the dally events

LA. V y tau ia i eCeriulle, last S'»ar named the most outstanding U.S. Army lieutenant of Cohnecllcufe 13 Nike batteries, left M anchester with hU wife and young daughter Thursday for Germany whece he will aerve wltn the NATO forces.

Kersulla, who made hta home at 17 Weal 81., had been at Battery C for the past IS months and had served ss the unit's launcher area leader. He Joined the Army aa an enlisted man .n 9-V) and received h second lieiitenanfa commlaalon In Oclobci 1956 He was )lromoted to liial lieutenant In April.

l>aat Tall Kersulla was aejected aa Ihe 11th B a tta l io n s top lieu­tenant, and in December was named the . oat oitatanding among the more than 80 lieuten­ants In the S.ird Ormip which em ­braces the dor-en -Nike batleitea-of the S t a l e s four bat tnliona. In

F lo sta will be Judged ahead of |

(inlf Tniimament PairingsPairings in the quarter finals of

the greater Rockville golf lourns- mriit, .sponsored hy the .laycees.

t im e and p r l i * ribbons, will he at tached to the winning floats so th a t apeclBtora ran see whli h ones were judged bfsl.

The line of march was changed to help relieve Iraifir congestion, of both marchers and apeclalois. which, appears to he the biggest problem of the committee to date,

K a rry Lugg, committee thalr- Bian, eallmated that Ihe parade will be five times Ihe siee of any event ev tr held In Rockville. Com­mittee membera sfre amazed al Ihe number of organizations sending marching units from all over the ■tate.

The U R Naval and CoaSI (Jiiard Reaerv'ea have advised Ihe cnniniil- tee that they will send marching units.

A movement Is underway to pro­vide transportation and 'a good viewing spot for shut-ins

T a g e u i t Kepi. 18A pageant depleting four scenes

In Vernon's hlelory will be enac ted on t.he lawn of Vernon Congrega- tlnnaJ Church SepI 18 al 6 :.in p m

The program, expected to last about two hmirs. will he followed by a buffet aupper.

Mrs Olemi -Stephenson Is w rit­ing the script and the program will he. managefi by -Nornian Couch Assisting are Mrs. Eileen Murphy, Glenn -Slephenaon Mrs. .lohn Grant. Mrs. Gerald Risley and Mrs. l lnrrv i f Liigg

A riidal Vernon diiiral group will provide hac kground music for Ihe pageant scenes bringing to life certain Incidents In Ihe histnrv of Vernon, which wjll he nul lined by a narrator

The four pageant aceiies will be aa follows,

Reenai linenl of the I77fi m a n h to RosI.om by 17 Vernon Vnliin- Icr r . ' , The usit of I .aFayelte In lS2t Willie traveling between B o s ­ton and Washington; Hamuel Graiil .s horsehai k tour of whal la nmv l!oi kville before swapping his likl acre larm in Bolton for 800 arie.s here, and the making of

'Inaugural suits of Hollies In the I loi kaiium Mills for Presidents Mc- Kitilry Harrison snd Theodore Hnnseveil

All organ will be rented for use si Ihe religious service which will open Ihe iclebrallon Sept. H al Vernou KIcmentary HHinol, and for I he dedication arrvicea at Fox Hill lower al aOnset the same day.

l.iigg, a.s Town Coiinael, la pre- p.irmg a pi oclamalloii aelling a.ndc the week of .Sept, U to 20 aa a lime lo celrhrnle V'ernon’s an- nivciHar.N

K H'enlnn Hu«ke will he acting clinirinarr of the i rleluation for iKb next two weeks bile laigg Is a\ia\ Anv suggrslioiis or iiifor- malinii should be Icleplinned into

- Lugg s office, howei'ei\ iiiidervoort, llnlemnji Stet

Vernon Re|>uldii aius a l a caucus last niglil iioiiiliialed Arthur B ate ­man ami .laniea F Vandervoorl for elate represeiilallve Bateman

• la Incumtienl seeking lua seroml term

Vandervoorl la s mrmlier of the Board of Finance and |ual com­pleted a fi-year term on IlieZruilng Commiasiiiii.

TlireCj^lcw Ju j lu e s of Ihe prai e were Iioliimaled al the lauciis. They are Norman .Strong, Ceoige Wilson and Luther Tmulaii

Incumhenta renominated were, Falith T l.'asali Winfred A. Klol- er. kVederick M .McKoiie, -Ste- w arl .C . Neff, Francis R Rup- precht, William A Hetunalz snd Henry Biiller.

Hills .\giilnst l'.iiwii line Anyone having hills againsi the.

Tow-n of Vernon ahniild suhinll them as anon as possible .Mia Helen Preasler. sccrelary lo Ihe selectmen, said today

Bills should be. Ill the .Selecl- m a n a office by Aug. IH so ihal action can be taken on them that night. The final opportiinily for getting bills approved by liie .Se­lectman will be at their mecimg Aug. 28. The flaral .year ends Aug.Sit

Adult Ku-lm ClassAnother adult awimmiug Haas

is baing planned at the nuinicir>al pool, Donald F. Berger aniiniiiiced today. Berger asid 'there has been considerable demand for another series of lessons for ndulls Some! SO persona allenderi aoasinn.

Those Interested should regislct with Ihe rajihler a t the pool Im-

were announced yesterday:Flight A Fred McKone vs

■loaeph Novak Arthur Wohltehe v's Norman ('Timlelewski; f a i l Griiman vs Al Orlowakl and .laniea Taylor vs. Ray F’ ragliiaki

Flight B Dr ErlHi Kellner vs. George Pulz; Robert l>elpei va Sherman Hills, Robert Niilland vs .Sal Y.etz; and Scott Brown vs Bill Yelz

-I-'lighl C: Adolf Frier vs Roberl .Sierakowakl. Dan I.aindermann va. Emil SI. lands; Seymour I j iv lt l vs Gerald Allen, and .loaeph Gwnrek vs. Raabiiry H w is

j Flight D: Fred Wuthrli h vs WII- I ham Priitllng; Riiaael) Meyer va,

Donald Beerwnrth; (711 ales O'FlInn va Roheil Pllver: and Ralph Lip- man vs Robert Baeiworlh.

Matches are being playsd a| the East Hartford Golf Club Quarter finals must be completed by Sunday night. P7nala are scheduled for the weekend of Aug .71.

First HOrae Hhmv MiirooM The ftral annual horse show of

th(i Vernon aVTIey i -H Riders was considered a aucceaa by all who parllclpaled

The allow was held aa a part of Ihe-Vernon 4-H Town F air In Ver­non (.'cnler Salurdin'.

The horse show was dliecled by Kenneth Gibson and judged hv Miss Barbara Nelli. William Smith was ringmaster and Robert Mc- Hiitchlaon was annniinrrd

The fitting, grooming and ihow- manshlp Haas was 'won by P a lly .Kcrkln with her hay gelding. Pe|). per. She received a trophy of a lead-line.

In the combined English hoise- manihlp Haas, Martha McHulchi- son wop a trophy, a halter, and Nancy Bradley won a second Iro- ph.v, a long line. 77ilrd place went lo Patty Kerkii!

In tile .luiilor Weslern horse- inanMlilp, a brush wenl lo Mary Belh Hallies fur firal place

Harry Nelson won a lirusii In '.lie Sen'or wealerii horseniaiiship

.lean Kerkin led the bead-line I'laas. and Marllia Mcituti'lilsoii won a picnic bag foi- first place In Ihe western trail Haas

Martha alao won the quirt for placing ftral In the Saddle-up rare, ami copped firal place in the hare- hack Haas

Mary Beth Haines oiillaated her coinpelltois In a all-n-huck match and received''a briisl).,

Ill the coBlume Hiisa, Martha McHulHilsoii'a I n d i a n rosliiiiie was selected aa heal all-sroimd roslunie. Pat Kerkin a and Maxine Smilh'a weie voted the prellleal ;- Nanev Hradley'i and ( ’arol Ann Haines'the funiileal. srid Marths a the moil original

llockaiiiim lUrriudis Meeting Hockaiiuni Barrai ks, Veterans

of World War I will hold a regu­lar meeliuK tonight al 8 p m in GAR Hall

II<>s|Mlul Niile*Adniilled lesle i i lsv .loscplAlM-

snii, R FI) I, .Mrs Theresa Slaves, 10 .lilt (d) SI

Dni barged yesli-iilay Mudiael Allen 70 I'mon si , Mrs (leoigr

rera from Ihe six .New England I aisles, .New York, .New .lersey I snd Pennsylvsnla. he placed aec- I ond; Hallery <’ Commander ( 'apt. j Antone Frade and .Mis Frade I were hosts s t s farewell party I tendered Ihe Kersulis' earlier ’ Iasi week ai the battalion offleer'a

lounge. LI. Gol. .lames P. Strauss. I battalion commandei, presented ' Ib e depapllng couple With a aler-

Ellinf^on

C lapp G O P N om inee F o r G en eral A ssem bly

U.S. Flukes N-MissileIn Pacific

' *(Continued from . Page One)

shot at Johnston during an 8-hour, p eriod .

On Aug. 1, (/. high level explosion pf a nuclear warhead trom John- i lon startled IHoiiaands of Hawaii residents aa a miiahroom cloud rose In the .Hawaiian sky.

This morning's blast was notquite so spectaoijlar from Hawaii. I |,|y He la In the construe-'Phere were no linniediale reports ; nop j^cnvatlng business -In El-that a mushroom cloud was sight- j lington,ed. ■ j Candidates nominated for Ihe of-

In Washington, the Atomic F .n - ! fb a of Justice of the peace arc ergy Commission put out this leMe VVralght, Mrs. Hazel Hein. Carl explanation In a alalenieni; Gochrlng, Seabiiry Lewis, Theodore'

"Tlie te.sl detonation of a nu- Talm cr , and Ja m e s Conway.Hear warhead In a missile occurred W ater Shut Offabove the Johnston islsml area iitj /’How Dry I A m " was the themeIhe Pacif ic today. The test is part ' soSig of 10 Ellington residents yes-

Ja r v is N. Clapp, Main 81., was| endorsed' ag the nominee for state repreientative from Ellington at the Republican caucus last night.

Edward Wralghl, Mountain St., incumbent, did not wish renomlna- tlon. 'Clapp was a aeiectman In Elling­

ton from 19.76 lo 195.7, He was elect­ed to a term in the General Asscni-

of the Hnrdlai k NiK'lear Weapons j Test Series."

Oliservers said the flare of Ihe exfilosion waa .'isihle only for some I wo or three .aecomls.

"A brief sunrise in the middle of the night " was the way It Was desrribed by Austin F a n c y of H nolulu, who v atched from the a opes of Hawan s Hill of Sacrl-

Edward CTharter, 'o smer. o f the Ell ington W ater Co. said today that due to low prsMure in ' the area the company ik inatalling new pipes and replacing a valva on Mapiit St- and thaU w h i le . there would be some Interruption of serv­ice again, today, things ahoiiid be back to normal by tomorrow morn­ing.

I’eraonaJaMr. Slid Mrs. Thomas P yrn yn rt i

and daughter, of Morris Plains. N. J . , Were weekend gUests o f Mr, and M rs. Jacob Loetscher pf B e rr Ave.. Ellington.

Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon/^apmtfh. .Maple St... are away, on a two weeks' vacation. /

Mancheetnr E \/e n I n g Heraldterdfiy as the Ellington W ater Co. Ellington correspondent, Mrs. O. shut off the water in order to in- - F, Berr, tefephone TRem on falkll a new main on Maple St. j .7-981.8. /

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ling silver silent huller from the i s (omrers and ladies of the M a n - | f ( e i Punchbowl Cemeleryi Chester Inslallsllon In comparison, observers who

Many Promotions IJsleil > saw the Aug. I blast said It had Among Ihe many promotlmis n red ball of tire and then a gi-

aniioiineed at Battery ( ' Iasi week I gantic mushroom Houd which was was that of W. O. Gerald F. Taber visible up lo 10 minutes.

bona marrow takes over, st imu­lating the blood-producing sys­tem.

The leaearchera aaid that when each of the materials was used in­dividually. only ilmiled protection ; / iwas achieved. -Jflay In sustaining an injunction ob-

7'oii IM"* under a continuing obllgatlyfn for at least a yeab to I protect' the trade secrets of your

i cx-bpsB, especially from his com- I petttora.

/The Supreme Court,, aaid so to-

to chief warrant officer. Taber, who recently moved from Talcott- villr Rd In Vernon lo .Nike ('Ircle, serves Ihe local unit as ssaistanl giildsd missile officer

Other promotions Include Sgl. Gary D. Zapp, flie coiiti ol iiiechan- Ir. to sergeant first Haas'; and. Speclallala 4.C. Delbert Allbee and Delmus Wood lo specialists fifth class. Th e- ' la l te r two are senior fire control operators s i Battery G, Also advanced was Pfe Illr.h- ard F, AndrzeJwakI to apeclallsl fourth Haas AndrzeJwakI Is s fire control panel operaloTv

iU nder the new U .S. Army en­listed promollona prograpi, ad- vaiicemenla are In the order of recruit, jiriyate, private first Haas, apeciallal fimrlh Hjiss, .specialist fiflll I lass, sergeant, sergeant first rlasa and mastar sergeant i

Fifteen men were alao advanceil from privalf to private first clsas Iasi week They Include Henry A. Valla, lauiulier crewman; Albert F Yorlo sujiplv clerk .lohii A. Miller, ordiuuice; Itlctiard .1 Ihrui. ordiianee, David Wilensky fire innlrol ojreraloi Paul H. Dupre, fire panel operator.

Also Hoherl P .lean, liiunclier rrew'iuaii, Llovd O, Knejipet lire cnntiol ojieratru. Robert O Seng- laub hallery i l e rk , Itogoi W. Hjiaiigei lauuihei irewmau, W il­liam .1 Hlockiuvitz launHier ciew'- nian. Vl'niieo Ii Gla,\' Are coutrnl npeialco Gouiail I. SlMcgel. launcher ciewman. .Irroitie Teal Isunc her crewman; and Charles M. Wirlli Isuiir her ci'OWipSn. Dion Is from ManHiesler snd (7lay Is from GlasI onbiii V

Coming anil GoingNew sn .lvsls si Ihr .ManHiesler

Nike base liii hide .Speclslixi .7C Aurel J (’ Icsrd who r aiiie from Easi Windsor’s Battei v A lo .seive SB mesa aleward; anil Pvts Ronalil F Briasel le . Lawrence H Rrynold.s and William A. Green, all Are con-. Irolmerf previously s l la ih ed to the 8,7til Group headquarters si New Brllaiii

Transferred from llie hallery j last week were Hgl 1 (' Ezia S i Snillh, mess slewaiil, lo .lajiaii; Pfe Marvin Goldsleln. laiim her

crew m a n lo Tliule GreeiilHml; and -Rpecialisl 4 f .Inlin K Gohh, rook, lo Korea Cohh had hern here for 19 months

T I l i r d Q i i i n t i i p U ‘1

in !M o n t r r a l

Monticiil Aug 12 i.Tj Maile DIoiine. Iliird of Ihe Canadian

The glare f rorn todHV's .HIaaI WAR viAlblf A about a 46-degree Anglf above the tmnzon.

A Weather Bureau apokeBman .derlbied to ealimate the altitude of th># morrifnjf'B blaat. On Aug. J the aame hmeau aaid the explo- moM then vabb about 20.000 feet high.

A ApokeBman aaid ((xlay'ii blaBt looked like a ObbIi of lightning and he thought it wab a amall bomb sHonne people wAlting to ol>Berve the Ahot railed newapapetB after- ward aaking if it had been fired yet

When the Aral of the Operation Hardlark aetiea waa hied Aug. J. Rome ApectatfUB thought Peari Harbor war attarked.

F A U .O I T P R O T K C ’T IO NBurlington, Vt , Aug. 12 'Ab —

The poBBiblllty of a. double-bar- •• reled protection againat death

from Htomu hon\h rarllation was reported today

'riie promlaing preventive de- •« rftied aa having achieved dra­matic reauMa in protecting mice from radiation death -conBiBiB of combining the wonder-drug s trep­tomycin with bone marrow cells, both given by injection.

ResenrcheiB Howard H Vogel ,Ii and Donn L Jordan of thei Alomtr Energy Commiaslon's A r- ' gnnne NatlOMHl Laboralonv told about It in a report to the F irst InlernatlonHl ('ongresB on Badta- tlon Reaearch The r’ongresB. a t ­tended by Home 700 sclentiats from both aides o f the Iron Cur- Inin. Ifl heijig held on the campus of Ihe University of V’crniont.

The arlion of the dual trent-

However. when the two wen^ combined there was a drama)4cprotection from de.ath.”

Supreme Court I Rejects Terms Of Ouija Will

(ContUui«d from Page One)

the Gily National Bank and Trust Go., of Danbury consult with the Rockefeller Foundation.

The Bethel Probate Court fe- Jeoted .Mrs. Peck's will after rul­ing she lacked tealimentary ca­pacity because she wa.i "suffering from a mental delusion, to wit, tnnt there was such a person as lohn Gale Forbea . . , and that he existed though she had never leen him. "

"The burden of proof In the ln-“ stent case jo eslabliah the capac- It; of the testatrix to make a will rested upon the plaintiff " the ex­ecutor, the high court ruled, and added:

"Wliether in the Instance case, the delusion which the lealalr ix harbored entered Into and con­trolled Ihe making of her entire v'lll u-aa a question the trial court had to decide "

Rules on W ater UIghta The -Supreme Court also ruled

I today that neither this a ta je nor ,New York can use the waters of the Mlamia River lo the exclusion of the other.

The ruling came in one of three cases Invoh lng the '2.2 billion gal­lon bl-atate reservoir of Ihe Green- wii'h W ater Go. in Stamford, and that company's 7fi-year contract

menl appeara lo provide a v a r ia - ! to supply Ihe Port Chester |,N.Y )

lained by a Hartford Manufac­turer against two former workers.

The (Mien Mfg. Co., claimed the two, B production engineering chief and an electronics engineer, a t ­tempted to reveal the d.etaila of Its "warm heading" process for manufacturing screws to a (Chi­cago competitor for gain. '

The compan.v said It had devel­oped the proress, a variant of other similar processes, at a cost of $180,000 and that it gave them a competitive advantage in the field. The defendants. Edward S. Isrika and Ja m es Florino, helped perfect the procesa.

During the injunction hearing it was pointed out that without de­tailed knowledge of the company's aecret, It would take a competitor two years to develop the same pro­cess. With that knowledge In the hands of a rival concern, the com­pany would lose Its competitive ad­vantage "in a m atter of weeks " It was said.

The dafendanta claimed there was nothing aecret about the "warm heading pro cesa" of pro­

ducing screws and that the ma- Hiinety and materials used were commonly known, snd no trsde se r ie t could have resulted from their use.

C erm an x S a v e 8.2^ /c

Bonn West German hoiuseholda were thriftier In 1977, saving 8.2 per cent of their Inconie compared with 5.8 per cent in 1976. accord­ing to a report hy the Federal R e ­public's central bank.

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tk)n of Oip "ol<l ono two punch of the hoxinp world

R.xplaimn)^ I lint BymptomR of aculr ladinlion alcknpBB in main- pialB r<»Bwlt pnnmrlly from injury lo the KiiRtro-inleatma) and It) Uu* hloptl-fonninR^ ayateni, llir aciBii-tiBta .BHld the duBi l iealinentprni’B to work thia wav

w aifi ’ works with upward.^ of S million jrallnns of watrr daily. No

j error \\’aa found in any of Ihe ■| caseB.I The 5 -member tribunal rejected

claimB by owner.‘< or riparian |riRhifl alf)h^ the stream that, the

” l' ’ j contract was illegal in that it at- ■ tempts lo allocate the waler.s of an

Ihe atreplomycln lonlm lB R on-. interstate river for a period of 75 eraljr.ed bRcterlal InfetHons d u r- lv e srs . the life of the contract . liiR the period of tnlestinal dam -j Speclflrallv, the owners appealed age and thus prevents the early | froni a Superior Court order nam- dealh uaually aeen in mice after hr a commillee to deteniiine rom- expoaure to heavy doses of atomic i pensaI ion for the riparian righta neutrona. taken by the Greenwich W ater Co.,

'I’hen. by the lOlh day a fter e x - ! in creating the 2 fl-mile reservoir poBure. when atreplomycln alone ■ which extends Into Pound Ridge no longer offers prolecUon. th e ' ' " ' ‘' and North Castle. N. Y.

i Clear V,

I I III 11 te' t

UK*) rroR|ieci St .Nfias | mai rv. was lumev^Mciiifmilh .78 Hsmin.iii.l ' " " ’ ' '“ ‘ ''8 " ,1" ' l''l"i<>M Houle',

- ,78. vein oM roiiil < leek she metn'Hneii, U|.l.>kt .Mix ..tsiiie.x Hinllil Hrnok

Assniill ('ImrKi-illosi'iili S, I'slu/.JIC. 2K. of Gisive

liil KlllMglon, wa» snr.sleil issl olklil mill Himgeil willi sssauli soil hrem h of Ifir pmi e , t’alroliuiiM Itoheit kjHIiiiUsi mnifr Ihr sm-sl kfter hr sSiil he snw I 'hIoz/.Im s l i ikr s oisii silling III a I Hr SI a Wliulsoi Avenun I ralaiirsnl

Piitqzzle VHs irlrnsril iituler s J75 fionil suit will he-aiifstifneil In Glly Gout I .Moiiiliiy

\ efnoii Slid 't'alriillr tile news U hiuidlerl Ihrmiglr Tlir llrrald's Itnrkvllle liilfeHii. 7 \\. .Miilil .SI., telephnne Tlle-mnnt 7-8188,

B l KIJCNQI'K TO HKO.\t>W AV

Neo 7'oik i4‘i Berl I j ihr. who iMHile hli name In bullesqiie and alapsllc.k miiab al romed>'. la be- romlng a leading intei |U eler of F ie iu h drama

He began Ihe i yrle wl,Hi.,an ap- praranre- In ' W aiting for G odot."

nitulia Some I and moved on last season lo the Die eiirliei I , iiiasir fiirre, "Hotel Pai Hdlso '

Next srasoii hr- La bnoknl In ap ­pear In "Moodbiids. " a new drama i'v M a u r i Aviiie.

j Insl .Miiirh ' Thrv \M-i r wed earlr- veslerdav

m a SIM rel rrirmoiiv lo iivold Ihe gillie of piililuily Ihal, siiiroiind- rd Ihr miuiiiigea laat mitumn of Annette and GeHle, the oUiei I \mi m a n lad quints The fniirih sla­ter. Yvonne. Is s regisleted nurse Emllie died In 19.74

'Pwo nllai bovs wilnessed Ihe wedding rrieiiionv snd then as aisled In s mijdliil Mass Iii Ihe S a i led Heiiil Chapel of Nntie Dame Itirtnan Gnthohe , Ghuii h. GhurHi offh lals would give no delnlls on Ihr wedding

The roiiples lionrymoon ipol also yvas a aerrel.

Marie. Hie ahyesl and frailest of ' ih r 24 vear old sisters, look pre-

Imiliiarv vow s o f , a mm but left Ihe-convent after eight monihs. She o|)rited a smatl flower ahop in.downlown Montreal hut Hosed II wll^n more people raine In stare Ihah to huv .Sli* reporled- Iv has hern housekeeping for Yvonne rerenlly.

George Rouse. Houle's hrother- I In-law. said the wedding was sup- I posed to have been last Friday

'Hid aomebow Jbe. news got around ami Floreii postponed )l

I unlit lodsy. He didn't want It lo ! be a olrciis."

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MANCHEgTKA EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER. CONN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12. 1958

W DRC— IS M W K N B r-8 4 « WCCC—IMO W I N F ~ I 2 S 0

Daily Radio^ ^ I b M t e n D njUght Ttroe

W HAV-i-Olt

W T IC — lOM W P O P — 1419

#Ao b f iv e.......... -.............. iNw ..

Columbia

The (ouowlng program ac&M4t*'!,t27 ulea a re euppUed by), the 'radio

*W8iiagementa ana are subject to /'Change without no'Uce.

/ :___ OHancheiter Herald News• WtKF^Musle for the Ftrgt Shift

WHAY—Country Muslig. Caravaa Wl.l.’V-Kfoiinl Revle-

—Baltimore va. Yankees ..Wiliei .

Tenn. Grnls Ford WTOP—Waxworks

. ‘W IN F—News 4it0“

WINK—Miislo with Joe Gtrand• •1$'*“ f yWHAY—Couiilry Music CaravaM' WCCC—Record Revue WKNB—Ballimore va. Yank^ca

s.WTIC—Roaa Milter N e R C —Cal Kolby l X

W ^ P —Waxworks /

WCCC--RwQKd^ f • V ue WKNB—Newir^nd Sporta W T JC ~ R i^W DRO^ai Kolbr'^.WPC)(R-—Wax work ■

4:45-*WiiAY-Planer Party \ WCCC—Record Revue WKNB—P.M.WTIC—RoBb Miller WDuC—Cal'-Kolby WPOP—Waxworks

1:44—WHAY—Planer Pariv WCCC—Record Revue WKNB—P.M.WTIC—News WDRC—NflTB.WPOP—Waxworks

• :06—W IN P—Newa WINK—Sporta

• :13-WHAY—Platter Parly WCCC—Record Revue WMKB—P.M WTlC—Ross Miller WDRC—Cal Kolbv WPOP—Waxworks

S iSO—WHAY—Platter Party WCCC—Record Revue WKNB—P.M WTIC—Rosa Miller WURC—Cai Kolbv WPOP—United Auto Workers

1 :4 5 -. WHAY—Platter Party

W CCC—Record Revue WKNB—PM WTIC—Rors Miller WDRC—Cai Kolbv WPOP—United Aulo Workers

1 :00—WHAY —Dttlejine WCCC—Kvcnlng Music WKNB—PM.WTIC-News WDRC—News Reporter WPOP—News

4:05—

WHAY—'Music Now' and Then WTU^NIgbi Une W r o c - R . Q. Lewis

Nlgbt Line - ~R. Q. Lei

lWPOP;r4Ya8nIngton vs Boston* l ^ A Y —M u ^ Now > and T1

WTIC-Nigbt Lldf WDRC-Mood Piecd WPOP—Washington ’ 'Boston

B 43— /WHAY—M usic t ia ir idW T IC -N lgh t ------ MoiWDRCWPOP

ThinPiece

ihlngtcin VI Boston

WINK 4 :10—

WINF- 4 :15—

WHAY WCCC- WKNB w ri ’ W DRC W PO P

4 :3 0 - WHAY WC("C- WKNB W T IC - WDRC W PO P

4 :4 5 - WHAY w c c c - W KNB W T IC - WCRC W PO P

7 :0 0 — WHAY WCCf'- WKNB W T IC - W DRCwrop

t :1 5 —WHAYw c c c -W KNBW T IC -Wi»R<^W PO P

1::i0—WHAYWC’CC-WKNBW T IC -WDRCW PO P

9:4:»—WHAY

fW crcWKNBW T IC -W D RCW PO P

4 :00—WHAYWTT<'-WDRCW PO P

—Nows

WHAV^ xsiglit W atch C—Night Line

►HC—World Tonight POP—Washington vs Boston

fjD5—WINK—News

1:14—WINK—WINK Bandstand

4:15— ^WHAY-Night Watch WTIC—Night Line WDRC-World Tonight WpOP—Washington vs Boston

4:30—WHAY-Night Watch WTIC—Nirtt LUie WDRC—Moods for Romahee WPOP—Washington vs Boston

9:45—WHa Y~N iRIii Watch WTIC—Night Line WDRC—Moods for Romance WPOP—Washington vs Boston

10: 00—WHAY —Niglil W aich

W TIC—Oregon Shakesperian F estiv al W D RC—Moods »nr Rom ance W P ^ P —Ja z z From the fleiihlein

10 :15-^ .WHAY Nigiii Wairh WTIC—Orf%<m Shakesperian Festival WDRC—MdooikI oi Romance WPOP—Jazz from the Heubleln

14‘SG—WHAY-Ntghi Watch WTIC—Economic Work'sTiojii WDRC—Moods for Romari^..WPOP—Jazz from the Heubl^a

14:45—WHAY-Nignt Watch WTIC—UN Radio Review WDRfV-Mnods for Romance WPOP—Jazz from the Heubleln

11:00—WHAY—Jazz Aliev WTIC—News Music WDRC—News WPOP—News

11:15—WHAY—Jazz Aliev WTIC—Snorts Final WDRC—Moods for Romaixe WPOP.—Modern Sounds

11:50—WHAY—Jazz Alley WTTC—Starlight Serenade WDRC—MondY

N am es W illiam i L egislative Candidati

Tha Republicans npminnUd La*ea gift from the Republican TownVergne H. Williams. Incumbant, aa their candidate for ftepreaenta- tive tO'the General Assembly, last night in Yeomank liiall. Harvey 8 . Collins nominated Williams, point­ing out the years of service' he has. T l y e n '4 i e town during his foijr preVUms te r m a He spoke of the sd- vantaghe one^taa through the years gained In senlorlty^and appoint­ments to important committees.' The vote o f the approxltnately 7.7 persons present was unanimous.

Ju st ices of the Peace The caucus named the following

candidates for justices of the peace: Atty . Elizabeth Dennis Hutchiha, Howard Shtimway, Ken­neth Fox, William Jacobus snd Reginald Lewis.

Committee, In recognition of his ten years service as Its chairman. H o ltth a n k sd the group. He retired this past spring and was succeed­ed hy Mrs. Hutchins.

M ake VotersTown Clerk Hubert P. Collins

announced that a short session for making voters Is scheduled for Aug, 23 from 9 a.m.-tlntll noon In Teom sns Hall. Other seasiohs will be held b\tt the dates are not yet set. Mre. John Pringle, registrar, said that she and the Democratic reg lstraf would be there to Sign up g b y party members who want to at th a t time.

one team In the league, Joh n Prin­gle, manager, said.

In Little League .—the Yankees j defeated the Cardinale 8-4. Bruce Vitner and Ed MacDougall were | battery for the Yankees; J e r r y ' Bergeron and J a c k Knapp for the Cardinals.

Firemen Not Needed . Columbia Volunteer Firemen \rere called out about 8 o'clock last

h t to a fire in Hebron. However, pan. way there they were sent back\ via call over their radio which said the fire was under con trol.

ding HatiirdayHarry A l ^ n and Nellie A, tJoyd,

both of 860 Main Street, Wiltiman- tic were m a r i^ d Saturday after­noon by J u s t i c e ^ the P eace Eliza­beth Dennis Hulcmna, st her home on Jonathan Trumbull Highway, They were attended y Mr. and Mrs. J im m y Jordon

Restaurant Oloseq Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence\.Haynes

have announced the r l o s i n f ^ f Ihe Gx-Yoke restaurant on Hebrort^Rd., which they have operated for Sev­eral years. This Is due to lack qf

The

lly this weekend and all will be here u’-tll the end of the month.

M.’. and Mrs, Lyndon E. Little of Columbia Green have purchased a house and propert,v in Windham Cehter from Mr. and Mrs. Edward

Wedding |Miss Evelyn P. O’Connell daugh-j

ter of Mr. and Mrs. George O’Connell of South Woodstock a n d ! Leonard R. Mathieit. son of Roland | Mathleii of Danielson, were mai'-i

B, Thompson of St. Louis, Mo. The ' ried Saturday morning In St. house is In the center, on the ro a d ; Mary's Pariah church In Putnam, which leads lo South Windhani'M Malhieu. a native of ColumbiaThey do not plan to move there until work they are having done on the house is completed.

T8\e little white house on Colum­bia Green, just south of the center owned by Lester J . Hutchins, has been sold hy him to Mrs. Ksrleen Lessenger of Wllllmantlc.

Mr. snd Mrs. Carlton Hutchins have a.s their hoiiseguest, Ml.ss Edilli Hlllbrook of Ashburnham. I 'ass .

who lived here with his family on Old Wllllmantlc Rd., is now in the II.S. Army and is-stationed at Vir­ginia where Uie couple will live.

Silver WeddingMr. and Mrs. Solomon Sinder of j

Pine St. will observe their 25th wedding anniversary today. M ar­ried in New York Aug. i2 , 1933 they came here to live In 1942.

The couple has four children, Mrs, Judith Cohen of Springfield

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WELDON DRUG C O .MI Main SU Tel. Ml 8-8821

I j tk e r s In Second PlaceThe Lakers, Columbia Recreation bualneea. Mr. Haynes said

Council sponsored ball team ' d e - i t w o young sons. The town committee was e m - > (eated Wtllington 6-3 Iasi night lo l and Donald, left Saturday

powered to fill any vacancies which I clinch second place in the Willi- 8 three weeks' motor trip West,

play-off begin for the

for Romanes poundsW P O P —Modf*

U :45- WHAV—Jazz Allpv WTIC—Starlleht SAranadR WDRU—Moons for Romanes WPOP -Modern Sminda

11:54—WINK—Sign Off

-Music for Evenln*—Dateline

Evening Music —P.M.• fririiv Sports —News—Lawrenca Walk—Serenade -Kvetiing Muelc -P MMusic by Melarhrlno -Guv Lombardo -John Daly

—Serenadr KverilnK MurIc

;—p MThree Stai Extra

liOwell Tliomas —Top 40 Tima—Sorenarlp

KvPijhig Mualc —P M Dick Bertel

—Amoe and Andg — Fulton Lfewla—Serenade “Kveninx MurIc - P MDick Bertel— AmoR and Andy -E. P. Morgan-Serenade -P^vening Muetc

1—P MNewe ol World

— Anewpr Please —Top 40 Tima

-Serenade Eveninc Music

—Open Mike Life ami Itie World -E R Morrow

— Top 40 Time-Mu.sic Nfiw and Th^n N'ielif Lltif*

—R. Q I.ewi"Bn.xtfn V)« Wa-^hinglcn

Deaths Last NightBy THE ASSOtllATED P R E 88Forte del Marmi, Italy. Ennrico

Pea. 77. intei-nationally known poet and writer, died Monday of a heart ailmerit. Pea (pronounced pay-ahl won fame with his flr.st play " F o i e "1 humbugs I, published when he was in his 20s.

Freeport. HI . William H. Kunz. 77. former executive of the F r e e ­port Journal-Standard, died Sunday after collapsing on a Freeport Btreet. Kunz had been aaaoclated

: with Hie Journal-Standard since f l9 I9 . serving as business manager I for 20 years and was vice president

and a member of the board of directors from 1980 until his retire­ment a year ago.

Washington, Col. E ar l E. Gesler, 65. retired Army Engineer Corps officer, died Monday. Gesler. who waa born In Chicago, retired In 1958 after 38 years of service

Hot Springs, Ark., The Rev. E d ­ward Constantius I^amore. 54, for­mer Amerlean editor of the Catho­lic Inlernational Press Association. died.Mondav. He had been an arthritis patient at St. Joseph's Hospital for five, years and although confined to a wheelchair he taught .medical ethics, phychology and psychiatry at Ihe hospital’s nursing school

might occur. j mantle Twilight League.Ifonor Form er Chairman In prepoiatlon for the pi

A t the close of the business ses- | games which will begin fo Sion, but with ever.vone still pres- | locsl team Sunday night, when ent, Horace S. Holt was asked lo they meet the Elks, a tune-up approach the chairman’s tgble. | game has been', arranged for Thura- Here he waa greeted by Atty. ‘ day at 6 p.m, on Hutchins Field. Hutchins, who presented him with I They will play the Ridges, number

PersonalsMr. snd Mrs ,Ia4ues L. Young.

Jonathan Trumhiill Highway, have as their guests, their daughter Mra. Scott Petrequin ao<l children, Cary and Mac, and-a friend Mias Lois Rlcliards, all'Of N. Fairfleld, Ohio. Petrequin will Join his fain-

j Mr. and Mrs. W alter H. Monteilh j Ma.ss.. Brian, Allan and Rosalind ! of Old Wllllmantlc Rd. have as all of whom live al home I their guest Mrs. Moatetlh's sister! Sinder Is a foreman at the Elec- I Ml.ss Elaine Morceau- of Spring- tro-Motlve i l f g . Co. in Willimanllc

field. . I Both are actriie in the affairs of, Phil Smith, of West Hartford *h<‘ Agiidath Achim Synagogue, i and Columbia Lake, was guest o f , He is chali man of the Columbia ' honoi at a aiirprl.se party given by Recreation Council and trca.surer

Mr. and Mr.s. John Forryan, for his of H''’ Uons Club, sixteenth birthday last Friday. I Celebration of the event yvill h

.About 12. young people were p re s - ; noalponed pending the arrival of I ent for the occasion. i their first gTandchild, due momen-I T7ie Monday Club were de.saert tanly,I lunch guest.s of Mra. Luther Buell ,I at her home on Erdoni Rd. ye.s- Manehesler Evening Herald, Co-

terday. Mra. Jamos Smith was s liimliia correspondent, Mrs. non- guest. Prior to this Mrs. Buell gave aid Tuttle. .AC 8-8485.

' the voimB.ster.s in the iTeighlior-I hood a picnic and hot dog roa.st Melted butler and canned I Those attending were Stevie and I minced clams make a deliglitfui

Janie Carter and Philip snd sauce for hot cooked thin spa- Martha ("arler and Paul .Smith, ‘ ghetti.

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About Payrolls, tor example:

A whistle every Friday at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft starts one of Connecticut’s biggest “chain reactions.” Then thousands of men and women receive paychecks for their work helping to produce aircraft engines.

Payday at Pratt & Whitney is an im­portant event in more ways than one. Nat­urally it’s important to every employee, but payday starts a kind of economic “chain reaction” that affects nearly everyone in this area in on way or another. It typifies the American economic system in action.

This money going into circulation every week goes a long way toward making the greater Hartford area—and all Connecticut —a good place to work and live. From cities to small cross-road villages, it keeps stores and shops and businesses humming—and helps keep many thousands of non-Aircraft people on their jobs. It supports churches, charities and other activities; it buys the products of fields and farms, and the output of shops and factories. It helps to pay the taxes that build and support schools, roads and other public facilities, taxes that pro­vide police, fire and health protection and other needed services.

CASHINp HIS PAYCHtCK on the. job, this man is one of about 36,000 Pratt &. Whitney Aircraft em ployes who share a weekly payroll of more than $4 rrjillion J n 1947 the average weekly payroll waa $810,000. By contrast, in 19'2~, two yeara after the company waa founded, it was only $15,600 per week. ,

. ?

SAVINGS in banks, U. S. Savings Bonds and Other aecurities are a regular part of payday” for many Pratt tc Whitney Aircraft employees, and a factor in this area’s economic sta­bility;. For example, about 70 per cent of 5II employees are buying L'. S. Savings Bopda through payroll deductions. Ijtat year they invested $3,^ 5 ,000 in these securities. Above, William P. Gwinn. president of United Aircraft Corporation.

feta results of a lS-IH bond drive from R. p . Hummel of the 'ratt 6 Whitney Aircraft payroll department.

IN SILVER O O U i^ S , a weekly payroll a t P ratt it. Whrtney Aircraft, baaed oh laat. vM r's av«ra!|R, would make a stack of dot- lara more t u n 6 miles high—61 times as -tell H the fahtoua Travelen tower in down- tows Hertford. . . . . . _ ^

'.I

PURCHASING POWER in Connecticut is enormously expanded by P ratt'& Whitney's payroll, which totals nearly $'210 million a year. A great part of This huge sum is spept right here in the Connecticut River valley, for such things as food, clothing, shelter.transportation, taxes, inaurance, utilities and recreation.

Pratt & W hitney A ircraft*DM$iofi o f United Airenft Corporation . ~ 'MAIN O P P ie C AND PjLANTt §»tt HarttarO. Canaaetkat RWANCM PLA N TS) MSNS NsteA l bte8A|tea iWsrtMsA SftMSMSMB

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Page 4: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

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PAGE SIX MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTEB, ^ONW. TUESDAY, AUGUST 12. ^958

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Tuesday. Augii"! 12

A Clincher ReportT h . report of the IJhJtpr! NnUonn

S rifn tif ir ( ’on im lllrc on Iho Kf- fertA of Atom ic rtmllnlion t>, lilir tv .r y o ther A rlrntlflr stiidy of th r fAltoiil riAriKtr. lahorliiK iindrr n inieA onrf hanrilcAp. T hr alntjnllcH Are not In, We do not Know liow TiiAny deform ed children will be horn. hecauAe they liAve not yet been bom . W'e do not know how m any reae i of cAncer will develop, or how m any Uvea will he ahort- aned how m any daya, hecatiae the cancer haa not yet developed, and Uvea have no t y e t been ahorlened. K iirtherm ore, In fa r t , there will no ahaolute a tatlatlca on aorne of theae Ih lngaeven later, heraiiae the d a y ; th a t radiation rllpa off a life m ay not he Identifiable, and the caiiae of ran cer not eaally labeled •peclfirally ,

Reraiiae theae fu ture i ta t la t lc i a re not available now, our Atomic Bneriry Commlaalon, itlll true to the apirit of I t i departed I>wda Strauaa, takee the line th a t no peril haa been proVed, and th a t w h a t­ever peril m ay be Involved can be taken aa p a r t of ttie price of proR reaa. Rut euch argum en t m ay hr taken aa the dying gaap of official pretenae th a t we and the world ran continue w ilfully releaalng Into the world atm oaphere a danger we can not accurate ly gauge.

Ttda lin lted N atlona (lom m itlee conalalrd of aclentlata from A rgen­tina. A iialralla, Belgium, Brajill. B ritain , C anada, Caechoalovakla, P’-Rypt. France, India, .Japan. Mex­ico. Sweden, the Soviet Union and the United Statea.

Ita report m akea certain m atte r of fa rt, em otionally controlled ita lem en ta which cannot fall to d ic ta te the polirlea of natlona,

In the field of general obnrlu- •lona, the com m ittee a la tea the follow Inc

" 'n ie expoaure of m ankind to Ionizing radiation a t p rraen t arlaea m ainly from n a tu ra l aourcea, from medical and Induatrlal procedurea. end from environm ental contam i­nation due to nuclear exploalona. The Induatrlal, reaearch and medi­cal applicatl.ona expoae only pa rt of the population while n a tu ra l BOurrea and environm ental eoureea expoae t(ie whole population Ttie a rtlflrln l aourrea to whleh man la txpoaed during hla work In Indiia- t ry and in aclenllflc reaearch are of

' value In .acience and technnlogy Tlieir uae la controllable, and ex- poaurea ran he reduced by per­fecting proterMon and aafety lerh- nlquea All app)lratlona of X-raya and ra d lo a rtly i laolopea uaed In m edicine for dlAgnoatlc piirpoaea and for radiation therapy are for Ibe henellt of m ankind anil ran he eonlrolled.

’■Radioactive rontam lnaU on of the environm ent reaultlng from ex- plnalona of nuclear weapona con- a tltu tea a grow ing Increm ent to World-Wide radiation levela, 'ITila Involvea new and largely unknown hazarda In preaenl and fu ture pop- Ulatlona; ■ theae hazard,a.' by their very n a tu re , are beyond the conlrol of the expoacd peraona '|i|ie com ­m ittee conclude* th a t all atepa de- ■Igned to ntlnlmlze Irindintion of hum an populatlona will a r t to the benefit of hum an health. Sm ii atepa Include the avoidance of im nrrea- •a ry exposure reaultlng from m edi­cal, InduatrlAl and o ther procedurea fo r peaceful uaea on one liBiicl and tjie reaaaUon of contHmlnalioM of lh a environm ent hy exploalona Of nuclear weapona on the other."

L a te r on In Ita general conrlu- alone, the com m ittee a ta tea lhal ‘'eihfb the emalleal am ounia of radiation are liable to cauae dele- terioua genetic., and p e rh ap i alao lom atlr, effect.s." (he term aomatlc including tlie field of enneer, leu­kemia, p renata l dam age and alim l- inlng of life.

. The conuuittee alao sta tea th a t ‘th e Irradiation of any. groupa of

. people, before and during the rr- ►roducHve age, will contribute fenelie effecta .to whole popula- .liojif in ao fa r aa the g o n ad i a re aepeaad." •' com m ittee alao a u te g th a t

"becauae of the- delay w ith which the lo m atlc effecta of radiation m ay appear, and w ith which Ita genetic effecta m ay be m anifeated, the full ex ten t o f the dam age la not Im m ediately apparen t. I t la, therefore, Im portan t to conaider the apeed w ith which levela o f ex­poaure could be a ltered by hum an action ’’

There, the com m ittee agrcca w 1th the com m ent of our Atom ic E n­ergy Commlaalon, to the effect th a t the dangei a of which it apeaka have not yet been a ta tla tically proved hy reaulta. But, Instead of tak ing thla aa license for fu rth er te.sling, the UN com m ittee aeea It as a reaaon for haate to avoid p u t­ting more radioactive m aterla la In­to our atm oaphere. Tliere. m ay he enough up there now lo do all loo much cum ulative dam age by the tim e it cornea down, aa It will he coming down for aeveral more yeara even If no more homha are tested

T liat Is the verdict of lh*T UN com m ittee, and It will be Uie verdict of m ankind, too. and II clinches the cs.se for an fnd of n u tiear tests, not only hy Rus.sin, hill by nalions who consider th em ­selves the leadqia of W estern civilizal ion.

A T o k f i i W ith d r a w n lA amMen loiich of panic sent us

m io Lehnnon. I’lim niilv , our aetjon was a show of muscle. Like all sJiowa of m iisile. II ran lerln in risks One risk was lhal II woiilil provoke mill I a ry action from aome- hoily else A nother waa th a t we ourselves, om e we had re.sorlerl to I he uae of forej*. w oiilrl not know how to lim it our ohjeclives,. 'Hie [leacefiil iiiisw rr lo both

rlaka aoon appeared N aaaer and Ruaala rem ained m llllarlly quiet, and Ruaala turned to a a tra teg y of m aking diplom atic and p ro p ag an ­da cap ital of our action. And we decided th a t we were not. a f te r all, •going on to Iraq to overthrow the revolution which waa the caiiae of our reaort to force

Theae dryialona having been made, the qiieatlon then hecame one of g e llin g our troopa out again. Today, axactly one m onth a f te r Ihelr landing, the first M arine at- larhm en t ashore haa Ita onlera to leave. This Is a token w ithdraw al, tim ed to Im prove our position In the United N ations U enrial As- (lemhly debate coming up lonior- row. We cannot expect to do well In this debate, for there are few natlona In the world which openly and sincerely a|iprov« oiir resort to force. B ut feeling and argum ent Bgalnat ua will have some of Us edge removed If we are .ptqylng In the direction of w illidraw al In- alead of mox ing, as we w ers even last week. In the direction of ex­pansion of our forces In I.a'hanon

Tills Is sn Im provem ent of al- moa|ihere, and an evidence of mir peacrfiil Inlenllona, hut we still have some 11,000 rem aining troops and several laatiea lo go before wc can rail our ifluacle play al an end.

And Just aa the key to our en try Into l.,ehanon lay outside I,eihanon, In Iraq, an the key to our final exit from Ijehanon alao aeema lo lie, o u t­side I,aihnnoii. In Jordan, where B ritish parnlroopera, In an action parallel lo ours, have hltlen off a problem m ore crltlcsl than oura In Lebanon. We can. It hnpefiill.v ap- pearii. get out of l.elianoii w llhoiu dooming I^banon lo dlalnlegraUnu aa a nation. No one' can see, now, how the B ritish ran get out of J o r ­dan w llhont having the en tire po­litical a triic tn re of th a t country collapse. Tile sam e action which m ay have saved the m o n an iiy In .Iordan al.so s tr ip s It of Its lasi poor chniire of surviving on Ua own re- eoiirces We are allleil wllii lhal action. We are giving, i,„ |ay . s lolu'ii of iiur godil m inU inns Bill carry ing Ihem mil fully will be a llltle like bar^img out of a rat trap

T h e N o i th w e a l I’H.s.sH|[eFl\'e hundred .years ago. man

W’ni, seeking a N orthw est Pai.sage helween Europe and the Oiiehl The paa.sage was never fniinil. hut the fabled apives and rltiiea of the E ast served aa the spur that led to the e ra of expkiratlons, to the dlx- covery of the New Woi id. the c re a ­tion of new em pires amt the plolutlon^'nf w ealth previmi.xfv mi- dream ed of

'Hila week, a alup and a new fiom tile New World ts retiiriung lo the Old a fte r allowing thal a sea route dues exist helween the world s two great oveans over the lop of tile world and under the Polar ice. it to o k .1100 more .I'oara of aclenlific ai hlevenieiUa. of the In- veiilloii of the anhm aiine. the har- nesalMg of alom lc power and the development of navigational terh- nlrpie.s lo iiear-m aglra l peirevllon. Hut the Nautllua avvompllahed II, Iravelm g alm ost 8.0IM) m llpsjindei- w ater. Im iudliig l.R.iO mile* iimler Ice. helween the Pnrlfie and Al- Ifintic OrcBnx.

riir trip wnx mndr in ronncrtioii witli llie Ih tm in ilo n a l (ipophvBical Year, and was part of the Navy's llrogram of explnrattoiis .in the Arvtiv As sm h. It w as welcomed around I h e '0 (11111 as promlamg a grenl bmm to sciriUUic kmnviedgo. It was itlsb- icgarded as ano ther Btep In ahi inking otir planet slUl fiirlher. A tom -powered subm arine rrplgjilera and tan k e rs th a t could ply the finally discovered ehort cut

^between the A tlRntlc and the P a ­cific are reported ly on the cjfawlng board* hare and In E ngland. j

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B ut the Im plications o f the trip w ere not only ecientlflc and eco­nomic. They w ere m ilita ry , too. To those In the w est who had been un ­nerved by ..the appcarafice of S p u t­nik 1 and Were a larm ed a t reports of R ussian auperlorlly In misailry, the N autllua ' Journey conjured up a com forting vision of m fleet of mlasllc-ladcn aubniarlnca, hidden from view beneath th ick shee ts of Ice. ready to launch th e ir rockets ■’as aoon as the bell ling'a."

UOnsIdering the conditioning of m an 's th ink ing in thla Cold W ar era. such thoughts are inevitable. And th a t is the Irony of oiir pre.xent-day era of dlatovcrles. Every apeclscu lar aclenllflc b reak ­through la read in term s of Ua mll- ilai y algnlfii am e. Inalrad of of­fering new hoiizdns of hope, they seem to carry a p o iien l of doom, aa though m an had finally found hla N orthw est Passage and s ta rted building hla stepping atones to the s ta rs only the belte r tn destroy the E arl h.

But man s Innlm ii for survival gives hope IhsI he <sn yet escape lh a l final, iiUlmale Irony, th a l he will one day im iovrr the wisdom that will tell him th a t If he w ants to go on unlocking the secrets of the universe" he's going to have to iinloi k Die one Inside hini- aelf. w heie llie frirmiila for peace 1 esides,

IWtl V ir f ’ laiia V is itI New YnrifCil’i The (Jld Vic, one I of L im lon 's mdiU. renowned ac liiig companies, Is coming to the United S ta le s this fall for its f i r s t coasl- lo-eoast loin.

On previous (|laUa, the troiip has played m only five Am erlean cities, none fa rth e r w est than Chi­cago. This lour begins In Han F rancisco Sept,. 10, proceeds lo Iroa Angeles and then eas tw ard via principal ( itlca In both th is coun­try and C anada before reacHlng B roadw ay In Deceniber.

The lep e rlo ry la lo Include " llam le l," "I 'w elflh N ig h t ' and "H enry V,"

1627 Oil rind I'irntNew York - The first oil dis­

covery In the United S ta te s was made In 1027 near Cuba. N.Y. Seneca Indians Isd a F ranciscan mlaalonary lo the elle. The In­diana u se d .th e crude oil, which bubbled up in a spring, for m edi­cine and a pain t base.

ConnecticutYankeeBy A. H. O.

The Republican p rim ary Jn the ■Hat senatorial d is tr ic t se rvsd aa a m in ia ture tes t of certa in s tan d ­ing political probabilltlea. Our Own porennl,il view of these prob­abilities has been such th a t we labeled the- resu lt no surprise , a l ­though It waa technically labeled an upset.

I t waa an upset becausa the voters in this Republican prim ary selected, by 1.181 votes to 811, a candidate for s ta le sen a to r who had been licked, In the senatorial d ia lilc t convention, 18 delegates to 13.

It was also an upset, technieally ape.'iking, becauae the official p a rly leaderahlp in the d istrict, which consists of Rep. P rosper Lavlerl and Mrs. K atherine Brown aa m em bers of the Republican S ta le C entral C om m ittee, were vigorously backing the candidate who lost In the p rim ary the nom ­ination he had won In the eon- vent Ion.

T here was, of eourse, some sla te-w ide in te rest In th is phase of the prim ary, because Lavlerl and Mrs. Brown are a ta lw arl and typical aiipporlera of Fred Zeller, and m em bers of the erstw hile rebel faction of the p a rty which haa. tem porarily al least, taken over w ith the nom ination of Zeller,

But all th is a tm osphere of "up­se t” w as m ore technical th an real. We would have been surprised If Rep. E rancia Cady had not taken the victory In the p rim ary . W hat waa on view here w as one more instance of the gulf betw een rou­tine control of the p a rty m achin­ery, which can easily h* acquired hy eager, tim e-giving profession­als of the t ype of Lavlerl. and -the Mltimalo will of the p a rly m em her- Shiih W’henever it is really sum ­moned to a dcclalon of Its own.

Lenders of the type of Lavlerl m ain tain their rinitine sw ay both by their own energy, which feasts on the exchange of favors and ac­com m odations and on pe tty pa ­tronage. and by the default of o th er Repiihllcans who live iip lo the hills and can 't 'he bothered with such petty slu ff. And It Is these professionals who provide the m ainstay of the w ing of the p a rly which look Zeller Into nom ination. But of all these professionals we happen to be able to th ink of only one n ep u ty ftom plroller C harles H arper of M iddlehury- -who h a in 'l , a t one lim e nr another, been up ­

ended tn his own ; d istric t. I t has happened to Zeller him self. I t ha* happened to B ig Bill B rennan. And now i t haa happened to L a ­vlerl. H e w a i easy to lick, once som ebody had decided to m ake the e ffort.

The profeeslonali, who give all th e ir tim e to th e gam e, lead p re ­carious lives, and th e ir form idable o rgan izational shell is frequently cracked fo r them . Because they a re willing to go on w ork ing a t the gam e, however, th ey eoon re ­p a ir the track e , and look a s fo r­midable and Influential a* ever, un ­til the n ex t te s t comes along.

This m in ia tu re resu lt in the 31st d istric t, the supposed atronghold of one whom ZeUer lis ts aa one of his own m ajo r lieu tenan ts, o f­fe rs a t least a alight ta s te of the flavor a sta te -w ide p rim ary m igh t have had. If John Alsop had chos­en to seek one. The professionals of a certa in type a re In the sad­dle, for th is cam paign, th an k s p a rtly to the fact th a t they a re willing, aa alw ays, to work a t th e ir gam e, th an k s p a rtly to de­fau lt on the pa rt of those who m ight have called the p a rty mem- berjjhlp Itself to a decision.

Float* lo Sneer**New York (Ah—i single appear-

*nc5 on A pArado float has won 9-.year-old Lynn P o tte r a coveted role In the national com pany of B roadw ay's sm ash hit, "The Mu­sic Man,"

Lynn took p a r t in a hom ecom ing celebration a t Mason City. loWa, for the show 's compoaer. M eredith Willson. In trig u ed by the lad 's a p ­pearance, W illson Invited him to audition for the focal role which Eddie Hodges perform s with the original com pany, and a con tract followed.

M A CHINE MADE IN ‘lO’aNew Y ork—The earlie st c ig a ­

re tte -m ak in g m achine was p a t­ented in the 1870 a. The first sa tis fac to ry m achine, capatilc of m aking 200 to 220 c ig a re ttes a m inute, waa introduced In the mld- 1880 a.

MEDICINE CHEST “LEFIOVERS”T here 's but one good place in Ihe horn*for "leftovers." T h a t'i the r e f n g e r a to r - a n d th*"leftovers" should be foods,, not medicince.M edicine chest "leftovers" are risky s t best, and often dow nrigh t dangoroua. The m edicine your physic ian p rescribed a y ear or so ago was in tended to be uaed then, not now.Avoid serious d an g er—d u m p o ld m edicine at onee^ Each illness req u ires scientific diagnosis — and, usually , specialized m edicine is Indicated.See your phyaician. Lot him decide w h a t's b eat Call on ua In provide your m edicalinn,

QUINN’S PHARMACYrhonp Ml 3^1136

Insist On

HEATING130 OUT OF 139

HARTFORD lUILDERS USE O IL IN THEIR

O W N HOMES . . .

costs less too

A T houfflif fo r Todajr>SpM*or*d ky tk

OamMO «f

OntoeIn th e n o rth e rn a re a of A u s tra lia

mep a re engaged in p ann ing gold from the countryside. T hey see no th ing on the su rface b u t piles of d ir t and earth , b u t th e y persevere and ge t th ro u g h th e m ounds of d i t t in to the gold w hich lies un d er­neath . To m ost casual observers th ere is no th ing b u t d ir t; however, to the one who knows, th ere Is in ­estim able w o rth beneath th e Sur­face dirt.

God, in Hla g re a t wisdom and m ercy, sees beneath the ain o f m an and know s there is a hum gn soul of inestim able w orth . He keeps a t w ork th rough the Holy S p irit to b ring th a t soul from beneath the cover of Bln,

"I w aited p a tien tly for the Lord: and he inclined un to me, and heard m y cry. He b rough t me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the m iry clay, and se t m y fe^t upon a rock, and ealabliahed my goings." Psalm 40:1-2.

Rev. C harles Reynolds

U.S, Births DeclineW ash ing ton—T he num ber of

b irth s In the U nited S ta tea dropped by 7.000 du rin g the first q u a rte r of 1958 Compared w ith the first th ree m on ths of 1957. The P o pu la­tion R eference B ureau al trib u tes the decline to the reres.sion.

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■ A S T E R N S T A T K S

E X P O S I T I O NS«pt. 13>21, W « it Springflsld , Moss.

3 Great Coliseum ShowsTICKBTS ON SALUTODAY and TOMORROW GLENNEY'S MEN'S SHOP

R.gim.ntal Band of th.GRENADIER GUARDS

ond M aii.d Pip.rs and Highland Dancersof the SCOTS GUARDS

Sept. 13-16

THE RO Y ROGERS S H O Wwith Dole Evans, Pat Brady,

Sons of the Pionaari, Trlgi^r and Trigger jr.

Sept. 14-20

■ASTERN STATES HORSE SHOWfeaturing ARTHUR GODFREYand hit palomino hone, "Goldie"

Sept, 19-21

A ll SEATS RESERVEDI lUT NOW - IE SURE OF A lEAtl

Whose hand will be at the Wheel?/

In Him * rapidly changing Hmes ir is wise to consider W HO SE HAND W ILL RE AT THE W HEEL o f your esfaf*/w hen you are no longer here to steer H i* course. W ill it be e strong, experienied hand copaM * o f nuriiing decisions In an uncertain future? W ill It fu lfill your wishes os set forth in your W ill re­garding your w ife and children? And will It exercise reasonable judgment in setHing and adm inistering your M to t* fo r Hie "benefit o f your heirs? W hether your M ta te is large or small, Hi*m arb only a few o f th * mony ques- Hens you should consider. Th* M onchM ter Trust Cempony's Trust Depart* meet acts os Executor and Trustee under w ilb ,'carrying edt your every d M ir* fe r M long a period as you specify, W * invite you and your atto rney to visit us anytim e to discuss your estate.

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MRMBKR FDIO C O M P A N Y

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MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTBRi CO'NNh T u E ^ A Y , AUGUST 12, 1968 PAGE

Rogers to Seek Anrest In Bridge Toll Disfiote

W illard B. R ogers, • lo n g -tim e^ 'fo* o f B ttlkeley B ridge tolls, aaya he will gel^ h iitiie lf a rre s te d T h u rs­d ay m orn ing in a n a tte m p t to ge t a S ta te Suprem e C o u rt v e rd ic t th a t th e to lls a re illegal.

,A nd B urke W. Sm ith, d irec to r d f th e G re a te r H a rtfo rd B ridge A u thority , said to d ay the- A u th o r­i ty will oblige by hav ing R ogers p inched if he tr ie s to drive over th e fo rm erly to ll-free b ridge w ith ­ou t handing o v e r a toll tic k e t or a q u arte r.

G eta FolloH ingT h e d ram a, w hich is se t to u n ­

fold a t 10 a.m . T h u rsd ay , m ay have a num ber o f su p p o rtin g players. R(»gerl said som e 20 E a s t H a rtfo rd m oto rists , also u n happy about the to lls on th e fo rm erly free bridge, have told him th ey would follow him over the b rid ge-^and to the E a s t H a rtfo rd Town C ourt, too, presum ably .

Roger*, w ho is ch airm an of the board of th e F ir s t N a tional B ank of M anchester, said today he is p rep ared to face a r re s t so th a t the d ispu te can be tran sfo rm ed into a legal issue he sa id he ia p re ­pared to c a rry all th e w ay to the S ta te 's h ig h est court. He will have bond m oney and his a ttro n ey , P au l M arts , w ith him , R ogers said.

R ogers announced his in ten tion of m aking a te s t case of the Bulke- ley B ridge to lls in a H erald Open F e ru m le t te r on A ug. 7. In th a t le t te r he outlined hla reasons fo r believing the B ulkeley B ridge tolls to be illegal and sa id he a lready notified the Bridge. A u th o rity th a t, "w hen convenient,” he would seek a r re s t fo r fa ilu re to pay the toll.

Advised th a t Sm ith has said the econom ic re su lts could be "ca­tas tro p h ic " If the antl-BLiIkeley B ridge toll cam paign w ere su c ­cessful, R ogers saM, "T h a t's not m y lookout. The tolls on the B ulk­eley B ridge a re Illegal."

■ H e said he has been assured of th is Iw a num ber of a tto rneys. Roger^^-Who said he has no q u a r­rel w ith tolls on the o th er Con­necticu t R l \ ^ bridges, asserted th a t tolls could fee. charged on 50- year-old Bulkeley B rt4ge only if the com m unities which paid for Its construption w ere reim bursed, w ith in terest/ These towns kr? M anchester, H artfo rd , E a s t H a r t­ford, G lastonbury and South W indsor.

RecaUla DedicationM aking the to lls p a rticu la rly

Irksom e to R ogers Is th e fa c t th a t he recaUs the dedication of the B u lk e le / B ridge in O ctober 1908. "A long w ith toousands o?N)^hers there a t the tim e,” he *aldv; “I heard sp eak er a f te r sp eak er atre*^ it w as to be a to ll-free bridge." The B ridge A u th o rity 'b eg an ^ a r g - iiyr toils on Jan . 1. when the Founders B ridge on S ta te S t, was opened.

R ogers said he doesn’t object, personally, to the tolls. "B ut I do object to penalizing H artfo rd w orkers who live on th is side of the river and w orkers on th is side who live in H a rtfo rd every tim e they cross the Bulkeley B ridge to w ork," he said.

The local m an said he has held off th is long on challenging th e lega lity of B ulkeley B ridge tolls a t the req u est of the la te W illiam P u tn am , chairm an of the G reate r H a rtfo rd B ridge A u thority "and an esteem ed friend." R ogers said th ere w as concern th a t a court case m ig h t have in te rfered w ith the Bale of the bridge bonds. /

The im m ediate cause of T h u rs­d ay 's im pending challenge, R ogers says, w as an incident about a m onth ago- in which he handed a Biilkeley B ridge toll collector a tick e t R ogers did not know w as ob.kolete. (B ridge toll tick e ts are good only as dated. 1 '

The toll collector shouted, "Hey, W hat do you th in k you .are doing,” according to Rogers, who said he replied, "I'll show your com m ission w h a t I 'm doing!"

So, T hursday m orning a t 10 o'clock, according to p r e s e n t plans. R ogers will hand a Bulkeley B ridge toll sta tio n a tte n d an t a calling card Instead of a toll tick e t or 25 cents. His a r re s t will fol­low and the case will be on Its way to a decision th rough the rourU .

C ites I-awSm ith says th a t the S ta te Leg­

islatu re , which gave 4t the toll powers, also laid down an o th er law —- "A ny person who w ilfully viol­a te s any p ro v is io n .. . re la tin g to p aym en t of tolls on any parkw ay, highw ay or bridge, or who w ilfully evades or a ttem p ts to evade such paym ent, shall be fined not more than JIO,"

C u rren t loll charges a re 25 cen ts cash, 10 cent hy tick e t for odta^ional users and 5-cent tickets for comxnuters.

South WindsorNewberry GOP Choice

For General AssemblyEllsw orth S, N ew berry of N ew ­

b erry Rd. was nom inated last night to run as the Republican candidate to the G eneral A.ssem- bly.

A record crowd of oyer 200 peo­ple a ttended the GO P caucus In South W indsor last n igh t where N ew berry won ovei R. Chase Las- bury by a m ajo rity of som e 30 votes.

N ew berry, 52, is a native of South W indsor, and is cu rren tly engaged In Organ sales and in- *tructlon . A g ra d u a te of Morse Business College and N o rth e as t­ern U niyersity , he aierved as a calcu la tion engineer w ith the H am ilton S tan d ard divlslofi- of U nited A irc ra ft fo r two yeara and as a tobacco grow er for nine years.

A form er m em ber of the' Repub­lican To-wn Com lnittee, he also Served as sec re ta ry and chairm an of the B oard of Education from 1940 to . J 948 and m ore recently on the In d u stria l Developm ent Com mission. Ac.tlYe w ithin th e F a rm B ureau, he served as ch air­m an of the S ta te F arm B ureau m eipbership drive, and chairm an of a special tobacco s tu d y eom- m ittee . A p a s t m as te r o f the E ver­g reen Lodge, AFAAM , he is now on the board of the Wood Me­m orial L ibrary .

He Is m arried to the form er H elene A tk ins of E as t H artfo rd and Is the fa th e r of two. children.

The caucus ajso nom inated the follow ing six residen ts as candi­da tes fo r Justice o f the peace: R udolph E ck ert, M rs. Hazel Van SIcklin, D ex ter S. B urnham , Lu­th e r B urnham , H arold D illert, and Jo h n Sele.

D inam ure FinedC harlea D in sm o r^ owner of the

Rockville S an ita ry Com pany, who w as recen tly involved In a fight w ith the Town of South W indsor over an ordinance lim iting thp type of tru ck s which m ay be used in the hauling of ga rb ag e and refuse, ap ­peared in South W indsor Town C ourt la s t n ight. D insm ore w as given a suspended Judgm ent on a ch arg e of v io lating the tow n 's ru b ­bish ordinance and a $50 fine on a charg e of fa ilu re to secure a load on a vehicle. Both charges, em a­n a ted from a case th a t 'h a d been continued for aeveral w eeks *fnd w*)i the causa of a town m eeting la s t T hursday w hich ended in the fa ilu re of D insm ore 'a a ttem p t to have the town ordinance repealed.

At the town m eeting it w aa voted to give Dii)*more a 90 d ay ex ten ­sion of tim e in w hich it i* expected he will com ply w ith th* ordinance.

Driver Flips Car Pursuing Youth

An a rg u m en t and c a r chase las t n ig h t, resu lted in the a r re s t of C larence Browm, 28. of N orth W indham , by C olcheater H ta te Po-. lice, Browm is charged w ith reck ­les s driving. S ta te ^ l i c e said he. overtu rn ed hl*.ca.r. in A ndover.

Police gave th is account o f the Incident: .^mo* M aynard , 19, of W illim antic. argued , w ith his g irl friend '* m o th er-an d le ft in 'h la car. Browm, a fam ily friend , cha-.ed M aynard and lo st con tro l of his car. r . .

M aynard ' w a s a rre s te d ' and c h a r g ^ w ith a b reach o f the peace.

M aynard an d B row n will be a r ­ra ig n ed in A ndover C o u rt to n ig h t O a tro lm an WUUam Tom lin 1«- r e t o t a u d . ; . . . / - . '

Police ArrestsRaym ond A. T rom bley, 19, of 373

A dam s St., and W alter F. Gleason, 17, of 23 T yler Circle, were ar- rc.ated la s t n igh t and charged with breach of the peace. They w ere In­volved in a fis t fig h t behind a Main St. re s tau ra n t.

P a tro lm an C harles M orneau said T rom bley 's eyes were gouged in the fig h t and he w as taken to M anchester M em orial Hospital where his eyes w ere trea ted and bandaged. He w as . released a fte r trea tm en t. Gleason w as released by police under a $100 bond. The two youths a re scheduled to ap ­p ear in Town C ourt Monday.■ F ra n k J. S trano, 17, of 15 Ash

St., w aa a rre s ted early th is m orn­ing and charged w ith lam perinlf w ith a m otor vehicle. Police said S tran o siphoned gas from a car a t the re a r of the A rm y and Navy Club on M ain St.

S tran q w as cau g h t In the a c t by the ow ner of the car. C arlo Quag- lia of 19 W addell Rd., anil .a com­panion who sum m oned police, Pa- tl-olman Leo G rover said,

S tran o la free under a $50 bond and his co u rt da le la se t for Aug. 29. - ■

H i l l s t o w n H o r s e m e n X J n s u n g b u t A o t i y e

Officials lo Comb Subdivision RulesAn inform al m eeting to discuss

proposed revised subdivision reg u ­la tio n s fo r th e Towm will be held by the B oard of D irectors and the Town P lann ing Com m ission In the M unicipal B uilding to n ig h t a t 8:30.

The tw o groups also m et about a m onth ago to go over the reg u la ­tions which the P lanning Com m is­sion fin ished rew ording M ay 28 a f te r m any m ontha of study and work.

The tow n counsel h as been s tudy ing th e changes proposed 4n the new reg u la tio n s by the com ­m ission and also has been incor­po ra tin g recom m endations m ade by th e d irec to rs a t th* f i r s t m ee t­ing. ^

A m ong th e suggek’Uons m ade by th e com m ission fo r Inclusion in the reg u la tions w as a proposed $10-a- lo t fee fo r new subdlvlaloni. The fee proposal .m et wfjth genera l ap ­proval of th e d irectors.

A no ther suggestion w ould speci­fy th a t m iinicipal sew er and w a te r lines m u st be available to any sub­division w ith lo ts of leas Jihan 30,- 000 sq eare feet.,

The revision is aim ed a t p re ­venting the use o f sep tic tan k a in sm aller, m o re" densely populated subdivisions. -

O ther proposals expected to be b rough t up to n ig h t include Ih rep - to r Ted Cum ininga suggestion th a t banks in subdivision's ^ seeded to preven t erosion. T hia is aim ed to p rev en t s ituation* such u th a t a t B olton S t., w here a sandy bank cause* f lo w in g of beck yard*.

And h e r propoaal m ig h t coipe up in reg ard to Birchw oed P a r k , w here th e developer f i n i s h e d s tre e ts and sidew alks before q till- tiea had been laid by th e town.

FO U C B .FIRE ON M oji hoiahaj, India, Ang. - I t UP)->

Polibe fired eh an nraMi nsob i|l GIummU Road In Almiednbnd t»- day a f ta r koafa of rioting overOielNegnaM » $—*<*■• One per*

B y DICK HOW ARD"T here md«t qertailily is a rid ­

in g club' in M anchester!"W ith tliila assertion , IS young u ito tibn en th u siasts and ttieir

fo u r a d u lt leaders have been su r- prlsQtK num erous inquirers d itr- Ini. recen t weeks. .

A ctuall>s.to* Hillsto'wn L oather Pounders oK^^^Manchester, a 4-nH Club affiUatiqb. which alao in­cludes 'm em bers xrom Blast H a rt-

uford and G lastoabU iy, h a s been in/ ex istence now f o r ^ e e r l y tw o years; But, as is the ceec w ith o ther sihe.II groups, this ' o tg M iza- tion, its aCUyl es and w h a t itshee to offer to ‘ o thers in te rested horsem anship, has gone alm ost' unnoticed. . _

The H illstow n L etch er Poyntf- e rs—so nam ed by ita yoifUiful^ memlbers because "W h en 'w e ride v/e're pounding lea th e r"—began sh o rtly a f te r flvej g irls w ere i»n- dov/ed w ith horses of th e ir own a* g if ts from th e ir paren ts.

Carol and Peggy Jaco b s of 742 H illstow n Rd., G loria M arch of 84« Hilldtown Rd., and R uth H ig ­gins and Ba. 'uara M ederos of Blast H artfo rd , were the re ­cipients. And by b and ing to g eth e r they, and e ig h t subsequent m em ­bers, have realized the ad v an tages of com bin ing’ common in te res ts to ' gain m utiial knowledge and friendship.

The group w as a t f i r s t an in ­form al one. I I w asn 't long, how­ever, before th e g irls learned of the nationw ide 4-H Club's ex is t­ing program o f organized horse and rid ing clubs w ithin its agricu l­tu ra l division.

Get C harte r, SealCoftductlng Its ac tiv ities fo r 12

m onths according to the 4-H plan, the H illstow n L eather Pounders last fall requested a n d ' received its c h a r te r and seal, thua becom ­ing a full-fledged 4-H H orse Club, one of several now active In H a r t­ford County.

W ith helping m em bers to Im ­prove the care of their horses and the prom otion of b e tte r and safer rid ing hab its aa their m ain objec­tives, the L eather Pounders 'spend m any hours a t th e ir clubhouse and new practice ring a t the farm of H ow ard Jacobs, P eggy 's and C arol's fa ther.

T he club m em beiahip now num ­bers 13. eleven girts and two boya betw een the ages of 10 and 17, and m ost of whom have th e ir own horses.

A lthough the four m others of Jhe five original m em bers serve as ad u lt leaders, the young riding en th u s ia sts them selves have a free hand in o rganizing and conduct­ing the activ ities of the H illstow n I.«ather Pounders. In fact, the leaders readily adm it th a t th e ir

■fhlldrcn "know a lot m ore about horses th an we do."

M em bership is not lim ited lo those In terested only in w estern- type hor.semartship. bu t It Just h ap ­pens th a t the p fe ie n t m em bers all arc. T rail-rld ing was the Initial prim e activ ity , bu t du ring the past y ear they have shifted Ihejr In­te re s ts to p a rtic ip a tin g In Junior horse show s and .securing, aS gu ests fo r th e ir m eetings, persons

S B V E ^ '

Thrall Says Claims By Kelter Not A^nie

r iObituaryD iana Lynn K essler

D iane Lynn ' K essler, in fan t d a u g h te r of BMward P. and M arie Donnelly K essler, 32 Clinton S t., died Sunday a t H a rtfo rd H o sp ita l/

Beaidea h a r p a ren ts, sl^e leaves a s iste r, M iss Donna K essler; h e r p a te rn a l g ran dparen ts . M f ., and M rs. E dw ard J . K essler o f ' A n­dover; and he r m ate rn a l g ra n d ­m other, M ra H ugh Donhelly o f H artfo rd . /

P riv a te fu n era l services w fre held y esterday m orn ibg a t DlHon'a FYineral Home in H artfo rd . B urial w as tn M ount S ^ Benedict Ceme­tery .

A nniversary MaasAn ann iversary M ass will be

said for Jha repose of the soul of F ran k G ktli S a tu rd ay m orning a t 7:45 In St. Jam es ' Church.

_and Sewer D e­feat enough in

fa te r la te ra ls a t Birch-

The young office-holders in th e H illstow n L ea th e r Pounders, a 4-H R iding Club w ith m em bers from M anchester, B ast H a rtfo rd and G lastonbury, recen tly dem onstra ted th e ir horsem anship w ares for H erald P h o to g rap h er R eginald Pinto. 'S ec re tary R 'th H iggins shows how she has tau g h t her "R ex" to bow. W atching a ie T reasu re r B a rb ara L adabouche and "C ham p," P residen t C arol Jacobs and "C opper," and Vice P residen t Peggy Jaco b s and "P ean u ts ."

who have becom e experts in the equestrian field.

Ju s t last m onth nine m em bers took th e ir horses to the S ta te D em onstration and Judging Days a l the U niversity of C onnecltcul. E igh t of them re tu rn ed home w ith rlbbon.s: the ninth. C arolyn N el­son of M anchester, gained valuable experience as she took p a r t In her f irs t show.

Top honors a t the UConn com- pelllion w ent to BariSara Lana- bouchc of M anchester, the L ea th e r Pounders' olde.st m em ber a t 17. who g arnered two bine ribbons. Peggy Jarobs, the youngest s t 10. won two "reds" and two "w hiles” and sis te r Carol w ith h e r new horse "C opper" which she haa been tra in ing fo t^only one m onth, alao won a bine ribbon. And Carol G n tt of G lastonbury, tak in g p a r t In her first 4-H show, w as aw arded blue, red and w hile ribbons In three sep ara te events.

W ith the fa ir season ap p ro ach ­ing, all of the m em bers a re p re p a r­ing them selves and th e ir horses for

the m any show s which will be held. L ast fall, Mias H iggins w as the recip ient of one of the five m edals given at th e H artfo rd CoLinty 4-H Roundup.

G uest speakers are a lw ays w el­come by the H ills to w n 'g ro u p and the m ost recent w as Just last Sun­day when F ran k lin Y’ork , an 11- year v e teran In the G overnor's Horse Guard, spen t five hours g iv­ing Inslruellons a t Ihe Leather" Pounders’ p ra rlire ring. During the w inter, of course, the club m em bers a re visited m ore often, and aniotig last w in te r s guests w as Donald Gaylord, anim al h us­bandry in s tru c to r a t UConn.

B ut even w ith horsem ansh ip as the m em ber's in itial in te res t, the y oungsters have no t lost sigh t of the basic 4-H Club principles of good citizenship. A l th e ir business m eetings — a l w a y s conducted s tr ic tly according to parliam en­ta ry procedure a discussion of th e ir responsib ility lo each o th er and to the com m unity alw ays comes first.

But, m ost n a tu ra lly , they alw ays end up on the sub ject of horses, and usually on the horses them ­selves.

Club O fficersThe Jacobs s iste rs. Carol and

Peggy, p resen tly serve the HllIS- town Ijca lh e r Poundcis as presi­den t and vice president, respec tive­ly. Miss H iggins Is sec re tary and M i s s I,adabouche Is ti easurer. O ther active m em bers Include Pen­ny Buckland, David Ladabouche and K enneth Nelson of M anches­ter: Ja n e M iller of E ast H artfo rd , and Pau la W ychadll of G laston­bury.

And w henever any of th e m em ­bers have lo asse rt, "T here most certa in ly i t a rid ing rlub In M an­chester," they a lw ays add, "Come on over to the clubhouse any­tim e." 'Yoii c an 't mlSs It now lh a l H enry Jacobs' the s is te rs’ g ra n d ­fa th e r and a fo rm er m em ber of the G overnor’s H orse Guard, haa ' put up a new sign on the fa rm g a tf .

I t reads, "The H illstow n I.,eather Pounders."

Fuuieral*

Eisenhower to Address UN, Offer Mideast Peace Plans

(C ontinned frnn Png One)

the America delegation.Dulles w as reported p lanning to

m eet ton igh t w ith special ambafe- sador R obert M urphy who w as dLie to reach New York In la te evening on his re tu rn from a trouble shoo t­ing mission, which took him to Lebanon, Jo rdan , Iraq, Israel, the U nited A rab Republic and E thlo- pta.

M urphy waa understood to be p lannthg to s tay in New York sey- eral daya. reporting lo Dulles on resu lts of hia tr ip and assisting him during the d e b a t io n the M id­dle E ast. r' Dulle.-J’ plane, an A ir Force

tw in-engined tran sp o rt, took off a t 11:32 a m . Eleven ahjes accom ­panied the secretary .

"I go t th e im pression the. P re s­ident p lans to go before the .a s ­sem bly In person,” S p ark m an tbld a rep orte r. He added th a t Dulles d idn 't say one w ay or the other.

Sparkm an , a m em ber of the Senate F ore ign R elallons C om m it­tee, said the U nited S U te s has developed a firm program to p res­ent, Including an expanded U.N. police force for the crisis-ridden Middle E ast.. Dulles talked for , 45 m inutes

w ith five S en ato rs and four re p re ­sen ta tiv es who are m em bers of C ongressional com m ittees on fo r­eign a ffa irs.

In addition to Sparkm an, the S en ato rs were Theodore F ran ces Green (D -R I), chairm an of the Senate F o re ign R elations Com ­m ittee ; W illiam F u lb rlg h t (U- A rk )„ A lexander W iley (R -W ls) and A lexander Sm ith (R -N J).

T he House m em bera w ere T h o m a s E M organ (D -P a), ch a ir­m an of the House Fore ign A f­fa irs C om m ittee: A. 8 . C arnahan (D-M o), R obert C hlperfleld (R-: 111)' and Jo h n Vorys (R-O hlo)i

The session w ith th e C ongress m em bers a t the S ta te D ep artm en t cam e two hours before D ulles Waa to leave by p lane to tak e personal com m and of the U.S. delegation a t the U.N.

Dulles' recom m endation, a f te r *n o n ^U te -s^ t survey of prospects, p robably will be decisive -in de- te rm ig ing E isenhow er's rale.

A t p resen t, m ost of E isenhow er's top aides, Including Duties; favor Elsenhower*a appearance to give m axim um Im pact to th e A m erican p ropoials. ^

A Middle B a s t 'p o l t^ speech has been prephred . fo r ' flUsenhpwer, based on a aweeping ritview- of econom ic-politipal m easu res the U.S. governm ent will advocate.

B u t i t D uIIet discovers la s t m in ­u te hazards, he is re irarted ready to recom m end th a t E isenhow er s ta y a f his W hite Houae dsSk w h lto Dufies delivers th e spee'ch aa head o f th e U .$. delegation.

T he p lanned tim in g o f a n Etaan- bow er a|i(M *nm c* haa been k e p t a clooely-guarded eocreL Tk* pra«- p ect is, h o w ^ r . Unit i t Would bo e ith e r a t th * ofKtoinc w aU on W adneaday o r |T ln ifad ay , depend-

'‘ Ing on how fa s t U.N. d iplom ats s ta r t th e ir work.

Dulles a rran g ed to tak e six of his h ig h est-ran k in g S la te D ep art­m ent a as is ta n ts w ith him to New York to advise E isenhow er, and to s ta y a fte rw ard lo help m eet an antic ipa ted onalaught by R us­sian-led opposition.

P a rtly because of E isenhow ­er's possible appearance. the W hite H ouse and S ta le D ep art­ment have draw n unusually t ig h t secrecy w raps around specific proposals the U.S, will pu l fo r­ward.

These are reported lo include such suggestions as:

1. A U nited N allons-supervlsed Middle E as t economic foundation to Improve living s ta n d ard s tn the region.

2. C reation of a special U.N.force which would rush to any country th rea tened by d i ts ld e a t ­tack or subve sion. ' “

3, S e ttin g up a U J'J. commisaion to ' m onitor h roadcaats aim ed al Inciting troubles.

4, S u p p o rt, 'fo r U.N. S ecre tary General I ^ g H am m arsk jo ld 's plan to increase' Tl.N . truce observers ffi the area, including I^ebanon and Jordan.

The A m erican p lan of action will be coupled, au th o ritie s said, w ijh denunclati na • of -."Indirect aggression" R ussia has fom ented In the region. Some offlciala said, however, th is would not be h am ­mered loo bard lest ll d isrup t w hatever sc a n t, p rospect rem ains of w inning So ie ‘ and U nited A rab Rapubllc back ing for U.N. action In th e troubled M td-E ait.

S ta te D ep artm en t ex p erts saw little p rospect th a t P rem ier N ik ita K uniahchev would suddenly fly from Moscow to New Y ork for a face to face m eeting w ith E lsen ­hower on th e Middle E a s t crisis.

They did no t ru le th is o u t a lto ­ge ther, b u t noted th a t in his le tte r to P rim e M in ister H aro ld M acm il­lan y esterd ay K hrqshchev ex­p re sse d hope th a t th e U.N. Aa- -sembly session w ould lead to a la te r big pow er sum m it confer­ence.

A u th o ritie s p lann ing Eisenho^w- er'B tr ip em phaalzed he would a p ­p ear only fo r a one-shot ipeech , then re tu rn to the W hite House, leaving DuUca to lisizd th* A m eri­can delegation . * ,

AlniulTownI .. *.Manchester WATE8 are re­

minded of the picnic oupper' tpia evening at aix o'clock at the honie of Mra. Emily Fracchia, 2*0 Spring St. They are also reminded of the invitation o$ P aat. PreoiLlent Mra. Barbara Thompeon fo tpend a part pf the coming weekend atf her hont*' op L«k« Road, Andover,

ifr . end Mrs, Walter G. Guatof- eoA of S4 Hahtltat It ., and Mra. Lil­lian Kennedy. Mr*, GuaUfunn'a eia- ter, kr* spending thla «*tk at Hampton B*9ch, N. H.

Hospital NotesP a tie n ts Today; 180

A D M ITTED Y ESTER D A Y :W11- linm Lewis, 149 A dam s St.: Mrs. Helen D arge, G laatonbury; M rs. Ida Johhs(3n. S im sbury: Jam es I’oriy, 211 H o llister S t.: Ma.xine Felber. 170 Green Rd.: Mrs, N ancy Sulli­van, 270 C h arte r Oak St.: Mrs. E lizabeth Phelan, Laurel M anor C onvalescent Home: Mrs. Dawn Johnston, 114 W oodbrldge St.: Mra. M ary Hogan. Lynwood Dr., Vernop: H a iry MHler, T errace Dr., Rockville; Mi'i. D oro thy PllawakI, W indsor Locks; Mra. Lucille Rlq- ard, 114 P a rk S t.; M ichael'F arria , 18 B ancro ft Rd., R ockville; K"red- erlck Gable, H a rtfo rd ; - Michael TiernBy, 282 Cooper Hill St.; Mrs. M arie Szetela, 34 Lewis S t ; Mrs. E toanor Rodanis. .39 C h a rte r Rd , R ockville; Desire M ercler, Colum­bia; Mrs. Ann Davis, South Coven­try ; Mrs. J a n e t A zinger, Andover; Mrs, M ary O verfelt, Rosewood Dr., Vernon: Susan Ann W allace, E aat H a rtfo rd : David Bell, E llington.

AD M ITTED TODAY: Miss J u ­d ith B oynton. 551 W oodbrldge St.; Mrs. P a t ty Tom aazewskI, Ando­ver; John Stiver, E ast W indsor. .

B IR T H S Y ESTERDAY : A ion to Mr. and Mrs. l.,awrence Sulli­van. 46 Phoenix St.. Vernon; a son to Mr. and Mrs. H a rry Tomaaek, R FD 1, Rockville; a d au g h te r to Mr. and Mrs. E dw ard Tyrol, Ando- ve.v

B IR TH S TODAY; A son to Mr. and Mra. R oger Adam s, K a st 'H a rt- ford; a son to Mr. and Mra. Karol Leeznar. 42 A rdm ore Rd.

DISCHARG ED YESTERDAY: In fan t d a u g h te r -o f Mr. and Mrs. H arold F itzgerald , Tankeroosan Hd... Rockville; Miss M ary Zenuik, Dobson Ave.. Vernon; George W are/ A hdover; Mrs. Josephine K racunas, 64 Turnbull Rd.; Lor- rell G rim m , E a s t H a rtfo rd ; Mrs. M ary Sabourin, S taffo rd Springs; Mrs, D orothy Petig . 94 Leriox St.: Mrs. Shirley Robinson and sop, 433 N. M ain S t.; Mrs, J a n e t Toper and d au gh ter. ‘72 S ih tin a D r.: Mra. Irm in e F ree th y and son, 34 Elm St., Rockville; Mrs. D qrolhy P ack - ofen and daugh ter, 8 C herry St., Rbckville. -------

Jordan Court Sets Gallows

For Plotters

Britain H ears Army Plot on Hussein N ear

(Continued from Page One)

Mr*. Annie P . McCulloughF u nera l services for Mrs. Annie

P ro c to r McTCuIlough (incorrectly lilted as Mra. Annie P roc to r In S a tu rd ay 's H erald ), of 2 8 ti N ew ­m an St.i. whp died F riday night, Were held y esterd ay a t 2 p.m. a t St. M ary 's Episcopal Church w ith the Rev. A lfred L W illiam s of­ficiating . Mrs. W. B. K loppenberg w as organ ist.

B urim waa in Ebist Cem etery.B earers w ere G eorge Proctor,

John Maxwell, David Robinson, Jam es McCullough. T hom ss R us­sell and Jolin McDowell.

Jpliil ClarguFunera l aerylces for John Cargo,

69 S ta rk w e a th e r St., who died S a t­urday, w ere held a t th e Holmes Funeral Home y esterday a t 3:30 p.m. w ith the Rev. C. E. W inslow of the Church of the Naz.arene of­ficiating , assisted by the Rev. C hester A ustin . ,D*>rlng the se rv ­ices Miss M arlon Jan es sang "God H a th Prom ised," accom panied by Mrs, B'rederic Wood, organist.

B urial w as tn E a s t Cem etery.B earers w ere John Allison, A l­

be rt P ia tt, A lbert Holm aim Jr., Tennyson M cFall, E dw ard Sw ain and VVlllls K ilpatrick .

_ Mrs. Helen B. Oo'Mlale"Funeral aervlcea for Mra. Helen

B elanger Goodale, 10 C a rte r St., who died Sunday, w ere held th is m oft'lng a t 11 a m. a t the T. P. HoHoran F u n era l Home with the Rev. A lfred U W illiam s of St. M ary 's E piscopal Church official- ing.

B earers w ere J. E dw ard Mc- I.«ughlln, H a rry B urdick. N orm an Holm es and Max Kaaulkl.

B urial waa In E ast C em etery.

Negro Rights At Issue in

2 Primaries

" I t would come as no surp rise If an o th e r e ffo rt Is made by arm y elem ents w orking w ith paid a g ita ­to rs and foreign agents.

"B p t We now have been receiving official w arn ings of an Im m inent up rising for 10 dnys and na tu ra lly a re beginning lo wonder Just how long is Imminent ”

A big problem w orry ing Ihe B ritish Is w h a t th e ir troopa In J o r ­dan would have to do If, in fact, p a r t o r all of H ussein’s famed A rab leg io n w ere lo rise up aga in st the young m onarch.

R igh t now ,' however, it is rlea r th a t B ritish troops a re serv ing V irtually as the k ing 's bodyguard.Hus.seln's su p p o rt in the A rab Le­gion comes prim arily from the Be­douin elem ents who have a trad i­tion of loyalty to their king. On i m em bers of the! M onday—sixth ann lveraarv of his ' 'a ccession—Bedouin sheiks paid a l­legiance to Hussein.

By T H E AHSOfXATEl) PKE.S.S N .g ro righ t* were a t issue to ­

day In p rim ary elections in New York and A rkansas. F a r th e r weal, in Idaho, a prim ary Jea tu red a candidate for governor who w an ts legaliz,ed gam bling.

The New York p rim ary was held In H arlem Itself. Rep. Adam C lay­ton Powell w as challenged for the Dem ocratic

The . partment installing wood P s y

ThiaT"* General Manager Rich­ard Martin's answer today to Jer-

er's claim that paved id installed sidewalks had

iUg up berjiuse the Water :wer Department was glow in water laterals.

artln sa id it is K elle r’s "h a rd Imik” if he a ttem pted "to finish toe .roads In his sulwlivigion before 'u tllilles .were in .”

K elte r claim s "rough" roads and “dropped" sidew alks pointed ou t In a recent investigation of B irch- wood, w ere caused large ly by the ■Water D epartm ent, He siid . town w orkm en couldn’t lay w a te ra L la t- era ls in pace w ith hia w ork sched­ule, so the road.s and sidew alks had to be com pleted w ith the under­stand ing they would be excavated later.

However, W ater and Sewer D e­p a rtm en t S uperin tendent Fred TYiraJl today had an o th er answ er for K elter.

Sabmitfod R«>port TodayIn a rep o rt subm itted today to

M arlin, T hrall denied th a t his de­p artm en t had to rn up finished s tre e ts o r walks.

He said "N o w a te r la te ra ls were Installed a f te r the s tre e t surfaces were oiled," and th a l "no Insta l­lations w ere m ade a f te r g ravel on the roads waa rolled. "

As for sidew alks, T hrall said "No sidew alk slabs were broken or tunneled u n d e r fo r w a ter se rv ­ices. Two slafoe were removed for a h y d ran t Installation and these were replaced fo r the W ater De­p art me.nt."

Ha said In four cases pipes were reported broken by heavy equip­m ent of co n lrac to ia a t the devel­opm ent.

T hrall concluded: "L ack of proper com paction of sub base be­fore application of g ravel and con­crete w alks could be a p a r t of the p resen t problem .”

Town E ngineer Jam es Sheckey ylted th is a s one possible caifse (if some of the B lrchwood P a rk flaw s he listed In the tn v es tig a tiv . re ­p o rt o rdered by M artin . He al»o cited "tren ch in g under sidew alks” and s tre e t excavations ap paren tly m ade for Insta lla tion of u tilitie s as possible causes.

He said 2,000 square feet of side­w alks had seltleci one inch below curb level. He recom m ended they be replaced and th a t roads b« " re ­paved" because, In some spotiw gravel and stones w ere flush w ith the surface.

However, M artin today term ed the ap p a re n t d isag reem en t between T hrall and K elte r aa "academ l^"

He sa id 11 is . sutodivlder’s re- •pon itb lllly to w ait un til utilities a re Installed before he finishes his s treets. No m a tte r who to re them up, M artin said, K elte r will re ­pave the roads and replace the sidewalk*.

Me«t TonightThe West H artfordite is develop­

ing Blrchwood under a $70,000 p e r­form ance bond, and haa aold about 40 hom es there.

Niles Dr, end F ran c is Dr. from the co rner of N iles to Keeney St w ere accepted by the town last spring a fte r a Town Highway De­partm en t Inspection.

M artin hag suggested the TPC add a provision to the revised sub­division regulations that would m ake a developer com plete work on a s tree t and install u tilities be­fore the town g ran ts them certifi­ca tes of occupancy.

Tile T PC will m eet with toe Board of D irectors tonight to d is­cuss the regulations.

Torch Kin Hunteftnom ination for hisHouse se a t by ano th er Negro, C ity VI A l o g t i r n l A i f ICouncilm an F-arl Brown. A s e e t l S i U e t l l C U t / s i l t

The content Is only one of 52 [

IRAQ NEWHCAFER ('MINEDBaghdail, .Aug. 12 (4h— Iraq 's

revo lu tionary governm ent haa rloeed down the Inlliientlal new spaper Al A khhar (The N ew t) on ground tJiat It wa* am ong “co rru p t fo llim era” of th e slain P rem ier N urt Nald’s governm en t.

prim aries for Congressional and S ta te L eglalalure nom inations in New York S ta te . B ut polUiclans regard It as a possible gauge of I.’egro political sen tim ent In the nation.

It Is the a ttitu d e tow ards thit race question by the tw o candi­da tes th s t m akes the Issue con­siderably more than purely local.

Powell has gone all out, He h a . called Brown a "hand-picked Un- cL Tom ” a Negro phra.ae for

race considered

(C ontinued (ron Page One)

nephew 's death- and a f te r m aking a vow of vengeance for w hat h ap ­pened to his relative.

A t th a t lim e the only ex p lana­tion fo r the younger. K leM orf's bum s w as his a lm ost incoherent m um bling o t a s to ry th a t he had been se t upon and burned deliber­a te ly by two men."'"However, police la te r said they believed th is a false s to ry an d that k ie rd o rf was burned acci-

subservient to whiles. dentally a t the cleaning shop fire.F o r his part. Brown . has ac-. In the jneanU ine. H erm an Kier-

caused Powell of rabble ro u sin g .' dorf waa released from custody racism and "treaso n to the Dem o-. and disappeared, r ra t lc p a rty .” At a news conference In Lansing

Most observers th ink Powell will yesterday A dam s re ite ra ted beliefwin. He a lread y has th e R epubli­can nom ination. W hat politicians will be s tudy ing will b e . the v ic­to ry m argin. In A rkansas, where Gov. Orval Faubua won an over­w helm ing prim ary v icto ry Ju ly ' 29.' Ihe race Issue has been raised In con tests fo r nom inatioas of .State Suprem e C ourt Jusliee*.

th a t Thotnpison had a connection w ith the d ry cleaners fire.

The a tto rn ey general also dis­closed he and S ta te Police Com- ml,ssloncr Joseph A. C2iikLs' had discussed the possibility of asking a 1-man grand ju ry Invc.stigallon of the ca.se. He em phasized, how-

t ever, th ere has been no decision.

Amman. Aug. 12 (A6-^A Jof-p danian military court today aen- ' tenced 12 Jordanlona arid one' Syrian to i eath for aniuggl(ng i ,arms into Jordan from Syria as th* prelude .to an attempt to over­throw King Huaeelq.

They fee* hanging unleia the ' Council of Mlnietera or the ..king committee their '•entencee.'),

.The 13'were among 3T put on trial Aug. 3 oh chfugea they tried, to etir up. firmed rebcillon in-Jor­dan with aid fnun Syria, a prov­ince of Preeident ' Neoaer’* UnUed Ahab ItepubUe. « ' - '

I

S uper fo r t ip p in g

D n iR V QUEENS O D A SA real thirst quencher, Dairy Qu^n sodas get the vote for super sipping! These frUit-flavored favor­ites are made with delicious Dairy Queen that’s better tasting, better for you. Less fattening, too.

Come in fo r a tfo a t TO D A Y I

” •9M* le iy ——w wAffKei e»-

n n i R V Q U E E NDAIRY QUE5N N O . T DA IR Y QUEEN N O . 2

OWNED aad OFEKATBD BY ALLAN OOE OWNED and o rE HATED QT AL KUPlKT U E N PO uB WESTS9* HAETrOED BOAD S*T m i d d l e

..1 t ;

Page 5: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

■’ , ' 1 ■

X

PAGE EIGHT MANCHESTER I^ENING HERALt), MANCHESTER, CONN„ TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1968

LITTI.E SPORT Ky ROIJSONC**- « •••' rw w*>M «•»« M . m-M c

1r

aU*.

a lle y OOPALLEY? NO, I Ha/EKTT SEEN HIM FORTW:?, THREE DAYS

eV V, T. HAMLINH^V f 1 THOUGHT SURE, ?f RIGHT AFTERHE'P A BEEN HERE / I TOLD TM 'lOULONG AGO. TH'WAY f N ;WA6 F1XIN'TOHE TOOK OFF FROM I L iGET VOUR5ELF

PLACE / A HUSBAND,'

JWHY. SUREf AFTBJ TH' TAU!I TH' WAS

I

« A

1...I SWEAR 1 PONT KNOW WHETHER / »

• M,

PRISCILLA’S POP BY AL VERMEERP^JUST 7 ME TWO OF UG

MAKE

o

M ^0^ * 0119 ,tTi Hi, ut ,,t V to im li hrmi, »iti

LONG SAM BY Al- CAPP and BOB LUBBERS»/U AO C,»«un&-l fV!5ecrT>»«ofr

SENSATIONALNEV<5 FORVOCirr

>(ATACoiNc:ipcfWJ

]\‘v e ix n m n & J M 6 NFWifoeyoorr ,

iw M*n< vPtfumuri rvt t* rn POOL, Lfi^rii, LEHMS ■i«j(?A<oNey fWNP»WLN(M,,-0

ID MARRY )t>0 ANPYTIR

F o t t r u n e -ANP LlVfe

HAPPILY eVER APTEK IN LUXURYrr

WHAitS T O U R FKC'rUM f »Y0If/ALL Aflcxr ir 1fcl U>l(5 LYMA ANP !inev - TRY C FK3J*!?

Vyglfp IP HPg AT . n y 'L wv

JUDD SAXON MY KI:N HAM) and JUIIHY BKONDUKM)

STAY OUT Of Mf (?P M R. SAXON ' IT :>

QUICK5ANP/ ,

C^RAB HOLP, PflUL.\ HgLP.ME ANP WE LL HAVE ) P'«?5T

VOU O UT IN A SAXON 'M 'N U T E .... '/ IM5IN<IN'

BUZ SAWYER BY ROY CRANE

AND WHAT AREMOU D0IN4 IN ATUENS.BOVtHA!

I'M ON MY .HONEYMOON.

BUT W H E R tt

YOURHUSBAND? j

WELl.ER, YOU SEE, THE COUNT HAD A BUSINESS DEAL C0OKINa,*ANO...AW,HECK! it MAY AS WELL TEUYOU THE t r u t h . 1 MADE THE MISTAKE OF GIVING HIM A COUPLE OF OIL WELLS/ AND THE SKUNK RAN OFFw it h a chorus

HOWA w f u l !AND ON

YOUR H O N IV -m o o n ;

OH,W ELL, I'VE HAD HONEYMOONS BEFORE, DEARIE.

THIS l5 MY F I F T H . IT'S KINPA LONESOME,

TWO... SHiFF...BEIN' ON ONE BY YOURSELF. SURE SLAD I RAH INTO YOU FOLKS.

MICKKY riNN BY LANK LEONARDYOU KNOW WHO FINN B,DON'T YOU? HE'S

THE MAN WHO CAUGHT THOSE BANK ROBBERS

SINGLEHANDfO;

REALLY? THEN HE CERTAINLY HI WHAT A 6000 GOLFER NEEDS -NERVES or

STEEL?■\r '

MR. ABERNATHY BY1 HATE 70

DISAPPOINT THEM. WHAT AM I

GOING TO DO.’

BAI.S’ION JONLS and KBANK BIIHJLWAYr I'LL S E E VOUR. TWO CHIPS AND RAISE YOU FIVE MORE,

UUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HUOPLE

ANOTHeR WIRE FPDM HiM? HMPH I WONDEP WHAT TALE OP WOE HE HAE •tHiS T iME/-«.H6A'VEM6/- ?AWMBV, RESTORED ASmiraculou LV as it wasL0ST-*-ALS0 'C0LLECTED.lavish reward for APPREHENDlMG VlOdtJS-1 CRIMIMAL-y-AM 0RINS-:INS YDU MANDSO/WEpr e s e e a t/ lo ve

AMOS,'

>hhv, t h a t o l d BARI^IOWL/ HE ACTUALLV^ SEMT A WIRE \

. ASKIMS FOR A\m E y L AND HE'6 BRlNtflNS AAEl

« PRESEMT/-».L'&AND6e . '

JHERE^ I FIRST TIME

EVERV-THIN6 -

CARNIVAL BY DICK TURNER

.1

•«

/ 1 M » k Pwi fm^ m t »T MA tM*. p -ll

Sense arid Nonsense' Epttajrii

When it happen'd la not knownTherefore not mentioned on thiy

atone.

Bill— So ahe Is to marry that younB Parker. He has been jilted by half * dozen girls.

Jim—Caae of being well shaken before taken, I suppose.

Blessings be about you, dear, wherever you may go.

Three fourths of the earth's sur­

face Is water and. one fourth', t i land. It's clear the good Lord In­tended a man should spend three times as much time fishing as he does plowing.

After-dlnner^speaking Is the aH of saying nothing br' \ y.

One male wedding guest to an­other as they watch bride - sind- groom leave church:

Male — There, but for soma.' fast thinking on a moonlit lake, last July, go I.

Daily Crossword F uzzlewar to

Explorer.*Answer to Previous Ptinl*

"Bruah h it teeth every time he eats? That’s silly! He’d wear out hie teeth!”

B. C

ACROSS1 English

navigator,-----Hudson

8 He exploredth e-----which bears his name

11 Redacted13 He underwent

\ privations14 Value highly15 Reluctant .18 New Guinea

port17 Female ruff18 Roman brohie 20 Painta22 West Indian

sturgeonflsh 35 Doctor at

HolyScripture(ab.)

28 He made hla third voyage in theH a ll---- -

30 Danger warning

32 Menial faculties

33 Reeided34 Agreements ,35 Summers

<Fr.)38 Health resort39 Pause40 -------------of

Juvenal43 City In The

Netherlands 48 Coat part 47 Steal SO Leaser52 He wa» a ----

of England54 Withdraw55 Anointed 58 Expended

87 Forest creatures

DOWN1 Fool part2 Feminine' name3 Phea.eant

brood4 Route (ab.)5 LongB Carouse7 SuffixI Feminine

appellationS Gaelic

10 Scottish sheepfolds

12 Fear13 Reieues

il

m s22 story 41 Nimble23 Dismounted 42 African24 Church part antelope27 One time 43 Makes28 Hops' kilns mistakes 26 Bird's home 44 Profound31 Medical 45 Grafted (hST.)

director (eb.) 47 Irritate32 Spanish (ab.) 48 Above 38 Fixed look 48 Couches

18 German river 37 Apple seed SI Important30 Exit 38 Sphere of metal31 Smudges action S3 Golf moond

1 1 1 r - r - 1 1 1 1il II ik

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if

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jn

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m1)

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AHHH---THE SKPEF IS TO lie down on the LOS.'

J ' ' '

HMM,THERE GOES A LOG WITH ARMS AND

LEGS!

>

BY JOHNNY HART

THERE GOESitOG WITH ARMSAND '

C I«tl Me. VsYt He.eU T./B«es

BUG'S BUNNY

'TMAYBE th a t SIGN WILL

BRINS ME rtvi A FEW CUSTOMERS I

"o~^

b e a n e r y

NOW T Q fT INTA MY NEW

.UNIFORM I

THERE'S A I CUSTOMER i AN' TM AlL

SET

BUofav &Oi^/i

FF 6 5 ?

GREETIN 'S, ELMER!

W HAT'LL^ ______ VAkitchinI have T

MUBTY MKKKLIi; BY DICK CAVALLI

.... . ■ fr r r!MB|F4-ll-3-g-l4- I Ihe lo-oo-Ofo o - ,

t ( ©

C.....('Ari'AIN KASY

TMB HOUSB 15 DAUC. HOW CAN M3U FIND OUT IF THAT SUTLEK HM$ •AOLV WOUNPiP.

EASY?

• • -V-v

- V v

., V

WiANV , WOULPNTK:' W V fO F IW n it

UD JOBS PUT MM N l WAIT HERB/

HtJLLVi

t He S'I'ory oe Martha w .a y n i:

BY LESLIE TURNERWM)t..TMB BED IS OCCUPlia •

MANCHESTER EVENING^IJ^RAU). IUNCHESTER. CONNe TUESDAY, ApGUST 12, 1958

S’*-.

PAGE NTOE

'L ' l

BY WII.SON SCRUGGS JEEE COBB BY PE1E HOKEMAN

Hears Old, Newlests at

• ^ e Town PUrtning Commissionf would also have to Install a pump­ing, station. Tlvla would run intoheld a public hearing. on three

ptopoials and briefly considered the latest development' regarding “the Darling Farm Tract oft Keeney Rd. during a meeting last flight in the Municipal Building. ' I n additibn, the members of the CdRihtisslon spent almost an hour going "round and round” with Sfonldy Bray, local realtor. In an attempt to rekch g solutlbn on.the >ewering o f the proposed Kenwood subdivision oh Union. St.

Another proposed subdivision on the 45-acre Chapman farm tract

,l)On W., Middle Tpke. was also dis- . cussed as well as several .other meters which the TPC hhs been considering.

No opposition was expressed during the. public hearing to pro­posals .made on the propaed Glen­dale subdivision off Bush Hill Rd., a building line change on Oak St. and the building of a road off Mitchell P o The T P S made no de- CislonsMast night. ,

A tty. Philip Bayer, representing Manchester Building 'and Realty Co., presented the plans for the 18-lot Bush H|U Rd; subdivision and answered the questfons put to him by-members of the Com­mission. .

Two Siiggestiohs The developing company has

been' working on the Subdivision plans for' se(veral months,' how­ever, 'afld during that time has checked With the TPC several times for suggestions in order to make the. project acceptable.'

Because of this, the^questle^- Ing was. brief and only tWq fur­ther suggestions were made .by the Commission. One was that two catrii basins be installed and the other was that bituminous rather than concrete gutters be Installed with the concrete curb­ing.

This subdivision is located on the north side of Bush Hill Rd. about 1,300 feet west o f Keeney St. In a Rural Zone. Plans call for It to

■ have two streets, Glendale Rd. and Hartford Rd., and each of the lots In the subdivision would have ap- projtimately a 150-foot frontage.

Alsb considered was a request from Samuel Felice, owner o f a grocery Store at 234 Oak St., who applied for either removal of the old established building line or alteration of tbe buUdlng line to coincide with the zoning line on the south side o f the street. t

Bayer, who also represented Fe­lice, explained that his client wished the change made in order to modernize ahd extend the front of the store in order to obtain addi­tional space.

A survey conducted in the vicin­ity had failed to reveal anyonS who was opposed to the plan, the at­torney said.• Earl 8. Rohan, a real estate and

Insurance man called by Bayer for an opinion, said he felt the pro­posed alterations and addition would give a much more attractive building.

The third proposal dUcusserl was submitted oy Grover Mitchell, owner of the property '.n the Mitchell Dr. area, who wishes to build a 625-foot long. 60-foot wide street o ft Mitchell Dr.

Would Build Road Mitchell explained that he wish­

ed to build the road to gain acce.ss to lots on the property. One of these lots has already been sold, he said. ■ /j

Most of the TPC questions re­garding the proposed-projeci cen­tered around a tnrnaroumj on the road and also grading, paving and water run off.

A fte r the public hearing. Bray and the Commission spent the next 45 minutes or so in a spirited dis­cussion on the sewering of the re­altor's proposed 13-lot subdivision, Kenwood Park, o ff Union St.

Permission to develop the area Is being sought , by Bray, whose re­quest to change the zoning there from Rural Residence Zone to Residence B Zone; was granted s few months ago by the TPC.

Action on Bray's request for permission to subdivide the land has been held up, however, "dhe tb a disagreement over sewering the proposed project. -

Bray's plans call for each home In the subdivision to have a septic tank while the Commission feels that "every e ffort" should be maffe to run s sewer line. along Union St. to the Eighth District sewer system on Kerry St.

Little had been settled after the question was once again batted back and forth between Bray and the Commission, laist night.

The 'TPC continued to voice its opinion thsL if at all possible, the ■ewer line should be Installed, pray agreed that installation o f' such 8 line would be a good thing and tol4 the Commission he would g ^ d ly pay his share of an assess­ment for ,th« InaUllstion of such aline, /,";<■

PiropMal Opposed However, he said, f^ w . of the.

residents living ort-Untoh St.' seen)- ed in favor o f the Idea !b(wausa of the exj)et)se- .This was shown at «. public hearing,about two- yesra ago when the jnroposal waa mBde by the Eighth District, he said. ,

As the result Qf i t s first diacua- lion with Bray, t lt l ’ TPC had asked the District to i^eatigiate the cost of Installing, a sewer line fflom the Kerry 8t. location along Union St. to Tolland !Pgl(<L ■

A rough''•sKm ite o f Afte,,.cost ‘ o f the job V d » shown; lairt night.

It would b e . approximately $41,- 000 to Install the line and would cost Brsiy about $11,000 to tie into the system. Because of the grade

additional thousands, he said.The commission. hoWever, con­

tinued i o maintain Its stand that the etiUre area is growing and they want to plan for this ftiture de­velopment "now."

MarUn Alvord. TPC chali/ian, pointed out that millions have been spent, on new Schools In the town, which he favored. However, he said, the necessary development o f sew­er lines in the town has been neglected.

"W e must make a sincere e f­fort to see that these lines go In,” he said. "W e must plan for the future.”

Suitable for Tanks When he made his jpropoasl to

install septic tanks, Bray had sub­mitted a report showing the ground in the proposed subdivi­sion was suitable for such tanks.

The (Commission felt that the tanks might be a source of trouble in the future' because of the num­ber of houses Bray planned to build in the area. <„

Last night Bray offered to re­move a lot or two from the plan to Increase the size of the other Iota in the property,

A TPC Suggesion that he have only eiglith lots in the subdivision, he said "be couldn't go along with:' because It wouldn't be practical financially for him to do so.

Although nothing definite was settled last niglit. It was agreed that pray and th? TPC would meet again for further discussion.

In further action, the Commis­sion decided to withhold discussion pn a request from Frank VJood re­garding his proposed subdivision

o f 'th s D a r lin g 'F u m H a c t o ff Keeney Rd. until Wood justified, in W TlU ng, hla reasons why another hesrli^ ,be held on ihc matter.

Wood was turned down by -tlje Commission on his request to have the entire area rero?ted from Rural Residence to'Resldence A ?one for subdivision purposes s few monins ago, H'e now wishpd to present a revised plan for T P C conslderg- tion; ■ ;

Wood's plan calls for resoning all biit 10 acres ai the tract as Residence A', l^ e smaller portitm of the lend he wishes td have nneu as A A i '^ e TPC wishes to have UtU-'plany‘spelled put", by Wood to se i I f the change will justify another/hearing.' Regula­tions specify that a q^rtain time must elapse hfi|fore such requests can again be considered by the Conutiissloit. A request for the hearing wall made recently in a letter to the Commission.

State to Use LandA contemplated subdivUion on

the Chapman tract apparently will not materialise, it was revealed at the meeting last night. I t was reported tha- the State .had Indi­cated iL 'w ill use the lsn4 'for the new Rt. fl project.

Louis ' Lsvitt, Rockville real estate' agent, had approached the Commission regarding the pos­sibility o f putting In a subdivision or. the propierty. 'The Commi-sslon in turn asked Lavitt's attorney tc check the State tor its plans regarding the highway. The an­swer informing ■ the Commission of the State's highway plans was received a short time ago.

In other action, -the Planning Commission gave its approval to s proposal that the town accept title to property oh Nelson PI. which is owned by Mrs. Bridget Merz.

General Manager Richard Mar­tin had asked the Commission to investigate -Mrs. Merz' offer to turn over the property before tak­ing further action. I f the property is accepted it win lead to the irh- provement of the narrow street.

SchoolPlanFormality

TheDoctor Says

Officials Talk On CB Area

school cannot be determined yet. FirsL the school'a size ,1s only a r o u ^ estimate of 1.000 pupils.

Second, It Is as much for the use o f East Hartford and other towns as it is for. Manchester.

The 'Cathbjics themselves have no idea o f how many Manchester youngsters In the • Junior lijgh school- age bracket w ill be attbhd- ing the school. A poll will be taken In September by the diocese to da­te m in e how many .youngsters, are eligible. Until this poll' i ^ token, no one can say what effect the school will have, said Stlnchflcld.

The Howell Cheqey School will not' be erected until 1981 at the earliest. Manchester's p u b 11 c schools w'ill be on double sessidns In September 1959. _

Gryk abstained from giving sp- provalj Building Committee mem­bers who gave Informal approval werw Goslee, Qarence Wettaerell, Edmund Cox, and Gllmoure <3oIe. Formal approval will be ^Ven at the next regular committee meet* Ing.

Directors 'Johnson, G i l b e r t Barnes. Francis Mahoney 'and Ted Cummings Informed the mayor they would give Informal approval at tonight's meeting of the Direc­tors.

Manager. Martin assured boqrd members he would commission Frid in the next day or so to draw preliminary plana; outline epecifl- cations. and cost estimates. The next plans may take a month or more to draw and must have the formal approval of all three boards.

Ruth Mil left

iicans Can Win In Fall, Says Rottner

Atty. John S. G. Rottner, Re-#; publican candidate for State Sena­tor, asserted la.st night that 1958 can be a victorious, year for Re­publicans if they shun the "ex­treme of pessimism.”

In a keynote add.ess at the East Hartford Republican town commit­tee nominating conventjon, RoU- ner dismissed reports of portents of a Democratic victory in the fall as “ Democratic propaganda." The Republicans have the candidates and the issues to win, he declared.

Making his first political appear­ance since winning the party's Fourth Di.strict Senatorial nomina­tion, the Manchester attorney also lashed out at Democratic Governor Rlblcoff as a man who has acquired ‘a lot of good publicity but only A hollow record" of accomplish­ment in his first four years in o f­fice.

In urging his listeners to resist the gloon> that he said is pervad­ing the paj-t.v. Rottner said pes­simism was'the only factor that can defeat- them in the coming elections "The'cn ix .o f the election will be to gel Republican vfters to the polls," h e^c la red , "But if they are defeatists about the elec­tion, they won't bother voting."

Hits TollsRottner underlined his charge

that the governor's reputation has been ballooned out of proportion to the facts by favorable pre.ss 'pub­licity with 'two specific criticisms of Ribicoff policies. These involved the Connecticut River toll bridges and the special session of the I.egia- lature called by the governor to deal with the recession.

Rottner said the decision which pernnitted the creation of a network of five toll bridges was "hasty and Hi considered." and one that has led to "barriers to free lnterchang4F tk traffic."

He wag particularly the inclusion by the Great; ford Bridge Authority ley Bridge formerly a, free bridge — In the network of toll bridges.

I f the project .hpd ^ en tied In with the federal road building pro­gram, as it could have been; Rott­ner said, "the federal government would have financed 90 per cent of the cost and the bridges would have been toll free.". He conceded this w o u .1 d

have required a delay In the con­struction of the three new bridgek. But bv doing ic the way it .was done, Rottner said, "these bridges won’t be paid for until our grand­children haVe grandchildren."

In speaking of the special session. Rottner said It was. balled by the governor Ih Sn attempt "to make political hay." Rottner said the $40(> million road building and pub­lic works program recommehded by Ribicoff would have saddled t^e State with debt and hurt Its credit rating., Issaea Faded

"It Is to the jyerlsstlng credit of the Republlcan-icoHl rolled ial«tt)rc.i;bJtt It refused to be staim

;peded into going along with this Rottner declared.' '

ReyieiWing the reasons for ileving the Republiesn parly can w*j. this year, on the nstUxnaV lev­el. ss 'w ell as the State and local,! Rottner said the issues theDemo-'j crats' had hoped to exploit "have i blqvVn up in their facesT*’ ' '

’Theae lesues‘included "Sputnik" and the recesOion, he said. The United Statea had made "greAt progress" in .the field of sqlence since Sputnik I, while the nation’s economy' is not ’ . snapping out of the recession and should be in "excellent” condition by fall, he

ly crltlcAl ■ of O rea t^ Hart- of the Bulke-

As for the Sherman Adams-. Be,rnard Gojdflne cage, Rottner said he endorsee National Chalr- ntsn Meqde Alcorn's view that "he would welcome moranty.^a8 an is­sue" In the campaign."RAgardlegs of whether Adams was right' or wrong,” Rottner ssjd, "it was an isolated incident” while the Demo­crats’ scandals were "reported In the press every day when, they were In offleq."

‘ ‘Man o f the People'He also said the State Repubti-

esns have a ticket composed of candidates who deserve the confi­dence and the support of the peo­ple. He said State Comptroller Fred Zeller, GOiP candidate for governor, "may not make as good a Speech or take as good a picture as Ribicoff but he Is a man of the people . . . and a devoted public servant.”

He also mentioned Sen, William Ehirtell and Congressman Edwin H. May Jr. of Wethersfield as men who have proven their ability. ■Purtell is being opposed by former Congressman Thomas Dodd and May by A lly , Emilio Q. Daddario, o.' Hartford.

Driver Hits Pole To Avoid Crash

William Heffrqn. >21, of South Coventry, suffereil a bruised fore­head and hip late ...Oiis-. morning when his car collided witli a utlK Ify pole Oh New Bolton Rd.

He \yas arrested and charged \Vilh\re(’kles8 driving.

Pdlloe said Heffron, driving west, attempted to pass several cars. As Ke pulled out, A car ahead of him In the line o f traffic also started to pult out. H e ffron . swerved to avoid the collision, an eye-witness said, and his car hit the pole head- on.

Patrolman P r i m e Amadeo brought Heffron to Manchester Memorial Hospital where he wag treated for his injuries and rS- leased. Traffic on the 2-lane road was held up for several minutes while wreckers remotod' the car from the' center o f th f road. The car spun o ff the pole after the col­lision. S 'witness said..

Patrolman Jarnes McCooe In­vestigated.

EN01>AND BUYS SWEDISH .BUTTER

Stockholm — Swedeqls butter- surplus this year is estimated at 30,000 tons. England Is virtually Sweden's o'nly remaining foreign customer.

Iti a Ourry o f formal and lnforF*wiIl attend the Catholic high mal votes last night and this • •morning, the way was finally opened fos‘'Oeneral Manager Rich­ard Martin to commiasion - the preparation' of preliminary plans and outline speciftcatlona for the propoAOd North Epd high' school.

The Board of Education .JJ^is .morning formally approved the fourth set of plans for an 82,263- square-foot building.

'Voting in favor were Board Chairman ChtisUe McCormick and members Mrs. E. Mae Holden.Qebrge Cheney, Edward Glenney.Frank Sheldon and Robert Smith.

Abstaining' from voting was member .William E. Buckley.

Last night the Building Com­m ittee-.ga^ an informal approval of the plana. A forfnsl.vote could not be taken since only five o f the 11 committee members were pres-' ent.

The Importance o f the Building Committee’s action was tolstered by the'assurance of Mayor Harold A'. Turklngton, ./who was present with four other Directors, that hl.s board wotiM give informal approval to the plans at tonight’s meeting, and would give formal approval at next week’s- meeting.

I f the Board of Education meet' ing this morning was a perfunctory one, the Building Committee, meet­ing last night was not.

‘M ystery’ Cleared'Before the meeting was over,

members of the three boards had discussed)

1. The "m ys te ry ” of the 6,000 square feet eliminated by archi­tect Victor Frid from the 88,000- square-foot plans.

2. The necesaily of building the school in the first place.

3. Elimination of tuition stu­dents from the schools.

Christie McCormick explained to the Building Committee that the Board of Education had cleared up the confusion regard­ing 6,000 square feet cut from the 88,000-square-foot plane. A t a meeting Thursday board members had declared it was a "m ystery ” that the plans could be cut with­out harming tbe educational pro­gram, in fact Improving it.

“ I ’Ve gone over them space by space and inch by inch," said Mc­Cormick. "1 think this last 'set of plans was the best he’s submitted."

" I ’m satisfied myself," said Ray­mond W. Goslee, clialrman of the Building Committee, "that Frid a figures are substantially correct. In fact, I came out in the one area with 200 feet more than he did."

Goslee then asked if other board members had questions.

Director Roy Johnson asked the Board of Education members if they Wei'e satisfied with the plans from an educational point. He was assured they were. Then h* a.sked,Raymond D. BUnchfield, acting superintendent of schools, whether the administration .was satisfied with the plans.

Again t.hs tmswer was affirm a­tive.

Questions NeedGoslee bSgan to poll the Build­

ing Committee members, starting with Judge Wesley Gryk.

Gryk threw the meeting into a temporary turmoil when he asked Whether, In view of the Catholic high school which will be built in Manchester and the new Howell Cheney Technical school, the jun­ior high school would be neces­sary.

"W hy put in $1.7 million with­out getting the answers first?" he asked. "How ran they ( town of­ficials! .sell this job to the public if they fan ’t answer the questions I just asked." he continued.

Veering off on another track he demanded to know why the town of Manchester permits tuition Students to attend the schools when the schools are crowded.

"1 think it ’s about time ,we said to theae tuition students we have here it's about time they provided their own ph.vsicsl plant."

He wa.s told that the schools have room now for tuition stu­dents, By 1960 there will not ,be room. ■ •

Other board members agreed that eliminstion of tuition slu- I dents will provide more space and | should be done when it becomes | nece.ssary,' j

'‘Sure o f Necsl 'MayoK, 'Turklngton and StlncH- ;

field ansWisred Gryk on the ques- ; tion of the effect of the two new | schools.on the junior high school.

"I'm sure we’re going to need j the school," said the ma.vor. He | said he based his idea on estimates of pupil population and predic­tions of Manchester's growth. •

Stinchfield said that .the .hum- bar. o f Manchester youngsters who

Consider Yourself LuckyI f You Meet One of These

When you come In contact with one of these you cSrtsinly appre­ciate your good fortune:

A repairman who answers yo\ir trouble call promptly, works fast, knows what he is doing, and doesn't depress you with a lot of pessimistic chatier about all the troubles you can expect in the fu­ture.

A saleswoman wlio leally list­ens when .you tell her exsctlv the type of dress you are looking for snd the price you have set as vour limit. ■ .

A butcher who doesn't look pained when you a.sk him to cut you a piece of meat, A lot of butchers these days art aa though a customer is unreasonable if she can't find a ready-out piece in the display box that suits her needs.

A telephone voice that sounds interested In your problem and in helping .you when you need in­formation or have trouble to re­port.

A salesperson who Is willing to really look for the item .you want to buy Instead of brushing you Off with a vague, " I haven't seen any­thing like that around lately."

A cashier who looks at yoii, and give j VOU a amlle and a pleasant "Thank ,vou” when she take.s yoqr money. Somehow you part with your money more happily when it is taken from you by someone who treats ,vou courteously.

A room clerk who doesn't act high hat or obvioiialv.-pleaaed when he ran tell you that he hasn't a vacant room. J l ’a a blow and it helps to have the clerk appear to be sorry, rather than plea.sed, at your predicament.

A recept'lonlat who will tell yqii exactly how long you will have to wait to see the per.son you have asked to see, instead of letting you cool your heels-for' an hour during which you could have done three errands. ’

(A ll rights reserved, N E A Sen-- Ice, Inc. I . ,

The Port of Ne^kYork Author­ity was created in 1921 by New York and New Jersey.'■'It oper­ates 17 port facilities, iiwiudlng tunnels, bridges, airports, dm'kti, trOck terminals and a bus termini - ■I.

Hay Soever Season Needn’ t Be Dreaded as I t Onoe Was

By EDW IN P. JORDAN, M.D..Written fob N E A Service

Millions o f pcfi'^e suffer from some kind o f a llergy.. Simply de­fined, allergy may 'be called an increased or al^normal sensitivity to some subOlance which is for- elCT to the human body.

Tke . offender may be Inhaled In the form of pollen from the air, taken Into tlie body as food or medicine. Or it may be a con* tact agent, such as weeds, danJ druff or lacquer.

A normal person does not re­act to the foreign substance. The allergic person may , show/any one of several unpleasant re­sponses.

Toda.v I shall diacuSs the most common form o f allergy, which Is known as ba.v fever. ActuslI)'.It docs not' produce fever an< rarely comes from hay.

The, moat seriotui form o f hay fevef Is usually that which comes In the late summer or early fall snd is the result of t i l l e i^ to the pollen of the common ragweed.

There are other klhds of hay fever which generally come at different times of the yeaA .and tesult from tree, grass, flower of other pollens.

Probably still the best pro­cedure for a person with seYere hay fever Is to And out o.v akin testing which pollen is responsi­ble and to receive lnjectl'>ns of diluted extracts o f these pollens far' rn 'adv'ahce o f the "season." Tliis Is railed desenSlUzation. and often brings full or partial relief.

When a person Is susceptible to seiYrc ragweed hay' fever"' and has not taken the sliots, or does not get svifficlent relief from them, the season is looked forward to aa a tinif of -misery. Many seek some area whore ragweed is ab­sent, or present only in small quahlitles. In North America tiiere are many such regions.

However, for those people who have to sla.v p\it in an area where rag^veed pollefi Is plentiful, there are improved measures of relief. One of these is Mr conditioning, partlcularl.v if cooling IS combined with washing or filtering the air.

Modern drugs are helpfvil. Those which have Ihc most dramatic e f­fects are the antihistamines. These are taken by, mouth. They often bring striking Improvement of s.vmptoms for lieveral hours at a lime. ;

But it is hard to choose which' one to use since tliere are so many. Some work best for some people, wliile other persons do better w illi a different prepaVa- I tion. Furthermore, anme people arc made alcepy by Uiess drugs, and this can be dangeroua.

Many sufferers are conslder- ably^helped by taking weak doses of pollen extract every day or so during the season, even if they have not had injections before. By one means or another, II Is possible for most victims Of rag­weed hay fever today to get a good deal of relief.

TopBPO EO Hicer To .Visit B r is to l

(toneral. Manager Richard Mar­tin’s plan to redevelop Cheney Bros. IndustriaLl property vrae dis- cuued todi^ i t a nyeeUng o f the manager, 'Town Planning Engi­neer Edward By boxy k; Letmard Sdader, chairman o f the Town De­velopment Commission; and Jo­seph L. Savtck, vice president o f Economic Development Aseocl- ates, a Boston consulUilg firm hired by the TDC to aid in at­tracting industry to Manchester.

The quartet talked over. Mar:/ tin's hopes of redeveloping a '60- scre industrial coinplex in the Hartford Rd.-Pine St. .^ea> Mar­Un said today he met with the planning offiriala to get their ideas on the p ro jn t before it gets underway.

A public hearing will be hel,d Aug. 19 on a n .. Ordinance that would create a local agency to Apply for state aid for the proj­ect.

Gives Opinion.........The agency may have one' mem­

ber from the Town Planning Com­mission and one from the Town De­velopment Commission according to Town Counsel Charles N. Crockett, who was asked by Mar­tin for a legal opinion as to the membership o f the 6-msn agency. It must be crested by ordinance, and would get Stats assistance in refurbishing the 60-acre Industrial complex In the Pine St,— Hartford Rd. area.

Officials fe lt the • agency would maintain closer contact with other town planning groups If. the latter supplied members. 'The Stale spec­ified that the TPC, as a group, could not be appointed s i a re­development sgehey.

The five members would be ap­pointed'by Martin to 5-year terms, with sach appointment eubject to approval by the Board of Directors.

The State Development Commis­sion has $5 million to assist towns in redeveloping commercial and In­dustrial areas not being put to full use.

Th e Bristol Lodge o f Elks will serve SB host for the offlclal Con- n e c H ^ visit, on Sept. 22, by Hor- sce C .,^ !s e ly of Salinas, Callf„ Elkdom’s grand exalted ruler. A dinner In nis honor, followed by dancing, will highlight the visit.

W isely last week appointed State Police LL James M. Reardon o f .'75 Benton St., . district^ deputy foe UonnecUeut EasL Reardon, along sylth Dr. George A . C^ouette of 119 Center St., ^Oonnectiept Efiks Aesn. president, snd Arthurd. Roy of WilltmenUc, grand este«nne<H^ loyal knight, will leave Friday for an Elks conference at Bedford, Va, They w ill attend a meeting of east- * ern district .deputtes, snd state presidents called by iVisely and to be held at the Elks National Home.

Diying clothes it easy today...

RENEW ING A ROMANCEMount View, Wyo. UP)—rSeveiQy

five years ago Rob Hamilton met Nora Moss when he stayed at her grandmother's house here. Now they’re honeymooning. Hamilton, 89, snd Mrs. Nora Moss Law. 79, of Carmel, C?allf., had a June mar­riage. The bride moyed to Califor­nia in 1891, but returned to Moun­tain View early in June to write an historical feature, She met Hamilton again snd a whirlwind courtship ended in marriage.

0%z

LUMBER PK O D IT T IO N DROPS

Washington- During the first three months of 19.58 the nation's lumber production totaled 7.311,- ono.ono board feel, a decrease of in per cent from the figure for the l)ka period of 19,57.

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Page 6: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

: i - ‘'

\

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MAkcHESTEE, CO N SriU ESD A Y , AUGUST 12, i m '\ __________ ___________________:___ yEAGE TEH

THE

Herald AngleBy

EARL YOSTSport* ed ito r

Peaceful, Quiet t'aeationThere is nothing l>kc a vacation away from the regular

sports beat, especially when you are nearly 600 miles from home with excellent weather, swimming and fishing, plus peace and (|uicl. The nearest store was 10 miles down the road and the closest telephone service was down the road apiece, about six mijos: The Irn-ation was Gene Moriarly sPocori ioonsl i iMP IxirlRC?! on* — 'l^caut i ful r o i omoonflhinc l*nkp m . y o n s In th« »prln |f - Boston in A lex an d e r . M a m r Irs.s tiiRn 20 A m encR n and St. lx)Ul8 in Ih r m iles fi*oni the C an ad ian hnrdor. I t l .vat ioiiai Iveapue jwal won't

All-Star To Play

antedGame

Thirteen of the leading sofUjall players in the Manchester- Rbckvillc area have been .selected to oppose The King and Hi.s Court—the original four-man . softball team—Friday night under the lights at ftobertson Park. The gala attrac­tion, icBtwiing Eddie Feigner, nnp' of the country'fl top, iiofthall piti h

w as Uie most re.stflU nnO peateful vacation we have ever apent as well aa the tno.sl relaxing

However it i.s a lw a \s goOS lo ge t bark at the sports desk anh th a t 's the case a l te r a week lip North.

Grid Season Nrnrs

make It this year. Mention of pie- (licUons. my colleague, one P .l R. can come front anfl ren te r Pat'- rick picked underdog Sullivan a against Ibe^ .Manchealer Auto Par is in the l.ilMe l,.eagiie base- 111!II finals. Ilesiill was a .1-2 win foi Ihe lied and While entry In Ihe biggest upset of the year in 1.1, hall.

* • •

era, la a heiietit cohkest for the i Youth AcUvilIca t'otmiUitee of the iM anihea le i laidgc of KIks, BPOK.

" S , , : ; ; ! . I I , . . > ' ™ e " I" am; T . ™ b . . , b . i i ,n . i. V A C . . I ...........I , . . , . ..f III. i lT m m * ?™ ;* ”.

Th«* Rockville CUy 1,/eagu® <vill be repi eRcnted by John L ubE and F?f»b WelngaiTner of froht-ninninjf Zahncr'.R; Ja c k Holloran. no

lion, hflfi alrcarly nanv^d veteran anflJfjo Lfheid;? of the Poliah Am eri­can ( Muii.

Koolball hCasnn i an t be m anv v*.crkR a\^av judRinK by Inc ^mail whirli aecumiilated during { V la i i rg g ia I n I rH C U

Andy .VlaheggiH. faij iy fieldingniv ab.scnce. Per usual, the flrat college brochii ie of the aca.soii a r ­rived from ,N’oi Ilian, Okla . home of the Oklahoma Sonners. Also, the New York Giants ' book for the coming National Pro T,eagi,e 'cam­paign arrived The Ginnla open their exhlbilioii alatn Sunday aga ins t the 'tDera in -San k'rancia- CO. .Speaking of football. Friday , night s exhibition game in O il rago betM'een the t'oliege All-S lats and r>«trolt I.ions will be telernat s ta r t in g a t fl 1h

G roup Day at YaloCharlie [>3ftiia chief aporta tub

thum per at Yale, forwarrta word that .voiingstera Ihrolighoiil the s la te may witness the Yale-Cori- nerticut football g' me it* Ihe Yale Bowl on Saturday, .SopI 2* Re­duced ra les will he in effect for all adequately atiperviaod groups, such aa Sunday School classes. Boy Seoul troops, I.lllle Ivagiikra, PA L units and YMCA groups Re­quests for tirket.s from siirh groups should he m de in writing with Ihe Yale Athletic Assn be­fore .Sept 20 Additional Irifnriiia- tlon may he senire<l hv inlllng The Herald s .Sports fteparlnienl

DiUiiar .Sris P arrBifj hand.^mnf Art r>itmar la

but hRhl hiUmg third bH.Afuuah with Moriarty a, will tBarh Junior hl^h In Rockville in a«pt^mb<*r, Tlic « nnounc^in^nl waa made by Supf n n trn d en l of .SchooiR Ray RnnlHdrll. well known apo|rta of- ficiRl MnnegjfiR gi 'adualed from Willi mantle Htnte Tearhera f ’oi*

i Irge iRRl June. A recent fa ther waa Ralph .Schumey, one of Rorkvllle a heat baacball player* in the paat two decftdea. Srhm uey la aIbo a feni her in the Rockville #( hool aya- t em . . Koolball fana niHy gel a gllmpBB of a one-lime Mnnchealer M errhan l player Friday night on leever. Tommy Rhylec of Meriden and American InternHllonal. la a rookie end with' the World ( ‘Iihui- pion Detroit Dlona who meet the ( ‘oMcge All-Stara. Rhylcr la an ex- foptU»nnl paaa receiver willi handa like hnma, Ffe waa recently dia- charged from the lervice.

♦ • ♦

iMoaC Vnliinlilr G luurrOne \o te la caal for k’rcd Mc-

f 'u rrv a.a the moat valuable player in Ihe recent Ditlle l .cagur poal-araaon rouiUt robin playoffa Mc-t ’urry aparked for the Manchratei Auto Parta. runneraup in the finala

Alao, one vote la.caat fo?' Frank Klnel of SiilllNan a aa the c-oac hof the year in Kittle lyeague. Not only did hia club \sin the Ameil-

Richy Jarvia aa tbe Man-rhea ter-Roc kvillc' A ll-Ktaia. J a i ’via will tm R.ssislcil by ,Mhc Scgiir imd Feigner, who muds a tromen- Hnrold ftsgnod icspecti\'o couches dons hll nt .Ml. Nebo th r fa years of Ihe Rsiiihow fl i ih and Miii incs 1 ago. i., the m as te r of softball andIn the local tuis ty Softlmll Is-agiie ; has hurled tlic ball a t an imhchcv-

Uiislv Is'iigiiF rcp iesen la t lves. able IfM milcs-per-hoiir. Feigner, will Include .tun Mormrtv, .lim Mt:-1 who really puts on a show, throwa( ’urry and Sarn MarTiaon of t l i e ' t ni vck that all but go around theBritish American Cliih and .lai k 1 ' ''i iieis and his iipshoot rises a O'Coln, Noun Villner and Red P'ol or more, Pans and playt.is Madsen of Ihe league-leading 'ibke pro/lt by seeing The King Rainbow Chib ' 'o iir t who play softball

' Chiireh Ia*agiie' Sliiniloiils |*** 'ks best.Picked from Ihe local t' li iin h Tii kels for the gaiiie are now on

Softball Isiagiie are three memhri s | sale al Ihe fOlks I.ndge on Blssell of Ihe strong North MelhodisI nine !si , Green f*hannacy, Nassiff

Hernie August, .lack Villner and | Ani'is ami inny be aeriifed from Tonim.v .Mason. i i 'on ian

H ere s Roy Harris, riglit. moving itlside of a left hook th rown b y an apparen tiv bewililered aparmale, Howie Tufner, dur ing a sea- aioii a l Arrowliead Springs Calif. How nigged Roy will look agains t H o v d Pa t te rson in the Aug. 18 title bout In Ilos Angeles Is a question. '

Murlaupih Had Hopes lor Cluh But Didn't Expect Contender

the leading j»errentage p t ld ie r in | < an longue hut added the plnyoff.i the AmericAii Keagup Tlic Spring- i a« vv-fJI And I'*Nt hot foigcUmg his field. MneH , rraidri . has won el(;hl ayateni of IrMIng f*vorv hov cm his of 10 deriBion.s with Ihr Ne'W' Yc>rk | equad play in the arc ond cliani- Yankeeji . I»ok/i like my iielrr- [nonelup ^aine of the plnynffa.

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Pill.abufgh cNKAt It waa on \UK J of laJ'I aea.son when Dann\ .Muitniigh an.swered the phone in a (*h)cago liote! arvl then | mi! cm Ins jacket and went to .Joe K. Hmwn'a .sijlle to any. yea, he wrmld move up frotli c oneh to be rrinnagei of the Pittfld)iiigli Plrnle.s

1'he t ram won 2d and lo.st 2f> the leat. of the wav iiivler him, but at the major league meellnga at ('olo- rado J^pnnga dunnp the winter, r>anny waa around tak ing Pitls- huigh front office pc*nplc off to one aide and in.alaling thicl "We ll- make the flrat division And we

I could do be lte r than that ' II would aeein, then that he had a good line on the Pilales. w )io

, nc»w have inovecl up peMiianen! ly. ba.cieball people aay from a pev- 4 ru th And eigUlU pin* e finiaher to a ' t e a m on the near of j)en-! nn nt content loii I PotHnilUtlea riiereI "That v la a little too muc h for

ina to fiRure, ' Danny admlta. lu»w- ever. ‘ You look at wheie we were aeventh pla« e. ’Phe • poaalidlitioa

; werf there \\ e ail i<ncw that. Rut I dldn t walk in ami take the job with the iclrn ihia was poiiig tci Ivnppen ant oma I ica II v. It wn.- n ITt- I le t nfi much to I ctunt on

■■Rut af te r I bepan to UnnU tite cluh out I could ere where there i was no leamm whv u e coiildn I be j In the fir.'d division. After that j you h<»per( foi moi r ’ J

Muitaiigh, and Ibn Pill.sburi;h fiina W'ho have .atai lc*c| In lu in out i wliole.aale, are now Ketling all Ihev ' ever c;oulcl have* lu»|’ d for Thi.i is: the team that now ha.a ic'.speil) from e \ e r \ ’ rpiartei ,*\t the ,MI- S ta r Rame. ff>i- (wainplc. p laseis from both Icuigurji.'’ sloppetl to ' \satch Rill Mazeioaki, the Rm arc - i oncl haaeinan, w;ork emt dunnK in ' field, praeth e I

"M^-harcilv toiichea the ball."

GOODYEARCUSTOM

SUPER CUSHION DESIGN

Whitey kotd of the Yankees mused “ Ma gets n d of it thatcpick.’'

Strong InfieldWorking with Dick flionl at

alien t ami Frank Thoma.s al third, -Ma/.eioakl giveB the P ira tes a.< strong an Infield ,as there I.s in the majeus. Rob Skinner, tlie outfield­er. ha.s finally a ii ived a.s the big hitler And with Rob Frirnd, V'ern Kaw, Hon Khne. r i u l Raydon, Roy Face and (ieorge Witt, the pitch­ing i.s llieie. Il Roberto C'hmiMite could keep up Ins hitt ing Milwau- )(ee might hf\\e a sericnis chal­lenger.

All cef wh1i li gives .smue m ean­ing to the hasc'ball a 'rgumenla they have al P rank dusline'H oj- ( ’oyne a III Ihe Devon.'diiie or the other plac CH aroiiml P’nrhes Field.

PAervhmiy talks baseball in Ihe.Me placets, but In tlie paM they \MMild he hnnging up a ball cdub that.wa.s a cto.h.s between a college I la.'cs and the minor league.s.

Fred Haney, who managed them for a time before moving to the Rravea and luxury, aid) remember.H havu^g one of Rram U Ru kry> bright college-11 alned honua- .spoiled youngslei'H on .second, with two cml, H run needed The young mnn tried to steal third. Ignoring eveiy basetiall rule ever written, and w hen he < ame bac k to the dug- oul a f te r being Ihrnwm out lie mumbled aoiiielliing about th ink­ing lic' ( mile) in;)lie 11.

"I don't know ulia l you were tluiikiog," ll/cncy snapped, "but if vou '.V'ue thinking about the Wall S t i ' # .lonrnal and lho.se slock HW'i.cgc’s vou can stAi l thinking •Fl'Mi ie.>cs ’■

Rill It Is different now. After running througli .sieges with a Paul p r in t or ftem Necc Ri or Dirk Hall the P ira tes thn>w hlg leaguers al vcni now find they are around to Slav •— ■ ............... - - r ....................— - ■-

Jenkins Hired, Fired As Adviser to Harris

At-row head Springs, Chlif.. Aug. 12 (/P)—Former light- weifjrht, Champion Lewv .Jenkins’ role- as adviser |,o heav.v- weiKhl conlender Rq.v Harris diminished almost before it Kot under wa.v. As tfiiiiKs developed. Jenkin.s is still a mem-her of the board of s t ra te g y foi the big guy from ( ’ut anci Shoot,

Duck Flights Seen Smaller In All Areas

DUSTY SO FTB A LL UEAOUSRainbow Club clinched reg m ar

■eason hononi by trouncing F in as t 135, 17-1 la*t n igh t a t Robertson Park . Red Madsen, Ja c k O’C oia . arid Bob Gajfrion combined their e f fo r ts in pitching a one-hit ter. F in a s t ' i only h i t cam e in the sec­ond inning off, Madsen when Don Goehrlng bloopecTa single to r ight- field and la te r scored on an in­field error. Don Mozsef; Tom Con­ran and Norm Vlt tner each collect­ed two hits for the 1958 champions.

R a i n b o w ........... 600 38—17-12-3F )n as t 1 3 5 ___ 010 0 0 - r 1 -1 -2Madsen. O'Coln 1 3 1, Gagnon

(5) and Gagnon, Whipple (.5), Nar- kon and Jon Hawthorne.

In the n igh tcan^ the British Am erican Club /in iled down sec­ond place by cni.shing the Marines 11-1 on P a t Bolduc’s one-hit ter. Bolduc, re tu rn ing to the lineup a f te r an injury, had fine control. He s tn ic k ou t 13 b a t te rs while w alking only five. The Marines drew f irs t blood and lead 1-0 In the th ird inning bu t the BA's bounced back to t ie the score in the top of the fourth. Benton Os­good pitched .good ball tintil the seventh when he t ired and gave up five hits. He struck out six and walked two, Ken Skinner had a tw o-n in hom er and Richie Jarvds a double for the winners.

BA's ........... 000 121 7 -1 1 -1 0 -2Marines . . . . 001 000 0— 1- 1-S Boldiic and .Skinner; Osgood and

McCarthy.

Tex . however. Peace of a sort wa.s re-e.slahlished today for Roy’.'i crH<l( at the champion. Floyd P a t ­terson, In I » s Angeles .Monday night.

Theie wa.S a .slightly diz/y chain of dc\ elo|>menl.s ye.sterday a l H a r ­ris' t rain ing camp. II s ta r te d when Roy’s m anageria l adviser. Loll Vlsciisl of Homston, ammiinced Unit I.ew had been engaged tn j coiinael Harris on the he t le r use of I Roy's willing fight hand. |

Texas Patrio t ism jI,ew. a Texan himself, sflanie |

willi Texas patr iotism, a r rep led | the offer so r t of riglit hand man j for Harris . ‘

.lenlun.s wa.s known s.s the j ".Sweet S w a t te r front .Sweet- f water, ’ Texas, that Is. and his , beat sw at was a r igh thand swat to the head or body.i ;

Sfmieone forgot to' menlloiv the appointm ent to H arr is ’ veteran t ra in e r Bill flore. d'lio has been , tinndling boxers for 30 years oi^ | more. ■ I

Gore hit tlie eeiliiig of Harris ' | Slllf)-8-day ImiigHlow a t this pl)i.sh resort hotel wlien I-e\v showeil lip lo dl.sriiss rigtitluiivl p i im hing willi Roy. *

Hoy apprecia ted llie, advjce.And tag, HCiirv Hariis , hia father, was equally apprecia tive l.a'w had been a favorite of his a long jline. \ called off said hlg Henry.

Hill the white-haired. ii.siinlly mild-mannered Gore all hut o rder­ed IjCw out.i,."I W.1 S only trying to help. " said r>w. an Army m aster sergeant

G a m e ^ e e l n e s d a v

MiA'fu*lie#iter and Stratfxtrc} Mill miM't for a fourth time to­morrow nit^ht a t 8:15 a t Mii/./y r iH d in Hriatcd. At atakp will be the .Ameriean !><‘t^ion S ta te Junior RiiHehall ( ’hainplonahlp, with the winner moving: on to the ref^ionala in Kiiii;:Hton, N.

hef^innlni; Sa turday, Aiijf. 23.

< ur\e-lmllinc: MiUe Me1 eauj;h-liii ia e\pe.<'tcd to piteh for the downsta tera while eltl^er F a t .Miatpetta or Clyde Richard will Im» the Silk Town s ta r te r . Stratf,ord was a 2-0 winner In the first ffame of the l>eHt-of- thn*e aerlOH and Manchester evened the a<!ore w ith a 5-2 tr i ­umph. The rh a la battled to a lO-Inning: 5-5 a ta lem ate In the third content over the week- eiul.

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Roy's style, l i r a jfood. He ra n win Uii.s title. But we IhoiiKht. he might emphasize hi.s r igh t hand

i more."ere IxMdurei

I„ater (tore delivered a aevere lecture to viaiting boxing wnteift'. prompted when one inquired why Roy's ache<lulcd boxing drill was

j "I don’t want him to work,’' said Gore. "He's ready to fijfht

, r ight now."'I But H.s one oh.server pointed out,

there is al least one man ready for a fijjht and on edge.

on leave from Fort Ord, t?alif. 1 "Bill "(Jorc," lip said, "is ready "\^■p -wer.fn'1 try ing to change ‘ for r a l t e r a o n righ t now."'

A M 'M M IJCAGl’KExploding for 14 h its la.st night

a t C ha r te r Oak Pa rk , the Elks troiincerl Manchester T rus t 10-4. Mike Chiirilla. Dave Howes and J im Coleman led the fireworks wilk three hits apiece. Team m ates John Lucas and Ed Jolly chipped in with two bingles each. A rt Storey, the losing pitcher, banged a th ree -n in hom er In the f if th in­ning for Ihe T rua tm en who were e lim inated from the playoff.s.

E lks ............ 003 331 X 10-14-2T ru s t ___ 010 030 0 - 4- 6-4Lucas. Maralone (6) and Cimr-

illa: Storey, Laliberte (5) and Du- p'ont.

TW ILIGHT I .E A G l’K.Sparked by Steve Cooper and

J im m y Roaih. the North Ends up­ended the South End.s 7-5 last night a l Mt. Nebo. Cooper, who pitched four-hit ball, collected a single and double and Roach belted two long triples. '

N or th E n d s ........... 202 12 '7 -7-2South E n d s ........... 202 01 .3-4-2Cooper and Johnson; Gauth ier

and Muller.---------

( I I C R C I I SOI-TB.ALL I.F.AGl'KSt. Mary's walloped the Church

of the Niizarene 11-2 last night a t C harfer Oak Park and are now as­sured of al lea.sl a tie ^ r fourth place ill the final .standirtga. Charlie Covey stroked a homer for the vic­tors while O m ar G ingras chipped in with three bingles and E lmer Kilby and Jim Herdlc each had two safe­ties.

St. M ary ’s . .140 0,31 0 11-12-0N azaiene . . .001 100 0 2-10-3Odell and Hanson; Smith, Wes-

,CoU (6i and Rilrhie.

INTERMEIII.ATE L E A G I Kk'ine relief pitching by Jim

Galanek played a hig role in Naa- .Hiff Arms' .3-1 tr iumph over Police A Fire last night al the West Side Oval. The winners Iced the verdict W i t h three runs in the th ird in­ning. with Buddy Minor I t l ip le i , Bill Blaglesoii idoublei and Jim Meacham (double) suppl.ving the key blows. Rud,v Wojnarowicz singled and doubled to account for two of PAB"» four hits.

Tonigh t 's makeup gam e a l 6 o'clock pairs Nassiffs and Banllv Oil.

Na.sslffs ___ . . . . 1 1 1 0(W- .3-7-2P A F .....................300 000 1-4-3Hewitt. Galanek i l l and Eagle-

,son; Ixrngfellow and Manchiick. M.VRTKOBI) TW I l .K AGI’E

Behind the two-hit pitching of H as lm gs .Shlveley, Gengras Motors iip.sel second place M oiiar ty Bros. 1-0 last mghl*3it Colt’s Park . The .setback dropped the Oilers three full games, five in the Im portan t lo.ss column, belvtnd f ron t- junn ing Hainilton Standard . Litt le l-.eo Cyr and second baseman Andy Maheg- gia accounted for the loser's two safeties. Centeifleldcr^ ■ Sonny Thomas crashed a tw d-nm homer for Gengrass In the second Inning.

Oengrass ......... 020 010 x —3-6-0M oriarly s ___ 000 OOO 0 - 0 - 2 - 2Shlveley and K orper; ' Simmone

and Race.

N elson lo . Speak Al U Con 11 C lin ic

Ml 9-5231%

Slo rrs — On* of the leading young football coaches in the n a ­tion. Dave Nelson, head coach a t the Universi ty of Delaware, will dlscuas his fam ous Wlnged-X^ of­fense a t the 13th annual Connect­icut Coaches-Clinic which opened its three-day p rogram a t the Uni- ver.sity of Connecticut today.

Nelson collaborated wljh Forest Evaahevski, a form er team m ate a t the University of Michigan and now roach a t Iowa, In publishing a book on the Winged-’T entitled, “Scoring Pow er with the Wlnged- T Offense," - '

Besides winning wide fame with the W’inged-T offense. Nelson is a m em ber of the Rules Committee of the Nationa l Collegiate A th le t ic Asan.

In all, Nelson will conduct th ree lec tures with the f i r s t scheduled W ednesday af te rnoon on the " In ­troduction and Phllosaphy of a W tnged-T Otfenif 'T

Bhafing the spo tl igh t; wlO\ Nel­son on the. football phase of the ^ tn lc will he A m h e rs t College R eed Coach . ^ h n M cL aughry end CKarles iBodU) J a r v U of An- s e n U p i f h .

Washington, Aug. 12 A cut of.,10..dayAJn the hunt­ing season for ducks aiid oth­er waterfowl in Atlantic Fly­way States was announced to­day. New^ restrictions also were imposed on' tak in g cah- vasback and redhegd ducks In lUl flyways except the Pacific.. Tl>e 1958:^9 regulations for shooting m ig a to ry waterfowl were a n ­nounced by A ss is tan t Sec re ta ry p t the In ter io r Ro.as Leffler. ‘

The new l imita tions reflect m outlook to r sm aller fall d u ^ flights in a 'l a rea s eas t of the P a ­cific Flyway. ' '

The Ftajh and Wildlife Service said las t-w eek t h a t the 1958 w in ­tering populat ion-of ducks In the A tlantic F lyw ay w a s a t the lowest evel since 19,35. I t also said the number of diving ducka—such as canva-sback and redheads—w as on a downward, t rend while t h a t of puddling ducka w a s upward.

The new regulations a tipulate t h a t , , w i th cer ta in exceptions tn the Pacif ic Flyway, the s ta te s m ay select the ir shooting season within the outside da te s of Oct. 1, 1958 and Jan . 1.5, 1959, tncluatve. 17116 la the sam e span as las t year.

The Atlantic FlyWay will have a 60-day aeasori fo r waterfowl and coots. This compared with a 70-day season during the las t three years.

The Ml.ssisslppl Flyway will con­tinue fo r the fourth y ear—to have a 70-day aeaeon for w ater- fowl and coots.

Offered an Option The Centra l F lyw ay is being of­

fered an option under which Its 76- Jay season for ducks m ay be ex ­tended by 15 d ays with, an ac ­companying reduction of ofie bird In daily bag and two In possession llmlls.

The season fo r tak in g blue and snow geese is Increased from 60 to 5 days with the season for Canada

geese remaining a t 60 days. The coot season of 75 days m ay be extended lo 90 daya by those s ta te s selecting th a t length duck season. The bag and possession limit for geese is decreased from six to five.

The shooting hours generally will continue to be one half hour before siinrlae to suhaet in all fly- ways. However, va r ia tions m ay occur in the Mississippi Flyway from s ta te to s ta te , depending on whether a s t a t e ' selects a closed season on wood ducks or elects to include one wood duck in the dally hag and possession limits.

Where hun ters a re pe rm it ted to include one wood duck in the ir bag and poa.session limita. the shooting of all species of waterfowl and coots m u s t atop one half h our be­fore .siin.set.

In each flyway In addition to the dally bag and po.ssession lim­ita on ducks, the dally bag linilt on American and red-breasted mergan.sers shall be' five, posses- .sion limit 10, singly or In the a g ­grega te of both kinds.

The dally bag and possession limit on COOLS in the Atlantic, .Mississippi and Centra l- F lyways shall he' 10 and in the Pacific 26.

Detailed Itegulatinna By fij-ways. the detailed regii ls-

tlons for tak in g ducks, geeae. coots, hrant,, and o th e r species:

Atlantfc. - Connecticut, Dela­ware. Florida. Georgia. Maine, .Maryland, Massachusetts , New Hampshire, New Jersey, Nbw York, North Carolina, Pennsyl­vania, Rhode Island. South Caro­lina. Vermont, Virginia and W est Virginia may select concurrent open seasons on waterfowl and coots of 60 consecutive fiiU dars, oT" two reasons a ggsegat lng 54 full days, beginning on o r a f te r Oct. 1 and ending not la te r than Jan, 13.

The dally bag and poase^jon limits on dueks shall be four and eight, re-spectively, exceipt t h a t the daily 1-ag lirj i l on ducks ma.V not include more than la I two canva.sbacks, or (hi two redheads, hr ( C l one canvasl a rk and one rerlhead. The possession limit m ay not include more than four can- vasbacks, or four redheads, or four in the a g g reg a te of both spe­cies. ’

For geeae, except snow geeae, the dally bag and possession lim­its shaji be two and four, r e ­spectively

The season for tak ing b ran t 'w il l conform to the season for ducks, geese and coots, with a daily bag and pasaesaion limit of six.

The daily h ag on duoka may In­clude one wood duck and the poa- aeaslon limit m a y , Include two.

PoaneaaloB U n d t s The dally bag and posaeatlnn

linUts on o ther ducks may include not more than one hooded m er­ganser.

' In Connecticut. Maine. Masaa- chuseita, NeivT' Hampebire. New York and Rhode Island, the sea- aon for tak ing aepters, elder and

d-equaw ducks beyond outer- harhor lines shall be ftxim Oct. 1 to Jan . 15. -inclusive. In areaa other than those beyond outer- harbor l in e s scoters, elders and old-sqiiaw ducks may be taken only during the open season fpr other ducks. In the s ta tes lIstM, the daily bag arid possession lim­its, singly or In the. a g g reg a te f i t scoters, eiders, or old-aquaw.ditclts, are seven and 14, re.spectlvely.

Ppp Sigus AgainNotih Adam((„,,Alaai,

Wee Wiflie Pep, the fo rm er................ Aug. J *

(p) W'ee Wiflie Pep. the ' fea therw eigh t champion from Hartford , Conn., h a s signed for Uis 228th' bout f f his long , pro boxing career. The M-year-dld m aa te r boxer agreed to term* of Match* m ak e r Sam Silverman for. a JO- rounder against Manuel B apUsta of Sari Fraijclac.o und’er the l ig lgs Aug. 25 lUi' Glovers' B ^ ’I.

, _ l - - - v • . V .

Dmibloa—Kuenh. D etro i t '! " 29; ICUine, Detro it 27; Power; Cleve­land 3S; ,Jan M n . Boston M l Ron* nelA Booton a .

\

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER, CONN, TUESDAY. AUGUST 12. 1968 PAGE ELEVEN

P irate^ Share Second Spot, Have Flag Hope^s

Hoy^ ICs Hot WorkBalt im ore p i tcher Ja c k H arshm an . who came within one out of becoming the f i r s t lefthancied hi irler to blank the New York Y'an- kees th is year, pauses in his moiind' labor.s a t Yankee Stadium y es te rday to wipe perspiration from his forehead. H a rsh m an did all r igh t aa i t was, pitching the Orioles to a 3-2, victory. Moose Skowron hit a pinch-homer with one on for the only Yankee runs. T h e Orioles followed up with ano ther victory, 9-3, In the night ha lf of a twin-bill. (A P Photofax.)

Big Guns Now Firing

Seco.nd Place Record Of Lopez Looks GoodNew York. Aug. 1‘2 (/T’j—Now that the hig guns of his Chi­

cago White So.\ pitching staff have hegiin to file, Al Lopez may yet extend hi.s amazing record of never finishing worse j than, second as a manager. !

Lopez ha.sn’t must else tn shoot *'-------------------------------------------- --------for in his 11th year as a skipper-.' (IKIOLES 3-9, V.X.NKS 2-3 — His usual hopc.s of .swiping the Jack H arshm an and Connie .lohn- Am erican Le,igiic pennant froini son delivered a pair of seven hit- the New York Yankees were junk- le rs as the Orioles won for theed tong ago. when aces Billy Pierce and Dick Donovan and a bolstered s ta f f misfired.

Nice guy Al was last two m onths ago, seven gam es shy of second, 14 hack of the leading Yankees. Pierce, ■ 20-game winner In 1956 and 1957, was 4-5. Donovan w as 2-7.

Now th e White Sox have squeezed into a .second place He w ith Boston with Donovan win­ning six in a row and Pierce win­ning eight of 11 in t h a t climb from the cellar.

Pierce pulled the W hite Sox even svith Boston las t night, winning 3-1 a t Cleveland while the Red . Sox lost 6-3 a t W ashington. It left .Che. W hile Sox 15 gam es behind New T ork , however, despite Baltimore 's 3-2 and 9-3 sweep over the Yankees In a day -n igh t doubleheader.

first time this season a l Yansee trade- Sladiiirii. H arshm an (9-10), c a r ­

ried by home runs from Bob .Nie- man and Joe Ginsberg, strui k out nine in the opener. He had a five- hit shu tou t until Bill Skowi'on's Iwo-oul, tw o-n in pinch homer In the ninth. A r t D l tm ar t8-3l was the loser.

The Orioles scored five runs in the n ightcap first, th ree unearned, off loser Johnny K ucks i7-6i and rolled as ex-Yankee Gene Wood- ling went 5-for-5 and drove In three nins, one with a homer. Johnson (4-7) s t ru ck ou t five and re tired 10 of the last 11 he faced in his first complete g am e-s in ce Ju n e 6. He blanked the Yanks a f te r Mickey Mantle 's two-run, f ifth-inning homer.

• • •SE.NATORS 6, RED .SOX S —

It w as the Mick's 32nd, keeping

Good Hitting, Pitching U sed To Cut Lead

New York, Aug. 12 (A*)— Maybe Pittsburgh’s persistent Pirates, pulling in fans and crowding the l^ tlers, aren’t just along for the ride after all in that National League pennant race.. The BuCs, usually scrapping to

escape the -cellar a t this s tage of the season, have paired pitching with a s teady b a t a t t a c k for a five-game winning stiTak and a ilViare of second place with San Francisco, cu t t in g Milwaukee’s lead to six games.

They, did it the hard w ay last night, knocking off the B raves and ba t te r in g tough g u y VVarren Spahn 6-4 while reliever Elroy Face aav-*'' ed Bob Friend’s 1.3th victory.

Cincinnati and Philadelphia split a p a ir In the onl.v o ther KT„ games scheduled. The Redlegs won fhe completion of s June 1 suspended gam e 12-I l ' in 13 innings. The Phils won the regula tion gam e 6-4 in 10 innings.

* • •PIRATB.S 6, BRAVES 4—

Friend, joining Spahn as the only NL pitchers to win 15 thfs season, out-dueled the ve te ran lefty with ease before t ir ing in the eighth. He hsd . the Braves blanked for seven, gave up a run In the eighth and was charged with three in th e ' ninth. ./

Friend (1.3-121 gave up nine hits, walked three and s truck ' 'ou t five. Spahn (15-8| was tagged for 11 hi ts and all six runs In his 6 2-3 innings, J t was S pahn’s /first de­feat bjv the B urs this dieason In three decisions, and opiy the sec­ond time they've beriten him in eight decisions over two yeaia.

Bill Mazeioski, tytt on a six-game h itt ing s t reak tlYat has produced 10 hits haff -for extra ba.ses —

lin 21 a t bats, drove in three runs I with a pair of singles and a triple

for the Burt.H ank lysron had three hi ts for

I Ihe Braves and lined a two-run I single Kn the ninth before Face j got .loe Adcock .on a game ending I fly ball with the tying runs on ; b a k e .! Pennant hungry P ira te „ fans [gave the Burs their Iarg.e.sl night-

game a ttendance in almost 20 j yesrs. The count of 18.918 was aec- j ond only to the P i r a te s ’ record ; night-gam e crowd of 43,2,34 Aug.

12, 1940.

R ED LEG S 12-4, PI1IL.S II-.3 —A throwing error by losing reliever Dick Farre l l enabled Frank Robin­son to scoot home from flrst with the t ie-breaking run for the Reds in the opener. The game was tied 11-all with Cincinnati at ba t, in the ninlli when the Sunday curfew fell in June. Joe Nuxhall won il in re ­lief.

A walk, flelder's choice and Wil­lie Jones' single gave the n igh t­cap to the Phils a f te r Ed Bailey's two*iim homer had tied it 4-all )n the ninth fo r ' the Reds. Willard Schmidt lost it in relief while Don Cardwell (2 -0 1 went all the way for his second victory over the Reds.

American League Y eaterday’a 'R esu lts

Detro it 3. K ansas City 2. Ba-lllm,ore 3-9, New York 2-3. Chicago 3, Cleveland 1. W ashington 6, Boston 3.

New York .

Standing*W. L.

___ 72 40Pet..643

G.B.

Boston . . . . ___ 56 54 .509 15Chicagb . . . ___ .36 .34 .509 1.3Cleveland . .,•..55 .36 .495 1 6 ' ,Detroit . . . . . . . . . 3 3 55 ,191 17Baltimore . ___ .31 .37 .472 19K ansas City . . . 4 8 59 .449 21' iW ashington ___ 48 64 .429 24

Y M trrdav 's H om ers(Season TotaJ In Paren theses) .

.American Leagufi Jensen, Red Sox (32).Mantle , Yankees i3 2 l .Sievers, Sena tors (32).,Lemon. Senators (24i>'Minoso. Indians (1 Skowron. Y S n k e e ^ l 2 ) .Nleman, Orioles/) 11).Woodling. O r l ^ s |9 ) .Ginsberg, Orioles (3).House. A t ^ t l c s (3).

N ^ - ’-i • - ig i ie Bailey, Kedlega (8).

Sydpey Bill Stanley, 132'_ AiiaU'alla, nulpointed a 1 Williams, '• Ib y . U.S., 12.

Creekmur Iron Man in Pro RanksDetroit (N E A ) — In a gam e noted for Its ruggeilness, Lou

r r e e k m u r ’s record of not ha t ing missed n football gam e In eight seasons Is amazing.

Throughout the autumn* since 1850, the 2,Vt-pnund Creek- m ur ha* racke<l:up 1.30 coilseruttve games, Including pre-season and rhamjiinnshlp play.

" I ’m .31 bu t have never been In be lte r ph.vstcal condition,” says the Detroit tackle. “ It Is mostly luck tha t has enabled me to keep going. In this league It , Is praetleally a miracle to go nne season Without an Injury sidelining you.

"D uring the off-season, I s tay under my playing weight so tha t when I come to camp and have a lot of tough work­outs, I know I can eat all I want and still not. have to worry, about being ovenvciglit ."

Creekmur is one of a very select group who has played In every Pro Bowl game. His record currently s tands a t eight s tra ight .

HKting—Gene. WoodlUig/'OrialM ; —Was 5-for-S, driving tn three R g n vs’tth four slhglet and m hoihe i m , In B'S victory after Orioles hdd n o n I opener 3-2 for day-night ' doable

header Sweep over the Yankee#.Pitching—Billy Plerc*. 34hU« Sox

- B l a n k e d Indians on two hita for six Innings and wound up srtth seven-Alt. *-l victory.

Las Vegas, N ev .- J im m y Feas- ter, 137U. La* 'Vegaa. stopped KidCenlella, 137i}, New Orleans. 10.

Wynn

G.B.

Today’s GamesChicago a t Cleveland

(9-121 vs. G ran t (9-8). / Baltimore a t New Y o rk —Brown

(4-2.) vs. S tu rd ivan t U-5i .Bn.4ton a l Wa.«hln4rton, (N) -

Sullivan I9-.3) v s , /K en im ere r (6- lOi,

Kansas City s t Detroit . iN i — Dlckaon l7-.3i,Ys. L ary i l l - lO l .

N a ^ n a l I .cagur A ' e ^ r d a y ’s Resiilta

Pilt.sbuygh 6. Milwaukee 4 Cincii/iaU 12. Philidelphia 11

I Completion of au.spended gam e of June 1. 13 innings I

Philadelphia 5. Cincinnati 4 (10 ing'ings)

Stand ingsW. L.

Milwaukee . 63 46Pittifbiiigh . . .37 .32 .,323 6Sah Francisco .37 .32 .523 6St. Louis ___ 63 .35 .491 9 ‘sPhiladelphia . .32 .35 .486 10Chicago ......... .33 .39 .473 11 ijCincinnati . . . 51 59 .464 1 2 ' jLos Angeles . .30 .38 .463 12 'j

T oday’s GamesCincinnati a t Phiiartelphia (N l-

Acker (0-21 via. Semproch (18-6) Milwaukee at PitLsburgh (.N) —

Rii.sh |6 -4 | vR. Wit t (5-2lChicago a t Los Angeles (Nl —

Droll (4-9) vs, .McDevitl i l -4 i St. I-.OU1S a t San Francisco iN) Jones |9 -8 | v.s. McCormick (8-4)

M a j o r L e a g u a

= = L e a d e r s = = =

D etro it defeated K ansas (City 3-2 I pjjpp with Boston's Jack Jensenand W ashington 's Roy Sieveis f o r

[ the AL lead. Jensen and Slevera I m atched tw o -n m shots In the I fourth Inning, but Sievers added a wiitning RBI single in the fif th off

In the o ther AL game,• • •

W H IT E SOX 8, IND IANS 1 —P i e r c e '(12-8) gave up seven hits, walked bu t one and struck out deven. He had a tvvo-hit shu tou t i loser Bill Monbouquelte. Jim Le- untll the seventh, when ex-team- l-mon-hil hi* 24lh homer for the m a te Minnie Minoso slammed his i .Senators. Reliever Vito Valenti- 16th home' run. Minoso. who also n e t t i ’wiqn his flrat s ta r t of the sea- doubled, w as the only Injun with son, w ith- the m o p . .u p _ h ^ a f D ic k an ex tra -base hit off the lit tle Hyde, southpaw, who now has beaten , • • •every club In league in hia tu rn ­about. t.

Nellie Fox did the ba t vv'ork for the Sox, who had but five hits. He drove In one. run and scored an ­o ther with a pair of doubles off R ay Narle ik i, now 11-10.

Sport Schedule

TIG E R S S, A'* 2 - The Tiger*did -their scoring on a walk and four singles with tw o-ou t In the fourth and Jinv^Biinning (9-7) won his fi rs t since his .lul)*20 no-hitter. Hank Aguirre saved It a f te r F ran k House hit a tw o-nm homer in the ninth. Bob Grim was the loser. •

Three Jockeys Steal Spotlight With 10 Wins at Major Tracks

N ew York. A u r . 12 (Ah—Jockeys; M anuel Y c iza , Eddie Arcaro and Bill H a r ta c k stole the show y es te r ­d ay a t Arl ington P a rk , Sa ra toga and A tlan tic City.

Th# 21-year-pId Ycaza, the P a n a m a n ian pepperpot who coat Mrs. E lizabeth G ra h am ’s Maine^ C h a n ca -P a rm a lot of money ekrlier ' thia season, bounced home w ith four w inners a t Chicago.

A rcaro ’, the 42-year-old ‘’Mas- tar ," and the 26-year-old H ar tack . N a tiona l C h a m p io n . the last two yaars, each rodf three winners. „

Ycaza a lm ost m ade It five a t Arlington, a s his mount. Falmer. w as nosed :out by Prince Khaled ($4.40) In the fea tu red W heaton Purse . Willie Shoemaker, curren tly leading the nation 's riders, was aboard Pr ince Khaled. .

B u t the young P a n a m a saddle a r t i s t ,waa doing all r ight with some big price horses finding their w ay to the w inner 'a circle-'He won the ‘fourth w i th Btkck Widow ($16), j jie f if th aboard Monk Shoe (87.60), a n d th e aixth, with where- havubaen ($17;20).

Then he p u t (he icing on the co- faa tu red W illow Road Pur*e,' 'wln- n tag in a photo, finish w ith H ue and

, C ry over L e a th e r Button . Hue and C ry paid $36.20, and a $2 bet to

'vrtn on each of Ycaaa’s m o u n ts would have re tu rn ed $77.'

Tcaiui rode Jew el’s R ew ard in Uta $135,000 F lam ingo a t Hialeah-

'Ifist M arch, b u t tbe ooU w a s dfs- ' efoalifled fo r bum ping Tlih T*>n. A m o n th l a t e r E bony Pei

--J-

____ earl won the$13,000 Johns tow n . Puraa a t

'ifamaida, b a t w a s disquaUfiad for) J in ta r fa r tng nd th N tah t Amool. M u n w l co s t M r s . 'O r a h a m Va.ZOd t a p u rsa s f a r TJioih raesa , and

he got 15 days on the ground for the F lamingo ride.

On May 27 a t Belmont, the P anam an ian hotshot drew 10 da.v.4 for careless r id ing . : and the next day the' stewards set him down an additional 1.3 daya.

Ycaza w ent to California In July to win the $116,900 W esterner a t Hollyvs’ood P a rk aboard - R ay Cam p 's S trong Bay, who la one of the favqrites for the $100,000 A m tr ic an Derby S a tu rd a y a t A r ­lington Park . I . ^

A icaro not only had a t n p j e ' a t the Spa. but won hia third i itraight 2-year-old s t a k e s a t Sa ra toga with Bhigene Constantin J r . 's J<mn Doe.

John Doe., a bay son 'o f-To M a r­ke t-Butterfly , was m ak ing the second s t a r t of his egreer. a n d 'a a the $ 7 J0 favorite beat C. T, Chen- e ry ’s Top Double by a length and a half. "The race was a newcomer, trie $11,975 Y ta r l ing Sales 'Stakes. EMdie had won -the fourth w ith Merry Hill (S IV ’C) and the eighth with Mr. Redbird ($5).

Seeks Four th S ta k es J '.On opening day Ju ly JH. A rcaro

won th e Fiaah S takaa with Laigh Cotton’s F i rs t Minister. He took the S a n t to g a Special A u g . -6 with O ien ery ’a F i r s t ' t i a n d ln g . the colt Arcaro hopes . will - b r ine him a sixth K entucky Derby nex t spring. Eddie gooa fo r a; fo u r th 2*ybikr-eld s ta k es on W ednaMay, the. $26,009 Grand . Union Hotel, w ith tha B ro o U e ld SU bie 'a In tentionally .

As fo r H a r tap k , he’s been a sen- 'sa t ton - a t A tlantic City. He rode .three winnera F r ld a y j and had. fo u r Sa tu rday , inefudinf Oonibua* tton 0 . in the $l»,fl60 m i a t M p h t a T u r f Ha ndica p . - 7 ,

TodayClvilan vs. Temple Beth, 6 :15—

Robertson Park .Nazarene vs. Baptist , 6 :1.3 :

C h a r te r Oak.Second Congo* vs. Center Con­

go.*. 8:90—Robertson P a rkGreen Manor vs F * P, 6 -C harte r

Oak.Wednesday, .Aug. 1,8

E as t a iders vs. W est aiders, 6:15 - M t . Nebo.

Bantly vs. Ponticclll’s, 6—W est Side Oval.

Mai Tool vs Telephone, 6:15— Robertson Park .

King 's V I . .Bill's, 8 : 3 0 -R o b e r t - ' son Park.j ..Ctvitan vs. Teachers, 6 :15—

C h ar te r Oak.Elk* vs Trii i t , 6 -C harte r Oak.

Thursday , Aug, 14Baptis t vs. Teachers, 6:15 -

C h a r te r Oak.St. M ary 's v*. C ente r Congo*.

8:30 R o lx r tson Park .M o rta r ty 'f vs. Hamilton, 6 ;15—

Colt's P a rk .F A P va. Bankers , ,6 -C harler

Oak.— Friday, Aug. IS

King and hi* Court Vs. All-Stars. a . '1 5 - ^ o b e r ta o n Pack. ;

South Ends Va. N or th Ends, 6:15 — Mt. Neho.

L iberty vs. Civitan. 8:15—Char-top Ofih

Nassiffs va. Elka, 6 -C h a tte r O ak - delphia and Friend, P l t lab u rg h 97

.American I-eagueBail ing Runnels, Boston .331;

Kiienn, Detro it .322; ro w er , Cleve- laiul and C«rv K ansas ("ily .321; Goodman. Chicago .319.

Runs Mantle, New 3’nrk 88: Runnels, Boston 73; Cerv, Kansas City aiul Sievers W ashington 70; Power. Clevelaml 69

Hits Malzone. Boston and Fox, ( t i icago 137; I'ower. Cleveland 132; Runnel.', Boston 131; Kiienn. Detroit 125

Triples Lemon, Waaliington 9; Tuttle. K ansas City 8; Power, Cleveland 7: Harris , Detroit and M adyn . Kansas City 6,

Home Runs .Jensen., Boston, Mantle, New York and’ Sievers, W ashington 32: Cerv. Kansas CitV 29: ColaVilo, t 'leveland and Lemon, W ashington 24.

P itching 'Dirley. New York 17- 5, ,773: Deloek, Boston 10-3, .769; l-iyile, \Va.shington 9-3, .7.30; Ford, New 3'orl{ 14-5, .737; Moore. Chi- eapo and Dltmar, New York 8-3. 727.

.Strikeouts Turley, New 3'ork 133: Wynn, Chicago 126; Running, Detroit 125; Ford. New Y'ork 121: Harshman. Baltimore 11.3.

National Ia>agiieBail ing Musiitl. fU Ixiils .343;

A 'hb iun , Ptilladejphia 3.38; Ma_vs, San Francisco 336: Aaron Mil­waukee .324; Skinner, P i t taburgh .322.

Runs Banks, rjli lrago 89: Aaron, Mllwaiike.e 82: Mays, San Francisco 78; Neal, IjOs Angeles 73: Matliews. Milwaukee 71

Hits Maya, San Francisco 14$: Aahburn, Piiiladelphla 144; Aaron. Milwaukee .138; Banks, Chicago 138: Cepeda, San Francisco 13.3.

Triples Virdon. Plt tsh iirgh 11; Ashbiirn, Philadelphia 10: Banks. Chicago, Mays, San Franclaco and Blasingame, St. IjouIs 9.

Home Rima Banks Chicago .84; Thomas. P i t tsbu rgh 28, Aaron. Milwaukee 25; Mathews. Mil­waukee 24; Walls, Chicago.. Cov­ington. Milwaukee and Capada 1 San Francisco 21.

P i tch ing - - W'ille.v. Milwaukee i and Grtssom, .San Francisco, 7 -3 ,1 .700; Semproch. Philadelphia 13-8 ,1 .884; McCormick San Franclaco 8-4, .667; Spahni Milwaukee 15- ' 8, .652. . ■ ' I

’S tr ikeou ts Jones. 81. T.aiuis, 146; Anlonelli , San F ranc isco 107; S'pahn, . Milwaukee, 10.3; Podroi. Los Angeles 104; Roberts , P h i l a - 1

8:15 P.M. HUDAY, AUG. 15

ROiERTSON PARK

EDDIt FEIGNER

THEKING

AND ms COURT"4-Man “Show” TeamVs. MaRilitifItr-RotkvIllR All StarsA M ft SliM —CMMrMi mMIw U . SOc

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WYMAirs aULF STATION24 MAIN ST.—Ml 3-1503

DON Wiais OARAQE10 MAIN ST^-MI 9-4531

295 OROAD ST.—Ml 3-5179

EHLER'S ATLANTIC STATION120 E. CENTER S T .-^ I 3-1477

JIM’S ATLANTIC STATION451 W. CENTER ST .-^ I 9-0154

RUFINrS SERVICE STATION110 CENTER ST.—Ml 9-0279

SUHRER’S SHEU SERVICE453 CENTER st.—Ml 9-0120

KEN'S GARAGF' ANDOVER—PI 2-4227

GROWNIE’S SHEU SERVICE275 MAIN S T .^ 1 3-1272

GRISWOLD’S SERVICE STATION174 WEST CENTRIC ST— Ml 3-f4S9 ^

’ . '*■

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■V. 'O . 4

Page 7: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

V .f "

PAGE TWELVB MANCHESTER J3VEN1NG HERAEDk MANCHESTER. COIW.. TUESDA^, AUGUST 12, 1968

Classified AdvertisementtLASSlFIEO ADVT.

DEPT. HOURS 8:15 A.M. to 4:80 P.M.

Autoiiiobilen for Sale 41»57 BLACK Chevrolet Bel Air, hardtop, whiteWalle, power it*«r- inir, turbo-glide Iransrtiiaalon, low mileage. Will acll reaaonably. Rockville XP 5‘2i20.

COPY CLOSING tiME FOR CLASSIFIED ADVT.

MON. THRU FRI.10:30 A.M.

SATURDAY 9 A.M.

Buainesa Services Offered 13

rotnt COOPKBATION' WILL ' BE APl^BECIATED

Dial Ml 3-271T

Lost and FoundLOST—Red and Ivory 21 ' hoy'a Hawthorne hirvclr Miaamg (rom Globe Hollow. Call MI n S.'iTO. Re­ward

FOUNP Fox Terrier mongrel. Cheatmit Virinify of Parker and ' Gerard Sl.i, Call MI fl-flaifr.

Announcements 2SADDLK HORSES for hire a t ' B L R Stablea. Great Swamp Rd Glaatpnhiiry.

19 0 FORD (I cylinder, 4 door, good ' running condition, Reaaonable. I May be aeen at Eaalem States ; Farmers Exchange. MI 3-425.1.

11950 MERCURY. Call MI 9-24.12 after 4:30 p.nv.

' 195.1 CUSTOM Fj»r4 Panrh wagon. Fordomalle, power steering, ex- tellehl condition, 1300 down pay* ment, private parly. .MI 9-2576.

19.1.1 BEL AIR CTievrolet 6, Four door sedan. In excellent contlllion. MI 3-6913

rLYMOUTH 1949 de luxe black. I very clean, low mileage, fully! equipped,.»I75 PI 2-7211

,1955 BEIGE VOLKSWAGEN sedan. Excellent condition. Call MI 9-5469

ELECmiOLUX owner's — Prompt, frl'ndly servtcg on your'Electro lux (R) deader Pick up ana de livery Can Electrolux authorized ae' and fervice Ml 9-0848 ui JA 2-0108. Please eik for AofUitlniL Kamienskt.

DICK'S WEATHERSTRIP Com pany. doors end windows, custom worV, guaranteed. Cali Ml 9-1B83 after 0 p.m.

MORTENSEN TV. 8peclall2ed RCA televtaior. service m 9-4641.

UONDBR'S T V Servics avaliable any time Antenna converiions Phllco factorji' siipervised service Tel Ml 9-1488

! M * M RUBBISH CO FuM i cleaning, removal aervice.

time land

scaping, lawns mowed driveway sealing patching Metal, ‘ card board drums MI 9-9757.

THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW,! BY FAGALY and gH(»R'TEN

Trailers 6-A

Peraonali 3VACUUM CLEANERS repaired In my own home shop. Forty years factory experience. All makes, low rales, free estimates, free pickup and delivery. Mr. Miller ,IA 2-6904. '

WANTED—Ride from East Middle Turnpike to corner of Laurel and Capitol Avenue, Hartford working 7-3:30 shift. Call Ml 3-4721

MOBII.EHOMES - Furniture tak en as dnwn payment on jnoblle- homes Excellent lots available at Mansfield .lensen's, Inc (siwavs reliable I 64 Park Road, Weal Hartford, AD 3-6214 or GA 0-4479 Monday through Ssttlrdav. * to 5 Monday. Wednesday. ^Thursday evening.

Auto Diivlng School 7-AMDRTI/ICK'S Msmhesler's lead Ing driving school. Three skilled. roiiilediiB inalriiclnia Claaa room inali'uclirma for 15, 16, 17 year olda Telephone Mr Mnrllqfk HI rci lor nf Driver Edursllon MI 9-7,396.

FURNACES I 'leaned hy l|r<>nsed oil burner men f6 and up. Call BU 9..32.19,

HAVE TIME, will work. All odd Jobs done any trnre Everything Is our specially. MI 9 3936

TV SERVICE—any make—highest quality work al lowest price for expert work Famous for service

"since 1931 Phone MI 9-45.37, Pot- lerton's

J uS T A T iNN COTrAfiEBVTHe-WA IS WHAT THEV TOLO THE WILDER

ALL AL0N&-

THATS waHT.'J •FIVE - MAVEE Shf VOOMS.'t DON’T ' AMVTHIN&TOO

JUST BUILD US A «M A U HOMI.'WfEP THE COSTpowh; nothin6

FANCV! '

WlWSMMt tTJOlCAH

B ut rrs NOW At SID AS THE .PlHTXiiSirANfrSTlLL A'fiOiN

STR0N&

THiNN I want'ANOTHBR KPttOOM ANOpeehapb we couldAPPAWIN61HE8E-

^ALL PLANTING \>v uiutocapii^T Looking for top <|ualiW clean loam? Call Ml MMDS. Sandstone,' gravel, fiU.

"T/iseuitO AtKOiP XOBlOtt/-batch* iOlIttT

LARSON'S, ftonnecllcut's first II- cenaed driving achool, Trntned Certified and approved. la now offering t'lnaaroonr and hehitrd wheel Inatrirr tlon for leenagers . MI 9-607.1,

Automobiles for Sale 4 ! Ma n c h e s t e r Driving AcademynF^n'n 'F~Y nir'R U Y "a usirt can '«'W offerittg ( laaatoom and behind BEFORE YOU BUY a riscd car ,, , n „ r , | „ ph«aessee Gorman Motor Sales. Huick 1 nrive, Fdiicatlon Call PI Sales and Service. 265 Malix).!’'Slrecl. MI 9-4,171. Open evenings, c-------------------------------------------- ' EARLY R DRIVING School, Dual

control, atiimlairl and siilomslrc I ara Day or eyening appoliU- mcnla Claaa rnoiil-Jiiatriicliona for

NEED A CAR and had your credit turned down? Short on down pay­ment? Had a roposaesalon? Don't;Rive up' See 1.1. 16. 17 year olda hv experienr edthe owdown on the lowest down o o«-r ' 'and amalleat paymenia anywhere, teacher, t all 9-66, . ,_____ ______Not a amall loan nr finance com- ________ ____________ _ _patty plan Dmigiaa Motors. 333 CiiraKe— S erv ire— .SIoniKe 10M.aln .Street. I __

—-------- - — ! GARAGE FOR RENT CoineiCooOLDER! ARS. me-chantrs specials pimaani ,Sla fnriuite 2.1fixii ynuraelf (Bra. always a gmd Wcalwood St MI 9 9114 eelerllnn. Look behind our office, jDniiglas Motors, 33.1 Main. '* , FDR RENT (image for i iii m

------- --------,—.----- ------- aloriigr Cnnyenleni In Adiiiiia ami1940 DODl.L ',-Ion parrel truck. Deepwnnd Dr MINrw jfofifl running rniidiUon I n-894ft-Kirpt $l2ri lflkr« It. Trlrplmnf* MI 0.0171,

AI>I. TypKfi grrp(*nfl rcpHlrcrl Hnd rowtiofl Qui("k r«ll MI0*48.3.3 ff)i' frro pirk-un WDHthrr* rjuurd r*o . 44.3 Mnin St

Household ServicesOffered 13A

FI-AT FINISH Holland window ■hades, made to measure. All metal Venetian blinds at a new low price Keys ms4e while you wait. Marlow’s.

ArtlclM For gate 45 Holueliold Goods 51

UtiWYT VACUUM cleaner. Uke new all attaohmenta, I2S. Call MI 9-9984.

FAMOUS MAKE boys' sboaa, sizes T-UH, B w idthf only |1.80. Sell for 87.96. MI 9-9429.

FLORENCE 7” oH burner. Excel­lent condition, looks new, 826, MI 3-0308.

Boats Mid Aeeeaiorles 46

11 a, OR * TEARS TO PATt ^ START PATDfO

n f SEPTEttBER I KOOMS-PURNmiBE

$9.38 MONTHLY Brand Ns.w -

BadrOom,, Uving Rohn^ Dinette, , Limpe, “

*^BRTTOlNO $288 X*$ ROOk^S FURNITUIW ,,, $10.16 MONTHLY r - Brand New

Westinghouse Refrigerator, Living Room, Bedroom, Dfhetta, ** Ruf%

Lamps. Tables ' EVERYTHINCi $300y

BOAT; MOTOR and trMler. Alt -in A-1 condition, Cgn be seen at 45 Riverside Dr.

10 FT, RUNABOUT, fiberglaaed hull. Can be seen at 76 Pine St.

SNIPE CLASS MNibokt—Custom built. Cedar hill], stainless steel rigging, Larson aailt. Call TR 8*366S.

8 ROOMS FURNITURE $14.74 MONTHLY

, . Bruid NewNorge, Waahing,Machine, Westing-/ bouse pefrigerator,.. Bedroom, Liv­ing RooTif, Dinette, Dishes, Rugs,

Lamps, Tables, Blankets ' EVERYTHING $44 . .

THREE H.P. Johnson motor, $35.. MI 8-5206.

outboard

Buildins: Materials 47

Heating and Plumbing 17 Help Wanted—Female 35 Help Wanted —Male 36

RADIO REPAIRS on sny m ake- all smpllflerli spd phrtnographs ami changers' Over 47 yesra total experience 90 dsys guarantee on all work Pottertqn's

f ijr n it iTr e r epa Tr in g Am llques restored. Furniture Repair Service Talcollvllle Ml 3-7449

WASHING MACHINES repHlied all makes and mndela. Phone MI 9-5150

24 HOUR Immediate service. Re modeling, repairing, new Installa- tlona, electric sewer cleaning, drain pipes cleaned faal and effi­cient. \Vill R. Guy, Ml 3-0677

Moving—Trucking—Storage 20

MOVE BY 'mAILER van. It's leas expensive—One load Initead of two or three-Easier loading and unloading— Distinctive, dignified and smart "The Best lor l,ess." The Austin A. Chambers Co , 503 East Middle Turnpike, MI 3-6187, Hartford CH 7-1423.

WEAVING nf bums moth holes and torn clothing, hosierv runs, handbags repaired. zipper re- placement, umbrellas repaired, men’s shirt collars reversert and rrplaced. Marlow's Little .Mend Ing Shop

Huildliig— ( ’onf ra f t in g I tALL ’Ty p e s of rsrpenlrv work done, alterallona, dormei'a. roof Ing, porches, elc Call 5U 9-5961

MANCHESTER Package Delivery, I.lght tnicklng and package deliv­ery. Kefrigerators, washera and stove moving speciality. Folding chaira lor rent. Ml 9-0752.

Painting—Papering 21PAINTING AND paperhangtng. Good clean workmanshhip at rea- annable rales 30 yeapa In Man­chester. Raymond Flake, Ml 9-9287

1356 ClIEVnDI.ET four-door sedan -Ivory and reil Radio, heeler Ex- cHIrnl irindlllon Clean, low mllr- agr 41,135 MI 11-2430.

CARPENTER—Exnerlenced In all fields ot cerpcntry Conlrmt or reaaonable honrlv rales. Ml 3 0731.

PAINTktR A.NP pa|ierhanger, dceoreloi (jood rirnrr |oli. reason-, ntile |ince. 8. Yeneha, Ml 9-6914 after 5 p m.

1313 C H E V n n L E T r lu h coupe Call 9 5147

Imaginatively Designed!

H usiness M ervlres O fferefi 13 — -FI/IOR HANDING and reflnlshlng , Hpei ializmg ln'~Wd ' floors Ml

i 9-n7.50-I IASHES. RUBBISM, Iswna, all kinds nf gpnrirtl wnik arul Ughi lru(k-| In r. HngN wrifl papom pit krrl up frae. Prl( rx rrnaonablr Ml O-OHt’. j afirr JuMf 20 nrw numbri', MI 4-0784,

i KXTEUIOR and Inlrnor painlinK. I OlIiiiKH refiniHhed PapcihanKinj;.

Wiiii-paper books E.sliniatCK jfivrn. I O'ullv rovojrrl by insvirnnce. Call

Ituilding—rontrseting 11! rtdwaid R Pm e, mi tt loo.i

Sew-Easy Look Alikei

Rose Embroidery

2267'' hh

Sa’f

BIDWELI Home Improvement. Co Alterstlona,,. additions giuages Roofing and aiding experts Alum Ilium clapboards a specially Un excelled workmanship Easy hudp el lerrus MI 9-6495 or TR 5 9109

ALTERATIONS to kitchens, hath rooms sitirs, cellars porches or playroom Phimhing. earpentrv eleeirlea' and masonry Aluminum siding Garages, eutlagea, out buildings rnoni additions Nuside Engineering Cunipnnv, Inc., 34 Dak St Ml 8-1421

PAINTING 09' alt Ivpes iliine Will do al yiinr |u u e Plume MI 9-6(155,

Roofing-Siding It*RAY'S ROOFING CO shingle and built-up rrmfj$. (turirr nnd rondur tor work: roof, rhimnry rFpnlr« riny Mapenow, Ml 9 2214; Rav .lac kaon. Ml

KOR n iK hfat tn ahtiiKlF and huttt up K'dlFra. laadfra, rhlmncy and roof r^palra rail Coujfhhn Ml 3 7707

UOOElNn. HIDlNO, painUnR Car pentry AltrrattunH and addition! Calllnjt! Workmanahlp ifuarap trrd A A nion, tnc.. 299 Autumn Rl Ml 48fl0

' ( ’ourses and 27A IR 1 - / N K Sovi' i ft l youMR n in i nml u o n i r n will br H c l n l r d i inmrfl i* n lr lv ffir I i h u i Iu r foi’ n t t rart lv r , liiRh-HMlHi U‘(| pUflIlions A.n ftirlinr Mr« 1 f’l arv. I io h I omh. roHorvaUoniHl.< (iniiiiunit Hlionisi, s la l ion Hprnt. pas*u’UR(*r H R m l, t irk r i RKrnt, i re - nitla Kn joy f i ru 11 avr l 'pASRrn. v r - t'AIlon.H. ii iRuniiu o S h o j t . Io w -c o r I t ra in ing ran (p inhfy M u r i br 17 or nvr i , Im v r hiKli r< hoo| ct lura- lion nn<l plrnMing p r iBo i in l ity In- ( ludcR HprriHl t ra in ing in priRoiiRl ( l f \ r l i fp in on l for w op ion All In- f|Uii'irR itinnflrntirt l VVntr. Riv inp adflrcRH and phono n i i in h rr n. l l r iH ld

8209

Ho.kp mntifR IJiat arf 'jmaRlnR- tlvriy' drPiKDPd tn Inm linens Rtul wcarnblrs’ Thrv arr of VRiMnuR in?:r.*<. arui rmbrouirrrfl In Rimplf RlitiiirR Rnfl lovrly coIoir lo atlti ! rhRrnt t(» anv it<*in t.br> luloin ' * pHUrhi Nij 22rt7 igntjilns hoi- Iron transfpi foi H motile, niatr-i rial irqiluiWurnlH; .stitch llluRtia - I tlonR and color cliait.' Send in C'oins. for tlu.s j)at-, tern add Tk- ffu CRt h pallrin for : f\r»t-rlRRs niHiliiiR Send to Anno I Cabol. Tlir Maiu’heRirr rONuninR | Herald IlftO \ \ h.. OI AMKKI- f'A8. NEW VOIIK ,10. N. V. Print I

•Name. AddresR ami Pnttrrn Nuiu her. I

Have you n enpy of mii IP.'iM j Needlework Album'' It >"ntniii$l dozen nf -nreltv .doRiRna m citt* rhet. knit, cpibrnideiv and sew. | phiR direcllonR fni oiif. Unit amli three ernrhet iteniR. Only 2'm a ropy, e !

CONNEf'TlCUT Valley Oonatnic tton All type.! of roofing, aldlnir ipitteia and rarpentry work $5 veara experience Ml 8*7190

Rnnftng nnd Chimneyiz 16-AIIODFINC—Hp'ClsIlzIng In repair

Ing rqq’fs nf Sll kinds Also new rnofs Gutter work (nilmneys cleaned, repaired. 28 vesrs ex- perlence Free estimsles Call Mowley Msqchesler Ml 8 5361.

Ilond.s—Stocks Mortgiigcs 31CONSOLIDATE debt hiln a second

mortgage loan Pay $22 25 per thousand per month Dial CH 6-8697 and ask Frank Burke or Mrs Carter how laay i| la. Con­necticut Mortgage Exchange

SECRETARYAn opportunity .for an Intelligent

secretary capable of handling a variety of duties. Position requires facility in shorthand, good typing ability and some liking for small amount of figure work. Modern air- conditioned office, 37 hour, 5 day week. Liberal company benefit pro­gram, t

WriteSE C R E T A R Y

P. O BOX 2103 H a r tfo rd , Conn.

Slating business experience, edu­cation, age and salary desired.WAITRESSES wanted for day shift only. Apply In person. Howard Johnson's. MI 9-6220,

COUNTER GIRINS 16 Or over. Ap­ply Wigwam Snack Bar. MI 9-8162-

GAS STATION attendants- One part time mornings, one part time nights. Married. Experienced only *PPly- 488 Center St.

Situations Wanted—Female 3S

WOULD LIKE house cleaning by hour or day. Also offices. Write Eleanor .Tyrrell, P. O. Box 191, Station A, Manchester.

Situations Wanted—Male 39GENERAL housework. Lawns mowed, windows washed, walls and ceilings painted. $1.50 per hour, Tel. MI 9-7809, 8 p.m.-4 p.rn.

Oogs—Birds—Pets 41

WANTED-A middle-aged babysit­ter for Dennis The Menace (age 9 monlhsl and Little Iodine <age 2), ShrHlId have own Iransportallon snri patience of Job. Call MI 9-21,16.

BIGHT WEEKS old Beague pup­pies, MI 3-4824.

MIXED GERMAN Shepherd pup­pies. Eight week., old. 1,-ake St., Coventry. PI 2-612?, ,j

BOOKKEEPER Wanted - Exper- iem ed. Apply Garden Grove, Kee­ney SI . Manchester. Conn.

W A N T F D MKNF o r our P i t r r R o o m and m i l l ing

opn a t ion R . Open ingR on a ll shiflR. Fu l l pm p loyp benpfllR.

srFN rK U RUBBKP f'O, C'happ! St . ManchpRler

Help Wanted —Malo 36TEXTILE printers for roller print­ing in vii’inilv , of Manchester. Write B(»x E. Herald.

Money to Ijoan 33

IteatinK nnd PlumbiiiK 17S WA TSON, PI.UMBINO and heal Ing contractor. New Inslsllallons, sMeratloi work and repair work.

•5U 9 3606

ABANDON ALL B IU ^- Apply for a 1st, 2nd. nr 3rd mortgage, Con- sidldale your debts into one ea.ty payment. You may have $1,000 lor a , 11111$ aa $10 a month No red tape Unlimlteil fiitui, available for I'onatructlon of new home. Call today lor < ash lomni row O ntral Really Co, .lA 7-0196 5-1 Church SI Evcnlnga AD 2 2421. Ealahliahed 1328

TO-THE KNKOLLED .ME.MHKR.S OF THE nKMOCRATIC PAU'I'Y O F T H p: . TOWN,yip-^ noi.'i'i i

Piirauant to the pim l.xion, of the State Prjiiiary Law and nilos of the Dcmo( ratic Parly, \'oii aip hereji.v, jvarned that a'caticua will be held on Auguat 16. 1956 at 6' P.M. al the Conimiinity Hall, Bol­ton. to endorac ca'hdldalrs foi Kep- resehlative .to the ticneral Aaaem- b lyand for Justicea of the Pern e, snd to Iranaai/l aiich 'other Inial- nesB as may be proper to come be­fore said caucus.

BOLTON DEMOCRATIC TOW N COMMITTEE

Vincent KtrzeiiU'kl. Chairman Dated at Bolton. Conn.-, this 12th

day of August.' 1958.

3-8 m.Yi|ij I'Hii co inplele Ihia prell.v

pa ir In al mo-xl no t im eNo 6206 with P a t l - o - R a m s 1,

In ,17-c, 3. 4. 5. 6, 7, 8 yeara. Size 4. 1 L vai d , of ,'t5-inch.

No 6209 w ith P a l t -o -K a m a la in aiz-ca 10, 12, 14. Hi, 16. 20. Size 12. 32 biial. 5 yard., of 35-inrh Tw o p a t le in a .

Sent T H IU r V - P ' lV K I ’EsN’TS in co in , for each p a t t e r n add 5c for CIO li p a l l r i n for fust-rln . , . , m a i l ­ing, .Send to -Sue B urne l l Man- ( h c l e r PIveiilnK Herald, 1150 W E . OI A .M E im AS, N E W l O i m .8(1, N',8. I ’riiil Nam e, .\ildie.s., w i th Zone. SIx'lc Niimlicr and .Siz.c

Send 35 ceiil., today for yo u r ropy nf mil f asc ina t ing p a t t e r n tiook Ba.,ic P'nahlona The new S p r in g and Siimmei '46 edition la a dclighi w ith »pc( lal f ca lm ea , up to the mlniile s ty le , . Don't m l ,a It!

l-l,()YU 8 PLUMBING Service as sures satisf'Bctlon, prompt serviCs CH 7 6124. Ml 9-5466

i PLUMBING AND Jobbing altei s- ' lions, copper lepnirlng Emergen I cy calls. Ml 9 7636,

Help Wanted—Female 35SEW INirNIACHINE~ope^iT Ex-

p e n c iU T d prcferriMl hut will train if appMcant Ir ( a m i lm r with nuR-(o l lan rouR fftiuUv Rcwing. Kak lf t rT.)v t'o., St

M O y S K W I V K S ! ( 'U R lon i r r i lpmAiul fof A von roR m cM i’R in hlKhcat in his torv * StHft now hr Avon rrp i r.if n lH t ivr r a n i $2fi lo $40 a w ork, w ith a 4 0 % »ommiaRlon. A vo n r m d i u l R . .lA 2 l74*W.

MKN PART TIME KARN UP TO $4.00 PKR HOUR

•■ IFYou are preaently employed

Have car •Are over 21

Y OU C ANEarn High Im onieWork your own hmiraWork In your own areaHave pleasant, steady workIn a home maintenance businessNo selling, no canvassing.

CALI. CH 7-6561, 10 A M -6 P M.PART TIME Esso service center. Evenings, weekends. Dependable, willing to work. Experience help­ful. MI 9-8198 before 5 p in.

REGISTERED pharmacist tor part time. Excellent working condi­tions. Miller Pharmacy': MI 3-4134.

Articles For Sale 45

KNAPP SHOES. Harry Mahoney, 38 Maple St Tel. Ml 8-4827.

18 " TORO ROTARY mower, dis­continued model. Regular $69.95, now $49.95. Maflow’s, 867 Main St.

PRE-SEASON chain saw cpeclal. Save up to 30% on Clinton saws. New and used. Capitol Equipment Co., 36 Main St., Ml 8-7958.

CEDAR CIXITHES line poles In­stalled. nil sizes Old poles re­moved Reasonable. Used -ruck tires. MI 9-1353.

MOTO-MOWER, Toro, Jacobsen rqtary, reel or riding type power mowers. Toro Power Handle. Capitol Equipment Co. 88 Main. Ml 3-7958.

POWER MOTORS—Entire stock at cost. No down payment, 20 montha lo pay. Cole’s Discount Station, 436 Center St.

AIDIIS.SIO.N OF FI.FUI’OKSThe Board ot Ndmla.,l(*n oTKlec-

tn i, of Iho Town of Co\-entiy will hold acsHioii on .Saturday, August 23, 1956 Itom 10:Q0 A.M. to 4:00 ILM,. al the llrehmiae In North Covenliy foi the puipo.,e of ex- aimmng qiialilicatlona and sdmir- tmg lo 'the; elector's oslh those fpimd qimliried.

Dated si Coventry, Oonn., this 15th day of August 1958,

Richard M, Gallnat Berlron A. Hunt

, Board of Balaclman

$18,900s .An elder 7-rmim home thsi look, like new ln,lde snd nut s t hedriMim, s '1-csr garage s ,61. dames Parish • Nice lot.

R. F. DIMOCK CO,

$23,900LARGE RANCHs An extra nice home off Pur­ler SI. t H rooms s 2 full Itaths s Encl»,e<l porch # Recreation room s l-'iill basement ■ Large lot.

R. F, DIMOCK CO.

WANTEDWomen for our InapecliOn and

packaging deparlment, factory e.x- perlence helpful. Houra 7 a m.-3:30 p.m, Eull employe benefita,

SPENCER r u b b e r CO. Chapel St , Manchester

EXTRA CASH $50 tb $200 essily spare lime. Sell stunning new Hy- cresl CThristmaa cards. Up io 100% profit. Cards aa low as $1. Experience unnecessary. Free aamples. No money down, Aaaorl- ment.s on approvai. Hvciest Card Co., Dept. E226,' 163 Esaex S(., Roaton It. Ma.sa.-1 ...... . , . .. _

EXPERIENCFID plumbers hgjpera. Steady work, good wages. Life In-, surance. medical and accident In­aura i.ur progiama. Apply Beison Bioa., New Britain, or Call JA

. 7-4922,

USED FOUR ft. fluorest'ent lights. Two biltbs. IJke new, $10 each. Three or more. $9 each. Ml 9-0474.

USED l u m b e r and building sup­plies. Hot water heater, modern furnacea, oil burnera. 275 gallon oil tank. Gun cabinet, bathroom seta complete, plumbing supplies, sinks and toilets. Open dally 3:30- 6:30 p.m., Saturday 6 a m.-4 p.m Choman's Housewrecking. 'Yard located St Stock Place off North Main Street, or call "MI 9-2392.

CALIFONE 25 wait cohjbinatlon P.A. a'yalem and variable'' speed record player PI 2-7415.

WOODEN STORM windows ^ screens, six 32x56'j, nine. 32x62'i. one 24.X54. one 29\x53. Also 7 piece walnut dining room set. MI 9-6746:

YOUR BUILOmG NEEDS AT WHOLESALE PRICE

6d and 16d Common Nails$9.60 per keg

Builder’s Wool Insulation$38.00 per M’

I-ock Seu $1.75 eachDisappearing Stairways $24.95 each Dry 1x8 Sheathing $84,00 per M’ Prefinished Paneling

from 24c sq. ft. 24” Royals Shingles $18.95 per sq. Canadian F-ramIng $89.00 per M’ Windows—Complete and set up

From $10.50 each Knotty Pine Paneling 14c sq. ft. Clear Clam Shell Casing

8c Un. ft.We will beat oUr competitors

advertised prices by at least 5% NOBODY-BUT NOBODY UNDERSELLS NA"nONAL

NATIONAL LUM BER. INC.381 STATE STREET

NORTH HAVEN, CONN, Telephone CHestnut 8-2147

Diainoiids-r>WatchcJewelry 48

LEONARD W. TOST Jeweler, re­pairs, adjusts watenea expertly. Reaaonable prices. Open daily. Thursday eveninga. 129 Spruce Street Ml 9-4387.

Price Includes Delivery, Setup, Service. Guarantee Immediate de­livery or Free Storage untU needed.

» Phone for appointment SAMUEIL ALBERT, Hartford CH

T-0358, any time up to 8 'p.m.See It Day Or Night

If you have no means of trans­portation, I’ll send my auto for you. No obligation.

A—I ^ B —E—Tl—T—'S43-45 ALL'YN ST„ HARTFORD

Open Mon., Thru Frl. till 8 p.m.

ATKINS USED FURNITURE EXCHANGE

15 OAK ST.Just received frqm Simmons,

Hollywood bed outfit with head-- boards, full an d ' twin size, box spring and mattress. Factory sales floor .samples selling at less than half price.

Open Thursday Evenings Until 9

Closed MondaysFOUR-PIECE walnut bedroom set. good condition. Reasonable offer accepted. Call after 8 p.m. MI 9-2409.

Machinery snd Tools 52TROY ROTOTILLHIRS and attach­ments. Bolena wiUMlig or riding garden tractors and attachments. Capitol Equipment Co., $8 Main. Ml 8-7658.

Flowers—Nursery Stock 50-B

CUT FLOWERS, gladiolus and zin­nias. Fern Gardens. 179 Fern St.

GI.-ADIOLT and asters. 564 Hill Rd. MI 3-5994.

Bush

Household Goods 51ANTIQUE FURNITURE, sliver, glass china, and used furniture bought and sold Fftmiture Repair Service. Ml 8-7449.

FRANK IS starting to buy and sell good used furniture and antiques al 420 Lake St Ml 9-eS60. Hours 10-8 p.m. Closed Sundays.

SALE 1-3 OFF on wallpaper Wall t ^ a 4c a tile, Kentiie. from 7c eSch. Green Palm and Wallpaper, at the Green. ,x,

STOREWlDE SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE

Tremendous savings on ail floor samples. Stop and Shop atCHAMBERS FURNm iRE

At the GreenHours 10-5 and 7 :30-9 daily

Wearing Apparel—Fun 57CHESTER FURRIERS remodels furs for $19.95, Fur storage 82. Cleaning and glazing $3. MI 9-7218.

Wanted—To Buy 58WANTED TO BUY

Good used resaleable himlture, also amall upright and aplnet pianos.

Watkins Used Furniture Exchange

15 Oak Street

Rooms Without Board 59ROOM FOR RENT. Inqulra Stats Tailor Shop, 8 Btssell. MI S-T383. After 6;8C Ml 8-5047.

PLEASANT large heated room. Free parking^, Oq bus line. 148 Center St. Ml 3-5002.

FURNISHED ROOM at 106 Birch St. MI 9-3884,

FURNISHED ROOM rear Main St. 9 Hazel St. Ml 9-2170.

s t e r il iz e d used furniture for every room including upholstered furniture, springs, appliances and antiques, in excellent condition. -40% off on new mattresses. Le- Blanc Furniture Hospital. '195 South St.. Rockville. TR 5-2174

$14,7006-ROOM CAPE

• Rstalillshcd hlanchester neigh­borhood • Ctonvenlenl to bus and shopping • neaiillfiil fenred .yard e Ftreplare • Full base- ment. j-

R. F. PIMbOK 00.

AUCTION NOTICI] l 0»« Main .SI,—Manchmler I

(Opjt. Old High School)

FRIDAY. AUG. 15At « P.M.

Household Furnishings, Antiques, Rrtc-A-|iracs,

Alaa.if Fine Pieces. - InapsHitlen 8 P.M.

MrGrafh. AoettoDaer

SEPTIC TANKSAND

PLUGGED SEWERS Machine Cleaned

Septic Tanks, Dr.y .Wells. Newer Lines Insinlled—Cellnr Water- proeUng Done

McKinney gros.S«w«raa« Ditpoiial Co.I3II-I8« Penri NL - Ml S-ASn8

$18,500NEW RANCH

If you’re looking fo r-a home with extra large moms — a large wooded lot ,—- 8 bedrooms — Fireplace — and a full base­ment — this Is It.

R. F. DIMOCK CO.

FOR SALE-Three cushion English lounge Bofs. Needs some repairing. Reasonable. Call MI 9-9495

KNEEHOLE mahogany desk, ■ in go(xi condition. Price $10. MI 9-4114.

Va c u u m c i.e a n e r s 'boiighusoM, repaired, any make. MI 9-365$ aftdr 8.

$17,800NEW RANCH

• $ bedronms, large living room and dining room e 2 fireplaces e AttnchM garage e F.ull base­ment e Built hv If A R Const. Co.

R. F. DIMOCK CO.

FOR THE VERY CEST IN HOMES OAU

R. F . DIMOCK Co.Ml 9424$

BARBARA WOODS Ml M m

R O B i»T W. AGNEW

JOSEPH N.ASHFORD Ml f-AClS .

VtOBEET D. MITSOOOK — . . MI 1-S4TC

WhltehouM Bros.

P A IN T IN G anil D E C O R A T IN GIntRflerAi!^ ExtRrIer

Fully m uitd G u a r o n t * ^

Werkmanchip Phone Hr 3-0110

PLEASANT front room for one or two gentlemen. Near bath. Park­ing. 54 High Street.

PLEASANT ROOM, continuous hot water, separate entrance. Gentle­man. Parking, Ml 3-4724.

ROOM WITH kitchen pri'vileges, centrally located. Single or double, Siyhll babies accepted. See Mrs. Dorsey. 14 Arch St. ..

ATTRACTIVE furnished room for one or two gentlemi^ with kitchen privileges and parking. Inquire .167 Maple, SI.

FRON’f ROOM, double! beside bath, free parking, privileges. Tel. MI 9A740.

$16,40PRANCH

e Nice S-room home In Man­chester • Over 11.000 M|. ft. • $ bedrooms' a f^ ll bdsement with garage • M n nf trees.

R. F. DIMOCK GO.

$17,900COLONIAL

e 8 rooms and attached garage a Large Ini with a beantlful view a Ijirge living mom with fireplace a ,8 bedrooms. . ,

R. F. DIMOCK 00.

• SEPTIC TAW^Cleaned and InataUed

• SEWERSMachine OleaheJ

• INSTALLATION SPECIALIST

Town and Couatry Draiaa^a Ca.

Ml 9-4143

NOW IS THE TIME TO lUY YOUR

1958 M ERCURYIS BRAND NEW MERCURVR TO CHOOSE FROM

. ALL MODELS. . . AlX.COIAiRS Prirasi will aeVar be lower . , . aad year present ear will aesrar be worth more thga It le right now In tradA |

M0R|ARY:Y BROTHERSLiaeolB — Maatsuy e^.CeatNMatal — BaglMi ParR

M l CENTER EVBNINOR---MI »A1U

■a.

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, ^ N N , TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1958 ' IPAGB THIRTEEN

Rooms Without Board 59'-LiARGE THREE Window room,

clean and comfortatde, for refined genUyrtan. 9-8764,

AT CENTER—PJeatant clean -oom for one .pr two gentlemen, .with bath, shower and parking. M Hazel St. MI 9-7083.

ROOM FOR r e n t . Private / en­trance. Continuous hot water, Bhower, tine men onijq Inquire 101 Chestnut St.

■V.Aportments— Flats— '

Tenements 63TWO AND f 6UR room apart- menta including beat, hot water, gaa, electric refrigerator and gaa sto'vo. Call MI 6-4071 from 5-7 p.m. only, '

TWO ROOM unfumlahed apart­ment. AU utUltlea except gaa. Cen­trally located Rent $88. Ml 8-4824.

FIVE ROOM apartment, West Side heat and garage. One grown child preferred. Inquire at 73 Summer St.. MI 3-8880.

FOUR ROOMS and hath, hot water and heat convenient location Call hfi 8-7861. •

LARGE SECONp floor apartment, four rooms. Just off Main St. $80. Write Box G, Herald, »

SIX ROOM apartment, completely redecorated. Central. Lease avail­able. Ideal for teachers, etc. Call MI 3-187" any time.

TWO ROOM furnished apartment at 106 Birch St. MI 9-3884.

MANCHESTER—Lovely five room flat plus range. $95 monthly Cal) Ml 3-0441.

THREE ROOMS and tile bath. Fur­nished circulating hot w a ^ heat. Venetlah blinds. School ,St. near Main. Adults. For tnforznation in­quire 284 Spruce St. / '

TWO, THREE, five 709 Main St. See Mr. Clark at 709 Main St. Telephone MI 3-2068.

NEW 5 ROOM apartment, heat, hot water. $100 monthly. \Vrite Box A. Herald.

FOUR ROOM flat, heat and hot water. Available Sept. 1. Central­ly located on bus line, $90 month­ly. Call Ml 9-8774, •

NEW 4*i ROOM apartment, heat hqt water, atove, refrigerator. $120 monthly. MI 3-6105.

Business Locations- for Rent 64

Business Locations for Rent 64

ROCKVILLE, $4 Park, St;—Attrac­tive offices, auitable doetora or anv other aervica. Will mibdivide $38 per room. TRamont 8-8188.

THREE ROOM office, ground Hvel, Main Street near Center. Plenty of parking. Phone MI »-8223, MI 8-744L

FOR LEASE, Route 44A, Coventry, MobUgaa SUtioh, S bay. Call H. H Stenner. JA 2-8281, Hartford, Conn.

Houses for Renfi. 65NEW TWO bedroom ranch. Avail­able now until June, ' completely furnished. 20 minutes from Hart­ford, also the university. Write Box H, Herald.

Suburban For Rent 66ROCKVILLE - 38 Elm St., new three-room.- apartment, heated, electric range, refrigerator ga­rage, disposal, no pets. $90; TR 8-2808,. TR 8-8050.

Summer Homes for Rient .67BABBS BEACH, Congamond Lake. West Suffield. Conn. Due to can- cenation—Pour room cottage with screened front and back jtorches. BOO feet from water, also heated. August 10 until September. 18. W. S. Dash, Babbs Beach, C Court.

COLUMBIA LAKE - Three bed ■ room cottage, available August 17- Labor Day. Electric kitchen, hot vtAter. Sandy Beach. Call HA 8-1886.

LAKE AM8TON—Four rooini cot­tage near water, 160 per week MI 3-8159.

COTTAGE FOR RENT — Small waterfront cottage, Columbia Lake. August 16-23. $50. Phone Ml 9-4929, Ml 3-2593.

Wanted to Rent 68

Houses For Side 72fXVnl — Naw Capa vrtth.UOO aguara f t at Uving area. 8 mlnuMa from Manchestar O raaa Tounga- town Utehen living room zritli fireplaM, veatibnle. Baaement ga- 'rage .,*^ rga lot, $16,200. R. F. Obnock and Co., Raaltora, MI 9-5248, Barbara Woods, Ml -9-7702, Robert W. Agnew, Ml .S-687B, Jo­seph N. Aahford, M l: 9-6818, or Robert P. Murdock, Ml 8-6472.

(VI) MANCHESTER — Naif/ 8H ' room ranch in eatablishedjQaagli^.

neighbortHxxL FtrenlaMf: with paneled wai), large n t» e n , ga­rage. Nice lot with trees. $17,900- R. F. Dimock A Co., Realtors. MI 9-S24S, Barbara Woods, Ml 9-7702, Robert W. Agnew, Ml 3-6878, Jo­seph N. Ashford, MI O-SSIS or Rofiert D, " -

(ID—$11,800—$13,060. New subur­ban ranches. Five rooms, % acre lots, full basements. H i^ eleva-

• tion, nice .view. 10% down. R. F. Dlmock A Co., Realtors, MI 9-5246, Barbara Woods, MI 6-7702, Robert W. Agnew, Ml 8-6878, Jo­seph N. Ashford. .M l 9-8818 or Robert D. Murdbek, Ml 3-8472. .

8-6 PUPLEDt, oil steam heat, ga­rages, 184' frontage, bus line. Carlton W. Hutchiha, MI 9-8132.

(Vm i BOLTON Coventry Uns. New six room Cape. Four nnlabed down, ceramio Ule bath, walkout basement Iqtge lot tlS.Ton R F Ditnock A Cb., Realtors; MI 9-5248 Robert W. Agnew. Ml 3-6878. Jo­seph N. Ashford. MI 6-8818, or Robert D. Murdock, Ml 3-8472.

(XXVI) JUST OFF Portqr St Beautifu; six room Dutch fJolorJal for only 819,800. Call R. F DImOck A Co.. Realtors, Ml 9-8245 or Mr. Bemie Cantor. TR 8-3496.

COVENTRY — Furnished, seven nx>m, three bedroom home. Large pine-panelSd living room with fleldMone fireplace. Dining room and den, Sundeck. Artesian well. Oil heat. Ameslte drive. Beautiful­ly landscaped double lot Right-of- way to private beach, ibis and much more for $14,800, for every­thing. Open for Insnectibn. We are moring to Florida, which accounts for this low price. Stephen Cubles, owner. South Street, (Coventry. Phone PI 2-6728,

Houses for Sale

Murdock, Mf S-8472.(XXVm EAST B A R T R ' O R O (Whlis they last) — Nsw ranch homes. |i4,980. (Odiiiplctaiy fln- isfasd) Built-in stove and oven, nrepiates, esrande tUa batb, full baaementa, am sska ilrivta com- pletsly landacaiMd. 10% fffmt. F.H.A. R. F. Ounook A Od., Real to n . Ml 8-8248, BarbAra. Wooda, Ml 9-mu, Robert W- Agnew. Ml8- 8878, Joisepb N. Ashford, Ml9- 8818. or Robert D *3-8479.

D. Murdock. Ml

MANCHESTER —Large room yellow shingle ranch home. Three bedrooms, fireplace, tils bath, wall to wall earpatlng, radiant heat. YOungatown kitchen with disposal, thermopane picture win­dow. Rusco combination windows and doors, rear terrace, attached garage,' am'esite driveway, large beautiful landscaped lot. Priced to sell due owner’s Illness, immediate occupancy. B s^ t( Agency. MI 9-7683 or write iSox P, Herald.

H o u m s Cor,.SAl« 72MANCHESTER Spacious three

bedroom ranch in top location. Raised hearth fireplace, large colored ceramic tile bath, alum­inum Storms and screens, patio. Many other liatinga from $7300, Elsis Mayer. Realtor, MI 9-BS34.

M"© BE SOLDA V d N S T P E E T

An expandable ViiM m C&pe Cod home offend tor qulbk sale below $11,000. Steam heat, flnF>ace, large kitchen, city water and^ sewer.' Handy to school, stores and bus.

PHELPS ROADAn attractive 1 bedroom home

located in an excellent residential area with nicely landscaped lot 71 feet front and 338 feet deep. Large living room ,with fireplace, and screened porcbi.. Modern kitchen, dining room, 1 ^ bafhs. m aster bed- rOom, attaclied garkge plus many other features. Fatrly priced at $18,800.

Wantied-rwResI Estut* 77ARB ZOU OONSIDERINO

SBLLDKj YOUR PROPERTY? We,«Ul appraise yoiir propert'’

tree* and without any obligation. Wa aiao. imy property tor cash.

Member Multlpls Listing V , STANLE'F BRAY, Realtor

BRAE-BURN REALTY Ml 8-8373

ULSTINUb WANTED, slngia and two-famuy houses.- Member of MLS. Howard R. Bastings, Raal- tor. Ml 9-1107 any time

HAVE CLIENT looking for a 4 to '8 apartment building. Call Broker, P. V. Tmigren. MI 3-8331.

Legal Notices

ROBERT J. SiyllTH, INC, 963 Main Sti'eet

MI 9-5241

COLUMBIA LAKE—Seven room ram bling Cape Cod, double ga­rage, dishwasher, fireplace. 150' frontage, beautiful landscaping. Carlton W. Hutchinh. Ml 6-5132.

MANCHESTER-^Famlly grpwlng? Need a larger home. This is It. Eight room ranch, complete, first time on market. P. V. Tongren, Broker. MI 3-6321.

WANTED—Six room house with chance of buying with about 1 acre of land on outskirts of Man­chester or Rockville. Have $1,000 down for owner. Write Box B, Herald.

Business Property for Sale 70

TWO ROOM alr-conditloned front office. 100.% Main St. location. Parking available. Apply Mar­low’s, 867 Main St.

CXIMMERCIAL buainesa or office space tor rent. Up to 6500 square feet. Win aub-divide. Main St Lo­cated near Center Plenty ol park Ing. Phone Ml 9-5229 or M3 3-7444.

Tow'n of Manchesteri ublic Hearing

Proposed Regional Planning Authority Ordinance'’’

In accordance with the provi­sions of the Town Charter, notice is hereby given that a Public Hear­ing will be held in the Municipal Building Hearing Room Tuesday. August 19, 1958 at 8:00 P.M. on a proposed ordinance as follows:

-Section 1. ADOPTION OF ORDI­NANCE. Pursuant to the provi­sions of Section I of Public Act 635 of the January 1957 session of the General A.sscmbly, the Town of Manchester, having a duly consti­tuted planning' commission, estab­lished pursuant to the provisions of the Town C?harter. hereby adopts Chapter 46 of the General Statutes, aa amended, and joins in the crea­tion of the regional planning au­thority for the Capital Planning Region aa defined b.V the. Connec­ticut Development Commission un­der the provisions of Section N178 of the November 1955 Supplement to the General Statutes.

-Section 2. LOCAL REPRESEN­TATION. ’ITie Town of Manchester, having a population of 34,116, ac­cording to the, federal census of 1950 shall have three representa­tives on the board of the authority Who shall be appointed as follows:

The Board of Directors 16'hereby authorized to appoint to the board of the Authority three electors of the town of Manchester, in the fol­lowing manner: one member to aen'e until the first Monday in No­vember 1958, one until the first Monday Ih November 1959 and one member to serve until the first Monday In November 1960. Tliere- after all appointments shall be made for a period of three years. Ap,pointees under Wiis section shall continue to serve aftei- expiration of their term until their huccessor is appointed and takes office. Ap­pointees- may be reappointed for successiyp terms. At least one ap­pointee shall be a member of the planning commtsaion and if such reureseritaUve’s membership on the Town Planning Commission ahall cease during his term as sucJi representative;' then he ahall be considered to have resigned fjro'm said Regional Planning Authority and the vacancy shall be filled by the Board of Directors. Terms of office of Initial appointees shjill

- commence upon establishment of said Authority.

Sec. 3. RESIGNATION OF MEM­BER. Any representative who la absent from three, consecutive reg­ular meetings of the Regional Planning Authority “fd “tiy inter­vening duly called qiecia) meetings thereof shall be considered to have r-slgned from said Regional Plan­ning Authority and the vaca’ncy shall be filled by (he Board of Di­rectors. The requirements of this section may be waived where ill- neaa, or other extenuating circum­stance makes it Impomible for a repreaentniUve to ifietit the atthRtl-. ance requirement of tnla aectloq, F

Sec. 4. EFFECTIVE DATE. This ordinance shell become effec­tive ten days after public notice of its paasage unless a petition for overrule ^ a l l have been filed with the Town Clerk th accordance with the Town Charter.

Gilbert C. Barnes, Secretor}/■ Board of Directors

Manchester, Connecticut Dated at. MancheiUr, CkHinecO-

ouL this 12th dhy o t August, 1958. A4vt- M ia

(XINCRETE BLOCK and steel in­dustrial building. High celling, 8 phase current. About 1.90() square feet.' Over acre of land. Plenty of parkmg. Call Broker, Ml 3-6321.

Farms and Land tor Sale 71FOR DIFF’ERENT sizes ana types of farms and land tracts v/ithln 20 miles of Hartford Lawrence F. Flano, Broker. Ml 9-8910.

Hou-s.es for Sale 72$10,500—SK ROOM Colonial, alum- Inum storms, double garage, good location. Carlton W. Hutchins, Ml 9-5132.

(XlJ) MANCHESTER - New six room ranch home In Rorkledge section, U4 .baths, ceramic tlffe kitchen counters. Attached garage, ameaite drive, fully landaoa^d lot, $19,800. Call R. F. Dlmock O)., Realtors. MI 6-5245, Barbara Wooda, Ml 6-7702, Robert'-W new. Ml 3-6878, Joseph N. Ash­ford. Ml 9-(W18. or Robert D Mur­dock, Ml 8-8472.

(XXVITI)—NEW six room (Colonial, $17,900. Being built by Joseph Roaetto on Broad Street. near Waddell School. 1% baths, built-in stove and oven. Completely land­scaped. Amesite drive. Delivery In 91 days. R. F Dlmock A Co., Realtors Ml 9-5245, Barbara Woods, Ml 9,7702, Robert W Ag­new. MI 3-687$. Joseph N. Ash­ford, Ml 9-8818, or Robert D. Mur­dock, Ml 3-6472,

(V)-MANCHESTER - Five room ranch with 1120 square feet. Three bedrooms, ceramic bath and plas­tered walls, lots of trees. Base­ment garage, $16,400. R. F. Dlmock A Co.. Realtors, MI 9-6245, Barbara Woods, MI 0-7702, Robert W. Agnew, MI 3-6878, Joseph N. Aahford. MI 9-6818, or Robert D. Murdock. MI 3-6472.

MANCHESTER4-BEDROO(M- tiAPE. City utilities,

deep lot, $1,200 down, $12,000 VA appraisal.

5 ROOil CAPE COD. Garage, baae- nlent. Minimum down, $14,000.

8-ROOM RANCH, Fireplace, porch, garage. Near Buckley School. Im­mediate occupancy. $15,700.

6-ROOM (XJSTOM RANCH, BuUt- los. stainless steel range, ' ven and refrigerator. 2 fireplacea, $21,000,

8-ROOM CAPE, Lakewood Circle area. Paneled living room, 2 fire­places, 11a baths, garage. $24,500;

TOLLAND— Located In "Crest- wood” a colony of distinctively dif­ferent custom homes, this 8 room Ranch is highlighted by a spacious colonial flreplaced living room complete with wall to wall carpet­ing, two fine bedrooms, delight­fully bright kitchen, electric stove and refrigerator, dining area, pine paneled den, two car garage, jalousied breezeway. A distin­guished home landscaped with tall shade trees and fashionable ahrub- bery. Lot I 'i th acres. Immediate occupancy. Exceptional 4‘i% fi­nancing available.' Immaculate c-ondition. $23,800. George J. Cole-

AT A COURT o r PROBATE holdzn »t CoVriHry. within and tor thr District of Oovditry on the 11th d«y of AugiiM. A. D. 1968

Prospnt Hon.' . Elmorf). • Turklnglon, Erq., Judgr.On molTon of FrAoces E. Jacobson,

Exocuirlx. South Street. t)ov«niry. CoiwL, ^ ”of** oodwin w.Jacobaon. latR of Coventry.• .within Raid difltrlct. deceaaed.This Court doth decree '>hat alx monthA be allowed and Unilu*d fdTs the

Hebron

Goldstein., S|iiith W inG O j P L ^ s l a t u r e N o ^

Alfred D. Goldstein, 26, and Ed-^ia aupporiing the two porty-en- ward A. Bmlth, 69, wU) b a th e two Republican candidates for State RepreaentoUve in thig fall'a elec­tion following a cauciu batUa laat

rredliorn of said estate to exhibit th^r „ ....w ^claima against ih(' same to the Excciiv on Burroughs Hill R4, owned by trlx*and directs --............... that public notice be.(Clvcn.of this oi’der by ndvertlsing In a >vewApaper having a circulation in said dlxuici, and by fwsting a copy thereof o n the nubile sign post in M ild Town of Covunt^. nearest the place where the

CeitiflTARtR«*cordEIzMOim.TUnKINtJTON. Judge.

AT A COURT d p PROBATK lioldrn at CoventryJ within artd for the District of CoveiUry. on the Uth day of August. A.D. 1908Present Hon, Elmore Turklngton. Ksq.. Jiidcr.On motion of Lawrence J. Biibdeau. Administrator, 334 Lydall Slreei. KNiji- cliester. CMnn , on the estate of Geo Jf. Bilodeau, late of Coventry, within said

di.strlct. deceased.This Court doth decree that six months he allow'od and limited for the creditors ot said estate (o exhibit their claims against the same to the Admin­istrator and directs that public notice

night.In more ways than one, hovlever,

last night’s theme song could very well have been; “There’ll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight.”

Juat oa the unusually large turn­out of 76 Republicans was mounting the Town Hall atepz to convene In caurua, the fire airen , Bounded. GOP Town Chairman Richard M. Grant, and nomination-seekers Goldstein and Smith were among the many Hebron volunteera who raced lo the kitchen fire, in a house

,-nnmnrm uin ■ i br (flven Of Ihia order by •dvrrililna InciRiainon. jzs.aoo. George J. cole- * tie«»|>«ni,r h.vfnt ■ rirculallon tn man, Rockville, TR 8-4710, TR • raid dtatrlci. »nd by imaling8-4046.

(X m i—SANTTNA Drive—Oft Kee­ney St. New 5(4 rexjm ranch on large wooded lot. Built bv Harry Goodwin Jr., $18,600. R. F- Dlmock A Co.. Realtors, MI 9-8245, Bar­bara - Wooda, WD 9-7702, Robert W Agnew, Ml 8-6878, Joseph N. Aahford, Ml 9-6818. or Robert. D. Murdock, Ml 3-8472.

(XX) -COVENTRY- 6’,4 room ranch. Basement garage, three bedrooms. Acre lot. $16,700. R F. Dlmock It Co., Rectors, Ml 9-5248, Barbara Woods, Ml 9-7702, Robert W. Agnew, MI 3-8878,' Jo­seph N. Ashford, Ml 9-6818 or Robert D. Murdock. Ml 3-8472.

$18,800 — LARGE three bedroom ranch, attached garage, aluminum storms, full cellar. Beautiful lot. Near bus. Carlton W. Hutchins, MI 9-8132.

(XXni—SIX room Cape. Finished recreation, room, garage, covertd patio Beautiful landscaped yard, choice, location, $17,800. H F. Dlmock A Co., Realtors. Ml 6-5245, Barbara Woods. Ml 9-7702. Robert W. Agnew, Ml 8-6878, Joseph N. Ashford. Ml 9-8818. or Robert D. Murdock.'Ml 8'-8472.

$11,800 NO CLOSING costs, attrac­tive 3 bedrixim ranch, ceramic bath, formica counters, hot water heat, excellent construction, 100’ frontage, trees. Carlton W. Hutch­ins, MI 9-5132.

Town of MancliesterPublic Hearing

Proposed Ordinance In accordance with the provl-

sions.of the Towq Charter, notice is hereby given that a PubUc Hearing Will be heft! in the Mimi(;ipal Build­ing Hearing Room; Tuesday. - Au­gust 19. 1968 at 8 P.M. on a pro­posed ordinance as . follows:

An '''rdinance CVeating a Redevelopment Agency for the

Town of Mimehester SECTTION J. ;^embcrs. Pursuant

lo Public Act 125 of the Jan: tiary 1957 General Assembly, there is hereby created the Manchester Redevolopment Agency, w h i c h , shall be compoaed of live (5) elec­tors of the 'Town who shall be ap­pointed by the General Manager with the approval of the Board of Director!!. The members first ap­pointed • shqll • be designated to serve for one, (wo. three, four and five years respectively and there­after members shall bb appqinted to serve fof five years. Any va­cancy shall be filled for the lih- explred term.

SEC. 2. Officers. 'The Agency slial! .select from among its mem­bers a chairman and a vice-ehalr- man and may employ a secretory, and such other officers, ogehU, technical, consultants, legal coun­sel and employes as it may require. —SEC. 3. Ex^M8ea.'*The memTsertt of the Agnecy ahall serve without coltipensatiiip but V may be reim- Itursed for neceadOry expensea.

SBC. 4. Aeuona. Actions by th? Agency shall be taken only on .a majority vote of an ’the members.

SEC. 5. Duties. The Agency shall have those. dUUea ga are set forth In Actions 53, .54 4t' 55 6f IhibUc' Act. No. IS . of the Janiiary^.ICS? General A aa^bly .

' Gilbert C. Barnes, Secftstoiy r Board of Directors ? '

/ Manchestar. jiOoluiecUcut•' Dated a t Manchester, OinnecU- ettt, this Cth .day o t Auguat, ICSC.

( I I - MANCHESTER - Six room ranch. Large living room, dining room and three bedrooms. Two fireplacea, garage. Large iQt, full baapment. - Nice locatidn $17,800. R. F. Dlmock & Co., Realtors. MI 9-8245, Barbara Woods. Ml 9-7702, Robert W Agnew, Ml 3-6878. Jo­seph N. Aahford, Ml 9-6818 or Rob­ert D. Murdock, MI 8-8472.

BOLTON6-ROOM RANCH. Large lot. flre-plac$16,400.

VERNON3 B.EDROOM RANCH. Fkill base-

ftient, trout brook. $18,300,

SOUTH WINDSORNEW 3 bedroom Ranches, near

Parkway. Half acre. Fkill base­ment, $18,500.

SPUT LEVEL. "S bedrooms, fire­place, recreation room. Garage. Vacant $16,900.

TOLLAND4-ROOM RANCH. Fireplace, car­

port, near Parkway. $11,800.

CLIFFORD HANSENREALTOR Ml 3-2483Eves.. JOHN CHENEY, Ml 9-0340.

Ml 9-0788

HAVE YOU seen 89 Hawthorne St.? (Between Cambridge and Ashland Sts.) It’s an extremely neat 4 room expandable Cape, newly decorated inside ahd out. Ideal for retired couple. LSirge walnut tree in back yard, outdoor fireplace. Walking distance to bus and Parkade. M. L. 793. Call Ul- llan Grant or the realtor of your choice, Wafton W. Grant Agency, Realtor. MI 3-1153.

LOW MONTHLY payments, 8 room ranch on 44A. One acre. It has ever>'thing you wish, $16,900. PI 3-79Ur - —

(DC) BULTUN -Coventry Una. New 6 room ranch: ceramic Ule bath, knotty pine kitchen, .walk-out basement. 1-orge lot. Reduced to $14,900 R F Dlmock Co., Real­tors, MI 9 8245, Barbara Woods, MJ 9-7702 Robert W AgntW Ml 3-8878. Joseph N, Ashford, Ml 9-6818, or Robert D Murdoex Ml 3-6472.

BOWERS ST. —$15,000, excellent location, near school, finished 6 room Cape, Dull shed dormer, tile bath, full cellar with hatchway and connections foe washer and dryer. Hot water oil iieat, amesite driveway, aluminum combination windows and doors. Electric stove, Venetian blinds, full length fire­place mirror, etc. included. Owner MI 9-4779.

VERNON LAKE Street—Five rortm ranch. 2 yeara Old. Must sell. P. Tongren. Broker. Ml 3-6321.

UNUSUALLY beautiful new 6 room Ranch In choice location. Two baths, 2-caf garage, 2 fireplaces, apace for recreation room with full length windows, all city utili­ties, 526,500.. Also new 8 room Co­lonial. 2 baths, 2-car garage. Real­ly a luxurious home. $28,800. See- lert Realty Co. Ml 8-2221.

ANDOVER—Five room year 'round cottage. Two lots, near lake. Fire­place, garage. Vacant. $8,400. John Cheney or Clifford Hansen. Realtor. Ml 3-2463, evenings, MI 9-0340.

CAPE COD X- Uving room, fire­place. paneled recreation room, ceramic tile bath, plastered walls, garage, hot water oil heat, com­bination windows, awnings. MI 9-8581.

BRANFORD S T .-F irst time on market. Six roiom Cape, clean, new root, aluminum storms and

.screens. Excellent value. Price $11,990. 4% mortgage may be as­sumed. Agent BU 9-0939.

(Ill)—Bolton—Beautiful (oui room ranch. 1>,4 years old % acre lot with apple orchard. Paneled fire­place wall, baaement large porch $14,000.'F.H.A. or V.A, R. F.Dlmock & Co., Realtors. Ml 6-5245, |Barbara Woods, Ml 9-7702 Robert i MANCHESTER—An unusual list-

ROLLING PARK—Six room Cape, I ' i baths, 12’xl8’ living room, fire­place. cabinet kitphen. extra large garage, amesite driveway. 7S’x224’ lot, $15,900. Ken Ostrinsky, Real­tor. MI 3-5169.

W. Agnew, Ml 3-6878, Joseph N Ashford, MI 9-6818, Or Robert D. Murdock. Ml 3-6474.

(1V)-MANC3ESTER - Six room Cape just off East Center Street. Beautiful yard, amesite • drive, basement, fireplace^ .A rea l., nice home for $14,700. R. F. Dlmock Ic Co., Realtor!, Ml 9-5245. Barbara Wooda, Ml 9-7702, Robert W Ag­new, Ml 3-6878, Joseph N. Aah­ford. Ml 9-6818, or Robert D. Mur­dock, NU 3-6472.

(XXrV) MANCHESTER older Al T. room honiet three.bedrooms. 2-car garage; large liif. Within St. James Parish. $18,900. R. F'. Dlmock It Co., Realtors. MI .0-5246, Barbara Wooda. Ml 0-7702, 'Rotert W. Agnew. MI 3-6878, Jo­seph N. Ashford, Ml 9-6818, or

. Robert D. Murdock, Ml 3-8472.(VU)—SDC ROOM ranch neat Ppr- ter street School Two .praihic ttls baths, fully plastered Bn-

' closed (orch, • Mtached -garage. Large tot $43,900 R. F 'Olmock, Si Co.. Reoltora, MI 9-5245 . Bar­bara Woods. Ml 9-7702. Robert W. Agnew, Ml 3-8878, Joseph N Aah­ford, Ml 0:8818, or Robert D. Mur dock. Ml 8-8472.

$13,800 Large ’ 4Vi room cuqtom built ranch. Ftreplace, hot water heat, aluminum stonna, US’ front­age’, near bus, a real buy. Carlton W. Hutchins. MI 9-5132.

MAN.CHE^ER —For economical liv ti^ bay this Attractive 8-room . C ^ , near new high achtMl. Flre- pioce. goraga. I0 n « tot. $14500 with 10% (town, Madeilne Smith, Realtor, l a 8*l«4l ,

(X-) MANC31ESTER-8ix nwm Go- lonlo) on a large lot lirUh a beautl- ful view. 1S)(90 Uviiig room -with fireplace. 8 beilrooma, , garage.

. $rr.900. R. F. Dimock H Co.. Real- tors.' MI 9-6348, Barbara Wooda, Ml 8-7703, Robert W: Agnejv. MI $-8878, Joseph tf . Ashford.- MI M 818, or Robpn D. Xurdoqk, MI

Ing, first time on market. Large family? This .is for you. 8 room ranch, 6 down, 2 up. ail finished. Wonderful place for children, elec­tric dishwasher, fireplace, l>,i baths.- about 7 years old. Owner will dicker. P. V. Tongren, Brok­er. kU 3-6321,

GOOD BUYSBENTON ST.—Full 2-story home.

Large liiing room with fireplace dining room. Kitchen first floor, 8 bedrooms and bath 2nd floor, Ga­rage. ScreenetHmrch, $14,800.

ELSIE DRIVE—Spacious 5 room Ranch with carport. Fireplace. 3 bedrooms with large closets. Big kitchen with knotty pine cabinets.- $18,000.

FALKNOR D RIV E- Expandable Cape. 4 rooms on first floor. Dor­mers and 2 radiators with space for 2 large rooms on second floor. $18,800.

MIDDLE TURNPIKE EAST At­tractive 6 room Capo. Fireplace, Oarage. Large play area for chil­dren. $14,200,

VERNON, LAKE ST.--Handsome Salt box with ell. 8 rooms of living comfort. 3 car garage, with or with­out large red ham.

MADELINE SMITH'AH 9-1642

Ixits for Sale 73BOLTON AND vlclmty- For lota and acreage call Lawrence F. Fiano; Broker. Ml 9-5910.

BOLTON—One large lot, also ap­proximately twenty acres. Good possibilities. MI 3-6321.Another section open at Locser’s

GERALD PARKon ' Coventry Laky. LOTS S0'xl25' AT $395. A lake community for summer or year 'round Itvlng. Fine roads, electricity, telephone. All lake rights. Sandy Beach. Easy terms. Apply Owpera

(LOESER)South St., Coventry Lake. Phone Pilgrim 2-7831.

MANCHESTER — lArge cleared loL Call MI 9-4967.

level

VERNON—About 18 acres with seven r(x>m house. Beautiful spot for small development ot homes. High and dr>’. Builders—See this one, P. V. Tongren. Broker. MI 3-8321.

MANCHESTER—Six rixim homes, some with garages, 8 lo ch(x>se from, all in the $12,000 range. Short way out. Two to choose from In the $7,000 range. FHA orj; GI financing . available. Over . 60 more homes Ifi all price ranges. For further .Information call The Ellsworth Mitten Agency, Real­tors. MI 3-6930, MI 9-5524. Or PI

. 2-7412.VERNON, Box Mountain Drive — Handsome 8H nwm ranch. Three bedrooms, two fireplaces, oil hot water heal. Basement garage, large w (^ e d lot. Ideal for chil­dren. Don't misa looking at this exceptional buy. Price $15,700. Gaston Realty Company, Ml 9-5731. J________

BAST HARTFORD-$10,800 Ctpo Cod, 4 roqjns. first' class condi­tion, qiilck occupancy^. Call Bert A Co., BU 9-2731. O ^ n eveninga till 9 and Sundays.

24 PR(>CTOR ROAD—Juat a hop from bus. Six room Colonial, large living room, fireplace, separata dining room, brealifast nook in kitchen; Three nice )>edrooms. two- car garage. Shown any time by anpolntment, Elva Tyler, Realty. Ml 6-4469, $ a 9-8824.

ANDOVER — Clean ' 4H room Ranch, plastered woUSi ceramic bath, aluminum combination, acre lot. Dead and street. Excel­lent flaoncing. Lawrence Flano, Broker. MI 9-WlO.

OOVENTOY-'-Splc and span five room -dwelling. Short distance from Manchester with about acre land..8eUtng under $8,000. For furthar tnfermat1oo„ eontoet AUea OamiMt, Itaaitdti 1 0 0-4M.

ANDOVER—Two adjacent lake lots 110'x270*. No reasonable offer re­fused. Contact owner. PI 2-8801 or MI 9-0687.

Sabnrban for .Solo 79WEST SUFFIELD—For the handy- man. Small eight room'home, five bedrooms, all t ^ improvements. Very low taxes, H acre lo(, nine minutes to Springifield. Westfield and Bradley ^ e ld Owners must sell. Asking $8,000. Good ilzed down payment required; Lawrence F. Flano. Broker. MI 0-8910.

QUIT PAYING HIGH RENTYou can make money also; A

four room house shell, a dug well, electricity, finished road, 300’ front­age by 100’. Only $3298. Near every­thing.. See It. buy it quick.

TR 5-533910 a.m. - 8 p.m..

Wanted—Real fintate'TISESLLINO TUUR home? For prompt, otticleni. couitaous oerv- ice and oppraiahig withput obllga- Uoo, coll 8. A. Boechler, Realtor) t o S-8989 or Wesley R. Smith As- ■odoU, MI 9>-8902.'^Member MulU- pl8 tMUng Mnrlce.

u a x m o Totm home, land oe bustnsee, (or prompt oorvlee,.cau Paul J, COrrenti, Broker, iuWM*'.'’ - •

usTinas WAiniiDi: eoarteetia. eeavaotait.aervlee

■ r . y . M f f p h BeMur. MI' r '

th^r«nf on the public siffn iK>8t in RAld Town of Coventry noarest the pla-ce where the (l^reaaen iant dwelt.Certified from RecordKLMORK TURKlKi^TON. Judge.

U.S. to PullBack Some Of Marines

(Continued from Page One)

It did not enumerate them.Pravda eaid the United States

waa working for U,N. approval of its actiona in Uic Middle East ”tn order lo free its hiuids for ftnlher interference in the Internal affaira of the Arab slates.”

Tile government newspaper Iz- vestia said the United Stales wants a U.N. police force to take over functions ot U'.S. and British troops in the Middle East. It described these tuncllong as ” lo pressure any Arab state which o)^posea the United Stales.”

A Lebanese rebel leader. Sacb Salam sold In Beirut that the with­drawal of one battalion of about 1,700 men from Lebanon was a wel­come gesture but far short of meet­ing rebel wishes for a complete evacuation.

HammarSkjold's plan sketched lost Friday, called for U.N. econ­omic aid to Middle East to coun­tries and Arab pledges of nonag­gression a n d noninterference against each other. It also' called for an expanded role for U.N. ob­servers.

Pravda said an American plan for the Middle East looked lo a u:?!,’police force lo take over func- Upns'''qf U.S. and British troops.

The A,mcrlcan plan has not been offlcially'N^isclosed. There was a possibility lhal President Eisen­hower m'lghf' jLinwrap the package in a persona) appearance here.

RoUt Plana Op|tnsed. Oppoaition to hbth the Ham-

marskjold and US. plans was sounded in Cairo by thi> newspaper Al Maaaa. It carried an qttack on the United States under n ’ anner- llne aaytug;

"Opposition of Arab counWes destroy both Hammarskjold ahd United States proposals before' they are formally presented. "

'The paper said Elsenhower would try to-save the day by mak­ing a perabnal appearance and would propose to "withdraw some of,his troop units from Lebanon."

"iTie Egyptian Gazette attacked Secretary nf State Dulles.

"Let Duljca be silent so the Gen­eral Assembly can conduct its de­liberations in an atmosphere un­disturbed by massive mislesdlng lactlos,” the newspaper sa’id.

British Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Lloyd arrived from London, for the aaiembly session. Dulles adheduled a meeting with him to mesh their atrategT;'.

Both Russia and the West were pressing for maximum support in the 81-naUon assembly. Sfiokt^- men for the so-called neutral na­tions were holding back until they got a flll-in ' 'om both sides on the concrete > es they would pro­pose to lergency assemblymeeting.

Oromyko-'talked yesterday with Indian Ambassador Arthur Lall. who met also with U.S. Ambassa­dor Henry, Cabot Lodge

Mahmoifd.FSwzi, foreign minia- let for the tlnlted Arab Republic, was due to arfire today. A Faw- z!-Gromyko meeting \t’as expected a t the earliest possible moment.

Both the Soviet Union and the UAR are putting prime emphasis (in demands for immediate with­drawal of U.S. troops from Leba­non and British troops from ’’Jo r •|3an.

Asian diplomats said the Asian- Afrian' group of 28 nations big­gest bitx;. in the U.N. would also press for the troop wllhdrawala to, be followed by consideration of long-range plana under U.S. di­rection for Improving economic and social conditions In the Mid­dle East.

Both U.S. and British diplomatic sources stressed the need for a program tha i would deaLwitji the broad and fundamehtal problems of the Middle East. But spacific de­tails were still lacking.

Lloyd told newqmeii a t London airport the British government wgnts to sea “aoma kind qf status (or the Middle. Bast countries, to enable them to (eel they m»y live their own.Uves In independeneb and preiwrving' their- integrity)' that tbejr. lyiU hot lx undeitmlhed by ■ObversUra' oMmeats from out-

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blllard, now in Holland. The house is rented by a young bachelor who had left a pot boiling On the stove and returned to find the kitchen in (lames. Can­didate Smith is Mrs. Billord’a father and pCmatned at the scene, returning -to the T(>wn Hail later.

The caucu* could not proceed un­til Chairman Grant retUnJe.<Llp. call It to order. ""

When the meeting waa called to order, it became evident that a political pot waa also boiling aa four nominations were made for tita. two General Assembly posts. The nominees were the incumbent Representatives Smitn and Karl Links. Goldstein and Robert Allen.

Goldstein, Vho had announced his candidacy only last Thursday, led on the very first' ballot with 29 voles to Smith's 24. Links' 19, and Allen's three.

His lead increased to 3s on the second ballot while the .Othere were; Smith 16, Unks 20, and Al­len two. On the third'ballot Gold­stein- surpassed the required ma­jority of 38 votea when he received 41, .Smith 13, Upks 21 and Allen one. Smith's candidacy was assured on the fourth ballot when he ob­tained 45 votes. Links had 30 and Allen received one.

After the contest ended chair­man Grant called for parly unity

dorted candidates.(3oldatain is a poultry farmer

who opeHiteg the Paradise Farms on Church St. with hts parents, Mr,

•luid Mre. Morris Goldstein. He Is a graduate of • Windham High School and haa atiended the Uni­versity of Connecticut where he majored in agriculture. He la ne«v taking extension courses at Storra

‘with the expectation of receiving hia degree In the spring. He also studied .law for one yehr a t HUl- yer (College in 1055-56 after com­ing out of the Army.

He served In the U.8. Army from September. 1953-55, during the Korean War. He graduated from the Army Engineering School a t Fort Belvolr, Va.. he was ssrtgiMd to intelligence work with the S2nd Engineer Headquarters Co. a t Fort Carson, (Colorado, where he was an Instructor in government. He also attended the Army Intelligence Sth(X)l in Fort Slocum, N.Y., for a 16-weeks course.

Locally. Goldstein is well-known for. his 4-H work. He waa a 4-H leader for seven years and waa se­lected to attend the National 4-H Camp in WMhlngton, D.C., In 1940 sa one of the two outstanding leaders tn Conn. In 1950 he won the State Rural Youth-Award. He has also won many honors on a county level for his 4-H work In poultry.

Goldstein Is a member of the Hebron Grange, the tlnlted Breth­ren of Hebron, the Volunteer Flrb Dept., and the Republican T6wn (Committee. He headed the Gtilaena for Eisenhower (Committee In 1956 and is now organizing'! Young Re­publican Club in' Hebron. Lest win­ter he waa chalnhan of the Con- cet Crusade.

He is also the newest member of the Regional District 8 Bozml, of Education, halving been elected to 'that post last year following the resignation of Douglas Fel­lows, one of the original board members.

Hoffa Denies Gangster Rule

(Continued (rom Page One)

nothing to oust Glenn W, Smith, who allegedly used union fimds to' fix a court case.

Nor, hs said, has he taken any action lo remove Samuel (Shortly) Feldman from any fiOailton of trust In Philadelphia Local 990. Feldman took the Fifth Amend­ment when questioned by the Sen­ate Rackets investlgratlng Commit­tee last week about alleged rack­eteering.

Hoffa specifically said he would not summarily fire such scandal scarred Teamsters chieffaini as Ray Cohen of Phllat^tlphla; Joey Glimeo of Chicago and AI,Reegsr of New York.

Hoffa said a union committee has been set up lo try Cohen, president of Philadelphls Local 107, Cohefi repeatedly took the Fifth Amendment )>efore the McClellan committee.

Kennedy said 17 employes in the Cohen Local have an aggregate of 103 arreata and 40 convictions.

"The (Teamsters) investigating crinimlttee will go Into all em­ployes of Local 107," Hoffi replied calmly.

He ' said no charges have been filed within the union against Reegec, secretary treasurer, of New York Local 522. Kennedy de-. scrlbed Reoger aa a convicted ex tnrltonlat with one time Commu- iBltlea.

As for Glimco. Hoffa said there had been no recent convictions of the oft-arreated (Thlcago gangland figure.

Kennedy said .Glimco has been a close associate of such Chicago hoodlums as tough Tony Accardo and Paul (The Walter) RicCa.

Hoffa replied; "Our constitution doesn’t deal With asaociatlons' but with the activity of unions."

Hoffa objected when Kennedy ^referred to Maxle Stern, allegedly ^associated with the Feldman group In Philadrlph'ia, as "a well known gangster tn Detroit." . »

"1 don’t know If lie’s a well linown gangster." said Hoffa. "He’s out of jail."

Hoffa was asked whether he knew- Stent, who Kenned,v said waa saved from, assaaslnatlon re­cently by a bullet-proof vest.

"He’s a frishdly ncqUalntanre o! mine,’'''Hoffa conceded. .

Andover

GOP Renames C o v e l l for

State Office

33 on Missing Japan Airliner

(CoDtlnned (n>m Page One)

miles southwest ot Tokyo.-that it had trouble with ilk left engine and was returning lo Tokyo Inter­national Airport.

A half hour later, it asked per- mlsalDh to land at Klsarazir Air Pass, 35 miles southeast of Tokyo, on the shores of Tokyo Bay;

There were no further messages. Civil Aviation offlcisls said they feared the plane went down off- ahore.

A U.S. Air Forte ‘ amphibian plane alarted searching coastal waters.

Five Jap(Uiese Coast Guard boats began a sweep of the area from Shimoda - - near.where the plane first enCountefed trouble — to Tokyo Bay.

The plane was on a flight to Nagoya in western Japan.

Ptate Rep. Ellsworth Covell utOg renominated laat night as the Re- pubUckn candidate To the General Assembly a t a poorly-kttended Re­publican caucus.

Only nine me'mltera of the OOF party turned out for the meeting in the Town Hall.

The party also endorsed the In­cumbent Justices of the Peace, Mrs. Rachel White, Mrs. Christine Coveil and Wilfred Perry. Harrj' Sheldon of Andover Lake was endorsed for the JP post formerly held by William Dunnack. Dun- Hack Is a member of the Board of Assessors.

Th# Democrats will hoW their caucua at'P o'clocK tonight in the Town Hall. No announcement has been made aa yet as to whom the DemocraU may name to oppose Covell.

ALFOA EvenUMovies for young people *411 be

shown At the Red Bam tomo>iTow at 8 p.m. by the entertainment comrqjWe of the Andover I.iake Property Ownera’ Aasn. (ALPOA). The only other event announced for the Red Bairn this week is tlte Friday night dance sponsored by the ALPOA Juniors.

Manchester E v e n i n g Herald Andover oorreaiMNideBt, Mrf. Paul D. Pfanatlehl, telephone nigrtan 2-8858.

Officials Called ’ In Bet Inquiry

(OiMitinuci VbHT'Fiige One)'each day, said ha noticed eight telephones constantly ringing but told newsmen solemnly he figured the phones w ere"so all those fellas could call their wlVea and chil­dren.” ’■ i

Waitresses in the Manor House Restaurant below the IxxjKie joint said they brought the syndicate operators meola every day, usual­ly eaniing 69-oent tips.

"If we had known whet was go­ing on up there., we wouldn’t have- worked BO cheap," they told re­porters.

The government claims the syn­dicate gnoeeod.about$3ii million in beta on football, horsts and base- bAU in ‘he two mohths it was op­erating. Fede al Ogmta sold the bqokifs receiver) more than 2,30Q' Icing dinniice.telephone (Alls over the 2-month period

Tabberl is seeking indictments 'or excise tax eVaslon on. the bets against eight men.

More thnn- 160 blg-tlme gam­blers, bookies and wealthy men ■ from erjaat to coast sold to have made bets 'rith the aj-ndlcate will appear before the grand jury Be­fore the 2-(veek hez^ngs are .over.

FUtST THINGS. FIRST

) St. Simona lalond, GA. (Ah — Betty Lou Roebuck, preparing tq leave (or a 'Baptist youth confor- ence. went to a bonk to get odm* travelers' checks. Asked th# teller, "What denomination?" Bet­ty, appAreaUy: church-mind­ed Uuu) money-minded. repUedp "Buj^ipt, o t eoiiraet" '

Publir Records\Varrant«e Deeda

' Andfew Ansaldi to John G. and Virginia L Button, property On Wells St.

John F. and Kathleen R. Me- Dermott to Chester M. Ferria, properly tm Gerard St.

BuUdlag Peinilla Mary C. Roach, alterations to

house at 36 Walnut S t, $700. ' Qerord and Olive O’Oonnor, al­

terations to house a t 143 K an t Rd., $300.

FAST STARTNew‘York oi>)—With lU drtee

for a 16-mUUon-doUor OovOLof- m«nt fund lust getting underway. Union Theological seminary re- porU that tl.4«0,000 alrewly Itai been received to gifts and pMgoz- TRe exponsioa/ program wea sn- notmeed two sApttHss iga

-■t • '-..r ;

Page 8: E. A. lOHNSON j N-Mis site m q In Pacific Plans Evening... · ' era wore orchid nor.aagea. A re

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PAGE FOURTEENi l l a n r l r P B t p r C u m i n s i i f r a l b \

TU ESpA Y , AUGUST 12, 4^58

About TownT h e weekly »neelinff of the Man­

chester Squadron of (^vil Air Pa- Crol. U SA F , will he hold at 7 p.i^ . Wednesday at the AmcrUan Lcjjjoh Home.

A farewcU party for John J . Kosky, son qf-'Mr. and Mrs. E d ­ward ^r^KoSky, 49 Hyde St., wai hold Sirnday in honor Of hla enlist-lUttiW-Tn the Army. Kosky. former

the National Cliiard here, left Y esterday for Kt. Dix, N. J .. where he will reoelve hasle training.

Knights of Columlms will hold The Cla.ss of IP.'iR-df Manclios- i " summer dance at the K of C

ter High School ef iohrated last I I'omo Saturday from 9 to I J p.m.' ~ ■ Nnn-inomhors ajf well ais members

SIT Invited to attenc and dame to the mu.sic of Tony O'Bright 's Orchestra Light refreshments will hi served. Tickets may he oh-

Fire Damages Hebron Hous^^

night at the hoyrfe of ftobert Al­bert. 19 .Oakland Ter. one of its last rennloiw'of the summer before some of Its meijibers lesve foi .school or go toewoik in the fall Everyone shared his experiences of | laiired at the home or from Lioois thie summer and caught up on the Lanr.ano. 40 Olenwood SI. latest news to the ta.sle of potatochips and coke, . Atideraon-Shea Auxiliary. VKVV.

will hold a meeting Innighh at 7:30 The Manchester Square l) i incr ,„| the post home

Club will hold a dance for memhers only Thursday on the tennis courts at the West Side Rer from R.30 In 11 p m . Earl .Tohn.slon \yill he the raller.

■ An estimated *3000 damage was the result of a house fire In Hebron last night.

The house, owned by Albert Bll- , mnJor role In keeping lard, now In Holland on b u s i n e s s a n d , greens a tt for P ratt and Whitney A ircraft 'O . of. East Hartford, and rented by tliree bachelors, caught fire last night when Gerald Klkln, one of the tenants, left an empty pan on ,th« stove while snswering the telephone.

Kiliin, who had Just begun to lueparc. aiipfer! returned fioni his phone (all and found the kllclien In flai.ies

Volunteer .Ire companies from

You Should Know.. .W illiam A, Am lrulot

DEVELOPING

W M T D M i

uinn's“ harmacy

INC. 0M l - y */ j6

(slastoiil)iiry iVlan (iharj^od in (erasli

A <,flnRtonbui y mfln wha a i - rPAtrrl last nljjiit Aftrr hiA car ramniPd mtn Ihr tpai of anothri' AUlo on rU- 44A in North ( ’ov-

I rnt 1 y..'htatP Tolhr jhar^orl HhioUI

j Pfan. 3H, of Main St ( ilaAlmihiii v Iwith driving iinflrr ihe influrmp '«f ; int oxK A t ing ]ir|urn nj dnigA arvl

with lArklcj^A di iving.Thr Acridrnl Of CUT rrd Hboul K..T0

' pm \^hrn niChaid Mill. 21 - of j .silvfr SI Covrntry Alopprd lo I In orjrowing tata by hr whi ' niAking A Irft turn on Rl 44A.

poltl’C- AHVPfAii, who UAA following Mill,

etliink Uir rrni of thr Mill («r,I damaging it AlighLIy nnd drnioliAh- I ing hiA own aiitfj, flcrordlng to po- jl lce

Pf,iu Has aiie.sled hy S ta le Pn- lliedian Edward p Reattie and re-

I leased on a ,4200 bond.I He IS lo appeal In Coventiv

.lil.slire CoiHl on Aiig. I.'i.

A M anchester rpan who plays a, the town’s

ractive and is WUllam Andrulot,

foieiitan of the Park Department. His duties range from supervising the skating' r lpk In Center Springs Park to plantihg trees.

Andrulnl has uteri working on the trees/ spraying, removing, and Iriinming them. Other riteri under him do the heavy work on -the Idtlle I.eagiie ball fields and ttre many softhall fields u.sed during the Slimmer, In addition tq the genersl maintenance work re

Hebron, Columhia, and Amatoh a n - ' fjoired on the parks and greens.

OPEN WEDALL DAY

DOUBLESTAMPSFAIRWAY

WORLDGREEN

EVERYWED.

S U P E R M A R K E T S

D O U B L EWORLD GREENS T A M P SW EDNESDAYSPECIALS

CH O ICE DEEP

CHUCK ROASTNATIVEW AYBEST

CHICKENLEGS Lb.

SW ANEE

T(HIET TISSUEHUNT'S 14.0X. 8 0 n L E

CATSUP"STARKIST " WHITE CHUNK

TUNA FISH

A

1 0 S1.00

6 $1,00

3 "■"‘ $1,00RMT.F.T .11 ICV

S E E D L E S S WINESAP PASCALGrapefruit. APPLES

I'or I'k- m- i:ntlii(jCELERY

3 F or 49c 3 Lhv 39c Bell. 1 Oc

BANANAS, LOOSE lb. Kb

! Awrrrd thr caJ)' DoHAld fJnffln. rh irf of thr fle-

hron ftre rnmpHny rAlimAtod -thr dRniHgr At $.‘ 000, moAtly from

i. RiTKFkrThr nthrr t'A'o ti'HiintA of ihf

, liniiAr Air AvSi .V ti VArAtlon.

Jarvi.s LouiOii Slat<“ Project

The .lurviR ( ‘oMAl ruf llfm ( Vi ofMAnrhrAtri Iiaa Aubmitlrd An Ap-

; pAiCMt h)W bid of $6A2. I01 for thr, rnnAlriH tinn of tuo milcA of pAV- ; ing rm Pt. ’S ir. /orth Mftvrn, T)ic I projr«'t, vL A.A onr of ArvcrAl on \ whn h bnifl u err opened vrAtridAV ■ b;, Ihr .StAir Mig.iWAV I>rpArtmcnt ’arwl Ihr tntAl coaI.r rxcrrdrti .milium

L. (L Defr iu r A Hon of North iM avcn uma .croud low buUlrr on

thr nt. jf/b with I70P.944 A I joint hid of $726.P2fi by Ihr North I Hnvr/1 rnnAlruction Co And thr

VrllrcA ( 'on.At niction Hn of NVw ' Mavrn n’HA t bird.I 'I‘hr Irttgr.Rt of thr piojrctA 1a

two milrA of ro ncirtc paving «nd Acvrn ovrrpHAAr> on fU. S Ir. Nam* gaturk. anrl thr appairnl low bid- del WMA Ihr Bninaili ( 'nnat ruetlon Cfi. of Sm.thlnglon with |4,t>40.6^>3.

PINE LENOX PHARMACY

399 E. ( rn ler 81.^ .M l 9-099B

Invitation to HidSealed hidA fm tumiAhing fuel

oil and i(»nl f»n the 'Town of Vei- non .Si IiooIa f»n tlie S< hnol Year Hl.SM-.Ml will tie leerixed by tlir Honid fif Kdmnlion At the fiffice of t lie SiipenntemlenI <if .Si horjla, Hox 420. UoeUvllle ( ’onnertieut lU'lil 10 00 A M . on Wediie.Ada \ , Ai.gii.'d 27.

.Spei ifli a I Iona ina\' t»r ohiAinerl at the o f iu e of the .SiipeMnlenflent of .Si hof>lA

Loi 1 tii‘ \ ei mmMoAid of Kihu all'in HAvmond K. flAmAdell Superintendent of SrlioolA

Thr Park Dfpflptt1*irnt hSA com- fdrtrd tsvo m ajor J oHa thAl were undrttflkrn Aome timr Ago a Aluling4iill in Center .Spring* pArk And Atorte AlepA leading into the pAi'k from Main St.

“The Ajiding hill ban taken u* two year* of on-«nd-off labor to roinplete. and thi* wlntri waa the AimI tinte IhAt it waa uard. It looka p irtty good and 1 think thr kid* enOived it." Bill aaid.

Bill Atartcd with the P a ik De- partn>enl ha a caretAkei 2.3 yeaiA ago. Hr WAA employed at the Che­ney Mlila anfl enme on to help run the Akattng nnk at Center SprlngA He returned, the following winter and haa been with the de­partment prnnanently ever Aince.

“Someday the pond ahoiild hr filled in It eoiild hr uaed for a playground in the Mumnirr and hooded In the winter for akating." MHid Andrulot who pinbahly knowA the akating rink hrttrr than anyone

Andrulot aald that thr depart* iiieni apraya Die pond and trira lo make thr .Aiirfaer amootli. hut “thr wenlher gelA thr he.At of ua many ! Iniea.”

'Phe foirnian anld that hla offire reeeivea aomr complamta about the ( ondition of the 1( e. but added that the people of ManL-heater a ir very underatandlng and thr roni- plaintA are few In number.

“I t ’a not quite the aeaaon m talk about the rtnk. la It 7“ I^ a a k e d . “ Rut I remember One ^ p e r le n c r that I won't forget foi/a while. I WAA plowing anow offdhe ire near Ihr deeprat point, in the pond when the Ire rrarked bertealh the trar- lor '■

“Thr rear wbeela u n i t through the ire, hut the tractor crawled ahead Tlie plow waa high in thr air and the machine w r a tilled at a < r n/y. angle 'Hie rhailia on the wheel* kept digging into the brok­en ire amt finally the front wlieela hit aome haifl ice The plow drop­ped anil the weight of it pulled thr liHctor and me up onto aotld u r 1 headeil atraight for the nrar- eat bank and got off that ma- ( lime ■'

A hlg joh for Hill and hia If)- mun crew i.a each yrar'a ‘ tree- t*lanling “All a person baa In do to get A t ier lA rail thr depart­ment office before .Iniie t. and v\e'll ptil a ttee on Ina piopeity in Die fall ." AuflruUd aald. “We

WeU Mdy Feed Globe W ilb o u t

Help from j^tniipThe ne v town well olY Fern 81'.

will be -drilled dMper to tee if water can be* channeled to Olobe Hollow Reaarv.oir . without puritp-

aecdrding to General Mandater Richard Martin.

The manager aaid the Stephen B. Church Co..will drill-lower than 500 feet to aee if tlie water will build up enough preaaure to rlae near the top. without having to be pumped It here.

He aaid if a high-enough level ia reaehed, the water will be. piped in­to Olobe Hollow by/gravlty.

Friday the yield more than ful- lUted expectatiops that it would be 200 gallons at 500 feeL The output wha 580 g^lona per minute - the capacity o r

Supertatandent Frad Thrall aaid teats and drilling are centimilni* on a daj^-tp-day ' baaia to aee if agravity*-l|ni to -Globe Hollow will

the the moat practical way of join­ing the new well to the town’s water system .. y\

Accident Eitda in A rre s t

p a r k e d

have a choice of about six types, -all popular trees. I think we have ; one of the heat tree-planting pro grama in Connecticut,” Bill add-

pil.Bill was born Aug. 15, 191). He

; attended local schools and left to I work at Cheney's.

Androint lives with his wife and chlldien, Joyce, 16. Wllllsm D., 1 4 ,1

' and Richard. 10. at 307 Cooper Hill St., during most of the year | .Siimmets, the family moves too Hammonaasell Beach, where they | camp In a traflei. BUI joins hla family on weekends. He enjoys j fishing beau "trout f is h in g ” he staled emphatically. " I f I had nijM way. that*a how I'd spend my vs- > cation.

"Th4 recreation program at the ; shore Is great for the kids. They I llAve a baaishall league there and I

i mV oldest son plays about four I I games a week." BUI said.

M rs. Ruth M. .Stanton, 45, of 169 Oak, St., was arreXted ye'iter-

ai afternoon ks the result of a nor accident. \PoilCl! said Mrs. spton backed but o f her drive­way and struck s' car

across the street. 'She ia charged with Improper

backing and failure to carry her ; motor vehicle reglatrq.tion. Police , said the woman was unable to j produce the registration when asked for it.

Mrs. Stanton hit a car owned by : the test ing equipment j Arnold Kurth II, I ’TO Oak St . 'The >

used. X, j Kurth car was parked In front of 'The Seymour tVall-digglnK Arm hi* home, directly qcross the I

would/ have subtracted *3,000, » t r « t from Mra, Stantoh’a drive- about half the contract price of j " '»y . police aaid. id ig ^ n g the well, if it did riot give , Patrolman Jamaa McCoo* sum- at least 200 gallons per minute-.^ - moned Mrs. Stanton to appear in' W ater and Sewer Departmerit 1 Town Court Friday. I

Russell $tover CANDIES

‘ 3 5 Lb. And Cp

E xclu B tve in M anche${er a t

Q U I N H 'SPHARM AtY

S’?* MAIN "s t r e e t- ''-I ............

LECLERCFUNERAL HOME

FUNERAL SERVICE

Walter N. I^clerc, Director

Coll Ml 9-586923 Main Street, Manchester

NOTICEWE WILL BE CLOSED

FOR VACATION

AUG. n Thru AUG. IS

OPEN SAT., AUG. 16

VIC’S SODA SHOPI.Mi W E S T 5IIDD1.E T P K E .

Tir«d of parking a "batllaw agon”? ' G O .Rambler

NOW 7 TH IN SALESEasy to Park^ So Economical!

Rambler is selling more because it give* people more of wbat ihey want—big car room and comfort, amall car economy and

handling ease. Save every mile you drive —aave when you trade. Rambler ia firat in resale value. See your Rambler dealer!

DrCORMIER m o t o r s a l e s , INC.. 24 MopI* St., Manchester

s i i ^ p i s s li^lpsaa i i g p i w i^ p i i sd|ps» ■rqpsw i i ^ m i i i ^ s a n < | f t M , i i g b s a i i ^ i f c s s < g ^ i

GENERAL

TV SERVICEl)ii.va g i * A Call

Night* iMiia PartsT E I . Ml 3-5482

m e

THIS IS NO BULL!!

NOR ARE WE JUST BEATING OUR GUMS WHEN WE TELL

YOU THAT A.MOR.SUN WINTER AIR-CONDITIONING FURNACE GAS FIRED, MAKES THE "ONE

BEST" HEATING INSTALLATION FOR YOUR HOME.

Hurry: Hratijig tiiur I'a ouiy ,'Vu'rrkii mray-^up t& .» yi’flr* lo puy— iSo puyiuviu uulil Octohvr,

CHADWICK « COMPANYSrt OENTER ST.

Ml 9-0669

%

1

SAVINGS and LOANMADK OUK

DREAMSCOME TRUE!

"j

Way bacit in 1891 when it yva» foiinded, Savinjrg '& Loan Mas engaged principally, in providing financing for home owners. Since;rlhen tnir ac livilies have hranched out to iiicluffe.manyother types uf financial services, hut home mortgages are still our chief concern,

(kmie in and lrt« talk over y<tur home owner­ship problems. Chances are a Savings & l^tan PKNALTY-FREE mortgage will solve them all. At any rate it doesn’t cost anything to get our counseling.

r . • • _ V , ,

f7S A V I N G S a?tc/ L O A N

/■V S s < J t ' I A 'V 1 a N

M R W C M i i T t * * $ a i D l t T ' r i W A N C I A t I W » T I T. U T I • W

OPKN .......9 A M. to 5 P.M. M O N .-T U E S -F B I .

OPENTHURSDAYS

9 o.m. to 8 p.m.W E D N E S D A Y

9 A M. ,td NOON C L O SE D S A T U R D A Y S

FREE PARKING IN REAR

i '

m wiiaaeiiwAp'iiei Mb'■J

.■ ■ '

7*-

*

Atexaxe DRil^'Nct l^iie RunFor tl«" Weeli Raded -

. t l . ItlW

12,701Member mt the Audit Bureau of OreulaUeu

Manchest^rr—A City of Village Charm

Th* WeatherFereeut ef D. 8. Weather Benue

hlwwere. Uraederltenau emlieg> eurijr toeiglit. fair late teelgM. Lew Mar es. Tlilitaday auuii9' het leea hunld7-|llth la lew 89*.

VOL. H X V II , NO. 267 (C'laaamed AdrerMalag, ee Kige It) MANCHESTI^R, CO^N.,'W EDNESDAY, AUGUST 13. 1658 (TW ENTY PAGES)

/ U.N. Police in Mideast. ^ I C E FIV E CENTS

— -------- -- r *

/

Soviet Delegate Hits Marines start

West’s Quest for OilTrom'SionUnited NalilMIfl, N. Y., Aug.'i’h'f*''''ention In the Arab elate*.■’ . ! a Beirut, Aug. 1.*? (i?*)— A

1.3 (,tP)_The U.N. General As-1 President Eiaenhowei, appearing: token withdrawal of U.S. Ma-aembly adjourned at 1 2 ; 4 4 | " d " V e ‘"U"mbiTthel o-p.m. It will meet, again at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow,

United Nation.*, N. Y., Aug. 1,3 ((P>—Soviet P'oreign Minis­ter Andrei A. Gromyko an­swered Pre.^ident Eisenhow­er’s Middle East peace bid to­day with a charge that the United States wa.s the main threat to peace in that area.

The .Soviet ..leader addressed the emergency Middle East meeting of the 8l-nation General Assembly shorlly after Eisenhower had oui-

unlted States T. readv t^^W ori I ‘ «*'’ « b e f o r e S o v i e tboth a Middle E ast peace force and I f o r e i g n M in i . s te r A n d r e i G r o - a bold new agency to help finance m y k O - d e m a j l d e d in t h e U .N .economic m’ojec** I G e n e r a l A s .se Jn h lv t h a t all 1.5.-

He was given a rousing round o f , ~ . ____ ■ , n ,applause a* he concluded hi* 30- 1®^^ A m e r i c a n troop.* pull out minute speech. Soviet bloc dele- a t o n c e .

The I.7Q0 men of the 2nd Marine Division’s 2nd Bstta l ion worked

gates and some of the neutralists, however, did not join In the ap- „plause. The President left the U.N. blazingimmediately after his speech and ammunition and heavv equlp-h e a d ^ ment.on ships of the 6th Fleet The

Jo r d a n s chief delegate Monem k. m . u,.., ( ( , . n ..,Rifal told the assembly hi* coun- ' 7 ; ' 7try was struggUng against indt- [J*"'' 7 » 'r e i t aggression snd plots against Uhsmoun to bolsterIts integrity. H e -s a id Biaenhow- hi* pro-western regime after the

lined a bioad program feir U.N a c - ' * ' * »Pe*‘<'h brought hope and aal- ' ’ " ‘I' ‘’” "P tion. including creation of a s tand- ' *»f«Ptlon. Loading of heavv equipment wasby police force and a regions) agen- British spokeams|n welcomed scheduled to be completed tomor-cy to finance better living : f*** U.S. proposals and aaid the roev. The men will f1ni.«h going

•Refusing to take the Preaidenl's »peech was "full Of constructive cue fqr playing down East-West d lf-1' f l* *" which we believe should’ be feren cia , Gromyko charged that fallowed up." policies of the United States and Grom.rko opened up his blast Britain ’ ’thigeten to hurl mankind shortly a fter the President had into fh* abyss of. a new war with He chided the I 'n lted Statesall its consequence*.’’ for its withdrawal of one Marine

He accused the United .States of ballallon from Lebanon as mean- trampling the U.N. charter under ingless.its feet by sending military forces Referring to Eisenhower's pro- inlo Lebanon. He alao rharged that posal for economic development, indirect aggre.ssion was a firm part Gromyko .said the Soviet Union of t'.fi, foreign policy. ^agreed that e.conomi' development

’■Oil,, oil and oil again ," Gromy- wris a good idea. He insisted, ko aaid. "That Is what Is tempting howeVej;, that i : .S . troops must be the monopoli.sts of the United wilhriraWo from Lebanon and ' One group of I.ebanesc dropped Stales and United Kingdom in the British trodp* from Jordan before unsigned le s f le i . on the NorthMiddle East and that is what, ----- j Beach saying: "Yan kees Go Home.

We swear we will not stop- short of anything, even death, if Ameri­can .soldiers ate not withdrawn ffoiri out country in the shortest time ’

Some Marines picked up leaflets ■as souvenirs but otherwise they were ignored. There have been no c l a s h ^ be’tween U.S. troops and Lebane*Vs»

T h * reb e l 'ch ie f in Beirut. Saeb .8alam, weleorrted the withdrawalas m svmhnii/' Idea biiF''^*ld' -If

aboard ship Friday.The other Marinea and Armv

troops continued peaceful palrols around Beirut. There was no indi­cation when they might leave.

Only a handful of Lehaneae watched as the 2nd Battalion put Its geai on linding ciaft for trans- port to Kth P'leet slilps in the har­bor. When the Marines landed 29 days ago ciowds of Beirut re.ai- dep. s turned'out hut now they had gotten used to seeing the Leath er­necks.

prompta them to lake military (Continued on T w elve)

U.S. A-Sub Probing Under Polar Icecap

Washington. 'Aui”. I S ' T h e - f - a r e a s from which to w a g i war.”

Also Prpposes Arab EconomiCxProgram

1 nitpfl Nation.*, N. V.. Aug. 1.3 (/Pi^i^TfPsident Eisenhower today .set fort It a sn eeping 6-point plan| fhr building enduring Mid-east peace—-inrluding swift cfealiinn s f an emergency U.N. police force and an international jeconomic development pi'ogram.

In a diamatic personal appearance jbefore a MRse extra­ordinary meeting of the United Natiojna General Assembly, the President at the same time accli.*ed Russia— wHhout naming the So\ iet I nion—o f stirring jup war hysteria with

clic.s of “halli.sfic blackmail.”ephower laid down hi.s propo.sala for p«ace and eco-

nomK'NiMiility in a prepared major foreign poficy speech ear- ried coastHjvcoast on television and radio, and beamed around the woi'ld li/!fh*' government'a. Voice of America Radio.

He said his pr^ram would promote “a true Arab renaii- .saiue.” 'I'he alteruitAe. he aaaerted, la;

“The danger that nitijon.s under aggi'e.s.a:ive leadership will .seek to ex|iloit man'K hoiS<pr of war by confronting the na. tions. pai'tit’Ularly small natuih*, with in apparent choice be-

I tween supine surrender, or waU^„Again wtlhoul naming Moscow,♦ - ----- —

Kiscnhowsr comp*r»(i th* K r*m - ^ ' t x ^lin's conduct with somfon* whn |criea " f l i * " in s crowded sasembly. O C C l J l

Th* President's proposed six p w a i

" T ' a s t .n d h y Unued N .l io n . - t O F j i k c i ' < 1 8 1 1: peace force | i ' . _ __ 'x

2. An Arsb-run Midesst. ecn- . . . » i . 7*» « : , „ (nomic development loan fund and-; ^ 'A lerh m cs l assistance pro g ram .'

j f lnam ed (oinllv hy tha Amb ■ 9talc8. thw United S ta les and otheT

ANDREI A. GROMYKO PRKHIDENT EISENHOW ER

United S ta tes staked a new qlaim ! to mastery of undersea pioneering today after a second atomic sub­marine had crossed under the North Pole.

The U.S.S. Skate reached the pole at 9:4-7 p.m. lE D T i Monday — jn.at six days a fter ILs older sis-

Andersbn said."There our aubmarinea can hide,

can remain undetected for long pe- rioda of time, and can fire missile* St anyone who dares to a ttack us,"

CMcb on War.Anderson said the combinalien

of atomic submarine* and th* iis'e

a symbolic*' iftap huf'^ald’ It-I , ' •___;s '-r-ihrL.'ffi'S.’s:,;;;' 'v„hfnjti;„TAu5. u.

for complete withdrawal o f *11 oc- The Hoti.ae vote.s today whetli- cuoying t r o o p s" . er to cite Bernard Gojdfine,

The .Marine* themselves weren't • Boston • millionaire and gift- . w-orriedsbmit the int^ei-nal political (f]v|ng friend o f pi'esideDf ial■struggle rhal brought them here ” , c i *» i r

■•We neve, dtd .igrtve out the local ' S h e r m a n A d a m s , f o r

House Ponders I etters Link HoffaUoiUempt Case „ „ _ .P o r C o i d f i n e l o Kansfis Oflicials

Waahingtoii, .Aug. IX (g’l j— * i i ja n iR-M Iclu l■o-chalrluBn of

ter, the Nautilus, emerged from an i of the polar ice ( ap may cou.ali- historic 1.830-mile trip under the.j title 'the most certain way of pre- polar cap. ’Fhe. Nautilus arrived ! venting war."yesterday in Portland, England, The United S ta les currently is and got a big welcome. huilding a fleet of 33 atomic subs.

The Navy released word of the | Tliese include th re e ' already in 8ka.leja.,achiev*ment la.st n I g h I | smtviqe. levei al soon to go into witHbhi any fanfare in a two j aerviee and others in the process

of construction or on the airthori- zation list.

(UonMniied on Page Nineteen)c o n t e m j i t ( 'o n g r e s .s .

Such a cttalion, recomniended, iinanlntou.sly l>\ the House U ou i- '

F o rm er Uo\, Payne Katner of Kniiaaa teettfled toda.v he a r ­ranged for better treatm en t of J a m e s R. Hoffa in a I9.V3 t.'on- greaalonnl Investigation. But he (ienled he engineered . the mya- terloiis squelching of the inquiry.

special House suhronnniUee, ha\'e saidj the Investtgation wa.a dropped .becitu** of political piessuc* from blgll pls ,es . They ne\et ha\-e elalioiaterl

One lelter, dated ,\ov. 30, i»5S ft dm Ratiier to Hoffs said:

"Wint told me today that he cei lamlv got in had widi Hoffman

count l ies, pi esumahly Innltiding j Russia. »

.3 A I on spin t U.N. check to I oiii b inflainqiatory propaganda | b ioadeast* lo and from th* Middl*

I East nations.I - 4 A U.N. study of poaalbic con­

trols on arms shipment* lo Mid- I east countries, including Israel to 1 avert an F.aat-West munitions rare' in the are*.

5. l iuspecifled new I' .N. moves to gtiaranlee Ijebanon's security

I ami Independence a fter American , troops a t * withdiawn ' 6 An expression of U.N de-. tei 'mmalion to assure Jordan's

siirvlvsl as a nation, presumably by replacing .British troops now there with U N. personnel.

( 'suing world attention to the tense situation In that tiny king­dom, Eisenhower warned that "in-

prliu tof Middle Raat .peace won stiong (longtehaional endoreement toda.v, even fr(Sm some who have been rr ll ical in the past of policle* in that area.

Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Minni railed Btsenhower ■ speech to th* United Nations 'General AMembly an a c t of atalMmanship and leadership.

HumpbYe'y. a ■ member of the Senate Foie ign Relations Com­mittee, told th* Senate:

■'The President has laid down a progrem for our own govern­ment, Uje United Nation*, and. 1

j might i^y, for Oongrees, and I- 1 peraohaliy support it."I San. Jgc o b K. J a v i l * ’u R -N T )I commentled Tdii.e'nhower for an Im­

portant j in d historic speech that I rtemonstratea U.S stincerily and good faith.

Sen. peorge D. Aiken (R -V tl said th<f 6-poInt program la "In

ill a two paragraph itatem ent. This con­trasted shaiTily with the special While House ceremony ■ arranged last P'riday to announce the .Naii- tiliia' voyage.

The bare anncfimcemenl l a s t

88 Believed Dead In Jap Air (A*a.sli

Tokyo. Aug. 13 1.7*'bodites were recovered from the »nd if Goldfine is then prosecuted

Some of the vessels will be arm- Pacific todav after Ja p a n s second *»d coiivlcled, he could be given a ed with Polaris 1,500-mlle range fatal civil airline crash sine^ maxiMium penally ol $1.0(K) hn# miRfiilFR that can be fired from un- World W ar II . There were no gig-ns •»'* R vear.ln priaon. deraea which meana, from the of aui’vivora fiom the 38 persons. GoLmne, at ■ healing last July

VN'ashington. Aug 13 Sen-merer CoiiimiUee. Would, he baaed *>'• investlgalor.a dug up let tei .« | *nd Ui. at a i f h\ haying gone along oi Gnldfine's refusal to answ er 22 toda;.’ telling of conferences in lO.T.'i wU'.' bis l iea lm enl of yoiiiquestion* pul lo him hV-.,* aiih- between a foi iiier governor of K*n- committee probing his ' relsi(nna "8*. who was roun.vrl for Tesm- witli Adams. stela ' hOas .lame* R. Hoffa ahd a

If th* House votes to send ,he .Sixteen ■ ‘talion to the Ju st ice D epailm enl ,lh'’f8|'k’ntmg Holta

- - - - - - bohm.ei Gov. Payne Rainer, *

.Iordan may lead to confllcta en­dangering the peace." He did not fix blame for this, but said conse- que nces of a far-reaching nature could result.

Eisenhower proposed fast Gen- Krlday ''■1 A..*embly action on th* psi-la

"I. of (Oiiiae, expressed thy ap- " f his program dealing with the uerlaliori to him and told him that force, f^ebanon, Jordan and

direct aggression discei-nible In ' line with what a majorit.v of ushave be^n working for for aomelime,",

"This should be ''e ico m e assur- s o re to The Middle E a s t that the United (Itste.s la mindful of Its

((kmNniiod oq I 'aga Twelve)

night aaid the Skate surfaced in polar region they could strike deep . including one" American, aboard I I . reiiised lo answer 22 questionsan ice field aome 40 miles from th# North Pole lo radio word of the trip. The Navy said the Skate, the third U.S. atomic sub built, was continuing imder-lce explora­tions.

Entered from .-VtlaMtioThe .Skate's ^alh lo the Pole

- w as -juat the opposite from the

, in the hesrt of Russia and have good hiding plar-e under the ice. Airways.

The Skate, while aeconff to reach t j , , bodies were the .North Pole, haa two other rec- immediately.

7 A a U r The plane crashed SO miles 7 Tokyo last niglit after the

* report of trouble InR k . i r ‘' U engine. The plane wa* .on.S k a te remained *''hm^erged f,rr 31 , Tokyo, to Nagoya.day.a. 51., hours in what the Nevy ^v a roundifbout

the twin-engine DCS of All-Nippon about the flnani es of the Bo.'sloiiPort Development Co , * real estate

not identified I'old ng companv he conlio ls 'ITie P o s t o n tndiisti isli.<it contended, among other things, tlist the siib- • omii i llee was joiit of hound* in asking these queationa.

Re)>iihlii an, identified letter* ex- I l iniged witb Rep. Wint Smith t R- K si i l .

R stn er was in the winie.as (haii of the .Sensif Racket.'* Investt- galing I 'omimltee v.liult got the letters from his tiles.

One lettei, from Sm ilb to Rainer. sHid c l ism es foi a ciintempl of

have s iw sy * thought no one had to wort y vei y nun It , shout doing the right thing.'

A .Match 11. 19.'i4. letter finin R atn er lo Hoffa anld .Smilli had r*fti.v*d to sign a (ontempi ( ila- lloii against Hoffa prepared by Hoffman.

T h e i f was also a .Match 31 1954 lellei from .SniiTh lo Ratner which said:

"I have heard nothirig more

Nautilus, which began its joiirnev from the Pacific. The 265-foot described a* a breakthrough of the ^owsul’T o u ir V o 'a v o id mou^^ long Skate left New London. firal n i a g T i m i d e . T h e S k a t e . c o m - Tlie firat wreckage was found 15 Conn.. July 30 , and entered from misstoned , I a a t Decembei at .l iours a f ter the radio report Thir- the Atlantic. Giolon. Conn . displaces 2.190 tons ty-lhiee ship* and 22 plane.*, in-

A* with the Naiililiis. Navy of- "nd is shout one-fourth smaller eluding 11 Ameriesn aircraft , kept f lcials did nothing to call attention than the I^aiitHiis. up the search.to the military ilgnificance-of t h e -------1— i , - — ;-----tranapolar trips. President Blsen- I (Uq«HBUed on Page PIve) I (('onriniied m. Page Two) hower cited the Nautilus' achiiiv*-ment as pointing the way toward ; wy- i j n s F * aa new commercial seaway between I W O r t u O f 1 O tn O r i'O tV “‘^ 2 fViA lA’nrlH'a tu*n m«fnr nr«Ana. • ' — '

;; Global Conformity: Is This Man’s Fate?

the world's two m ajor oceana.But the military importance o f

t(ie feats was made plain ,ln re- m arka by 'S en s . PresepiUt Bush <R- Oonnl and Clinton P. Anderson (D -N M i .

Bush, telling the Senate of the S k a le ' i trip, spoke of the M a v y 's ’ delivery of a ” one-two punch. ” .

Anderson aaid the aubmarinea | ■ may have given the United S ta tes ! . . J h e mean* of preventing war.

Ill lonnectloii wllli lire qiieatious, Team sters In 1958 Hdiise investf- aiibcommittee coiitiscl Robert Llsh- gXtion which was dropped jnysier i- man pivtiired Goidtine. i liajority i oiisly.stockholder in the holding com’- ' . 'tmilh aiid Rep. r U i e F . Hmf - pan.-. as milking , the Brin to the Kennedy satd the memo con-detriment of mlno|1t.vatocklio ider* .— - — c—- -...........— -■■■- -

lyislimnil suggested GOldflne had ' borrowed a total of (104,973 from Bo.sloo P o l l DefvclDpuient^ received s (20 ,000 commiasion trom II and that the vompany wrote off (68,000 of interest on s mortgage it held 0.1 a Goldfine building, S o m e quea- t ioni also concerned alleged debts

a , Timmle Rogers, widclv knownGoWfln* balked a t answering on N „ anleiTairtei. savs he was

tU’alen bv a U.S. Arm.v m a jo r In ( iermany Aujf. ’J for arHvtftg late

(N ote^TV relettHcM march alfInternaUonal TV programs, dsnr- "We now have vast new <K#an leciinology keeps aarroniag t)ie • -■

dTfferenec lielween people. ' Ceald It's qltlmate ^evelopmeof brtag an« 1|- • -a II s ninmase nere iopm eai n n a g anSun appalling glokal i ln ifn m iltyr A

* ' ^ ^ ' * * - l -eX t-H j/ A long-time reporter of tke Interna-r i • . • . C? HonaScientists b ay

the questions weie not pertinent to the committee’*' assighed task of inveatlgaUng federal regulatory agencies.

He argiu-d also’ that he should not be required to d iscus* internal biisinets a ffairs of Boston Po.it Developnianl, eapecislly while a minority ■ stockholder had a civil

. euil pending. Goldfine reportedlving the same dances, responding to ^a* a 79 pei cent interest in the the same advertisement*, develop- firm.

I'oiigrcss cUstinn sgam al Hoffs a-hqttt any contempt citation fOi had died. Hoffa, and 1 think it I* s .dead

P atn ei was coiiiisel loi the IssueSm ith Is still a ineiutier of ih*

Ho'ixe. Hi* office reported he is a t Ins home m Mankato Kau • .A fter the leUei-s were put in evidence, committee counsel Rob­ert K. Kennedy asked R s t n e r , "W ere yon retained by Ihe Team- alera in order to contact W I p l

.S m i th 7"jr, Ratner replied he wa* hired to ' handle legal work for thr T e a m ­

sters.■ Ratner. a slim, precise man with

t h i n n i n g gray hsli . readily acknowledged the letlers But he said he' had no i-ecojlection of a memorandum Kennecly said was found in the 2-t*rm governor * files,

Nens TidbitsCulled (nun .AI* Wires

(C'nnHnneil on Page Twelve)

PlaiiK N«»f Apparent

for s perfnrmsnca at an nffii;ers club. . .Aides at .xiysUc Or^l .Sfhool , tor the Deaf tell Gov. Rlblcoff thei e is a growing problem of pfo-* viding adequate program* for nieii- t'all.v retarded deaf and those ai if-- fering hearing loss from cerebral palsy.

Sen. L is ter Hill iD -A la i giopuses legislation designed to encourage International research on ranrer. heart, cerebrsl palsy and other erippling and kilhng diseases.

The l79th known suicide from. Golden Gate Bridge ‘‘was bolding'

/ t 'nntlnued on Pag#' .Nine)

the curbing of aubyeralve propa­ganda. The regional' economic de­velopment plan and arm s control he left for handling Chroiigh other U..N machinery.

Tile President made it clear the Arab* first of all mnsi agree on the regipnal development plan He said :-

'Shoii^J (he Arab Stsles agree on Ihe usefillness of such a sound­ly organized re ; jonal irmtitiilion. and should they h* pierpsretl lo support it will, their own le- soliices. the United -Stales would also be prepared U> support it '

Defends l .ae of Troops Wi t h Soviet, Foreign Minister

Andrei G io m ik o on hand, E isen­hower strongly defended hi* derr- tlon lo niah U S troops into I-ebs- non. Slid said against Ihr bark- giound of Russia s bluer denunci­ation of th f t move:

"This world of individual nn- , Hon* Is ndt going lo he controlled by any one power oi group of powers . . . plesse believe me when i say that the dream of V'Oild domination by one power

. or a world of rohformily, is *n impossible dream '

"The Preiident ser- ed notice that j if neceasary the U..S again would

i (CnnUniied on Page Twelve)

hla i u l ••) hit head with both hands U . all the wav down. ” sav* witness

Ing pretty much the same tastes F a n ta s t ic ?Of course, but look over voiir ___

UonoJ s r f« e and.double Pnlltzeri shoulderwlaner explorea the proapeet I Only .veaterdav. a low-Slung

the neconil o f fnnr-at«eles on the European c a r was so rare on the » i - l V j I V I J L g C I P I l H f ?r . iw aln g OeMdns.) road that you stopped to stare at

■ . Uew Americana ever heard, ofBy REI...MAN’ M ORIN --a vodka magtinl. mtich Jess tasted .

S t a f f W riter) it. Foreign movies were ■ confined _______ __ _It wa* a chilling thought. ■ to antalj. a r ty theaters In thg,).hlg , Moscow! Aug.- 13 ‘JPi' - - .Search conflde.Tc-e man who once aenl golf1 was lomewbere in the F a r E ast I r.itiet.- VVho would have dreamed carefully through this Soviet me- clubs to Vice-Prealrienl Nixon with

tropolii o f more than six million ce»<l^/eadlng. “ DWt, b e * t t h e people and .You migkt find a sign e-

' ■ Cecil B. DeMillJ s l s i l s his 78th____ ___ ___ _ year of life g e l M g ready f o r ‘ hi*'

laughter a : f ) ^ . - o v e r from World War l l than any 7l«t p icture . . . Ei-le Kailrnad’eMn

Powell Renominated P,€spite Tammany Hall

By H A RO L D K. M I L K S

who tried to atop him but missed by inches. . . Nets York Police' a r ­rest- Josifph I-evj'. 65. colorful

Bv ALTON B L .A K ES LR R (A P Sc ieace W riter)

Moscow, Aug. -IS iJb— Rocket astronomy is finding evidence our aun is S litlerbilg.

The sun Is strewing s lot 'of when thi* ides' suddenly begsn t s k - l t h a t a Japanese actress wohlii win tiydrogen gas around in the. ing shape. I t h»s been haunting an> O s c a r 7E a r t h s front y*rd and In tl^e path me evef nniM. Only yesterday.. Coca-Cola In- pointing to an air raid shelterof all plarleu of the solar system. I f you. doh t like being haunted, vsded ICurone. The wine grower* But it look* more i lk* a hang

I f you could expose a quart m i l k ^ t t e r atop reading noev. N o ? Then. I ^ k ' ^ laughter a : first , over from World War l l than a .*. K* « -a'er rie ^^oon, t|Wy were ygllinir for goV- recent SAviet 'l i tlem pl to »peed ve«iK«Uon of t r i m urexh which

would pick up Drom lOO.Ow to a Ara we all beroming a h k a . '^am m an t proiecUon. Sam e with the tip Civil Defenae as I t ’s practiced .killed five a t S w i in g t o n . N. Y. million jiydrogen^ atoms rf|xy-ts Is everv nation on E a r th losing; P a r is ctiiffeur* when A m e r ica n ! in the West. ' i wffi opett T o r g d a i at the railroad’sDr. J - r i^ m a n of he U.S, Us spec ^ customs, culture, indl- , h4 ir -w aJln g gadgeU began to U k e , Organized pr .p aration* for de- office in Hoboke^t. N. J .w . ' ’b n r t « T ' n S t toward j fe n a e * of the civil population o f . Jo .ce ly n K, Sm ith becomes.YVgshinfton. __- t a ^ h t t w a r q i voull pardon th f On Fotiposa* the oth er day* a ; Hoacow and other Soviet cUiea in Denio<TaUc party llral > > a m

Mpst if of this g a s ap- e presaion) togrtherneas . Cailnea* tb{ had a birthday. .Which t event, of war do not exist, a t least . ■omlnee f o r ^ g n ’y office- fromparenll.v the sun, . I t looks that way. ■ j fift ■wrecked th# party ? A co w b o y , publicly.' -i-Qileens Countw JN.yT,- . . Coastwhich ^^jUs H in vast f lare*. (p o -*n i t d ith _chapa and a lO-point There a re no sirens b l a r i n g Guard i n v e s t i g a t o r s ^ a r apbareat

Nonethejess. interplanetary space dlaUnt hiture. * . may be.draaelng t Stetson. w U r m s J o r mock air raids to p i a c - ; co anic ttn g t e l i ^ n y In p ? S ^ ^

New York, Aug. 18 ■F' -- Rep.» Barring un isiial .developmehl*. Adam Clavton Powell J r . biiitled ( Powell seemed a good bet to de­

ar. avalanchei o f . feat Brown in .November and re- win the Demo-'““turn . In Congress, where he hM

cra t ic renomlnatioii for his H ar- ! been the self-proclaimed chatii-'* lem congressional seat despite the | pion of the Amenvan .Negro and opposUibn of powerful Tammany j of the people' of Harlem in par- HaO. I ticiilat

Th# 49-.vear-old N egro. Con- Harlem is sboiit W per Vent Ne- grestnian. seeking an eighth term i " ‘'1*' """"ri of *he rest Puerto tn the House, easily defeated E a r l !Brown, a Negro city councilman arid an ass is tant editor of

Powell won. however, even- in * , section of Harlem that was heav-

Magaxin*. In yeaterday'i p r im a r y - “X “ •‘l * " ■"'* P " * ' ; ! " f e la t io n ■ ( ell said the area i* * po\ve--fularea i* g “powe--

Tamm any dlgtrict n n by Carm'neDeSapio'a leader, f n m k Rosetti. ' ' Oe.Sapio la New .York 'aeci etarv of s ta le an<T the T am m any Hall lead-

l i stUl • ‘ pretty good yacmim. A , more alike. e*Un^ muqlr the same 'One ■ — — ’ ■• 1 f o ^ a . Uving in • f *w *Undmr4l j

(O nadM ed F « g « Tw*> ■ | type* » f he«*M . -watehlnir th * Mune |

- 7.1

night, .aome Indonesian tic«

Fm« . iClyil DkftnM . opeyationf.

<Cm « I m Fhg« TM)

collision of tankers’ Gulfoil and 8. B. Graham outaid* Stwp pt, R. 1. hartver Thursddy.V, .' ’

Returns from all 145 election d istr icts gave Powell 14,837 votes to" Brown's 4.935.

The victory kstured that Powell ,er, w:ill ^ On both the Democrat lo T h * .viclor.v waa i< blow to De- arid' Rapilbiican ballots ih .No- j Saplo and tha fortiines of Tam- . vemtaer. He waa the iinoppoted : many, which backc^ Powell’* pi*- G O F "d e s ig n e e . Brown, 56. once ' tioila saven suc'qaasful bid*. ,foi ; again will be PoweH’s opponent { Congress but ju m e d against him

running on the Liberal pdrty this t im er.......... it icket, w h e f * ' h * was iinoppioeed yaatarday. - (CmsOm MI tm P n g * B ig i i t)

Bulletinsfroin the A.P Wiree

.MOON RHOT NOT RETNew York, Aug. 15 iP)—•AlaJ.

Gen. Donald. M. YsUe*. com­mander Of the mls*U« tM t. cieii- ter at Cape Canaveral. Fia.. iiakl today no Untie liaa been set for thi* country’s planned rocket *hnt at the moon. He anld he didn’t know when the nleniit- will he made, lie anld authnritle* Bl Ihe te*l renter were "very much emhnra«»ed" by published reports that tile lunar Bring would be imdertnken next da.i. i

IKE LHhMMENTR ON T A jJiNew York, Aug. IS UP*—"I

hope It did some good. A fellow nei er knows." 'I%at. was Presi­dent Ei*f«how'rFs own comment today OB kl* awift trip to New ) ork lo address the I'nlted Na- Hon* General .\s*embty on the .Middle Bast cri*l«. The Preal- dent’* remerk came Just hefolW he boarded the Colombhie III at Ijifiuardia .\lrport tor hi* re­turn (o Mashlngto^

I’LA.NE.S S t’R.AP NE.AR M.ATSCTaipei, Formosa. Aug. IS (Pi—

Two Oilne*« Nationalist patrol plane* fought an eight-mlnutn aerial battle witk Cptlimaiiint Jet fighters near >latsu l*land to­day. The Defense Ministry aaid the Nationalist plane* returned to base safely. No hit* no tho undisclosed niunber of Rovlet- built .MIg* were reported. The Indecisive haltir necurred ahnrt- Ir afirr the fifth air raid alert of the day on the Matsu group n8aVthe Red China mainland.

RKl’KY NE.VR.8 ISLANDSSan Juan, Puerto Rico, .Augi 13

ifi-r-YropIcal storm Becky moVed weatward acroes the .AUantie Ocean today. Gale warning* wera hnitled tor' the lieeward lalnnda for winds up to‘ M m.p.h. In squall*. .A tropical storm watek was In effect for Puerto Rico and the A'IrgIn Island*. The latest weather Bureau advisory plnccd the .sesBoo’s oecoad troplcnl starm SIS iiiUeo east-aorth«aat a( Saa Juan. 1^ «raa moving weat- northwest nf S* m.p.h.

. I'S A F PI-ANE CR-ASHER '' !^ . Vlth. Belgium. Aug. IS lA* — A I'.S. Air Fore# tn«k*r nilnne •I the' Wleahnden Baaei heBeved, to linve 'Mx' pnaaengo** nhonrd. eraahSg haea today.V.. t

* i -T”'


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