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Home > Documents > Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111}...

Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111}...

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« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de t ^ l»l«l ‘n cortnectlon with the SUte nremen'a convention. ¥1^ f“ loi.in» Sat,.rt.y they *ill lead the -Welcome Home !«*•<*' In Briotol. They are conatderlna aeveral other en*a»emenU. Mr. and Mra. Wataon T. Blow, of Florence atreet. left thla morn- Inc hy plMe t*>rCalifornia, called there hy the aerloua lllneaa of Mra. Blow’afdther. _____ The Decree of Pocohontaa will .powet a public card parl^' at the hSne of Mra. Beaale Fairla. of 9 Durkin atreet. tonight at 8 o dock. There will he prize* and refreah- menta. ____ Mr*. Mabel Shearer, of Edward atreet,' haa retunred after a two week*’* vacation at Pine Glove. Nlantlc, . I Mr, and Mr*. Carl Peteraon. of Henry atreet. are enjoylnjf a trip to Canada, and a crulae on the Safuenay river. Mr. and Mra. Carl Hanaon. of Bower* atreet. their eon, George, and daughter, Gail, are touring the Adirondack* Lake region. Mr. and Mra. til'illlam Graif and children, of Waahlngton atreet. hav* haen vialting frienda In Boa- tea and Worceater. Maa*. K. C. Carniva Attracts Many Anoihrr Big Oowil al Groiiml^ al .Main ami Delnumt Slrecl* Another good crowd attended the 11th annual rainival of Camp-, bell council. Knighta of Columbu*. laat night. Again the holder of the winning ticket for the door prize wal not preaent at the time of the drawing ao the door prize tonight will be Increased another Slh to 830. Admiaalon to the lot next ^ the K. of C. home at Mam aiM Delmont atreeta i» free. With good weather the hingo game attracted many of the ; val patrons, other booths did a ' good btiaincss, aome of them sur-1 paaaing the receipts ol «he ojienlng evening. All booths are manned by niemhera of the coiineil. The three rides, on the lot are drawing the patronage of many, es- i peclally the children. The carnival will contimie for the real of the week ^nd l>abor Day. On tlfe final evening the draVvIng for the five prizes to be j Rwardrd on th^ rafflip the council 1 haa Ix^en conducting in conJiincUon ' with the carnival will be held. The I Plymouth aedan, which la the main I prize, la on dlaplay In front of the home. All prizes are In the hands of the committee awarded to the winner* immolate- 1y afUr the drawing « 'eaaary to be on the lot to win the raffle prize*. P ^ e Goiirl TED A BILL’S Refrigeration Service DMaaatl* sad Co « ib« c I*I' Iggi B w aldi Avmim ■aHfard »AdM dgrneat C . Langevlii, 42, of 192 | Warren etreet, WateHury, -wa* sentenced to the county J^l fori ten days on a charge of inN^xIca- , tlon but the sentence was ku,*- I pended by Deputy .ludge Hermaiv Yulea on condition-that the accua- ^ ed leave town Immedlalely. i Langevin was anested at 3:35; thU morning at 4S6 .North Main I atreet sleeping on a veranda of a house. A call was sent to the po- Mcc AtAtiop from th*t ®ddre*A and ; Officers NewtolkTaggart and Wll- liam Pearson tesfionded in the cniiaer and made the arrest. A continuance wa» granted by Deputy Judge Yules to Jamea R. McDermott, 21. of 15 Linden atreet, Allaton. Mass. driver of a truck owned by tfie University Overland Kxpreaa Company of .358 MeOrath Highway. Somer- ville. Maas., who la charged with speeding on Tolland Turnpike at 1 2:45 thla morning. Tha arrest was made by State Policeman Robert E. Brown of the Colchester Bar- I tacka. ' In the police i-eport filed hy Of- ficer Brown. McDermott la accus- ed of operating hla truck on Tol- land Turnpike at apeeda-of from 55 to so miles an hour. Old G>mplaiiit Is Heard Here RcsiflenUi Tell Vclcraii?** t Outer About Frensure Salesmen The Veterans Center has rec^lv ed numerous complaints from >es- Identa concerning men leprcscnt- Ing themselves as veterans calling H local homes tor ig*|| niagazine auhacriptlona. The general ii<-n,l ol coropia^nt la that theae sHlc.smcn reprcaenLx.thema*tvea to-* he in a race for "pblnta*' toward a college education and\they harp on this theme, often toShe point of being Insulting.* \ T h c^ salesman re|iii:esi’ni iliem- ^ selves to be veterans of Woi Id War ' II. using this leverage to'-vMirk on the aympathlee of the hoiisc,v|ie. - In moct caaea these complHi»jts have come to the Veterans < 'enter., and Director Gatchell has tried to ahort-Cot the complaints by referr- ing them to the police, hiii it is the pulley of the police departnn id to ' assist only If Uia complaint is made at the police station In person hy the complainant, declining to ac- cept ahy Intermediary In thla In- stance. <;omplalnto Are Contlnnlng f'oroplainls are still coming In ( oncerning the activity of these troublesome salesmen and In an ef- fort to clear up an einharraaalng situation. Director Gatchell stated i today that the public la tnadvert-1 f-ntly to blame for a continuation ' of theae acU on the part of out of , town visitors. j It would be comparatively eewy, j Director Gatchell etates, to Inquire ; of the magazine and any other: salrapeopte what their credentials i might be.rw'hether they can sup- port their calls and reference* by i showing an honorable dlachavg® i from any branch of the service or' .show a 1?P^ or printed and signed authorization to Uke subscriptions. A dozen of theae various actupe have oeen Investigated by the Vet- .erana' Center after the receipt of (oinplaints about individual or group actlon.a of itinerant sales- people. !>>gltlmale Vets Operating |- In some Inatancea legitimate veterans Have been found operat- . ing legally within the town limita Njut without a definite method of tiii^neaa operation. The latter groups or indlvliliials have been 1 advised, how to proceed In their , chosen field and no further re- port* have been ,rec*lv*d Operating m a non-coofomamg mRimcr. In aU cases where the clUa«i fecla that they are •“ •J* pressured into any kind of *al^ and If the salesman dacHnsa to show credentfala or aanrlc* rafar- ancea coupled with authoHsatlon *from a reputable organlaaUoa. New Printed KHdien T ow^ such complaint* should m direct i to the police department for ac- tion,'Diiector Gatchell stated. Colorful and bright for |(iffV^<l for your own ufnt, Sampleir Pattern 3 0 c ea. Old Fashioned Sampler Design n.J!WIIAM< Lattice anti Rose Pattern .................. 50c ea> WANTED First Class PAINTERS Jarvis Radjty Co. • Dom Road 4112 HALE'S SELF SERVE THE ORIGINAL IN NEW ENGLAND h ' AND HEALTH MARKET THURSDAY SPECIALS - Green Stamps With Cgah Sales K. of C. CARNIVAL TONIGHT MAIN STREET AT DELMONT STREET •RIDES •BOOTHS •BINGO THRILLING RIDES FUN FOR EVERYONE OBAND FUZE ISa PLYMOUTH SEDAN Dow Priac Tonii^i—$30 FlBahafy*. Flour 5 i.b . B., 39 c TaU caa ffheffleM Milk 3 Cana 35 C Sonko Coffee i.b. 39 c DotoMato Voeoam racked Coffee Lb. 38 c Apricots No. 2 '/, Can 34 c Solada Tea Basis boh or 4s 45 c Spam 12 oz . Can 43 c 1 OoM Dnst 1 Cleanser 6 Cans 25 c SpicondSpon, Box 19 C 1 Bleaching Water 1 G*L 22 c Contents 420okSt. Business Property 9-Room House Lot 90 ft. tm Cottage St. and 64 ft. On Oak St. Suitable For Gas Station Office or Store Building Get Price and Terms From Arthur A'. Knofla Exclusive Agent 875 Main St. Tel. 5440 or 5938 Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Small California Oranges Doz. 23 c Potatoes 10 Lbs. 33 c ■0 Whit* Boiling Onions Lb. 9 C Idoney/dew Melons Ea. 39 c VeUow Or <arren Squash 3 Iba. 19 c GUARANTEED RADIO REPAIRS aegardleaa. of ma^. yiar .or noAel r . . take ad\-antage of t}M prompt and HBdent aervlee BAatai by ear radio repair e Skilled Workmanship e Quality Replacement Parts • Reasonable Cost Scarce Tubes, Parts and Portable Batteries in Stock CALL 3535 FOR PICK-UP SERVICE Imoasilats danraay oa ataad- Hdbcjmd tsdlea Is the popular BENSQN*3 Furniture and Radio ng MAIN STBEVT JOHNSON BLOCK HEALTH MARKET silver Ijuie Sauerkraut DAYS of HALE’S AUGUST FUR SA1£ Niagara Textile Colored Border Huck Towek 5 9 c ea. Two novelty border* In blue, gold, green and red. Part linen, absorbent quality. Another Shipment! Plastic Place 'Mats in Lace Patterns 29 c" ea. Seven beautiful patterns including cutworki point Vienneaa, Cluny and filet. Just wipe them off. Save* laundering table cloths. Buy them for gifts also. Lady Sylvia Place Mats Plastic Coated $1.98 Set of 4 Floral and fruit patterns in natural colors. Practical and beautiful gifts. Seconds of 54’ When you are eoiieeriietl ahotit'meal plan- ning and don't know whut to serve nexl^n*- member Hale's Fresh Seafood Dept. offers \4iii nutritinii. variety anil economy. This week as usual we have a fine supply 4if Fresh Fish— Swonlfish, llulihiil.' Haililoek, Cod, Boston Blue, Fresh Mackerel, Delicious Scallops, Fresh Northern Gams, Salt Cod and Boneless Fillets. Reserve vour coat now while the selection of quality furs is at -its peak. You’ll find the most popular furs of the season . . . furs that have been , chosen for beautiful style, fine workmanship and excellent value! r"" Our label is your assurance of reliable, dependable fur coats that you will enjoy wearing. ^ Superb Fasluons! Exquisite Furs! Buy Now and Save! Partial Listing of Our ' EXTR.VORDINARY AUGUST VALUES GREY PERSIAN LAMB ............................ -«529 SHEARED BFAVER RACCfioN ......... .. 499 OCELOT .............. ^99 RUSSIAN SQUIRREL ... ................ 399 MINK blended MUSKRAT ..................... 299 SlI^vteRBLl E IMUSKRAT ......................... 29^ ' dyed NEWFOUNDLAND SEAL . ............ 229 " ' NATURAL SILVER MUSKRAT . ............... 229 ( MOUTON LAMB .......................................... 166 GREY INDIAN LAMB PAW^ ..................... 159 GREY AFRIC AN KIDSKIN . . ............... .. . 149 . OCELOT STENCILED LAPIN . . . ............ 139 BLACK AFItK AN KIDSKIN ........... H9 GREY CONEY .............. |99 Plu* Taz ' . *v Sh(ip and Compare! Easy Budget Terms — Free Storage Until Fall Printed Table Cloth and Drapery Fabric 90 c yard Make up your own di-ap«a and fable clothes and save. Colorful fruit pattern in red aiid blue. Fine Quality 40” Sanforized Gabardine In Navy. Only ' 0 ^ yard For alacka, short*, jackets, skirt* and children’s wear. Mer- cerized finish, beautiful quality. ■} 18” Martex Part-Giien Printed Toweling 40 c yard A smart peasant design for draperies, towelf, scarfs and place maU. See the made up drapes. ' 18 ” Printed iJ J Toweling 59c yd. Two colorful pattema, floral and strawberrj’—in blue, red and green. See the made up drape*. 12 c I - I V Thf JW HAL€ CORR MANCHISTili COMM«- Green Stamjifi -Given With Cash Sales tI m JWHAL4 CORK MANCNim ii CONIP a A A Fataaanl ^"Jy*** RraaM ttal £artaf aad tarnhig eJSeZta- oight} Friday partly elaady aad cooler. Avenge Dally dreuktioa Wmto* Maatt at My. nss 8,909 ii^rdb Msmehaster^A City of ^Slage Charm ^ - VOL. LXV, NO. 261 *■ li^i »> MANCHESTER. CONN^ THURSDAY, AUGUST 29. 1946 (FOURTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS Chiang Favors Plan For China Coalition; Stuart Group Head Approval of Creation of Committee of Five Is Regarded Most Hope* fnl Development vin 'Situation in Weeks; Communists A s s e r t They May Set Up Own Separate - Government Jap. Banks May Weather Crisis Muknmy, 1 Can Seel Nanking, Aug. 29.- Generalissimo Chiang Shek was reported reliably today to have approved the creation of a committee of five, headed by American Ambaasador John Leighton Stuart, to clear the way for a coalition government taking In aH partlea. Thla wa* regarded hera as the most hopeful- develop- ment In the Chinese situation In recent wee|ca It came as fighting in the north tncreaaed sharply In Intensity, and as the Cbmmuniata announced they might set up their own sepa- rate “national government’’ rath- er than accept any new constitu- tion In which they did not have a voice. _ The primary obJecUve of Stu- art’s commtltee would be to bring the Kuomlntang and minor parties together In a 40-man state councU which would aerve aa an Interim coalition governing body untU a more permanent administration is formed at the Nov. 12 National aa- oembly. Premier T. V. Soong called on Ambaasador Stuart today and pre- sented the names of the govern- ment member*—Wu Te-Chen, aec-. retiury-genaral of the Kuomlntang, •nd Chang Li-Sheng, mtnUter of tha interior—^who are slated to ' aerv* anmnd the same conference table with Communists Chou En- Lal and Tung Pl-Wu. ToBae^lastractloas ’The govemmentr' choices al* to leav* for the summer capital at KuUng tomorrow to re- ceive instrucUona from the gener- aliaaimo. ’The committee pr^aably would not begin functioning until early next week. ’The moat difficult problem bpfore the group would be to strike an ac- ceptable voting .balaitce to satisfy Communist fears of being dominat- ed by the Kuomlntang. Tenan want* a veto power—two- thlrda vote instead of a simple ma- jority—on all queationa affecting decisions reached by laat , Febru- ary’s aU-party political conference. Theae decisions laid out the course the nation must follow if it ts to achieve constitutional democracy. Ambassador Stuart was said to (OsattaMied aa Page Foar) Patrols Seek Men on Yacht Tokyo, Aug. 29 ■■Japan< may know within two wosks wbath* arsh* will b* ohla to waathar htr most aevars financial crisis with- out wlda^^raad bank failures. Reliable aoqreaa today axplainsd that banks hava advanced aubstan- tial loans to many wartlma Indus- tries, expecting that war-Indemnt- ty payments estimated at 70,000,* 000,000 yen ($4,6«6,6M.M7) from the govemmant would be avail- able tor repayment. . Bcadjastlng Fnada Nnik that olich Indemnity pay- menu to the Induatrlea have hem cancelled, the banks are beginning to readjust their fundf, to jettison bad loans—loans, that la, which had been advanced on the strength of anticipated Indemnity paymanta. Current Income of moat Such pinnta Is meager, becanaa most of tha major wartlma factorla* grs •armarkad now to ha aMppad idiroad aa reparations—or alas tliay hava delayed costly, laborious re- conversions because thay fsarad thay would be. And th* govam- msnt ttsalf is guaranteeing only an Inflnltoslmal part of the banka' loans. VaaMe to Prediet Outoaoss Authoritative sources in Japan’s financial world said tha banking aituatlcm Is so tongled that no one can prsdlct how severe a shock th* readjuatmenU may be. Au dcpooltora atand to loss pro- portionate amounU from their *•■ counts, in bank readjustments. Moat bank*, financial leaders said, should he able to survive without closing hy deducting 15 to 25 per cent from deposttora* in* Top Diplomats Seek Way of Peace Pact Parleys W innrn in Triplet Conteflt N Soviet ‘Prejudice’ Seen in Opposing Transjordan Plea “She’s pretty," says Tony Upton, five, Cincinnati, aa he aeea hia mother for the flrat Ume. Mra. Upton wept with Joy after a third operation to remove cataracU from her son’* eyes proved successful. He had been blind alnc# birth.—(NEA telephoto). . ' - Snarl Keeps Live Animals Free 4 Days < )PA Gings to Sched* ule for Restoring Meat Price Oilings; Wlllw Show Increase Advertise; in The Herald— It Paya Verano Sinks Mysteri' ously Just as Rescuing Lifeboat Reaches Her ; Bulletin! ^ Sooth Haven, Mteh.. Aug. tS —<>P)-^ts of wreckage from the yacht Verano wefe spotted In Lake fillchlgaa by a Coast Guard FBV plane today but no ! trace of her crew had been found up to IS hoars after the craft mystorlooaly soak In ‘ soogh ocas. The PBT reported aighang what appear^ to the top of the yacht caHn fltiaflng four miles northwest of where the boat weat down .late yMtorday. South Haven, Mich., Aug. 29— Coast ,Guard patrol* today gsarched for aurvlvors of the lav- tab yacht Varano, mjrsterioualy sunk in the rough aeak of Lake Michigan'yesterday Just aa a life- boat bent rescue reached her. The 92-foot vessel, owned by Maynard Dowell, Park Ridge; m mairafacturer. want down “with out a sign of life aboard" three qugvtaT* of 8 mil* off shore north of hsT9 Si$2 p, m. (o, a. t.1. Tina* Nau BeSaved AhooH A TSPew^ asareh of the waters by plane and boat was ordered at the hour of daylight today in the hope of finding the three men be- lieved to have been aboard. ’The Verano, which seamen said cost perhaps $100,000 to build, left Chicago early yesterday for pol- land, Mich., where ahe was to get repairs. Aboard ware Cfipster Oranath of (Chicago, an employe of Dowell’s company. an e u ^ e e r and cook loioiq a* •Rd “BaP^ Quardaman aald Oranath was da- scrihed to them as an experienced aailor. Shore watchers saw the Verano in trcoible seven and a half mfles north of here, but already awash, she went down stern first as Coast •* r*g* Bgbtl Jet Engines Tests Show ‘Dead Band’\ Combination of Circum> stances Rather Than Particular - Area in Air is Seen Reason Washington, Aug. 29—(/P )—OPA clung today to its schedule for re- storing meat price ceilings Sept. 9 despite the lltti hour snarl that kept live animals free of controls for four extra days. When the new schedules are posted, however, they will aver- age aiwut five and one-half cents a pound higher for beef and be- tween two and one-half and three cents a pound more for pork than June 30 ceilings. But they’ll still be below current coats. 'Agree on Estimate* OPA and the Agriculture de- partment agreed, on those estl- mates after differing sharply on what ceilings to clamp on the live- stock markets. Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson resolved that dispute by taking advantage of the new power Congress granted him. He directed OPA diief Paul Porter to hike the June 80 live .animal ceilbifa by- $2.25 a hundred for beef id $1.40 for pork in an effort to imulate production. The CIO Cost of Living commit- tee today labeled this action as the climax to "a long series of in- (OsMtaaod aa Page Six) Record Looms For Incomes Figures Compiled by Ex peirts Indicate 165 Bil lions for Individuals Cleveland, Aug. 29—W )—A “dead band’’ in which jet wglnea fall to operate wae diacloeed to- day by officials of the Aircraft Bhi' glne Research laboratory of the National Adviaory Committee for Aeronautics. ’The “dead band’’ is a ’ combina' tioij of circumstances rather than a particular area In the atmos- phere. although altitude has much to do with it. A. M. Rothrock, chief of re- search at the laboratory, discuao- Ing the phenomenon in an inter- view, said it bad showed up dur- ing test runs, but that it probably had been experienced hy jet plane pilots without their recognizing the aituation. Engine Befnaee to Run In the “dead band” th* engine simply cute out and refuaea to run. In flight, the engine might re- sume running when conditions are returned to those under which the engine previously was operating satisfactorily. Rothrock said'that in some jet engines the altitude at which this ratting out occurs already had Waohington, Aug. 2S—(P)—Fig- ures compiled by governiMnt ex- perts today indicate tbat^divid- ual inoomas will set a record of around $165,000,000,000 this fiscal year—exceeding the iXMmIng war year of 1045 by $5,000,000,000. Moreover, information gathered by the taxation staff employed by Congress and made available to a reporter suggests that even this es- timate might be revised “upward before the fiscal year ends next June SO. Blaar BaJanoa Budget Thla raisad a pooalbjllty that th* Federal budget, thrown out of kil- ter by dsprestson and war, might be brought Into balanoe. . All these things are baaed on the assumption that the nation will re- main relatively free of any large- scale strikes for the remainder of the fiscal year. ’The new income estimates, con curred in by the Budget bureau, compare with official predictions last year that the 1947 income would be around $130,000,000,000. On tha basis of those flgoraa Oon grass wrote th* first t f« feductloa In 16 yean. President Truman took note of the unexpected upward trend earlier this month whan, in a re- vla^ budget meeaga. he eatimated tax revsnuas at $89,600,000,000, I I ouIB ib Hal Australian Delegate Makes Charge on . Re> fusal to Accept Ap- plication for Mem* bership in United Na- tions; Failure Seen' Lake Success, N. Y., Auff. 29.—<JP>— Paul Hasluck, Aus- tralian delegate to the United Nations Security councU, to- day charged Soviet Russia with “prejudice” in refusing to accept Transjordan’s ap- plication for U.N. member- ship because the Soviets have no diplomatic relations with that countiy. OooncU Rons lato Snarl Tha ooonci), considaring sight appUcaUoo* on th* last dogr. i»' which it assy complate actiqn tha Saatanibar miiatlt of the Oensral Assembly, ran into a snarl when Australia, 'The Neth- erlands; th* United States, Egypt, France, Orest Britain and China challenged Andrei A. Oromyko; Soviet delegate, to explain hla stand. Hsaluck raid th* 'Transjordan application would fall now through the veto because it does not have relations with Russia. Declaring that the councU mem- bers have a reaponslbiUty to all UJ4. members and not solely to their own governments, Hwuck said: We cannot on grounds that amount to prejudice’’ reject any nation. hfexloo (tueotiona Stand Mexico also joined in question- ing Russia’s stMd. Oromyko replied briafly to the delegates-wUi the statement that it seemed to him he was clear enough on hi* motivao and that he had nothing to add. ’The councU adjournell for lunch, to meet again at 2:30 p. m. e.d.W China and Soviet Russia today ipported the application of the Mongolian People’s rapubllc for admiasion to the U niM Nations been aubstantiaUy increased and thus differed openly with the through research at the N ^ A I Dnltod States and Great Britain Cleveland laboratory. * on the second of eight applications It was found in the laboratory to be taken up by the U.N. Secur- researcb. he said, that increasing j tty councU. When dlscuarion on Albania, to velocities and decreasing pres-1 sure* and temperatures in the combustion chamber are each detrimental to combustion and I the “dead band’’ results when either temperatures aad pressures ar* very low or velocities are very high. Therefore, the “dead band’’ is reachi^ by goihg to high alU-| (Oonttaoed oo Page Six) (Ooatlaaed Oa Pag* Poor) Court Asked To Find Nazi Units GuUty Dodd Asks Conviction* Declaring THey Were Part of Perfected Hit lerian Police State Nuernberg, Germany, Aug. 29— Vn—V. 8. Prosecutor ’Thomas J. Dodd asked today for the convic- tion of five Naal organlaatlona on war crimes charges, declaring they were port of the Hitlerian police atata psrfaota4 “into th* most a ^ Qrsnfly of modern Umea” Dodd denounced defense afforta to shift the blame for war crimes from on* German group to an- other. ’The 21 indlvldu^ defend- ants In the box squirmed uncom- fortably a$ he attacked before the International MUltary tribunal their oft-profeaoed Ignorance of the deeds ai the organizations which they headed. BafaiM Half Out of Seat Herman Ooerlng once raised half out of hU seat as if wanting to clamber over the rail, but re- laxed even before the military po- Itoeman at hla side found it necas- oary to restrain him. Dodd said the organiaatlolna specified In hia speech were “Nasi- created” or "Nazi-perverted.’’ He declared th* indicted Reich cabinet, ^ Political Leadership corps, SS Elite Guard, SA Brown Shlrto and Gestapo — together with the Military Hl$>> command —were the principal agencies through which the Nazis ^eetad their “enormous erihies’’ against clvUlsation. “Deprive the Naal oonzpirators of these organizations and they could never have accomplished their criminal alms,” Dodd told th* tribunal. By convicting them, he said, the court would show man- kind: "'That no crime will go unpun ished because it was commlttsd In the name of a pollUcal party or of a aUte; that no crime will be AHcs, Barhara and Carol Rogers, 8-y**r-old triplet daughters of Mrs. Marion Rogers of East Port Chestsr, N. Y., holds th* crowns they won as tha moat photogenic of 24 triplets at the Mathers of ’Triplets aasoolaUon convsntlon In Atlantic City, N. J. (Coattimed oa Page Oglit) Midwest States! Given Foretaste of Autumn 280,000 KiUed In 1937 Rape Long Series of ments Reveal Docu- Trage- Chicago, Aug. 29—(JVrA taste of autumn spread over the middle west today as temperature# In three, sUtes dipped into th* 80s or below. Land O'Lakea, WIs., refmrted a represent the coolest night in Aug- ust in the bureau’s history in Chi- cago. ’The previous rsoord was 48.9 d e ^ e s on Aug. 28, 1917. CoM Air Btanketo Mld-Baetloa I No immediate change was In sight as a mass of cold air from minimum reading of 26 degrees,! central Canada blanketed the na- aocompanled by a light frost. Oth- ' tlon’s mid-section. 4r low tempersturts iijcluded 86 a t ; Federal forecasters said the cool , • ikT !• ■( I St. Cloud, Minn., 87 at Wausau,' weather extended"from IlUnota and dy of Nanking H o PPOP Wl*.. 8S at spencer. la.. and 89 at IndUna norihwaat Into th# paH*- Madison. W i^ . . . us and Montana and the plalnf Tha forecast for Chisago which, ptatss. They aald the eold niaaa, had a low ar S3 last night, waa for moderating as It moves s o n t h w ^ a minimum of 48 tontghjL Th# was expected to extend Into Ohio, UUs would Kentucky and Tenneesee. Tokyo, Aug. 2»—<P)—Conquer- ing,- near-l>erserked Japanese troops slaughtered 280,000 Chinese in their bestial "rape of Nanking" in 1937, the war crimes tribunal was told today la a long series of documents from those who lived through the weeks of horror. "TMs was a U^edy the Uke of which never has been known In his- tory,” said a Chinese report, read- ing to the court which is trying Former Premier HIdeki. Tojo and 26 others for war guUL pnaWe T* Hsptr«r Japans** civtUan qutboriUes. the report said, wsrs tmaMa to halt the rampaging vtetMloua troops from rape, robbery, looltag, murd- •r and sfSOiL A report by Nelmn T. Jdfanaon, American arahaasadpr to CMn* at ICauttmiad M fUga Mai Weather bureau Indians of Northwest Tri^s \ Wiirt ^Battle on fishing Rights 'The Dalles, Ore., Aug. $9—(JV - *'Indians as well aa white# must use Indian, of thrse northwest tribe. , cto^**of ^ I cominrreisi have won ,thalr latest battle with the whits man’s law of Washing* ton and Oregon at their ancient sal- mon fishing grounds on tbs Co- lumbia river. Oidsfs ot th* TaMmaa, UmatUls and Warm Springs Indians were told last night their tribesmen may esntlnne using spsnra and nsto dssr ,pito n tsro-stota sdlet which ruled ‘ tissty* A. J. Suomela. Oregon mnatsT fish warden, and Milo Moota, di- rector of Washington fishertas, ro- ported after a eonfeienca with th* chiefs sad reservation supsrintaad- entf that friendly court ouita will be initiated to settle the Issue of the Indiana’ rights under sa ISW Army Frets Over Illegal Uniform Use iS rtO - '■ ^ IFor Department Sus- pects Million Se IP earing Garb Without Right; Morale Hit Washington, Aug. 2 9 -(J*)—The Army, sUU worried about getting more men into uniform, is almost as fretful over how to persuade perhaps a million to doff their khaki That’s the number the War de- psrtmsnt suspects may be attired U lei^y la Army dress—Including some who never packed a rifle. They bought their military garb at surplus stores with no questions asked. Coneerned for Two Reasoas The department Is concerned for two reasons: 1. The Anny gets a black'eye whenever some Individual In uni- form commits a crime or other- wise' ipisbehaves in public. 2. Morale or men still In uni- form goes down when fresh critl cism is heaped on the Army. Brig.'Gen. B. M. Bryan, the Army's provost marshal general deacrlbed the situation ,today as “ a headache to the War *dep*rt ment and to every MP." What to do about it Is causing much scratching of official head*. One proposal whs to ask Congress to tighten existing laws which pro- vlda a moximtim of six nidnths in Jail and $.100 fine for wearing a uniform Illegally. ^foroement Problem Too Big • But that was put. on the shelf avan hafore Congrtsa quit for the (Cmrttsued Oa Page n g k t) *’7^ Recess Given In WAG Trial Pposet-ution * Concludes Case; Conspiracy ^arge Thrown Out Frankfurt. Germany, AOg- 2 ^ (F)~-rha prosecution concluded to- day Its case against Mrs. Kathleen Nash Durant, charged with lar- and emhesalement of the Kronberg jewel collection. The Military court granted the defense Uthree-week recess to line up Its witnesses. The court threw out the con- spiracy charge against th# WAC captain, approving a defense con- teation tost evidence failed to sup- port It Prosecution attorpey* said the War department had prepared to affid witnesses for the defense hy air from tha United Stotes pext vbbIl Asks for Six WHnesees The defense has asked for at ICealiaaed *■ Pag* Tsral Moscow Views Greece Hostile About Balkans Foreign Ministers of Big Four Gather in Office Of Bidault After Con- ferences Witnesses An* other Clash BetweiRi Australians and Rn^ sians on Collecting Da- ta on Italian Frontier Paris, Aug. 29.-—<JP>—Ths foreign ministers of Britain* Russia, the United Ststss and France met this after- noon in an effort to find a way of revitalisingdthe Paris Peace conference, wortljr be- fore the ministers gathered in the office of Geopgea Bi- dault, president and forslgn later of France, the ctmfersnas had witnessed another of tha claRies which hava bedevtled Uie peace making. AnatrsUan Prspoeal Beatag An Auatrallan proposal to as* tabllah a subaommlttra to eoDsek factual data on th* Itallaa- French frontier vras beatan 1$ to six In tha Italian commlaaton after a heated Auatralian-Rusalaa *■- change. . The four principal powars sad nine other nations votod against the Australian plan. U. 8. Saerstara of Btata Jamas F. Byrnes, British Forslgn Seo- retsry Ernest Bavin, Bovist Fee- elgn Minister V. M. Molotov and Bidault met in tha building ooa- tointng th* famous clock roeos whsr* th* Big Four of ISIS fram- ed the treatlas which thsy toe hoped would end war. 'Their first task, it was btUfvad, waa to devlaa a eommen grottUL- for dealing with ttw SOSanUn#--’ menta to treaty drafts which have snowed tha oontorsnoa uhdar. As Any New Diplomatic De- velopments Can Be Un- flerstood Only in Light of Attitude | . l.l IW I. ■ Moscow, Aug. 29— For- eign diplomats In Moscow hava gained tha Impression from the Russian press that th# Soviet union haa come to view the prea ent government of Greece aa com- mitted to a program definitely and Unalterably hoAUe to everything Russia would Itks done In the Bal- kans. Op* dtplomatic source said that any new diplomatic developments relativS to the Soviet union and Oreeca could. be understood only in the light of this attitude. (K. K. Rodionov, th* Russian ambassador In Athens, has re- questsd a visa permitting him to InysGreece, wlthout^requastifig a return Vlas. A Oovtst smbaaoy official said a charge d’affaires would he nominatod, however, thus precluding a break in diplomatic relationa.l 8lnce the opening of the Parts fCoannuad oa Page nght) 0 _ Continue Hunt, For Weapons Flashes! (laUe B4dlrttaa of toe (#) Wtoa) British Tighten ity Meafiures Acre Prison Sccur- Around Today Bulletin! Jenisaletn. Aug. .29— 'nie BriUsh iwaduclnd large scale search** In the all-Jew- Ifth €!lty of Tel Aviv today fol- lowing reports that outlawed farces planned to spring 500 Jews from the Latnin deten- tion ramp. Moshe Nhertok, Isaac Onifobam and Bernard <• JoHcph, ah membrro of the Jewish Agency, aw •'“M ■* Latnm. ,. Jerusalem.’ Aug. 29— British troops continued today their pains- taking search of two more Jewish villages and tightened security measures around a prison where 18 members of the so-called Stern gang are being held under sen- tence of death for sabotage. 'Troops of the Sixth Airborne di- vision, combing through the vll- lageb, of Dorot and Ruhama on the edgevbf Palestine’s southern desert, found two signalling lamps, a mor- tar, a' mine detector, military training pamphlets and « radio transmitter yesterday. Have Threatened Reprisals No reason was given for tight- ening the guard around Acre prison, but an announoement con-i cernlng conftrmatloa or commuta- tion 9 f death sentence of the 18 young Jews held there was sxpect- Death Sentences Ooimaated Imidaa, Ang. 20e—<d>—Tha Oa- loalal office snaooMai totofM thht the death oeataMea agafisrt 18 Stem gaag mambera ceavtcf- ed of bomb attaeka oa the HaMa railroad yard* la PalestiM hav* been commuted to Ufa ment. The commatnttea wni by Uent. Oen. Mr Bvalyii oommnnding officer In orho hnd to pnsn fiaal revtow yt ton MlUtary court sentence. • • • Civllinn Employes Cnt avasldiigto*, Aag. S 9«—(fft—<i|» War depwtow* today esdasai n redoctlen of 5S,a79 ip Its efirWaa employees toroogbont. the esootoy Iqr Oct. I, to meet Prvaideat TMi- mon’o aad congremtonal ooeoowqr order*. Under Rndget Bursna to- structlon, total personnel wM |kn reduced frem 572,579 on the pay- roU July $1 to 519.506 by Octobfr. Mnj. Gen. C. H. Bonesteel. preat- dent of the War Departmeat Man- power Board, oald order# for the cuts werVi being sent todu to Army aren bendqanrtera and oth- er .JnstaUntlons. < • • Five Eoenpe Prifion Farm ' Montgomery, Ain.. Aug. t#;—<F) —^nie loat two conviida remala- Ing at targe foOnwIag Tneodaf night’s man* break were recap* tured today, bnt five otbsr pfia- oners escaped from the prison farm. Arlhar Heoatnas, asolstoat state prison dlreetor. aald bn had been notified of this «inornlng*B runaway, but that be did not know their names or wbetbor they were white ot Negru Heuatas* said be did aot have any detatls on today’s break bat that Mood- hounds from Kilby prison tas been sent to SpHgner to hunt ton fugitives. 1 m Pags Mibt). Klltan fined $500 Bod Nauheim. Germany. Aqg- 39-^yP)>_Ca). Jamea A. KlUan et Highland Park. Ifi.. fanner eoas- msnder of too U- 8- Arww’s **• piaemeat dejtot at UqhfletC Bhf" u a A wa# convlctod today muting ernel and nnneual meat of American anldler* oaed In the depot- gunrdbonsa, Klltan wan acquitted of “oldtoff and abetting" crueitten tor wMoh nine enllatrd guards and throe siihordlnnto ofllcera have been coal- victed. The court martial clearad him also of charges of “kaowtaff- ly" permitting cnieltleo. KUtaa wa* fined $866 and reprlmasdad by the seven-offieor MUltary coatl. The court ceavicted him after two hours deUbevatton at th* end of the lO-wssk trtaL Treasury Balanca Washington, Aug. 29 (IF - Yh* position of the Treasury Aug. 27l Rseelpia. $177,577,588.48; ea- pednituraa. $201.$80jmJ7: bU- $11,007,96A88R«T.
Transcript
Page 1: Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de

■ «

PAG E 81 X T E E 9^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl

— f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t»,

111}

About TownTh. oM

•T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «d e t ^ l»l«l ‘n cortnectlon with the SUte nremen'a convention. ¥1^ f “ loi.in» Sat,.rt.y they * ill lead the -Welcome Home !«*•<*' In Briotol. They are conatderlna aeveral other en*a»emenU.

Mr. and Mra. Wataon T. Blow, of Florence atreet. left thla morn- Inc hy plMe t*>r California, called there hy the aerloua lllneaa of Mra. Blow’afdther. _____

The Decree of Pocohontaa will .powet a public card parl ' at the hSne of Mra. Beaale Fairla. of 9 Durkin atreet. tonight at 8 o dock. There will he prize* and refreah- menta. ____

Mr*. Mabel Shearer, of Edward atreet,' haa retunred after a two week*’* vacation at Pine Glove. Nlantlc, . I

Mr, and Mr*. Carl Peteraon. of Henry atreet. are enjoylnjf a trip to Canada, and a crulae on the Safuenay river.

Mr. and Mra. Carl Hanaon. of Bower* atreet. their eon, George, and daughter, Gail, are touring the Adirondack* Lake region.

Mr. and Mra. til'illlam Graif and children, of Waahlngton atreet. hav* haen vialting frienda In Boa- tea and Worceater. Maa*.

K. C. Carniva Attracts Many

Anoihrr Big Oowil al Groiiml^ al .Main ami Delnumt Slrecl*

Another good crowd attended the 11th annual rainival of Camp-, bell council. Knighta of Columbu*. laat night. Again the holder of the winning ticket for the door prize wal not preaent at the time of the drawing ao the door prize tonight will be Increased another Slh to 830. Admiaalon to the lot next ^ the K. of C. home at Mam aiM Delmont atreeta i» free.

With good weather the hingo game attracted many of the ;val patrons, other booths did a

' good btiaincss, aome of them sur-1 paaaing the receipts ol «he ojienlng evening. All booths are manned by niemhera of the coiineil.

The three rides, on the lot are drawing the patronage of many, es-

i peclally the children.The carnival will contimie for

the real of the week ^nd l>abor Day. On tlfe final evening the draVvIng for the five prizes to be

j Rwardrd on th rafflip the council 1 haa Ix en conducting in conJiincUon ' with the carnival will be held. The I Plymouth aedan, which la the main I prize, la on dlaplay In front of the home. All prizes are In the hands

of the committee awarded to the winner* immolate- 1y afUr the drawing «

'eaaary to be on the lot to win the raffle prize*.

P ^ e Goiirl

TED A BILL’S Refrigeration Service

DMaaatl* sad Co« ib« cI*I' Iggi B w aldi Avm im

■ aHfard »AdM

dgrneat C. Langevlii, 42, of 192 | Warren etreet, WateHury, -wa* sentenced to the county J^l fori ten days on a charge of inN^xIca- , tlon but the sentence was ku,*- I pended by Deputy .ludge Hermaiv Yulea on condition-that the accua- ed leave town Immedlalely. i

Langevin was a nested at 3:35; thU morning at 4S6 .North Main I atreet sleeping on a veranda of a house. A call was sent to the po- Mcc AtAtiop from th*t ®ddre*A and ; Officers NewtolkTaggart and Wll- liam Pearson tesfionded in the cniiaer and made the arrest.

A continuance wa» granted by Deputy Judge Yules to Jamea R. McDermott, 21. of 15 Linden atreet, Allaton. Mass. driver of a truck owned by tfie University Overland Kxpreaa Company of .358 MeOrath Highway. Somer­ville. Maas., who la charged with speeding on Tolland Turnpike at 1 2:45 thla morning. Tha arrest was made by State Policeman Robert E. Brown of the Colchester Bar-

I tacka.' In the police i-eport filed hy Of­ficer Brown. McDermott la accus­ed of operating hla truck on Tol­land Turnpike at apeeda-of from 55 to so miles an hour.

Old G>mplaiiitIs Heard Here

RcsiflenUi Tell Vclcraii?** t O u ter About

Frensure Salesmen

The Veterans Center has rec lv ed numerous complaints from >es- Identa concerning men leprcscnt- Ing themselves as veterans calling H local homes tor ig*|| niagazine auhacriptlona. The general ii<-n,l ol coropia^nt la that theae sHlc.smcn reprcaenLx.thema*tvea to-* he in a race for "pblnta*' toward a college education and\they harp on this theme, often toShe point of being Insulting.* \

Thc^ salesman re|iii:esi’ni iliem- selves to be veterans of Woi Id War ' II. using this leverage to'-vMirk on the aympathlee of the hoiisc,v|ie. -

In moct caaea these complHi»jts have come to the Veterans < 'enter., and Director Gatchell has tried to ahort-Cot the complaints by referr­ing them to the police, hiii it is the pulley of the police departnn id to

' assist only If Uia complaint is made

at the police station In person hy the complainant, declining to ac­cept ahy Intermediary In thla In­stance. ‘

<;omplalnto Are Contlnnlng f'oroplainls are still coming In

( oncerning the activity of these troublesome salesmen and In an ef­fort to clear up an einharraaalng situation. Director Gatchell stated i today that the public la tnadvert-1 f-ntly to blame for a continuation ' of theae acU on the part of out of , town visitors. j

It would be comparatively eewy, j Director Gatchell etates, to Inquire ; of the magazine and any other: salrapeopte what their credentials i might be.rw'hether they can sup­port their calls and reference* by i showing an honorable dlachavg® i from any branch of the service or' .show a 1?P^ or printed and signed authorization to Uke subscriptions.

A dozen of theae various actupe have oeen Investigated by the Vet- .erana' Center after the receipt of (oinplaints about individual or group actlon.a of itinerant sales­people.

!>>gltlmale Vets Operating|- In some Inatancea legitimate veterans Have been found operat-

. ing legally within the town limita Njut without a definite method of

tiii^neaa operation. The latter groups or indlvliliials have been

1 advised, how to proceed In their , chosen field and no further re­

port* have been ,rec*lv*d Operating m a non-coofomamg mRimcr.

In aU cases where the clUa«i fecla that they are •“ •J*pressured into any kind of *al^ and If the salesman dacHnsa to show credentfala or aanrlc* rafar-

• ancea coupled with authoHsatlon *from a reputable organlaaUoa.

New Printed KHdien T o w ^

such complaint* should m direct i to the police department for ac­tion,'Diiector Gatchell stated.

Colorful and bright for |(iffV^<l for your own ufnt,

Sampleir Pattern3 0 c ea.

Old Fashioned Sampler Design

n.J!WIIAM< Lattice anti Rose Pattern .................. 50c ea>

WANTED

First Class PAINTERS

Jarvis Radjty Co.• Dom Road

4112

HALE'S SELF SERVETHE ORIGINAL IN NEW ENGLAND h '

AND HEALTH MARKET

THURSDAY SPECIALS- Green Stamps With Cgah Sales

K. of C. C A R N IV A L

TONIGHT

MAIN STREET AT DELMONT STREET

•RIDES•BOOTHS•BINGO

THRILLING RIDES FUN FOR EVERYONE

OBAND FUZE IS aPLYMOUTH SEDAN

Dow Priac Tonii^i—$30

FlBahafy*.

Flour 5i.b.B ., 39cTaU caa ffheffleM

Milk 3 Cana 35CSonko Coffee i.b. 39cDotoMato Voeoam racked

Coffee Lb. 38c

Apricots No. 2 '/, Can 34c

Solada Tea Basis boh or 4s 45c

Spam 12 oz. Can 43c1 OoM Dnst

1 Cleanser 6 Cans 25cSpicondSpon, Box 19C

1 Bleaching Water1 G*L

22cContents

420okSt.Business Property

9-Room House Lot 90 ft. tm Cottage

St. and 64 ft. On Oak St.Suitable For Gas Station Office or Store Building

Get Price and Terms From

Arthur A'. KnoflaExclusive Agent

875 Main St.Tel. 5440 or 5938

Fresh Fruits and VegetablesSmall California

Oranges Doz. 23c

Potatoes 10 Lbs. 33c■0

Whit*

Boiling Onions Lb. 9C

Idoney/dew Melons Ea. 39cVeUow Or <arren

Squash 3 Iba. 19cGUARANTEED

RADIOREPAIRS

aegardleaa. of ma^. yiar .or noAel r . . take ad\-antage of t}M prompt and HBdent aervlee

BAatai by ear radio repair

e Skilled Workmanship e Quality Replacement

Parts• Reasonable Cost

Scarce Tubes, Parts and Portable Batteries in Stock CALL 3535 FOR PICK-UP

SERVICE Imoasilats danraay oa ataad-

Hdbcjmd tsdlea Is the popular

BENSQN*3Furniture and Radio

n g MAIN STBEVT JOHNSON BLOCK

HEALTH MARKET

silver Ijuie

Sauerkraut

DAYSof HALE’S

AUGUST FUR SA1£

Niagara Textile Colored Border

Huck Towek 5 9 c ea.Two novelty border* In blue, gold, green and red. Part linen,

absorbent quality.

Another Shipment!

Plastic Place 'Matsin Lace Patterns

2 9 c" ea.Seven beautiful patterns including cutworki point Vienneaa,

Cluny and filet. Just wipe them off. Save* laundering table cloths. Buy them for gifts also.

Lady Sylvia Place MatsPlastic Coated

$ 1 .9 8Set of 4

Floral and fruit patterns in natural colors. Practical and beautiful gifts.

Seconds o f 54’

When you are eoiieeriietl ahotit'meal plan­ning and don't know whut to serve nexl^n*- member

Hale's Fresh Seafood Dept.offers \4iii nutritinii. variety anil economy. This week as usual we have a fine supply 4if Fresh Fish— Swonlfish, llulihiil.' Haililoek, Cod, Boston Blue, Fresh Mackerel, Delicious Scallops, Fresh Northern Gams, Salt Cod and Boneless Fillets.

Reserve vour coat now while the selection of quality furs is at -its peak.You’ll find the most popular furs of the season . . . furs that have been , chosen for beautiful style, fine workmanship and excellent value!

r"" Our label is your assurance of reliable, dependable fur coats that you will enjoy wearing. ^

Superb Fasluons! Exquisite Furs! Buy Now and Save!

Partial Listing o f Our ' E X TR .V O R D IN A R Y AUG UST VALU ES

G R E Y PERSIAN LAM B ............................ - «5 2 9SH EAR ED BFAVER R A C C f io N ......... .. 499O C E L O T .............. ^99R USSIAN SQUIRREL . . . ................ 399M IN K b l e n d e d M U S K R A T ..................... 299SlI^vteRBLl E IMUSKRAT ......................... 29^

' d y e d N E W F O U N D LA N D SEAL . ............ 229 " 'N A T U R A L SILVER M USK R AT . ............... 229 (M O U T O N LAMB .......................................... 166G R EY IND IAN LAM B P A W ^ ..................... 159G R E Y AFRIC A N K ID SK IN . . ................. . 149 .O C ELO T STENCILED LA P IN . . . ............ 139B LA C K AFItK A N K ID SK IN ........... H 9G R E Y C O N E Y .............. |99

Plu* Taz' • ■ . • *v

Sh(ip and Compare!Easy Budget Terms — Free Storage Until Fall

Printed Table Cloth and Drapery Fabric

9 0 c yardMake up your own di-ap«a and fable clothes and save. Colorful

fruit pattern in red aiid blue.

Fine Quality 40”

Sanforized GabardineIn Navy. Only '

0 ^ y a r d

For alacka, short*, jackets, skirt* and children’s wear. Mer­cerized finish, beautiful quality.

■ }

18” Martex Part-Giien

Printed Toweling

4 0 c yardA smart peasant design for draperies, towelf, scarfs and place

maU. See the made up drapes. '

18” PrintediJ J

Toweling

59c yd.—

Two colorful pattema, floral and strawberrj’—in blue, red and green. See the made up drape*.

12cI - I

VThf JW HAL€ CORR

M A N C H I S T i l i C O M M «-

Green Stamjifi -Given With Cash Sales

tIm JWHAL4 CORKM A N C N i m i i C O N I P

a A A

Fataaanl ^"Jy*** RraaM

ttal £artaf aad tarnhig eJSeZta- oight} Friday partly elaady aadcooler.

Avenge Dally dreuktioa Wm to* Maatt at My. nss

8,909 ii^rdbMsm ehaster^A City o f ^Slage Charm -

VOL. LXV, NO. 261 *■ l i ^ i » > MANCHESTER. CONN^ THURSDAY, AUGUST 29. 1946 (FOURTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS

Chiang Favors Plan For China Coalition;

Stuart Group HeadApproval o f Creation of

Committee o f Five Is Regarded Most Hope* fnl Development v in

'Situation in Weeks; Communists A s s e r t They May Set Up Own Separate - Government

Jap. Banks MayWeather Crisis

Muknmy, 1 Can Seel

Nanking, Aug. 29.- Generalissimo Chiang Shek was reported reliably today to have approved the creation of a committee of five, headed by American Ambaasador John Leighton Stuart, to clear the way for a coalition government taking In aH partlea. Thla wa* regarded hera as the most hopeful- develop­ment In the Chinese situation In recent wee|ca

It came as fighting in the north tncreaaed sharply In Intensity, and as the Cbmmuniata announced they might set up their own sepa­rate “national government’’ rath­er than accept any new constitu­tion In which they did not have a voice. • _

The primary obJecUve of Stu­art’s commtltee would be to bring the Kuomlntang and minor parties together In a 40-man state councU which would aerve aa an Interim coalition governing body untU a more permanent administration is formed at the Nov. 12 National aa- oembly.

Premier T. V. Soong called on Ambaasador Stuart today and pre­sented the names of the govern­ment member*—Wu Te-Chen, aec-. retiury-genaral of the Kuomlntang, •nd Chang Li-Sheng, mtnUter of tha interior— who are slated to

' aerv* anmnd the same conference table with Communists Chou En- Lal and Tung Pl-Wu.

ToB ae^ lastractloas ’The govemmentr' choices al*

to leav* for the summer capital at KuUng tomorrow to re­ceive instrucUona from the gener- aliaaimo. ’The committee pr^aably would not begin functioning until early next week.

’The moat difficult problem bpfore the group would be to strike an ac­ceptable voting .balaitce to satisfy Communist fears of being dominat­ed by the Kuomlntang.

Tenan want* a veto power—two- thlrda vote instead of a simple ma­jority—on all queationa affecting decisions reached by laat , Febru­ary’s aU-party political conference. Theae decisions laid out the course the nation must follow if it ts to achieve constitutional democracy.

Ambassador Stuart was said to

(OsattaMied aa Page Foar)

Patrols Seek Men on Yacht

Tokyo, Aug. 29 ■■Japan< may know within two wosks wbath* arsh* will b* ohla to waathar htr most aevars financial crisis with­out wlda^^raad bank failures.

Reliable aoqreaa today axplainsd that banks hava advanced aubstan- tial loans to many wartlma Indus­tries, expecting that war-Indemnt- ty payments estimated at 70,000,* 000,000 yen ($4,6«6,6M.M7) from the govemmant would be avail­able tor repayment.

. Bcadjastlng Fnada Nnik that olich Indemnity pay-

menu to the Induatrlea have hem cancelled, the banks are beginning to readjust their fundf, to jettison bad loans—loans, that la, which had been advanced on the strength of anticipated Indemnity paymanta.

Current Income of moat Such

pinnta Is meager, becanaa most of tha major wartlma factorla* grs •armarkad now to ha aMppad idiroad aa reparations—or alas tliay hava delayed costly, laborious re­conversions because thay fsarad thay would be. And th* govam- msnt ttsalf is guaranteeing only an Inflnltoslmal part of the banka' loans.

VaaMe to Prediet Outoaoss Authoritative sources in Japan’s

financial world said tha banking aituatlcm Is so tongled that no one can prsdlct how severe a shock th* readjuatmenU may be.

Au dcpooltora atand to loss pro­portionate amounU from their *•■ counts, in bank readjustments.

Moat bank*, financial leaders said, should he able to survive without closing hy deducting 15 t o

25 per cent from deposttora* in*

Top Diplomats Seek Way ofPeace Pact Parleys

W innrn in Triplet Conteflt

N

Soviet ‘Prejudice’ Seen in Opposing Transjordan Plea

“She’s pretty," says Tony Upton, five, Cincinnati, aa he aeea hia mother for the flrat Ume. Mra. Upton wept with Joy after a third operation to remove cataracU from her son’* eyes proved successful. He had been blind alnc# birth.—(NEA telephoto). . ' -

Snarl Keeps Live Animals

Free 4 Days< )P A Gings to Sched*

ule for Restoring Meat Price O ilings; Wlllw Show Increase

Advertise; in The Herald— It Paya

Verano Sinks Mysteri' ously Just as Rescuing Lifeboat Reaches Her

; Bulletin! ^Sooth Haven, Mteh.. Aug. tS

—<>P)-^ts of wreckage from the yacht Verano wefe spotted In Lake fillchlgaa by a Coast Guard FBV plane today but no

! trace of her crew had been found up to IS hoars after the craft mystorlooaly soak In

‘ soogh ocas. The PBT reported aighang what appear^ to the top of the yacht caHn fltiaflng four miles northwest of where the boat weat down

.late yMtorday.

South Haven, Mich., Aug. 29— Coast ,Guard patrol* today

gsarched for aurvlvors of the lav- tab yacht Varano, mjrsterioualy sunk in the rough aeak of Lake Michigan'yesterday Just aa a life­boat bent rescue reached her.

The 92-foot vessel, owned by Maynard Dowell, Park Ridge; m mairafacturer. want down “with out a sign of life aboard" three qugvtaT* of 8 mil* off shore north of hsT9 Si$2 p, m. (o, a. t.1.

Tina* Nau BeSaved AhooH A TSPew^ asareh of the waters

by plane and boat was ordered at the hour of daylight today in the hope of finding the three men be­lieved to have been aboard.

’The Verano, which seamen said cost perhaps $100,000 to build, left Chicago early yesterday for pol- land, Mich., where ahe was to get repairs.

Aboard ware Cfipster Oranath of (Chicago, an employe of Dowell’s company. an eu ^eer and cook lo io iq a* •Rd “BaP^Quardaman aald Oranath was da- scrihed to them as an experienced aailor.

Shore watchers saw the Verano in trcoible seven and a half mfles north of here, but already awash, she went down stern first as Coast

• * r *g * B gb tl

Jet Engines Tests Show ‘Dead Band’\

Combination of Circum> stances Rather Than Particular - Area in Air is Seen Reason

Washington, Aug. 29—(/P)—OPA clung today to its schedule for re­storing meat price ceilings Sept. 9 despite the lltti hour snarl that kept live animals free of controls for four extra days.

When the new schedules are posted, however, they will aver­age aiwut five and one-half cents a pound higher for beef and be­tween two and one-half and three cents a pound more for pork than June 30 ceilings. But they’ll still be below current coats.

'Agree on Estimate*OPA and the Agriculture de­

partment agreed, on those estl- mates after differing sharply on what ceilings to clamp on the live­stock markets.

Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson resolved that dispute by taking advantage of the new power Congress granted him. He directed OPA d iie f Paul Porter to hike the June 80 live .animal ceilbifa by- $2.25 a hundred for beef

id $1.40 for pork in an effort to imulate production.The CIO Cost of Living commit­

tee today labeled this action as the climax to "a long series of in-

(OsMtaaod aa Page Six)

Record Looms For Incomes

Figures Compiled by Ex peirts Indicate 165 Bil lions for Individuals

Cleveland, Aug. 29—W)—A“dead band’’ in which jet wglnea fall to operate wae diacloeed to­day by officials of the Aircraft Bhi' glne Research laboratory of the National Adviaory Committee for Aeronautics.

’The “dead band’’ is a ’ combina' tioij of circumstances rather than a particular area In the atmos­phere. although altitude has much to do with it.

A. M. Rothrock, chief of re­search at the laboratory, discuao- Ing the phenomenon in an inter­view, said it bad showed up dur­ing test runs, but that it probably had been experienced hy jet plane pilots without their recognizing the aituation.

Engine Befnaee to Run In the “dead band” th* engine

simply cute out and refuaea to run. In flight, the engine might re­sume running when conditions are returned to those under which the engine previously was operating satisfactorily.

Rothrock said'that in some jet engines the altitude at which this ratting out occurs already had

Waohington, Aug. 2S—(P)—Fig­ures compiled by governiMnt ex­perts today indicate tbat^divid- ual inoomas will set a record of around $165,000,000,000 this fiscal year—exceeding the iXMmIng war year of 1045 by $5,000,000,000.

Moreover, information gathered by the taxation staff employed by Congress and made available to a reporter suggests that even this es­timate might be revised “upward before the fiscal year ends next June SO.

Blaar BaJanoa Budget Thla raisad a pooalbjllty that th*

Federal budget, thrown out of kil­ter by dsprestson and war, might be brought Into balanoe. .

All these things are baaed on the assumption that the nation will re­main relatively free of any large- scale strikes for the remainder of the fiscal year.

’The new income estimates, con curred in by the Budget bureau, compare with official predictions last year that the 1947 income would be around $130,000,000,000. On tha basis of those flgoraa Oon grass wrote th* first t f « feductloa In 16 yean.

President Truman took note of the unexpected upward trend earlier this month whan, in a re- vla^ budget meeaga. he eatimated tax revsnuas at $89,600,000,000,

II ouIB ib H a l

Australian D e l e g a t e Makes Charge on . Re> fusal to Accept Ap­plication for Mem* bership in United Na­tions; Failure Seen'

Lake Success, N. Y., Auff. 29.—<JP>—Paul Hasluck, Aus­tralian delegate to the United Nations Security councU, to­day charged Soviet Russia with “prejudice” in refusing to accept Transjordan’s ap­plication for U.N. member­ship because the Soviets have no diplomatic relations with that countiy.

OooncU Rons lato SnarlTha ooonci), considaring sight

appUcaUoo* on th* last dogr. i» ' which it assy complate actiqn tha Saatanibar miiatlt o f the Oensral Assembly, ran into a snarl when Australia, 'The Neth­erlands; th* United States, Egypt, France, Orest Britain and China challenged Andrei A. Oromyko; Soviet delegate, to explain hla stand.

Hsaluck raid th* 'Transjordan application would fall now through the veto because it does not have relations with Russia.

Declaring that the councU mem­bers have a reaponslbiUty to all UJ4. members and not solely to their own governments, Hwuck said:

We cannot on grounds that amount to prejudice’’ reject any nation.

hfexloo (tueotiona Stand Mexico also joined in question­

ing Russia’s stMd.Oromyko replied briafly to the

delegates-wUi the statement that it seemed to him he was clear enough on hi* motivao and that he had nothing to add.

’The councU adjournell for lunch, to meet again at 2:30 p. m. e.d.W

China and Soviet Russia today ipported the application of the

Mongolian People’s rapubllc for admiasion to the U n iM Nations

been aubstantiaUy increased and thus differed openly with the through research at the N ^ A I Dnltod States and Great Britain Cleveland laboratory. * on the second of eight applications

It was found in the laboratory to be taken up by the U.N. Secur- researcb. he said, that increasing j tty councU.

When dlscuarion on Albania, tovelocities and decreasing pres-1 sure* and temperatures in the combustion chamber are each detrimental to combustion and I the “dead band’’ results when either temperatures aad pressures ar* very low or velocities are very high. Therefore, the “dead band’’ is reachi^ by goihg to high alU-|

(Oonttaoed oo Page Six)

(Ooatlaaed Oa Pag* Poor)

Court Asked To Find Nazi

Units GuUtyDodd Asks Conviction*

Declaring THey W ere Part o f Perfected Hit lerian Police State

Nuernberg, Germany, Aug. 29— Vn—V. 8. Prosecutor ’Thomas J. Dodd asked today for the convic­tion of five Naal organlaatlona on war crimes charges, declaring they were port of the Hitlerian police atata psrfaota4 “ into th* most a ^

Qrsnfly of modern Umea” Dodd denounced defense afforta

to shift the blame for war crimes from on* German group to an­other. ’The 21 indlvldu^ defend­ants In the box squirmed uncom­fortably a$ he attacked before the International MUltary tribunal their oft-profeaoed Ignorance of the deeds ai the organizations which they headed.

BafaiM Half Out of Seat Herman Ooerlng once raised

half out of hU seat as if wanting to clamber over the rail, but re­laxed even before the military po- Itoeman at hla side found it necas- oary to restrain him.

Dodd said the organiaatlolna specified In hia speech were “Nasi- created” or "Nazi-perverted.’’

He declared th* indicted Reich cabinet, Political Leadership corps, SS Elite Guard, SA Brown Shlrto and Gestapo — together with the Military Hl$>> command —were the principal agencies through which the Nazis ^eetad their “enormous erihies’’ against clvUlsation.

“Deprive the Naal oonzpirators of these organizations and they could never have accomplished their criminal alms,” Dodd told th* tribunal. By convicting them, he said, the court would show man­kind:

"'That no crime will go unpun ished because it was commlttsd In the name of a pollUcal party or of a aUte; that no crime will be

AHcs, Barhara and Carol Rogers, 8-y**r-old triplet daughters of Mrs. Marion Rogers of East Port Chestsr, N. Y., holds th* crowns they won as tha moat photogenic of 24 triplets at the Mathers of ’Triplets aasoolaUon convsntlon In Atlantic City, N. J.

(Coattimed oa Page Oglit)

Midwest States! GivenForetaste of Autumn

280,000 KiUed In 1937 Rape

Long Series of ments Reveal

Docu-Trage-

Chicago, Aug. 29—(JVrA taste of autumn spread over the middle west today as temperature# In three, sUtes dipped into th* 80s or below.

Land O'Lakea, WIs., refmrted a

represent the coolest night in Aug­ust in the bureau’s history in Chi­cago. ’The previous rsoord was 48.9 de^es on Aug. 28, 1917.

CoM Air Btanketo Mld-Baetloa I No immediate change was In sight as a mass of cold air from

minimum reading of 26 degrees,! central Canada blanketed the na- aocompanled by a light frost. Oth- ' tlon’s mid-section.4r low tempersturts iijcluded 86 a t ; Federal forecasters said the cool

, • ikT ! • ■ ( I St. Cloud, Minn., 87 at Wausau,' weather extended"from IlUnota andd y o f N a n k in g H o PPOP Wl*.. 8S at spencer. la.. and 89 at IndUna norihwaat Into th# paH*-

Madison. W i^ . . . us and Montana and the plalnfTha forecast for Chisago which, ptatss. They aald the eold niaaa,

had a low ar S3 last night, waa for moderating as It moves son th w ^ a minimum of 48 tontghjL Th# was expected to extend Into Ohio,

UUs would Kentucky and Tenneesee.

Tokyo, Aug. 2»—<P)—Conquer­ing,- near-l>erserked Japanesetroops slaughtered 280,000 Chinese in their bestial "rape of Nanking" in 1937, the war crimes tribunal was told today la a long series of documents from those who lived through the weeks of horror.

"TMs was a U ^edy the Uke of which never has been known In his­tory,” said a Chinese report, read- ing to the court which is trying Former Premier HIdeki. Tojo and 26 others for war guUL

pnaWe T * Hsp t r « r Japans** civtUan qutboriUes. the

report said, wsrs tmaMa to halt the rampaging vtetMloua troops from rape, robbery, looltag, murd- •r and sfSOiL

A report by Nelmn T. Jdfanaon, American arahaasadpr to CMn* at

ICauttmiad M fUga Mai

Weather bureau

Indians of Northwest T ri^s \Wiirt ^Battle on fishing Rights

'The Dalles, Ore., Aug. $9—(JV- *'Indians as well aa white# must use Indian, of thrse northwest tribe. , c to ^ **o f ^

I cominrreisihave won ,thalr la test battle w ith the whits man’s law of W ashing* ton and Oregon at their ancient sal­mon fishing grounds on tbs Co­lumbia river.

Oidsfs ot th* TaMmaa, UmatUls and Warm Springs Indians were told last night their tribesmen may esntlnne using spsnra and nsto dssr ,pito n tsro-stota sdlet which ruled ‘ tissty*

A. J. Suomela. Oregon mnatsT fish warden, and Milo Moota, di­rector of Washington fishertas, ro- ported after a eonfeienca with th* chiefs sad reservation supsrintaad- entf that friendly court ouita will be initiated to settle the Issue of the Indiana’ rights under sa ISW

Army Frets Over Illegal Uniform UseiSrtO- '■

IFor Department Sus­pects Million SeIP earing Garb Without Right; Morale Hit

Washington, Aug. 29 -(J*)—The Army, sUU worried about getting more men into uniform, is almost as fretful over how to persuade perhaps a million to doff their khaki

That’s the number the War de- psrtmsnt suspects may be attired U le i^y la Army dress—Including some who never packed a rifle. They bought their military garb at surplus stores with no questions asked.

Coneerned for Two Reasoas The department Is concerned for

two reasons:1. The Anny gets a black'eye

whenever some Individual In uni­form commits a crime or other­wise' ipisbehaves in public.

2. Morale or men still In uni­form goes down when fresh critl cism is heaped on the Army.

Brig.'Gen. B. M. Bryan, the Army's provost marshal general deacrlbed the situation ,today as “a headache to the War *dep*rt ment and to every MP."

What to do about it Is causing much scratching of official head*. One proposal whs to ask Congress to tighten existing laws which pro- vlda a moximtim of six nidnths in Jail and $.100 fine for wearing a uniform Illegally.

^foroement Problem Too Big • But that was put. on the shelf avan hafore Congrtsa quit for the

(Cmrttsued Oa Page ngkt)*’7

Recess Given In WAG Trial

Pposet-ution * Concludes C a s e ; C o n s p i r a c y ^ a r g e Thrown Out

Frankfurt. Germany, AOg- 2 ^ (F)~-rha prosecution concluded to­day Its case against Mrs. Kathleen Nash Durant, charged with lar-

and emhesalement of the Kronberg jewel collection. The Military court granted the defense U three-week recess to line up Its witnesses. ‘

The court threw out the con­spiracy charge against th# WAC captain, approving a defense con- teation tost evidence failed to sup­port It

Prosecution attorpey* said the War department had prepared to affid witnesses for the defense hy air from tha United Stotes pext vbbIl

Asks for Six WHnesees The defense has asked for at

ICealiaaed *■ Pag* Tsral

Moscow Views Greece Hostile About Balkans

Foreign Ministers o f Big Four Gather in Office O f Bidault After Con­ferences Witnesses An* other Clash BetweiRi Australians and Rn^ sians on Collecting Da­ta on Italian Frontier

Paris, Aug. 29.-—<JP>—Ths foreign ministers of Britain* Russia, the United Ststss and France met this after­noon in an effort to find a way of revitalisingdthe Paris Peace conference, wortljr be­fore the ministers gathered in the office of Geopgea Bi­dault, president and forslgn later of France, the ctmfersnas had witnessed another of tha claRies which hava bedevtled Uie peace making.

AnatrsUan Prspoeal BeatagAn Auatrallan proposal to as*

tabllah a subaommlttra to eoDsek factual data on th* Itallaa- French frontier vras beatan 1$ to six In tha Italian commlaaton after a heated Auatralian-Rusalaa *■- change.. The four principal powars sad nine other nations votod against the Australian plan.

U. 8. Saerstara of Btata Jamas F. Byrnes, British Forslgn Seo- retsry Ernest Bavin, Bovist Fee- elgn Minister V. M. Molotov and Bidault met in tha building ooa- tointng th* famous clock roeos whsr* th* Big Four of ISIS fram­ed the treatlas which thsy toe hoped would end war.

'Their first task, it was btUfvad, waa to devlaa a eommen grottUL- for dealing with ttw SOS anUn#--’ menta to treaty drafts which have snowed tha oontorsnoa uhdar. As

Any New Diplomatic De­velopments Can Be Un- flerstood Only in Light o f Attitude

|. —l.l IWI. ■Moscow, Aug. 29— For­

eign diplomats In Moscow hava gained tha Impression from the Russian press that th# Soviet union haa come to view the prea ent government of Greece aa com­mitted to a program definitely and Unalterably hoAUe to everything Russia would Itks done In the Bal­kans.

Op* dtplomatic source said that any new diplomatic developments relativS to the Soviet union and Oreeca could. be understood only in the light of this attitude.

(K. K. Rodionov, th* Russian ambassador In Athens, has re- questsd a visa permitting him to Inys Greece, wlthout^requastifig a return Vlas. A Oovtst smbaaoy official said a charge d’affaires would he nominatod, however, thus precluding a break in diplomatic relationa.l

8lnce the opening of the Parts

fCoannuad oa Page nght)0 _

Continue Hunt, For Weapons

Flashes!(laUe B4dlrttaa of toe (#) Wtoa)

British Tighten ity Meafiures Acre Prison

Sccur-Around

Today

Bulletin!Jenisaletn. Aug. .29—

'nie BriUsh iwaduclnd large scale search** In the all-Jew- Ifth €!lty of Tel Aviv today fol­lowing reports that outlawed farces planned to spring 500 Jews from the Latnin deten­tion ramp. Moshe Nhertok, Isaac Onifobam and Bernard <• JoHcph, ah membrro of the Jewish Agency, aw •'“M ■* Latnm. ,.

Jerusalem.’ Aug. 29— British troops continued today their pains­taking search of two more Jewish villages and tightened security measures around a prison where 18 members of the so-called Stern gang are being held under sen­tence of death for sabotage.

'Troops of the Sixth Airborne di­vision, combing through the vll- lageb, of Dorot and Ruhama on the edgevbf Palestine’s southern desert, found two signalling lamps, a mor­tar, a' mine detector, military training pamphlets and « radio transmitter yesterday.

Have Threatened Reprisals No reason was given for tight­

ening the guard around Acre prison, but an announoement con-i cernlng conftrmatloa or commuta­tion 9 f death sentence of the 18 young Jews held there was sxpect-

Death Sentences Ooimaated Imidaa, Ang. 20e—<d>—Tha Oa-

loalal office snaooMai totofM thht the death oeataMea agafisrt 18 Stem gaag mambera ceavtcf- ed of bomb attaeka oa the HaMa railroad yard* la PalestiM hav* been commuted to Ufa ment. The commatnttea wni by Uent. Oen. Mr Bvalyii oommnnding officer In orho hnd to pnsn fiaal revtow yt ton MlUtary court sentence.

• • •Civllinn Employes Cnt

avasldiigto*, Aag. S9«—(fft—<i|» W ar depw tow * today esdasai n redoctlen of 5S,a79 ip Its efirWaa employees toroogbont. the esootoy Iqr Oct. I, to meet Prvaideat TMi- mon’o aad congremtonal ooeoowqr order*. Under Rndget Bursna to- structlon, total personnel wM |kn reduced frem 572,579 on the pay- roU July $1 to 519.506 by Octobfr. Mnj. Gen. C. H. Bonesteel. preat- dent of the War Departmeat Man­power Board, oald order# for the cuts werVi being sent todu to Army aren bendqanrtera and oth­er .JnstaUntlons. <

• • •Five Eoenpe Prifion Farm '

Montgomery, Ain.. Aug. t#;—<F) —^nie loat two conviida remala- Ing at targe foOnwIag Tneodaf night’s man* break were recap* tured today, bnt five otbsr pfia- oners escaped from the prison farm. Arlhar Heoatnas, asolstoat state prison dlreetor. aald bn had been notified of this «inornlng*B runaway, but that be did not know their names or wbetbor they were white ot Negru Heuatas* said be did aot have any detatls on today’s break bat that Mood- hounds from Kilby prison tas been sent to SpHgner to hunt ton fugitives.

1 m Pags Mibt).

Klltan fined $500Bod Nauheim. Germany. Aqg-

39-^yP)>_Ca). Jamea A. KlUan et Highland Park. Ifi.. fanner eoas- msnder of too U- 8- Arww’s **• piaemeat dejtot at UqhfletC Bhf" u aA wa# convlctod today muting ernel and nnneual meat of American anldler* oaed In the depot- gunrdbonsa, Klltan wan acquitted of “oldtoff and abetting" crueitten tor wMoh nine enllatrd guards and throe siihordlnnto of llcera have been coal- victed. The court martial clearad him also of charges of “kaowtaff- ly" permitting cnieltleo. KUtaa wa* fined $866 and reprlmasdad by the seven-offieor MUltary coatl. The court ceavicted him after two hours deUbevatton at th* end of the lO-wssk trtaL

Treasury BalancaWashington, Aug. 29 (IF - Yh*

position of the Treasury Aug. 27l Rseelpia. $177,577,588.48; ea-

pednituraa. $201.$80jmJ7: bU - $11,007,96A88R«T.

Page 2: Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de

" ‘■V

T W dM A N C ^ E ^ T ^ e v e n i n g h e r a l d . MANCHESI’ER, c o n n , THURSDAY, AUGUST 29,194S

I:

II

Court Denies Shyers’ Plea

Reargomeiit o f Appeals Not C ra n t^ i Trio W ill Be Resenteneed

Hartford. 'Auf. IS—(» ) — The- StaU SupreBM court baa denied re> aivuxnent of tho appeal* of three ■tat* priaon convtcta from their oonvtctlon in the b lu d^n alaylng of a (uard during an attempted eacape from the priaon In March, 1S48.

OriglBally ,aentenced to die In the electric chair on Nov. 6,Jam** J. McCarthy of Danbury, Arthur TommaaelU of New. Haven aad Haymond Dewle of New Brit* eta were granted four ataya by Oovemor Baldwin.

T * Oe Reeeatenreid TomorrowCharged apeclflcally with the

Marder of Ouard Herbert O. Par* aoaa, the trio will be arraigned be* to n Sapreior Court Judge Edward J. Daly at 10 A in., Friday for reeentenelng.

Tho plM lor reargument waa

Wright’s. Paint ShopOar and Vraek Paintbig Staam Clenalag Servtee

MMdle Tpk„ East— Near Bolton Toarn Une.TeL 7S04

f , „ „ D c n . o n d - " " - > "

R „ d ,o n , . H e a r in g A .d _

4 ^ *5 0•#*••*# ^40

B«|«| M >4.e*50

WELDONDRDG COMPANY

Fhanaaelata

M l MAIM 8T. TEL. s n i

baaad on a contention Involving ad* nlataon in evidence during the Ulal o f an alleged confeaelon ^ Lewie.

I t wae claimed that the court did not oonfutp the eff€*t of the ed*

oi L,ewie'B alleged confea* eion to Lewie alone, and that ao far aa th# DafendanU McCarthy and TonaaclU were concerned Our court ehould have given coneldefatlon to thla fact In determining the degree of thalr guilt.

The trial court'i decision finding them all guilty of a bomlclda, It waa oontandc^ did not fully an- ewar the queatlon of the degree o f McCarthy*! and Tomaaelll’a guilt

Closing OfficeIn Washinglon

Hartford, Aiig. 2» -The Connect* Icut Development Commlialo'n baa dtelded to dlacontlnue Ite branch office In Waahlngton, D. C., effec­tive September IS, Chairman Wil­lard B. Rogers «alU today. The ac* Uon, be atated, was prompted by recent requests of the state's fiscal authorities that aU departmenU taka atapa toward retrenchment The Waahlngton office waa opened In April, 1S44, Mr. Rogera explain­ed, as a maana of establlahlng war- tlma Ualion between federal agen- clee and their counterpart! In the Connectiout atate government, and It prom t axtramely useful during the war Slid early reconversion pe­riods, but the oommiaaton felt the need for a beadquartera In this na« tion'e capitol wotdd eoon ceaae.

In recent montba, the chairman aaid, tha work of the office haa largely been devoted to contacting mambera of foreign miuiona and commercial attachea In Washinton In tha Interaat of ovaraaaa marketa for ConnecUcut-mada producta. "Tlia great ma^rity of tha pur­chasing commllplons remaining In tha country have now tranafarred their personnel to New York,** ha atated. "and It la noteworthy that the beadiiuarten of the. Depart­ment of Oommarce’a Offiee of In­ternational Trad# la llkawtaa being moved to New York. Thus, thla function of tho Washington offloe has dlmlniahed In value." Mr. Rog­ers said thqt tho Development Oommlaeion during the UftUroa of tha war-motivated Waahlngton aa- tabllahmenta had racelvod many cbmpllmantary lettera and verbal pralaaa about the aendoea perform­ed by Its personnel.

RANGE and FUEL on.O PEN 24 HOURS DIAL 5156

MORIARTY BROTHERSthe Level At Center um I Broad”

lu iLLm m p. a u is HA greatlj-appredatcd feature of .oar

modem faneral hone Is the complete

privacy permitted the bereaved fam­

ily. Tiro entirely aeparate apart-

mentf ' each with Its own entrance,

each complete in every detail— pro­

ride adequate facilities for two nerv-

icea aimuHaneoualy.

€ n c e S e r v i c e

SttterolRome22SnuSt

phont OXTariNICIT

4 3 4 Q

N O T IC E

To Our PatronsA complete inventory o f all garments

in our eatabliahmeiu at the itinie o f

the fire yesterday is now being taken.

W e ask your cooperation and pa­

tience until we can complete this

worit and that connected w th the

insurance adjusters. A ll garment^

not damaged by fire will be fecleaned

and everyone’s garments will be

taken care o f satisfactorily that may

have been damaged by the fire.

U . S . C LE AN E R S

Firemen Pick Six Delegaties

Town to Be Represented At State (>>nvention Tom orrow

The aix Are companies In Manchester will be repreaented by six delegatee lat the annual con­vention o f the state Firemen's aa- Boclatlon which opens In Torring- ton tomorrow. They will also take pert in the parade to be held Sat­urday afternoon In Torrlngton In connection with the welcome home cfleyration for veteran* of World War II.

Four o f the alx delegates will represent the South Manchester Fire department companies! and two the Manchi-v tcr department.

The delegates from the South. Manchester-department are from No, 1, Robert Rlsley; No. '2, Ray­mond Trueman; No. 3, Harry V, Sweet, and No. 4, Raymond Hen: ntquln. The delegaUe from the Manchaster Fire department ere No. 1, Lester Harlow, and No. 2, Jedin LUnertek.

Mr. Limerick Is,a veteran rep- rasentatlve of the Firs depart- manta In Manchester, and haa at­tended conventions for over 23 years, at one time being an officer o f the state association. He is a former chief of the Manchester Fire department.

W ed d in g s

CiolumbiaColumbia Poet of Die American

Legion met at Teotnans Hall, Mon­day night at which tlma officers for tha coming ycra alectsd— Laonard' Okrman Waa elected com­mander, replacing Arnold Mason, the first commander, who declined nomination because of plan* to move from the vicinity. Robert Church waa elected senior vies commander; Philip Xaham, Jr., junior vice commander; adjutant, Luclua W, Roblnaon; assistant ad­jutant, John Forryan; finance of­ficer, Oeorge Peters; chaplain,' Walter Deptula; sergeant-at-arms, Alfred German; aaalatant aergeant- at-arma, John Wilke; and histori­an, Bam Kaaamann. Adolph Ger­man, aarvlca officer. Mr. Mason announced that about one half of tho tlckata the group had. for sals on the Elks Fair had been dispos­ed of and that any others nocdlng them should contact John Forryan who la managing them.

Columbia echools will open, for the fall season September 4, ac­cording to an announcement by Rowland L, Cobb, chairmen of the boa|'4 of education, Tcnchera re­turning will bo Mrs. Ethel Brehaht to Pine atreet achool, Mrs. Mildred Church to'Old Hop River school; Mrs. Coro Mhor* to Hop River Vll logo. Miss Gladya Rice to Chest­nut hilt. Miss Goldie Narotsky of th* Wllllmantic BUte Teachers College Mdll teach at Center achool for th* flrat half of the y e ^ MIsa M. Louise Rothe returns as imtaic teacher. Miss Margaret D anel^ aa achool nurse and Miss Kostonen aa primary supervisor. Mr. Cobh States that there seems to be a greet Increaae In the number of pupils for some of.the schools and It la expected that there will be about thirty In the Pine street sec­tion.

Spencer Much!, John Snrokollt and John Wilke are spending the week on a fUhIng trip in Maine.

Mlsa Dorothy Chowance waa guest of honor at a bridal shower

given by several of her friends at ie Community House at John Cotes terrace in Wllllmantic, last

Saturday night. About seventy guest* were present from New York, Waterbury, Ansonla, East Hampton, Colchester. Manchester and the towns surrounding Colum­bia. Her gifts were many and beautiful Including a chest of Rug- era silverware. As'M iss Chowanec entered the room, two balloons filled with confetti were dropped on her head, showering her eoin- pletely and os she was seated tu open her gifts, the lame thing hap­pened. Mias Chowanec la tn be married in October to John Knnpp. Refrcplimcnta and dancing were enjoyed by the guests to complete the evening.

Mr. and Mrs. Clayton E. Hunt, Mr. and Mr*. Clayton B. Hunt„.lr„ of Rochester, N. Y „ and Mr. and Mrs. David Ihint of West Hartfurd, will attend tho fi7th family reunion of the Goff family, to which nil descendants o f Schubel and Snllv B. Goff are invited. It will be helil this year at tho home of William Francis at Rehoboth. Maaa., where the guest* will enjoy a clambake, on Thursday.

Miss Sally Tuttle returned to her home Thiesday, after a summer spent as counselor at Camp Wnm- plncauk in East Madloon, N. Ih She made the trip with Mr. ami Mrs. George Newkirk, of Sears- dale, N. Y., and on Friday will go to the Newkirk home for the week­end to attend parties tor Mis.s Dory Newkirk, and brother, Peter, both of whom leave the following week for their respective colleges, Snrgeant and Brown.

Mis* Jennie Kowllnski, of Tor- rington, a class mate, at Hartford Hospital Training School for Nuraes, Is a guest of Miss Olive Tuttle for a few days.

La Crols-PoUaianMr. and M n. Frad FoUrnan, of

Hudson street, aanouiice the mar­riage of their daughter, Mias Ber­nice E. Pohlnwti. to George lA Croix, eon o f Hector LaCroix, of Westfield, Maas. The double ring ceremony was performed Monday. August 1#. by Rev. Gadarowski. in the rectory of Bridget's church. The bridal attandanta were Mrs. Florence Rogen, slater of the bridegroom, end Fred Pohlmnn, brother of the bride. A dinner for thirty-flv* guaate, membem of the Immediate femlllcs and close friends waa eervad at the Sheri­dan.

Mr, and Mra. LaCroIx have re­turned from thalr wedding trip, and for the present are making their home with the bride’e par­ents.

The bride wee graduated from Manchester High achool, class of 1936, and In 1M9 from the Con­necticut Institute of Heirdressing, since which time she has been a beautician with Anne Campbell'* Salon.

The bridegroom graduated from Westfield High achool. He hs* been in the Naval eervica In California, aa a Diesel mechanic and is now employed in Slmahuix

Warnock*WolfeMiss Emma Wolfe, dnughtei of

Mrs. John Wolfe, of 115 Charter Opk atreet, and William Wemock, of 240 Charter Oak atpeet, were married Saturday wening at 8 o'clock In the parsonage of the Concordia Lutheran church. Rev. Karl Richter, performed the cere­mony.

Mrs. Fred Warnock of Bolton was maid of honor and John Wolfe of Manchester, brother of the bride waa beat man.

For her wedding costume the bride chose a light blue dress with Navy blue accessories and a cor­sage of baby's breath, blue del­phinium and pink sweetheart rosea. The maid of honor wore a yellow dresa with black accessorlea and a corsage of baby's breath, blue detphinluin and yellow sweetheart roaee. .

A recieptlon for the families and friends followed at the bride’s home.

A fter the reception the couple left on an iinann'Oftnced wedding trip. Upon their return they will reelde at 240 Charter Oqk street.

Recess GivenIn WAC Trial

Sherman-ClieneFM l« LuclUe.Mae Cheney, daugh­

ter of Mr. and Mra. Noal A. Cheney, of 89 B ^ k fls ld otreat. wee married Saturday to John Dexter Shermau, eon of Mr. and Mra Lester Sherman of North Ox­bridge, Maes. The double ring oera- money took place in the Center Congregational church with Rev. Clifford O. Simpaon officiating. The church Was decorated with white gladioli and palm*. Music for the ceremony wee provided by Warren Wood, organist, who play­ed "Becauae" and ‘T Lova You Truly,"

The bride waa given in marriage by her father. She wore a gown of faille and marquisptte with a fitted bodice, long sleeves and a circular train. She carried a bou­quet of Eucharist lillea.

The matron of honor, Mra. W il­liam Moorhouse, of Manehaatar. wore an aqua net gown and car­ried a bouquet of yellow roaea.

The beet man was William Moorhouse, of Manohester, friend of the bridegroom. Tho uahera were Joseph A. Oervale, and Herb­ert Thompson'. *

A rcceptfon wee held after the ceremony fur 100 gueata at the home o f the bride. The room* were decorated with pink and white gladioli. After the reception the couple left on a wedding trip to Canada. The bride wore a brown suit with brown acceaeoriaa. On their return September 8. they svlll take up residence at 89 Brookfield street.

Tha bride is a graduate of Man­chester High School and of Hlllyer Junior College. She is employed at Pratt and Whitney*. Th* bride­groom is a graduate of Oxbridge High school and Hlllyer Junior C 'lege. He was recently dis­charged from the A A F and will enter the University of Connecti­cut this fall.

(Oontiniied from Pag* One)

least alx witnesses from the United States.

Among ^wltncssrs sought are Army officers at Fort Sheridan, III., tha defense wishes them to testify In Its effort to show that Mr*. Durant never was reinducted Into the service and therefore is not silhject to military court mar­tial..Depositions also are sought by th* defense from the defendant's sis­ter, Eileen Lonergan of Hudson, Wie., in whoso home jewels owned by the royal houses of Hesse and Hohcnxollem were found. The de- fenee wants to show that military police took the Jewels without a proper dcarch warrant and obtain­ed from the WAC a waiver of her righto In this respect "by coercion.”

The drvfg store cowboy la not tUe loafer he's made out to be, says a Judge. Anyway, he works on tfundocs.

Woodrow Wllaon said this: "Liberty has never come from Gove.nment. Liberty has always come from the eubjecta of it. The history of .liberty la a history of limitations of governmental pow­er, not the increase of it."

NOW PLAYING

C- A

6 '/ ^ a n T

SUN. MON. TIIES.ContlnuoUB Show MON.

Wiil’Jimes'

^Jncftwokae/

.m i Kiiiigmii.m il i i i iu a t

Plus: Paul Kelly In— Deadline For Murder

M A N (^EST£R e v e n i n g h e r a l d . MANUHSEI'EK. c o n n ., THURSDAY. AUGUST 29, 1941

FR ..-SA T.-SU N , First Manchester Showing

CO-H IT “ H O U SE O F HORRORS’’

Ends GENE TIEBBfET IN

Tonight • “ DragooMryck“ Emergency

Landing’*

Let Benson’s C3ieck

Yoiip Radio Now !Now la the time t* have needed repairs made t o ' laeaie good listening on Fall and Whiter programs.

CALL 3535

BENSO N ’S Furniture und R«|dio

2 IS MAIN BTREET

FOR COM PLETE VARIETY OF SUPERIOR FOODS

I T ’S

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“THE h o u s e OF QrAI.ITY*’Kitchen Open From 11 a. m. tu 12 p. m. ^

BE SURE TO TRY OUR DISTINCTIVE SO U TH E R N FR IED FOODS .

As Prepared ByC LIFT O N GREENE

Camp P lann^ For Children

I

Knights o f Pythiasi to Take (la re o f 9 0 0 at Cheshire, Conn.

Plans for the conversion a 58- acre tract In Cheshire Into a sum­mer camp with faelUtlae for 900 underprivileged children, were dU- cloeed today by Lester H. 8. Smith, of this town. Grand Chan­cellor for the Kqlghts o f Pythlaa of Connecticut.

Under'the plan, said*Bmith. each of the state,'* .39 Pythian lodges and 24 Pythian Sisters' temples, will be responsible for the con- stfpctlon of a 12-bunk cabin, and each unit would finance the two- weeks’ v.'ication of children sent from Its ares'.

Th* plan also provides for ths

osBStruetlon of wading and swlar- mbig poola, axUalng halL odmlnia- tratlM building and strategically ptacsd outdoor flreplacea.

Mevs than half a mile of brook runa through th* property, Smith aald.

H is camp will havt a staff of supervlaora, nutiiea and councilors us well oa other attendants and smployaa, he added.

By this time all amateur gar- dsnere have found out whether the lettuce they planted Is parsley or epliiach.

E 4 S T W (N m •la 8L — Essl Rartlafd

FORt AN ENJO YABLE EVENING

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DINING ROOM OPEN FROM 11. A. M. TO 12:30 A. M.NO COVER OR MINIMUM CHARGE!

WE INVITE WEDDING PARTIES. BANQUETS. ETC.

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WHERE THE AIR IS ALWAYSO ^ tE A R A S C R Y S T A L *

•Circled In the above pic­ture I* the. mason for the eryehU freeh air which la alwaya thc'at- mosphem In our grill. The unit in Imert Is the finest air conditioning avallahio today. At great expeaee. are have ln*tall- cd this unit for our na­trons' comfort. Notice the dlffereni^ a* soon u* yon *tep taslde the door.

IT ’S r e f r ig e r a t e dA IR o o w o m o M N o :

KITCHEN IS ALW AYS OPEN

UNTIL 1:00 A. M.

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MENUAPPETIZERS

' CHERRYSTONE COCKTAIL ANTIPASTO

MINESTRONE SOUP FRESH SHRIMP COCKTAIL*

' ENTREESVEAL SCALLOPINI ....................LARGE SIRLOIN STEAK ......... .BREADED VEAL CUTLET .........BROILED CLUB STEAK ............ROAST SIRLOIN OF B E E F .........SPAGHETTI AND M EAT BALLSFRIED SCALLOPS .......................

DESSERTSICE CREAM PUDDINGS

SLICED FRUIT ASSORTED PIES TEA COFFEE MILK

SPEeOIAldD A ILY LUNCHEONS.........65c

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• " D A N a N lT ~ EVERY NIGHTI

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' Ther^* BooMthtag Doing AO ths Thnet Moet Your FMeods

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I O A K G R IL L I^ S O P A K S T y E E T P H O N E 3894 P

\ •

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C on tract N egotiations On T eachers’ P ay Fail

N n r w a lk B O a r t l n t E d u - rocognlxed the aoso-n o r w a iK o o a r a O I E .a u - , bargaining agency;c a t i o n O f f e r s $ 3 1 , 0 0 0 : Recognition was flrat granted last , A S . * ' June 35 but It waa withdrawn onI n c r e a s e ; A M O C la t io n xug. is when the board voted toW a n t * e o n n n n l u m n discontinue contract negoUatioinaw a n u a**oclaOon Ifi protest of

the assoclaUon’s original schedule d m and.

Calls BpteM Beasloa Meanwhll*. at Hartford, the

president-of the board of the Con­necticut State Teachers association called > a special seeaton of the board for Sept. 4 at <Hartford to diecuas the Norwalk controveray.

Said Mrs. Efien 8. MacFarland. president, “ the board will doubt- lees be called upon to support oth­er teacher groups during the fall In their efforts to secure salary ad- juetmenta which will compensate for the estimated 23 j>er cent cost of living rise since schools closed to June.

'•nie association, through its rep­resentative assembly last May, has placed Itself on record aa calling for a statewide program which will effect substantial and general In­creases In salary essential if edu­cation is to be adequately main­tained.”

--------------------------- - t

Norwalk. Aug. 3»-(AV-Contract BhgotiatloQa batwean the Board of Bdueation and tho Norwalk Teacb- ars asaodatloh war* In a deadlock today with tha >oard offering an iQcrease of 58L000 over Its original sebadula of |818,000 for salariea and teersASii tha aaooclatlon atsnding stasdfast for an Increase of $90 !^ .

Negotiatlona were raaiuBed last night after tha board had recog­nised the association as the collec­tive bargaining agency for the city’s 2M teachera by a vote o f 5 to 8. The ProfasstonsI committee o f the aosociatlon had said prev­iously that negotiatlona could not be resumed until recognition waa affected.

The aaaoclatlon'a original de­mand, made last June, wad for a salary schedule of $1,034,000, an Increaae of $311,000 over the $813,- 000 which was offered by the board. This offer waa approxi­mately $100,000 more than the fig­ure recrived by the teachers for th* 1945-46 school year.

P fsvloua Demand Cut In Half Sidney Vogel, counsel for the as-

oociatlon. said ' the i aesoclatlon's compromise demand was reached by approximately cutting the prev­ious demand In half. A t the start o f last night’s negotiations, the as- ooelaUon demanded $90,112 but cut It to $90,d00 when the board re­quested “a final figure.”

Said Vogel In announcing the fi­nal 'demand! "the Professional committee does not feel that It can

’ do anything better than the figure ($90,000) we have presented. It la now a matter for the Board of Education to work out with the Board of Estimate and taxation."

In making what he termed the b o ss ’s final offer. Chairman Alexander R. Serena described the $31,000 as an increase of ap­proximately 5 per cent for all teachers and asserted, ‘ ‘the board must also make its stand to­night."

Propoeea Referendum When negotiations became

deadlocked, Serena proposed that the teachers permit the schools to be opened on schedule Sept. 4 and then to present their salary sched­ule demand in a ' referendum to the voters.

Vogel, however, read a resolu­tion which the teachera adopted by a ^20 to 1 margin last week before they returned their unsign­ed contracts to the boaitl, setting forth their determination not to report for work imtll the associa­tion bad been recognized and a cimtract had been negotiated and drawn with the board.

When Serena asked Vogel per­sonally if he would consider a ref­erendum, the, association counsel aaid he bad "no authority for that.”

No mention of further negotia­tions was made as last night's meeting adjourned.

Recognition WUI Expire I f there are no Hore, then, un­

der the terms of the resolution by wlUch the board recognized the association as bargaining agency, the recognition will expire at mid­night on Saturday. Read one clause of the recognition agree­ment:

“This recognition shall auto­matically expire and terminate and shall no longer bind the Board of Education legally or morally on and after Aug. 31, 1946, at 12 o'clock midnight unless the Board of .Education and said association by that time shall have entered into and signed and delivered an agreement in which the members represented by,said association have agreed to be at work at the opening of school on Sept. 4, 1946, kt 8 a. m. and continue at said work for the school year of 1946- 1947."

Last night was the second time

Crange Fair Lists Ready

Exhibition Spaces Arc Nearly A ll Sold fo r l|ie Amfiial Event ^

the Xtolon Cengiagntlonsl ebuzch of Rockville wlU supply Vm pulpit In the Ellington Congi^|atlonal church Sunday moaning.

Harrioon U Hamilton la vlaltlng his too and wlfa, Mr. and Mra. Richard B. Hamilton o t Dovor PlaliiA N. Y.

The premium list for the Man- cliester Granga fair to be held In the State Armory, Sept. IS and 14, haa gone to the printer and wlU be In clrculaiton In a few daya. Local merchants and manufqetur- era have shown a great Interest in

Possible Causes - Of Fatal Crash

Washington, Aug. 29—(^ ^ B a d weather and "personnel error” might have caused the crash o f a converted Flying Fortress on Mount Tom, Holyoke, Mass., which

this event, exhibitiw epace Is now { claimed 35 Uvea on July 9, sceord- pracUcally Mid out. end xlrrady ^ preUmlnary report of Ar-

Seek Indictment Against Goodale

Plymouth, Mass., Aug. 39— (JP)— The month-old slaying of pretty Ruth McQurk, 25, was placed be­fore a Plymc^uth county grand Jury today as Inveatigatora aought an indictment against Ctoarlee R. Goodale. 25-year-old former Onset art student already charged with murder.

District Attorney Edmund R. Dewing said he was ready to pre­sent evidence that so fa r haa been kept secret against Goodale in the McGurk slaying, as well a* in an­other luirelated case involving an alleged attempt to rape a Lowell nurse the week before.

Goodale was arrested on a charge of murder in the McGurk case and held without bail a week after he had been arraigned and released under $15,000 bail, double surety, on a charge of assault with intent to rape Beatrice Wallace, 22-year-old Lowell student nurse.

Both girls had vacationed at the nearby seaside resort of Onset, where Goodale’s father is a well )cnown restaurateur.

Young Cioodale was described by his counsel aa “confident" of be­ing cleared end spending most of his time in his cell painting.

Democrats Hold Vermont Session

entries ate being made for the various displays of fruit, vege­tables and handiwork. <.

The entertainment committee has. ^ great good fortune, procur­ed Clevadore, the man of mystery, aa a feature act. Clei’ador* defle* locks and locksmiths, making es­capee form any constraining con­trivance known to man. His last public appearance before going In­to war work, was to make his es­cape from a strait Jacket while suspended by one ankle from the sixth floor of the Hotel' Taft In New Haven. ThI* feat was per­formed Sept. 1942, at the conven­tion of maglciehs held in tliat hotel. *

Another added feature will be a live Doll show featuring children between the ages of one and five, dressed as dolls.

Bach year Manchester Grange has Improved and enlarged the fair and this year promises to be the best ever.

F J l i r i s t o n

my Air Forces InvesUgatore.The report said that investlga'

tore found that th* crew was not sufficiently briefed for the flight from Newfoundland to MItchel Field, Long Island.

Inspectore have been sent to the Newfoundland baoe headquartara of the. A ir Transport eomnland to check procedure there, and radio equipment at Weetover Army air field, near the scene of th* crash, also is being cxalinlned. i Four crewmen and 21 paaaan- gers were killed when tha plane crashed while feeling Its way to Westover field in a fog.

No evidence was found by Invea­tigatora of failure o f the plane It­self or its maintenance.

Give Reports On Red Cross

Directors o f Local Chap* ter in Monthly Meeting —W ork Continues

The director* o^ - Manchester Chapter, American Red Cross, net Tueeday evening In chapter head­quarter*, vlth Dr. Eugene M Davis, chairman, presiding, and 17 member* present. /

Mrs. H. B DeWolf, secretary, road her report, which was accept­ed aa read, and "Her)Mrt Phelon, treasurer, read his statement.

The chairman of Volunteer Spe­cial Services, Mrs. Perry, read her report, iu folio Vi's; 9 workers In th* Ointeen Corps g*v* 43 hours; I I Home Service Coips members Worked 71 hours; 3 Staff AasUt- anta worked 7 1-4 hours; 11 Niiracs* Aides gave 161 1-3 hours to th* hospital: l l Motor Corps members drove 71 1-3 hour* and 10 Production worker* made 37 knitted articles. These figure* cov- enKl June end July.

The resignation of Mra. Vir­ginia Lewis as chairman of the dotor Corps was read and accept­

ed ■with ixgret.Mias Jessie Reynolds, Home

Service secretary, reported as fol­

lows: In June, 67 caeca, 49 acted upon, financial aasistance given to the amount of $137:91 and repay­ment of $100. In July, 62>casea opened, 43 acted upon, w|th finen- ctal aaaUtanc* ot $35.

York Btrongfleld, First Aid chainnaa, reported one dess com­pleted this aumnler, with the pros­pect of about 400 school puplla Uklng thf 6oureea next year.

In Watar Safety. Ukrs. Nora Mc- Cleamr atatad that pUrna are being worked out for next winter; Mlsa Hannah Jansen, Nutrition, cbalr- men. reported that It is planned to contact organisations again this fall, offering Nutrition lec­tures for tboee wlehlng them.

Th* board voted to give up on* o f the rooms occupied in th* House and Hal# building, waa necessary during the period of the war.

Winfred Kloter has purchased the place on Main atreet owned by I O. J. Brunell, and Mr. Brunell has j purchased the Medhurst place on | E’Jlngton avenue end haa moved i there.' John W. Fullerton has placed In the Hall Memorial Library a size­able needlepoint picture, a copy of the Holy Mother and Ctolld by Raphael, worked by Mrs. Eliza Parkman Delano Stoddard of New York In 1645-46; a picture embroidered on satin In 1806 by Sophie Kingsbury, who later mar­ried John Hall, who conducted the famous Hall School for Boy* In Ellington; and two smaller pic­tures drawn and painted by Sophie Kingsbury. Mr. Fullerton recently presented to the library two large bookcases and some steel engravings for use in the up­stairs hall. All of the above arti­cles were formerly the property of the late Mrs. Harriet Delano Fowler of Holyoke, Mass., a aleter of Miss Ellen Delano; the former owner of the Fullerton place which he has recently . sold. A number of scrap hooks made by Mra. Fullerton have also been presented to the Ubrary by Mr. Fullerton.

Rev. Forrest Musser, pastor of

WUsoa n<M fCkwd NIghC

Bennington, Vt., Aug. 29— Hugh Wilson, who was ambassador to Germany In 1937 and' 1938, had a "good night” at the Putnam Memorial hospital where he is aeriouely ill and waa reported “ a little better" today. Hie condition was described as critical yester­day.

Newport, Vt., Aug. 29— (tP)— Vermont Democrats, who usually wind up second best in this rock- ribbed Republican state, hold their state convention today.

Their atate slate, headed by ^er- thold C. Cobum of Chelsea as nominee for governor, already has been selected. All that remains Is to line up the party platform.'The formed convention session

was called for 2 p. m. (e.'d. t.) but long before that hour party con ferences were under way. The State committee scheduled a meeting with the candidates at 11 a. m. at the Hotel Newqiort. convention headquarters. Noon was the start­ing hour for a pre-convention din­ner, also at Newport.

To Attend Medical Congress

New Haven, Aug. 29—i;p)— Dr. George R. Cogwlll, professor df nutrition at Yale university, will leave by plane Saturday for Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where he will attend the first Inter-American Medical congress, scheduled for Sept. 5 to 15.

FRIED o yster s ; CLAMSn S H AND CHIPS WITH OUR NEW FRIALATOR!

Oar new lanitairy process gives yon a delicious, crisp, golden brown food —> Seals in the Oavor! Come In and trv them! PRIED OYSTERS AND CLAMS PACKED l 6 TAKE HOME. CALL .3803.

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A C om p lete S e lection o f

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Expert advice given on all landscape, grading, dry -well and lawn fertilizing.

f. ' .................................. ....This work raqy be done with an F. H. A. Home Im­

provement Loan. No money down up to 36<inontba to pay.

Visitors Welcome.

Open Evenings and Suhdays

LECLERCFaneral Hom|

23 Main Street Phone 5289

FENDER AND BO D Y W O R K

SOLIMENE A FLAGG INC.

684 Center St. Tel. 8101

OIL BURNERS Installed and Serviced

Furnaces Cleaned

Heniy PaiwnfTelephone 2-0185

SICRITARY CALUO "SUPIRW OM AN" by her bou. He appreckit** her efficiency in getting his colls through faster. How doe* the do H? She placet local and out-bf-town coil* when telephon* lines ore leott buty — before 9:30 A.M. or during th* afternoon. 'Tm no tuperwomon", the witely reotons.‘"'It'l common tent* to ovoid th* ruth hourt and get better tervice."

Back To School

SWEATERS2.63Sizes 30-38 Two-Tone At­tractive Woolly and Warm

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P A N T SOutstanding Value At

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LOOKING m GOOD... .

We’re fbinonc for quick, depeadeMe eervloe — at the Btatlob and on the rend. CnU'<a* nny ttme. We handle anything from edjnatmenta to overhanle.

Maple Super Service

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Don’t Neglect Slipping

FALSE TEETHDo talM t««th drop. *llp or w*bbl*

when you talk, eat, lauzh or aneeie? Don't be annoyed and emberrtMed by •uch handicap*. FA8TXET1I. tn elk*- line (non-*eld> powder to iprinkle on your plate*, keep* falte teeth more firmly *ct. Olve* confident reelln* of •eeurtty *nd added comfort. No zum- my. fooey. paaty taate or feelln*. Get FAa'fCB'rH today at any druc atore.

W e’re Considered

A Friend o f

the Family’s

We’ra glad to do omnll favor* —Jnat aa we^m glad to ho ot help In aaMr|fen«lea and IP- neaai Mipplying dependilila remedlea . and *clenttAonny ailing preecription*.

CENTERPHARMACYProfeoelonnl Phnnnnclata , E. W. Brown, Pharmnclaf

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TONIGHT AND A LL THIS WEEK

K-C CARNIVALENDS NIGHT OF LABOR DAY

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27 Russell Street Telephone 2-2625

NERI ARE FIVE REASONS WHYi

1 D«bM .WMW oe be •( bo»fa M Mch ete* E ^ T w lu e * r « i* le * i i4 h e e a e *. lb * beire

eiiiMmiri* the D.A.V. eOeM-tm ef tb ify -iiilw e ie* w e*i<i4ketiM e< eUeu «•* to M e ia e le*.

a Ttoeeto fhe D . A .V . toe totoblee ewewe betpe* * * 6 f toaebdil leihledee beto leesOr w

m0co4lf.* The D A .V . ke» 4e»elore4* MMe lee toeeMed »in r i '

Commander Ernest Peterson Invites You To Get Complete Details About The D. -A. V.

Telephone 7401

Back To School

WithT rfe n d |y

M«. wa nl't. otr.

Looks do moke o difference. So pliy

it smart in Friendly "Sports,’’ for

that good first impression that lasts.

CHILDREN’S AND MISSES SIZES 8,«/, TO 12 AND 12 Vi TO S

C£H0USe-'S0KIMC.

Page 3: Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de

Ifis.

v A a fo u f tland*. Franca lookad upon U latadly with favor afur Blann vol­untarily afked that har appllca^Uon ba hald In abayanca papdlny aattlamant of her border dlapute with French Indo-CJilna.

However, atout oppoaltlon from •ovtet Delarat« Andrei A. Oromy- ko to wliat he called wholeaale ac­ceptance ^ candidatea and the added tineat of a Ruaaian veto, blocked the American effort.

Johnaon withdrew hi* propoaal ■—at Oromyko'a requeat. Ruaaia waa | New York, Aug. 2b —<F)--StateJoined ^ lAuatralla In principle^ M , Harold C Hall of Alerl-

den. Conn., died early today at Harkneaa pavilion. Preabyterlan Medical center, where he under-

Clodies Drive b Successful

Foitf Tons o f Garments Collecled h j Catholic Chnrdies HereA total of four toea of dlothlnf ___

waa ooOeoted 4uiin( the recent i i^th caUod for individual conoidweak hme drive at S t Jamaa'a and ' eratloa o f each applicant.■* Catholic churchea for I Johnson Immediately coimUredS t Bridteta* CMhoUc wurenea ror rolteratinf a reaervatlon he hadthe needy people In Poland. I offerin* hia proposal, | ^^nt a major operation Aug. 24.

totiU amount MOO ; when he declared that the United;

I C A N C m n - ^ EVfiN IN G H E R A L D , M A N C R B S T B R , OOMN, T H U R S D A Y , A U G U S T 2 « , 1 9 4 i - lIA N C H E STEt^ E V EN IN G IIERAL,D. M AN UM IfiSiKK. UJNN. THUICSUAV, A U G U ST 29, 194S PAGW

State Senator Dies, Aged S7

Harold G Hall of Meri­den Renominated Last Week for Second Term

Moslems Celebrate Ramadan -

With Prayers, Fasts and Aims

SUtaa had "miaglvInKa about aome of the appileanu. eepeclallv Al­bania arid Outer Mongolia, but waa willing to waive any doubta If all eight could be accepted In a batch.

Faieed to Oppoae Both The American delegate aald he

Of thepe—"*** waa collected at S t TawTf’f diurch. T ht clothaa wfre eoUaetad at the two churchaa and to the Pollah AmericanOub on CUnton atreat Herb wom­an aorted tha varloua plecaa (nto lota and the clothes were packed.

Thla iiM^*"g a Perrett and,<na£«y truck picked up the gar- j would be forced to oppose both intaH ikey will be aent to needy ! those application* If they eaniiiaa In Poland voted on aepurately at thla time.famiUoa In Poland. . unauccewfully that the

council preaident call for a vote on the question of postponing con­sideration of Albania and Outer Mongolia. «

Gromyko sharply challenged the ! American position, declaring It

D | A a ' Inconalstent. Gromyko also A r S D o J O I u H I l a ' said Johnson lacked the patience

I to hear out the case*..John*on Immediately replied that'

he had advocated the admiaaion of the eight on the baets of univer­sality, with the hope that hta doubta on Albania and Outer Mon­golia would be oiapelled once tha

Hall took a turn for the drorae on Tuesday and Mia. ' Hall waa called to hia bedside.

Hall would have been SS yaara old on Nov. 11. He was a mem­ber of Draft Board 13-B, Meriden,

Soviet ‘Prejudice’ Seen in Opposing

fOaMtmwd trem Page One)

Which the United Statea waa op- posad. was domplatad with a brief parliamentary skirmish in which tbs oouncil decided to vote on alline coimcu lo yoic on im | „,t,ona were members of the U. N,,ppUcaUona Inetead of calling for a vote on

laaen American requeat for defer­ment of those two bids, Preaident Lange ruled that the Oreek andYugoslav raprasantatives who were permitted to alt at the coun­cil table should be permitted to voice views as Interested partlea In the hot. controversy, over Al­bania.

Long Detailed IndictmentAmbassador VasslU Dendramla,

QreaK repreaentativa, then deliv­ered a long, detailed indictment of Albania.

Sweden, Iceland and Afghanis­tan remained unopposed for mero- berahip. Portugal, Ireland and Transjordan were without sup­port from Ruasls, and Poland was a Isader In opposition to Portugal and Transjordan.

Another hot Sght In the council lay Immediately behind the mem­bership applications. it shaped up yeaterday over the Soviet Ukraine's charges that Greece le a menace to world peace.

In the brief flrst round of de.r bate, which waa quickly side­tracked, by the necessity of meet­ing a deadline on the memberehlp. applicatlona. The Netherlands led off In questioning the validity of the Ukralne'a allegations.

Sharp words passed between ' the Britleh and the Dutch on one side and Russia, on the other, which Instated that the council i must hear the Ukralne'a case!

hats. Outer Mongolia waa «P-Dr. C L, Hsla, caiineie C-'legate, said Caiina was prepared to sup­port Outer Mongolia "If we over come to the voting." China orig­inally had recommended the appli­cation wait until next year for tht UJf. to know Outer Mongolia "more Intimately."OKm Support Olven Rod Army

Andrei A. Oromyko, Soviet dele­gate, citad support driven the Red A m y by Outer Mongolia.

The Britloh and United States dMagataa stated their opposition to l^ ln g In Mongolia at this time. Both sought deferment of this ap- ptteation.

Afghanistan, the next country, wao given a dlean alate with little diecuaelon.

The Security council, faced with the threat of a blackball from the UMtad States on Albania and Mon- goUa. both sponsored by Ruaaia, reeumed debate thla morning on the eight applications.

Iba qipUcatlon of Transjordan, ■ponaored by tha Britloh, waa up nest and Oromyko immediately voioad objection on the basis that Ruoala had no diplotnatic relations with Traaajordan.

Tht Auatrallan dal^ate, Paul Haoluck asked why Ruasla made dtpiomatic relations a requisite for luemberablp. Rerachel V. Johnaon of the United States said tha Rua- ■lan view was "contrary to the fOBdanental law of this organisa- tloo."

bttflealt to Bxplabi Attitude Alexandra FarodI, French dele­

gate, aald Outer Mongolia had ra- lationa with only two other states airi that mad# it difficult to ex­plain the Soviet attitude.

Favle Lulda, Yugoolav apokes- asan. advocated tha admlosion of Attanla, tracing what he called the long fight of Albania in behalf Of tte AlU^ powers.

Lukin countered the two-hour Bloa made yestorday' agalnat Al- Baala by Vaoslll Dendramla, Oraek. tepresentative.

Aa the council convened at 10:44 a. m. e. «L t on tha last day In which It may consider applications for the coming aeatlon of the Oen- ural Aaaeihbly, Dr. Oacar Lange of Boland, council preaident, announc­ed that BraxU's delegate. Dr, Pedro Laao VeUoao, was absent because of illness. Orlando Laiu Ribeiro, a deputy, sat for Valleao. Lange warned the delegates to be prepar- od for morning, aftarnoon and Bight aaaelona.

Only one secUon of the three eet aside for spectaton waa filled to-

Harold C. Hall

AP NewatoutureaCalro—Now la tha time for medi-.

tation and fasting for more than 200,000,000 Moatoau throughout the world—Ramadan, nln^ month of the Mohammedan calendar. Fol­lowers of the prophet fast from dawn until sunaot BxpccUnt mothers, travelara and tha sick are exempt by tha Koran, but should give special alma to the poor and perform their fasts lator.

Ramadan la a month of prayer and spiritual reSaction. Verses of the Koran are chanted In the mosques, which at night are bril­liant with colored lights. It le also a time for generoolty to the poor. Buslneoe and pollUos take a back ■eat

. one new moon to the next about 25 days. It began this year July‘Jfl.

The Koran deSnea daylight hours as those In which it la pos­sible to distinguish between whiu sne blsck string. But In Egypt, obsarvstories issue dawn and dusk tables which arc pub­lished In the newapapen and dlo- tiibutec' by bualnaaa Srmn

Two meala are taken, iftsr— breakfast — after sunset and ao- hoor before da vn, usuMly be­tween 1 and 2 a.m.

In the larger cities, guns an- nou.ice the meal hours. In the smaller towns and villages ape- clal criers, Muaaah-haratlya, walk tha atraata beating- drums and singing songs, beginning at mid-

Sdme Arabic acholara say fum-1 night. Many shops and cafes re­main open all night Children carrying colored lanterns aleo wandar tha atreeta singing.

On the 27th of Ramadan comas Laylat El Kadr — tha Night of Power, anniversary of the first Koran revelation to the prophet Ramadan’s end la the three-day festival of Balram, otaervad by public prayera and feasting.

adan means the Ume of "Intense heat," b^auae In tha first year of Islam Ramadan fall in pfiidsum- mer. Others connect. It with the Arabic word "rarod" which means to bury In ashes, signify­ing spiritual purification.

The Moalem calendar Is lunsr. Ramsdsn, which oocura about 11 days earlier each year, runs from

What It Means

DetectingCheatersOf U. S .A.

Q—What dees an elephant tusk weigh 7

A—They average about 59pounds, but some exceed 100 pounds.

and waa engaged in the real ce- state and Insurance business. He was renominated for a second term last week when hia petition was the only one to be filed with the Democratic Town committee.

Active In Polltles.SA VeersHall had been active in Meriden

political circles for 35' years.In 1941, he waa hie party's un­

successful nominee for mayor, and In 1944 was nominated and elect­ed stale aenator from the Meriden district. In the upper houee of the Legislature, he served on five committees. Including the chair­manship of the Public Welfare and Humane Instltutlonh commUtee8.\

Hall had been In 111 health aincr 1942, a few months after he con­ducted a vigorous campaign for mnyorallty. In September 1944, he a.Wfercd a cerebral hemorrhage and was In the Meriden hospital where his lutme was on the d-inger list.

About Town

By Ctarko BeachWashington—Anybody who gets

money from the government when ha Isn’t entitled to It has to buck the General Accounting Office (GAO).

<5—Are unsafe conditions or un­safe practices responsible for moat Industrial accidents?

A —Unsafe practices cause 80-90 per cent. Up to 19,000 aye kUIed In the U. S each year as a result

It’i the biggest accounting outfit o occupation accidents.__on earth. It has thousands of ways I . ,. sOf out leakage of govern- Q -Must s woman take the

funds, whether through | name of her husbarid upon mar­riage 7

ploniat§ Seek Wav to Revitalize Peace Pact Talks

(Coatlnned From Page One)

they met only the preambles^ to four of the treatlss had been gdopt- ad In commissions. The conference itself had yet to past on moat of these, having pasred on less than 300 of the 55.000 words In tha five traaUes for Bulgaria. lUIy, Ro­mania. Finland and Hungary, '

Byrnes First to Arrive Secretary Byrnes was the first

to arrive at the QusI d’Orsay. He waa accompanied by his advisors for the meeting. Senators Arthur Vandenberg (R-Mich.) and Tom Connally ID-Tex.). and hia Inter­preter, Charles Bohlen.

Molotov .was last to arrive. He was accompanied by his deputies, Fedor Gusev and Andrei Vlahinaky.

A crowd of several hundred anxious Frenchmen and women watched them arrive In front of the French Foreign Ministry.

Byrnes, Molotov and Bevin all appeared cheerful aa they climbed the stone steps and Byrnes and Molotov were smiling.

Meeting Barred Press The four ministers will devise

their own means of letting the world know what goes on In the intimacy of Bldault's office. The meeting was barred to the preee.

John A. Beasley, the Auatrallan delegate, took up the award of the Mont Cents plateau to France In particular In hia argument before the Italian commission that a ape- cial committee should make a study on all disputed territorial questions

i connected with the Italian treaty.; Referring to papers collected on

Q—What Is pipsr nigrum? : the question by a committee of ex- A—Pepper. It’e the LaUn name. I P^^s for the deputy foreign mlnls-

tcre of Britain, Russia,, the United States and France, Beasley ex­claimed, "We have never seen these documents.

I’ll tell you more," he stormed.

N ine F oot Sunflow erO nly B -Little Fellow

The nine foot aunfiower re­ported in yesterday’s edition of The Herald has been topped today with a report of a four­teen foot aunfiower belonging to Mrs. Reuben WblU of Bmlth street, Wapplng.

Mrs. White reports the aun- flower to be fourteen /eet high, not in bloom, and atlU grow­ing.

mentfraud or error.

Fifteen women, for instance, have learned hog GAO catchesup on marltsl wrong-doera. Each ; BriUnnica. It’s merely a was married, or aald ahe was, to ' fixed custom, two servicemen at the same time !' _______and drew wives’ aJlolnients from ! Q -W here is the world’s largest both men a pay. ■ - - "

"This committee of experts never went to this place. How can they give us any Information?"

Replies to Soviet Chdrge Replying to the charge of the

Soviet deputy foreign minister, i Andrei Y. Viahlnsky, that the pro-

There is no legal obligation ' * •ub-commlttee came

by word. Six committees were in ■eaelon during the day. j

Anseadment WithdrawnOne source of conference tension

wa* aaaed yesterday when tne Aua-traU.,,., . ... <A*UW «l11 lfciUttllU(a«v*aL |proposing a review of all repara- tlona elalma in Romania, ana saw a similar propoaal voted down, 16 to 3, in connection with the Italian treaty. Ruaaia bad opposed the measures vigorously, with the sup­port of other nqembera at the Big Four. •

Other work done yesterday in­cluded:

Hungarian Political oommiaaton —Adoption of the preambla of the treaty draft for Hungary, with the Inclusion at clausM that the vic­torious Aillea desired poat-war tarma to ba “ baaed on principles of justice;" unanimous approval of the first three paragraphs of Arti­cle One restoring sections of Tran­sylvania to Romania u d restoring the Jan. 1, 1988, Hurfgarlan-Roma- nian border.

Bulgarian Political and Territor­ial commission—Adoption of the reamble to the draft of Bulgaria’s treaty with the inclusion of the same "principles of justice" clause.

The Big Four aesleon, proposed by Bevin. apparently waa barred from diacuasing and procedural mattara, aince Byrnes accepted the Bevin suggestion only on condition that such Items would not be touched upon. He aald he would not cenaent to the Big Four limiting the sovereignty and freedom of ac­tion of the conference.

Knights’ Prize Is Up to

Holden^ o f W Hu’ Ticket Not Pre Time o f DrawingThe door prise at the 11th an­

nual carnival of Ckmpball council, Knights of Columbus, now la up to $40, the holder of the winning ticket failing to be present at tha time of the drawing last night at the grounds next to the K. of C. home at Main and Delmont streets. The award of $10 nightly on the free admlseton tickets given to patrons has not yet been claimed. If tonight’s and tomorrow night's prisaa are unclaimed the total for Saturday night will be $80. At that time the drawing of numbeni will be continued until someone on the lot shows up with ^ a lucky number.

Oimod P riu on DIapInyThe Plymouth aedan. which is

the grand prlxa in tha rafflst being conducted In conjunction with the carnival, waa placed in front of Kemp's on Main street today whan it w\U remain until 3 p. m. Members of the councO were aa* signed to varied hours to handle the sale of tickets to thoss who do not wish to visit ths carnival grounds. Tha aedan, with four other prizes, will be awarded Labor Day night. It la not necea- aary for the holder of tha winning ticket to ba on the grounds as all tickets require ftamas and ad­dresses.

Last night the largest crowd o f the week was in attendance with many waiting long periods to get on the varloua rldea. Members of the council from Bast Hartford manned tha booths asalsted by Manchester membera.

Saturday afternoon the annual children’s matinee aeasion will ba held from 2 to 5 o'clock.

j to do so, says the Encyclopedia j *’ *5*” ’*■ - -------- l ied * the altuatlon, Beasley said.firmly i

I Ivory market ?A—In London, on Mincing Lane.

In recent years sales have drop­ped to around 200 tons annually.

Trapped By FIrat Naibes^ But they didn’t know that GAO has a file of paid allotment checks arranged by first naraee. GAO figures that when a woman com­mits bigamy or adopts a false sur­name she Is likely to retain her ; true first name. If in the "Mary" ifile the endorsement o f two! Q _ ig Ireland (Eire and North checks looks alike, the cases are i Ireland) a livestock raising land? checked — sometlmea with sur- ; A—Yes. In the poet year Ire- prUlng results. | jgnd exported half a million head

Every voucher paid by a dla-, of oatUa. Bsfora the war, live-

Lieut. Johnson Reports for Duty

Q—What national capital ha.* no fire department?

A—Asuncion, Paraguay.

--------- burling officer of the government stock population Included five mil-o ™ .c , Th. f , . , , 5; ' S je V S I " . ; "tSSi'' m'Z,

»U 1 b . « th. ! ' " o ™ ! “ “ ilast week-end they attended the j

I annual family rounlon- of Mrs. ! 417,00«1 Cole’s family with 76 in attend- I y p u c h e r s - rssulting in the 1 ance. The fii.st of the week Mr, I • receiving refunds

membership ■way.

matters are cleared

Membership Goal Set by McGill skey

Cole attended a ball game in Bos­ton.

I Alexander J. Lang, of 289 Main I etreot, Buper\'isor oi the drug de­

partment of The J. W. Hale Co., le ; enjoying a two weeks’ vacation. With Mrs. Lang he spent a part of the time toining Maine.

Director Joseph P. McCluskey, of the Mancheeter YMCA an­nounced today that memberahlp* tn the various classes at the Y :

opened officially on SiimUy. Sep- * * 1*1 " ‘tember 16 for public inspection, i ArmL,^’

There will be several type mem-, ® **If** Main street. Mrs.berahlps . including adult, high 'school, ex-aervlcenien. family andi"®* "l'»* Nina Mcrenino. juvenile. The latter will pertain to 1 , , _ „ “youngsters over 10 vears of age. i -Joseph E. Ferguson, of 61 Foster

Special privileges "will be grant- street, a Herald employe, 1.* confin­ed to those who are actually afflli- Manchester Memorialated with the YMCA,

The director has act a member­ahlp goal of 450 membera. A full fall and winter schedule Is now being planned by Director Mc-

hoepltal following a cerebral hem­orrhage he suffered on Sunday.

Mrs. Frink Winlck of 182 Bisscll ng planned by Director Me- j street, is cnnvnieseing at St. Fran-

Cluskey. The biggest program in . cle hospital. Hartford, following an the hlntory of the Y hat been appendectomy.

first session In the new interim baadquaHera yeateMay.

Yagoalav Btatcment ShortThe Yufoalav «etatement was

■horL AHor Lukin concluded Lang said that Poland supported the Albanian application.

Meanwhile, the aecreUriat re- leasad a telegram from S. Steph- anopouloa, Oreek acting mlnleter ef.fprelgn affaln, who requested thM the council's diacusalon on the ykranlan chargee against Greece M postponed for ten daya.

Lange called for a vote on the ■toUon of Herachel V. Johnson. United States delegate, to post­pone consideration of Albania’s 4VpUcaUon.

Lula Padilla Nervo, Mexican dalagata. proposed that the coun- efl debate all eight appllcaUons and then vote on them at the end of the diacuaeion.

T7»4re waa no objection and lAnge ruled that the voting would comp at tha end of the discussion.

Than waa no objecUon and lAnga ruled that the voting would cene at the and of the diacuaaton. Xt waa the third tlma aince the oCuncU met yaatarday on member- Mdpa that the Johnaon motion had aoHM up and had been sidetracked.

After the brief parliamentary iDduylng, Lange dUmlasad the Tagaalav and Oreek represents- ttvaa from the table and caUed up tlM appUcaUon of the Mongolian Faopla’a repabUc, to which John- aoa has expreaaed oppostUon.

Araavlcaa Propaeal RejactedThe proapect of an Anaerican

Maekball of both Albania and Outer Mongolia developed yeater- ddjr after Soviet Ruaria had re- Jartad a propoaal by u. S. Dele­gate B a r r e l V. Johnson that the •OOBOtl peas favorably upon all

particular are .expected to take advantage of the revised setup at the Y. , :

Director McCluskey will wel-

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Pa-scan- tell have just returneil frum \Vest Palm Beach and Miami, Fla., where they spent their honeymoon.

of 343,400,000. The discrepancies , are usually the result of error and ' not fraud, aaye E. W. Bell, chief of the division,

5,U00 Busy Checking Bell has 5,000 bookkeeping |

sleuths In his division, some of them at bis headquarters In ' Washington and some at 250 field atstlona. .>■ „

Largest field offices are In Cleveland, where 600 accountants and lawyers check on payments made under Navy contracts; and in St. LotiLa, where 600 more keep tub on Army transactions.

Most of the work of Bell’s di­vision Is simply checking vouch­ers to see whether they comply with the law and with the con­tracts Involved. The division may make a complete audit, however, when directed by Congreaa, aa it often Is, or tn the case of cost- plua-flxed-fee contracts.

Still Wider Scope It also can make an audit of

' "termination aettlementa" — the ! contracts which the government ’ I terminated at the end of the war ' ! completed. ;

Another GAO unit, the Cor-

Q—What percentage of world population cannot read or wrrite ?

A—About 80 per cent, according to eatimatea.

Q—What la the market price of ivory ?

A—It runs about $4,000 a ton.

Q—Do race horses and polo ponies reach peak performance at the same age level?

A—No. Race horses are at peak under five, while polo ponies are best between eight and 16.'

Q—Where do the Malagasy live 7A—They are natives of Mada­

gascar, of Malayan, Ployneslan, Malanesian ancestry. They drape themeelves in white ’’togas."

Q—How long does it take for s divorce to become final In Britain ?

A—Six weeks, neviiy changed from six months.

"It la because we have studied It that we want more informa­tion."

The vote on the question, which lined up only Belgium, Brasil, Greece, The Netherlands and South Africa with the Austral­ians, came just before the foreign ministers of Britain, Russia, th; United States and France met in a Bis Four session in an attempt to revive the conference now in the latter half of Us fifth week.

This was the second set-back to major Australian amendments ii\ the cWiference. Yesterday Aus­tralia was beaten in her efforts to have Russia’s $1,000,000,000 reparations bill against the five former enemy states Involved here set aside for stoc months and made the subject of a special com­mission study.

Another Argument FlaresAnother argument flared in the

Military commission over a Bra­zilian amendment to the Italian treaty which provides for destruc- the

Lieut. Carl W. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Johnaon, of Bolton, has reported for active duty at Army M ^ical Dept. Schools, Brooke Army Medical Center, ac­cording to an announcement by Brig. Gen. John M. Willis, Com- mandanL The medical training program of the Army la now conr centrated at thla Center, which is the largest and moat complete military medical installation of Its kind in the world.

Lieut. Johnson, a graduate of Boston University School of Medi­cine, is one of a class of reserve medical officers who are beginning nn eight week basic training pro­gram.

Chiang Favors Coalition Plan; -

Stnart Is Head(Continued from Fage Una)

be optimistic these procedural da- talla would be disposed of by "men of good will.”

Formation of the council pre­sumably would bring an and to hoBtlUtiea and give General Mar­shall and the Communist and Na­tionalist membera of his cominittea of three a free band to proceed with the military reorganization of China and the reatoration of dis­rupted communications.

Fight For Kaigna Ukely - A fight for Kalgan, Communist

stronghold in Chahar province, ap­peared Ukely today aa government troops pushed their northern offen­sives with fresh fury.

t :* a • . T» . i Government circles^ meantime,F O F . ^ I F D O r t A O S l expressed fear that the Shaiurt

* I province rail hub of Tatung, under 1 ! Communist siege for nearly a

Hartford, Aug. 29—-(/^ — F if- , month, finaUy bad faUen after teen persons have applied to take | withstanding two doxen attacka. merit system examinations fo r ; communists at Kalgan were

15 Persons Apply

s s ;fortifications along the French- Italian frontier. ’

Gen. Angelo Mendes de Moraes of Brazil proposed that the treaty provide for destnictlon of installa­tions “able to fire on French soil.” Presumably his amend-

„ 44 „ ! fensea of that "second capital” incompete for Job.* as state police- ! ^ j j government movements women, the State Personnel de-.i ' ' »partment disclosed today.

Though today was the dead­line, applications received by mall,

i Friday, will be accepted If they carry the Aug. 29 postmark. Ex

Q—What percentage of news­paper printing expense does Ink costs constitute?

A—Three to fivs per cent. A single Sunday edition of a large New York newspaper, for Instance, reqnirfN 13 tons of colored inks, 22 tons of black, 42 tone of gravure.

come all at the formal opening on j Mrs. Pascunt. Il i.* the forniei i POf^tlon Audit Dlvlelon, headed | Q -H ow long has the Coastby T, Coleman Andrews, roakea | Ouani been known by that name ? commercial audiU of all wholly-1 A -Since 191.5; when the I.ifc-

Sept. 16.

Accident Victim Reported Bcttci

The condition of Henry Ulilmann, 23. of 90 Talcott avenue. Rockville, waa described as good today at the Manchester Memorial hospital. The R/^kvllle man suffered a badly crashed left leg in nn accident Monday at a road construction Job on Sliver Lane In East Hartford.

It waa feared at first that it would be necessary to- amputate but Dr. Edmund Zaglio pf the hos­pital '.ktaff after working font hours'succeeded in saving the leg.

Uhlmann is a World War II vet­eran.

Miss Rita Honibanl of Manchester and West Palm Beach. AVhile in Manclie.ster they are staying with Mrs. Pn.*canleir.s family at .HI Center street, but they plan to return to Kloridii soon and spend the winter tliere.9 ■

,Mo.*e.s Symington, who has been poKtmaater in l.i ng Island City, N. Y., for many years, is vi.Miting friends and relatives here. A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Sy­mington, lie was born here in 1883. He IS a cousin of Harold Syming­ton. local Fedeial Housing direct­or.

government corporations,' now number

Saving Service and Revenue Ma­rine Service were combined to form the CSCG. .

long has pepper been

Mglit applieants. JwlHwnn'a piplan to apply

*lMdDelpla of nnivaraaUt/’ i ^ t all auppori

the and

■upportad tm- Braatl, -Mexico,

‘Hie Nether-

Money Stays On Running Board

Redwood Falls, Minn. — i,n — W'hen a Waaeca. Minn., woman moterlst stepped from her automo­bile after a 20-mtle trip from home the found $10 In currency on the running board. The money, she re­called, had been placed on the run­ning board while she took aome camera pictures before starting the trip. And it had not been dislodged during the 20-mile drive.

Moleetilar l*n**lhtllt|es Shoun

Salt Lake City—(/Pt,—In tiie"niolecniar age,"—iunnerup to the atomic age —cbicken feathers may become niiludy's evening gown. Rotary club members were given a glimpse of molecular possibilities by Dr. Henry Eyeing, dean of the University of Utah Graduate

ownediring about 96,

It has submitted t o ' COngreaa audits of Federal Prison Indus-1 trie.*, Inc., the Virgin Islands' Q— How Company, the Federal Dapoait' in (ijir'Insurance Corp.; Tennessee Val- j A Since the Eaa* Ind'an* and Jey Associated Cooperatives InC-. ' Malayans found it added ze.st to treaty."niui the U. 8. Spruce Production j their nee pudding some 3000 or "Jbe draft contains 78 articles.Corp. j 4000 years ago. - Vlahinaky opposed an Australian

FYir Begins To Fly | __ :___ proposal to refer to a subcommla-It has begun the audit of a ll ; Q - How much of U. S. retail ' rion the question of transferring

the other .^government corpora-! busineK.* is done on credit? . the Mont Ceiiis plsteau from Italylions, including the Tennessee | A—In 1938, almost a third. In -• to Franco as provided in , the Valley Authority -and tha Recon- | stullment sales accounted for 9.3 striiction Finance Corporation, I per cent of all retail sales.which Andrews says la the larg -' — —-------------------e.*t corporation In the world. | Railroad Absolved In Death

Andrews, who was a Marine | ..Corps reserve major on duty in Bridgeport. Ang. 29— The Kwajalein when called to hia: New Haven Railroad company to- pi esent post In th# spring of j day was absolved by Coroner 1945, has scoured colleges and ac-1 Theodore E. Steiber from criminal

ment would have permitted Italy j amination.* will be held next to retain some defensive installa-1 month. The salary range for alr- tlons. I port manager is $4,320 to $5,280.

The commission adopted the i State policewomen get from $1,- original phrasing, however, provid- 980 to $2,700.Ing for destruction or removal of | -------- ----- ;-------------all Italian fortifications within '*•; miles of the frontier. |l s - i i -

Polish Delegate Wlncenty Win- I r.lllllStOJIlewtez urged the Italian Political and Territorial commission of the peace conference today to forget petty differences and get down to work.

He reminded the commission members they had taken a full month to discuss only six and one- hstf of the Italian' treatv’t 92 pages, all o f which must be con­sidered by three commiesinns and the full 21-nation conference be­fore it can go to the Big ^ u r foreign mlnlstera for final draft­ing.

Concerned 0\'er Delay Andrei Y. Viahlnsky, Soviet

delegate, also expressed concern over the delay, commenting;

'This Is the second month we have been sitting. We are only at the second article of the ( Italian i

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jennings of Springfield, were guests of Mrs.Gustave F. Berr, Wednesday. I

WUUarn E. Klbbe, Jr„ Robert |MacVarlsh. EMward F. Charter. I Jr.. Donald Pease and John Lnsa ! only 17 miles from Chlafeng, Im- wltnes.*ed the doubleheader b e - ' portant city In central Jehol prov- tween the Boston Red Sox and , ince, aftci occupying Chaoying, on Cleveland Indiana at Fenway the Chengteh-Chinchow railroad.

to the south. Government aourcea ■aid the Communists had taken tha initlaUve in fighting at Nankou, strategic pass south of Kalgan, and along the Peiping-Kalgan railroad.

Cssualtlee Apparently Heavy Casualties apparently were net-,

vy on both sides, said the pro-gov­ernment Peiping newspaper Haln Min Pao.

The Communists' Y^htoi radio broadcast the wholly unconfinMd report that "another 9,000 Kuom- Intang troopa were wiped out” o® 'Tuesday near Jukao, just north of the mouth of the Yangtse where three NaUonalist regiments have been reported encircled. Yenan claimed one government plana wag shot down during the fighting.

Nationalist troopa were reported

Park, Boston, Sunday. John Lusa aiid Eldward F. Charter are the proud possessors of two foul balls autographed by two of the star players.

Henry L. Hayden, his sister Mrs, Agnes Bibbe and Mrs. Ruby Me- , Gray are spending a few days in Gloucester, Mass? Mrs. McCray j has just ■ returned from Camp ; Wood where she was employed for ; the past nine weeks. j

Mrs. Carl A. Goehring has re­turned from a visit with her mother in New Hampshire. .Mrs. . Alma Fahey was her guest for the week. ... I

Mrs. Effie Kibbe of Manchester. 4 J »4 ni.,!..,..,. 1 I.K . .u 1 visited at the home of Miss Idatreaty draft Oladwyn Jebb of the , D .„ „ „ f4 IBritish delegation supported Vlsh- i Bancroft Tuesday. * i

counting firms to assembl# 205 bighly qualified accountants for

....... ........... , hi.s. ilivislon. He Intends to haveSchool of Chemistry and former ,’Uio when fullv staffed, director of liber research at Prince- He has reported lax'accoOntlng

• of the rlche'st!the governmenL

causing acrid controversy on I Capitol Hill and "Downtown" to government offices. Some of his

liability for the death of James Conliii. ,50, of 17 Pulnski street

insky in oppoklng the Australian move.

Winiewica demanded to know: "Are w# f|ging boundaries for ex­enemy Stales or are we fixing boundarlea for the potential enemies of tomorrow ?

Thera la an air of skepuciam,"

Notes

*“ *4'^* Just chuck feathers, j,lattices in some4u. milk, peanuts or any other sub- agencies In

stance with "long" molecules into H splneret. mix well with air and spin into fabric. Eyring said, add­ing that the work ia experiinentsi and not economically practical. lieutenants say that ths furor hIs; ped directly Into the path of the

reports have created ao faV le |or'r>inotive.

Admitted yesterday; Mrs. Ger­trude Norton. 11 Lilley street;Clementine Adams, Rockville: VVIl-

__— - .......... . . *tom Mitchell, 69 Fairfield street;he declared. "We,are planning fori

Norwalk. While walking the tracks peace, not war^atomlc war — as ' Elmer Morrison, 16 Eld-of the Danbury division near Pine r ^ime delexatea seem to think " i ridge street. ,Isl.aiul cemetery, .Norwalk, on M a y j''| -e „„ Finding ('oinmoii <irniind ' Admitted today: Louis Melesko.12. Ooniin was struek and killed He u rg^ the delegates to find | Hilliard street; Mrs Frances by a north-bound train of .which I . common ground for conciliation * 38 Hamlin street.James Towey. 28 West street. ' “ / S S il^ ^ e e s ThrM Discharged today: Her^rt- • ' of .i ,* : ■ WhUc. HazardvUle; Morcia Albro. i adopting body.committee, mean hile, adopted | ^ gpruce street; Lee Johnson. 40; Any attempt by

South Alton street.Dunbui y told the

The Communists launched atronjg attacks on Antshusien. on the Pelping-Tientaln railroad, and Tienchnng, on the Pelplng-Muk- den line, government aourcea said, rhe Reds derailed government ar­mored coal trains on the Tientsin- Pukow railroad.

Six Trains Fall to Arrive Government sources aald six

trains which left Mukden yester­day had failed to arrive at Peip­ing, orabably because of Com­munist activity along the line.

The situatibn in the nbrth waa be'eotning ao serious Gen. Cheng Tung-Kuo, deputy commander of all government troops to Man­churia. established headquarters at Chinchow to direct thb fighting from closer range.

Chinese Communists suggested today they would consider setting up tiieir o\vn separate "national government" rather than accept any new constitution adopted by an assembly from, which they were excluded

'Spokesman \'oicea Threat Parly • ..Spokesman Wang Ping-

Nan voiced the threat to objectinjg to the scheduled conatitutlonal s.ssembly meeting next Nov. 12. A coalition must be formed first, ba insi.sted. and Communists given representation in the constttutlon-

was the engineer. Towey ; coroner that Conlin step-1

Sleei^ While Fire Fought l.uinbrr Dealers Hold Outing , nothing compared to what is com­ing from his division eventually#

• .v__ . _ ... _ ,, Torringlon. Aug. Thef'J ’' annual summer outing of the IVe-

0. f®*' Lumber Dealers’ associationlard SUain s house. Paaaersby , of Connecticut is being held to-

.Vfiiraska I'lizzles Dutch Woman

Nortli Platt. Neb.—-lypi—A resi­dent in Holland wrote Mrs. Ira Blakenian and thanked her for clothing sent through the Salvation Army, but she was not quits clear

men clltobed through the house IncVudM tor^ th u i woman

aakod what was itn. 200 or America? When you wriU1 are exoecte^Rto attend. 1 »R»in. piea.-e, will you tell us T”

Kollo Petition Received

Article 39 of the Italian treaty on condition that it could be altered ; later on the basis of observations to be submitted by Italy, j

The article says that the mill-i Naval and air clauses of

Train Kills Unidentified Man

Waterbury, Aug. 2fi—( ^ — AnNew London Ana. 29 (A*i—Citv 1 Navai amt air clauses or 1 unidentified man Avaa Killed by a pared to call a meeting of i

Cleik Henrv L McOiiire said to- 1 **® treaty will lemaip in force u n -1 passenger train of the New Haven der region (Communist) dav he Iw* received a petition with modified by agreement among railroad on tracks half way be- governments to reply."

I fbe Torrington CaupiryMembera of the Connecti-

I Lumber Salesmen's aasocia- ing, and finished the job; then fire-1 tlon are guests. The - program

a unilateral ' aasetnbly to put through a con­stitution would be intercepted by Communists as "a government do- sire to split the nation politically,'* he told newsmen, and "we are pre-* pared to call a meeting of all bor-

localpetition

about 150 signatures nominating Michael A. Russo of Bridgeport for ropresentatlve at large on tha Com­munist ticket for the atata elec­tion. .McGuire said the petition la to be fil«>cl with the aecretarj' of atnte afteV he has chocked the sig­natures against the city voting lUt.

the Allies and Italy or until Italy bacomaa a member of tht United Nations, by agreement with the Security council.

While the major powers. con­vened. conference committees con­tinued their slow, argumentative •zaintoation of the treaty drafta- elause hv'rVsiiae *iu1 almost word

tween the Bristol Co., Platts Mills, and the abbatoir, South Leonard street extenaion. shortly after 10 o’clock, this morning. The en­gine and two passenger cars lasse'd over the body in an iso-

Until now, he added, all ernmenta of Conr.muni.** have been local and h~-' tral government.”

r.

The reason so many people nev-pa , , . . .lated . section of the city where ; or get there is because ” thete" la straight tracks ruh a , distance of | a place they always iyah

COLUMN«entan republic, oat down again, : because, be said:

"There la too much difference between the old and tha new Ume

‘ and between the old and the new ' anthem that I should remain up- ! right." -

By Haak Keratlng (For Hal Boyle)

Groningen, Holland, Aug. 29— m —Playing of national anthems In honor of the 20 chewi maatera from IS countries compering in a four-weeks tournament hero la causing some confusion and bring- Ing not a few mixed memorlea to 1 ^ 0 1 1 1 8 3 1 the contenders. ;

Moot of the participanta to the . tournamenL Which ends Sept. 7, can claim at least two nationallUea, |■pd a jig-aaw puzzle could not be , more fascinating than trying to ■PTt out the International hodge- p o ^ .

At one. of the official dinners, the Belgian anthem was played for Iriah-born Alberic O’KeHy de Gal­way. and the Pollah anthem for Michiel N^dorf, a resident of Ar­gentina for eight years, who stood In rapt attention when the Argen­tine national song was sung for Carlos Guimard uf Buenoa Aires.

Polish Tune FamiliarBut the Pollah tune undoubtedly

sounded familiar to Ruaalan-born Dr. Xavielly Tartakower, a former Pollah citizen, who now Is French.The orchestra played the Marseilles for hiip and for Russian-born Dr.Ctasip Bernstein, but both were more than casually acquainted with the Ruaaian anthem played for the five Soviet representativea.

T he. Hungarian national aong wa* for Lasslo Szabo, but Indi­rectly, too, for tha American Her­man Steiner of Los Angeles. But Steiner, If his memories went back far enough, also probably was moved by the Czech anthem played for Cenek Kottnauer, for he came originally from a region alternately belonging to Hungary dhd Czechoslovakia. The Rus' sian Szalo Flohr also waa once a Czech.

Undivided AllegianceThe American champion Arnold

S. Danker, although born of Ger­man parents, could listen to The Star Spangled Banner with undi­vided allegiance, as could 21-year-

’ old Abe Yanovsky to the Cana, dian anthem since he was only four months old when hU parents left their home In Polish territory which now is Russian.

The situation was simple for Dr. Max Euwe of The Netherlands,Erik LundIn and Gosta Stoltz of Sweden and Martin Christoffel of Switzerland, but less so for Tour­nament Director Hans Kmoch, an Austrian who is applying for Dutch citizenship.

The climax of confusion came when the orchestra began to play the' Yugoslavian anthem. Every­one stood up, but after the flrst few notes, Yugoslav Prof. Milan 'Vldmar of Ljubljana, whose brother is president of the Slov-

News Official Crash Victim

Acting President o f Syn­dicate Killed as Auto Crashes Into Pole

Slaying MotiveCranston. R. I., Aug. 29—le)—

Police Oiief Nelson G. Bourret said today that sUte police prepara­tions to use a lie detector Induced Edward F. J. Comer, 35, of Cran­ston, to confess the slaying of James J. Spellman, 58, Providence metal polisher. *

Comer, a clerk in the plant where Spellman was employed, was arrested last night and booked on a charge of murder.

Spellman’s b o ^ w ^ found 'Tues­day morning to a shed at the Au­burn plant of the Grinnell com­pany. A medical examiner report­ed that he had been beaten to death.' Bourret said Comer confessed be

struck Spellman over the - bead with a steel bar when hia fellow employe refused to loan him $5. The police chief added that the clerk had frequently borrowed money from Spellmaa

Fairfield, Aug. 29.—W r-R «y C.Holllss, 66, acting pretodent of The News Syndicate Company,Inc^ publiaheni of The Now York Daily News, waa killed here qarly today- when hia automobile crash­ed into a pole on the Shore road.

The car waa being driven. Offi­cer Morris Kessler of the Fairfield police department aald, by Fred- _ „erick H. Bedford, Jr.. 83. preaident Patterson, Mrs. Philip Howard, and

waa treated for cheat injuries and possible fracture of hia left leg. Hi; condition waa described as "fairly good.*

Pole Moved About 10 Feet Kranyik aald the accident oc­

curred about 12:45 a. m. (e. a. t.). and the impact of the crash moved the pole about 10 feet.

M. T. Moore of Weaton, who reached the scene shortly after the accidenL said Bedford told him, according to Kranyik, that he "didn't know what happened."

Kranyik aald he had learned that Hollies and Bedford had pIayo8 golf earlier tn the day at the Blind BfoOk Country club. Ryjs. N. Y„ where they dined, and thM headed this way. Molllpa had a summer home to Reddtog.

In addiUbn to his widow, Holllss leaves three daughters, Mrs. John

of the Arias Supply Company of Now York and a director of nu- meroua corporations, tocliidlng Standard Oil of New Jersey.

Bedford was taken to the Bridgeport hospital where at­taches said he waa expected

Mr*. Charles Young, all of Bronx- vllle, and four grandchildren. All were reported at the Redding home.

live.Kessler, conducting the tovesti-.

gatlbn, aald the auto, owned by| HolUaa, crashed Into a tree on' Connecticut Route 136, near Bed­ford's home, where the tw’O execu-1 tlvea were headed after having' spent the evening in Fairfield’s Oreen Farms section.

The officer said the fore; of the colllBlon threw both men from the car and * their bodiea were found ; lying on the highway. He report- 1 ed that Holllss apparently waa killed Inatantly. • ]. (Thief James Kranyik of the Fairfield police aald Bedford will i be booked on a technical charge o f ! operating a motor vehicle so as to cause death.

In Bridgeport hospital, Bedford

Holllss was named acting preai- to dent of the News syndicate on May

SO, of Ihl* year following the death of Joseph Mwllll Patterson. He started his newspaper career to the advertising department of The Chicago Tribune and served aa eastern advertising repreSMUatlye' o f The Tribune until he wqa 'bMI- ed on to organize the adverttainF department of The Dafly News.

in 1932, Holllss became second vice president, and asalstant treaa- uror of The New*. He lived In BrbnxviHe. N. Y.. with hU wife.

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Page 4: Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de

• / : i-

l lA N C H E S iE R E V E N IN G H E R A L D . M A N C H E S T E R . C U N N . I H t K S U A T . A U G U S T 29. 194ft

y. FA<SC t ! tMANuniWTER EvBmirro nRRALiU, »Am ;n iw > 'B i*- c u r a - T n u n a u A i, AUOUwr*?r, ! » * •

PAGE SEVEIf'

i l a t i r t i r a t f r

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— »t-P MUNTtNO OC IK<it t ■ » " » ** iMr. Cmm.rtKuoauN

mOeUMri. IM

siwy BMaiu BsMpt•lMi4ay« MM !>»<*<»>•• * * ***!?* . ^Poat 0**«* •* O**'- •••antftd «TU» lUM _

MUMHClUrnuK lUTBt UM f«M ■» “

U fef IWI ....i.*-**** fomv • oSmntdm

nmurntm aM 4POumiiaM ui

THB *nuaaTBi> I'KauM TM AaaaeiatM Praaa <a aseluaiaaly

aatitlatf ia Oi* ••• raniaMeatiaa cS JTl «a*a dieeewaee u a « n at bm eUMTwtaa eraditau <a Wa papai aad alae i*a tnmt »a «» piitHtaBad Bara.

All nnta ai raauWiaai'o* ol aawiai diapatdMa aafaia^ra

rail •araiaa aliaat al N. ■. A. rarataalaa. ___________

a\-eiit He brought tt Into the Herald.

Wall, we on the Herald are lined to pHnUng all klnda of wild Idea*, providing the author of them will aign hia name, and ao we allowed Mr» Hanaen to aubmlt hla fanrlftil

but we have not yet perfected any technique of fighting communlani with demticracy. the only thing that can lick it.

If fhe choice which confront.* Greece Itaelf U a tragic one, the atrat^gy of the great nHllona who

ly tragic. We have, a<» aoon after a,, war fought to end the um of forCf in International relatlon- ahipa, come tp the point where force ii once again the only thing we know how' to uae. The armed commiinlat revoliituinHiles in the hllia, our big gun* poMlng outover are poat*war t.N .T,

diplfimacy t0\ a

WaaraaaBlatieaa; Tba luliu* lUtaaaa Saactai Agaw-Naa

UatroU ana •natoa.Pualiahara

uiuia lUtai TBra. Caieago.

MICIIMBM AtmttCllot'ljkTIoNh.

•URBAU Ot

raa Uaraia pnatiag Ouaiaaay. aaouno* ao gaaBCtai raaauaaibtn Im traogeopaiaai *.roia aaaaar'ai hi aa- eartiaaaaanto la TM Maaebaatai B*a> aiag Weeata. _____________ ,

Thiu^ay, Auguat 29

program to the general publii^have choaen Greece a* one of their Any o f theae other town* might own many ,hava thought It a pretty wonder­ful program. But we gueaa the responoe here ahowed him that Heard Along wa* right. Manchei- ter la not going to be drawn Into any auch patriotic acheme. Man- cheataf knowa better.

in one other way, Mancheater * dccialon haa been conflrmed.Somehow, the idea of aome Wel­come Home folly crept Into the augua> deliberation* of the Board of Selectmen. The aelectmeii j don't like to aay no to pnything. | ao what they did in ihl* Inatance waa to turn to the veterana them- aelvea and aak them why they didn’t aUge their own Welcopie Home celebration if they want a welcome. let them weliome them- aelvea. Tha't may not be the fa*h- lon in aome other communltie*.But Manchgater know* better.

Ye*. Mancheater know* better.Some of theae other lonimunitie*

The Open ForumCommunications lor pjblicationa in the Open Forum will not be guaranteed publication u they :odIaiji more than 300 words. The Herald resarvas tiit right to declina to publtab any matter that may na libamuA or which ii in oad taste. Free expression of political views la desired by contobutione of tbu character b'lt letters which arc deiamatnry or abusive will be rejected.

Snarl Keeps Live Animals

Free 4 Days(CoDllnued from Pegs Ooe)

riiBlomer CeavealcnccTo the Editor,

“ Where the customer 1* king.” that'* the sort of businea* e*t*b- Ii*hnient* we need in ManclicKier and throughout the country. And wherever a biiHineaa man gel* bm 1<

the Greek <oa*tiend», the*e to the old fashioned notion that

Now We re All SftThe one hitherto miaaing factor

in ell the proepect* of a good quick war with Riit*ia waa aiip- plled yesterday by Aijmlral W il­liam rV Halsey. thedoughty ^yafrlor of tlie Paclflc. In hla p**ia confcieVue at Washing­ton, he supplied the goorl old mili­tary bombast which ha* ao far been ml*.*lng fiom the altuatHm.

He waa aakeil lo illacuaa the

Manchester Knows Better'Throughout thia broad land of

cure, even in our own etete, iwrl*' oue communities ere making e . greet fuse over the feet that the

young men who went forth to war have now returned home. They seem to think that tl^a fact calls for soBM public demonstraUon of Accletia and graUtude. Apparent­ly they have some notion that, be­cause a young..man went out and offered hla own life on the behalf of all tha peaceful cotmnunlUea In the world, hia own community

' should blow aome whtatlea aqd hold a parada and glva him a big

2 hand, and a big piece of its own X heart, when he comet home, t Mancbeeter knowa better., Now take Middletown. Hiere le i a Um-B which obvloualy wasn’t too 1*'clever at masking Ita fastings f about the homecoming veterana

For two days aarller thie month, g Middletown really turned Iteelf In- I aide out, ataglng all klnda ot Joy-* ous etramonlea and apadal event*, f We can Imagine It made qulU a ^ diaruptlon In Middletown life. Ton \ can be pretty sure, too, that quite k a few Middletown ciUsene bad to I work pretty bard making ar-* raagements for It. Mlddletm 'n, we i suppose, wah all puffed up with F civic pride, and thought, at leaat, I *aa» lit waa showing that tU heart

waa in the tight pUce.' 'But Manchester knows better.

None of that sentimental stuff for ua. Ntme of that bother. They're

. hams, aren’t they? »o what? You f don’t think Mancheater Is going

!to lose Its eclf control and give out a little, do you? Manchefttrr knowa better.

Tnkc towns like WllUmantlc and Nors'lch. You take them, be-

. rauiy* nobody in Manchester " wants to have anything to do with - what they have done. We don’t i go for that soft stuff of taking

the veterans who laid their life on

may chance lo think that we are | ,Kje«lblllty that the vlaltiiig rou- a alngularly gracelca*. Ingratc, j tine of our new fleet in the Me<ll- ahort-memoried. calloii* collection | terranean might be conatriied aa of Americana Some few in our i power politic*, own midat may think the name . . , f , o„hody'a <lHinn hualne** kind o f thing. But lefa atick toiwiiere we go," »aid the Bull. "We our guna, aa our aoldler* alui-k to anjrwhere we please."their* when they b*d to. l.«efa Now, *s a gentleman with some not weaken Into doing one alngie, „ f hlatory observedaolltar>’ thing outalde of our ordl- mII wc necil la to hai enary routine. We have only a American warship* infew months more to hold out; why Mediterranean blown up. andspoil our record? bet other com-, ^.jn ^ave our war with Rua- munlties do whet they pleeae. bet |,them hang out the Saga, and | Kailler in hla interview, ofmake speeches, and hold their Admiral Halary had- ad-paradee. and make a bunch 6f i fitted that "I always gel Inaoldlera think maybe they've lieen • trouble when I lelk," which washeroes, think that maybe they did 11.,,, tainly the truth. But earUcr,

c)i*to?rera are the source of bii.si ne*a aiicceaii and |hat their whiiI*. dcHire*. and convenlencea arc to be catered to. that man I* going to forge to the front in the business woild, becauBC he is aatlafving a public desire. For today tlie cus­tomer la a most kicked about in- .tUvIdual, by business generally.

Now, to satisfy public need* and convenience, buMneaa atiould he open at times convenient to the public—not attempt, aa at pu-sent. to aee how little it can be open and how inconvenient it can make It for the ciistom<na to do business.

Once buaineaa waa open for biial- I nesa; now, however, the customer ha* got to figure otit whal day it

, I*, whether the atore* *rc to be I open or not. la it W’edircsday l,<iok out. you can’t do any biiainesa

' this afternoon. la It Saturday eve-

the people’s needs and who knew tliat any buaineaa td be , pre­eminently auccesaful must aatlafy customer needs and convenience.

“ Old Timer." •

To I'oalinne FightKditiii. Tile Herald;

1 wish to take this opportunity to express my thanks and appre- ( latlon to those persons in the Democratic ranks, who. without regard for their own political wel­fare, knowing that they would Jeopardize their stamlinga in the eye* of the so-called "power# thateye* or me »o-c*iiea mai , . urgentbe. " without healtAllon. auppwled ^ willme, and the principles that I fought for at the Democratic cau- ciia, Tuesday evening.

1 admit, without rancor, that I waa defeated fairly and squarely and hold no grudges. 1 took It for granted that there would be no personal anlmoalty on the porta of the vlctorloiia leader* o f the party, that after the battle we would

carried o ff every hour o f the day and night.”

He said he watched a Japanese soldier smother a baby to death be­cause it whimpered while its moth­er waa being raped.

George A. Fitch, a China-bom Amarican, wrote that on Dee. IS, 1987, he watched 1.800 Chinese bound together in bundles and shot.

A Chinese Sun Yuen-Chang,cident* in which Anderson haa act- wrote, "in 60 minute* 1 aaw 10,000 ed a* ftioiithpicce for profiteers. i pw>pie niowed down by machine

In a statement issued by Chair- i g^jif on banks of the Yangtee man John Thornton, the committee river."said American , IJvlng standards ; • ---------------have been dealt "a new and die-1 astroua blow” and added:

'The loiintry ha* a right know whether the president'^BtamI* hehinil Anderson'* decl-alon.’‘ . A '

The cabinet officer hinvself had' pointed to v*bet he celled an,“ alArfninp’’ liquidation of live-: atoek dming the period of no con-] trola and a;i.*erted in a atatement:

"The whole situation clearly need for

be a stlm-

Jet EnginesTests Show

‘Deatl Band’(CoatiBued From Fege Oae)

priceiiliia fni. future production, rather than levels which would pioductioh."

The new live animal were to have gone into effect laat midnight, but OPA late yerterday announced a delay until Sunday to permit the agency to complete work on a new act of pitce tope.

tudea where the temperatures and preaaurea are low.

When living the engine at full______ throttle, if the throttle ia paifflv

im p^e I cloned the temperature and pres- amohg the patrolmen. The chief, faure In the eombuatlon chamber ; the- captain, and Iteutepant are ail

ceilings; decrease at a faster rate than the paid aet sSla.ries.

Police Wages Highest Here

New Budget o l Depart­ment Reveab Figures For Next Year’s PayThe salary npw paid Manrhae-

ter policemen has been found to .be the highest pay of any pollee deoartment In the state.

The new Police budget aa ap­proved by the Selectmen at their meeting this week calls for the expenditure of 876,000, of which amount 869,910 la for aalarlea The policemen are paid a flat eal- ary of $1.11 an hour plus a cant an hour for each yaar ?df eervlce. There are three men paid $1.1^ two $1.14, one 81.16, and one $1.17, they being the lowest paid mem­bers of the department, while 81.37 an hour or a total yearl.v salary of 83.419.92 la the highest

vetocitle.* decrease. Conaequentiv schedule forat aome high altitudes the high ^elaries follows; velocity existing In the combua- g q (jordon. Chief . tlon chamber become.* too great q sphendel. Cant, to permit burning at A. Barron, Ueiit. .

but I waa evidently sadly mistaken, for the leader* of the party, aa noon as they were .sure of victory,

____ ___ _________ receaiied for two minutes, Juat longiiing 7 Vou can't do any bii*ine*» enough to strike from the Hat of then, I* It Saturday daytime” The «andldates for the Town Commlt- liimber vaid* are closed. What day tee, two of the moat active mem- are the librarien cloaed? Keep away her* of the Democratic party. 1 re- from the V.M.C.A. in the aumiuer fer to Miss Suaanne Reardon and beeauae It’^cloaed up- clo*ed up Ht a time When all the rlty Y.M.C.

thl* ! ^ oinking Ihrlr biggexT drives' for memberahip.

If you’ ie going lo Hartford to do buafiicaa, >h-)U better get out a com- tuerelol encyclopedia to find out

^ho'a open and wt>en. If you have a note due at the bank on Satur­day, don't try to pay it because the overworked banker*. those fellow* who go lo work every

____ - ............ ........ ....... .for oackera. wholeaalers and re-| creased tempereture aM pressure, l . r . Conrad. CTerk .unite In the InleresU of the party, .-Mpm rrflertine the higher level® which results In Carpenter, fUdlo-Tcn.

--------------------- - ordeie.!, by the secretary, . entered. RothrocU ~ ,OPA said ceilings allll will ap-

next year’s

. .84.920.00

.. 3,900.00

.. 3.600.00

.. 1,680.00 420.00

at 8.90

Dlv .Sunday to slaughterera and The situation occurs at different packers on Sept. 9 to wholesaler*, •Kltudea and englnc^speeds in dlf- kud on Sept. 9 to the butcher 1 ^ewnt types o f engines, shops.

Supernumeraries per hour . . . .

1 man 2496 hours at 81-37

ReHliiring Subsidies 1To complete the program, the,

Re< onati uction Finance Corpora-,Atty. Jay E. Rubinow, Theae two ' non anhounced last night that e f- [ real Democrat* have done more for ■ feettve Sunday it is restoring the the Democratic party in town than eiaughter subsidies which lapsed , any others that can b* named. > u jlh price conUol June 30.They hive always done more than] Otherwi*e. the focfil price pic-:their share of woik al electtone. I ture Included Increakrt for P*'*‘ , -i-K-ribed as the onlv one in the

m which high .Ultude flight can be eimutated with exactness |

The trouble is overcome by im­proving the fuel and air mixing mechanism—the nozzle through which the fuel la sprayed—and the design of the combustion cham­ber.

Rothrock explained that the labo iatvy haa been making its studies in combustion laboratories and in the altitude wind tunnel.

felt like calling upon them. Yet,-canned Hawadlaijvpineapple and because they lought for their prln-1 pineapple Juice, canned salmon, clples and dared to do It openly.' and moat syrups. . liiev are immediately censored and OPA said the popular 20-ounce banished from the Town Commit- siaes of plain pancake and waffle tec la this the way to atrengthen mix as well aa buckwheat P * " 'nionung after everyone else has ire. *, i...= - - j -------- „.iii »«,o to three

gone to work and who go home , the party or create h arm ony?^ f- cake i ^ v Hl rlM ^Tvery afternoon before everyone , in ltcly not. and a* long a.s these cenU price* on

I else get* thrirngh and wtio have tactic* are followed. I will definite- .need Hawaiian pineap-aomethlng the home folk* appre- had alao ahowii liia convlr-1 every excuse of a holiday off. those ! ly oppose the party leadership and Fancy slicea Hawaiian pineapelated. tlon thet the war hla talk may lo

But Manchester, to ita deep and much to hasten is Inevitable, bitter sh*ing,^knowB better. Iu * has Just icluined fiom a pci-

We aljpelld be pleased to have it ,onal "good will" lour of amilli deffitfiuitrated that we have got Aineiii H.Manchester all wrong. | ••v\’f're going to need ah tlu-

I iftleiids we can gel." lie said, "andTwe'va got aome good ones down i there If wg've got aense enough lo

Thoaa oaven United Stetee w er-. ihcni." ehlpa, headed by the carrier j r vi'oiild have been a aliame to

pie will climb four cents a No. 2 ', The agency said this re­

increase of 13.9poor overworked boy* have to rest I call upon all Democrats In Manup Satiirdiiy*. So do your business Chester to increase of la.oitiere some oilier day but Saturday. - ship by voting against the incumb-1 su gUowed pineapple pro-1,i other words. the public be damn- wt^regletrar of yP i ^eseora on the entire 1946‘^HawaJ-

.howing that you will not support | lan^crj^.

ed salmon will cost six cenja

Timely Visit

ed. This Is the generiil altitude of our bimlncss men, so called, to- wnids pubhr convenience today.

Now. if a wide awake business Ilian came to MHiiehesler tomorrow whose first motto wss "publie service and i luitomer convenience'' that man would make a fortune and at the siiine Imie win the iin-

I . , living loyiiltv and giatitude of aFranklin D. Roosevelt, which last ,v-(th Riiesie without the (faring public whicli isweek played their part In our nc- RyiHry touch. But now, we guess, longing for the leliiin of the old

we’re all set. When does the shoot- fashioned bn.slne.Hs man who meting atart?

gotlatlona with Portugal for a base In the Azores, have now moved on to another function- They have been ordered to make a "courteay” visit lo Greece. They will arrive qt Greece at a time when IluaMan preeaure against Greece la heavy. Just as the bst- Ueahlp Missouri ai rived at Turkey laet winter at a time when Ruaala aeemed about to get tough in her quest of privilege* around th“ OardantUes.

Onr Navv la at sortie pains to

i

ConnecticutY ankee

Bv A. H. o.

Irllliig llietii llml Micial sreiirlly waa aomelhing for their benefit,

I* anil explaining wli), and hla let­ter bet»inie A major lac-tor In the Uenioeratle effort to repel the last minute RrpiibUeaii attaek In this stale.That aeenis Uie Democrati.e dark-

horse roster at the moment. Per-

such tactics is to defeat their can­didate at the primary. Vote for a veteran of VVoiid War II. Philip Bayer. This lucrative spare time job should go to a veteran. Philip Bayer served three years in th e ; armed forces with 15 months over­seas. He earned the Job. L/'t's see that he gets it.

Thank you for the space.Edward W. Kraaenic*.

Braves Pm •ehase I Milwaukee Sloek

Boston, Aug. 29.- i>Ti- toil National League Club today announced

haps It l i no more Important thun chase of approximately

-The Bos- Baseball

the pur- 90 per

The ftrat reaction of most ob- *ci vera to the rumor that the Dem- (M-rats were angling for Charles

natabllah that our visit tp Greece i Seymour, the dislingulslied pres- at thl. particular lime ha. noth-ing to do with diplomacy; the disbelief. The first item ofMediterranean la a "fiee " aea. and ; dlabelief was an inatinetlve un- we ran make auf-h calls there aa willlngneas to admit that the sue-

wiatful thinking. But perhaps, too, it may be a ygar when the Demo­crats tliink It necessary to do some­thing out of Uio ordinary.

S r h o o l C l i i k l r e i i ’ s

S i i f p l v S t re s M M i

we pleas*. That la, of course, thebunk. Thla fleet was sent to theMediterranean In the first place

^ UnT'tor'u. and putting- them strengthen our diplomatic the line tor ue ana pi a schedule of courtesyup on A pedaatal, for one day at leaat. Manchester la smart enough to figure It out this way: if these veteran* could take care of thamselvea out with th* Nasi* and the Japs, they can take, care of themeelve* now they’re eafely home, can’t they ? Sure, eay* Mancheater. People In Menches- U r really think thlnge out.

Something ought to about Torrington. Now Torilngtoii has alway* been a nice enough town, a Uttle bit like Mancheater In many reapecu. But it win go off our list this Saturday. On Sat­urday Torrington la going lo

calla Is In line with that same ob Jective.

cessful president of li great and wealthy Inatltutlon like Yule could , l)e a Democrat. How could siicli s thing be?

When they foumi out Unit it could be. tlu-ir next reaction was to doubt that tlio Connecticut Dcm- ol-rats could possibly entice such a

' distlngui.shed citizen into the po-

have powarful fleets have alwaye used, them, and the timing of this visit to Greek watere is classicallv appropriate. There le a tireeli referendum on Sunday, on-wheth­er or not the Greek king shall re-

be said ! turn to hia throne. Russian dijilo- matic preaeure 1* at it* near- peak. And, inside Greece, com­munists have been incrca.singlV auccesaful In taking over tliiit rev- uUitlonary movemenf w hlch , Brit­ish troops, over a year ago, re-

aUge one of'the«^ same celebra-! P«r-ssed but could not extinguish, ttons. We wouldn’t be aurprised , These .revolulionnnc.*, wlio It the whole town went hay-wire ] might once have repie.sciitcn the for the dayi making a .lot of non-1 cause of Greek democracy, liui senatcal fuaa over a lot of healthy j who are now In the arms of Mos- young men who ought to be i cow-directed communists. are apcndlng the day at their Jobs, or I holding out in Uir hills wticio iM klng.foi a houae. Well, Tor-| they pqse a consiant aimed

Hailford, Aug. 29 -Thirty-two cliildreii of s< hool age were killed and 116.1 were injured on Connecti- eiit streets mid higliwsys last year, according to William M. Greene,Director id the Stale Highway Safetv Comnils.aion. who urged drivers to Be particularly carefulwhile driving in residential and arrangement* to dispose of the 40 - . r . * *

t . 1... 'iVie im. school areas. He further pointed „er cent of the stock which they l 9 f t 0 0 0 0 K l l l f H ladminlstnitlve career for the iin- reading^Jiwned m the Indlanapoli. Ameri- I V I I I U I I"Go SCHOOL Slow ly ’ now take on I can Association team, with Frank an, added algniftcknce. During the McKluney. who recently pur-

Thl. l. Ihe wav natlona which : •'I*'-'*'This la the way natlona wnicn , pmpaele of hla academic and

tent of the stock of the Milwaukee Brewers of the American Associa­tion and reported the Boston club phoned would take title at the conclusion * - of the I'urreirt season.

Tlie Braves’ statement said thiil itie Boston cluh’a president... Loui*R, Perini, had bought for the Braves the (ontrolling stock in the Milwaukee club held by Oscar ,‘tnlenger. -j.

“So far as the transfer of play­ers, through sale or trade 1s con- 1 cerned," the Braves added, "the Bo.slon National League Club, as of this inarning will handle tlie entire situation"

The balance of the Milwaukee slmk is held by a group of citi­zens o f that city.

The Braves are now iji*king

more while the pink variety goes up four cents. This results from a 12 per cent increase for sal­mon canners ordered by Anderaon to encourage production.

The syrup boost* will amount to as much as 20 per cent for i blended maple and cane syrup*. ! OPA said, aa a result of increases j required for producer*, whole­saler* and retailers under terms ! nf the new price control act. |

.Xllnwed Blanket Increase Gandy inaiiiifacturera also were

allowed a blanket increase in prices, to bring their earninga up to normal peacetime averages, but OPA said this should not affect consumers because few manufac­turers could qualify.

On the subject of dairy price controls. Chairman Roy L. 'Thomp­son of the Decontrol board tele-

a atatement to Washing­ton from hi# New Orleans home late yesterday, refiilling that his | independent panel haa sole an- thortiy over those now-suspended ceilings.

Porter on Tuesday said in New | York he would "in.sisl” upon a re- 1 turn to controls becau.se he feared ; lUilk prirea soon would get out of ' 19ir. ^

In his statement Thompson em­phasized that the board has no official spokesman other than its i own three members and that any , other statement* “are merely sup- j positii'ns or speculation andshould be treated as such.”

as to humidity, temperature and presaure up to 90,000 feet.

Supports Bonus Proposal

West Haven. Aug. 29—(4»i—Th* Republican Town committee today w’a* on record supporting the statement made by Republican State Chairman Harold E. Mitchell Sunday In which he told New Haven aasaaaor* that there was •’overwhelming aentlment" within the party for the payment of a boittis to aervlcemen. Mitchell added that the bonua would pro­bably be a plank In tha Republican state platform thia year. The com- mltte* also endoraed the candidacy of Former First Selectman Charles F. Schall for high sheriff of New Haven county.

per hour ................... '1 man 2496 hours at

81.33 per hour . . . . . . .3 men 7488 hours at

81.13 per.hour ----2 men 4992 hours at

81.14 per hour ...........1 man 2496 hours at

81.19 per hour ...........1 man 2496 hours at

81.17 per hour ----1 man 2496 hours at

81.27 per hpur . . . .1 man 2496 hours at

81.28 per hour . . . .1 man 2496 houra at

81.30 per hour . . . .man 2496 hours at

81.32 per hour . . . man 2496 hours at

81.34 per hour .. i . . . .man 190 days at 84.90 per day ......................

1

7,978.84

3.419.92

3.319.68

8,461.44

5.690.88

2,899.36

2,920.32

3,169!92

3.194.88•1

3.244.80

3,294.72

3,344.64

899.00

865,910.00

ALICE OOFBAN (Knowa A* Qoaea Alla*)

Seventh llaughter of a Bavaatb So* Btirn tVlth a Vofl

Readlnga Uall.v. Inchiding Seeday, 9 A- M to 9 P. M Ot By Appolat* raent In the Sorvtoa « i ni* P**> pie for SO Venn.

SPIK ITIIAL MBDIUM 169 Church Mtroat, Hhrtford,'Oaas.

Phon* «-ttS4

The question of costs receives a sensible solution here: details and costs of sefvice are arranged to fit the family's individual preferences and re­quirements.

142 EAST CENTER ST.P H O N E S 3 l 9 6 » 2 “ f3 6 4

rlBgton can have its Welcome! Home day if it wants to, if it has cltlsens who are so (ull of energy and public spirit that thry Just cOJi’t refrain from doing it. But Manchester knows better.

MlancHctter'a la no snap deci-' olon. We have thought It over pretty thoroughly. A few weeks ^ o . a weekly column called ‘Heard Along Main Stieet” put its ear to the atreet, and thought

' It hoard the town’s decision not to lot anything Ukc a Welcome Ham* Day InUrfere wUb civic

threaCSo, aa the gamr » f war is tradi-

tlonally played, it is high time for our warships to arrive in Greek harbors and take Greeie iiiulei their guna and plunea.

There aae two tragic thin;;' about thia ailiiation. Onr ip. that prw r itaelf ha* born foii'ed to eh(K>ae betweeii two equally un­happy •xtremea. Whore possibly once a great Gieok majunty had hopea of a Greek democracy, no'A the Greeks must apparentlv choose between communism and m

V pragtaaa. Th# column reported i r*tum of a dictatorial monarchy fclt* indlng. and than a curious.? thing happenad. It d*v*lop«l that departmenti

the Biitish for their obvioiia back­ing of the Gi-eek monarchy

^tharc waa one Individual, Clayton Manaen, ‘'executive oocretary of

fth # Chamber of Cttmmerc*. who .j-i,,,^ thought to Iflhsd divergent and botberaome fldOM. Ha. it tumad out, thought j[tb at Manebaster ought to have a sNfolcoms Horn* celebration. In ^M* lonely way. he. had thought "about It ao much that he bad oat hlmaalf down and drawn up a

pragram for oueh an

cortaintv of a political campaign” The Ilemocrata anauered Ihl*

one uilh the word that l•n•atdelll Seymour ia near Ihe retlreiuenl age anyuay. .And,-wHhoat the oIlKhleat «en<u» of an Inferiortr eomplex, they professed lo see ao reason why OUrh a dis-

j tliigiilvhed gentlenian «limild e\«T regard |* nomination from

I Ihe diHtIngulshed Demm-ruJ- a« anylhing In Ihe nature of a lei-

I dou II.i Allhoiiph the Democrat.*, on iho fsurfm-o, seem to have a linulod I supply of r.'indidate* thl* yeai, !l\ev

Hie. behind the scene*, indulgitu; tbem*»*lve.- m a goodaleHl <>f .-ii. h

spi'culatioii nbout potential cnmii- dales who have not and are jiot likely to take the pre-convent ion stump in their bw'n behalf.

Roger S. Baldwin, the i ivi. minded Gieenwich lawyer, who is one hi the trustees of the Fall find State«Ho*pit«l at Newtown.'is nn- other indivi(tu«l with whose iiame the Demoi rata have been thought­fully tovi*ig lit .their relaxed loo- lYtetns. There arc indication.* \> c don't know Itow reliable—that tlii"i thoiightfuliie** lias already t.ik'n ttie fotm of iin approach lo tl'- gentleman in question, and tl it tile re.siill has lujd yet been a il>'! nUe.no front liit]l.

“a third po.s5ihi(tty being dn-cn.-- ed heliind the seenra 1*-Col.

, Donahue of Stamford, a hand-ijim.' debonair manufaeturer who. it tin Demonals msiat on the seholailv background, haa alao recently hec-'i

' created a Doctor of Law* hr Georgetown University.I rolniiel llonatllie was a great

I siipiHirler of the 1*1* Francis T. v», " L, yiaiortey, hut also, even In Ihe

once reproached I hallle of the 1944 eonvenlimi.

summer uiontha, lie added, many diivoi.* have gotten into the habit of ignoring 'auch .signs.

Of the .32 ehilclren killed. 25 were pedestrians, U of whom were (our years old ot younger, 14 were between the age* of 5 and 12 and tliere were no pedestrians killed between the ages of 13 and 19.

O f. the 1461 injut-ed, 760 were pedestrians. .'S42 were occupants; and 161 were

chased the Pittsburgh Piiatca." ; the statement addetl. e.xplalning he was "dtie to acquire the Brsve.H' holding* in the Indianap­olis fianchise.”

At rangements for the purchase

111 mil Rape(Contlniied from Page One)

completed late yesterday cago,

In acquiring the Milwaukee team, the announcement added,

: wew occupama ; Biaves ajao received . t he Eau bicycliat*. Of the Wisconsin, team in the

latter, three were under four years Northern League a Mtl-old. B.'i were beUveeu 5 and •nd farm team.61 were between 13 and 15. These palenger now ireasuier of the figures. It waa pointed out, would \ Mihvaukee' teanC and other per- mdicalc that the dangerous aga for i presently, with the club,bicyclist* waa the 13-15 br*cket..K^.j,i vvithitlie organizstion,The figuies also show That hte ljj,,, Biavea added.teal dangerous age for child pades- . --------tiians waa between the asm* 13- 150 bracket accounting for 826injured. A total of 12 weqe Injuf- »%* * “ *48 J-<VrArlIi»ed 'in the under four years old htHcket and 2.56 between 13 andr>.

the time, said Japanese official* "were horrified when they saw the

of tile Milwaukee franchise were orgy of drunkenne.ss. numler, rapein Chi- and robbery . . ■ but failed to make

any Impresaion on the cnllou* mill- j tary commander who deliberately turned loose hla men " ■

One Nanking foreigner, .1. H .) McCallum, testified i>\ affidavit that “there were l.ooixa.ses of rape a night, and many by day.”

IBs diary notation dated Dec. 19,j 193* read: #-

" fo o Horrible To Itelutr" “Thl# I* a hell on eai th It Is a

story too horrible to relate. People are hvsterlcaL Women are being ,

For IncomesLegal Notices

To Tench on Siibiecl of Traffic

Kaigo. n. Id*' Ke)^l Oberg. -'1 \eii olil (ieorgetown, Minn.,

'I'M.l (.eaclier, will, by court or- i ti Ki h on Ihe subject of tr*f-

ii' ‘at the Fargo police school for ly next ( ouple of weeks. Mias < H'l rg .•< .SCI vil e on the police

ho.il faculty wa.* Ihe sentence ■i"' i.led upon by Police Judge F. A Ue'iiiaiil afte? .she had entered » plea ol guilty lo a charge of

' "m g .

l( nntiniied From Page Oni^

(oreca.st 'ht

■ t.iq ro ii ariiMiTXOTtCB «»F APri.K ATIOX

This I* to ahr iioUi •- Mint I AN- TIIO.W j'. KOCVM. Mf 3.'.. WrMiiiliifler Roail. Mamhealer; rmu Ijiiie nied an apRlU atlim'daled Aiittiio i f tM*. « ill'

I the Liquor Control ('oininienioii for - 1915 -Beer Perndt for tli' Ml- ■ Irnhnitc

Cen-

ngauist hi* .laiuiary j:tl •.nn.iJOO.OOO.

Th, peak income year of |-5--u;„.-o„ ,i„ pr. „.l.-e, ;;:n K*.,t Ceipioduced 843.800,000.1*00 in ta.x re- street. Manchest- r (Van. eeij'ls. Tiieae fell to 810,672,000,000 -rii,. buetnrsa Is-owiie,! hy .\NTIION in Ihe year ended last June .30. - ! J. Kt>Cl?M. oL tCi

Notwithstanding the $6.000.0(M).-000 .slash written by Congre*-* m .................the hist post-wsr tax bill, Mr. -c'onn., * » pernillt ,’T« viman n latest, estimate of tax revenue* for fiscal 1947 is only

.VNTHONTiMiui.sIcr Ri^d.

I>e con- KOIT’M, ef .Manchester,

ANTIIONY ,1. KOCL'M. Dated Aiilii»t It n't,.

J KOCITM. oG iCi t\ i -li,iui.«l Mancheater. ^>nn. «i.,l willducted hy J^TIIOW I K, 3.3 Wealminaler Road .Mi

be the wiahea of the Greeks them-' aelves, now aeema reconciled lo the poaslbility that we must uae; that monarchy in order to ll.glit! communilHi.' li| i* the pooi?*i; weapon we could select; jnobaijly tha auieat way u, hand Giccce eventually ovar to communism;

theluaiiitaliied cliise and cordial re- latloiih ullh former 4!ovcriior Rolu-rl .A. Hurley. He hlinsell obtained aome dramatic alule prominence back In the 19.36 campaign, when social stH-iirity waa an laaiiCj and Rriinblicuii. alrairgy featured a laat minute "ware" campaign that aocial aeciirlly wa* aLw'heme lb ode- fraiiil Ihe workr.rs." t'olonel Dmi- ahiir, a* an eni|iliiyer In hla own right, wrote a pay envelope cn- r.lnanre fog Ua own amployfa,

Plea l)ro|iped h> Pinna

of

about 41.01)0,000,000 below collec- j lion* In the previou* year.' Drive lo Detect Evaalona

In addition to the possibilitiea of ittle ..p’ Members of the a fuillu-r boost in national Income

lu.u AmerlcHii patty to scale and lii tax leceipls, the Tiea.sury \l 1,.,'* formidable .’ill. St. Ellaa now us in Iho midst of ap inten.sive u'. iiii ir mosi enjoyable meal of drive t,> detect wartime tax eya-

thc twn-moiiih expedition wa« four 1 aions. ftomc officials say letyms a|,i'l,' pies dropped by an . a ir- i from this campaign may run into plane "They were packed In ' billion. .sau iuai in \voodeii boxoa." said' At the asm* time the govetii- I'uinelm.s Molenaar. 29. o f Lo* j ment has ordered-extenaive cut- Aiigeie.s,' who returned here with] backs or delaya m various Federalhit brother. Dee. w hile four other I constiin tnui., g■ limhi is reiiiHined in Alaska. All ot wh'clfadds up to the pa*- AVheii \vf openeil them, we found aibllily that America piay see

something it hasn't teen in a long, long time—a balanced budget*

a note saying: Sewduat by cour te»y of Yakut'at carpentry ahog’."

Landscaping Lawn Grading

PI.OW1NG HARROWING

‘CORDWOOD SAWING

E. A. Senkbeilc a r t e r ST. TEL. 7319

fcHOOtomsWednesdajr Sept. 4

Have You All The Things You Need!

• L O O S E L E A F C O V E R S

• L O O S E L E A F S H E E T S • P E N C IL S , R U L E R S • D R A W I N G S E T S • M E C H A N IC A L P E N Q L S • P E N A N D P E N C IL S E T S • C O N S T R U C T IO N P A P E R • P A S T E , IN K S ,

1 • D IC T IO N A R IE S ' • T E C H N IC A L B O O K S

• D E N N IS O N G O O n s^ • T Y P E W R IT E R P A P E R S • T Y P E W R I T E R C A R B O N S

The Dewey-Richman Co.Jeweler n — Stationers — Optir^ani

w n u —16M , WDRG--UM9 Today *8 Radio

XMtera Uayllcfel rtase

WTUT—1886 HONK—1416

4:00 — WDRC — House Party; < News; W KNB—Newe; Vaughn Monroe; WTHT—Jack Befch; w n c —BackaUge Wife.

4:19->WKMB — Birthday Oub; W THT—Glrand'a Music Hall; w n c —BteUa Dallaa.

4:80—WDRC — Give and Take; W KNB—Uncle Dave; WTIC — Loranao Jonca.

4 :4 fl-W K NB—Acrooa the Foot- UghU; w n c —Young Wldder Brown.

8:00—WDRC—Main Street. Hart- Ford; W KNB—New*: The Mail­bag; W TH T—Terry; w n c •— When a Girl Marries. >>

5:19— WBRC—Top Tune Time; W THT—Music; WTIC — Portia Facaa Life.

9:30—WDRC—Old Record Shop; WON8—Supermen; WTHT — Jack Armstrong; W T IC — Just Plain Bill.

9:40—W KNB— YMCA Program: WONS—Tom Mix; W THT — Ttnneaaee Jed: W TIC—Front Page Farrel.

Evening6:00— News on all stations.6:19 — WDRC — SpoUlght on Sports; WKNB— Croee-Viewa of Sports News; WONS — Jim Britt’s Roundup; Musical Round­up; w n c —Emllc Cote Glee ClUlr.

6:30— WDRC—Headliner’s Club; W KNB—Lullaby in Rhythm; WONS— Aiiawer Man; W THT—

I. Music; WTIC — Bob Steele; Strictly Sports: Wqather Fore- caat<

g ;45 —.W D RC — Robert Trout Newa; W KNB — Little Show; WONS— Eaay Acea; w n C —Lo­well Thomu.

7:00—WDRC— New*; Twilight Serenade; WONS— Fulton Lewis, Jr.; w n c —Supper Oub.

7:19—WDRC—Jack Smith Show: WONS— Famotu Songs; Musical

Roundup: W THT—RaymondSwing: w n c —Newa of th* World,

7:30— WDRC— Mr. Keen, Tracer of Loat Pereona; WONS—Arthur Hale; W THT—Profeeaor Quiz; w n c —Symphony of Melody.

7;4B— WONS— Inside of Sports.g;00—WDRC—Suspanae; WONS — Carrington Plai^ouae; WTHT __Lum and Abner; W n C —Olm­sted Playhouae.

8:19—t^TH T-Th e O'Neill*.8:30—WDRC— r a i in Peace and War; News: WONS—Vic and Sadie; WTHT-"American Tqwn Meeting of the Air; R T IC — Meredith Wllleon Show, f

9:00—WDRC — Dick Haymqe Show; WONS—Gabriel Heatter, News: w n c —Mualc Hall.

9:15— WONS—Real Stories from Real Ufe.

9:30— WDRC—Crime Photogra­pher: WONS—By Popular De­mand; W THT—Take If fromThere; Harry Wlamer; W n C — Jack Haley with Eve Arden.

10:00 — WDRC — That’* U fe; WONS— California Melodiea; W THT—Harry Kogen’a Orches­tra; WTIC—Vaughn Monroe.

10:30—WDRC—Phone again Fin­negan: WONS—Vic Curly'a Or­chestra; W TH T—Sport Gems; w n c —Travelln,’ Man.

10:45— WTHT—Music.11:00—Newa on all atations.11:15—WDRC—Night Owl Show;

WONS— Benny Strong's Orches­tra; WTHT—Evening (Devotion; W TIC—Morgan Beatty.

11:30—WONS— Loui* Prlma’s Or-* cheatra; Newa; W THT—Mualc;

w n c —Concert of Nations.12:00— WONS—Lawrence Welk’a

Orchestra; WTIC—News; De­sign for Lletening.

12:30—WONS—Dance Orchratra.12:49i-WONS—Al Trace's Orches­

tra.

Complete Crosby Deal;His Opening Date Oct. 16

(Eastern Standard—Add One *a Hoar for Daylight.) j

New , York, Aug. 29— (8*)—The much-heralded Bing Crosby deal la now complete. As moat people. Including networks officiala, had bean gusasing. ABC gets him with a„ naw aponsor. Other arrange- manta Include relay to the chain’s 211 otationa from recordings, which also ar* to be supplied to 400 ad­ditional broadcasters.

Opening date (a October 16. but forecasts as to the hour were wrong. It wlU be 10 p. m. In the eastern zone, and 9 o’clock local tim* In other areas by means of delayed relays. This will eliminate conflict with Frank Sinatra on CBS.

Transmission from recordings, or as the announcement put it, "uae o f specially prepareq Holly­wood transcribed programs." is breaking something of a prece­dent. It will be the first time for I a network leader not to do hie show •live."

However, an understanding which spokesmen say was made as much at Crosby’s behest aa any­one’s, stands. It provides that if a Hooper ratlM of 12 per cent ia not I maintained Bing will switch from records back to direct broadcast-Ing. I

ment for Jack Benny. The new Kyaer agreement, covering an un­stated "long term," release* him from the one with hla former apon- sor, imder which he haa been "loan­ed” to the present series since the end of 1944.

Kyser reaumes September 18 after an eight-week vacation that included an operation. Gueata are running things while he la sway.

Too Much Water

Carlsbad, N. M.—UT)—There wa* Just a half-inch too much water for the Boy Scouts’ water carnival. The extra half-inch a'os rain.

f i a k op \ t C W S T

The nine-year-old Kay Kyser muaic quiz of NBC Wednesday night, one of the few remaining hour-long shows, will be cut to 30 minutes for the first time under a

' contract extension. The change, announced as being made at Ky- seria auggeation. Is effective Octo- I her 2. New time la to be 10:30. ' j

The holf-hour given up will re-1 vert to hia former sponsor, who la to move In the Frank Morgan comedy aketch, summer replace-

F o r m a k i n g really del^cioiu pie emits, com muf f ins, and popovers ♦

MODOUUtr

m m newRMrI

Laaaan tha labor of your laundry . . .your 999 othar houaahold taaka . . . with naw, improvad DAZZLE— tripla-filtiniad for aatra purityl Uaa DAZZLE in your laundry to bUach cottona, linana. . . in your waahing watartdbrifhtan linoIoum,ananMl atovaa, tila,bath tuba, rafrigarater, claajt fv lM ia paila, atnka. Ask for DAZZLE at yaur grocar Aetlay I

Read dircctiaaicarefally ^

DszalifvieMg NeiNdhad Ev0 y effanafB* iCWef amsE'

t.iin( M m • n naas w awiam

R. F. Sullivan Dies of Burns

Clothes Catch F ire aa B arre l E x p lo d e s ; 'Waa M em ber o f Loca l K . C

Roger F. SuUlvan. 24. of 51 Olm­sted St., East Hartford, a member of Ckmpbcll Oouncll, Knights of Columbus, of this toam. died this morning at 8t. Franola hospital. Hartford, from burns received ye*, terday afternoon at th* Pratt and SVhltney Aircraft. Eaat Hertford, where he was employed os a Bre­men.

flulllvan, who was scheduled to mah one of the booths at the local K. of C. carnival laat night, waa burned when sparks from a weld­ing torch Ignited shellac fumes in a barrel, causing the barrel to ex­plode and setting Are to hi* clothSB. He waa thrown to the floor by the explosion. Fellow workmen tried to remove his burning clothes but a necktie he was wear­ing was knotted so tightly It was difficult to remove. Some of the other workmen received alight bums to their hands In assisting Sullivan.

Believed Not SeriousRemoved to the hospital after

receiving first aid at the plant, the attending physicians said that Sul­livan was suffering from first and second degree burns and stood a good chance of recovering.. The burns ware on hie face, chest and arms.

Th* victim was a native, of Mandbeatcr, N. H., and has been

employed at the aircraft plants for a number of years. He wm. turned down by hts draft hoard because of a weak heart and he had attempted aeveral Ulhea to an- Hat In aome branch of the seiVlee but his heart prevented him from

' being passed. It is believed this condition, accelerated by the shock of the burna. caused hi* death.

I About an hour previous to hla . death Sullivan’s parents. Mr. and ; Mrs. John A. Sullivan, of 869 Halt street Manchester, N. H., had tela-

; phoned to the hoapital to Itarn of j his condition. They left immedi­ately by (.utomobll* to visit their

, son and could not be contacted about his death.

i

Shower Parties | For Briile-lo-Be

See l.aiid Values Here liiereasiiig

f ^Manchester DuiUlera and con­

tractors believe that with the ex­tension of the new super-highway now In the enuriis of conatruction in the northwest aectlon of Man­chester. land values In that sec­tion Will Increase rapidly. They

maintain that It will be possible to travel from Manchester to the nsw bridge In ten minute* without any difficulty. That means that men who work in Hartford can reach their homes here more readi­ly than If they lived in West Hart­ford. New bulldthg sections in the Buekland area are now being laid out.

^ In the time of Queen Fliznbeth the English were required by law to eat fish on 159 days of Hie year.

A pi'rsonal ahower was given by former clasamatea of Mias Enes Johnson, on Auguat 7, at the home of Mrs. Courtenay Crocher. Jr., of 119 Washington atreet, Hart­ford. The hostesses at the shower weie Miss Eleanor Leonard, maid of honor, and M*o- Crpcher. brltlea- rtiald-to-be. Many lovely gifts were received by Miss Johnson.

A dinner at the Elm Trei^lnn was enjoyed AuguAt 19. A t the din­ner associates of Ihe Hartford Visiting Nurses Association pre­sented Miss Johnson\wUh a pres­sure cooker. . ”

Last week Auguat 21. a card party was held at the home of Mrs. Alan Jones, of 24 Edgerton streeL The bride-to-be reeelved a lovely blanket.

Miss Johnson ts to be married to Ralph Marker, September 7, at 7

I p. ni.. In the Emanuel Lutheran ' church.

I]i

Wqyof'i Th. Thing

KOCUM’SQUALITY MARKET

(Formerly Firestone .Market)379 EAST CENTER STREET PHONE 5867

Wishes to expresdi thanks to the hundreds of cus­tomers who are plltronizing their store daily. Pleasant relations through the medium of friendly trading makes the job of serving you a happy one. New customers are always welcome at this community store, where quality and satisfied patrons are the byword.

“TONY” Formerly Manager «)f the Grocery Dept, of .the Manchester Public Market, announces these Grocery Specials:

S A U E R K R A U T , 2 la rge cans ..........29c

L U M M IS P E A N U T B U T T E R , 1 lb . ja r ,2 9 c

W A X P A P E R (1 2 5 fo o l r o l l ) ............... . 15c

H O M E C IR C L E S T O R E C O F F E E . .3 7 c lb .

S P IC A N D S P A N , p a c k a g e .......................19c

Marty Other Specials of Quality Groceries

HEKRY WEIRFormer Manager of the Fruit and Vegetable Counter at the Manchester Public Market is Now at KOCUM’S and Offers these Specials:

P O T A T O E S 4 9 c P k .

•LIM A BEANS

•GREEN BEANS

•W HITE ONIONS

C O R N 3 5 c D oz .

•TOMATOES

•LETTUCE

•CELERY. •BUTTER-NUT SQUASH

Also a Large. Assortment o f Fine Fruits

RENE MIRANDAExpert Meat Catter at KOCUM’S Invites His Friends and Customers to Buy With Confidence; the Quality and Superior Meats at His Counter

• B E E F • V E A L

•S T E A K S • R O A S T S

- • F A N C Y P O U L T R Y

COMPLETE LINE OF QUALITY FOODS' {P L E N n ’ OF PARKING SPACE

- STORE HOURS

S:80 A. M. TO 6 P. M. DAILY THURSDAY OPEN UNTIL 9 P. M.

WEDNESDAY CLOSED AT NOON • SATURDAY OPEN UNTIL 6 P. M.

I

Iced Tea— Easily MadeMaks tea as usual, but iloubln atranqth to allow (or malting too. Whils still hot. pour Into gUssoa (illad with craekod too.. . . Add augu and lomon to tasta.SUJUur

T E A

H O W DO YO U o n

YOUR C A U S THROUGH SO PAST, B IU?

Talaphon* operofort ora trying harder than ever to g ive you good service at all time*. But you ll ge t )fOUf calls through faster H you moke them before 9:30 A.M. or during the afternoon.

X ' Advertise in The Herald— It Pavt

N

AT HOME •n a t io n a iSTORES

f u p f p A ^ iiA iiry i M R i c i T i

Saa ^0od Sp^oicUlfS T I A K C O D

ni|SN I I 2 9 <H A D D O C K F tU J T

MMIN LI 4 5 «a O U N D I R H U I T

PaflSN 18 4S<

BABY FOOD EVANCEUNEBEECHNUT CLAPP'S AULKANDOERBIi'S 400 UMTS OF VITAMIN B'

5 4N-OZ JARS 5 9 * M EVERY PINT.TAU TIN ^ 2 aMOST POPULAR MHOS

A/atldfiafiM^MEATVAlUeS

ORADB AA^A

LAMB LEGS » 59-aiADB AA-A-iOM « ^

LAMB CHOPS <*69-aiADf AA-A-l swsd or Moled UDealrod ‘

LAMB FORES t>33-ORAM AA-A-ftW ‘ h

LAMB CHOPS - 59-•25-

whether you q* on a pknk or have a family euting in your own backyard, First National Stores hav* the foods fhei will add enjoyment to your Holidoy Wook-End. lo suro to shop as oarty at possible bocauto there will be aalra tiora traffic due to

the Double Helidey ahead

ASPARAGUSMAMtOOK I20Z FKC 4 5 «

04ILANV 14-OZ FKO 2 9 <STRAWBERRIES Slked

•tor • Fetwem MGZFKC 6 1 <ORAM AA-A

KIRKMAN'S PRODUCTSSOAP H AKIS LGE FKG 23«SOAP POWDIR LGE PKG 1t «CLIANSIR 3 CTNS 14«■ORAX SOAP lAR 7«6 RANULATID SOAP lge pkg 23<COMPUXION SOAP 3 lAts T4<

WHEN AVAILAM.E

4 ^ iltm PAchAc a a h a ek fa ^ O u tm f

CRAX CRACKERS 23* KRISPY CRACKERS — 23 ROYAL LUNCH cRscRiis ls 28* PEANUT BUnER - - -28<DOIKHNUTS Fg«oFi2|8«SODABLERDED JUICE ~45<ORAIKEJUKE — -<*-49-

LAMB NuntsaAiwf o w l 4 - s u A V e a A a i

TURKEYS BACON FBANKFURTS BOLOGNA

ITY ra iS H IRThq p M i e l N m Welda i m il led flo you r NATIONAL BTOM

BETTY ALDEN BREADdated/(o7 fPES^A/ESS

Join the theusends who oro new lelty Aldofl broad customers. You can't find • loaf with finer, delicale whaaty flavor

Of liner 'loxturo.

LAR6 I1S-OZLOAP

C R E W Im m MCHMOND •*«! TIN 19*W AX l•■ •6 ttcHMONO ir oiTm 19*H A S nNAST St ot tm 20cREAS SAISWAT SO Ol TM 17*LEMON JgfM 3m e.

tf Oi TbM29R

TEAIACS HOMa«i« SKO os** Jl7c TEA (mWw Im, m K U SUG 34c M E S a v m C J A R l. •ozots73c NAMTANT PEA SOUP » ^•*14< PUCE MATS TOT HouM moons 23< SPK A SPAN 2 • mot 39*

SWANS O A P

3 MEDIUM CAKES 17*3 ikAftOE CAKES Z9<

' WH(N AVAX/LIU

SWEETHURTS O A P

3 KEGULAR CAKES 19*lATH SITE 11*WHIN AVAtlAlll

fresh FRUI7S,«rfVEGETABLES

GRAPES ***eust 2 35*PEACHES 3‘“33'PRUNES 2‘“27*PEARS BARTLITT 2 2 5 *

HONEYDEW MUONS PEAS WISTMNLEnUCE ICIMRG

TOMATOES »««•BEETS NATIVI CARROTS NATIVI

OMONS POTATOES

YM.LOWU. s' H p . 1

2-292 hds2 3 '

2 -1 52 * a t s l 3 «

2 » chs1 3 -

3 - 9' 10' 31'

PRISH CRIAAURY

BUTTER

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITI($— .i-

E G G S Wm. HIIOTT AMO, ORADB A DOZ 5 9 *

PUUIT PUSH OIAOIA DOz 4 5 *

I RICES SUIJECT TO CHANGE DUE TO A4ARKET FLUCTUATIONS

I\ \

Page 5: Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de

■ir>X

■ ■ ' ... .(

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN, THURSDAY; AUGUST 2 9 ,194SJO

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHBSrrER, CONN.. THURSDAY. AUGUST 29, 1949 P A t i i N U IM f

r'A,

. ••

1 1

15 Requests Before Board

i w for Changes in Zoning Laws Are for I Liqaor Licenses

VittM n r«qu««t« h»v* b**n r*e«lv- Sd b r tiu ZoMnf Bo«rd of ApposU ii»r diancM of Zoning RuIm S tid the Board b u called a nieetlng £ r Thuraday night a t 8 o’clock at fte Munlcip^ ihiUding to act on the raqoeata. Two of the appU-

to be acted upon are re> auesU for liquor Mcenaea. Arnold PsM ni la nuking application for a Ucenaa to acU liquor on Wa prop­erty known aa the Garden Grove Sff Keeney atreet In a rural ' The other requeat la from Dante medmonte who la making an ap- SUcaUon for a package «tore li- Mnae at 98 Center atreet. Thta building la now occupied w t e gro­cery atore, and haa a beer I t WFaa formerly conducted by Pied- flnonte’a father-in-law, but recently araa taken over by Mr. Pledmonte and hla Intention, if. he aecurea a ; Mcenae la to have hla brother-ln-1 kw who haa recently been dla- j charged from the Navy, aa hla aa- aodate. Thia ia a realdence C ■one. ______ ^

Patrols SeekMen on Yacht

JBkigagcd to Wed Moscow Views ' Greece Hostile About Balkans

Town Ends Financial Year With $74^699 Cash Balance

(Continued •S'ram Png'

Peace conference the tempo of attacka In the Moeeow press on the Greek government of Premier Constantin Taaltlnrls has been In­creased to include frequent com-, ment after apeerhes aiffl atate- menta made against Greece

Soviet opinion, as expressed In the preas, has been that Greece Is dominated by an ' extreme right wing, monafchtst government with growing Fascist tendencies and truculent attittfilf toward ne^hborlng Bulgaria, Albania and Yugoslavia.

(Greeka will vote Bumlay In a plebiacite which is turn King George

The report of Town Treasurer snd that the year ended arlth a George H. Waddell for the year cash balance of $74,699.83. ending, Aug. 18, 1948, ahoWf that The recelpU includea $825,000 the bonded indebtedness of the In temporary notes, a total of 12,- town haa been reduced by $34,000 234,084.48.

'_______________ • The report ia aa follows:Balance on hand—August 16, 194.1 ....................................1 85,825.73

Total from Tax Collactor:Old Age Auistanca Taxes Property Taxes ....................

Keccipts

$ 46,962.00. 1,033.443.16

Manchester T n u t Company. Tax Anticipation Notes Aldo Paganl, dbrlf-Town Court, Klhrs and O aU . . ,State of Connecticut—Liquor I-ircnse Fees ..................State of Connecticut—unexpended Hog M oney.............State of Connecticut—E>og Otmage C la im s.................State of Connecticut—Penalty Tax .............................. .Town Depoalt Fund ................... .................................. • •Samuel 'J. Turklngtoii, Dog Licenses ..............................

Il to hit tlTrone ' St at ea Government Fe.leral, Lieu of Taxes

(Ceatiaued Fram Page Oar)

Ouartlsmen who aped to her aide were about to fling a line aboard.

The Guardsmen glimpsed loose lines hanging from one side. Indi­cating they said, that the dingy she carried had been let down and that Jier passengers had abandoned her Bometime before.'

The Verano sank in 80 feat of watar and left tossed on the waves above her a pillow, a door, hatch ladder, and Coast Guardsmen also reportirtl aealng "several” cork life jsekets.

Owner Dowell said he could not account for the sinking. He said tha W rano had a laak "along her kaal,'*' which was to have been re- 'palred at Holland, but that he did net believe this could have been the cause.

There was no sign of a fire or an explosion.

"Wa don’t hays any idea what happened,” said Chief Bosun’s Mata WiUlam Herbst, commanding the Coast Guard lifeboat.

Harbat. while emphaaixing the lo«ch seas ware dangerous, said tha man might have survived In tha dinghy If the amall -boat were In competent hands.

A power launch carried by the Verano had been left behind at Chicago, tha Coast Guard said.

Tha Verano waa valued by DowMl a t $75,000. Ha bought the vaeaal, wM^ had an 18-foot 6-lnch baam. last May from Robert Baumgartner of Milwaukee. 'The aMp waa insured for $85,000 Xlowall aaid.

Dr. Lewie K. Eastman, CSilcago yachtaraan who had sailed Into thla area Monday night, aaid the Verano was familiar to him aa a boat which appeared "very top heavy” and "unwieldy."

Fourtecn-year-old Virginia Mer- TlU, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Patterson Merrill, saw tha Verano to trouble through an Army tele- ■ebpa from her home In Ganges, Bear here.

“About 4 o’clock -Mother and Dad called up from the beach that

Mkw Marjorie Ann WlrtalU

Mr. and lira . Edward Wlrtalla, of 71 Chestnut atreet, have an­nounced the engagement of their daughter, Mina Marjorie Ann Wir- talla, to George B. Urban, son of Mra..8phle Urban, of 717 Garden atreet. Hartford. No date hsa been set for the wedding______

luli boat waa flourredlng out in the lake,” Virginia said, ’’Dad called the Coast Guard and then we watched it through the telescope for more than an hour — till it went out of our light,

"We didn't aee any algna of life on the boat or around it. 'The back and of the boat seemed to be tinklng lower and lower, and the front end Just went up and dowir, up and down. Then we couldn’t aee it any more."

after five years of exile.)Ukrainian Foreign Minister

Dmitri Manullsky’s Paris speech of Aug. 22 and hla subsequent Ul- egram (complaining againstGreece as a threat to peace In the Balkans) to United Nations Gen­eral * Secretary Trygi’e Lie were published In full In the papers. 'The telegram was headllne<! ”PoI- icy of Greek Government Threat-

G. H. Waddell, Selectmen's Cai' h

$ 1.100.405.18 825,000.00

8,122.59 18.880.27

1,330.72 108.72

1.033.14 108.75

5,18().7S 25,845.18

361,345.44

$2,148,2S8~70

curlty.'Publish (.luiriiiw Made

CTommenta In, the papers from Pravda, Ixveatla and Red Fleet down to the amaller publications published the charges made by Maniillsky against Greece: That Greek detachments have been a t­tacking Albanian frontier poets With the aim of provoking a light to aerve as a pretext for seising southern Albania; that the Greek.s have been persecuting Macedonl- sn minorities along the Bulgarian frontier; that the Greek regime has been flouting democratic prin­ciples of government by arranging Sunday’s plebiscite on an unfair voting basis.

(A Moscow radio broadcast i heard in lyindon last night said

Tonight 1 the Mediterranean crul.se ofK. of C. Carnival through Sep t.' American warships was •’timed

2, _ 1 nicely with the Soviet proposalSaturday, Aug. 81 1 for revision of the Monlreiix con-

Aquatic meet at Globe Hollosr j ventlon” governing control of the Pool. ; Dardanelloa.

50th Anniversary CJonvenllon (The Russian proposal — to Hartford District Luther League, share defense of the strategic wa- at Emanuel Lutheran church. | torway with Turkey and narrow

Saturday, Sept. 7 «'ontrol to Black aca powersRoUry Club’t Soap Box Derby. | only—is opposed by Britain, ’Dir-

Total Receipts .................................. ........................................nisbiirsements

Selectmen’s Ordara ........... ................. .................(3ourt Orders ...................................... ............................J . . . . . .Manchester Trust Company Bond P ay m en ts...............Manchester Trust Company Tax Anticipation .Notes

____ Manchester Trust Company—Interest and Discount . . .ens Internatlonal Peace and He- ^e„„ A. Thorp, Treasurer Public Libraries ..................

' Slate of Connecticut—50 per cent Dog Licenses ^ . . . .

Balance on hand—August 15, 1946

Tots) Disbursements ...................

$2,384,084.48

$1,426,754.178,839.11

54,000.00835.000. 00

13,439.8029.000. 000

2,233.03

$ 3,139,365.10 74,699.83

$2,234,084.43

The Doctor Says:vitamins Won’t Cure

Heart Disease

By William A. O'Brien, .M.D.Written For NEA Service »

Spectacular announcements of cures for all the common forms of heart disease with the use of Vita­min E are premature. Investiga­tions have not been completed, and j

It la not likely that the usual varieties of heart disease will be combatted by taking vitamins. If there is an associated malnutri­tion, the patient’s general condi­tion will be Improved by a good diet supplemented by necessary vitamins, even though no definite effect on the heart can be demon­strated.

Vitamins Ar8 No Cure-.\ll Patients with heart diseaseVitamin E Is not known to possfss

specihe healing prOpertl'cs to coih- should not try vitamins for their bat the changes encountered in trouble if it means discontinuing

Tiro Piece Dress

Tuesday, f ^ t . 10 Republican and Democratic pri­

maries at the Armory.J4ept. IS and 14

Country Fair under auspices of Manchester Grange, at State Ar­mory.

Sunday, Sept. 15 Y building open for public in­

spection.Friday, Sept. 20

Kiwanis Ice Show.ikitnrday. Sept. 21

Annual outing, Washington So­cial Club. Rod and Gun Club, Cov­entry Lake.

Sunday, Sept. 22 American Leglim Outing, Gar­

den Grove, 10 a. m. to 7Sunday, i^pt. 20

Welcome Home dinner. Lllbu- j, I i.ihtdy hall.

Thursday, Friday, Dee. 12, IS ' a., ui Ccnlci Con­

gregational church.

Assailant and Culls Disappear Los Angeles—(An— Officer O. L.

Wean woulcj like to-hove his hand­cuffs back—preferably still occu­pied. The policeman said lie picked up a suspect on a used car lot, clamped the cuffs on one wrist, then was felled by a Sunday pilnch to the chin. When he re­vived. his assailant and the cuffs were gone.

heart diseaseHeart disease can develop In con­

nection with hcrl-bcri, a form of Vitamin B dellclency. The condi­tion, which is well known in the Orient, ia uncommon in our coun­try, except for those few cases which occur In alcoholics and In those suffering from serious nutri­tional disorders I pellagra and nu­tritional neurit is I.

Many alcoholics develop starva­tion sicknesa because they try to obtain their calories from alcohol

The Soviet ambussudor. Admiral' and not from food. Body organs K. K. Rodionov, announced today i are seldom injured by alcohol

key and the United States. The bfoudeqat did hot mention that the warships will call at GrecK ports next week.)

Indicaten Deparlure Does ISot Mean Break

Athena. Greece, Aug. 29.—(JT)-

Gifl Aprons

lliat the Soviet charge d’affalrea In Greece would be First Secre­tary G. Tchemossey. Rodionov thus Indicated his departure for Moscow did not mean a break in Sovlet-Oreek relations. j

Paying a farewell call at the { Greek Foreign Ministry, Kodtonov I told ‘the acting foreign m inister,!

^tephanos Stephanopoulos, that nis departure for the Soviet caid- tal was ”ln eifccutlnj) of a mission."

He conferred for 45 minutes with StephanoiKiulos. Iiimiedintcly ul- terward the United States amba »- sador, Lincoln MaeVeagh. enleied Stcphano|)oulos’ office.

Envoy CaMs On Mrlas MacVeagli hud called on Leon

Melaa, director general of the For­eign Office, while the Uussiun en­voy was closeted with Stephanop- oulos. The reason for MaeVeagh's call was not divulged.

Later, Greek Foreign Office sources said MaeVeagh hud point­ed out that two Athens newspap-^ ers, in reporting United States warships were coming to Greece in a courtesy visit, liad attributed to Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson the words "and in case there is any trouble.” MqcVoagh was said to haVe pointed out that the phrase was not included m Achosort's announcement. ^

Note Eases Tension^ Rodionov s note naming a charge

d'affaires and hla 46-mlnute con­versation considerably eased the ten.slon here. Stephanopoulos wa.-* said to h(»vc wished him a plea.';aul Journey and a speedy return.

Widespread speculation had de­veloped concerning Rodionov's de­parture, and some quaiters had connected It with the almo.st siuuil- taneo\is summons to the Yugo.slav ambaasador. Isador Cankur. to come home. Although Cankar'.s re­turn waa officially described a.s not a break in Greck-Yugoslav tela- tlons. the left-wing press here had doMared it was a ’’recall.''

jinlcss there is a.s.soctated starva­tion. It Is prm'Ucally impossible to produce liver eirrhosls in ex­perimental anim.als unless food Is restricted when alcohol is admin­istered. f

Berl-Ilerl le ts SlowlyIndividuals do not develop beri­

beri Heart dbtense until they have been living on a ilcticicnt diet for inonlha.

Thiandn (Vitamin B) heart trouble resembles the other vari­eties of heart trouble, for ahort- ne.ss of breath, swelling of the feet and ankles, and congestion qf the liver are the common complaints.

Berl-bcrl heart dlseaac differs from the other forms In that the enlarged heart can be reduced to normal by eating an adequate diet plus large doses of thlaml.i. But after the condition has been prea- ent’for some time It Is difficult to effect a cure.

Hollp’ood

the treatments which have been prescribed by the physician.

The management of heart dis­ease ia a co-operative effort of patient and physician, and if vita­mins are needed the physician should prescribe them in the proper variety and amounts.

Vitamin supplements are not a cure-all in heart disease or in any other condition, as diets which lack vitamins usually are wanting in other food essentials.

The only exception to this gen­eral rule Is In childhood, when additional Vitamin D is necessary until growth ia completed. (In certain sections, the sun maiy pro­vide a Vitamin D effect during part of th ' summer months, but It Is not a reliable source).

Question: 1 read a magazine ar­ticle recently In which a drug call­ed demerol was recommended to ea.se the torment of migraine. Is a phyalclan’s perscription neces­sary to obtain this drug? I un­derstand that there is (lo danger of addiction from its use.

Answer; A physician’s prc.scrlp- tion is necessary. H. J . Ansllngcr, Washington, D. C., Commi-asioncr of Narcotics, states; "Demerol was placed under federal narcotic con­trol by the Congress because of evidence given .before that body of its dangerous properties. . . . Our flies contain numerous cases of ad­diction involving the use of dem­erol.”

pianist lives In the San Fernando Valley with his wife, Patricia, four black cats and an English setter.

Roiiiier Dischar»;<Ml

By GENE HANDSAKER

Hollywood—The lunchroom at Universal Studio Is the damadest place. You may see bony Dan Dur- vca. the screen heel, ivho Is real* ly a pleasant fellow, playing Uie genial Host . . . Andy Devine bounding through, grinning, be­hind a mighty barrel of body . , .■\l)botl,& CostcUo doing their gun- iind-cracker stunt; Bud fires an Imaginary pistol while across the room Lou standsholding a soup wafer, which he snaps as though the bullet had shattered It.

Or If you care for really appal­ling sights, you may aee Fuxxy Knight cross his eyes. Cross h li eyes and simultaneously pull out ••iraight, with his fingers, his large I l ips of ears.

By Sue BarnettBeallops’sH around make a love­

ly flalsh for the .jacket of this iM utlfully fitting two plecer. See bow the gently flared peplum be­littles your waist, the nlpped-in look provided by wsisUlne gathers.

P u ta m No. 8061 Is designed for idsaa 12.14, 18, 18 and 20. Size 14, abort sleeve, 4 ^ yards of 89-lnch.

For this pattern, send 25 cents, to Coins, your name, address, size daairad, aM tha Pattern Number to Sue Burnett, The Manchester BeaBtog Herald, 1150 Ave. Amer- icast New York 19, N. T.

Sm d an additional twanty-flve eaato for tha Fall and Winter lam e of Fashion—52 pages of the ■nerteet, moot wearable patterns pouH aee . . . fashions by well known Seslgnera . . . special baautjr and home-making sections - . . fraa prtatad iipattem instda

Froiii llVe Hospital

By Mrs. Anne CabotHave both these decorative hos­

tess aprons finished in time for the rash of engaged girl parties which is certain lo break out in September! The "sweetheart" apron at top is made of two thicknesses of red organdie and frivolously frilled tn white eyelet embroidery. TTie bride apron for after-the-game snacks Is lovely in cross-barred muslin with the card symbols appllqued in red and black.

To obtain complete cutting pat­terns. finishing dlirectlons for the 8w«;etheart Apron (Pattern No. 578) and the Bridge Apron (Pat­tern No. 6040) send 16 cents In coin plus 1 cent postage for each pattern, your name, address and the pattern number to Anne Ca­bot, The Manchester Evening Harold. 1160 Ave.- Americas, New

, Toyk 19, N, Y .

, Fuzzy thus demonstrated for me the first face h e ' ever made, achild's budding Thespian Impulse

I w Inch bis horrified mother prompt------— I ly .squelched back home In Falr-

Martin Bonner, 23, of Peacedale., mnnl. W. Va. During hlS high R. I . who was Injured In falling school .summer vacations, in a min-" from a tractor yesterday morning ] stud sliow tha,t toured non-Eng- while Working on the Willvir li.sh-speaking coal mtning districts, Gross highway was discharge,! Kii7.7y got roars of laughter by from the Manchester Memorial tuusting his flexible features Into hospital this afternoon. [ .startling patterns.

Young Bonner was thrown Fuzzy, 45. has made more than from.the seat of his tractor In the | loo western movies ns a stammer- path of another vehicle. The ' ing Cowpoke besides other pictures youth was rushed to the hospital . in assorted comic roles. He re­in the Burke ambulance In an on-1 c, nlly fimshed "Lawless Breed,’* conscious state. | the si.\lh horse opena tn which he

Feeling better yesterday after-; pla.vs Kirbv Grant's devoted pal niKin, X-ra.VB were taken and Bon , and stooge Ho enjoys his undigni- tier was permitted to w«lk | fied niche but h.as the comedian’s around, apparently, fecllnig no-ill ias.su- desire to play heavier effects of nis narrow escape from dnuna, an ambition he realises possible serious Injuries. ami succossfullv—In another new

Martin Gabel, associate produc­er of "Smash-up," has a handsome gold cigarette case which he prizes highly for sentimental and busi­ness reasons. I t ’s a g ift from his wife, Arlene Francis, mistress^ of ceremonies on radio’s "Blind Da“te” program. The former Broadway director grinned: "Whenever 1 was asking somebody to put up hla money for a show. I ’d whip out this expeii.sive cigarette case—which made me look as if I didn't really need the money at all- That lusually cllnchod the deal.” i

lA>st the Election ) -But Won th/ Offtce

IVMit|>oned by Mother

Worthington. Minn. —(JTi - Classified ad fn The Worthing­ton Globe: "Corne to the big cir­cus for kids—by kids.' Trained dogs, fortune readings, sideshows. Across from Morningslde grocery. Mon., Tues., Wed., etc." Cla.ssl- fled ad in the same-paper the next dav: "Attention! -Big'clrd 'is fof kid*—hv kid«. Postponed by the

i

I'mvi-rsal picture, "Her Adventur- oii.s Night."

Ill real life he doesn’t stutter. He isn t fuzzy at all; hlsi gjraying brown hair curves away fairly evenly on .both sides of Ita parL

The bridge of Fuzzy's long noso is flattened from boxing and foot­ball in high school and at the Unl- \crsity of West Virginia, He U lks biiskily out of th- side of his mouth.

This fortnar comre drummer and

Fmichburg, Ky. — i/P) —A blindfolded boy pulled from a hat the answer to a question the vot­ers, the governor and the courts fried to decide.

So Democrat Charles Mann be­comes Menifee county judge.

The question arose on election hight Inst November. The ■ count showed Republican Asa R. Little the winner by alx votes. Mann protested.

During a recount. Little and Mann agreed to call it a tie. On their request. Circuit Judge W. Bridges White entered an order for Little to serve two years and then Mann two years.

But Republican Gov. Simeon W’lllis stepped in. He declared the term couldn’t be divided under the law and issued a commission to Little for the full four years.

Mann protested and brought suit, citing a Kentucky law which requires a drawing In case of a tie. The Court of -Appeals upheld him and the boy pulled Mann’s name from the hat.

Court Asked To Find Nazi

Unils^uilty(CMUnaed from Page Om )

passed by because it is too big; that no criminals will avoid punishment because they are too many.”

Dodd is executive trial counsel for Associate Justice Robert H. Jackson, the V- 8- chief proee- cutor.

Opavk-tion Urged by Jackeoa Jackson earlier had urged the

con^ctlon of 22 indliridual Naai leaders; who with the organisa­tions have been on trial since last November. If an organization U convicted of war crimee, the next step by the Allies will be to Iden Ufy and try' individual members other than the 22 principals In the main case.

Dodd told the tribunal that the organizations, with possibly 3,- 000,000 volunteer members, con­stituted "the political Franken stein of our era, which brought terror and fear to Germany and ■pread horror and death through­out the world.

"The I-eadershlp corps of the Nazi party was Its ^ y . the Reich cabinet its head,” he said, "Its powerftil arms were the Ges­tapo and the SA and when It strode over Europe its legs were the armed forces and the SS."

In ' i s 10,000 word summation, Dodd dealt only with the prosecu­tion’s case against five of these six organizations. The High command, also indicted, will be the subject of a separate argu­ment'by another American prose­cutor.

Treated aa Part of Oeetapo A seventh organization, the SD

secret police of the Retchsfuehrer SS, waa treated as a part of the Gestapo, although It had separate headquarters Dodd asserted it "operated a network of spies throughout the world and Its agents were spying In the United states before Germany declared war upon America.”

L*odd contended that the indict­ed groupa met every teat of crim­inality set up by the Allied char­ter for the trial.

He said they were definite or­ganizations, with voluntary mem­bers, took direct part in criminal conspiracy and war crimes, alma were known by members and at least one of the 22 individuals on trial were involved in the crimes of each organisation.

He estimated the Leadership Cprps had some 600,000 me.mbeni, the Reich cabinet 48, the SA Broum Shirts 1,500,000 to 2,000,000, the black ahirted SS Elite Guard about 600,000, the Gestapo 30,000 to 40.- 000 and the SD secret police 3,000 to 4,000.Have Not Sought In Deny CrimeN

" It ia a strange feature of this trial that' counsel for the respec­tive organizatlohs have not sougfit to deny these crimes but only to shift responsibility for their com­mission.’’ Dodd said.

"The military defendants blame the political leaders for initiating wars of aggrosiflon; the Gestapo blames the soldiora for the murder of escaped prisoners of war; the SA blames the Gestapo for con­centration camp murders; the Ges­tapo blames the Leadership corps for antl-Jewish pogroms; the SS blames the cabinet for the concen­tration camp system; and the cabi­net blames the SS for extermina­tions in the east. . . .

"When the membership of these organizations swore an unconscion­able oath of obedience to Hitler, they united themselves for all time with him, his work, and his guilt."

Dodd aaid 17 of the Nazi leaders on trial were in the Reich cabinet, ten In the Leadership corps, nine In the SS, eight In the SA, and

’two In the Gestapo.Testtmony Called "U ntnie"

Sir David Maxwell Fyfe, British prosecutor, characterized today as "untrue" and "ridiculous" testi­mony presented to the Intcmationl-;. al military tribunal by witnc.sscs testifying In dqfenae of seven Slazl organizations Indicted for crimes a ^ n s t humanity.

Concluding hjs two-day summa­tion, Sir David . asserted that de­fense witnq|Mes had ca.st doubt upon their own credibility by des­cribing the notorious Dachau con-: centration camp as a recreation camp and by detailing the motion pictures, libraries and other fa­cilities allegedly provided for the inmates at Buchenwald.

Angrily he brushed aside de­fense pleas that “millions of mem­bers of the Indicted organizations would remain branded for the rest of their Uvea" If the organizations

Goes to New Haven

Bev. Francts P. Breen

Assignment of Rev. FranclJ P. Breen to SL Joseph’s church, New Haven, as assistant pastor, by Bishop Henry J . O'Brien of the Hartford^ diocese was announced today In "The Catholic TranscripL Father Breen, before entering the Arm^ was a chaplain In December, 1943, was aaslstant pastor at SL Bridget’s church here. He has been on terminal leave at Stannard beach, Westbrook.

Father Breen was chaplain of Campbell council, Knights of Co­lumbus, prior to entering the Army and also active in St. Bridg­et’s Men’s club.

Business Sold By W oodhousc

Corner Soda Shop Pur­chased Today hy Wal­ter L. HennequinFred Woodbouae, proprietor of

the Comer Soda Shop, a t Main and Blssell streets, today sold the stock, fixtures and good will of the biMiness to Walter L. Henne­quin, of 187 Green road, who Is a M itner In the ownership of the Lavallette Shop at Washington and Park streets, Hartford. Mr. Hennequin will take possession of the local shop on Sundby.

Mr. Woodbouse who has oper­ated the shop at Its present loca­tion for the past IS years has no Immediate business plans, but In­tends to take a well-earned vaca­tion. Previous to taking over the present business he operated the Comer Soda Shop at Spmee and Blaaell streets. He was at that lo­cation for seven years and for seven years previous to that h* operated a confectionery store on Pine street. He Is a veteran of World War 1 and waa wounded In action In France.

Mr. Hennequin will be assisted in operating the > Corner Soda Shop by his aunt, Mlsn AdelCk Lavallette, who has had many years of experience in this line.

Attorney Harold W, Garrity handled the transaction for both partlea

Army Fretsa

Over Illegal Uniform Use

— 1Continue Hunt_For Weapons

(Continued from Png* Une)

(Continued From Page One)

year. The problem of enforcing the persent law Is entirely too much for the 2,300 military police cur­rently on town and train patrol In the entire United States.

And the'Army has found from a year’s post-war experience that civilian authorities lack enthusi­asm for trying to pin down the status of men who on the pace of things are either In service or re­cently -discharged.

For 90 days after he quits the service, it is perfectly all right for a GI or an officer to wear his uni­form with full insignia. Technical­ly he is supposed to be on his way home, and there Is no disposition to quibble whether he actually is traveling.

After the three months the law says the uniform must come off— at least its Insignia. But officials acknowledge that despite the law men can beep on wearing their uniforms with relative Impunity and thereby enjoy reduced admis­sion rates at many movies, attend USO shows and travel at reduced railroad furlough rates.

If an MP starts to ask ques­tions. the ex-GI can give him a line of snappy back talk that, would have meant the guardhouse not so long ago. The Army’s po­licemen can’t arrest a civilian, al­though he is authorized to hold a man in uniform for civilian auth­orities if there is evidence of a crime or misdemeanor.

"The only short range solution I see is to make the soldier in serv­ice stand out by his military bear­ing and the general way he con­ducts himself," General Bryan told a reporter..

The Army’s problem Is more acute than that of the Navy be­cause of numbers and the nature of the Navy uniform.

There were some difficulties after World war I, but the dis­charged doughboys then were more eager to discard the wrapped leg­gings and other uncomfortable articles of military clothing of that era.

ed at almost any time, and under­ground organizations have threat­ened reprisals In event the 18 die.

The post office building In Jeru­salem was evacuated again late yesterday after another telephoned warning of an impending bomb blast, which failed to materialise.

(In Paris, French police and Sco'iland Yard security officers both denied reports''published tn London that special measurea bad been token to protect British For­eign Secretary Ernest Bevin fol­lowing discovery of a purported Jewish plot to kill Bevin. These officials termed reports of the al­leged plot “a silly rumor."

(The London reports said 14 Jews were "reported In Paris to have sworn 'to get” ’ Bevin.

To Consalt Weizmann(Three members of the Jewish

agency were reported flying to London frohi Paris today to con­sult Dr. CHiaim Welzmanitl presi­dent of the World Zionist organi­zation, and decide whether to par­ticipate in the London conferences on Palestine’s future, scheduled for Sept. 9.)

A 19th member of the Stern gang,charged with sabotage at the Haifa railway shops last June was brought to trial yesterday on a stretcher. He waa wounded while fleeing from Haifa following the sabotage incident. The mili­tary prosecutor demanded that the man, Jocom M. Alcalay, be hanged with the other 18.

A Jewish agency spokesman, meanwhile, protested the “puni­tive and reprisal" searches by the British, declaring at a news con­ference that searches of 30 ■vil­lages late In June had cost the Jewish settlement losses of $120,- 000.

Geta Free Tazi Ride

Public Records

M aits For Police To find Dog

Chicago—(iP)—it was roll call at the Warren avenue police station when seven year old Mary Howta- na ilashed paat some 20 policemen, pinned a message on the bulletin board, and made a jia s ty to treat Policemen read h«r message:

"Dog lost. If found please return to Mary Howtona waiting a t Mad- laon and. California." When police went to Madison and California they found ^tar>’. She would’nt tell them v h erc rhe lived but said she would "ju.»t wait here until they find my dog.”

were found guilty." I f they are guilty, this can be

no Injustice,” he declared. "It is less, far lesa, than their just desert. I t is the only hope for Germany and the world that her piMple realiae and repent their re­sponsibility fog what has happen­ed.'*

Sir David aaierted that only by acquiring complete control of the state and people were the Nazis able to carry out their criminal aims, and that the Political Lead­ership corps was an essential element In the acquisition of this control.

He said documentary proof had been submitted that the corpe was mobilized "to Insure that public opinion would not only condone but support and encourage" the perzecutlon of Jews and charged that the corps was “up to its el­bows Ih the bloody business of euthanaaia." *'

Warrant e« DeedsBenjamin and Anna G. Klemer.

to Samuel M. and Dorothea.,* S. Breadheft. property on Lenox street

CerUfIcate Of DtotrtbntlonThe estate of Loydon H. Clark,

late of Manchester to Nellie S. Clark, one-half Interest In lot 13 on Lydall atreet.

Marriage Intention Edward George Schultz, sales­

man, of Worcester, Mass., and As- trld Ulllan Hanson of 89 West Boylston Drive. Worcester, Mass., applied for a marriage license in the town clerk’s office today.

New York—(S’)— “Good morn­ing," said the man to the cab driver. "Will you please take me to Penn station?” At Pennsyl­vania station the driver waved away tbe 80 cents registered on the meter. "Bub,” said the cab­bie, "you ride for nothing. I ’ve been driving a hack for 28 years and you’re the first guy who ever Mid good morning to me."

FOR SALETwo family house— 4 and 4 rooms—'S te a m heaf — g a- rajfe— nice Rrounds— very fine neighborhood. On bus line.

Price S I0,000

JONES REALTY113-113 Main S t Tel. 8254

KLEIN^S MARKETIfil CENTER S tR E E T TEL. 3236

"C lWe have a good supply of : Smoked Shoulders^Pot

Roasts— Cube Steaks— Hamburg— Birdseye < Turkeys ami Chickens— Boiled Ham— Pressed Ham— Baked Halt) —Grote and Weigel Frankfurts— Genoa Salami and all kinds of Cheese. .

Ftone Hits Rowboat

Long Beach, N. Y.—(.Pi—Edward J , Blesch and William R. Havilapd looked up from their rowboat about 500 yards offshore yesterday and zaw a amall seaplane descending. They dived into the water and the plane wedged a pontoon In their boat. Aftqr a powerboat disengag­ed the plane. Blesch and Haviland balled out the water and rqwed beck to shore. Alfred Clement, pilot said he was practicing take- oCfb and landings |

"NOTED FINE FOOD"

E X U aiJ.EN T W INE8 ~ U4JUDRS A.ND B EER

BAKED VIRGINIA HAM VEAL CACCTATORE B E E F CUTLET STEAKS AND BROILERS

AND OTHER OOOD THINGS ‘TO Bi^T DANCE TO THE I'UNESOK I'HE **SWINtiSTEKS”85-87 OAR STREET TELEPHONE 8S8S

P & W Double Wasps Power New Airliners

R o c k v i l le'liminary racea. two ' and the final avent.

semi-finala

The Double Wasp Ready for Production For Commercial Field* Aircraft Corp. ReportsA naw and mora powartu) modal

of Pratt and Whlnay Aircraft’a famed Double'Waap engine, work­horse of the war for both the Army and Navy air arma, haa entered the eommarctal field. Known aa the "CA” modal, tha new 2,400 horae- powar angina auccaeds tha famoua Doubla wasp anginas heretofore ueed only by the military forcea

Since the knowledge gained from more than 100 million flight houra la reflected in the current dSslgn of the new Double Waap, it atarto ito aervlca In commercial operations with a mora impraaolv# background of flight experience than any an- ^ e in avlatloh history, Wllltatfi P. Gwlnn, general managar of P ratt and Whitney Aircraft Divi­sion of United Aircraft Corpora­tion, said today. *1710 long-Uma goal o f aircraft engine designers—one horsepower for each pound of weight—Is fulfilled in the current commercla engine.

Powers Transport Planes I'he "CA" Doubla Wasp is being

used to power the three most ex­tensively purchased transport air­craft of the postwar ara; the four- englned Douglas DC-6, the two- engined Martin Models 202 and 303, and the two-engined (TonsoU- dated Vultee Model 240. Ordera from both domestic and forelm air lines for these three SOO-mife- an-hour passenger transports total almost 800 airplanes, involving nearly 1,500 engines, exclusive apart engines. Options hava baan taken for the purchase of more tha.i 150 additional airplanas of these particular modeis.

During the war, earlier versions of the Double Wasp, known to both army and navy flight and maintenance personnel as "P ratt A Whitney Twenty-Eight Hun­dreds," powered such celebrated aircraft as the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt, the Martin B-28 Ma­rauder, the Vought F4U.Corsair, the Grumman F6F Hellcot, the Northrop P-61 Black Widow, the Martin PBM-5 Mariner, the Doug­las A-26 Invader, tbe Lockheed PV Ventura and the Chirtlss C-48 Commando.

At the height of the aerial on­slaught against Japan, the Navy’s Rureau of aemautlcs described tbe earlier "C" series Double Wasp, which used watea injection for emergency combat conditions, as "the most powerful engine In com­bat anywhere In the world."

It was in military aircraft tnat combat and service flight time In excess of 100 million hours ac­crued. Operating condltious ranged from the sub-aero winters of the Arctic to tbe tropical heat ahd humidity of the Southwest Pacific. Frmo thia aerial "test­ing ground" came auggestloha that resulted in engineering changes that lifted the power of this 2804 cubic-inch displacement engine from 1800 horsepower in 1940 to

•' 2100 horsepower without water In­jection, at the time of the Japan­ese surrender. Both army and navy flgflter airplane pilots fre­quently used war emergency pow­ers from the "C” engine to excess of 2800 horsepower, with water Injection, for combat operations.

Approved Water Injection The “CA” Double Wasp is the

first engine to receive an approv­ed type certlfleate from the Civil Aeronautics administration for the use of combat-prov^ water injec­tion to provide additional power in commercial operations. Provi­sion Is made in all "CA” series engines for the use of water Injec­tion, If desired, t^ deliver 2400 takeoff horsepower.'

T ho d r y w ^ b t of "CA” Double Wasp engines, from 2837 to 3380 pounds, puts them In the exelustve one-pound-per-horaepower class.

The weight Includes such Stand­ard equipment as the carburetor, air screen, radio shielded Ignition

. sjrstem, spark plugs, pressure type cooling deflectors, primer tubing and distributor, torquemeter, and provision for jd feathering and re- verBibIe*pttch hydraulic propeller.

... There are four models of the"CA" engine now available for commercial applications, all of them with single-stage, built-in superchargers. TWo models, the CAS and the CA5, have single- speed superchargers, suitable for low altitude' air transport opera­tions or for use with an exhaust driven supercharger for extreme altitudes. The othqr two models, the CA15 and the CA17, hava two- apeed supercharger drives for ef­fective operation at altitudes up to more than 20,000 feetJ The CA15 model has approved ratings for take-offs using the high-spead drive. Thia improves take-^fs from airports situated at high altitudes.

** Power Ratings ListedPower ratings, without water in­

jection, of the CAS and CA15 models are based on the use of 100- 130 gratle fuel: 3100 horsepower for takeoff and 1800 horsepower for continuous operation. The rat­ings of the CAS and CA17 engir/s,

• with carburetor modifications and' with 115-145 grade fuel, have beiui certificated at 2300 horsepower for takeoff and 1900 horse^wer for continuous operation, using the low-speed supercharger drive in the case of the CAI7 engine.

In addition to built-in pravisiona for tha use of 'water Injection, tha "CA" Double WSsp Incorporates many other improvements, most of them pioneered by Pratt A 'W hit­ney Aircraft. They Include two po­sition spark advance to provide fuel economy at cruising powers; 'olnner fuel injection to eliminate

‘ -'ng tendencies due to fuel -"oration in the induction sya-

forged, deep-finned, ,U ^ t I cylinder beads and cylinder

1 cooling sleevies to. provide _:nple cooling under all operating

: conditions.Also a built-in torquemeter to

_ p.rovidv.thc pilot or flight engineer

MMckMttr Vtttrang’ Stnrict Cantflr

•auaatar Mtreat ' (Next to MwMrtpal BulMlag)

TsIaplMi^a 8Stt aafl 5M1

Director—Ifathaa R Catch-aU.

Aastauat Dlraetor — Walts* Ford.

Bacrctory — Margartt Dll- arorth.

CouriooUing: 10 to 12 noon: 1 to 4 p. ■).: 9 to 12 on Satui> day.

Vetarana* Adntntstrauon (Jontact RapraasnUDvaa - Ttaonwa J . ^ s ’seney. Jr„ dally. 8 .80-5:00 p. ro.;. Saturday. 8:30-12; Howard Plank, Tuts. day-Friday, 8:80-6:00 p. m.; Saturdays. 8:80-18. KabaMhUUon and Training

iMflcar— John Fox. avniiable by appotntmani only.

Secretory-Ruth Oow.

with accurate information on pow­er output under all condUiona; cone clutches and creeper desludgers, to the two-speed eniftofa. -to prevent clutch fouling; lead-cilver-todlum beartnge to rcotat erosion and oon' tominatlon while carrying heavy haartng loads and providing excel­lent lubricating charactsriatlca, and second order counterbalances to oppose the second order forces and couples which normally pro­duce vibration along ahd about the vertical and lateral axes of the en­gine.

Tolland Fair1 /W»h V /__

O p ^ s FridayAll Exhibits B p in

Place by Noo^. O ffi- cialfl Announce X

Sperial MeetiM(iuard.(jorapat^ C, s ta te Guard, will

hold a special meeting thia eve- at 8 o'clock at the Town Hall

weekly Francis

New Books Listed At Cheney Library

The Mery Cheney library lists the following new hooks;

FlcUoaBarbara Bower, Miss Ransklll

Comes Home; Owen Davenport, Return Engagement; E . 8. Gard­ner, Case of the Backward Mule; Mrs. B. K. Harris, Janey Jesm s; H. H. Howe, We Happy Pew; John Jennings, Salem Frigate; C. S. 'Lewis, That Hideous Strength; Dorothy Ogley and M. Goodwin Cleland, Iron Land; L. P. Osborne, Through Purple Olasa; Mrs. C. N. Robertson, Unterrified; Mrs. C. O. Weston, Dark Wood.

Noa-Flcttoa'o Battle Stations! Your Navy In Action; R. H. BannetL Compleat Rancher: Stephen Chen, Sun Yat- Sen; M. A. D. Howe, Tale of Tanglewood; Paul Hutchinsqa. New Leviathan; Henry Kaiufman, Pennsylvania Dutch American Folk Art; Roy Meredith, Mr. Lin­coln’s Camera Man; Lewis Mum- ford, Values for Survival; J . A. Omstein, Decorating Unpainted Furniture; John Schwarzwclder, We Caught Spies; Robert and Dorothy van Oelder, American Legend: H. A. Wallace, Soviet Asia Mission; Jack Widmer, Prac­tical Beef Production.

Rockville, Aug.—The Tolland County 4-H Fair will open on Friday and continue on Baturda.v at Vernon Center. A)) exhibits miist be In place by 13 noon on Friday and tha judging will take place from I to 3 p. m. The exhibit hall will open a t one p. m.

There will be ah Intra-town ooftball gxme at 3 o’clock Friday afternoon. Between 6:80 and 8 p. m., there will be a box lunch aup- par, group gamas and singing. Friday evening awards wtU oe presented to the outstanding homemaking and agricultural dun boys and girls. Saturday will fea­ture tbe Dress Review and a pres­entation of 1946-47 atyles.

'M ist Qraqe Rlsley ia tn charge of arrangemento for the euperin- tendento and members bringing livestock to the fair who will stay overnight in Vernon. There will be pony rides, using Mr.. Drigg's ponies and the Willya Jeep Com­pany wilt put on a demonstration ehowlng the adaptability of the Jeep In farm practices. During the fair, sealed bids for the forthcom­ing baby beef auction will be ac­cepted.

Derby Toalght .The second contest for the

championship of Tolland County In tha Soapbox Derby will take place starting at 6 o’clock thia evening on the American Mill Hill in Rockville. The same officials who took part In last Saturday's contest win be on hand tonight, and, It is expected that the event will take about one hour. On Tuea- day Allen Armeltn, the Stafford Springe champion, won out over Lester Bresnanan of Rockville, who hopes to turn the tables this evening. There will be four pre-

nlngin connection with the drill with Commander O atty in charge.

Coatoat S taadlag Tbe committee tn charge of the

Popularity contest belim spon­sored by tbe Rockville Lodge of Bike tn connection with tha Elks’ Charity Fair to be held Septombtr 18th through the 21st today an­nounced the first standing of the

AA conteatanta The following to29.— (SpeciaiU ,jj„ standlnf of the conteetanto to

" ' date; Stella Rdavaxino, 5340 votaa: Betty Hahn. 3640 votea; Marjorie JeSanli, 2840; Eileeir Qraft, 1880; Antoinette Daley. 1300; Marjorie Zlnker, 800; Cecelia EckeK. 300; Joabphine ToUaano, 120. Otbars entered in th * contest include Oeorglanna Bnes, Gloria Orlffto and G e o ^ a Mlske.

The grand prise in the Popu­larity conteet la a Zenith (Combin­ation Radio and Record player which la on display a t the Insur­ance office of Harry Dowding on ttork itraeL Tbe pritea for the girls Include' a diamond ring, wrist watch and one dosen pair o7 Ny­lon Btoaklngs.

E u a a e n e a t AaMMiaead Mr. and Mrs. William Belnbauar

Named .Assistant Attorney General

Hartford. Aug. 29—(F)— Ray­mond J . Cannon, assistant clerk of the Superior court In Hartford county has been appointed an aa- sistont atomey general by Stats Attorney General William L. Had­den. Hadden announced last night that Attorney Cannon’s appolnt- msnt is provlBional and that he will be required to take a compe­titive examination within the next four months. He will be assigned to the State Welfare department. The position pays 14,840 per year.

THE

SHOE BOXWest Hartford Center

“FINE SHOES FROM FINE SOURCES"

Open*Every Night TH 9

FENDER AND BODY WORK

FLAGGSOLIMENE A INC.

684 O atei St. TaL 8191

Of 128 Pitwp«ct street announce the engagement of their daughter, Marvls Marie to Ruseell Thomten Maran, son o( Mr. and Mrs. John B . Jokhson of 48 Clinton slire t, Manchester. Miss Belnhauer is a graduate of the Rix;kvine High school and the HarUord HosplUl School of Nursing. Mr. Maron Is a graduate of tbe Manchester High achool and served 38 months to the United Stotea Army- He will enter Hlllyer Junior' College this tall. No date has bean set for the wedding. ,

Ateend Cam-cntloa * Mambars of the Rockville fire

department who vrill attend the annual'' State Convention to be held at Torrington tomorrow and Saturday include John Sehwara, Hockonum; Edward Priedrich, Fitch; Clarence SsrbMr, Hook and Ladder; Rudolph Oessay, F it- ton Company, together with Chief William Conrady and Asslatont Chief William Flaherty. ,' Sent to Ja il ^

Albert Pfau, 80. of this city plead guilty to non-support and

violation of probation In the Rockville City Court on Wednes­day and was sentenced to 90 days In Tolland' jail by Associate Judge (Jharlaa Underwood. He was ar­rested by State Policeman Arthur A, Koss and Patrolman Alden Bktnnar on Monday in West Hart­ford.

Seont MeetingA meeting of Troop No. 92, Boy

Scouts will be held this evening at 7:15 p. m. in the Union church social rooms a t which time plans for the fall will he discussed.

Appreeektog Wedding Mr. nnd M r* Michael Wcronlk

of 27 Now atrent, Meriden, Conn., announce the approaching mar­riage of their daughter, Gene­vieve Theresa to Waltei j . Kot-

lawskt, son of Mr. and Mrs. John •' Kozlowakl of 17 Morrison street, I Rockville. The ' wedding will 1 take place Monday, September 2nd j at ten o'clock a t St. Stanislaus church to Meriden.

Q i i a d i M

Bg*tiS:3msmm mtU tC i

In tha seventh century, the city of Alexandria la said ta have had 4,000 palacao.

MANCHESTER PLUMBINQ AND SUPPLY CO.

•77 MAIN STR EET TBI..iL .

live us a ftw facu so weesn flt irour mentbly pay- m enu to your kudget.

9 . When appliestlon la ap- provad. atop tn. sign and pick up cash.You oan get a loan on your

■Ignatur* alone. A loan of $100 coeU ISO.40 when promptly repaid in la month­ly eonseeutiva InaUllmenU of $10.06 each.

Loans $10 to 1300. .

FINANCE CO.stale Theater aidg. tad n e a r Tel. 84M D. N. Harey, Mgr.

WITH THE HOT SEASON COMING YOU'LLWANT YOUR SEAFOOD FRESH !

WE HAVE A TASTY AND OCEAN-FRESH ASSORTMENT OF YOUR FAVORITES!

BLUECODSCALLOPSSALMONHALIBUT

e FILLET OF PKRCH e JJTTIJCNEt.'H CLAMS e CHERRYSTONES e COD FTU-ETS

e DRIED COD a BUTTER VTSH e MACKEREL e QUAHOGS e SHRIMP

FRESH SEA FOOD MARKET

1,39 NO. MAIN ST. TEL. 2-1546

--------- Open Thura. T il 9 P. M________

ManiJiester Public Mailcet805-807 MAIN STREET MANCHESTER

STORE CLOSED MQNDAY— LABOR DAY— 0 P E I4 TUES. 8 A. M.

Shop Eorly For The Long Holiday Week End

We Will HoveB EEFPORKVEALLAMBSTEAKSCHOPSROASTSFiaak aad SmekedHAMSFresh sad SmokedSHOULDERS REGULAR BACON CANADIAN BACONCOLD CUTS -

And Oar Famous CORNED B EE F

Bttof Liver—Calf Liver Native Dressed Poultry

CoffeeNo Increase In Price

AbomBarrington Hall \ Beechnut Chase & Sanborn Dul Monte Maxwell House Putnam Royal Scarlet SankaSweden House Sweet Life VictorWhite House White Rose

Picnic ItemsOlivesDill PicklesSweet PicklesRelishj^ustardCatsupChili SauceMarmaladeJam sJelliesPreservesGinger AleMoxie

BAKERY DEPT.LARGE DUTCH APPLE CAKES FRESH BLUEBERRY CUP CAKES PLAIN and SUGAR RING DONUTS DELICIOUS COFFEE RINGS

Ea. 45c 6 for 25c Doz. 29c

Ea.29cCampbell Tomato Soup 3 cans 2 3 c Dovalettes, 2 boxirs, 5 0 0 ea., 4 S r

Wiscos Peas . ................2 Cant 2 5 cWax Paper, 12 5 ft. roll . . . . . 17c

X inedom funsral oi

\\

Bu r k e ©V.'/t

' • S V. - H( n 98

hmsyn*.CSMeGikH

FULL TIME FEMALE HELR WANTED TO WORK DAYS

BERGREN^S DAIRY844 MAIN STREET MANCHBSTIR

• Sw Htary Gryzb—Mgr.(Girls Retumint To School—Do Not Apply)

Call S141— FOR—

C IT Y CABSAFE, COURTEOUS DRIVERS

OPEN AI.L NIGHT

Heavy SiaarifPoiRMtiU*

PLAN YOUR 8HOPPINQ EARLY

STORES* CLOSED A U D A Y MONDAY SEPT. 2nd

ick Roast!: RibJlo st Brisket Fresh Hams Fresh Picnics Chickens Frankforts Luncheon Halihut Haddock Haddock

Heavy Sia«f Baal'Tsndar I Juicy Ll'

FANCYMILDLY CUtED

Wtiela or Eltiiar Hill L I'

GRADe A ROASTING 4 le 5 POUNDS LI

SKINLESS

MEATSUCEO-SPICIO U i

PRESH SLietD

FKSH CAUGHT.

FILLITtFRESH CUT

U l

U

NAMsuae

' IKAUSE ITS LUN AND mSHlY mOUNO

H AM BU RSY*s—Uoa and lr*ihly ground— ior outdoor grill or vour own kltekon range this holiday wask- ond. Enjoy thot good "squoro-. nool (••ling’’—th* sotUloction Ihdl oonisf from ■•rvjng A&P

Hamburg.

ROLLS o°.13:SUGAR-NUT LOAFtt^ 33* CRESCEHT 'SS? 39* RAISIN fOUND CAKE <&' 29* MANBLEPOUND

U .

CAKE A||g I LI CUT X V SUPER MARKETS

CANNED JUICES HRAPEFRHIT

JUICENO. t • • • •

V n .w M t. CAN I I

ORAHBE JIICE

nwM* NO. J m*g•WMI. CAN 2 1

4t OI oon He VFRESHNESS

ftEADY TO EAT JUMBO SIZE

HONEYDEW uitoMU.S. NO. 1 LARGE size, ELBERTA

PEACHESU. S. NO. 1 URGE SIZE, WEALTHY

APPLESCALIFORNIA FANCY BARTLEH

PEARSNATIVE PASCAL

CELERY ^CALIFORNIA URGE SIZE 360’s

LEMONSIcs Cream

C0M1S FIRST!2 9 '

6 . 73* oof 84*

x r a n a • oz a i fM— e Whliemin Bmili • 01 9 f t lO B IS ia wMi,ri«ki.d JAA 2 D

iHttarE ttt

raezMeaiAMciiv

•UNNVSHOOKraezH—lAROf

EACH

3 LBS 29**

3 . 1 . 2 5 '

2 ^ 2 3 -

laaaPeai^A - r t M NO, soDanis Blsaah Mella-Wbeat Cera Flakes Snasyfi McaPiffa

JAN

2 ?a°n2 25**c“A*a"1.38W I T *•.•o'*/18*

• UNNY. a Of riKLO FKa

TamauJaIca CrapefnitJHice OraagaJalca PraaeJilcaCrapefraltJalce Cider Vhwgar Cider Vtaegar

4« Of I CAN VwMt.4* OZ4.0Z g je

gUARTCOT 28* Ufiawt A l l 4§ 0t O r

Ann Pma ilA lOAL juaAnn Pag* 27*

Ft#.Una. CAN

•UNDW kCT

HALF OAl.

5*iBraABa flmanlOF 10 |iP

5*

SaltaBa Molastet^*or 52*■uNNvriet.0 to Of •«•

4ViC.RKO

DOZ

Wax liaataiaptivf

TOIICT SOAP CAKtS

LUX FLAKES LARGEPKC

"WhMi Avallabi*'*

PALMOLIVESOAP

Paacake Flair fiardeaRelitbrorfYRU*

X * 83*QUARTZ H K 8DOZ a a *

« Ideal Jars Ideal Jars MaiMJart

BATH PALMOLIVE SUAP5* SIZE 10 .."Whan Avallabi.” 3 20*"Whan Awaliahl.’*9* DUZOUZ DOES IVWYTHING i TATDNUTSPOTATO UTS126*38* LARGE OQt PKG AU“WHan AwaliRbl.” 2 BOXB 25*0* OXYDOLWASHES WHITE WITHOUT ILEACHING NOCTILwATttsoFmnt3* LARGEPKG IbU**WlMn Avallabi*** Id OZ 4 Oa ncG 1 0C 4F> A C 1 F 1 C TEAC O M P A fT H E G R E A T A T L A N T I C

All oriaaa auMlaat ta mgrbat ahanoaa. Wa raaarva rlaht ta limit auaittUlaa. Prieaa affactiva far this ara«a

r-pT—

Page 6: Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de

1IANCHE3TKB EVENING HERALOb MAMCBSai'ER* CONWi, TMURBDAT, AUGUST 29, 194S

^ t io n Agrees to Let Court Have Some Say

l iE s Joining United;! Biaiions Action b An* other Step Away from

Tolland

League Season ,To Be Longer

Soap Sox Derby Winners To See Midget Car Races

U n . Unooln Smith and «Uu(b- ter, Sally Ann Smith who have been gueata at the home of Mlta Florenoa Meacham and aeveral other of Tolland relattvea have re­turned to their home in Arlington. Va.

Mra. Thelma Price Bartm and

M ajor League Teams to P l.y 1 6 8 Schedule 1 9 4 7 ; Board Approves

'^Ighi wlhn^ra in the third an-e the race and they Immediately ac- win be given «pted the plan.

b o b t io nBy mono Martow

WSaUi«ton, Aug. » —laV-‘IW*geoatry haa agreed to let the _______________WMld conit have aoma'aay over uttie aon, John of Kent; and Harrla

of our problema with other pHce of 8 t Peteraburg. Fla., weregueata of Mr. and Mra. Erneat

Thla. Ukf our Joining the Unit-1 Monday, Aug. 26. ad N atim laat year, la anothw attp away from laelatlon. It SiSfns *5 yearn to make

The court'B purpoae la to try to Mttle interhatlonal dlaputea—rle- gal dlaputea—by international law.

^ thla legal meana. of ending a gitarrel natlona may bo lew In-

-dUwd to leap at one another a throat.

Fart of tJ. N. MachineryIhe court—called the Intemv

' Ubnal Court of Juatlce—la part of the United Natlona machinery for keepl^ peace.

All natlona which became mem- ben of the United Nations auto-

bacame memben of thecourt.

But only thoae natlona which gMCifieaUy agreed to let the court Sm t authority over tome of their

obtema could aiM, or be aued. Inproitha court.

Twenty natlona, including thla country and Britain, have agreed to accept the court'a authority, or juiladlction.

Othera—like Ruaata. China, m a c e —have not agreed, yet.

ftuaala couldn’t ; walk Into the oourt and auaS(8. nor could we aue Ruaala, elnce we accept the court’s Jurladlctlon ' but Ruaala doesn’t.

Mrtct UmUa ea JarlBdIettonBut we’ve put pretty atrlet lim­

its on the kind of JurladlcUon the court can bava over ua.

For asample: The court haa no authority over problems which we oqimM w d o n ^ e , Uke Urlffs or Immigration.

Wa’va agreed to, let the court have JurladlcUon over legal dls- THitvf only. For example: Inter- prating iivea ty If a dispute arose with another country.

(The ahooUng down of Amaii- ean It Yugoslav airmen,for Instance, wouldn’t be a prob­lem for the oourt We'd take It to the U. N. Security council

(There’ll probably be plenty of aigumenta over what la a case for the court and what Isn’t )

Baekgramd of Declaian Here’s the background of our

decision to let .the court have Jurla­dlcUon, .

A world court called the Per- naiMat Court of IntemaUonal JuaiiCOt ,waa aet up aide by aide

tha Old League of Nations In1931.

The Senate kept up out of the League and the court although every president since 1920 had nrged that we Join the court

n a t court’s purpose was the ■ame as the present one.. To Join, a twb-thlrda vote of the

Senate was necessary. No more than a majority of the aenatora ever v o M to Join. We atayed out,

Ihen U. N. succaedad the League e f Nations. The U. N. aet«up the new world court as aucceaaor to the old court.

Has Id Judges The new one, Uke the'old one,

meets Ui Tha Hague. Holland. It hM Id Judges, chosen by U. N flrmn a group of outstanding world lawyers.■ (Oreen H. Hackworth la the

American on the court. No nation can be represented by more than one Judge.

(The Judges are supposed to be above naUonallam and give their dem ons Impartially.)

Just as in the case of the old court, to accept the new court’s aay-ao. a two-thirds .Senate vote was neadad. This came Aug. 3.

Thla week President Truman is- Bued What te called a declaration Baying we accept the court’s juria- dlotion.

This was tha formal, final action closing the deal for ua

Stevenson Named' To Publi^t^ PostWashington, Aug. 29—W)—Ed­

ward Ford Stevmaon of East Nor- wajk. Conn., waa appointed today dlTMtor of motion pictures in the

Sbllcity division of the Republic- National conunittee, It was an­

nounced by CarroU Reece, the na tional chairman.

Stevenson, who served during the war In the ^ Army Pictorial sendee is a lieutenant-c(^onel in the Signal' Corps reserve. For many years before rejoining the Army, he was president of Visu- m p h ie Pictures, Inc., of New York.

Lieut. CoL Stevenson la the hus­band of Suxanne Silvercruys Stev- enaon, a candidate for nomination far f^ grea a from the Fourth Con- grrialonal district of Ck>nnectlcut

Mrs. Margaret Hamlin of Waab- ington, D. C , and two children are guests of Mrs. Hamlin’s parenU. Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. BarUatt and sister, Miss Catherine BarUett

Fredertc Metcalf of Niantlc waa a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ablal MatcaU and other ToUand relatives.

ToUand Faderated church held the annual "Home Coming Day” Sunday, Aug. 25 with over 200 present at Uw morning service which waa conducted by tha pastor of the church. Rev. Phillip King with Rev. George B. Brookes of RockvUle as the speaker. The text waa taken from Eseklel 3:10. A box luncheon on the lawn with cof- fe# served by the church Imdlea’ Society. The business meeting was held at 2:00 p. m. with the presi­dent, Harold B. Waldo of Olaaton: bury presiding. Mlaa Bernice Hall of ToIUnd. secreUry, reported on the last meeting. Mrs. Ruby B. Lovern of Vernon, treasurer, made the report. It was voted that thp asosdatlon make a contribution to the community building fund. The cane awarded to the oldest resident of ToUand waa sent te Mrs. Ida Grover who waa 91. In her absence her daughter, Mrs. Ellen Burke re­ceived the cane and flowera for Mrs. Grover. Officers elected were: President, Charles H. Leonard, Tol­land; vice president. Rev. Phillip King, pastor of the ToUand Feder­ated church; secretary, Mlaa Carol Needham of Tolland; treasurer. Mra. Florenoa Bowers Shearer of Manchester. During the afternoon l^rogram Mlaa Carol Needham aang I two aolos and there were familiar aongs.

Mlaa Helen Johnson and friend of Bridgeport, Ck>nn., were gueata Friday o f Mr. and Mra John H. Steele.

Mr. and Mrs. Percy Barber and daughter, Catharine Barber, of Manna, Pa., were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. L Ernest Hall and daughters, Bernice and Alice Hall.

Mlaa Barbara Warren of Mon- aon la a guest of her avmt, Mlaa Florle Bishop Boweiing.

Mr. and Mrs. W. Sumner Simp aon were week-end guests of their

arenta. Dr. and Mrs. Samuel llmpaon

Chicago, Aug. 29— Major League baseball owners, in an un­precedented move, have voted to put players on the game's new gov­erning body and they will have a voice In tha formulation of the game’s rules and poUclea.

American and National League club boasea announced after a two- day meeting yesterday creation of a seven-mam ber executive council, which WUI Include a pUyer repw- aentattva for each league. In addl- lion to Um formation of tho gov* emlng body, top news to coma out of the magnates’ meeting with Commissioner A. B. Chandler was the adopUon of a 168-game pUylng arhwiMie for 1947 and approval or ■II oontractural demands asked by

***^Ial’947 season will be the long­est In major league history. Part­ing April 10 and ending Sept. 28. Tha new aeaaon will be 14 gamea longer than the present IM-game slats, which has been since 1904,. Admlaalon of the players to the new execuUve council waa the out­growth of two recent offenalvea— the attempt of Attorney Bob Mur phy of Boaton to unionise the ath- fetes and the talent rslda carried on by the Mexican League.

The new council, aleo will In elude Chandler, Ford Frick and WIU Harrldge, prealdents of the National and American Leagues,

anyesterday. The youngsters will be the guests of the West Springfield Speedway management at the midget car races In West Spring- field on Satuiday evening, Septem­ber 14. The derby will be run the

The Rotary Club will transport the boys to and from the track. All youngxtera will be given box seats, will be admitted to the pita, lit III their favorites cars and meat the famous drivers. In addition it has been arranged to have the track photographer, B o b b y

previous Saturdky under the apon-1 Brooks, Uke pictures of the boys sorMtlp of the local Rotary Oub. I with Georgle Rica, Bill Schindlar.

A gala affair has baan planned {Jeep Colkitt, Len Fanelll and othar by the managemant of the Speed- sUr drivers.

ay through the efforU ef three local men. Attorney Jay Rubinow,Mai Barlow and Al Warner. These men conceived the Idea to invite the boys up to the Mg races and to show them a good time.

The praposltlon was given A-1 condition. A record breaking Rotary Club officials In charge of I number ef entries la assured,

The Te Hl-Y dance waa spon­sored by the young people of Tol- lapd at tha Town Hall Saturday evening. August 24.

Mra. Eva Pearson of Hartford, Mrs: Ruby Loveiin of Vernon, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Comtna of Worcester. Mass., Mra. Doris Brown Luddlngton of Hamden, Conn., and Robert Loverln of New Haven, Conn., were Sunday gueata

Mr, and Mrs. L. Ernest Hail and family and attended "Old Home Day’’ exercises.

The Federated church achool annual picnic was held at Colum­bia lake Monday, August 26, with 100 present to enjoy an Ideal day for such an occasion. Ira Wilcox's bus left the church at 10 o'clock with a happy load of young, peo­ple ready for a full day of recre­ation. Swimming, boating for old­er members, with 'other water sports for the younger aet. A deli- clous pot luck dinner was provid­ed with a variety of tempting foda. Mrs. Edith Gunther, Carol Needham, Luther Barnard, Kent Bushnell, Richard Reeves and Margaret Meacham were the pic­nic committee. A stand on the grounds provided soft drinks. Ice cream and confectionary for all who desired to patronise It. The picnickers returned to their'homes in late‘ afternoon feeling the get- together In church and school proved a profitable and pleasant gathering.

respectively, and owner represen- tativea Larry MacPhall of the Naw York Yankees and Warren Giles of the Cincinnati Reds.

The method of salecUng a play er from each circuit to alt with the council la stUl to be determined.

The new council, which will be formally seated ehorUy afUr writ­ten signatures of the 16 club own­ers are obUlned. will supplant the old advisory council whose mem­bership Included Oommlaaloner C3iandler. Harridge and Frick.

•Thla new council.” Chandler "will be empowered to make

legislation giving baseball a gov ernlng body the year round to am end rules and sWve problems until the approval or disapproval at the Joint meetings of the two leagues."

The magnates yesterday also unanimously approved all contrac tual demands asked by players In their “collective bargaining" move, including a yearly minimum salary believed to be gfi.OOO. Other pro­posals approved Included a pension plan, modification of the 10-day re lease ’plan, extension of post-sea son exhlblUon play from 10 to 30 days and Incidental spring training expenses, believed to be 525 per player a week.

Chandler said that unUl the new council Is formed, negotiations be­tween owners and players will con­tinue to be conducted by the pres­ent policy committee.

I Promoter Warner stated that I they will go all out to give the boys s !;ood time. With this added

I feature In mind, youngsters la this year’s soap box darby are expect­ed to make sure their cars are In

Hebron

Bamborg Plana Approwid

Hartford, Aug. 29— — Direc­tor Richard Martin of .the State Water commission has been noti­fied by the War department that Army engineers have approved plans for Improvements and cove landing at Hamburg but have re­ported unfavoral3ly on proposed Improvementa at Branford harbor. The engineers reports were filed with the Federal Board of En­gineers for Rivers and Harbors at Washington.

done over Europe. He oucceeded in getting engineer James Brown of Albany, N. Y„ and turret man Richard Boudreau of Saundersvllle,Mass.

Harold L. Gray, vateran of World War 1, (uid president of the Hebron Civic Council, read « letter from Ira C. Turshsn, who has been very active In war work as well as In civic affairs. The letter reads:To the Hebron Civic Council, the

Returned Veterans and tbe Folks of Hebron:

”1 sincerely regret my inability to be here with you as 1 hsd hoped to be, on this hsppy snd memor sble occsslon of saying ‘Welcome Home’ to the returning boys snd expressing deep sympathy to the kin o f those for whom the fortunes of war bad decreed a different fate.•T e part played by you ' in the great achievement is beyond my powers to dwell on. We must leave that to historians. In comparison to what you have done our little Job at home seems Indeed small; yet withal we can truthfully. If not boastfully, s a y that Hebron through Its council fulfilled In full measure every task put before us by Federal and State war agencies Hebron, too. has been fortunate through the years In producing men of quality and ability to fill many high offices of our state and who have helped place Connecti­cut among the leaders of the great stales .of our union. For these, and many other good reasons, I am sure it Is gratifying to you. as it Is to me, to be counted In as a He bronlte.

"And now that you boys are back with ua I am sure that 1 am not alone in the hope that you stay among us and help make Hebron ever^hing that its well wishers want It to be. In closing I hope that you will all have a real good time and that you will long re­member this day of days in He­bron's history.

Ira C. Trurshen.”Mr. Trurshen, who is proprietor

of the Amaton Grain Mill and has been a foremost citizen of Hebron for years, is slowly recuperating from a serious heart attack.

Mr. Gray presented well over 100 certlflcate» to U\ose who have done Important work in the coun­cil. Mrs. C. D. Way then called for three cheers for Mr. Gray for his work during the war in the War Council, covering more than four years. Mrs. Way was with the overseas workers in World War I.

Throngs of dancers and those who came to look . on filled the green up to capacity for the block dance, opening at 8 In the eve­ning. It has been said that per­haps Hebron haa never seen so large a crowd gathered in Its midst in all lU history. There were approximately 400, more or less, and all parking space was filled with cars. The green was lighted artistically with colored electric lights, and arrangemonU were made to guard against traffic coiUj» — Ing through. Music was by the Barnstormers, or Warner'a Orches­tra. as also known. The dancing kept up 'till about midnight, with an orderly crowd and no friction.

First Selectman Wlnthrop S. Porter presented the $1,000 fund raised for the returned veterans, during the afternoon exercises, and It was accepted with thanks by a representative of the veterims. the fund has been raised In vari­ous ways for some time pgxt, by holding card parties, auctions, dances, etc., or by donations. , It

to

Ths weather for Hebron's Wel­come Home Day for Its World War veterans Saturday, could not have been more propitious If ordered es­pecially for the occasion. For days preparations had been going op and a big excavation had been made for the clambake which had been planned. However Just at the last minute, as one might put It, word came that the clam order bad fallen through;, owing to some sort of a strike of truckmen. Effort was .made to procure broilers for the dinner but one might as well have asked for solid gold. So baked fisb had to take the place of the former orders, and It was pro­nounced a top success by the 250 or more who sat down at the groaning tables set on the lawn of the library grounds. Other Items of the menu were baked white and sweet potatoes, lots of green corn, hot dogs, watermelons and mu.sk- mclons, soda and beer," beshlcs oth­er good things.

Thirty seconds of silent prayer was called for, the people as.vm- bled all standing, after which the Rev. H. R. Keen, . a veteran of World War I. asked the blessing It was estimated that there wereabout 50 veterans of both wars , ________present. They had their dinner j, expression of gratitude free, while civilians bought tickets, gervdeemen for the part they

Bolton has been elected manager of the All-Star team. The league has been auccessful through the seeson and It Is planned to h ^ e severel new teeme in thf circuit another year. Hebron hae played 10 games this season, losing five and gaining five; A league game played at Ashford, Sunday, wax- unfinished. The AU-Stars k > A '^ Lebanon, Sunday by a scorp^6>4.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert sC Porter and two little glrla are spending a vacation with Mrs. Porter’a father, Gibson Preatpa, in Brooklyn, N. Y.

Mra. Albelri Hilding and pert of the family are at Point O’ Woods Beach for the week.

Professor and Mrs. Eugene Parker Chase, their aon-ln-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Trim­mer. also their second daughter, Catherine, are in Hebron for the week at the Chase summer home, "Shadow's Mark,” on the Bolton road.

Jones-FarrisSt. Peter’s Episcopal church waa

the scene of a very attractive wed­ding Sunday at 2:30 p. m.. when M*bb Corene Jane Farris of Lewis­ton. Me., and former CPO Henry Alped Jonea, son of Frani Jones of Hebron, were united In . mar­riage,. the Rev. H. R. Keen per­forming the ceremony, with t ^ double ring service. Mips Clafre Brunnell of Worcester, was maid of honor, and Alfred Hutchinson of Hebron was best man.

The bride was attired In white mousaellne-de-aote, with finger-tip veil, held In place by a pearl tiara. She carried a bridal bouquet of white roses. The maid of hohor wore aqua blue net over satin and carried pink roses, also wearing a headdress of pink roses.

The bride la a graduate of Pur­due University, Indiana, and of the N.U.A. School In Maine. She studied aviation mechanics and be­came an Instructor In that field.

The groom Is a graduate of Windham High school and studied aviation mechanics for three years when he enlisted In the Navy. Both are employed in Pratt and Whit­ney. Following their return from a wedding trip they will make their home at Apuiton Lake, In the Klrkham cottage.

The bride and maid of honor were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll W. Hutchin- aon for a day or two before the wedding.

Following the ceremony, the newly married couple received congratulations from the large congregation witnessing the event, standing on the church steps. Mrs. Lewis W. Phelps played the wed­ding march.

The bride's going |way dress waa of navy blue gabardine. Hebron people are pleased to have the two popular young people de­cide to live in the community. Both are members of St. Peter's church.

Holland Hurls Four Hitter

Pilches West S id e , Old Tim ers 4o 2 to 1 W inAgainst Yannigans

» ■ ' ■Ray Holland allowed only four

bits laat night and tbe West Side Old Ttmers won the rubber gams in their aeries with the Yannigans by a score of 2 to 1. The contest was plsyed for the benefit of Hank McCann, Old Timer first baseman who wss Injured two weeks ego.

’n e winning run came in the fifth inning when Bingo Sturgeon leid down a perfect bunt to squeexs In Gyp Gustafson from third bese.

Ernie Moake allow^ only six hits in hurling for the loeere.

A special volley bell jnatch win be played tonight at the West Side at 6 between the Old Timers and Yannigans. The former won the first match.

The box score: ^Old ntnerS (3)

AB R H PO A E . 2 1 1 2 0 0 . 2 1 1 7 0 1 .2 0 1 0 0 6 . 1 0 1 0 3 0 .3 0 0 1 1 1

Swede Salmonson Leading Gas House Gang Slugger

Outfielder Swede Salmoneon o f] Following are the official batting Moriarty Brothers State League | uiJ fielding averages for the 1946 teem won the team indlviduel tet- ting championship with a fine .367 average to nine games. Ths Ges House Gang recently completed their regular league schedule en d ; May woiuid up in fifth place. The of- < Kinel ficlar betting and fielding aver'

Urban

Ford, cf . . , . Gustafson, c . Wilkinson, rf -Holland, p . . Sturgeon.. 3b Mihoney, If . Wright. 88 . .p u t t , lb' . . . .Massey, 2b .

' 18 3 6.18 5 Yannlgana (1)

AB R ’HPO A

8

EMartin, 3b ___ 1 1 0 1 0 0Warren, aa . , . . 3 0 1 2 1 0Bellie, 2b . . . . . 3 0 2 0 2 0Surowiec, If , . . .S 0 0 1 0 1Taggart, cf . . . . 8 0 1 1 0 0Phelon,'* lb . . , . 2 0 0 5 0 1H. Frye, rf . . . . 2 0 0 0 0 0W. Frye, c . . . . 2 0 0 4 1 0Noske, p . ........2 0 V 0 1 2 0

ages were compiled by team sta- ticiim fOeorge ^n is.

Close' on the heels of the stocky flychaaer was pltcher-outfteldcr Lefty Jedxlnlek. Playing in twelve of the teanriB games. Lefty pounded enemy pitching for e .349 mark to rate the runnerup spot on the team.

Johnny Urban led the pitchers with four wins against no setbacks. Frank Kinel and Jackie May each won one end lost one start while Jadxiniak won two and dropped three decisions.

In addition to placing second lix team batting. Jadxiniak collected the most hits, 15. drove in the most runs, 10 and banged out two home runs to lead the club.

Salmonson Jadxiniak . David . . . . Berube . . . Dixon Saverick Horvath .. Zwick .G. May .. Urban . . . Wlerxblcki SurowiecCobb ___J. May . . .Hutt ........Kinel . . . . ' Ermtsch ..

21 1 4 15 6 2Innings: *

Yannigans ................. 160 000—1Old 'n m e rs ................. 100 Olx—2

Stolen bases. Warren; sacri­fices, Gustafson; double plays. Holland to PUtt to Sturgeon, Noske to Warren; left on bases. Old Timers 6, Yannigans 3; bases on balls, Holland 2, Nosks 1; strike-outs, Holland 6, Noske 4; winning pitcher, Holland; losing pitcher, Noske: umpires. Pagan!, Stratton, Olds; scorer, G.- May; time, 1:30.

season:Pitching Becorde

W. L.. 4 0 . 1 1 . 1 1

Jadxiniak .................... 2 3Top Five Batten

Salmonson........ .....................JadxiniakDavid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Berube .....................Dixon ....................................

Most Runt Batted |eJadxlnak........ ......................Saverick ...............................Suroweic .............. ...............

Most HiteJadxiniak .............................Berube, Z w ick .....................

Most DoublesZwick .................................Suroweic ............................

Most TriplesSurow eic...............................

Most Homs Runs____'• Jedzinlak ..............................Bat.Avs. 2bh Sbh hr rid eb po a e.367 1 1 0 5 0 16 1 2.549 2 1 2 10 0 11 10 0 .333 1 0 0 2 0 17 1 1.298 1 0 0 2 1 98 11 2.292 1 0 0 2 0 23 9 1.286 1 1 1 8 1 22 23 8.273 1 0 0 1 0 6 6 2.255 3 1 0 1 1 14 23 g.250 0 0 1 2 0 lO 7 0.250 1 0 0 2 0 2 4 0.250 0 0 0 1 0 15 0 1.222 3 2 0 7 0 23 1 1.222 1 0 0 0 0 2 3 1.175 1 0 0 1 0 19 5 4.129 0 0 0 1 0 62 1 3.111 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 0.000 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 0

Fet.1.006-6, .900 ^ AOO .400

/

. . 2 Fid. A n . .895

1.000 .947 .982 .924 .849 .867 A22

1.000 1.000 .938 .960 .661 .857 .955

1.000 1.000

20-conference meeting last month didn’t really accomplish anything, but if the whole college group starts hollering next winter they may decide to give the NCAA po­lice power . . , And, If It should happen, this writer would like nothing better than to Usten In.

star, plans to play the American winter circuit to gain experience from the pros . . . With a 168- game schedule for next year It seems that Instead of the Pacific. Coast League becoming a major, the majors are becoming another

■Coast League.

Sports Roundup

Gjtts Commendation Ribbon

Berlin, Aug. 29—lA")—Eight of­ficers and enlisted men from tlic U. S. Army’s Berlin district forces were awanled the Army commen­dation ribbon yesterday for out­standing services rendered since ■V-E Day. They Included: Master

Members of the Sub-Deb club scrv-1 ed. and Mrs. Clarence E. Porter, mother of four service men, all of­ficers.-headed the arrangements.

HebrOT has two majors on its list of service men, Howard E. Poi - ter and Bradford Smith, also a winner of the Congressional Med­al of Honor, William James John­ston of Burrows HUl, a number of lieutenanta. sergeants and many

Paaquel to Sue Owen

have played during the long and bitter struggle.

U Is left to the veteran* to de­cide what they will do with ths fund, and various plans have been suggested, but nothing as yet | definitely decided upon. .

The managers and officers of | the Inter-County League have de­cided to play a post season bass-

Spnngfield. Mo., Aug. 29—(iP'— Crossing the Rio' Grande, already an expensive pastime; will cost Mickev Owen another $127,500 if Jorge Pasquel, Ihe Mexican base­ball overlord, can collect it,

Pasquel sued the Missouri far- rrier and former Brooklyn Dodger now barred frem organized base­ball for that amount yesterday In Federal court. Pasquel claims Mickey violated a 5-year contract to play In the Mexican League. He asked $100,000 damages tor the alleged breach of contract and the return of $27,500 he claimed was advanced to Owen as salary and bonus. ,

By Hugh Fullerton. Jr.New York, Aup 29 — —

What's this boxing business com­ing to? . . . Welterweight champ Marty Servo spent a lot of money acquiring the title and has paid out more good cash for two tune- up fights preparatory to defending it against Ray Robinson next week . . . And now Robinson comes along with the statement that he'll contribute hie entire pu>se minus training expenses and, the manager's cut, to the Police Ath­letic League . . . Servo "owed himself $9,000’’ (as Manager Al Weill explains) after lifting the crown from Red Cochrane because of a guarantee to Red. Then he took on middleweight Rocky Graxlano for a "money” fight and had the expense of an operation on his nose added to the costs. Since then he has had to pay Jim­my Aneat and Bobby Lakln to fight him at Army hospitals be­cause he wasn't permitted to make tuneup fights . . . Do you won der that Weill claims: "Marty ain’t going to let that title go easy..’’

What Everyone Knoccs The verbal exchange between

Mississippi State and Army over Shorty McWilliams, while It’s tough on a good kid who also is a good football player, may dear the college football atmosphere a bit If the name-calling continues until next wlntsris National Col­legiate A.A. meeting . . . That

One-Minute Sports PageAlthough they escaped from

St. Louis, the Dodgers aren't safe yet. Three of the eight shutouts they have absorbed this season were at (Chicago’s Wrigley Field

. . And It leads you to wonder about the quality of amateur golf when a Brooklyn detective who swings cross-handed cops the New York sectional qualifying honors. At least there'll be a lot of new names In the Baltusrol tourney

. . Two former Iowa football captains, Dave Schmidt (1945) and Warren Reigle (1944) will be bat­tling for starting jobs at end of this year’s Hawkeye team . . . . George Preston Marshall, who ruined all those gags about the Washinip: done" Redskins when he

sold his laundry, gives this ex­planation: "I figpired with salaries skyrocketing the way they are, the .players would wind up with my laundry pretty soon, anyway, so I beat them to the punch.’’

other minor officers, besides a ho.st, bail game between the Colchesterof privates. Four or five of our Hebron soldiers, to our deepest ro- gret,'-were made a sacrifice for their country. *

Former Lt. Lloyd Gray of the r 8. aviation forces, made an effort to get, together as many as he

Sergt. John Rustigian, 200 Flat-! could of his crew on The firry hush street, Hartford, Conn. ] Engle In which valiant work was

team and an All-Star team to be -%'lected from the other seven teams. The game will be plxyed 111 Salem on the Bingham field, .•teptember 8. Sunday. Four um­pires from the Manchester Um­pires' Association wyi be on hand to ni’e The game will be called at ? .30 p m. Pqul Maneggla of

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MAKCHCSIKM KVEMNU HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN.. THURSDAY. AUGUST 29. I94t PAOB tL C V n i

Capture Pair from New York as Cubs Shade B rooklyn ; Bob Feller Blasted by Yankees

S J«M RMchlerFvwm Sparta Writer

Manager Eddie Dyeria Knack of picking the right pinch hitter et the right time haa moved tbe faat fiytng S t Louie Chirdlnala Into a n oM and a half lead over the Brooklyn Dodgers in the siuling National Laague Mnnant race.

Dyer put the finger on rookie Walter Seeel last night end the young outfielder, who had con­nected (or only one hit in II offi­cial times at baL came through with e two-run ninth Inning homer which gave the Redbirds a 8-2 victory over tbe Naw York Giants end a sweep of the day and night doubleheader at SL Louie.

Earlier In the day. the (3erde had broken tbeir first piece dead­lock with the Dodgers by outelug- glng tbe Giants 13-8 while the Dodgers were bowing to the Chi­cago Cubs 4-3.

First Homer of Career SesaL whose dramatic clout In

the second game was the first four-bagger of bis major league career embracing parts of two seasons, swung for relief pitcher Al Brsxle after Marty Marion had singled with two out in the ninth. With the count two balls and one strike Sessi sent Bill Voiselle's fourth pitch sailing against the base 6t tbe light tower In right scoring behind Joffre Ooss, who ran for Marion.

Sessi’s game winning blow marked the 12th time tbe (Jards had pulled a game out of the fire with a last inning rally and the ninth time the. winning run was driven in by a pinch batter.

Two Cub runs in the last of the ninth proved the Dodgers’ undo-

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Ing. a few minutes after Pee Wss Rseae's eighth triple had appar­ently won for Brooklyn. TraUtng 8-2 In the ninth, tbe Bruins tlad' the. spore on Peanuts Lowrsiy's single followed by Msrv Rlckert’s double. At this point Msnsgsr Leo Durocher of the Brooks, who has been having phenomenal luck with his -choice of relief pitchers this season, celled the wrong turn when he moUoned Hank Bshrman to the mound. Behrman passed Bob Schefflng and Lou Stringer stung him for a payoff double that scored Rickert with the winning run.

• Yanks Tams FellerWith 71,551 cash <mstomers,«the

largest crowd ever to see s night game, looking on at the Yankee Stadium, the New York Ysakeee handed 22-gsme winner Bob Fel­ler his 10th defeat when Ernie Bonham shut out the Cleveland Indians 4-0. Feller struck out only four batters In the seven In­nings he Worked to raise his sea­son’s total to 284, thus falUng be­hind In hie attempt to pass Rube Weddell’s record of 348 strikeouts.

In another night game, O r ^ Grove and the Chicago White Sox shaded Bobo Newsom snd the Senators in Washlnj(ton 2-1 In 12 innings.

With Denny Galehouse pitching two-hit ball, the St. Louis Browns shut out the Athletics in an after dark game at Phlladel^la 7-0.

Cincinnati and the Braves di­vided a doubleheader, Johnny Sain recording his 15tb victory in the 8-4 opening Boston success and Elwell BlackweU registering his fifth shutout in the Reds’ 2-0 vic­tory in the nightcap.

Detroit finally beat tbe Boaton Red Sox after nine straight losses at Fenway Park, downing the American league leaders 7-2.

Oscar Judd limited the Pirate* to four hits and drove In two runs with a double as the Philadelphia Phils shoved Pittsburgh deeper in­to the National League cellar with a 4-1 night game triumph at Forbes Field.

Last Night *8 Fights

By The Associated PressBrooklyn—Elmer (Violent Ray),

194, Hastings, Fla., knocked out Lde Ssvold, Peterson, N. J„ (2).

Camden, N. J.—Joey Maxim, 180, Cleveland, outpOlnetd Jersey Joe WalcotL 192, Camden, N. J., ( 10) . ^

Montreal—Johnny Greco, 145, Montreal, won Canadian welter­weight championship, by outpoint­ing Dave Castilloux, 187 >4, Mon­treal, (10).

Binghamton, N. Y.— Prentiss Hall, 1684, Buffalo, N. Y., out­pointed Jimmy Mulligan. 165, LowelL Mass., (8)., Schenectady, N. Y.—Vlnnie Vines, 157, Schenectady, outpoint­ed Tommy Millis, 148, Baltimore. ( 10) ,

Bangor, Me.—Harry Hitlian, 136, Worcester, Mass., outpointed Herby Freeman, 140, Bangor, 18).

Providence, R. I.—Jack (Spider) Armstrong, 130 3-4, stopped Fred­die Yelavich, 141 1-4, Newark,(99).

Altoona. Pa.—Chuck Taylor, 142, Coalport, Pa., knocked out Jack .Wilder, 145, Jacksonville, Fla., (1 ).,

Oakland, Calif.—Earl Turner, 148, Richmond, Calif., outpointed (Chester Slider, 1484, Fresno, Calif., (10).

HOiV THEYta n d

Tast«efiBy^l RessHs JEsotow

Wllkss-Barrs 10, 8; Hartford, 8. 7.

Elmira 6,'Utlaa 4.WiUiamsi«>rt 8, Binghamton 2

( 10).Scranton 10, Albany 8.

Detroit 7, Boaton 2.New York 4, asvsland 0SL Louis 7, PhUadslphla 0.Chicago a, Washington 1 (12).

NaUsaalBoaton 8, 0; Cincinnati 4. 2.(Chicago 4, Brooklyn 3.SL Louis IS, 8; New York 8, 2.PhUadslphla 4, Pittsburgh 1.

Standlags Eastcra

W LScranton 89 87Albany 68 57WIUcta-Barrs 67 60Hartford 65 59Elmira 89 61UUca 56 70WlUlamsport 48 75Binghamton 46 79

Anerioaa Boaton 88 39New York 74 52Detroit 69 53Washington 62 64Cleveland 67 69Chicago 57 70SL Louis S3 71

Natloaal Philsdelpbla 48 84S t Louis 77 47Brooklyn 75 48 .610 14Chicago 67 54 .554 8 4Boston 61 69 .508 14Cincinnati 55 68 .447 214New York 52 70 .426 24PhlladelphU 51 69 .425 24Pittsburgh 47 70 .402 26 4

Today's Oamse iBstom

Hartford at WUkes-Barre 2.Albany at Scranton.UUca at Elmira.Binghamton at Williamsport

NationalBrooklyn at Chicago — Branca

(1-0) or Melton (3-8) vs. Borowy (8-7).' New York at S t Louis -r- Koslo

(13-14) va. PoUct (16-7).Boston at Cincinnati—Lee (8-7)

vs. Walters (9-5).Philadelphia at Pittsburgh —

Raffensberger (6-12) va. Bahr (6-3).

AnserlcaaClevelandi at New York—Reyn­

olds (10-12) or Embres (8-10) va Wight (2-2).

Detroit at Boston—Benton (7-6) vs. Ferris (23-4).

Chicago at Washington (night) —Lopat (10-10) vs. Haefner (11-8) or Leonard (8-10).

Only games scheduled.

Grace Lenezykw

Eliminates Babe

North Ends Blank Rockville 5 to 0 to Move Into Finals\

Mickey Rubacha Gives Up Only Four Bingles

Cardinals Take Game And a Half M ^gin

SMlIMNirS FSITURE •The Autum n Handicap

iriOO added Three year aids and Upwards

___ _$^FaHaagseoMM/tr voup jggat rmsm on

Sell Your CarNOW

WEYJL PAY TOPS

OUR HIGH PRICES ARB OUR PROOF

Cole MotorsYOUR PONTIAC DEALER

PHONE 4164 NOW

Pet GBL .706 — JM4 804 A28 22 4 .824 23.492 27 .444 38 J90 394 .868 424

.698 -r

.578 184

.496 164

.492 254

.458 804

.449 314

.427 33 4

.333 45 4

Veteran Country Club G olf Stan

Holly Msadly . Bob BoyrsTwo of the most consistent golfers at the Manchester Country Club over s period of years have been Holly Mandly and Boh Boyce. Mandly Is one of the best amateur golfers In New England. Last week he won the Wethersfield Open.

Curtin and Corcoran In Main

Long Awaited Fight o f Middleweightfi Carded At Arena; Local Boy Undefeated at Home

Jim

Local Sport ('Matter

Spokane, Wash., Aug. 29—(iP)— Mildred “ Babe” Didrlkson Zaba- rias gave a friendly putUng lesson to 28-year-oId Ellen ICieser of San Francisco yesterday before they teed off in first round matches of the Women's NaUonal Open golf tournament at the Spokane Coun'' try Club.

The lesson paid off for Miss leser, who sprung one of the day's upsets by elimlnaUng Hope Selg- nloua, professional from Greens­boro, N. C., 3 and 2.

But the lesson didn't do Babe any good, as her putting was off and she was knocked out of the tournament by 18-year-old Grace Lenezyk of Newington, Conn., also by 3 and 2.

"It waa just one of those first round things,’’ Babe explained. "The girl didn’t expect to win so she just went out there relaxed and played a fine game. I didn’t."

New White Hope

Camden, N. J., Aug. 29—(>P)— Old Jack "Doc” Kearns, who pilot­ed Jack Dempsey to the heavy­weight championship two decades ago, to ^ y £vas back on the boxing big tune with a new "white hope,” Joey Maxim, of Cleveland.

Maxim last night turned one of boxing’s biggest upset in years when be gained a disputed 10- round decUion over Jersey Joe Walcott before 7,709, Camden’s largest outdoor boxing crowd in history, at the Camden ball park;

GcncrfllorRspairin^

W e W ork—SavinglyH m tUng to da aboot Oeaer-

alar Itaabic Is—came to w aad^ end H! We have the kaowl-' "fifiOt toola. parts (sr 6^nsadaMe Osasratw B*paira C'Siiis to OB oaea. and voaH n - •arw tor aay seeded Ante Elee- tr4cal aervlea. Oace tot • all.

Ikst top-grade arsrk and ■naterlale prove Isweat-priced, la the aad!

NORTONELECTRICALin stru m en t

COMPANY71 HlUiard St. TcL 4040

The boxing match that fan* have been anxiously awaiting to see. Billy (hirtin of Suffleld and Irish Billy Corcoran of Manches­ter, Is listed as the main bout Mon­day night St, the Red Men's Arens.

Many local fan* who have wit- neased the serai-pro offerings to date at the outdoor arena claim that C!orcoran has hsd little op­position. The fans who have been burning the ear of this ' reporter with verbal remarka concerning the matching of the two (we do not make th* matches) will have

I their question* answered Monday ' night.

D^plte the fact that fight night falls on Labor Day, Matchmaker Vito Tallarita is planning to go ahead with his show. Corcoran and C?urtin should pack the arena.

Curtjn is a fighter who has been through the mill. Billy has been fighting for the past six years. In his only appearance at the local fight club, Curtin defeated Bobby Essell of New Brltiln.

In the presence of this writer last Monday night, Corcoran ask­ed Matchmaker Tallarita to match him against Curtin. Thus, the match was arranged.

Pairing of the two middle- weights will go a long way in de­termining whether or not Oir- coran has what It takes. Billy is pleasing battler and has won three starts In local ringa without tast­ing defeat. Only one setback dots his ring record and that waa against a tough lad from Phila­delphia., The card'Will start as usual at 8:30.

Tha Boston Braves will appear In Hartford one week from tomor­row night In an exhibition game at Bulkeley Stadium. The Braves will oppose the Hartford Chiefs under the lights. At present the Boston team Is battling for third place in the National League.

Aa has been the practice in tbe past, tickets for the Twilight League playoff games will be giv­en to 'each fan on the basis of one Ucket for each quarter.

Middletown High, defending CX!IL football champions held their first prsetice last Monday. A num­ber of schools in this section start­ed earlier In the week.

Manchester High’s scheduled grid opener is on Friday evening, Sept. 27 against Leavenworth High in Waterbury.

Jarvis Motors will practice to­morrow night at 6 at the North End diamond.

The Softball League team and Individual trophies won by Jarvis Motors last year In the local league are now on display at the Manches­ter Plumbing and Supply (Com­pany.

. It’s almQSt time for all good alumni to start panning the coach.

A writer says the average auto driver would rather lose his right to vote than the right to operate hla car. The distinction seems to be that he uses his car.

Additional Sports On Page Ten

Sport SlantsBy Earl W. Yost *

Sparta Ealitof

Only A Month Remains <Exactly one month of play ra-

msins In the major league bss^ ball season. The seeson will come to a close on September 29. With the Boston Red Sox making the American League race a runaway event, the spotlight Is focused on the NationsJ League. At this writ­ing the Cardinals and Dodgers are all tied up with 82 gamea to play.

Brooklyn )b In Chicago for a two-game stand against the Cubs. Aftet enjoying an open date on August 80, the Bums open a two- game aeries with the Giants in New York. Meanwhile the Cards face ths Giants In two snd then after a one-day layoff take to the road with the first stop at Pitts­burgh. Thrse games will be playtd in the Smokey City and then the Red Birds play two games Labor Day St Cfincinnstl. Meanwhile on the holiday the Dodgers face ths Phils in Philadelphia.

The remainder of the Nqtlonal League schedule favors the D o z ­ers to cop the flag. Leo's cr4w wlU return home on September 7 after a short sasUm trip and will not leave their home grounds for tbs balance of the season. The Cards also finish their slate st home.

Pittsburgh, Phllsdelphls and Boston .will provide tht opposition for Brooklyn la the last ten days of the season while ths Cards will be meeting Braves. Rads and Chiba.

A three-game series in Brook­lyn with BL Louis on Sept. 12. 18 and 14 may well be the deciding point in the mod scrsmbls for

• place in the National League. A juicy series split wUl go to the winners.

On paper, and again we want to remind all games are not won in this manner, the Cards are head and shoulders over the Dodgers.

Outside of Pistol Pete RmiMr, Pee Wee Reese, Kirby Higbe snd old rellsbts Dixie Walker, the Dodgers have Uttie to offer In the way of standout performers. '

Stan Muslal, Wbltey Kufowibl, Howie PoUeL Marty Marion and Enot Slaughter are only a few of the big name playera with Manag­er Eddie Dyer’s team.

PoeltlOB For Poeltioa Poeition for position in compar­

ing the two, this corner's selections arc as follows: In the outfield. Rai­ser and Walker of Brooklyn and Slaughter of the Cards. Whltoy Kurowski, Marlon snd Muslal form three fourths of ths Infield with Btanky on eecond. Catching Is a tossup with rookies Bruce Edwards of Brooklyn and Stan Garaglola of the Cards, even Steplien.

PolleL Harry Brecheen, Johnny Beasley and Murray Dtekaon have been the Cards’ Big Four while Higbe, Vic Lombardi, RuIm Mel­ton and Joe. Hatten are the capable ehuckers of dem bums. Hugh Ca­sey, Brooklyn’s acs flreman la still one of the best in the buslneas. ‘Tto Cards rate ths edge.

The Cardinals have tbs bettor club In print but as ball games are won on the playing field, don’t be surprised if tbe pennant is boletsd at Ebbets Field under the sklllhil managing ef Lao ths tip.

* " * " " B y Rid Hudson WaMilagtoa Ptteher

I'U never fo rn t the game In i which 1 defeated the great Lefty Grove In Boaton in 1940. It waa a pitching msateipleoe on both sides. ' ^ e score was 1*0, the game last­ing IS innini^

The following year I was high­ly pleased at being selected ,to pitch on the AU-8tar team..I twirl-1 sd throe Innings, snd although I didn't have my usual stuff, the thrill of participating In such a gamp was immense.

rve pitched a lot since them, but 1 don’t think I’ll ever forget thoee two events, which are mile­stones In my baseball career.

B y The Associated PreM NaUeaal League

Batting—Muslal, St. Louis, .374; Hopp, Boston, .385.

Runs—Muslal. St. Louis, 99;Stanky, Brooklyn, 80.

Runs Batted In—Slaughter. St. Louis, 99; Walker, Brooklyn. 95.

Hits—Muslal, St. Louis, 184; Walker, Brooklyn, 154.

Doubles—Mualal.'St. Ixiuls, 39; Slaughter, SL Louis, Holmes snd Herman, Boston, 25.

Triples—Muslal, St. Louis, 14; Csvarretta, (Thiesgo, Walker and Reese, Brooklyn, 7,

Home Rune—Miae, New York, 22; Kinar, Pittsburgh, 18.

Stolen Bases—Reiser, Brook­lyn, 30; Hass, Cincinnati, 22.

Pitching—Higbe, Brooklyn, 18- 4—.765; DIckeon, St. Louis, 12 -4 - .760. ,,

American League Batting—Vernon, Washington,

and Pesky, Boaton, .342.Runs—WlUlsms, Boaton. 135;

Pesky, Boaton, 109.Runs Batted In—WUIIsms, Boa­

ton. 113; York and Doerr, Boston, 106.

Hits— Pesky, Boston, 178; Ver­non, Washington, 163.

Poubles—Spence, Washington, 39; Vernon, Washington, 37.

Triples—Edwards, Cleveland, 39; Vernon, Washington, 87.

Triples—Edwards, (TIsveland, 12; Lewis, Washington, 11.

Home Runs—Williams, Boaton, 33; Greenberg, DetrolL 88.

Stolen Bases—Case, Clavsiand, 28; Stimwelsa, New York, 16.

Pitching—Ferrias, Boaton, 31-4 —.852; Newhotuer, Detroit, 33-6— .786.

Box 5core INsrtli Eads (8)

AB R H PO A E Msjewakt, cf . . 3 1 1 3 6 0Opslach, 2b . . . 3 A I 2 I 08. Grsyb, os . . . 3 0 2 0 2 6Sumlslaskl, lb . 3 1 A lO A 0Rubacha. p . . . . 3 l A \ i oH. Grsyb, If . . . 3 A O 8 1 0B. Grayb, 3b . . . 8 t 3 A 7 AKosak r f ........ 3 A i 3 o 6E. Wlemblckl, c 2 l A i 0 0

Totalq ...........88 5 8 21 12 0Roohvllle (6)

AB R H PO A B Murach, e . . . • • 3 A 0 3 0 lRanisdell, p . « . . 8 A A 0 1 AGayton, lb . . . . 3 A i 6 o AKawalsc, ef, p . S A i i S A KntlowskI, 8b . 8 A 0 6 5 0PltkaL 3b _____3 A 1 8 A tHarriann, cf, rf . 2 A i 2 A AKnobel, as . . . . .1 A A 3 A 0JalberL If . . . . 1 A A 3 0 1Scibek, a . . . . A 0 A 0 A 0Paseka, b . k . . . A A A 0 A APsrsanowakl, rf T A A 1 0 0

Totals ..........23 0 4 18 9 3North E n d s ................003 130 x—5Rockville ......... 000 000 0—0a—Batted for Harrison In 7th. b—Ran for Sribek In 7th.

Runs batted In: S.-Gnyb 2, B. Grsyb 3, Kosak. Two-base hits: B. Grsyb, Kawalsc, Stolsn bases: Su- mtslsski, a. Ortyb. Saeriness: Ms- jewskl, Opalseh. Doable plays: Ru- bachs to Sumlolaakl, H. Oriyb to Wiarsbickl. Bases oa balls: Ru* bachs 3, Kswslae 1. Striks-outs: Kawalsc 8. Hits off: Ramsdsll € for 3 runs In 3 1-3 Innings; Kawalsc 3 for 3 runs In I 8-3 Innings. Hit by pitcher, by; Kswslae (Wlers- blekl). WUd pitehaa: Rubacha 1. Winning pitcher: Rubacha. IsMlng pitcher; Ramsdell. .Umpires: Kel­ley, Brsinard, Stevenson, Yost. Scorer; Yost Time; :55.

Colkitt Leading For August Trophy

For the first time elnce June when race director Bill Tuthlll In­augurated the monthly, trophy series for the driver scoring ths largest number of polntg at tbe West Springfield Speedway, the current battle finds no loss than four drivers In the running. In June, Jeep ColkltL current leader, took on early lead but George Rice went on to Win easily.

In July, Klee again won, but only after a hard fight with the little New Jersey ace who was nosed out on the final night by 11 talllea. This month we find Col­kitt again In front but with BUI Schindler, Georgia Rice and Lloyd CThrlstopher close behind. *nila Saturday night’s meet winds up tbe trophy battle for this month snd a real scrap Is snticlpatsd.

While (Tolkltt is not a seasoned veteran Ilka Schindler or Rice and certainly drives a car that isn't as fast as either, his eteady, con­sistent racing has piled up plenty of points ami conalderabls eaah on the Eaatem circuit. With "Wild BUI” Randal), Ray Neater and Len Fanelll back In action this week, and with Oeorgie Rice ready to 'Wheel out a new car,, one of the moet Interesting carde of the year is certain to result.

With Its banked turns ind straightaways. Springfield Speed­way Is the only track which al­lows the dynamite buggies to at­tain high speeds. All of the other tracks In this section have fiat turns snd short straightaways which hamper the real power­house cars. Following are the point standings to date:

1 Jeep Colkitt . . . . . ' .............. 1892 Bill Schindler ...................... 1438 Lloyd Christopher . . . . . . . . 1394 Oeorgie Rice .................. ..1246 Art Cross ............................ 1076 Don, Morris .................... 947 Len Fanelll ....................... 648 Dee Toran . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . 68• Chet Gibbons ............. 87

10 BUI Randall ............. 86

Yesterday's Stars

Ey 'The Associated PressErv Dusak and Walter Beast.

Cardinals—Dusak drove In four runs with two homers In first game 13-8 victory over tbs <3tonU; Seasl’s pinch hit two-run homsr with two out In the ninth won ths second game 8*8.

MsrviRleksrt, Cubs—Hit a dou­ble and triple to drive In two runs, his ninth Inning double tying ths score and sstUng ths stags for a 4-8 win over tha Dodgers.

Ernie Bonham, Tankees — Blanked Bob Feller and the Indi­ans with Sevan hits and beat Cleveland 4-0.

Denny Oalehousei, Browns— Limited the Athletics to two hits In 7-0 shutout Job.

Elwell Blackwell, Reds—iRegts- tered bis fifth shutout victory with a 3-0 win over the Braves.

Thurman Tucket, White Sox— Tripled to open the 13th and scored on Luke Appling’s fly with the run that best the Senators 3-1.

Soaday, Sept. 1 PA'S va Rockvilla 3 p. m. —

OvalMonday, SapL 8

Semi-Pro Boxing, 8:80—Arens.Tuesday, SapLS

North Ends vs. Jarvis, 8 p. m.— North End.

Sunday, Sept. 8Fall Field TYIals—Coon and Fox

(^ub in Coventry.Pro-Member Event —' Otuntry

Cfiub.Sundai', SepL IS

Legion Football opener.

Score Convineing Win Over Defending Loop Champfi to Earn Ri|^t To Play Jarvifi MotorsBehind Mickey Rubaeha’a nMt

four hitter, the North Bads added another victory to Uislr long dtrlng when they knocked Roekvllla’a Englert’a out of the playoffs last night at tbs North 1 ^ dlsmcnd by a 5 to 0 count.

Rockville, defending league champs, were tavorltaa to again walk off with thla yeas4 laursla but the righting North Bnda had a different Idea in the matter. Ths winners now have a few days rest bafore entering the finals Tueaday night against the pennant winnera. Jarvis Motors.

Rags to RIclies StotyFrom rags to richeo—or from the

bottom of the second division to the championship finals la the story of the North who hava come up the hardest way possible. Their next game, brings them against the toam they dem tsd to earn their way Into tbe pUyeffs, against Jarvis.

In the first and second thnlngs the Vets hsd runners on but ooiild not ^ r s . A spark waa Ut In ths third as Playar-Coacb Ed WIsnu Wcki reached first aa Muracn. Rockville’a catchar, want nftar a bunt but couldn't gat n hold of IL Prutty Majawskl boat out a bunt with botb runnara aafa. Stan Opa- lach sacriflcad both ninnara along and Stan Grsyb than a ^ a d tha flrat two runa in.-

Rawsisll to lihswsssBen Grsyb got his second hit of

the ganM tn tha fourth and want to third aa Jnibart booM tha usyi Wimpy Koaak slngtad Bomy home and aant Ray Raasadan to' tha Bhowais. Thla waa tha first time that Ramadan was foroad to laava the game. Flramnn Btaa Kawalac came In from canter flakf and oooM down tha rampoglag North Endara.

Again In tha fifth, RoekvUla gave up two runs whan two field- era choioaa, a doubla ataal. an ar ror and Benny Onqrh’a th M atralght hlL n atngla to omitor, •cored Sumlalaski and Rubacha. Thla ended tha aoottag ftor tha •vantng with tha Vat« tha long and of a 8 to 0 count

Tsra finOfpy snappy 'Ends I

first shut-outIn ths second frame, KoolewM

ranched first on • fraa b m with one out Pttknt on tha hit ond nm pitch hit atrnight ot Rubaoha who flipped tha ban to flrat tar a dou­bla play.

But it waa tha final play st tha gama that provad tha gam and gave Rubacha hlo ahut-out With one out Pitkat ainglad and waa forced to aacond aa fidbak, hat­ting for Hnrriaon, walkad. Ru- badia unoorkod a wild pitch to put runnara on ssoond a ^ third with one out Knsbsl filad to m n k Grsyb In Isft and ha threw the baat atrika of tha night to nip Flt- kat trying for n acora after tha catch for a double play.' Ben and Stan Q r s n atorrad at tha Plata and afield for tha North Ikida with Benny nccapUng aovan grounders without an nrror. Kawnlac and Harrison atorrad tn a losing causa.

Two snappy doubla ptaya i f tha North 1 ^ gnva ~ ‘ -Ruboeha Wo

CAR PAINTINGGot Our Bntlmatr

SOI.IMKNK « PLAGG INC.

684 Ontm St. Tal 8ISI

P-ARTHRITIS-?.. USE

SENEGA LINIM ENTSOkOBTHlNO ■ nOMBTHINO

Penetrating — Stronger — No Burning FOR REAL RELIEF OF PAINS DL'K TO

a AR'raRITM a MUSCULAR ACHESa BPRAINB • NEUBITIfi

At All Drag StoresHEWITT CHEMICAL COUP,

488 NORHI STREET PITTSPIBLD. 5IAS8.

1 H I 0 G E T A U T O R A C I N G |

EverySaturday ^ .

Night8:30

•r -

SPRINGFIELDSPEEDWAY

WE.ST SP*IN6FIELD, MAKS. 1 LLOYD CHRI8TOPHB]R |

' 1- I '■''V ■. )'

Page 7: Evening Hearld...« PAGE 81XTEE9 ^anrI|eBt?r Sognttig Ijgralfl — f WEDIfESDAT, AtJGTVr t», 111} About Town Th. oM •T6 Trio” will fo I® Torrlngton Saturday to, take part «de

I'fwitiniK V E N IN t; H R K A h D . M A N C H F S T E R , C O N N .. T M U R S D A T , A U G U S T 2fl.

t-4

I

A d m tiia n a ittF W B eat For Sale

T o Bay ToSeO

C L A S S ir iE D A D V T .DBPT. HOURS:

•tSO A. «l. to 4:48 P. M.

U r t Mt4 F w 4 1X^OBT—M eadi# n ifkt In vidnitjr o ( Om Ut and CdiMtnut Lod7«, a Ia4y'» gold wrlft watch.PhaM Kewirard.

cap for a>ryalar (•dan In vicinity o f HilUnrd -and Broad atrMU. Phon# 48W. Ra- wmrd _______—

LO tT ON Main atraat laat Thura- das'. ahalMimmcd glaaaaa In red eaoa. Gail 1-3734 evcnlnfa.

AairaanccaicnU

FOR TOUR Avon Product* call •IdO.

FREE Bawduat and akavlnfa, pick up at our yard. Manchaater Lum­ber and Fuel Co., 354 Center Btreet

Pcnmaali SWASTED—RIdera to and from Unlveralty of Connecticut begln- n lpf with the fall aemeatcr In September. Call 6454 between 4 p. m. and 5 p. m.

OUARANTBED band ciaanlng of your Snaat ruga, earpeta, upbol- aurad fumltare, right In your ewp bom*. No fuaa, no sea*, no laoonvanlenee. QualtSad azparta. Daan'a Peraonal Servic*. Phone 5405 or 6340. _____________

A etM M ibIk s fo r Sale 4PttA PALE — 1557 BulCk Road-

msatar In good condition. 5075 beitwaan 5:50 p. m. and 7:00 p. m.vl _______________

S crv icM O ffort4 IS

WARM AIR FURNACES CLEANED AND REPAIRED

VAN CAMP BROTHERS S49 North Mbln Street

Tele^one 6244

OU> FLOORa SANOED Leiyljif and bntahlng.

J. E Jenaen. -TM. WimmanUc 5035. eventne*

W. SUHULTZ and B ot^elio P.U.Oa Ucenae to do OdlTO'ltate moving, local trucking. Aabea and waate 3-1555.

removed. Phono

REFRIGERATION SERVICEOrunow. Cbldapot Croaley. Kngid- aire, O. B., and aO other make*. Commercial and Oomeatle.

SCTENTinCREFRIGERATION CO. _

57 OAK 8T. PHONE 3-1234HAVE TOUR aewera thoroughly cleaned afltb oui power aewer cleaner. Cutting head removea all root*. Car’ Nygren. plumber, atoam Otter, pump mechanic. 15 South atreet. Telephone 4407.

ANTUdlJES raOniahed and repair­ed. Ruab or apllnl acau replaced Tlemann. 155 South Main atreet Phone 5445.

ELECTRIC Motora repaliii <• and rewinding. All work guaranteed Ace Electric Motor Repalra. 331 North Main iatreet. oppoalte De­pot entrance on North School atreet Phone 5443.

ALBERT JAtXlBH— Aahea and rubblah removed. Light trucblng. Tel 5937.

MANCHESTER SHEET METAL WORKS

AIR OONDmONlNO HOT AIR FURNACES Installed and Repaired

Baveatrougbe and Conductore Alt Types of Sheet Metal Work!

' ‘21 Tears* Experience TELEPHONE 5415

FOR BALE-lM i-ton rack body 1935 Ford truck. Motor O. K., tlrae O. K. Can 3-1173 between 5 and 5 p. m.

l ia r WILLTS fouiwloor sedan m fa 551 Adams strsat Phon* 3- 355L

A«to Act5SBorl55 Thiw ilirSW TIRBa, Mia recaps, rnied

tliea and tnbea Expert vuioaniF iBg. 5 bea n leeapplng service- UaaMMster Hr* and R a ca ^ n g■**----------- Broad atreet ‘Tele-

. Open 1 to 1.

W s a t s iIS

OET OUR offer before selling jrow car or truck. Highest price* paid. Broad street Motor Salsa n O M 5934.

i t f i m GASH tor TCor car from p a ir Poetlae dealar. Stop la or eaO 4194. Cola Motora

HBBbwi Rerrtcis Offtred ISWAHERMAN*S poraonal errand aiarvtoa Local erranda paekago deitvoxp. Light tniMdrm. Auto ntimber plat* aervloa to Itorlford. Phone 3-0753.

lU D C n u c and Aeetylen* weld- taf. No Job too l a ^ or too eraall An arorh guaranteed. Parker Welding Oon 164 Middle Tum plka W est Tel. S938.

ALL APPLI4N(ffB8 serviced and repaired, burner*, refrigeratora rangee, waahera etc. All work guaranlOad. Metro Service Co. ral Manchester 3-08Sf.

Piliittiig-»Paponsf SIPROPBRTT ' OWhar* altantipn Paperhanging and painting. In- aid* or uitalda. Larg* aavinga. Now block ccUlnsa Eaiimatea furtUsbed fraa Phon# Apex 7254.

FURNITURB and matal work re- Onlshed. Lawn and unpainted fur­niture sprayed. Equipped to handle Industrial and commercial spraying contracts. Hava your bams tuid shads aprayed reason­able to save east of rebuilding. 'Thomas J. McKinney Paint Shop. 344 Adama atreet Phone 3-0106.

INTEKIUR and exterior decorat­ing, rooSng, 5oor sanding, gen­eral repairing. Pre-war' price*, work ^aranteed. O et- outsida quote* now. Webstar, 4945.

FIRST-CLASS Painting . and papering and wallpaper. Call "Joe-j' the painter.** Joseph Murawakt Phone 3-^334.

PAlN*nNa and Paperhangtng. interior and exte.-ior decoratora. reasonable price* -Call tor fra* sail mates. Ltach % Fogll, Man­chester 5797.

Help Wanted-—Mik 86! Articles for Snle ttEXPERIENCED inason helper,

51.05 an hour. Call after ^ p. m. 5549.

MAINTENANCE

ENGINEER WANTED

BV LOCAL MILL

Must be famillnr with steam engines, boilers, henting equip­ment, and mill machinery. Textile experience preferred. Attractive opportunity for right man.

Apply At

ALDONSPINNING MILLS

Talcottvilleor phone Mnneheater 6128

and ask for Mr. Olmsted.

POLDINO baby carriage, ^atbin- ette, rocking duck. Call 3455.

BulMing Matertsto 47FOR BALE—J. ICtuivUle atandard aabeato* Flexboard. 4rtSx'4. 64 •quare fee t Can be aeen at 665

Center street after 5:30 p. m.

M aslea l In s tru m en u 63

Fuel end Fcctf 4 9 -A

SEASONED furnace wood, 517.00 per cord, deUvered. Phone 4551.

m*rERIOR and exterior palntgig. Also-papcrhanglng. Prompt serv­ice. Fair prise. Worker* eompan- aatton, public ttabtllty Insurance carried. D. E. Frechette. Pbone 7650.

m sID E AND outside painting. Reasonable rates. Srst-clasa work. Call Edward R. Prica, 3-1008.

INSIDE AND outsid* painting and paperhanging by axpertenced men. For satlmatea call B. Tber- ault. Phon* 8555.

Private lastroctlons 88ELOCUnON — Diction, clear speech, vocabulary. Private lea- son In algebra, geometry, phone- Uca, reading. White Studio (John­son Block I, 709 atreetPhone 3-1393.

VIOLIN Inatructlon. Arthur H. stein. FtUl term opens September 3rd. Solo, orchestral playing taught. Special attention to be­ginners. 150 Union street Phone 71 Rockville.

Hooseliold Goods 81WE BUT and aaU godtt used

fumltura, comMnatkjn rnngaa, gaa ranges and hsatars. Jones*Fumltura Stora, 36 Oak. Phoa* 3-1041.

VE*TERAN8— Look bore! Men wanted to start In bulness on our capital. Ban aom* 300 Farm- Homo Products. Thoosands of our dealers now make quick sales, big proSts. For partleulari write Rawieigh'a, Dept. CUH-43-193. Albany, N. T.

Sitaations Wanted—Female 88

COMPANION to one lady. De­pendable. Writs Box F, Herald.

WOMAN wlil clean any kind of offices or beauty salons. Phone 2-1365.

Dogs—Peta—Birda 41ENGLISH Setter pupa. *Thre*

months old. Pedigreed. Price rea­sonable. L W. White, 105 Avery atreet.

SMALL Boston Terrtar pups. Set­ter and Pointer crossbred pupe. Ready to break. 7 months old. Zimmerman. Lake atreet. Phone 6287.

f l o o r problems solved aaltb linoleum, asphalt Ul*. counter. Expert workmanship, fra* aeU- mates. Open eventnga Jonaa Furr ' 've. Oak street Phone 3-1041.

WE HAVE Oneat assortaMnto at kitchan llnuleuma. Also Ule and wall coverings- Manchestoi Floor Cbvsrlng Oentsr, 34 BIrrti. GUI 0488.

NEW VACUUM cleaners for ael*. Llb4ral trads-ln allowanea. A.B. C Appllcance and Ssrvtcs Com­pany. 31 Maple atreet Pbooa 3-1575.

RADIOS— All types and alsaa of table and portable combination battery and electric modela for Immediate delivery. Stromberg- Carlson, Philco and Famaworth makes. Watkins Brothens, Inp., 035 Main street. Phone 5171.

APAR*rMENT slxe table-top Qual­ity gas range. New last Novem­ber, perfect condition. Adjusted for bottled gaa. Also wooden Ice box. Inquire 21 Bllyue Road.

M UHiral— f >ra met tc 29LAWN and power mowers tharp- ansd and rebuilt. All gaa engines, outboard motors, garden tree- tore, pumpa and elsotrlcal ap- pUaneea repaired Quick depend,- able service. Pick up and deliver. The Do-All Company. Telephone 3-3505.

OENBRAL *Mmciele work, retain­ing Welle, landaceping and grad­ing. Septic tanks installed. For atlm ataa cUl 3-9195.

SEWING Machines, vacuum clean- era and small appliances repair­ed. A.B.C. Appliance and Service Oo., 81 Maple atreet. Phone 8-1575. Pick up and delivery serv­ice.

PIANO TUNING and repairing. Player, pianos apaclalty John Oockerbam, 38 Bigelow street. Dial 4319.

EXCELLENT piano tuning, re­pairing and rebuilding. All work guaranteed. Bktlmatea cheerful­ly given. The Plano Shop, 6 Pearl atreet. Phone 6332. Open 4-0 p m. only.

Live Stork—Vehicles 42

Help Wanted— Female 86

SHEET METAL WORKHot Air Furnace Repairing.

New Hot Air and Air Conditioning Fumacoa Installed.

Eaves Trough and Conductor R o l l i n g .

NORMAN BENTZ -377 Spruce Street

TeL S944

WOMEN, would you tike to make money from a buatneaa ot your ownT Write Box NO, Herald.

OIRL WANTED — Dependable worker. Steady position, good wages. Peter's Chocolate Shop.

LAWN Mowers, hand and power, ■harpened, repaired. Engines serviced. Garden tractors repair­ed. Knives, aheara, hair cllppeni, mowing machines and blower knives abarpened. Baers lUsd and se t Band aaw blades welded and for salt. Capitol Grinding Com­pany. Phon* 7058.

COMMERaAL REFRIGERATION

SPEQALISTSWa angtaiaar. asrvtoe and saO re- frtcsiatfng squHuaant for mar­kets, reatauranta. daliiaa, Instttu- Hom . tavema. fama. ato.

^ WAYNE W. PHILLIPSStock Plaos Manebestar, Conn.

PHONE 6761 Nifbt Emergency. 3622

RADIO — Elaetrleal Appliance Servtca, repalra. picked up and delivarad promptly. 30 years’ eaperlence John Maloney. Pbone 3-1045 1 Walnut street

JA3CE8 MACRl. General ^ c k - Uig Range utd fuel oils, aabes and rubbuh removed. Phone 4538. Gravel SU and loam.

PIIS^A'S Refrigeration service. Domestic, commercial, repairs on all makes. Day and night aervtce. 38 Birch street Phone 2-1428.

ALL MAKES ot sewing machines expertly repaired. Singer Sewing Machine Co., 833 Main atreet. TaL 8583.

ALL MAKEIS of washing ma­chines repaired. 10 yeaiw’ exper­ience. Can, A. Brewer, 2-054B.

I N S U R EW ith

McKINNEY BROTHERS Baal Batate aad laauiaMs

•eS MAIM ST. TCU S9S4

I Hollister StreetNear AvallaMa ter Oorupaacyl New S-Baaaa Magia. Hot araOer haat, aU hnuar. ■utmmtle Iwt water hast, aappar pluBabiBg, M l laaalBlIaerdswnatalrB lavw- SatFf tOa hath, baaamaat laua- day.

Joryit ReoltyG>.• DsvarBaei IbLdlUarlFTS

tUmd Herald Advs*

RADIO need fixing T Have It re­paired by ^ p erta Ptek-up serv­ice. guaranteed work. Sets check­ed In the homa Oar radio* a specialty. Manchester Radio Service, 73 Birch street. Phone 3-0840. --

SHIPSHAPE Kitchen enaemblM arc top quality cablneu, charm­ingly designed and durably built to your oarai requirements. For prompt tnataliation call 2-0063. If no answer call 2-1336. Shipshape Woodworking Company. 166 Mid­dle Turnpike V'eat

W A N TE D -G lrl for bakery and atore work. Must be over 18 years and steady. Apply in person. Davia Bakery, 321 Main street.

WANTED—*Two women for can­vassing. Easy work, good pay. Xej^phone 6472.______________

WAITRESS WANTED Apply Silk City Diner.

CAPABLE conacientloua woman, experienced with small children and babies for occaaional eve­nings. Call Mrs. Benson 8046.

COW For Sale. In good milking condition. 713 North Main atreet, Buckland.'

FOR SALE—Medlum-alzed horee, four years old, in One condition. Used for cultivating, raking, driv­ing and riding. Very reasonable. Miller. Manchester 8626.

Poultry anil Supplies 43FOR SALE ' Hampshire Red pul­lets ready to lay. Healthy, ■well- bred stock. Fred .Miller's Poultry Farm. North Coventry. Manches­ter 8626.

FOR SALE— Servel gas refrigera­tor, 4 cubic foot. Good condition. Call 2-2052 or 4008. •

HEA*ring Stove, jwood or coal kitchen table with 4 chalra, maple bed complete. 425 Middle Turn­pike East.

USED FURNITURE bought and •old. *rhe Red Shop, 56 Hudson atreet. Moore’a Used Furniture. Phone 7251. *

A BEAUTIFUL amall grand piano, faifaouS make, like new. Mahogany case. Reduced to only 5495. Also a brand new Kimball eonaolette (spinet type) for Im- BMdiate delivery. Terms arrang­ed. A. L Owen Music Oo., 1274 Main atreet. Hartford.

JM R SALE—Upright piano, good condition. $40. Inquire 5A South Alton atreet.

HAWAIIAN guitar with case. Phone 3563.

DRUM Outfit for sale. Reasonable. Phone Manchester 6337 a flT 6 p. m.

A SMALL Brambacb grand. Beau­tiful walnut finish, can’t be told from new. A real bargain. Plano Shop. 6 Pearl street. Call 5 to 9p. m. only, 6332.

W earin g A pparel— F a r t 67TWO .SPORT Jackets. Boya’ size

14 and 16. One camel hair. In­quire 46 Florence street.

MAN'S Grey suit, size 38 tall, never worn. Lady’s yellow wool dress, size 20, never worn. Child's S-plece blue and beige hound check winter suit, size 3, In per­fect condition. Phone 8021.

GABARDINE U. 8. Aviation cov­eralls, Navy rain costa, blue denim dungarees. Brunner’s, 80 Oakland strecL Phone 5101.

WsBtc4 U Real •8WANTED—By a chemical an- flnaer, a Sve-goom tenement Be­ing evicted. CaU 8858.

W ANTED — By middle-aged couple 5 or 5-room rent Phone 3-0610.

WANTED—5-room bungalow In or naar Manchester. Call 4394 - be­tween 5 a. m. and 3 p. m 6r wrlU R. Rlckert, 149 Oakland straoL

RETIRBD elderly nurae seeks two rooms, heated, fumiahed or un­furnished. Preferably west aide of town, in adult Christian home. Highest character references. Permanent Phone evenings 3- 2949.

d e s p e r a t e local family o f four need any rent. Evicted In 5 weeks. IMerences. Phon* 3-0477,

HualneBB Property for Sale 70SERVICE Station, garage, modem

4- room house, 2 cottages stock and equipment; situated arest of Springfield, Mass.; all for only 120,000.00. Asaociate Realty Cb., 252 Asylum atreet, Hartford, Conn. Tel 3-2514; or after 5 p. m5- 1354.

AdvertisemeoUFor Rent

T o BuyFi»r Sale

T o Sell

CLASSIFIED ADVT.DEPT. HOURS:

8:80 A. M. te 4:46 P. M.

Booses for Sole 72FOR SALE— S-family house, 4 rooms each. Modem Improve- menU and newly painted. Situat­ed on bus line In business loca- Uon. Belling price, 57,800. James J. Rohan and Son. Realtoni. Tele­phone 7433 or 7911.

BOLTON— 5 rooms, -all clactrte kitchen, oil heat, hot water, beau­tiful flreplace. Two acres o f land. 17,000. W rlU Box U, Herald.

Lojto tor.AiUe 72

Wanted—To Bay 58

Farmg and Land for Sale 7122 ACRE tobacco farm, 10 acres shed room; modem automatical­ly heated tobacco warehouse; po­tato storage, modem home, etc., $20,000.00. Aasociate Realty Co., 252 Asylum street, Hartford. Tel. 2-2516 or afU r 5 p. m. 5-1354.

W ANTED—A small kitchen atov* to connect for hot water. Phone 7971.

CASH FOR pianos or muilcal In- ■trumenta, regardleaa o f age, condition. Highest possible prices The piano Shop. 4 Pearl ■treat Phon* 4332

S*rEAM Furnace with hot water heater attached. Oil burning hot water heater. 21 Elro atreet

FURNACES IN STO(n<. Quality Mueller pipeieaa. pipe ind blower. De Vino Company. 14 Bennett

. avenue. Waterbury, 3-3856.FOR SALE— Easy washing ma­chine, wringer type. One set-tub with cover and faucet. Call be­tween 7 and 0 evenings 6264.

M 4rhincr\ und I'<m>If 52

Artirlidi for Sni*GOLF Clubs - - Matched set of

three woods. Like new, $20. 127West street, Manchester.

FOR SALE —Number 10 Papec- Insllage cutter. Pella Brothers, 364 Bldwell street. Phone 7405.

FOR .SALE- Wheel chair In good condition. $20. 74 Woodlandstreet. Phone 3103.

NEW G E. Exposure meter, $18. Call 5382.

MODEL A tractor with plow and harrow attachments. $175. In­quire 136 Woodland street.

GARDEN Tractors, Cletrac crawl­er tractors, lime sowers, Fordson parts, milking machines. Dublin Tractor Company, Wlllimantic.

Musiral Instrum ents 53PIA.NO Accordions. New and used. Service and lessons. Chester Ac­cordion Company, 91 Union atreet. Phone 5709.

l*ANCHES*rER’S oldest dealers In rags, magazines, paper and ■crap meUls has S trucks to call at your home any tima and pay you highest prices Wm. Oa- trinsky, 182 Blasell street Phone 5870.

Hoaics for Sale 72EDWARD Street, seven room sin.

gle, garage, targe lot. aUam hea^ brass piping. Phone 2-1038.

REMEMBER when they were building good houses?, Well, I have two for sale. . ’Two-family house In Hartford, $17,000 One- family house in Manchester, $18.- 000. Box H, Herald.

CASH ACTION for your property Larg* Uat of cUenU waiting for ■toglea or doubt* homes. oW p r^ - itabla results see ». Reale; real­tor, 44 Pine atreet. Mancheater 3-1919.

Rooms Without Board 69ROOM To Rent. Centrally I6cated.

Business woman preferred. Phone 2-2133.

Apartments, Flats, Tenements

SEVEJN-room home constating of: first floor, living-room, with flre­place, dining-room, kitchen. 2nd floor: four bedrooms and tile bath. Attached garage, screens, ■term windows. Lot 57’xl40‘ with two large apple trees. Gas heat, automatic hot water, brass plumbing. Insulated. Built 1038. Call Mancheater 2-1684 for ap­pointment.

63FOR RENT—5 room heated apart­

ment In exchange for 6 or 'i room sln^fle or duplex. Phoi.-> 7297.

Wanted to Rent 68

WOMEIN Wanted for assembly work. Apply Duro Co., 10 Hilliard street.

(HRL FOR drug and ' cosmetic counter, Apply In person. See Mr.. Brown, Center Pharmiicy.

WOMAN Shirt operator. Steady work. Nice atmosphere. Good salary. New System Laundry-. Harrison atreet.

HOUSEKEEPER for family of four. Five-day week, hours 10:.10 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Telephone 7957.

Help Wanted—-Male 36MEN Wanted for harveatlng broad

leaf tobacco. Amelia Jarvis Phone 7026.

LOCAL Moving and hauling. Gen­eral trucking at, reasonable rates. Phone 8017.

CARPICNTER Work of all kinds, roofs, aiding, additions and alter­ations. Also new construction. Sleffert Phone 2-0253.

Florists—Nitrseries 15GLADIOLI bouquets. *niousanda o f hardy plants. Fruit treas and shrubs. Woodland Gardena, 168 Woodland street Telephone 8474.

R oo fin g— R epairing 17- AREPAIR or replace asphalt ahln- glea, Mats, oompoalUon or tin

/tobfiir cmmnvya, flashings and ^ eaveatrougha. E. V. Ooughlin, 390

Woodland street Phone 7707.ROOFING — Specialising In re­

pairing rqota ot all kinds, also new roofs. No Job too small or large. Good work, fair orto*. f t f aaUmatea. Call Howley. Man ebaater 6841.

W’ ANTED—CtounteTman to work nights. Good wages. Sandwich Nook, 900 Main street

MAN Wanted for aerVIc'e station work. Experience prefinrred. Ap­ply In person. Van’i Service Sta­tion. 427 Hartford. Road.

PO lirE ^ Wanted lo r afternoon work. Apply Federal Bakery Shop, 885 Main strieet

WARDROBE Trunk. Grunow radio, two kitchen Inka. men's shoe roller skates.’ phone 2-1043.

FOR SALE—Girl'a white shoe rol. ler skates and case, size 7. $16.48 Hollister street.

FOR SALE—One-Black A Decker heavy duty 3-4" electric drill. Phone 6926.

8 H. P. Johnson outboard twin motor. Good condition. Call 2- 9090.

I.ADY'.S. browm riding boots, size 7>y. Aliao green riding breeches, ■ize 18. Phone 3562.

VOIGHTLANDER Beasa ISO camera with coupled range-find­er. skopar 3.5 dens, and filter adapter. CaJI 2-1327 between 4 p. m." aqd 0 p. m. only.

GirlsFOR WINDING

. ApplyACE W’OOLEN CO.

Phone 4138

ROOFINQ, aldlBg and new cell- tags our apaclalty. Hlgbaat qual­ity matarlala used. Workmanship fw a a te w i A. A. Dton, Inc., 899 Autom streaL 'TsL 4840.

CHXMNET5 rebuilt and repaired. Keeling. AS work guaranteed. N. O. LaKoae Co. Phene 3-0748. Call any Um^

F O R S A L EFour Room Cape Cod.

Furnace heat. Laundry room and play room in basement. Large lot. Sit­uated on Deepwood Drive.

Two Room Cottage and Unfini.*hed Two Car Ga­rage. About one acre of l a n d. Electricity and water. I.4Kated on French Road in Bolton.

Both these places are Vacant.

See

Stuart J. Wasley756 61ain Street Tctephon«l,6648

FOR SALEOa« Ntatlon and garage fully e<|ulp|t . On main trank Une. Ainu 5-ro«m bungalow witk all Improvemrnta. Approx.'9 oerea of land. Oivner selling on ao- etiiint of Illness. 5Iiist be n mall |•r••|N•slll.•n. Full Price 514JM9-

JONES R E A L TY113-115 Main St. 1M. 9854

VACANT ON cedar StVAMP ROAD NO. COVENTRY, CONN.

New four room single eooalst- Ing of l.M ng Room, Kitchen, Tw o Bedrooms and Toilet. Blee- trlc water system and aeptto lank. i,ot 4.VX0I0*. FuU price M..100.

MIKIXNEY BROTHERSr e a l t o r s ,

Tel. 6040Real Estate Inatirnnea605 Main St, Manchratsr

W A N TED

Y o u n g M a nFor Cost Work

Apply In Person

Rogers Corp.Mill Street Manchester

DESPERATELY needed. 4-4 room rent by Manchester resident. Write Box B, Herald.

VETTERAN Urgently needs 4-5 room tenament, unfurnished. In Mancheater. Do own repairs. Phone 2-0768

4-5- or 6- ROOM rent by three adults. Being evicted. Urgent, Phone 2-0067 after 4 p. m.

MANCHESTER — 16-room apart­ment house, located on Birch street. $50 a week income. Owner wants to sell immediately. Will take $8,500 for quick sale, $3,500 cash. . One six-room heated apartment available Immediate­ly. Call William Goodchild, Real­tor. 15 Forest street, Manchester, Phone 7925. Open this evening ’till 10._______________*

FOR SALE— Two-famlly hou£e with 165' on Main street, 446' deep. One flat available for oc­cupancy on September first.-Land excellent for development. Priced for quick sale, $15,000. Call 5175. After 6 p. m. call 3740.

LARGE LOT on corner o f Haw­thorne and Cambridge etreeta. Price $800. Phone 4058.

HIGH Ellsvatlon. Gaa and water available. Short distance from Main. 40x100. Tel 2-1153.

Waated~Raal Batata 77

WANTED— RealdenUal building loU with utlUUea, In cither A or AA xones. Write, Box Lot. Herald.

I W ANT to buy a single horaa m Manchester. Will wait 60 days for occupancy if necessary. I wW give my new heated apartmentV in Manchester to the owner ol home if he desires It Writ* Herald, Box D. AU replies eon^ dentiaL Nip agents.

PROPERTY i wners—It you ar* considering capItaUxiag on the present i market contact us. We pay top cash for restdantlal or commercial property. For quick action communieat* with us.'Phon* 7728-5329 or 8-OMO, or Write Brae-Burn Realty Oo^ 8 South Main street. Manchester.

W ANTED—By Manchester veter* an, lot 55’ by 100’ In Manchester. Call 2-0087. i

A DUPLEX house In vicinity or short distance from Center street Private family. No agents. Write

I Box W, Herald. ,! WANTED To Buy-Rcnt. Single

5-6 room duplex, 5-6 each. No dealers. Call 6395 or Hartford 7- 7408 Or write Box R, Herald.

BUYING or selling? For rcauUa Hat your property with Suburban Realty Co., Realtors. 49 Perkin*

i atreet, Mancheater. Tel. 8215.

REAL ESTATEThat Von Ms.* Own—

• Your Home• Investment Propertye Farms or Bnalneaa Proper­

tyVon have your own Ideas aa

to values— Income derived, etc.. Irrespective ot outside nr Im­partial appralsalB.

II It la vonr derision to nmke any changes, we «tand ready to serve you. Caah — no red tape. Consult us Brat!

JARVIS R EA LTY CO.

5 Dover Road or 85 Alexander Street Phoae 4118 or 7275

H E L P W A N T E D*Two W om en to work in Gluing ilepartiiiont. •F bur Men for general factory work.

Excellent Pay— G ood Hours Contact MR. DANDURARD at

FOLDING'BOXES, INC.

TE X T IL E HELP W A N TEDWITH OR WITHOUT EXPERIENCE—

Jacquard Weavers Box Loom Weavei;s Velvet Weavers General Help Warpers Spinners QuiUers Twisters

WITH EXPERIENCE—Hand TwisteraSteamflttersLoomfixers

Male and Female Male and Female Male and Female Male and Female Female Female Female Female

Male and FemaleMaleMale

Apply At

. Cheney Brothers Employment Office

146 Hartford Road Manchester, Conn.

FOR SALENumber of beautiful steel cabinets with acid resistant

sinks and tubs.All fixtures are chrome and counters are linoleum

covered. They will make a beautiful job in your new home.

We are selling them at a ten percent discount as of the prices at the first of the year. Prices have advanced but we have not advanced ours. Get yours at once! They can be seen at .

Jones Realty Office113 Main Street Phone Manchester 8254

M ALE HELP W A N TE DFor increased mill operation .

Millrights—Machine Tenders— ^ater Man— Dryer Men— Floor Men

Top Wage*— Good Working Conditlona— Vacation With P a y - Shift Differentlala—.Six Holidays With Pay

Apply A t Office, 615 Parker Street

C O LO N IA L BOARD C O M P A N Y LY D A LL & FOULDS PAPER CO.

CENTER PARK SECTIONtsix-room single with riosed-ln aunporch and two-car garage. Living room, dining room, Idtchrn, pantry and aunporch on first floor, three bedroom* and bath on second floor.Hot air heat with oil hnrner. Hardwood floors throughout. Occupancy 60 days.Shown by appointment only ,

McKINNEY BROTH eIrS— RealtorsREAL ESTATE INSURANCE505 MAIN STREET TEL. 4060 MANCHESTER, CONN.

M A L E H E L P W A N T E DINSIDE AND OUTSIDE WORK

Good Pay! Permanent Work! Vacation .With Pay! Life, Sickn^ and Accident Insiorance Free!

— * Apply

T h e ‘O r f o r d S o a p C o .75 Hilliard Street

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER. C0NN„ THURSDAY, AUGUST 2 9 ,194ft Page th irteen '

Bflvircy cdififleiiTiRBy Alice M. Love rick CaoeOgN. 1044,

NiA SCRVia, INC

XColin eauntered over to the

huge grand piano and began to play casuql chorda lightly and BO on* spoke for a momenL ’Then Mark; flUlag hla pipe and gaxlng around the room la an abstracted manner, scowled suddenly and ■aid, ’This room I* an atrocity, that’* what It la."

Colin, stiU playing soft chorda, IBlaed hla arabrows la faint sur- pilae and Mlaa Charlotte amid, ^ a r k , why do you always say things Uk* that about Uda room? I love I t It’s so a lly and well- lighted and I'm sure it’a com­fortable.*’ She leaned her head agalnat the high backed chair and the dull rose of the tapeatry in­tensified the black of her hair and the blue o f her eyea

“That m grant you,” said Mark, hla owrn gray eyes softening ea he looked at bw. "But It could still be an o f that and yet not eo utterly at odds with the good architecture o f the original house-. Look at those mouldings— gold, mind you. Gold. And that flre-

eace. To Bay mind, it’s desecra- in for a man to take such Ubertiee with such a fine dignl-

fled dwelling as this ope.’ ’From* where I lurked in the"

far corner of the room, straight- snlng magazines on ' tables and imoothlng chair cushions already ■mooth, . 1 stole a glance at the daaplasd fireplace and I still thought it beautiful.

“ F^member It was your father who did the iimoble deed," Colin •aid. “But I had no Idea you were

so well versed In the arts. Bure, I thought Biathematics and aclenoe were your apeclaltlea "

*;Any fool knows that much about architecture,” said Mark I aboruy.1 • • •I OoUn Bhruggad and continued ! playing, drifting now into Strauss ; waltzes and bits from the classics.

1 was watching in utter fascl- , nation his brown hands on the ' keys, when I was startlsd to hear . Mark say, "In heaven’s name, ' need - you make so many mla-

takea? It 'pa wonder Schubert doesn't turn over In his grave."

"Maybe he does, who knows?'’ Colin said. "However, I've never laid claim to being a Paderewski —nor even a Father Gene. I Just amuse m yeelf"

"Well, you don't amuse me. Lis­tening to the mueic of the great interpreted by fumbling amateurs has never been a passion o f mine. As a matter o f facL*’ Mark rose, “ I have some papers to correct, if you'll excuse me.” He stopped by Charlotte's chair and laid his hand for Juat a moment on her hair. Then he was gone, and I suddenly realized that I had been in the room for a long while and Cousin Ellen would be furious.

In my haste, I dropped the napkins and when I had rescued then I glanced once more at the two who were IcfL

Miss Charlotte, looking apolo­getically at CoUn, was sa^ng, "He’s very tired, you know."

But Colin was laughing. "My brother Is a perfectionist," he

FUNNY BUSINESS

O LD H O M C W U K 49 O

* • *• M •• ? *V • M.

- -

8t1'fetKJfH IT HU MfVICLIHC T. M. M8 V. %. fA

'*We thoucht it miflht brinq back the few who broke out!"

CARNIVAL BY DM Iv M t’ NFR

m m

8-J19 eom tutarm* etsoct. we. t. n iite. u. s mt or.

'Ancestor heap iniportuiit man—start all modern high pressure tobacco advertising!" •'

■aid. And then hla laugh dlaap- paorad. Hla «y«s swept over her to where the light flashed on the dismond OB bar white hand, then they returned to rest on her face ■gain. Hla eyaa mat and held hare, whUs • faint color stained bar cameo-Uks f ^ - “ Taa," b* ■aid alowly, "m y brotbsr la Indeed • perfectionist.”

1 crept from the room, no one noticing.

• • •Hi* storm came back again late

that night and raged for an hour.Couain Ellen pattered Into my

room and peered at me anxiously two or three times, pattering out again upon aaanlg ms so aound aalesp. I toy very atlll each Um* with my eyes closed, though It was some Urns before I really slept I did not, mind the atonn, indeed, I rather enjoyed tt. Nor was I lonely nor unhappy. Rather, on thle my third night at Innla- fail I thought what a wonderful place it waa to be, how drab an- unevsntful Ufa would be any­where else. For Colin Fitzgerald had smiled pt me, bad ca lM me “ Little Sant Cecelia” and said we'd be aecing more o f each other. Even though he had not notleed me at all after that '

I was to grow used to not being noUced that summer and it waa a bit puzzling at first. I had been brought up, to be sure, on the old-faritioned- theory that children should not be exploited. And I bad not. In any case, been the ahowy type o f child who to held up before friends and rela­tions by proud, beaming parents.

Nevertheless, I had not before experienced quite the feeling of nonenity L was to have during most o f thet summer. My mother, at least, had a way o f acknowl­edging my existenes by being ex-' tremety careful what she talked about to women visitors in my presence. I think It was the lack o f this reserve before me In tb* Innlsfail household that waa a constant source of surprise to me.I came to the conclusion, finally, that it was the usual attitude o f those who are rich enough and fortunate enough to employ ser­vants. And. too, I' was so very young, so colorless, so quiet.

No on* ever spoke harshly to me. Indeed, at such Umas as they remembered me as a person, the Fitzgeralds treated me without an atom of condescension. Those amazing Fitzgeralds. Aa my mother would say, you never knew where you had them.

(To ^ Continued)

Sense and NonsenseWhen It cornea to w4gea. the !••

borer to worthy o f hla higher.

Oorract This Sentene*: ’T *n ’em th* plain truth." th* dictator Instructed th* preaa. " I f I’M obliged to dish out hooey In order to hold this Job, Td rather get out."

Johnny—How did you get that ewollen nose?

Tommie— I bent dovra to smell a broae In our garden.

Johnny—Thcre'a no "b " la roee.

Tommie—There waa in this <mal

The two-piece ewUn suit has been etated by a minister to be both practical and sensible; which should be the worst blow It has had yet.

Census Taker—Occupation, la­dy?

Woman—I toll noL neither do 1spin.

Census Taker—Okey. I'll put irour occupatloo down as Uly of the Held.

J __ ___An American teacher undertook

the task of convincing an Indolent Missioaippi Negro that It waa hla duty to ^ t out and hustle:

Negro-- But why should I work?

Teacher—In order to make money.

Nrgto—But what do 1 wantwith money. 1 am happy.

Teacher—Why, when you gat plenty of money you will be inde­pendent and not have to work any more.

Negro—I don't went to woili now. a

— and the Teacher gave up to dlsgiisL

S o c i a l S i t u a t i o n s

The IMtuatlon: An acquaintance has dyed her hair, and you honest­ly think that the change is becom­ing.

Wrong W ay: Say "Your hair looks lovely."

Bight Wayt Say nothing about her hair, for she may Interpret any comment upon It aa a sign of catU- ness.

Some people like work so ra'jch. they can alt and look a t It for hours.

Patient (recovering from opera­tion)—Why are all the window blinds down. Doctor?

Doctor—Weil, there's a lira across the street, and 1 didn’t want you to wake up and think the operation was a failure.

Lawyer—You aay that the hens •tolen are o f a very rare' and spe­cial breed, and that Is why you ar* so certain they are yours. Would you be surprised to know that I have a few of that particular breed? , .

Proeecutor—No; \ have missed a lot ot them.

Tramp—Madam, I ha\’e aeen bet­ter days.

Woman—That may be, but 1 have no time to discuss the weath­er with strangers.

Young Man—I got a real kick out of kissing Jane last night.

Friend—Any more than usual? Young Man—Yes, her father

caught me.

IDE GLANCES BY GALBRAITH

ceea km st m* etewee. we. t. a we v. s mt. ew. e -2 f

"I llioiiqhi IM try to qel all my Clirislmus slmppinq ilmic lliis monlli, but Uif way prices are. all I’ve j(ot is the. r slalinnery for Aiiiil Kale!^

VIC FLINT

)

Libby Is Thoughtfulf t (Maaaa. I'M gong id

(;Atl IMSPECTOR GkOWt.Qut Growl W5«0Ut 90l s«t Intiwt nice deop Iggthor cbfllrto wait.. Andwhflfilkiiy cging—

BY MICHAEL O’MALLEY and RALPH LANE

( POOa VIC/ I HOffN'T A TM MSHT 70 NIM./.

lU JUST8UN (U0N5 UP 10 (HMCIA MHOioeTk aooM AMO IT HIM SUf P. ^

WASH TUBBS Groat LIttIa Pixarslu -n w to <MT tr iHto iw fg u T p M rf^

POTMMAOAWf

B Y L E S L IE T U R N E R" toU MM CAN TaMK OP WOflfJD*^9lAMIP7MM6«

A woman engaged an Irtah maid from th* city to serve at her coun­try estate. The girl waa a devout (Catholic and suffered from the fact that the only church o f any de­scription althin reach o f her new

glace o f employment was a Chrla- lan Science temple. Feeling the

necessity to worship in sooMwla* ah* at last attended aervices there. Upon her return her employer ask­ed:

tomployer Well. Mery, how did you like th* Christian Bclenc* aervlcee?

New Irish Maid—Faith. It waa mighty quare. I went In and aat down and after s time a man on on* Bide of the church got up and told what Mary Baker Eddy had done for hfm; then another man got up and told what Mary Baker Eddy had doiw for him. And next a woman In froot o f ma got up and told what Mary Baker Eddy had done for her, and It went on until L couldn’t stand It any longer; and I got up and told what Lydia E. Pinkham had done for m*.

Th* wealthy baronet had not al- way* been wealthy, neither had he alerojrs been a baronet and for that reason he waa prone to keep a rather sharp eye on hla money.

He had noticed for some time that when the bottles of wine were brought In. they were acA quit* oa full as they ought to have been and accordingly he requested th* butler to do all the opening In hla preaanc*.

Baronet (ateraly)—I notitw that when you draw the corks In the pantry th* wine to exceedingly decoUetc.

Butler (looking surprised)—Ex­tremely decoUeto, sir?

Baronet (more ateraly still)— Yea’m, rather low In the neck. —

Grit aaya: "Some people have no respect for age unless it to bottled.

tckinkrville folks «

" O n e d a y O r a n p a w s a i d h e w u z f e d u p w i t h d i ^ g i n * h o l e s t o P U R Y g a r b a g e ,, 8 0 H E B U I L T H E R E . "

BY »'UNTA1NE FOX

MfN.siM arMani*. iw.

BOOTS AND HER RUDDIES4MN0M OCfMH.Wt .

7M« TINA 09 DPN I THMr« OOOl X K M O W COOA to Hoetol

-QuUt, Pugl BY EDGAR MARTINTOuXtA TO OUOPeat... uitHis •

LSiNO DOWNUB VUB*.

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Tima To Gft Up nV V I HAMLIN

Oto/to IT9 aufKfcut miviMt mofitocww w . . .

FKKt KI.ES AND HIH FKIENDS^ MUiffTITlII

MS mNO’. IP THAT HI PRIZE. ‘ - -A a MV

JNfi., (P lltoT Hi|^ COupBLC WINS VOOR ME«C»4AM0ISe If VOlJK . I'U- SUSVeCT cSojJSlO ! AND VVHATB MO(nSri'tl.m (THAT ftiO V l»BifN59 NevifllYJ RATgONlZE THIS CTORg AdAIN / i WAM9

What To Do? r

GlPL PRIENO WINSm MKIIKII.I. IIMIS.SKK

T wB NflXT W »^ CDIMM

ONENU*4MR.WOUSANO

RED RIDERm l£7 tDO AHHK.$ etFORS riOyuV fyn LiTtte LOd A«D Pimif?'A STRKICH on TDuRNECK, CO^BOftf

On th(? Trail R> FRED HARMAN

OUT OUR WAY

Nm

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BY J. K. WIM.IAMS OUR k o a h d im ; HUUSK

il'«1 1 '

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MARTHA/IT6 WONDeRFULV 30ST VMHAT

MA.M1R HIltll/i.E

1b 661 H0AA6 AND FIND ytXJ THE 6AME SPECIMENOf FEMiNiNVTV.'.-w ANO MERE’S A © irr. 4 0 A E AROMATIC 0ARKFCOM THE DROOFUTCHTKBe. VER'/ USEFUL IF YOU ARE STRICKEN VUITM ANOReXlA -w LOSS ( APPETITE, THACT tS.'

XNE ALWIAVS WANTED / NOW) IF :Oo (oA R eL E R S

HAV6NfTCAU6NT] .THAT, Th e r e 'S

FOOD iN t h eiceSQK/,

w lE 'c e ‘ i- HUN(5KlV , ENOUGH

ID CHASE A TER/VMT& OUT O f Al u m b e r .-

I VARD *

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