7
<■ 8,746 ' "liiHnbw of fte Aadit ' •t OlnoiMloM }'V The A^ »«iher K^rMMt ol Li. rather BvMi r' .Fiir had Soadar. w ^ 'eeatiered' thunderatonaa • . ^Uii 'attertaooa hndevea^l aliKtit* ly eoathr, leaa han^ Boaday. )LTiaatI^NO. 203 (CteMUM Adverttilai oa Paga U) M m ch etU r-^ CUy of Vmatte Charon MANepESTER, CONNm ^ SATURDAY, 1 / vJil ^ ^ (WuRTEE URYEEN PAGE8> PKICI^:lUttEE tJfeNTtf L h i n e R i y e r Clark Vitheasca Unioil^f Hi» V >o] ,A . lana Report ^Ttack I TrdVel |Oh Karlanihfj^ Mann- leim by ^^crican Air^ All But Few itepceptora Haiu- Bad Weather. ^ Than in ’43 p I lan ButlaUn! , London, May lada of u6 to 1»W0 Atner- „jin Liberatora ahaXnyirtB l^ottreases smashed rawoad iraeta at four Getman to^ ^ 1 aircraft plants in tw|o encii cities today in a pow- Iscful renewal ot the ^ life-lnvasion derial tmtleniw Hitler’s Europe. The Ger- centers 'of Karlsrlin^ mheim, Saarbrucken and iwigshafen. and aircrtft alaW aUthe French cities at and St^sboufK were BundS% the^giant forces. Londoiir Mhy 27 .-</P)--The hine river cities of Karls- he^ and Maimbeim were ;ruck by Ameri^ he^y ,„.jmbers today in a p^erful Iresumption of the Alh©M »^ [invasioh aerial offensive, ^ e [German radio announced; Th^ Ibroadcast said that oniavor- Ihble weather kfept but ^ I German Interceptors from making contact with 4he bomber’ ^rma- [uons and’their _ Residential quarters Of the two [cities were hard hit With "substan- tial quantities" of explosives and 1incendiaries. th« radio add^. Cross Chsnnel for Hou» . London observers said mat Al- lied formations including hund^e« [o f Flying Fortresses and tors crossed the chani^el "for three hours during the mofning. I The size of the armada stream- ing out during the morhmg sug- (Mted strong atUcka were way as a'follow up tomlght on liudwlgshafen and M's l^ h e Krde railway yards at Aacnenroy^ R. A. F. Mosquitos. _ . Even before sirens wall^ at Basel, the Berlin radio warnW the homeland that Allied ARbleAlmm^ et formatttms were app/wchlng southwestern Germany and t ^ t fighters wore moving In on wesi- etn Germany. V Two R. A. F. planes failed to rer. turn from the nlgtit OMtatlons. which Inpluded talne laymi In ene- my waters as well As the stuck on the tw* German Cities. ^ Brief ImU Now Over .. . roar of <fi*x planes ^over fhe English chanwBl today the brief luU <Was over In the Awsa serial offensive from B r iU ^ A ^ a and tha\ t»w Invasion defCjises^w^ b» ‘ Of. »"* Flymk abp»^ s light coveri^-of ■^oed on Page Po«r) 3 !X llie s ''J 'k l’li.st i^. Outlook Trtin$port^ion OfficiaU AtUicipote 'l 5 Pef Cent Increase Over Memo- rial Weeh-End, New'York, May 27.—^/P>—Ti ani- portation officials rolled up Oielr eeyes today In antlclpatloh of ig Memorlal'Day we^-end traveXlS per cent greater “than last y w . despite repealed appeals for a minhnum of trips over holiday. \ -A-- . „ ,. Bu‘ companlea and airlines^ said they exp^ted\Mpacity " ' w y-' ■ y\ -< 41,000Awny L Work In es Nazis Pledge Papid News unjnvasian business icah and British trot ps In the mHrshes as in Cut. GCn. Fifth Army troopa ■ from the Anzio beach- hey expeciea xcapaciiy uuain*~ American ana onuoii Tnii«n battletront. A U. S. off'cer fipm the main Fifth ihile ratooad^ iaU looked fi«^T,ea/joined Fifth ^rniy Forces from toe li,swas radioed from 10 to Iff-per c ^ increase over, group Stands at right with C3ark. fThis U an ommai . said; r lato toe similar week-endvln lFfS. Peak The Pennsylvania the travel rush kP^'Ander yeitsrday with many sen’i^iWJi entering the city. The peafc^h*,the outgoing travel la expected this afternoon. Extra aectlona wilt be operated on toe New York-VVashii>gton rim by the Pennsylvania which has asked its employes not to use their passes until n w f Wednes- uriless traveling'on' business. New York ^htral raUroftd d all Pullman roscFvatlonR week-end'had been sold atjd il^ed coach tickets were available'qn such, trains as, the Pacemaker'And Empire State. Col. J. Monroe Johnson. Office q f to Nedr York. A Labor Piitcl/ At,Harlford y _ _ Given Airin« Miller ^ o u lfl Cut Off Fiimls [War Man- p o w e r Comniihsion Oiitsifle Washingtoii. Chinese Units Big Battle Believeih in ' ■*- ToW Plv- Prospect for chiingy Strategic ot of CoinnmiiicatioiA Piirsue Jap scapiiig Trap Naz^ Prepare For Rc^me-FaH No Indtcawh Settle- ment o f Ci>nlr6yer8ies Imminent; Net^v^^is- cord at ClnPxfc. ' _____^.. \ By The Associated P r e ^ , Labor disputes, new and rold.^ kept an estimated 41,000 of toe country'! industrial workers away from their Jobs today and there was no indication that setUenitot of the controversies was immlneiv' The chief troubles along toe m tlon'silabbr front centered i^the Pacific northwest lumber imtustry Snd In Detroit’s war Industrlql area. There were more/th'an .100 lines ot lumbering onerati^a in Washington and Oi-^on, affected by the disputes, wljm frqm 25.000 to 30,000'employcj/idlq. 1 Fresh Cont^vprsy Arises In the Deti^plt krea, .a fresh la- t)or controvquy arose as pickets appeared toe Chrysler Corpor- ation’s I^lj'hnS Park plant, keep- ing I t S m employes from going to v^yc ,^aterdnv.. After the pickets *Quickf Relidl and Elaborate’ Be Given, dio Ihfo/ms ports to 'ertin Ra- Listehers. •^ft^Army Scouting lenti in Vicinity oK’ ‘^Aii^a, Two and Hall Mile8\.from Valmbn* tone, Sfkpng Point in Nazi D e fu s e .Line Be- low Rome; Niiiis Pull- ing Bacjt/ Artillery. -(ff) ■— Bet^ ners todsy^-It '"rellalrtk" and invasion A llied HeadQuarte ple^^ay 2 7 Thrust- Rjfclose to the Via Gasilin^ ast German escape mite from the main front. Fifth Army rwonnaissance el^ ments were reported today ifi the vicinity of Artena. about- two and a . half miles from Valmontone, strong point Iri the center of toe Nazi defense line be- low Rome. Valmontone is 21 tbllsi southesst of the Eternal City. Leave Masses of Equlpmeat . ' Thirty-six mlks to the south- east of this spearpolrit fhmlP ool of’ toe Anzlo. beachhead, Germsni on toe main front were defeated in heavy tank fighting and fell back, leavini; masses of equlp- meht, including tanks, behind toem. _ ,, Lieut. Gen. Mark W. Oark’s reconnaisaance troops In the tens area j pacing the drive fi the' Beachhead, , tltd advi^c^ about 12 and a half miles n p n h ^ the former beachBSmiL pdrti)»*tei Biter the Allies beat-Mcl^dhsrp enemy counter-ajtacks; -to which 15-hugs Tiger tsnky^rtlcipated. .Atf official repoK^toUd toe ene- my appeared t q ^ pulling back heavy artUleiY^bom toe Claterna- Vaimontone^road. Tank Battle Surgtog up toe Lirl valley, toe a Army defeated the Ger- in a furious tank batUewest the Melfa river, knocking out tanks. __ _ . Then Canadian snd British forces pushed to within two itolu of Arce, near toe Confluence of the Uri and . Sacco rivers, within two hr- three miles ol._Ce-. praho, important road jimction on the Casalno-Rome -highway. - These vital road junctions ton- troi communications at toe head of toe Uri valley whore Highway 8U (the Via CssiUtUa) ^ g ^ itt long. Straight stretch through ^ Vide valley to Rome. .. 'Deeperate Nasia t h i w foVeu**®^* ' rs, Na- (Continued Vi^Psge Two) Primary Test To Show Nei Deal Strength Two* Political Veterans Battle for. Democrat- ic Senatorial "Nomina- ti0n4n North Carol / By Jack .-%4soolated ■Two poll today for toe Ilemocratlc fisnator- laj-lmmination In NorUi Carolina In a primary contest toqt to assay the.depto of that state' New Deal sentiment. In a race where local issues s n d " personalities are regard- ed as predominant C Lff>id e HR. Hoey, 6T-yeartold - /tor, mer governor and someOtoe ad- ministration critic la matched against 75-year-old Rep. Cameron Morrison,, |i former governor and senator who was a staunch ad- minlstraUdn supporter white in Congtoss. With five can.didates entered, only one other, Marvin -L. Rltcb. Charlotte lawyer, has made an active campaign- Fight for R^olda’ Seat . „ . I Hoey and Morrison seemed likc- R e n o r t H ite A ll -A g cn - Jy to llgbt it out in the day’s bal- / . O n -t noting for the nomination which ■^ClCS Playing Any * ®Tt. Robert R. Reynolds, who - — -----^—- has opposed many of the admto- Wsshlngton, May 27 — (/R — latration’s domestic and^ fo^ign.] There’s more commotion to VftfBtoj poUcl^ let go by-defhult Rey- iTiere a ipv«> ^ MtontgOlheiy | Washington. ^ May 27—1-0 — rfartford, Conh.’s criUcal manpow- er problems were thoroughly aired before the Hoijae Appropriations committee, which received a sug- gestion from Rep. WUliajfi J. MU- .ler (R.; Conn.) that the War Man» power ,commis.rion’ji,funds for^ op- rations iJbuUlde , <Va.«ihington *»« iff; It k-Ss Itorned today.,' In. testimony before a subcom- mlttieb. made public tflUay. toe H'ai^ord -tongresamman sharply critldize^ toe WMC’s handling ot the labor supply within the hlgh- jV^dustriallzed Hartford area. qcCused the agency of actually re- tordlng th/,war effort there, odd said he’d rather vote for ^ na- tional seryice act than to ebntinue toe present system. Asking the committee to "look- very carefully In^ the operations of toe War Manpower commis- sion." Mlllejtoaid: ‘If t wiire going to m ^e a flat recommendation, it would be Jo cut the appropriation ,of the War Manpower coftimijalon to such an extent -tost their operations o«t- CKungking, May 21.—{iP) Chinese are in pursuit of re-ii treating Japanese who es-\ caped with severe losses fromi a trap at Tatangtzu, "the highest battle field in the world." bn the Salween fra the Chinese high comptond announced today. T^tfingtzu Is 29 mile* northeast of Teng- be- 111 Tall^ 6j»en ^rbpagani paign; To Ret /New Line to North Without Defeuflmg. chung. Slid a.big tottle was -- lieved in prospecb’'for that strate^ ^ c pivot of j|UMin*s« tions nortlydf the Burma road. Chlite*e Continue Freaqure Rain"has turned co sleet and ice in toe high mountain passes, but toe Chinese are continuing ——’ . \ London. May 27.-(r » ^ T h e Geh-^ mans hayeApened a propaganda theli Ward Dispute May Be Issue Senate Suhcommitiee (Contimied on ftoiV Foor) Another Trip Abroad Hiiitei Roosevelt .Shys He See OiuTchi^ ^ormy Weaihb*V' NoJ A Lihed- campaign^ preparing for the faj/of R om e.^ d through the Vichy rg^lo haveApread word that Nazi f°'y** wovfld retire to a new defense line tpJhe north wlthoul defending the Ity. Quoting a German pressure against the' japanjriw | "who have been unable to mtMt a successful stand,” the higl/com mand said. The Japanese, wath’ /einforce-1 f,y this spccesa.” ments. are countw-attackingl Double Purpose Seen south of Kaltou. the/tommunique added. Planes from tof/Chinese-Ameri- can wing of t o / 14to Army Air Force strafed /n em y troops yes- terday in the/vlcbiity of Loyang, the ancient/Chinese city whose probable toll to the Japanese has been conpWed, a communique from ----- Oeut..jlen. Joseph W. Stilwell’e damage the Eternal headqirfafteM^jmid today. 1 suffer. SO H d l agS I^uilie of defense less e“ 't ^ ‘’tS V w V ;fd e - 20 " ’ «®» the south, gunfire communique dVl«red. ' filiipH.rid hv neutral reports «» rumors -dnd bun- military the Vichy , broadcast 1 last night said qapture of R^® "would bring no new element in the general conduct of the war ex- Icept for toe prestige which would led by this siicce" " Double Purpose Anouncement that tlje ®‘ty would not be defended. Was/aeen In London as possibly carrying a double purpose: , . ' 1. To ease the shock among the German peqpte and Hitter’s satel- lites when the city falls. ./ ____________ ______ 2. To set the stage for placing ded, a communique from i-esppnsibillty on the Allies for any J I . City might Army driving inirtoii ov«r . Ward case than if toe compwiy • catalogues hud att been caught to a Chteago wind. , v - ' At a remiK of the seizure of to* Wird properUto, toe-ca«‘ came closer and clostar today to b ^ m - ^ e r e were these'dev*W 5 pnentt. A senate Judiciary subcommit- tee yeatwday Issued a report un- eoulvocally criticizing every Fto* 'wal department "which had any- thing to do '^‘t o ^ telzure^ ^ Biddle saya - Attorney General Blddl^ targrt for ~ the commlttee'i -ahirpezt blaMz,. replied that toe commlUee '“findtrie wre ‘‘abturd.** and. prq- holds, a •elf-style4“ lsolationlst,’ , (Cpiitt»iied-eh Bbjylef Denies Study Repori JVashlngtoh; May, Ident Roosevelt Counting oh ani to., meet ,Prni and other All a closer Yeste: .be Said hefmli In toe posaibi that j ’r.r-fAb—Fre's- believed to be trip abi'dad', ’Minister ChurqhlB leaders and to get ,t toe war; — . 1 t- w-tiews conference, ,t see Mr. Churchill e communique ucy,-.eu. ^ , [pictured by neutral reports «» Other air activity to®*“ ‘^ ‘*,.to« [city-of confusion dama^ng of a small \ merchant j vessel southeast of Honi^Kqpg by B-24 Liberators, toe bombing ku“ burning of at least alx river boats loaded with troopa aqd autiplies on the Yangtze river, and atrafinb. of troops on a road nfear Shansi toa.t caused “ many jCBSualties.' **ln the.„past few dSys through Vichy have comc’' wholly-uncon- flrined repurts that no German soldiers are In'-the city and that .even tlre''wo(ihded have disappeqj- ed. -v; The German Transocean agepey One-aircraft,was reported miss-1 tooajicast this morning; te spring, or summer, or ip-tod fan.*'Indiestions e Chief Executive Would make the trip rather tlwn the Prime- minister, .were strengthened bv hla reply^ to a <l'**htl'|jn « ! a „ „ p„-."|u'hether he .might see t^-8rltlah Sava N o In q u ir y o n L n - Kg^rier m toe winter. Th® Presi- r D i v if iio B l* " ^ ®*^®*^*** he_dWnt like forcement Divifioni ITvsin roiltpmttlated. How his travel intentions ip ^ t Is Even iAmteropia^ |«,lnclde Wit/thi Inrarion tlm^ OT Ituble rer^ttiB completely objure. ^ ^ _____ WftahlnrtoD, . May The aid^y cpnoernlnR the Inva- t ^ n g that te " |chalrm»n I>* d>., Lion'hM not let,up. Nor has Mir opportun.lty‘ to appear O” ®” "•IMbuae committee Investlgalini, to?I deliberate amlRgutty aald tht-8enate waaoUne "black market” p,^n„ed travda. wen akin to "atar chamber" P«»-l5ny that the Office of Price ce«f(UnK*'- . _ .> AL> __ . Admlhlalratlon la making,,a ttudy Ing from toeVpcratid.is, which in- cluded also toe strafing of supply diiinpa at '^ateten. w i ^ . fll.rMt l hits atArtyu large firea./hatoe at- ■-rj^ji^MIiiiied te .'Page'Four>■ ' Treasury Balance iSv^aahin^on, May 27.—(P)—The position of' the Treasijry May 25: BecelpU, 5U 2.0l 4.425.78; ex- pendltutes, 5275.697.938:555 net bal- aniw,'55.447.374,709,46,. . serted that, for '48 hours Allied Plant'S had been heard over Rome "atoioBt V’lthout pause attacking the outsklrU and southward road by day and night" T^'® *gen®.y aatd -a- suburban hospital was hit by a bomb yesterday. _ The Vichy broadcast last night, without locating the line to which It said Field-Marshal Albert Kes- selring's forces .would retire; said toe Germans -hqd been.' fortlfyli thla.iin'e for months. " - Comptoent-ititlitary mM,ii), L«n- (Ctetlnned .en Page' Fdir) -/'appeared Pre,sidpnt R. J. Thomas ^ of/the United Automobile Workers u5 lO| said that the instigators faced pos.sible expulsion from the union. The new disturbance fol- lowed the recent dispute which had affected 11.700 workers st seven i of the company’s units in. the De- troit area. . i A partial survey by The Asso- ciated Press disclosed that walk- outs in the lumber industry affect- ed 106 plants, sawmills, woodwork- ing plants, door and plywood mills,, woodworking companies. logging and booming bperstlons and other ! concerns coniinected with the In- *du 8 try. Estimates were that Jl. 000.000 Jhoacd feet of production ^ s loat dally by the walkouts, which were in protest against the War Labor Board deplal of pay in- creaVs. The strikes, union lead- ers sate, wei-e unButh<irlzpd and m e m b ^ were asked to roturn to work; ^ere was, however, no indiratio/that they would obey the leadei'i Without Eleetrlc Power Jrfncoin , ctenty < Ore.). coastal communities were without electric power yeswprda/after a walkout of AFL sawmill whrkers. And fear was expressed the, Toledo. ’ Ore., water system would go dry , be- cause of lack of poWr to operate^ th.: pumps, A lumlter company' power plant was left Wlthout^iel when the men failed to\ite®/ tor .work at the Vompany’s rri[lj/ The plant usci*. waste from 'toq planer mill. / ^ , .. Other labor disputes in DMrolt anfl Michigan kept more than/OOfl idle, including striking bread tnmk drivers wh6 voted to continue thWr walkout and not to meet until ne:w Wednesday/ Meantime, the Mich-^ Igaii metropolis was vlrtuslly with out bread or bakery goods. _ Strike In Fifth Day - The strike of 1,900 employes at two plants 'tot Parke. Davis * Co., was In its fifth day, while at.fSagl- naw, Mich.. 2,500 workers in; Gen- eral Motors^ Chevrolet tiensmis- I slon division remained idle, follow- ing a dispute over smoking regu- lattoTrii. -At Muskegon, an agree- ment WAS reached Jn a Regional War Lhi>or Board hearing to T i’a.ve . London/ May 27 radio t/d iU 'list:’ wtoUl/glve "qillc/ elako^ate” report* on westenAEurope, The ^atotlon skid that since pre stimabiy ^ maln froht would be in wes^ffn llurope. "Werner jewski, who htfherto has hefd an Important’ poat in to* Berlin head office, will take ovto. reporting as a special correap^dent from France.” (in New York tot- CBS listening post recorded a Berlin broadcast of an article by Propaganda Min- ister Goebbels in \/hich the latter declared the entire Reich "has to work in thsse weeks and months as if it were a matter of life anil death,” and then added ("No sign of weakness pr resig- natiirii shall have a place among us. We fight for our naked exlst- eh<*. We know only too well what hr at stake and we cannot afford to pass with empty phrases j over the actual serlouanesa of the situation.’’ ) — May Decide ( Group For Fraii^ Unitetl •'Slates F patiqn Hi yTomloii ParleysA, Fi^^cled lo PlayClmitemanl Pari. Londo/'May 27—(A ’i— United States teHlclpatlon In the (aiks to- take'place when Gen. Charles de Cteuillt- comes to London at the Itatlon of Prime Minister lurchlH was expected here today to play an Important ^ r t In de- ciding the role .of the French Com- mittee of National Liberatiort ■Thoffi- who criticise ' CTiurchill for opposing recognition of the committee as a provi.slonal Freimh government have attributed bla posltloni partly to Influefice m President Roosevelt. Th.es7- orito clsms admittedly are .'tempered, however, by hope that some new Continued an? Page Elgbtl st-War Joi IS at several danger polnte.’ and used more mobile forces against to e ^ ^ h to Army’s Uri valley ton«t thw at any previous time to toe lUllaii ^ Field*'Mktshal Albert Keiselrlng (fktntla..st[ on Page Flastie9! (tete RulteMns o f ^ Wltei 2ram ven Beanoaa for Maktef Journey Reverb current factor* have sug- Ptortdtet. BqcteVtoL -y h en j I f rra'Wn Preaident'^mlght vlaed .toat tte report bad 1* doing “tte f l o make tte trip, one being ed CongtuM might <ste«|® ®!fJ^Jl|job” In zearcbtng' oUt ^ •?***“ * to fnate" dedaion* of toe ' W ar v io la tio n s ^ - . • r. G a X ^ to r Labor board subject to cp^rt-ra- a denial toat any M i. C h u rc h ill, v ie w . In d lc ito d he thought to« ,, in progresa that this would te plan im praottcsl- — -. -I however, from A d m in is tra to r . 5 What would happen to tte poorjch,rter Bowles.who Said one was devlU who w%re out of wow in at-^ot ,ven contemplated.' • labor dispute, he asked. If * ® f'| , Lust U Clain* Perfection Cision had to b? appealed to the completely wtlsfied that D is tric t. Itlie tnforcem fntidivtsion' If wKHJT 5 :^ r ts and then b& subjected to an extrsprAnarily^ fin e InauUV by h'.SenaU^cbmfnlttee.. iBoW les declared- He ■ added ite 1 Tn gnali FnfcUc Hte rtfig I would t _ i And today the is .a .* aia steliniU ee w aalaam a'tiiM In th e T lra t W orld war. 'waa nutting on itaam behind <H Len aald that hla cmmniuee was drive to tewra* the report 1 the ternT^ra^n" aa flt=, aomb ndmtetetration eenatorz in*lclsing nff the rigjtoce It al^id uw Hesnggeated Advlaers^ubt that th[i enough' tto ttrthg ®n toe Ghurclml- Booaevelt conference but Mr. Roosevelt la believed to want a closer look *t toe war; ... rtbl(en‘i«I 'aUrWR hla hews conference, [yeaterday that toe fRt.much fiirther •ht*« w» m1 l«ra*s:ru W^Gjpu^JRidors Mtiiian^s Ftee Jo Roam (Continned on Page F o u r / Reds Attack > ; .Nazi Vessels German Troo|»»iiii»» im Har'ente Sea^ North o,f Norwav Under Allack; Ty^rwian' Valiev Ore May 27.—-dpreaaed ihelr ponies over difficult &^-Wraty wwi>o?a trallirf b a ^ U t r a t n a n J ^ noOn y®«^?‘^y bunched In toe three .finger Bufts Londonr-May 27"'«P)—The Rus- ts reported today SD air OfUsclj oh German troopships iu the Ba.- rents sea north of Norway,"lt was the first time in months large- Lgcale German troop movements Ited been noted ih Arotic waters. The'midnight war huUetin from Moacow said two transport* and a destroyer,; were *unk-;and " three other shtoa-'Jam^S®**- Whether the shlpiliweire carrying new German forces to Norway or withdrawing some waa not spectflsd. Earlier the Germans claimed to Revp/tips Policy Kiiglaiid Following SiiiPP 1h- dufitrial Revolution. I^don. May 27:— A post- war, employment program, de- seribed jafficially as re.versmg thf policy England has been, pursuing "ever sinc«i the industrial rcyoUr- tlon,’^ ' has been presented to Partia- m'e nt. ^ ' / The program, designed to pre- vent a post-vCar slump by taining jobs rather than alleviating l a r g e ' scale^ unpmploymenL.'yae unfolded ..yesterday nient white paper. Pari* Ilenvily F ortll^ \ Barreluna, "■kJ.-’ -r Germans have heavily ftettOte Pari* for a street b>' , and are preparing to transfe /r ij the Vlehy 8"'ernment*l s e ^ W to vvllhln the fortress bum W®®^ the Krencl. ®»P'‘ « 1 . from Kranee said today- Ing the strong-system ®t / " ’I*, built around the rlty after the v ^ of 1870. the German* have imPt* i laced them with' a blockhouses, trenches, terbed-nim entangtem®"!** “ "•* Stacies, the reports said, that even: street defenses haq-'i create<t- • ' , ■■ . in a govero- the Renorts BusriahjOlf®®**''® _ j . " Sew AndersorCi/a >'BC. day as saying the Russian.’ t e ^ storied an offensive ‘ h® front. No detail*. "®” ' there was no conftrnmtl®u_^ any other - -v —7—. I Siass DeserMon* *tolM*rie 6 { -Bari, Italy; May-.fl?.-^^’'—M®’ *'. ideserUnn* hy Bntgariail; te®®F' '■ from Idaho and eastern , Orej^n today, leaving some 2,060 wild mustang* fMteof*^Ov.?hee*ri^c»^^^ ^A rtter Seale, district grariaf in ---------------- Interior Secretary Harold Ick«|| charge of toe roundup aald the rs-1 shot .tewn 69 of the 80 at haxi ordered the Twndup to cleat' serve mounts ‘**'°ught ijp for tog . Air Force, but had ordered me ^ rider*J»olted.into the wild herd and L j^ only sevcivbomb- *t(toip«ded lhe,'ju through the-ring jp^t '.a„d ten German -of mounted cowboy* ted-baek'lnto.j-pijjpp^ were Inaccesalbte canyon*. | Hlrirmiate* Only AcUylly ^ Failure of^Ute current drive ta-l .^Bkirmlahe* aoutoeaat of not without precedent, however..It I j,iawow in old Isn’t unusual ranchera aajft to And I the only ac&Jty reported w the porUona of Improvised I long eastern land <rwL _ ^ r n ^ S i mouth oti^ ^ ^g^y0 |ij^yinboUc of previouf un- ■uGceufut att«mpti. ^ •*W« y. try fg«in later, Seale "cciiiimerite4 fomewhfct wewU/*i Yugoslav, paril^n n»'h»W * tod*y. wdth, a ^P®**®*?"*" that morale la . abb- as tension moonta In the Hi* tan^ Whole pteteteg-aad panie* are tenervtng the *P ® ^ ^ iimaaid. AHtotoer report rerite^ lag here, which was Bwomtfwn^,,; » e ftenwan* had begw^ anwiag Bulgar treepe. Serbia. the range! for catlle in the:war- tlm'e food, program. The animals then wets'to’ -be sold at auction a* cow ponies and for food. The mua- tangs. howeverrhad ^erldeaa. ^ ijh iy ridera In thfragalla t ^ - cal bf the, oW west set out laat Wedneaday to corriil the ^cagey muatafite The drive wma to edver the canyos-pocked rangeland along the Idaho-Oregon border.. ; i AiNmaite'jH®"***** **'®® For three teya the (Cow waddlea command knew toe aeetor w|Uch the Reda were expected to iCMttnnte — ^ nlans ’Labor Miniat^r Lid were evolving “the fismew’ork on whteh Britain can build up * century of ptogreas."* Lower Standard* 'theory p i* C f»^ Bevln and Gord Woolton. racOn- strwetion minister, said toe theory that''UTien(ploynient could be cured by lowering Wring standards being disc*rdS(|r‘* - They said the plan proposed. ■1 A lyatem of varying contri-. butions to a newj aodal Inautanw' plan designedpto'Influence v oK '^ of a community’s purchasing power' and iron .oUt varistlon* »n time demand for good*: 2, planned spending on ^public works to check the onset of a b n o io ib with pubUo w<>rta to Ul Marted to ward off unemployment, ratter than during'unemployment ^^^g^Concerted acUoti betwten.tte Ttdaaury and bankh- to Influei^ volume of capital iexpenditur# tg jraristiona m toe interest rata. In investigate Eating ■" Chteago* Hay 27. , Health deportment tnepertuto*; tev loyestlgated '*^®r®!' pteoee of a reslMrant < near theLobp M as, T lircMaa HI *?- tteHten^to . leosaved te «>* N»ry_, Navy U* •e^w«?;|gJ

3 ! X l l i e s ''J 'k l’li.s t - manchesterhistory.org Evening Hearld... · 2020. 5. 5. · 15-hugs Tiger tsnky^rtlcipated..Atf official repoK^toUd toe ene my appeared tq^ pulling

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  • or Board hearing to Ti’a.ve

    . London/ May 27 radio t /d iU 'list:’ wtoUl/glve "qillc/ elako^ate” report* on

    westenAEurope,The ^atotlon skid that since pre

    stimabiy ^ maln froht would be in wes^ffn llurope. "Werner jewski, who htfherto has hefd an Important’ poat in to* Berlin head office, will take ovto. reporting as a special correap^dent from France.” ’

    (in New York tot- CBS listening post recorded a Berlin broadcast of an article by Propaganda Minister Goebbels in \/hich the latter declared the entire Reich "has to work in thsse weeks and months as if it were a matter of life anil death,” and then added

    ("No sign of weakness pr resig- natiirii shall have a place among us. We fight for our naked exlst- eh

  • ■; -J.

    PAGE TWO MANCI .U, AlA^CTlpjlXB. CUNN., SAIX'Bd a T, ft 7.1944

    F E P

    '•/tcqnest for- F«m lif Go*

    to Senate -and N e ^ ^ ^ ; : f l 9 u t h e n ^ B a l t l e .

    -Wuhlngtoiii a«v-froit) aboUtlon foiit-vot?

    In the House IM K ^ s le r l pro|>osed new monies^S^for

    Sidwt IV>osSrvelt’e. F»U’ K' p loym ^^ -P ractice* cbmftiittee h ead eaw tay for the-Senate and

    .a new chalfcnfe from aouthern leg'Islatora. ,

    Most contrbw eial item In th^ $1,033.3M.3«7 oWmlbu* bill which carries fund* ^oK*^moat a score of hotnii front war agchclea for thê fiscal year atartlng JMly 1 ;$800,000 FE PC fund wba tlybly^ Allied by the Hotii vote,̂ OT--J41 to J03..only topued an hour Wtet by |/cou^i6f.’̂ 23 to XIO. Both ■Votj were \byteller, individual v ^ a belna u ^

    I recorded. Soutbero^pemocrats le ths fight agalnar the agency they Claimed waa nromoting irafjial clis ̂unity and m^'lded most of the Vbtea iu iB ^ gain st the entlr/r^^lll o n -fin a h ^ a ja g e . Not a/.slhj item in the overali me*, chan^d. ''

    lagk Ooifig'fiejMi' ta 'Senate, That the FjpJPO^would encounter naost ta rough^^lng .ln the Sen

    a te aa it fa « ^ in the. House was, indibated Jsy the nfact that o

    when It paaaed the In- dapaoddat o ffice supply bill, that

    tacked bn a rider denying , _ to ahy presldentlally-cTeaf-

    'ad'agency InSexlstence 12 months or longer a n d .^ t . tapresaly auth- orissd by statihe. The- Senate move Was aimed M nuirily at the FEPC and now 1* twa subject of a conference report belng^drafted by a joint SanatC'House \ommlttee. eapacted to approve i t

    Southcmers-'accuaed the agency

    of discji'iHlnating' ,ag*i>st the white race, » f seeding to promote the DrinciDle Of socta|,-raclareqti*l- ity and of meefit^ng In a problem primarilv anutiffrn'..' and being hapdied bv the-iiouth to the satisfaction of bofh whiles and .N egroes;

    \

    Proliate Com* Settles

    GO P G atli^riiig Next Thw sdav

    C o y Rej|>iiti1igellirr‘.

    ' H o s p i t a l N«i

    Allows Ad|4^$3 ,25(1 y^sResull of

    KatX A, Neflsen, adminlMifttor of Jme estate of Jhhhbne KXvCllhen,

    a * given permissiorfwJXhls mom-

    :----ijr^ncaliw hg^jhe necessity

    early and djmamic campaigvictory .the; campaign comarfittee

    itepuof

    ing'i session of the Triihate floiirt tO". accept an ofCcrvof $.3.2.̂ 0 f- Discluigcd yesterday:■'Mrs Elizabeth Oailt and Aaron

    epbk, .Ir., .162 Miildle turnpike, for 'A nJ^d-lt;' Mr*- (.IhaHes Barbsto apd; '

    son. 22m;Autumn stre'et.'^frs. Muriel McClifn, 6 Pioneer circle;

    Discharged today;Ronalft ftiekert,. 366 • Oakland

    afreet. ' \■ X ■ • \ \ -

    :>r Tiiv'’ n ybr '

    Death Peiialtv For S \^ iie iltt

    dastonbury, and J^rs. fethet Afac- donald, co-chaiffnafi, Hartford, have aiinonnreil , the master of

    Xeremonies to .be .lodge Henry II lift of Glastonburyr

    The fornnlittees are as follows. Ctialnnah,.Eugene House, G I ^

    toiibury, Co. Chairman, Mrs. IjUbel M acdoh^, Hartford. Comin. on |

    'XOffirejp^-Firsl lo Br Seii-

    tpfire! ̂ HangingSinci ̂ .Worlil War I,'

    dinner, Mrs. Roscoe Grey snd Harry Ward. Hartford.

    to rn p ^ a ro ld , G anity a ,^\Vest Hartford: Yerrington. Rocky HilXCrawford. Maiirhester: Borjt. Manchester: Robert.s, hSirmingtmi; Hou

    case WHjtvsettled this morning by the ppyhie^.of $3.SftO

    M o r e 'i'l'^ ivel

    T iia ii ip ’ t:r

    (Con^'DSd K r«^ Pagb 01

    Prtehse Transportalidn dii Istnied a last minute appealW'ashingttin yesterday for civilians to atay at horn* over the bolidayweek-end'and no,t travel, unnecessarily.

    EAT TH E B E ST AXHEYIHANB^B’S roast BEEF^MUSNATIVE RROIOERS

    , , STEAKS^-Soft SHELI/CRABS SCAIJ.,0

    DINE AND DANCE TONIGlCLAMS

    • ] F i n % n d e r V R e s t a u r a n t\ Fins Wines, Liquhrs ind Rear

    Oak Street * . Telephone ,3922

    X

    /Z ir -----------“ VA K : x ”

    V *nVHERE GOOD FELLOW’S 'lR ^ 1 i )G ^ H ^

    D IN E A N R XD A N CRTo the LMimg Tunes of . / ,

    THE OAK grill SWINGSTERg ^ ̂ G^LICl6 ltS;j6 0 DS — modest l̂ felCES!^ A S T / B ^ E F

    X

    HALF BROILERSm a m V E A t C l^ T L fe T S

    iJTlIED SCALLOPS / STEAKflsOur Kitchen Closed At tl PfM.

    30 OAK STREET Pine M'ines — Liquors and Beer

    TEL. 3894

    rmingtOn Xouse, .Manchester: Alsop. Avon-;

    .Spencer, Rocky HrU; Beach. Bris- tifi. add Dunn. Hartford.

    TlCluMs: Mrs. Leo N. Siiea. chaHn an, assisted by the Mes- dahies Tokarezyk'N New Britain; Rutnam. Wethersfirtd,'” Tarbox, Hartford; MouUhrop,. Bristol, and William H y^, Manchester; S tephen H. Cross, New. Britain; George E. Wood East Hartford: Milo ariffin, Grsnby; Ralph Kasc; Hartford. •

    Drcoratioius; . Mrs. .losoph W. rdlng, chairman, a.s.si.sted by the

    Me'kdames Thomson, West jXar'l- tbrdVO’Connell, West .Hartford, and ikireUa Vickers, West Hartford. ■

    Entertainment: Mrs. Crharles E. Miron, chairman, assisted by .1. Reginer, Glbstonbury; Charles E Sherwood, N ^ ’lngton.

    Seating: Mn chairman, .West

    Camp Anz*. Calif., Mity 27,-ri'Pi' -rCnless Army reviewing kgencies

    o r , President Roosevelt should In- ■f*r\'*ne,-I.leut. Beaufort O. Syi'iuv ̂euti will be the,firat Arniy officer to be hanged for murder In the United Stafea by order of a court, maitlal since'AVo.rld war I.

    A military coiirt, appointed by Col. J . K. Herbert of Uje Lba Aii- gelea port of embarkatldn veater- day found the ,31-year-otd -H " Crosse, Wis.. officer guilty on charges of miuderltlg four persons and w'ounding' four others, and- Sentenced him to be •‘‘hanged bythe neck until dead;......................

    Previously. the mintsi-y.tnbimal h^d declared Swartcutt was sane Alai-i'h .1, when the khraitings took

    Lplncr during,j[jjjl.-following a dance .a t the officers’ club here. ’

    Rvri'iitiim Within Sl.v Weeks I If HO error is found In the IrmP ' and no niitigatioh of selrteilceHs recommended, IJcu t. .^wanjuiUH’II be, expiu'ted. possiblv opHiis Jlrbiy reservation. Some tjm r ;W‘ipfin tkV next weeks.^He w i i l ^ recog-

    Crant iSehoolJ le iiiiio ii

    loltls Graduktion at Hip Yl^fGA;

    ^a|i Awkrded.■The, “Y“^ k ^ evening''st'as Vfie

    scene of the'gMa.uation o f the class of .1944 i^ lhe^G rant .School of thr'Speech Arts, coindMCled--by Wtss Lillian O ert^de ,Q tsh t'o f IhlV'town. -The occasion -iparkM also the rrtinion of the classes which she had conduct^ for the pa.st -five years, as w e ll\ ju the. conchision of the fourteenth year of her teaching in M ancheat^ and Hartford. It was also the,' drat time diplomas had ' been. awarded to the.graduate* all of whom were' obliged to pats both mid-year and final examinations.

    The exerclaea were conducted under th'i title, ‘‘Phges’ from the

    Mafli^ l>?U^.8e H e ld

    ' ^In Man’# DeatliX .

    Dentists EnSiIVTc'et Today

    -'.-■jLjPRjU

    6 ' Lillian (irrtnide Oriuifr

    l’iitlc|;n Book' of Speech.”

    .•Bciatofi. May 27.— A New Bedford .male nurse was scheduled to be arraigned in DIatrtet court to'ds'y in cohHectlon with the death of a New Britain ., Conn., man allegedly asssjilted in the Boston I Psychopathic hospital. ’

    The’ nurae, booked . as George Noyes, 28. of 7k Bay ViUagle, was arrested last night pn a charge of manslaughter. •

    Lieut. Joaepb B . Fallon, of the homicide, (quad, aaid Noyea denied he had aasaulted Cart Seaberg, 37, oR-Henry atreet.* New Bm aln. Whili!;-the latter waa a patient 'at the Psyhhqpatfaic hoapital.

    Fglton quoted Noyea aa saying he.“ only asa'iated Seaberg to bed.”

    B ekb^ g died at Peter Bent .t^righam hospital and Medical E xaminer'W illiam J- Brickley aaid cauae of dtsth 'w as a ruptured spleen. X> A warrant for the arrest of

    Noyea was Isaued by District Judge Frankland .W. Miles foilpw- Ing *rrlnqueat.>

    Ceremonies to Honor T)r. W eils to Be Efauire O f l^ st Session.

    ■ - Y -’ \P lan Sei’vicies

    ForSouth C h u reh ^ o Huve

    Sermon" Approprinie Fni^ School Gnuiuates.

    , N ^ Haven, May 27.—i/Pv-- The Oonnketicut SU te Detitsl associa- Uoil concludes its 80th annual con- yention her^’ today with cere* iuoniea honoring the memory of Dr, Horace Welle, the Hartford dentist credited by many authorl* tie* with discovering 'anesthcal* nearly 100 years ago, in December, 1 8 4 4 .x , ’

    Dr. Harry W. Archer, associate professor of anesthesia at the University of PltUburghr Is speaker for the final MSidon. ■

    Oppose* ^ociiOf^ed Dent'lsUy; , Dr. Mead, an or'M surgeon ■ aii^

    at} author, wag thejteeiplent pf^lhe Alfred C. Fohes ’ atr^ro rtV^n-by the Connecticut aswolSt^n each year to ah .putstsndmg dentist.. '> X .

    DeclaringX "legislation Ish''nece^arjJx Dr. Meadf said the den- la ljp fo ttaa ion was now successful-

    handling the four actiyl'ttes o f “research, dental education, the, care of children'e teeth tad the cape .of the indigent.

    “Dentlatry does Htlve a plan, of opposition to the socfallzation of the profession.'’ he saki.

    Dsiital H yglraltta Elect A t .. the OonnMticut Dental

    Hygienists' aaso ^ tio n convention, also held y e stw a y , these officers were elected; J^'resideht, MargaretMaher of S t^ fo r d ; vice president, Jtidy Bulllvam of

    The Sunday morning worship of the South' Methodist church hasbeen In part plaiyied in recogni-. . . Helen Daugerdas of Water-tloM of the young people of the bury.vai^ ticasurcr, Fatricia Dum- c h ,r e t .who next week Will grad- m ockW W aterbury.uste from Manche.Mer HIghj \_____:_________ __.'. i .school. Several of the leaders^ of i The fikst patent for an electrical

    year’s graduating class > are i headlight ■ for locomotives was ia-this

    A. A .- Shuje, nizrd/jRS .in oJBcer until/siu h lime arlford: iislierK . n.i'the' exrwrtmn .notlce^msy he re-1

    aa.ilating. Meadknies C«rsden,'|^*Rubn'eir^^**'M^r«' R 1 K\ ve ' .Swanciitt ŝ imI imflinchinglv as

    Thomas Ferguson, X ^ „ e h L t» . ' . I 12-officer panArthur W atsom / W ethersfild • ! T'y?" .Frank Healy, Windsor LOcka, a Frank TIndale, Hartford.

    Sprakera: Hugh M. Alcorn, ,Ir.,Co. prtdrman, 3uffhsld; Mrs. Aiiija- hfae Svrttaaki, chairman. New Britain. ,

    Republican ‘Tj-Jo; Mrs, .los. Grif- flk. violini.st; .MrsXciifton Weat,.i piaXjpt; Mr*. Henry..itone, vocal- ' iat. \ 'i '

    Guests will be; Mrt! Ali/e Ri CochraiiXState Central Vide QMlr- man, ai}d\ J . Kennet State CyhtriN^hairmajrt.ofricers of Ihe Hartford CountyA^anan’a R eX cu puhlipSn A aso^tw n. committee- tn cheli^an . cluh •'hwaidenta, «-hSTr- mtjf Xand rtoe" yChf^man li}Wn* (rfXthe HSrtfo'rtlGoi

    tate .Cw traJ .committW^men onit' eiaion which would akoYd of^.the HnrtfordyCoimlv:

    of -theoung

    took: the form of a play rehear.sal in an original play Woven aroufhj 'oroae aiid poetry o* w*’>ch the meni'’-.i'n}; had inade a study, du'r- '■e. tile veao' _ ' _. ’i;iie play' opened w ith ' a tcle-

    oliorte Conversation by Miss Giace •:'at: li ' from which ' those . gradu-

    wonld .' he "̂ >nK Jyere Introduced td the audl- t'H'ce 'Sml ■incllided -besides Miss Hatih, Mrs; Bostfice 'Manning, Mrs: Florence ErlandSon. Mrs. Ilulh Reynold.!. Mrs. Florence rhapman. .all .of this town, and

    placed h'andcufra'on kim_.find he I Miss Baplmi-a Ch.ipinan of Rpek- Was taken to hl.s .W heek^ir 'just ■*". *ke bther melln-ontsXle the courtroorwr - t hers arrived on the stage. Miss

    h, h oll.'l for^Kk mv cap'*’ heLM“ t l̂i explained what th ^ were jd a.s he lei^ned his'Vhair T h e -t" do for graduation and quickly

    )V(Vseaa can- Was'rt-covered fropi j **-*‘ipded'^the parts. Many humor- the Imnrortseri courtroom In the Pds lines which had been intro- ''e-oi{>^k,.ea. land he W s wheeled I'duced into the play brought forth

    clHickles from the audience as for-.| mei\ members were meritloned

    to ttrî Hetention ward.; Beltexkd Insane b.v Family ,.SwnnentUs . family his mother,

    Mrs. Uarolliie Swapentt; his sister, Mrs. Beatrice- W right:, his brotheiv Corp.'W ellington S'wan- utt, and his eatranged wife. Gee-

    L ‘ ■ P'-O'H' of «>me of rtie old- masters. Whek the matter X reviewed, by,,nCurting Dicken^x, Robert andElizabeth Brownlnk.\ Emerson, Carlvie, and other.!. \ • '

    Ifmember.! of the church

    ] apprcjtimatcly^ twenty and in the class who. have been active

    in the church’p program.The pastor will preach a Sermon i

    appropriate for the- occasion on | the theme. “I t ’s the Spirit ^ th at: Mktters.” The music wlll -b e 'h y ' the choir under the leadership of* Jam es Newcomb; organist and di-; rector. ) - j

    'The yhung . people are to meet in the i^ar-thcx of the church and J sit together in the sanctuary. 'U| is hoped that they will be accompanied'to the aervice by their parents and f r i e n d * , |

    . __ _______ ______ _ "•!

    There sre^aUed in 18|}F. graduates

    A n o th e r T r ip

    A b r o a d H in te d

    DANCEM ANCHESTER

    SPO R TS c e n t e rWells Street

    A i g h U• t s i $ \

    Sat. 2 7

    Modem and OM F u w p iM . Fnmnerly Held At MllleFavl^U.^ Petei Miller Prompter, \ , A Uood Dnte lor Vormi sad UMI

    (C;oatlBued..trum 'Page Ode)

    fronjHUne to time. Thus, the ”re- hearsBr* was really the graduation play into the preparation Snd execution of which the graduates had put much time and effort, as revealed b.v thrtr rendition o f the

    |tary operationa-and includes postwar planning.-

    1 of 29 j higher and more. understanding ii^ty, and I authprities" there w’oif be

    feaident-aifd vice,-]^alderi ^pubiicaiy Glub.

    Ward pisphtc Y May iBRiie

    (Contluiied 0IH1)

    party intends to make the', caae. a campaign ^isaue w as.d earth , indicated by 'the annonncT-ment'x of Senator Moore' (R-Okla.) that he will .fire an “opening* gun” for the G.O.P. national committee in a radio address on . the.' mail ordpr seizure tonight ye, and WUUam H. ilt«rHtig, retired busineas man, have beeip awarded the purple heart— wounds received 45 years amo in the •panlah-Amsricafi wary'

    a. ,,CHltoREN^ 'VtooATi

    V A LL R I I B ^ H A li: P R I (X

    R ID E S B O O T IIS T^iNGO

    THIS EVENING ‘FIN A L raBFbBMANCr or ? « £ » B O C itB tS IN TH EIR

    DARINO A ERIA L ACT!

    ‘ Prt’ . ..lit J , [ p'li P t' , P I'l ■[

    v , x '/;k,roh.w„?

    ASK. NOkVBU

    : y . .

    i-mi ' ■ ~->y

    X X-V-.t -x-j.X '/ '

    C ^ A N O T E S T E R E V E t e c H E R A L D . ^

    allhem

    zccofMi Congregational Church ijorth Main and No|^

    I rerrie E-U fisa Elsie N ew een*. CIw "*"

    Behool Director

    . »t.^daine*’B Bomaa Oathotfb, Bav-. W H ^ J . Punn, Paetoi? x

    Rev. E ^ o itd jta r r e t t , Aaelstaat

    Bhnday rnaes**; -X „For adults, 6:30, 7. 6:30, \9:46,

    I 7 ; o.n.» and 11 a. m. Memorial service for(Thurch .School at 9.JU Patriotic organizations, a t - JL ',^

    J Nursery at 10:46. . . g-ao—Chlldren’e mass dowit-

    S ’ -- '" -" " - ■ ■ S I*? " '* 'tnthem -■-Peace I i:eave W lth jo u • . . . . . . . X . . . . Robert*

    liertlory- 6 Lord, Tnist^.^ v

    ”M ;- 's i g m a ° ^ J;oclety*at 6:00. O utdoor meeting

    Lt 8:00 ajt High School Auditor^

    The W'eekMonday at 7 ff)0—Boy S^ u ta . C a y at 7:00 - Girt Scouts Tuesday .at 7-00 — Choir ,.

    ,^®Wcdnesriay at 7:00 .lu n i^ choir rehearsal. X . ,'' Notes ,

    Next Sunday atwill b i a Special SerVlCe oM nU r-

    re ir io n tn ^ h a lf of thv^^^^ fo f the parish, who arC; serving m Ith e armed forees. T l^ Sacrametfflo t the Lord’* W e r will be o ^I served tn connection wi th thel^ rv ice , Thc^am illes of service Ipersonnel pre especially r June U , win be observed as Ichildreh's Day this y ear .* FWhs are being m a ^ to hold

    h«' Vocation Church School this ^ m C r , tht- first three weeks in

    I July.* Mrs. Beatrice Vetrano. of i S i t Hartford, will have general

    fbhbervision of the school.* Funds fa te being sdllclted by the committ e e to defray the Ywpenses of the I nroiect. A. F . Howes is chairman lo f the committee, and Dr.1 RerTiolds will be the director this

    year.

    Asalstant Piutor

    unto you. Seek un- L tb i^ fa m lu a r jiid n to t,

    !̂ ri . •—

    The WeekMonday, 3:30 p. ni,-*Glrl Scouts.

    6:30 p. m .--Boy Scouts. J :0 0 p. jn :I—Beethoven Glee.club." ■ 7 x I Thursday, 2:30 p. m.—̂ -Woman’s ' Missionary Society, —

    Mr. Hjelm will be in charge of the T*rlntty Sund a y service J une itb , at 10:30 p. m.

    The June meeting of the Brotherhood will be held 'Ibursday. Junr 8th. instead of Tuestfay. June A special “Ladlsa* -Night P r o j^ m " has’ been arranged. An .lUaq|trated lecture on South Ameplcg will be given by ManvlUe ̂ Sm lth, P ratt and Whitney Alrpi4tft, tepresenta- tlve to South A^erlch. G. Albert Pearson is'^iXcKargf of the music that evenlKg

    SoIoMt, Oae The a a n c tu a r :^ --^

    given by Coxswain Fredrnemo^>^oLW* Wend,

    m.-,Mc.morl*l Day P A rt4e ., which win be held on year. The procession wlH Ihe Church, at 5 «Hone cemetery,, the school children SUrprCvide a patrioUc progtam,. under the direction of

    Mm RubY -Ldoverin. .The Rev, Son'^Au.iilu'^of North Cov^tiY .will be Oie "peaker; Frar^lln .W eller the ifiarshal and the Wv. Thomas Street, the general cl)Mr- man The TalcottvlHe, Girls Drum C ort* win lead the vriU play.*at the cemetery, Includ-

    ‘"7 Young

    8 Preture Man o f ;k-

    as Well as7 ; iicd si^. >v-

    r who

    "■‘NCSt. Mar> *i

    Rev. AlfredCburcli

    Hectoir

    By .l^llUatw E. 6 ««»y. ®- The two chapters Aha4 con*tl-i^

    tute the text of thX lC ssbh 'nm rH -____Uie highest point oK w cou rgge- ; weak ment in the)(^rihthlan8,..^Ttte actual printed l e ^ i

    y t teirhap

    ^iougl

    erit .^tm-^-though X- I’t asmecasaary a*thatfhe ahduWkMV*

    rth

    fMti've was posBlt n a great man.

    '(h^imatn Paul’i concernabotiihlmaelf :.he was con

    Ota, purity

    Rev. Elltaon F . f th jy w r o w t* ! , 8:60 a. m.-^tolfliCbinmunion.

    9-80 g,Z^irt71Chlldren'« Serv. . . . . . --------

    will .ring. Dedication of Armeo Service Honor Roll*.Procession Hymn— Spirit Divine,

    Attond Our Prayers.”Gradual—"Sjptrit of Mercy. 'Truth

    $8 niaBL oe aLuwcu «» »act the full perspective, ^ e --------- -------- ‘ '•*

    ■ Father!

    God

    An ADied soldier examines A broken Ge.n,an grave marker found amid the rubble Of, Benedictine mona.stei y ^ Cassino, Italy.

    Miss Munson will speak bq, “What Docs a Director of ReligldMS Education Do 7"

    Troop 25,

    r eve-

    Gospel HaR 415 Center '

    10:20-rB re 12 :16—Sun

    7:

    de reading

    , of bread, school.

    Service.V prayer meeting

    hriattan Science Seivice*

    The Center CburcJi (Oongregatiorasl)

    Marion A- Munson, Director of ReMgiou* M ii^ tlo n Jesse Dart*. Director of Mu^C

    W aldo Newbury, O r^ n lst ^

    Zion Evangelical LutheranCooper iuid High S tr a ta I»*ul O. Frokopy, B»af0t

    Sunday School aiid^Blhlc Class, ' 9a. m. - •- ” , „ '

    .D ivine Worship 10 a. m. E^lW h language; IL d . m„ in Qerroanlan- nauge. Celebtaflon oL-^’entecoat. T h e m e > ^ e Christian Church and th e jtto ly Ohoats’^ 'Textr John 14.

    3 l.

    Hartford, F irst Churcli .Sun 11, 3 . S. 11: Wed. 8. 537 Farm ti^ o n Ave. Second ufch Sun. 11 a, m.’ and 5 p. .m .,'S . 8., 11: Wed. 8. Lafayetto'ilnd Ruafi/stresta.

    Rockville Society, Sun. 11. 8. 8. lU 'W ed . 8, 94 Union street.

    :,')it. John** Polish ChurchGalway Street X

    Rev. 8 , J . Szczepkowskl

    9 a. mi— First mass.10:30 a. m.— Second mass.'Choir

    rehearsals following each inasa.

    ‘.'Ancient and Modem Necromancy. Ahaa Meameriam and Hyp- notlanr Dcnouncecd" will be the subject; of the Lesson-Sermon for Sunday. May 28th. -

    1 ' The Golden Text is from Rom- ans\16:19. 20. _ "I would have- you Wise unto that, which is goo

  • V >4̂

    %: .si^ n c h e S t i :S V E N W G H E I U L U , M AW GfiJEl^TER, C O N N ^.;P̂ ■

    S A I ^ D A T , M A T 2 7 ,' 1D44

    V'- iti*a[i T ff* '

    ■id* of WMbinfton would b« dl«conUnu*d.''

    ApMoitod PUb MlflU WorkMUW Mid tM t thoXprorrom

    for dooUnc the frow iiA ^W * powor ptimoiB In tho w u pMoented tb moinben of/Ui^ Con* iMottout dolegoUon o ^ t » V *"*go ot 0 broiUtfMt teMtlnc coHmIky Sonotor Molony (D^-Conn.!

    I , "and i t appeared a t that tlrn# that, t" it waa B ^aA that might .work.’*'

    However/he.: aald, "It juet-haa not worked, and^l^ aeerte to me It la ridiculoub to go on w ltt. a program th*t 7iot only ia n o t^ rk lp R but la dhflnttely k ^ l n g pfople but of war Induatriea."- -Mlllhr Mid before thi| "controlled luring*' waa put Into effect through the United (ttotee Em* ploymeht ier\dee. employerr would •perauade -worker# to bring bpck

    ^ ^ e n d a from other atmtea tc_Work In ^ a rtfo rd planta. Now. he Mid. therW^a "no inducement end, no effort b ^ g mhde to bring employee Intoj the—critical __labor krear.*

    S en^j^ taT SfO lartfo^He. p la in e d -vUu»t available

    v^orkclp were berhg aOl^ to the * b a ll-ta ring plants butaide Hartford/w here labor was . shhrj^st, anw If tt*«y ‘ftd not accept jl>ba

    frc. found'It.dliricult because nr Ibrity ratinga and ceilings to ob- A referral fmm,the uses to take

    .^ available Joba in other planta. He A citbd Inatances of numerous wom

    en who could hold down'Jobs Ingiants wllit ciHild not iMVf their homts to work a t dlatant factorlea. yet the:

    H k tH e l ^ v e r C itie s./ ■ ■: ''r:,. ■

    B o n ib itt^ /lp a rg e tB ; I ^ i l w a y H it

    (OontlaMd from Pago O a a > ^

    ciouda, the atroM force of Allied day raiders headiM for the Pas de Calata region of Trance. *Eht aky flMt,: fippaarad to Includa forma- .tionih:dr Mmbera.

    [oanflR n qua.

    «4'-

    Blanta within their neighborhoodi to(»y.

    were blocked by WMC rulinga V* from-taking the work. Miller Mid.

    On the other, hand.'Lawrence A. Appley, deputy chairman of the .WMC. told the 'aommlttae that part-time workers were not Included in the oeilinga placed on

    . 0 .amptoymant of full-time em- V ployes in less essential planta.

    ,^Iso. be aald. "those not.,accepting work In the h a ir ' boating

    ^plants were referred to other es- a ^ i a l industries according-to. the p r lw ty ratlng'df the Arm." Thou- aands. he Mid accepted theaa-oth- er jobs.-- Shortage 0(,̂ tD.OOg Workers

    Appley aald hefozb the program became effective there waa a shortage of 20.000 wot^iera among Hartford manufacturers. JCvcn in 1M2, Appley said,., "yital War in- dustrlea In the area frequently

    , could not obtain the number of aaeded woritarg baoauM other flrma''producing teas Msantlal ma- bariat 'ware *MtiBg up’ tha labor aupply. —

    "Without this orderly aystem ol recruitment individual employers would be oompetlng for the available labor au^p^ between areas 8ald, Was

    ted by PhiUp Cafaro, SS, d( turet, N. J.

    oulson died of a broken neck I other injurtea.

    Wlcklow^aald Cafaro, employed the" Relianco Steel Corp., of

    „l.yndhurst, was arrested on a Charge of operating a motor /ehl-' cle so as''to Cause loss of life.

    C h a r i e r, S e ^ ^ c e S ta r ts

    , SlmsbiW', May 27. ~(JP) — De acribingiat as a neSv, service, Presl-

    Jerorne fi. Respess ■ of the ibury-Flying Service, Inc., to- announced "a charter p a te n

    te r and freight airplane service to all parts of the country was now based^^at Simsbury airport.'

    The service. Re.speas said, was axpected. to assist Cohhecticut ^manufacturers in obtaining or delivering vital supplie.s'and to transport engineers and executives.

    | . . i Th^ planes to be used will carry I-A th ree pas.sengeiii or up to 1,000

    pounds of freight.

    RriOgs Rig l.oui(h ' ^

    The MoahflR«a, In th* IXth night axeucsion Oils, month, atruck. wt Ludwigahafen In soutJfiWeatem Oermany for the fourth time in May^ andlat-Aachen ripped up one of the t\i‘6 raltrbad yarda severely mauled by R. A. T. HeavSf bombera ig e night attacks Wednesday. Aachen la near the junction of The Netherlands, Belgium and German bordera. .

    Paris radio announced today that Obstende, on the ooaat of Bewum, was bombed yesterday. There -waa no Allied confirmation.

    -X/ Mine DMnhe lUvdr As the-smine laying program in

    northern European watcra went steadily forward? i t waa announced In N ^lee that R. A.'T.,. Liberators and wellingtons had completed _a new series of mining operations covering hundreds'of niilea of the Danube river, one of the Natia’ principal military waterwaya.

    canals and rivers always a valuable means of transportation In Europe.v^iio assuming even g re a te r ; importance as Allied bombers methodically smash the railroad aystem.

    The R, A .'F , haa bean , mining Ac^hem coastal lanea.-4tnd many iniiSAd waterwaya euccessfitlly ainoa 'MHO." Now it la completing an ambittmiB program along, the Danube Vritlcli has been c a r t^ n f a great deaf^oif oil traffic froim Romania. 'X

    PravlqiiB oper^Ripna there oauaed the intenniptum of much Viyer Bhtp|itng~-tjt9m Ronfama and Riingary. It is aMumed that the mines were sowed along the most naviMble otreteheis of thF Dinmie, aiiere the river is three jmilM wide

    Sweepa Ovar France While weather halted heavy

    aerial pffenaive operatiotfs .',frora Britain yeaterday, medium bomb era anth fighter bombej»>tonducted 8W«pa over France;

    tn_the operatioiyr "from Britain, more than S25̂ . American medium Marauders' raced. 40 mllea southwest "Paris, hitting an air field HMr d a r t r e s and bridges In northern France.

    R. A. F. aircraft of the Coastal command and the Fleet Air arm, have been firfng rockets at the Germans both on land , ancT -'sea since last June with cohsidTrable auoceaa, It waa d lacloao^iftar a 11. 8.'X. Navy anbounMinent In Washington that Atnifiican jdanea huntmg Naai aubnlarineB were now equipped With long-range rocket guna.

    Oart^t^8lgli| Backeta;era, Huirlcanaa, T>;-

    phoona/ind Sxyordflsh are fitted with ̂ {wojectori esuTying eight rockbta four under each wing, and ̂a rb . employing them, against U- boata. dipping, and land targeta such,as bridges, gun emplace- mentih wireless stations and mill- tarv buildings. •

    The Swiss newspaper Gazette de in a report on ■ recent

    damage along the F reh ^ - Oerman-SwiM border said that Area were' still burning, today In Lhe railroad yarda a t Belfort, France, from Thuraday’a American aaanult. It credited the Amer- ilcan airmen with "remarkable preciaion" In carrying out the at- tacke, Mytng thay picked out the Germans' gasoline reservoirs unerringly. W e freight yards also were smashed and aH worehyusep were razed, the newspaper contiii- ued^

    Belfort, Important link In supply lanes to German Anraies In It-, sly alao was bombed on M ay'Jjl, *fhe link is now completely blocked by bomb craters. The Oatette said. \ .. 'I

    \

    -JK 'V

    X- ’ST'

    . y-..

    1 , ■ X'̂ *'■ X - ■■ ‘ ■ - ':v ■ ■ x : . ■

    Henry B. Jeme.-toij,' J r , who.se ITrat hlirth.lay anniversury la Mov 26, Sits on his m other's'lott'-at .BuHliurton, ffl.. where She received word that a BiltBin-haaetl Flying l^ lr r .s s hnd been named "Mani J r , ” Ir' honor of the boy. Civw jyrembi'i'S'wfio namrii the skip \ ^ o frienda of the' baby’s fathbr, an AP w.ir.cnrresp.,mdenl'\vho hss/been overaeaaa 16 ntonlha and bia^mever s.^en his ion. lAP WIteWoto).

    ownFirst Lfeut. Frank N, Spacek,

    of ,12.Vnlimldwn road.'la presently .uttepdii'g the -Ailjutsnt Ganernrs ■arhfvJ st Fort Washing ton.“Mb ry- tand. undergoing eight wenks of tn- tohstve training in Army admhtis- tration procedures.

    G liiiie se C lia s^lUlg J u |) s

    ^ jx (Dontiau^ from Page im e)

    taeltlnff' :of JapaOear'Instnllations urt j^^h i'd n the Yellow river area!

    C h i i w s ^ C ^ tp tu r p T o i t 'n

    Southeast J ^ d q u a r te r s ,Kandy, Ceylon, -The^Chinese have cajM^ed the .north Burma town t^W nrrmg. 12 mUes northeast of^Xamaing, shd seized' a supply dHtqp in the ^ogsutig valley, ipfllcting heavy Cn.sttaltieson the/Onemy. it was officiallyXki-,; ' ... - ynotirtced today. — ̂ Xxl /

    V the * Daughtersi tox-’t'''t^b.''lla, \vill attend as a delej

    have advanced a mile and a Half 1 I n t e r - F a l l h rally to- toward base

    All Ani''r4can Legjonnaireg are

    mahad a burrladly-SMiimblad battle group of tha S34th Oarmah infantry dlviaion from the Adriatic sector' into the line agalnat the Fifth Army-forcM including the French, who arsAdvanclng north Ward toward Cepriino.

    R«inrorc*tnanta BeAtMi Bark But thasa' rainfqrcamantS were

    beaten back and the Alllaa captured both San Giovanni find Ras- tena, both heavily-defended Strong points. •

    Boring steadily Into enemy, de- fehaes further .west, the French seised Monte JRotondo and Monte Qiiattodorio yeaterdayreaeh^Jthe otitakiHinir Amaaemo, eight mllea weat of Pkatena.

    An Allied' official spokfimman declared "a tremendous am o^l motor movement" was obae' riirther so\ithwaat. a hers othoi Fifth VArmy troops croaaefi-" ̂ the Aaemo river and took the^lllagc of rastella V a len tino ./ /

    "All the German ^Vistona ,th the line and In reaerysFit the a ta ri o f the offensive now have hcea.drawil' into the maiir battle area, including twoi-fttofn the Adriatic flank, this, offiptkl said. ,y '

    R esistance W eak eq a .G h id u ^ .vII^ i f along the .rlghir'flfinJt'M.the

    I’ard the Japanese north Biirnia morrotx-evening at 8 o’clock in the le of Myllkyina. ' -iF 'h schoql anriitorttim.' Mrs. P.apanese BattalUm Annihilated Bromick>the regent/'hopes forgapanese Baltaltcm Annihtlaled ^

    A Japanese, battalion was re- ** large turnoiii .ported to have been "practically annihilated and . the commander killSd’’ In. the continuing fighting, which is ousting the Japanese from the Bishenptir area of Inclln aouthweat of Imphal.

    Royal Air Force and Indian Air Force fighters 4nd dlve-boml'crs registered twp direct hits .on the Manipur river budge in the Ton-\Nonvalk: zang area, again ctitting off com- Rames outdoors monicatlons sec; the .p--, [ Susan’s mother,.83rd division a t 'th e edgfe of Imphal plfiln'.

    f t p n s >ljgfirn*,ll/ Bombers

    Readquiftere,

    :\M ining R^i^ces ff^ateriiay Traffic

    Wilhem-sport. Pff.--(ff>,:iX Thi-^ ---JJarks. from a blind dog w 'h^ an ..auctioneer a.sked for a $3 bid on a bras.s bowl didn't; buy the an-. H^que-but did.bririg .a big laqgh, -

    -Personal Notidea . |C ard o f T han k s'̂XWj»h to tbsnjv sll our frlsmts Tor Klriitnrss ;,»)rt simpaihv »t Uie

    tinu- I>r the d,.i,tmii-Julin Kokui;. Wr .urc yn-y arateful for thr boao- tifUl, noral piece* pDil u. all thoae '•■•'Ujoanitdjrhe-iiseiof tliejr i-rff.’ -I'*’t4ak. Fainily,

    WANTED/■TOi'BuV;/-; U S E D C A B S 19.32 '

    T H R O U O K 1942 - X.^ f ly ModalA ny CoiiditioR. / P r i M no o lijcc t .if c a r is d e a n .

    CALL if ARTEORD 8-1^0 AND ASK FOR JOB

    Allied Haadquafters, Naples, May 17—(g>)—A new’ wriea of mining operations, caVarirtg hpndreds of. miles of tlje D anube^ver—the vital water highway o f 'th e B|il- kansXhss been completed by Royal Air Force Liberators and/Well- ingtpns of the Strategic A ^fW ce, it w as announced officially to d ^ .

    Mining of the Dandbe. carflM out a t low altltude/and a t nlghC has effectively rgauced 'G erm ^ waterway, t r a f ^ , to the eastetm froht.. "The diflrfence in Danube t fic now, .xtompared with the first tirhe w*' went o u t is like ths difference between main street - on Satfirday night • and a. .countfy lane,’/ said an R. A- F. Liberator rear Jgunnbr, S erg t WilUaip Mac- Guff le, Whitehaven, Cumberland, England.^-K— -

    A^ter the first Aiinihg af the Danube," it was announced, Hungarian and Rumanian ahipplng .companies broadcast, a statement that they were no longer ablg to B )— a commuhiq.ue today au.stain^. through th e »?nd hay the drum fire ot reports 'Concerning a ir ac- Uon against the Schouten islands, off North Dutch New QuInea, but omitted mention of the gflnv ground battle o n ' the mainland t o ' the southwest.

    Today’s report fit a Liberator strike a t Biak kept attention focused on the Schoutehs which are 20q miles northwest of the ground fnm t on Maffin bay and 900 milgs a'way from the Philippines.

    . But Whereas,’yesterday’s communique told of Yanks alugging their way through a . tena^ous Japanese juhgle defense to reach the edge of an e.nemy airfield at Maffin bay tha only, offtclal report on th a t sector today was limited to aupporting air a ttacks and the shelling by PT” boats of gun fJo- sitiona.— .Abandon' GUrut

    . However, ra’’ager field reports. toId.,of -Japanese withdrawing iin- der-fheavy American infantry aiid artillery fire, abandoning three 75 mm. guns,-a 37 nira. anti-tank gun and considerable ammunition before advancing American medium

    nks. ;;spokesman ia id the la test re-

    •purted Shoutca raid,’ occurring ’thumrtay.x brought to 700 the ex- p lo a lv ^ tortnag* dropped o n .' the two islm ds of tha t group - Biak ■and Soe'pWi—this month. BiakMs a pivotai/pqliit in a nest: of arr bases g ird lir^ C^elvink bay . ^ i c h

    . Srisan. d-uighter o^.^rr. and Mrs. Wilfred W. Crossen. oT-l.t* North Elm street, w’as 8 yeara^old yesterday. •fhe occr\sit)n was suitably celebrated by a .b irth d ty party.xat- tehded by a group of little boya and girla, also her go.dp.'j[renta. Mr. sthd M ra S.imilel Hoyt .of South

    The . children played and the ho.stesa,

    . _ , t i » c d red, white apd blue fB\’onr71f«a Chester W. "Nlmitz yesterday, were the 22nd in May on Poqape In the eastern Carolines, the third-oh' nearby Kvuiate ialand, the-14th 'On UieXurileSt 'and a continuation of the dhily asMulta on

    -iaolated. enemy Marshalls atolls. The Kuaaia strike waa Wednesday, the otheto Thursday, ’

    Anti-aircraft fire was not heavy oyer any o f the targets and all Amerlcan.'jplanes reutrned,.

    Airfield .gad dock areas were hit a t Ponap* and anti-aircraft / in- Mallatlons and buildliiga in tlM MarahaUa. Several firaa were.atart- ed at'Sfaumtiahu, the Kuriles objective.

    Mrs., John /^ U n and Mra. Mary Anderson were hflfiteMM- at a bridal sh'o.w-erj.-'rhurtday evening at the PoUsh-Amerlcan.club, tn honor of Misa Oenevlava Qothhsrg who will leave oit Satu rday. Jun9 2 for Fort McClallan, Ala., wtmra

    -she. is to be married to Sergeant Gt-orge Atkins, son of Mrs. .Anna Atkins of RockvillSv •' '’“T ’r ... -

    R cfig A tta c kV e ss e ls

    \ y (G-ontlnitW

    launch liieif'^aw pSfinMfia. ' T^ie BerUn nidi^, in ft -kiroftdcftat

    recorded in Tha .Daily Bxpreaa, ported Rgd iaremt h u tocottPiad tha Island of Lavansaart In tha Quit of Finland, 70 miles wept of Kronstadt, big Russian Nfivml-baM, ftiMt 50 RiMes northwsftt of Narva.

    heavier fire on roads over which the Americans sw-arrhed north from Cistema.

    Scores of new prisoners Were taken in this arim, including th^ Second Reg-lmental coratnonder'

    land the staff of the Nazi 362nd division.

    Even though their right flank had b ^ n tum-id, the German First Farschute. division attempted- to hold a Meffa river line in the U ri valley above the main rfiUroad bri.dg-; yesterday morning, but the Brittsh forced a dn>sal>ir-cy. ■ ' \ '

    Union Leaders Uondei Labor Board Order \

    Portland, Gre„ May 27^—(J Aa 85,000 to 30,000 /Oregon W ashington lum ber/ w-orker| mained idle and jiw re than plants cloaed from, unaum orizl walHputs, CIO and AFLx-jinlJ leaders met today: to ctm aldef-1 National, W ar Hfibar Bdard decll ration tha t'-the men /must re tu i to their jobs b c f (^ / 'i t will tall action on w-agfi in c lo se appea

    Both the Northwestern Councj of the A FL/Lum bar and Sav -.Workers" uqlon ,-and the Die Council of Oie Internatlonl W oodworkers,‘of America,

  • T A C E S IX

    M a n e h ( * » l p r

    E v e n iii^ HefM idpu wMMiiiiUUUO>aiNTi^,

    i'HifiCO ̂i«C.

    , , «*%•• taf. Conn.

    MOICAB PBKClOaON > .̂iBaaarai Uana>ar .

    andad OetotMr 1. I M labUMiad avarp Vaaaini' Bai^t

    ___. upa agd BollOapa Bourad attha'Jfoat Ojnoa af Haaebaatan-Coan.. aa i^ b d Cldd^Mall Matty;

    JBBUIunibM.lU'TBSOaa r UM li.oa

    BUBBUBjKrBlacla O o B » ......... . I .S IDalTaafad 61>a. f)i£r >»«■»....... »*•*>

    Tba AaaKti$ATBD PKicaa Tba Aaaodlatad Praaa la aaalualvar

    ly aatitliM ta th'a dM of raaublioa* tloe ctyUi aaara diaparobaa oradt'ad to tt/ar aoi dtbarwiaa eradi'ad ta tliijKpaDor aad alao tba. local aa»a puMlahad bora ’

    All rtahfa of rapublldatioh el I dlaaatebaa baraia. are aiaôipaelal

    raaaniod.Pull aarvloa allaai of

    .Sarvica lea, , \Publtaliara Raaraaaniai)eaa: 'N jirtlua M a t b a ^ Bpaelal A p a a c r -

    55 w Torb. C»ic«»o /Oa»roTi>f Bbf'on.■ i:

    ■r~ \v and \

    ClffiMUBir AUMlt

    TwiTtOHB - ,BURBAU o r

    :(‘r!i;:;iP' p|rpple''1̂ 9

    Aai|ti thr.\>^.Ari-Jtifp it', . If tKev make u^ti/ lr inindg |h^t they will doesn't reAUyter/u>o‘mufch how ,t>e niiUdns'get te^ther in t^e nafne of pafice, or

    ^•hat-^tlcu laf forgantrttioii they ddopt. / Whatever fyaineworjc they a d o p t/ w illA s /^ood aa the pop-

    '4.ulai^-wiU beijind it, 'aird never much bett^. 'What crounta la what it fa" worth to the average peojpl ̂ of thie wbrlcfi not to have to flgtat another war twenty y.eara from now.. 'I fc lt ta worth giving poaitiye i^i^icii'' to \ peace, , wdrthmakihg sacfiltfiei,^®*^ P**®*'won’tr^vO ip fl|fbt it.; The- peace made at Veraalllei failed'not prln*

    ^paily Abecauae of . the form It took, but becauae It waa not truly made th\ the heafta of men. , The queation \for the future la hot ao much one of what Uie atateamett .jvlll do. blit of what . the .i^ople

    \

    ,Tbc •ifarat

    i lnu., asspiaei blllly for tyretd Priotlor Oompanr. «a «o Bnaaelai responal- pograpbleal arrora a«-

    pearina-in Nadvertlae^nta la Tbd iranehettar

    ■ 1 -

    srrora•adverilaemanta Banina- Herald

    f la te r^ , May 27

    - \ ; v

    . F

    ) f Peace

    ■/

    ̂t.hc Ultimate 9aaiiL From k r . ChUkhlird »P««ch. r frS to-^^ lhgtp ir repoV^'iZfiom

    Forei|p/'feaepitary''Bdan come in- dlcAUona t 6 i t » a ^ o r t d organi-

    Iaatlon aW-up to fi la to conalat of taro eounc^ t i ^' I'^'^exacutiva eoi%cii'\ compBaing Limly the vary great powara, the

    -yy" which ii dcflnitfiy on ,,’our lidt.' The booklet Is designed as a guide for teachers of cltlaenshlp in Con- nacticut Achoola. _̂__

    booklet's- Awareness of ifn- ectlon and future challenge in

    this little ' dsmocrscy of ours, and Its relatively fair and realistic reading of the past ire . we think, a tort of good health tonic for Connecticut- thinking, and if the tone of the booklet is followed in the teaching that la-done some- thing.at least will have been done to rear a generation of Connecticut cltisena who regard their dtl- senship aa a constructive respon- slbilfty,-not merely'as license to enjoy a perfact system handed down to us by All-vilae forbears. For the booklei' glVea Uie Im- resaion that our hlstorlc^ihces-

    were human, too. When they achieved .something good, it was not without atruggle..

    Such modern democracy as Connecticut enjoys can be found to have Its roots in our sarly^ documents. blit it was long defeatbd by actual ptActlCf. And changes, 'llke- the Constitutlo^ltself, were won only by hArd. w d bitter fighting, always Agal/st ' opposition Of standpatters/ who considered everything /Wonderful aa lt_ had always h^n, which was usually

    !Ior thbU/partlcutar behelU.If 'Want to xcontrpst this

    thing with thS'Sort of coy op- tingam Which Is the sducsttensi technique of-Mr. Psrr, whb'H.aa

    itereeted In the future. Welfare and good dtlsenshlp of Connect- lout aa we ire, but wbo'haa hit own unique methods of-promoting It, the Contrast is lyliig right-handy In that portion of the booklet which telis teacbero sad Btudentc that the ayMan of repreaentatiOB lii Ooane^cut is attU aa outatandlng^robtem of governaient herw ̂ni contrait fo Mr. ParPa Uatid by-paaaing of Ib l r problem; the booklet points out thaj-kie senstorlal districts

    far from equal iw. -tlqa. It notes that pubJUc

    iBdiaereaos’*'' defeated prqpba- to change tbie eystena-''Mck

    1003,-iad- It etates, upequlvo- tbat the prpM ^ Is still Connecticut, Awortby of

    by sti^nta. ̂This '•^rt^ 0*̂ ' " thing, simply

    enough, gjyea ititure citizens the idea that QipFe will be soroethlog for them tif'Vdo when they come Into th)^''^ citizenship. Generally sp eak s the bbpklet, authored, by Rlchptd J. Stanl^. presents the hla^ry of Connecticut as a-drama jl»blch l^d its Influents on and Its

    We are glad itJ'l’ irollels In modern lEtonnectlcut - life, and it is thus a. healthy step

    away from the type ofXhlstory

    IG Amencapl .o p ^ w n c —Haws; W D R C --,, i ArGrand Central Station;xNews; V i ^ C ^ M ^ r WTftT—News: Music; 'W^IBG,- k ^M T —J^erlcari —Re'pbrt from London. . x V1.1Uary; WNBtJ^Tl

    i;i6-^WTlC-^Market Report aita'; Days.■ ItunCr. News; WTHT.rroxltaUy of a jumble of boulders ^jttch are visible and ob- noxjious St all but ths highest tjsfes—I hsve/beep dumping the

    î W'inter'a coal ashes. .^Iso a good deal of general trash has gone

    is that they put in hbohy traps— there is anythlngWIas to which a cat Is even Usrglc.

    The Cass of Mrs. McG.Take the esse of s cat that we

    Owned down here a great many ysars ago,' Ws called, her Mrs. McO. You sea she Was the most

    befi

    broadening/Concept of Manclie^er

    of \niiwhich dully peraitades scho^ children, and. -perhaps' even 'some adults, that everything sIaâ s automatlcajly happened for the best In Connecticut bccauae thls'-jx"'"-'* was Cojinecticut. And thta, with- out difnming their pride ih,. 'our eny i past, may stimulate their inCerest

    the fdttire, perhaps persuade that ■■

    partly to the nianufacture of a few feet of made ground. No great addition to the appearance of the little place, to be sure—but needs must when th#, devil drives, you knoV-rrand anyhow a lot of beauty spots have had their origin .in- juat such dumps. Look at FluiiUgg meadowa, where the.late World's Fair sprang up! ‘ ' .However, I didn’t start but to

    gabble about the beautification of thi, shores of the Niantic—with coal-ashes, ancient stoye pipe and broken-bottles. What I had in mind was cats-^.snd their appar-

    almost totgl immunity to number of Rcrrqs and viruses

    that\are capable of -khockiilg a 200-pb'qnd man fiat as a pancake

    belli ip- ihe Hifih 'sehoolrliinC' tomoM'-iWT —qAClock,

    evening, ^atamlijli-. |,„(i (o have them

    H

    TJif'Commuivists Keform

    great powers did not start/acting- 'lip. In. structure, then, it would notuhe' vastly ■'dlftereht from* - any.

    1 /other of the many aligmherî s, .,-,if ] seeks , to, "subvert, [ f great poyiecs which have, ijy th?'

    .jUThiSr is

    ̂course b f history, pledged ,}t.hsm- aelves to maintain the'peace, only to fall., out among themselves.,

    ' i tater. - ' ' ’’.Contemplating . this, piopuscd

    pe^eleUucture, and .imagining * tbs disci^ion ovef its wisdom

    which is certain to come.-we/ think x-ijvsry one might a« well strike

    quickly to the reaT- fouiidaUon j)l future peace. That, will 11,e l̂n the

    “i will of the average people of this 1 aarUi bo have pesos, and to guard

    against threats to peace. If the of thla worid'^ are in a

    mood to prize paads 'abovz ' any «.Bflipr,..klnd 'of possible advantage, l ^ s y caa-havrp*jlM. In that mood

    wa ppuld get peace through' tha ItaBjUfue of NaUoiui,.«or through any

    ^ktod /of. top.organization. Without achj aggressive determination on

    p iit o f averagt people, not ̂ ______________Ota heat orgBBisation bralna^atast -Rjiasia’s polish'

    ^ iq n ld ^ lae vlU be able to keep •eiee. tBree giM t iguardtane 'keep it, dnjr.BMte t lm eeV-ecora, naubna- prBsumebly

    i f .obuJd keep i t It will

    The Communist, Daily has noW CQt}vpleled swec|nng/ technical chatiges in -the fdrniallties of its American existence. \ - -

    It'-'ls, for one thing, no\ longer the Conimuyist Party. Itjifi' in- alead^he "Communl.st Political Asedciation.’'

    This new organization has avowedly American aims, as opposed to international aims, Its ■membership is open to" Ail over 18 who are inteiesled in "t.hc advancement and protection of the interests of the nation and its people."., 7■ 'IT\c. new,, organization fa well buttressed against legal attack- Its own constitution provides for thy expulsion' of any one ;.,who

    undermine,' weaken or overthrow any ..or all ’institutions of AiYlerican democracy.” , ■ ......__

    all. pretty wpnUe'rfuj

    We should nol glve'lhe - Impression that the booklet ik '̂iiof deroroUB, or that It Is ftal - of blood and thunder, or even that It is notleenbly enntrnvecsial. It’s virtue Is a mild oiie, merely that it discusses Conneetieut history without using rose-colored glasses, which Is, If - Mr. Parr w 111 forgive os for - the thought, the. way to nuike- history And public-life Interesting and appealing.

    Gj-ange meeting Wednesday eveiWng was inspected by Deputy Wilbu,r Little of Manchester Grange, who praised the local Grange as an active organiratioji, and particularly praised the work of the seefaUry. Horace Holl and,

    '^thc treasurer, Donald Woodward,, It was announced jthat the"'next card-party will be in charge of the three Gracea; the Mi.ssea Kave Sharpe, Janet Collins and Dorothy Squier

    Moacb-wrs disclbinVeV of Tnterna- tldnal political aiRis and with the molKl of the home politiqjilLftont. A ^ it prollably reprin ts the int n'oeubus • IFtieli to wblcnVihe . Communist Party will one bay be-' acend, in spirit as well as in letter, j. Dfi* ito*y question, .. bow'ever-,. whether this refortp'■'has'’''yet changed the real ch a^ct^of -the pi*fent_"gehei®l'■ , X

    x4:SPara4

    . WTHT-Chicago T h ^ er. 0:30—w n c — Can^Ytni

    7 Thla? WNBC—^ U ig h t Band Quick Quiz.

    0:45—WDRCi^NaHr'Befslod7 10:00-WTJ^— Barry WootLBI

    •y Kellj/Show: WTOT — R o i Arch> proximately 815,000, and when spaced about 50 miles apaiT, could be uaed to connect numerous main transnutters. Tlirougb this ' type of sxperimentatipn, eouplsd with work on the caldp, englnaprs expect .to determine whether 'radio or wire links .will be - the most practicable for network television or whether the two systems could be complementary. 7

    The Mt. Rose atatlon operates somewhat like, tost uaed since before the war by G- E-’s WRGB at Scheneptady to pick up. New York. Its relay transmitter la atop a mouiitota about. Ig miles south of Schenebtndyf Feasibility of such

    tests In which three experimental stations -were set up to provide a 60‘tnllc television path between WNBT, New York and RCA transmitting- laboratory on Long Island. . .

    Niantic River Road, Waterford. Conn.

    7̂M. M."“

    .[Platform CauaPs WorriM

    captipA.' of these, two

    'I v̂ , I

    ■ No. Eacapa 7 ‘ -Ofdoum when anyone, pt ty^-

    WTiter or nUcrapbone, uses -up space or time on auclr trivtaUtlea ad toe abpvp, you knb# sroli enough what’a t$q„_jgattof’ wfth him. He's tense with (hp strain of waiting for thiat terrible, tih- eacapable D-^y, whan tbs tong; frijihtfUlly bloody struggls for toe cpniiaent Buropo shall bagia— to last QM only kaowa how 1̂ . I thtakjj^co 'almeot all ta the same boat In that rsapPet, al|i but yw handful ot | pafitartad aioral

    ' ChtCMO—.8.P.CT.A. says i l l Pole* enough, to-roach her." M«'a trying to lure her down with non ntloned jbamburaara.

    On Saturday night list:NBC—8, Abie’s Irlab R ^ f^ :3 0 .

    Truth or Conaequencea; ;8C Barn Danes; gsSO, Can TouxTop This; 10, Barry Wood FAiiy; 10:30, Grand Ole Opry- • / • CBS— 7:80, Bob Hawk Q i^ : 8, Groucho Marx; 0, Hits and Sinatra; 9:45, Jessica Dragdnette; 10:45, Sen. E. H. Hoorr on "Montgomery Ward Case.” . . .-BLU—7. Good Old Days; 7:30, Music America Loves; 8:3̂ ̂ Boston Ppps concert; 10, Ouy z* Lombardo muatc'. ' 10:30,Army Service Forces, 'w-. . MBS —7, Amtrican Etagle in BrUairi: 8:30, qiaco Kid; 0, Chicago Thea- i»r^ BymphMyf - -rlO: 15,1 DetfCtlve Mystery; 11,' California merodics.

    Sunday talks : MBS- 12 noon. Reviewing Stan '.:

    I ■7 .,*;/

    A

    1/' X • ■7 ■ ■

    X ■" " i i - - ’ " ' ’’. A c :

    ■x'-

    -7. BB/"

    A :

    17•x-

    ,//

    y 1 ■ .. Emauitel Lutheran Chureh y _x ̂ ' ■ ll̂ ĉhanlge Q ~ 'X _ Cihbons Aifiembly, Catholic Ladie^ «tf

    -X'X’-X'.-X.Columbui ■ .. ....,■ ■, Homey . H o w a r d Oil C4>. • f~' , , 7 " ' '

    independent i^at (k>.j lue.

    •TV'.

    W R SK e m jp V 'In c . . x * x

    .K iwanifi^ Q t tb z -

    l-*aricn’» Feed Se ■Manchester Chapter of Hadassah ■Marlow'i'''7 • ' ' . ' i ■ 7Moriarty-Brothers * ftPin^urst Grocery, Inc.'̂ '̂ , - v

    " Quinn's Pharinacy / ^R o ta ry Q u b -

    ; St. Bridget's MenS CInh St; JJames’ Holy Name Society

    t .... a

    St. Margaret’s Circle, Daughters of Isabella r -

    A “"St. .Mary’s (^urch - 'Seaman Coal Co. v : 7 7 -

    . —Selecijnien'bf Manch^i.eY''' ■ /■ /"-At;.Sisterhood of TenipTe Beth Sholom-----

    jr Watkins Funertl Home x „- / -.Wetiliwie Tobicco Corp. - A 'Womep ojt the First and Second Congre? - gatibifiaLClinrches ^ . - ̂ '

    I Women’s Societies o f' Ybe N o ^ • » «’ South'MethndiM Churches

    7

    -"'‘lx-

  • »A>>̂ BtGgr MAfJCHESTFJll EVE VlKG HERAL&. MANCH'ES TEKrcONN.. SATURT))^, >1AY 27, 1944'- ■ ■ ! " • ' ■ ... ' ■- ■; ̂ ■ . . _____ : ■■

    ■ \

    rasb f^andiiig in .St«r«

    BMmttia « (o heLm A' mfL■“ —$# CsroUnm priinary

    1 up a a^ ina aos taa i for eratle govoniorahip nom-

    urtth R.̂ Gregg Cherry, lawyer and Dr. Ralph SIL

    jaid, Winaton-Salem educator,. regarded aa the leading candldatea.' Olia Ray Boyd ^ Plnetown, who campaigned .lytth a hlll-billy band was an unknown quantity. . -

    By hla decision not > ^o run, Reynolds became the .thtfd member to relinquish his Senate seat. Senator A rthur Walsh (D., N. J .l. did not seek election to the .seat he' fliled by gubernatorial anpolnt- ment after the death of Senator W. W arren Barbour, Republican. ^ lA to r Rufus Holman (R., Ore.l. wijS defeated in his bid for renom- inatlon 1̂ week.

    Eight w in RenomlnatlOn Thue far live Senate Democrats.-

    Lucaii of Illinois. Tydings of Mai^rland. Hill of Alabama, Pepper of Florida and Downey of California have, won renomination, aa

    Senators Dav}s of Pennsyl- vanla7'''Gprnev of South ‘Dakota and T aftM 'Q h lo . Republicans.

    Seven Republtwujs and 16 Democrats atlli m ust gO-Jj^bre --•the voters In a series of /'p rim aries which wlU upt end until 8ept>49- Some, like Senator Guy Gilletti (D.. Iowa), and 'M aiorlty -L eader Barkley (D.. Ky.l, will hd without serious ppphsltibn for renonilna- tlon but face stiff genera) election contests ndth Republicans.

    Otheril, like Senator Gerald P. Nye (R.. N. D.l. Bennett M. O ark (D.. Mo.l. and''Elmer Thomas (D„ Okla.). win enepunter formidable

    . -primary oppoaition.A O ther political developments In- ’ -chided a custom ary.fending off of.

    questions about the fourth • term ■ by President 'RooseVelt a t hla neWs conference yesterda.v and the inauguration o f ‘a d Attend are ask-

    German s e r v ^ wilf be held a t 11 a. m. a s u a ^ I . '

    On Thursday, June 1. the Ladie.s Aid will meet at 2:30 p. ra. and the Teachers a t 7:30 p. m.

    Purchase Equipment Several drgahlzationa and Ih-

    dividualarhava already aignlned their inttotion of purchasing arti- .cles of equipment for the Rockville

    but Uigre are a number of articles Which are ndeded- further' ,-Those having. qu«otipfis coriceiiiifig equipment “loward ■which they would like to contribute may obtain information by getting in touch with any of . the thiatees, these being f'rederick N. Belding, Lebbeus F, Wsaell, George Arnold. Jr., Francis Hardehbergh, - D ^ ld C. Fisk or CTaude A. MUIs.

    The lint of'iddnors to date is aa followa; M acEschem -Cibstefrical ’ Table, 1690, Rockville Lodge’ of. Elke; Fairbanks baby scale, 316..50 Mrs. Waldo Prlcketl; Shelfstandl operating room.. J 1()0, Gesang A Declamation club,-Curved Instru- m e ^ tab l^ $60, Geiiwng A Decia-

    tdub; 1 pair, 15 gal W ater ^ riU a e c , electric.. $975. White OorWn Olviaion employees, U / Si ^ v a lo p a Company; 2 operating stoola, each 811, Gaaang. A. Declamation club: 1 Germicide". Light

    MaUfiUtJf Ward. $125. 'Amencam

    Z' TonightRed kfen’s Carnival at . the

    Dougherty Lot on Center street.Tomorrow

    /In te rfa lth rally a t High school Auditorium. ' , 1 ■

    Memorial Services a t St. James's church a t 11 a. m. All local Vtrt- erims’. groupa to take part.

    ' .Monday, May 29 ' ,Annual meeting Beethoven Glee

    c lub 'a t Emanuel Lutheran churfch. Wednesday,'May 31 /

    Tenth annual Outdoor valusic Festival of : 1,000 voices.4,00-piace band, Educatioqal SquaiX a t 7 p, m. ■ /

    /F riday. $Gradipitlon exercises, Manches

    te r High achtool a f Sfafe theater a t 9:1.5 a. ni.

    Sunday, June 4. .- Organ Recital, Emily E. 'Yer-

    bury.-^gueat koloist, Cimcordia Lutheran ' clmr'dh a t 8:15. Auspices Young Pe'bple's .'Sdei'ety. ''

    /Thurada.v, June 8 Ladida’ Night by the Men/s So

    ciety, of Erhapu'e! Lutheran church/ / . U'f^heada.v, June 14

    Graduation 'exercise's; Hollister street school -jit 10 a. m.

    Graduation exercises, Mancheste r Green school a t . 2 p. m.—, Thiirsdayi June 1.1

    'G raduation exercises, Barnard school a t If) a. m. - '

    Graduation exercises' of- .Buck- land 'school a t 2 p. m.

    Saturday evcning,/,^June 10 Is to be observed by Manchester Lodge

    Masons as "Vcrplanck N ight” in rCeognltion of the fiftieth anni-

    Fred A. Verplanckver.sary of the r i s in g o f ' Fred Ayer Verplanck .as a M ^ e r Ma- .son. 1 The program will s ta r t a t 6:30 p.'m ./with a dinner to be served by tliex women of the Eastern S tar in the dining halt of the Masonic Temple, fpflowed by exer- ci.ses in the lodge hall a t 8 p. m /‘

    Ansel A. Packard, Grand M aste r of Masoiy î in Connecticut, has accepted to mvltation to be present and .'there will be several other d ^ in g u ish ed visitors fo assist in̂ making this si memorable even Lo _

    m ust be in the committee's l^ands not rater than' Junft 5 and fTickets may be claimed and paid

    for a t the Tsmple by those who reserve t h ^ , beginning a t 6 p, before the dinner.

    m t in the annals of M anchester Jge.. Reservations fo r the din

    OilcI Fellows Lodge Gives 5 Degrees

    King David Lodge of Odd Fel- 16WS conferred The third degree on a 'Class of fiVe candidate's a t the meeting fast night. T h e degree Was put. dfk'in full form and 37 pien Were on the-degree team. Past- Grand Herman Behrend was the, officiating offiter. Visitors were present Irgm several of the lodges, in the immediate, vicinity of Manchester. Grand M aster Charles )S; Roberts, who ju s t recently ^ Assumed the dUlCe was present. Following the .lodge m eeting the Odd' Fellows- had a soc ia l/hour with light refreshments.

    ■■‘S-./i/ .. J*J— ---;----- ;• - ..Khaki cloth Is woven from five

    different colored threads.

    May Decide Croup Role'

    * / F o r i r a h e e^^^imUnued from Page One)'

    agreem ent may b* reached de- oaulle’s.viiit.

    ' To Perfect' GoverningThe French leader a j ^ a r a ^ e r - -

    tain ,-to meet Immediately X v lth GfO'. Dwight D. l^acnhoftvX anil the supreme AJUm eprnmander's civhl a ^ i r s "tali to pcriect plans Tor governlnc./r'ranccX fter Allied trqop.a iHuheh their liberation as- asuH ^n Europe

    -Alnhydv-'It i? pl'anned that a.s soon as wny r a t io n - o f France is liberatetl, ,r .AP news in p a p e r d a ily

    ,iig t. .ttorotiqr

    rptoy Bonlno. d a ^ h te r b f Mr^ hd M r i/^ p g p e ro Bbnlno of 210

    Tschool atreatTbm l, toe « ^ y _Man- chester girl to sign '"iip^;^to the M arines, haa been prom otedYe the

    into effimt .adto toe a t ^ j rank of S ergean t She received heb r ty e a r . .w iy^.Jt.tft„ rbdot train ing a t Camp LeJeun*.

    ' " t f 'd a“t e a r ” New River, N. C„ afte r which she1* M ectiv e whei)/ PreaWetit was transferred to"' headquarters

    ’ avalt signs to# WU (gind fe- L t Washington, D. C.. In toe Pay- active to la s t /J a n . D —Rate* I m aster departm en t A fter worttlrig

    methods of toxatlon, including allotm ents for four months she ew ^emptlOTW and toe "stand- was placed In the disburalng office

    ” daductiim. where she audits arid prepares of2 Effbdtoto next Jan. 1—W ays 'fleers’ pa> vouchers. ' ' y ' -

    pay in^dD ia t la, new 'w ithhold- se rg ean t BOnino w rites th a t ahe (ig whM uimNleatgnad to pu t toe uvea in a large barracka housing

    Jntlro'Wcome ffojn wageg and sal- „early 400 glrla, and th a t toe food Irieg ub to $5,000 on pay-aa-you excellent There are two loungea to , and new .regifiatlona on decla- ^ t h Swedish furniture and a rec T a t li^ of esUmatod ta* (for thoae I reafloii hall where movlea are Ih o atm won’t be c o v e r^ to .fU lll^o W n three Umea a week, and |y wltoholdlnga- from pairt* I camp shows several times a month.

    Third P o in t Fixed \ The PX is in toe s ^ e building, Then tha coogreaiman fixeil a |W h e n fv e r a girt m akei to e ^ l -

    hlrd p o in t T t o S u ^ r final, pay .-1 tlon of sergeant she haa toe ^ v l - of m tU natod ta x along w ith lege of Uvlng out on aubsiatance

    " “ l ^ e n S t S f a y m ^ e c l a - ^ 1 » v l « “ > i e f o rla tipn ' (also annual - declaratlona I h e r ^ t the barracks.torn farm ers) -was obanged from j Sergeant Bonino was , a Girl jec. 15 to Jan . 18. 1 Shout ilKMancheater for ten years,

    T hat change will apply to 1944 member of the Ambulance■timataa. So lii you're paying on Defense TtanaportaUon Unit. A t- declaration, you'll have an ex tra U e , heK graduation from high

    "dhth to m eet the final inataU- ,chool she was epiployed as a clerk .cn t \ in the F ranklin aghool. Additional

    Wlien toe final 1944 returns paragraphs from X**' le tte r are .om e due nex t March, aingle per- p rin ted In full and may be of in- Iona may find themselves owing U ereat to some girl contemplating perhaps $15 more than expected, I gervicc a “Lady Maring."

    EourA TermG e te B a c k in 'g

    ^ t ^ t e ' D c n tio c ra ts ; to D ecide' o n R e s o lu t io n to VoYlix* U n it.New Hayab/.M ay 27—(8V-Co"

    I nbcUcut 'Demoefato, concluding thelr'^w o-day co n v ^ tlb n here today, h«K before them 'rggolutloha calling fh rX to e -nominail Praaldent, Roole^elt Tor a term and Instructing the s to te ^ 18-vote delegation to toe nguonal >

    [convention to vote aa toe prtaident. '

    Action on thaag^ reaiilutlona,1 elacUng the Natt«®»l convan.tloiidelagitea and 0»aS tate Centeaf committoe wars thi chief task# je f r for toe aUt# cdU'

    I v^tlon.^ >Atiptovod by Oommlttoo

    The resolutions ware approved J uhantmoualy let# last night by I to e Convgntkma Reaolutlona com

    mittee. ■■The one calling for a fourth

    term fo r the prealdent pledged "complete loyalty and devotion’ to the chief executive who, It aaid, "led ua o u t'o f a period of domea- Uc economic chaca” and "anablad ua to m eet the g rea t peril to our lives and homes wltbSito* comloB of war-” -L...In tli» keynoU addreaa Which opened the convention last night. Senator H arry B. Trum an of I~ - 4ouri declared - th a t Republl leidaca ware talking aa if they wero‘-1ntofa concem ld about wifi' hing- toa M c ^ o a than ;Wihnlng the war,, and in th la ri» X r« 4*ctod. they were "riding ta_iheX

    LsMhing a t " t o ^ t e a " > a a m f th e oppoaition, ‘Truman said publicans w ars attem pting to capitnliM on adm inistration mia- takas which Damocrata tham- sel'ves. had brought iU> light through work of tha war invesU- gating committa* which ha heads

    Not Hiding MIstakea - / ‘T h e adm inUtration has not

    taken the position of hiding mistakes,’’ Trum an said. “Rather, its policy has been to bring,them out in the open so th a t they can bo corrected.

    On War Plant G ets Mis W in g s

    FomaBdo Edward Lea, Brazilian Industria lly wiTtJnlahd CbnttanUno Endors of the Ecuadorian embassy to look through Garand rifle barrels on a-barrel straightening i^ c h ln e ^ to a V m c h e a to r Repeating Arm s plant ei. New Haven. J*® 'tofy was one/bf the stops on n tour of Connecticut war InduatrleB The''Associated Press New Haven B u r e a u .___ • '

    SU^in shd Chiang Kai-Shek strong, aklliful and able. .■Who % a ll fill toe fourth placa. or. perhaps r X s d b e t te r 'a a y the first pl,-ee. a t toe totoqtotlonal courmll table? I knowsame - answer bomea J?*hearts of a vast ihajority cf "-t^e

    .people of our eouniiy.'"

    H eb ro nThe Dempcrats’ '^no thought i _____

    has been to win thX w ar as quick- rnnrrrt to bo of'o-ily as possible," h /con tinuod , and ^ a p n n g concert to w prin regard to his view of the Re- sented by Hebron and A m ston publican attitude he aaid: l .vchoDls. The dale is Wednesday

    V W hatever toe intentions of tha t ;j|t*rnoon a t toe _ town hall. The

    ed with toe playing of beano, and With refreshm ents of doughnuU and cbffee. The meetings will be reaum ^ 'riex t Septemlwr..

    Mrs. Leroy H.tStitchelft clerk of the Hebron ration board; says t h y canning aiigar may now be tor. Blanks will be mailed

    -quest. Spare atamp No beXUached to the appllca poundstonly will be aHqw' each person'-for the period.The balance can'toeXPpHed.for in ,\uguat. Stamp Ito"3L jn i»st be

    * ' ■ •/ persoi{-«ppIied

    P^ley PlacesB id s f o r R e p re s E n ta tio n

    A l ’ M o n e ta rji C onfar* e n c e M ad e in S en g te .

    •Washington, May 27—(JV-Blda for congfeaslonal jrei>ret5fitatlon on the ''^ ’*R***“" -*Urtited Nations monetary confar"' qpce called by President Roosevelt were made today in the S enate^

    Chairman W agner ib -N Y );» y the Banking committee said he thought it would be "a good th ing '' for legisiators to alt in on the deliberatlbni since Mr. Rooa^ velt has asserted arty agresm enta will be submitted to the respective governments for ratlflcatlon. .

    Senator Ferguson (R-Mlch) advocated tha t members of toe Sen-, a te qnd House Banking commit- teea attend the conference. He said toe Senate will have to act if trsa tlea evolve from toe d e lty ra - ttons and both Senate and House

    . . . ' have to approve any legiala- tipi^ needed' tot Implement deciaiopi of the conference.

    Mr. Roosevelt invited 42 nations to send' delegations to toe parley, sta rting July 1 a t Bretton ^ o o d a N. H.. ^ y/S e c re ta r y Morgenthaii w in 'head th e United Nations delegation ''

    Prnposala to Be OnnaM A $10,000,QOO,(^ tntoftiaUonal

    bank to finance reconstruction and uevelopment. /

    An $8,000,000 0 ^ stabilization fund to provide Xgold base for the currency of each participating nation and redutfie fluctuations Ijr In- ternational/cuertncy tranaactlons,

    A’* member of to* Finance com- m ittee ,/nenato r T aft IR-O), had nothkig t o . say about detiilla b u t Bss^tod he already had mihle. it

    e a r tha t "both these plans appear unsatisfactory."

    Senator Thomas (D-Okla), chairm sn-of a special stiver committee, agreed with W agner th a t it was desirable to s ta r t consideration of postw ar monetary prob-. lems now, hut 1̂ suggested silver should have a larger role in the planning.

    Edwin T. Jlllson

    ------- , a ttached for eo'iR ehearsals are going on for Ihbj'for.

    M rs M a r ^ r e t Culieton of Mal- Icn, M a."."/ is again a v is ito r .at the hoinXof h e r relatives,Mrs. E/eroy H. (jetchell.

    Childress Xrmy Air Field, a i l l '\ dreas, Tex., Mhy -21. - One of the' largest classes tratned here during tha past year, was awardad silver wings Inst Monday a t a graduation ceramony a t this Central Flying 'Trolmhg Command bortbardler- partga to r school in Weat Texa#'

    Primed to toke their places a# 'key Bgures with AAF crack .bombing team s in the aerial assault on Axis strongholds j throughout the world, the newly‘cbmmlsslpned "HclI-from-Heaveln" men included Edwin T. Jlllson,: son of Mrs. Berv tha T .'J lllson of 43 ■ Cambridge street, M ancheaty, Conn.

    The handpicked youths of the big class developed Into expert bombing marksmen in their four and one-half rridnths of study h^re on the ground ahd in the air. 'They are rated m aatii- of the nation a moat deadly precision weapon, the American hombslght.

    Flying on defy and night practice miasiona, th new bonvbardiera were also trained in dead-reckoning navlgatlof, ao th a t they are prepared to havtgate mlsaldns to enemy targMs. They are ekllled, too, in ae rlfl gunnery, fam iliar with aerial Veconnalaeance photographs of /enemy Inatatlatlona, w ith,. camouflage

    id icffte ir R o ll

    Service Club .. «1 Msry's Provides Listing' Men at War.The Rev. Alfred L. WllUa« 8 v M

    th4 Rev, EUlaon F. Marvlik FfS d a^ e a ta the tour artmod •arrioo '^ Honor Rolls of S t. Mary** pal church.,,at tha 10:46 dervtea «rf Holy Comniunlon- tomorrow. /

    Every Wednaaday a t noon hi: . toe church toeto are intorcaaatona for victory and peace when par-- ̂l*Kionere in fbe aervice are prayed / for Iby name. And oh “D" Day / there w ll be a special aenrlca a$'12 noon In toe church. The Honor Rolls are the g ift of St. M ary’s Bervlca Club.

    The Army and Navy i^m m la- slon of the Episcopal / Church through* St M ary 'r Ser^ica Club kuppliee each pariahioher in toa armed.'servlce with a P rayer Book and .W af Cross. The Parish A ltar Guild has been sewing linbns for this Commlsaion w^lch: allocata 'them to chspIaltiB for use upon toa altars. ' "

    An offering 'MU h i taken in the church on June 11. for .ths Army and Navy Commission of toe Episcopal church. .The goal for tbl# offering is s dollar for every parishioner ih the. service. A t present there sre. Wf *'*''™®* fke Honor

    /Rolls. .St! Mary's Church nit-rhbers who

    enter the armed services are ask": ed to notify the pariah of thia fact, tha t the records may be kept up to date. '

    ROOFING 7A nd R o b f R e p a i r in t By Tour Local Roofer. /E. V. COUGHLIN

    898 Woodlaad St. Tel. 7707'' ' '"T— ^

    tnd chlldtesa m arried couples up ■> around $50 more for 1M4 tw e a -except where tola m ay be offset

    bv th a new standard deducthm of JlO per cent of income (or $500 if Income is over $5,000).

    May F ind Taxea Lower ^ M arried couples w ito^m ie de

    pendent vriU ^ m e out about toe Hame; taxpayers, w ith m ors thM one dependent m ay find their taxes som ewhat lower.

    In the m eantim e?Since the other half of unfor-

    iven" 1942-48 taxes ta ils dueM xt March, too. a o ^ couples who have filed dtolara- tions m ay w ant to am end them in order to spread ou t the 1944 Increase over the^ nex t three pay-

    isn’t compulsory, and toere von’i be any new kind of declara-Jon fo rm 'Until next year.

    No Penalty for^Uadeieatlm atoIf an undereatim ate / results

    ■from to a fac t the Taw y w hanged., the re won’t b4 a P^al*Y

    . However. If you w ant t ^ l e • Inew aaUraata, hero’* ,

    L S ub tract 10 per ce n tjJ f yowl i n c o m e . ^

    duetton. (If Inconae Is m o rC ^ M5,000,

    |$500).2. F or

    eUmd*ri$ "^deduction

    "^lormal tax , sub tract$50b a n d ^ ^ ^ l W ttie romalnder

    W toe* aurtax. you get laxeX ption for each 1 eluding tha taxpayer-rln the fam-

    Ity (huBbandr Wtfe and d e^ n d - len ta ). On the taxable affloum re

    maining. i t ’s . 20 per cent of toe flrtV $2,000, 28 per cent pf toe I next $2,000. ■

    S'ew V artatloa of Old Therao

    Pasaalc, N. J,—ynagogu'5 to take their t ia ts and m inistration which he called toe ^ „ew badges./

    een ■pro

    In Cromwellian:?’t lm e s .^ a t t l c j pikes sometimes were 18 feet long.

    TTiere are historic records of Norweglsn whsllhg as early aa 417 A. D. \ .

    Vfhodland Street Barber Shop

    O pen O n ly 2 H o u rs P e r D ay 4:.3fl to 6 :3 0 P . M.

    .S a l.^ /S O -to 8 :30 P ' M.

    C losed T h t i f ^ a y s .

    KNOFLAGetaerai Contractors

    Jobbing and f uneral Repairing

    CaU4386B e f o r e 6 P . M .

    guiding and directing torce" of toe entire w ar effort, and to a review of toe three tqrins of President Roosevelt- who, he aaid. lad toe countrv "frqm the dark days of to e Hoover’ adm inistration— from a s ta te /o f chaos and fea r . . . Into our rightfu l heritage as Amerlcsm citlzehSr”,Would “ Give/Com fort to Enemy”

    Assorting th a t "strong, firm, tried and proven hands’/ . must be W p t in control of toe government, /Triiman said w Democratic defeat this fall would "confuse the conduct of th“ w ar, perhaps imperil toe peace and thus give aid ; and comfort to the enemy.”

    Homer Cummlitga of Stamford, the convention chalrmanv..: said "the desperate needs of toe hour’’ called for toe re-election of Xm president in whose « b ln e t he op«e served as atto rney general. /

    Alluding ..to the f o r t o ^ l h g Mace conference, Cummlnga/aaid:

    "ChurchlU wUl be tbi

    There has not yet b ^ n a formal announcement of the/'program for Memorial Day o b s ^ a f ic e here, but it has been l-^m ed tha t the sneaker will be ^o f* aso r W ilbert Snow of Wes W a n University.Middletown, well known as * New England poety^ .

    Mr. and'M ,ra. Henry Roasman. who live on the p la » the Jr'bought recently of Emil German, had a." guests T^uesday, Mr. and Mrs.

    .ah ' ■ u t

    Shermaii Adams of Manchester About 48 or„ 20 attended toe

    ^ t'T each 'S r Association for the season. I t waa held Wednesday e y e in g in the C enter, school t4 oW ' Officers were elected for

    4 h s ehsulng year. Mrs. E verett B. P ortenw aa again choteo. president, having^/aerved in to s t capacity the pa."t year; vice-president, Mrs. M artin 'Turshen; secretary, Mrs. Norton Warhe^i: treasurer. John Horton. A social liour waa enjoy

    Fire InsuranceO n Y o u r

    FURNITURE\ \ n d P e rs o n a l E ffe c ts /\ •

    We. ran protect yon for aa low as 84.80 per $1,000 forsR y o a ^ time, . 'y

    Lot to e call a t your home/flid rvplsin details or ■, Y

    Telephone 5440 or 5988

    \rthur A. Knofla‘TThe Fnrnltnre F lre ^

    Insuranoe Man”875 MAIN STKEET"

    : Olttoe Open Dallyand Thors. Eyenbig .7 to 8 P. SL

    SfQitn Sash Too^ |C A N B B C H A N G B O

    i n S O s e e m i d sTbo houariMMerio S n a ia l I more faaaias MMh ^ i

    the eellar. Mo < paSInS to

    ItEUSOO

    .WlMDOIEi^ oSmlaote oil

    Tm <

    l>INE

    SUITOA’̂ "# B A R E D V IR G IN IA J ^ A M

    # R O A S T L E G O F L A M B# R O A S T O F B E E F /

    _ __— —- * b M e d b o n e l e s s c h i c k e n“ • ~ ^ ^A N D D R E S S IN G ^

    V ; # R O A S T l o i n O F P O R K(:o B N B R E A D R O L L S A N D B U T T E R

    E H O IC E O F B IR D S E Y E V E G E T A B L E S

    OVER OLDEDIwtolB*t*I)e« eem *»n». Ii aaea o* jr«Bumeatly amwol retaaWnaod m e m m and

    RAIN PROOF, DEAFT RU8CO om tM ritaii. ■om uT iir* «*im oat tottUiK Si MOW or wltboot cMMing dtallB to r ttaolf to w toter fool a a v in i^ Phone oa or maO • post eaiS wm ore' tafonm ttoo.

    • r a B ^B A R T L E T T - B R A I N A l f f l

    C O M P A N YIM 'W oodbine St., Hartford (S)

    H a r tf o rd — T al. 2 -1259E va and Sub. H artford S-S87S

    :Wr- -Jl :

    I -A t The ^ PR1N€E$S i RESTAURANl /

    C^riier SUta oirt Pawl ■trwta

    B u a i n e a s M e " ’ * L U N C H E O N - :

    Sei vod 11 A- SL. to.C i r a a p i c t e D i n n e n i

    Serv^ 5 to 9 P, M./ . Also A U Carto Service.

    75e

    'W. : W

    \

    V, “S

    Tenth

    SHORTEST ROUTE TO GOOb FOOD!

    R O U T E S 5 A N D 4 4 — B O L l D N , C O N N .

    tINEW ENGLANDN O ' W U N D E R - N E W M A N A G E

    OPEN SUNDA N D E V E R Y D A Y O F T H E

    I I Have Sunday bjhhei*^Or Stop. In Mempri

    O ur C hef Knowa^ Hh Onidna!

    VOLUNTEER bCa NK - BLOOD pONOR SERVICE, Mbiieiieater Chapter^ Tilt AittericaB Red Croee

    I Want To Dpna^ Blood for^e.Ara«jr snd-Nsryi.o d • e e s 0 e • ♦ EeV e

  • Fornished By / ‘ ̂(Bee o f P rice A dm him ratid li

    Be^tooel Department of lyormaHoW M T r e e i ^ ^ lH ^ Boetoa, 8, ^uaenclinMtt*^^

    M A N C H E ^ R ^ V E > ? ^ G ^ R A L D , M A N G ftE S T E R , C O N N - S A T U R D A Y ̂ ■: ‘ '____ / . '.-E v.:___-

    .'■■I W - .

    r

    M A N C H E S'rE R E V E N IN GH i a U L b . V A N U H E S i'E R . CQNM^ S A T U R D A Y , i l A ^ 8 7 . 1 M 4 - \ "

    F A G K B U E ^ d V

    a t a

    B y T lie A ssociatedMenu. rnU , Etc. \ Four red ■tsnipi As

    Hjrou|^K.T8 now valid Indefinitely, mor^red etampe wHl be vall-

    4... ___ Foods •

    Book BVmitx blue stamp* A through Q8 ndw>, valid Indefinite -^ x t series of five; blue stamps valid June 1. v ‘

    Sugar'-/‘ Book Four stamps" 30 and-SI godd for five pounds Indefinitely.

    .Btsmp 40 valid for five pminds for home canning through > Feb. 28, 1840. , ■ . ••

    Shoes' , ,' Book'Three alriJlana -eUmpB 1

    . Wd 2 good ^definitely.\ tinsollne' Th northep^ and ^uthcaatlO -A

    i coupons-valid for three ' gallons I thremgh' Aug. ■- 8. Elsewhere, 11-A J cop(K>ns g c ^ fof\ three gallons j^thfough Jiine 21. B-?. B-3, C-2, and,! Q „ “

    T h is m al^ s an ideal g if ! fo r a convalescent. ~ . ‘

    ^ 0 c - $ i . a

    li-nKSTwe-"—"

    X.

    WELDON H A U T Y STUDIO^

    things that help a bereaved family—and these he does. kno\vin,g that it Is the-little things as well as the bigger- oRes, that ^hefp-vpfople—through trying timta. If you are in need of his help, call hlni at A269 and he will come to ■ you immediately.

    E X P E R T R E P A IR IN G O.N A I.L M A K E S U F C A R S

    . . . E specially Fords, Mer- cu rys and Lincoln Zephyrs.

    All W orkA bsolutely G u aran teed !

    M O B JL U IL — M U BILG A S

    m Ain s t r e e tSERVICE STATION

    E .F O R Y O U R S E I.F !Yob ..oaa/go over yoilt car with a nurgal- fylng gl a e a when we get tb^migb aerv-

    icliig It' — and aee fnr yunraelt It It dnean’t aatlafy eve^atand- •ril.

    COO K’S S E R V IC E STA.\Manchester Oreea Phone 3896^

    Landscapingand

    Tree SurgeryConn. S ta te L icense W ork C arefu lly and

    N eatly Done.''^

    JO H N S . W O l.C O TT & SON117 HollMter Ht. Phone 1597

    / ...

    575 Main Street Tel. 8-iy j7

    J. R. Braithwaite-Keys Made^ Locks Repaired

    Tools Ground

    Lawn Mowers; Sharpened '

    E le ctrica l U tilities Re-Conditioned

    Guns R e p a ir ^

    32 PeaH S t . Phone 4200

    No Male Among Candidate?'. /

    7L

    By Having I t Servleed AtX / A M ' C s e r v i c e *

    - V A W STA 'noN4X7 HartiMd Boad TeL M||t

    / SEEFO R /A CO M F*LETE IN SU L A - /

    T JO ^ I. B U IL D IN G M A T E R IA L S P L U M B IN G AN D ^ ' H ifA T IN G S U P P L IE S '

    , . M ontgomery824-S2& M ain S I ; 7 ^ T e L S r ^ l - M pildieutW -

    I liiMi juT

    CoiMldetwd Oond Omeiii -w

    Ntw -York— (Jd —A clock on a rooftop advertiaihg sign Inexplicably, lost an hour, continued ticking. away on eaatem standard time instead of eastern war time. - The owner aalA ha-ha^—hotieedT' the clock’s. i'Trveciiion but. bad decided to let' it alone as he considered It a good omen.

    Baled fliawerka • '4 2 Surowiec, IT ^ * 6 0 Lsvey, cf . ,X X 4 8 'Aceto, rf 6 1 8Oteoeon, 3b . . . . 6 7 1 8 8 KleinochmldL o. 4 Nft 1 2̂ Bronkic, p . . . . . l^ lr^O 6 Robb, p 4 ^ 0 i. , 0

    sMKtng I

    -send In m* >• ei._W4si

    / Roekvin* W*a ‘ rtte. *5surtlng to* gam* last night J ^ sure ho# bis his baU-pteyersbrother waa Inserted into to lineup at th* lost minutw

    Rockville High ^ l l^ o M toelrf

    It night’s attendant# wo* the „vst of the locsL season.,

    ...rehtening weather Isheld M toe tor the eUm lUtnoot, .

    Johnny Mack V h e p itte d last h ightt game recently honorable dlsoharg* from the U .^ Army. Mack served 18 moqto* overseas.

    George May ftnally came through last night with a ringing single to left, driving in two run*.

    May has besn hitting to# ball hard but Lady Luck played toe bite into tleldere' liandA

    Mickey Kstkaveck, , fU te W - ing P. A. catcher excelled twice during Ittt night’s gam# to pick off two boss runners taking • off second. Kstkaveck It top# to ths art of backstopping.

    Manchsstw High may g»vjL local baseball fans a attrscUon nextTuesday. Memorial Day, by playing against on® I"* leading schoolboy teams *•* /JJ® sUte. St to* ovM. DeUite wUl be announced liter. • .

    gwmter and Rayan unusual play In from., Becker hit a high My first base. Cormier and vsborn bcto ^ l e d for toe boU; M Uoked Cormier'* glove, Oelmm the b»U much tot Chicagb —Dubtel

    (3-1) vs. Loptt (1-2)Philadelphia .,. a t; Detroit —

    ■Christopher (1-81/' i. Newhouscr

    '^Washington j Oeveland—W.qlf

    Totals .T t6 6 8 21 10 2 ItockvtHe * _

    a B R H .PO. A, B.

    ' ike Utvinch-yk is Ukln/\ over to* task of .ratelpg 600 ph*a«anU tor the Manchester,,Chapter and the East Hartford i^ p te r . He ho* to* brboders all set Sunday for tha birds that .are colping are; day old chi(;kB. . . X:. \ A

    dtooMurga u Ih* months ago, on* tn In Nnw ttavnn, ons In rMH>

    .one InCJhlcagn, (ohSteaett - Hte m onot^a

    Kogon o h d ^ W ta ho«tn,ta#lc*ted , thA he hM

    forin, but pressed on i^iiaian nbX taaj Boson bqiit was /t rtekjr wtetoh f t*TOly 10 doyh b a to n hte lin|)Qit«ifi meeting with Bluit*. . ■' Kogori,lair,, countiy Iw tr* -- itarted tm ■with * somewhat opotty record, but after a year!* te y r^ he essayed*# comebit^ to T H 8 S t h e n ho* p U t d ^ W t e ^ r string of vie tori e# filtbougbTie W .ailed to one or tero New Yorn

    dfphey. ** • atoiya,. cf »rml4t, lb . i .

    Fbfphey.Mate Corml( . Ramsey, SJh . ; Gsbom, 2b N,.. clemcn*,«lf .X Koelsch, rf . . Morrell, c . . . Mack, p .........

    28 Anally

    lost. \Bobo .Ne^om had to get ninth

    Inning help frbm Joe Berry tn shading Detroit S-2Vith Frankie Hayes drivlng'in two rubs and scoring to* other Wi! Phttadetohte. -George Coseb single In thV 18to scored Rick re m U ,*n d Johhny SuUivon u'lto Waahinirtpn’s decM^v* eount* ers In a .*i-3 ^ rd ict ovbr Cleve-

    ̂ The Invading Thread City nine haa a host of stars, including

    2)figure In local baeeball clrdes for a number 'Of year*, playing vdto to* Blueflelds. Mortarty’e end to*4Jakuckl past two eeeeon* with to* CUp-

    1 (1-2); ./ t. Loiil*—Woods/(l-

    oiuhgswnrth (0-21 / or/

    One' gram of carbon contain# 50,r ^ ,000,000,000,000.000,000 molecules. j

    land. 7,.

    ■2T' 1 t -7.

    Oie/rw* potoida tor the Ttop

    £d Russell Has caught'toe largest brook trout which to 15 3*4 Inches^ ,

    t h * lorgeat broem tro u t^ l4 inches, wo* eaught by Bd^pjtadUf.

    Ik* Utvtoohyk h i* a 2 i tocii ̂Itotobow trout...There ar* bigger fUh ’thon thee* to he caught, sb fiaficfinen Joto jUi* tfout contest. IVa not too U to !....T h e club gr- pectf to stack the birook* with 400 trout Uto week* • • • Trueman Oowlta, Doneld o»wl*s, G»ue Mc- ItuUen and Ghria Budfcq, a n sU trying toei^ luck 6t dstohiog the but bn* at L id e ^ te thU week-end

    . . .New Brttota to hoUJng lU tViol liny 27to and 16th. The

    trtott Of* betof run at Belton Pas tiue, BnBeldTCHto' «•« tovlted to attend.. . .L*4‘n Blinker took another aeoonid In f t̂he Brocton Trtoto toot tundoy.

    th e trout that were" put in a t Unitor*! BoM koeen’t teUrted to bit* y*L but be resdy' fellowe, eMf day no#V;..Shad are running a t toe Bnfield dam this w eek...Sam my Flble Is hOYlm, quite a ^ t l ^ *«d tone* hah gotten onto toe heringTSttit. goimmya bringing homo tot b n o o n -^ Should w# any s h u t ■ ■ ■ ■•7-.

    Totals . . .- score by innlngi: ,

    R M kvtii*-------- -ooojooi8«=JX Ron tor beckM to etb. -~ ^Run* batted t t i^ t k a v e c k 2.

    Dxiadyk L M*VKatkavoek. aem enei double play*. May, K*«ian."BychotoW: left -m b « M RoiUrvlU* 4, P A > 6 : bass* balls, M nckT; strikeouts, Mack A Sailou 5; hit# oft, Mack « -h ite ,78 rons to 6 Innings, BOllou 7 hits^.l run f ir 7 inhlngm hit by pitcher, Becker by Mnck; winning pitcher, BnUou',. losing pitcher. Mack; utn* 1>IN6, OTAory,' Kotohr TTtn*,'! :46.

    Tbe M^itolfig Berto from A*to to n fish thnt eon woBiion dry toad nnd cUmb trees. . < t - .

    State Scholastip Baseball Scô 8

    until late June, le Where the

    Hartfoid’ 1 ,.HiUhousiE (New Haven) 6X

    Griswold JJLJaiUngly 8. .......Windham (WlTllmahtlc) 11. Ad

    miral Billard 3. ' ■ --------West Haven *», T r ™ nf

    (New Haven! 0.jHamden 8. Commercial (New

    Haven) 2. 'New Milford T. Litchfield 4.

    By Hugh I^ lte rt^ . Bucket df Blood’’ eoloonNew York, May ?7, — -i VO. Oak Orfll, 6 ’.l8 . West

    Bide Oval. ’ J : ' .Frtdgy. dboe

    RoekviO* m . WHUniantlc, dslB. W ait BM* OvoL .

    er, W-B* Jaccused In Justice cOurt of harboring 12 dogs, six cats and « pOlr Of white mice; Neighbors,(n making' their , comidatot* saidthe (toga .»inagad thslc lawns the cate whoopeii -IL op netotly bfi night. The mice 7 They ..wandered out and frightened women.

    *• AvsM Bxtra StrtdiL

    .......t.

    Wont.‘:a.V5A

    Chambersburg, P*.—UCh—. Borough officiate, harkening to . ap-̂ •peOto from parent* of oorrice toM have reoeindcd plana to souad to* community fire olecrm oil P-Doju. Burgeto H . R. F < ^ . «al6 .0^^ dtatO’ famliiea wfuit to a i ^ *By,extra otroin Ob tfaeiPfMfvba.

    ■■ ' ' —■ .AbdCa fiber Is On m w « tot*4ai

    a t Manila rope.

    ' ' ' V" '

    but the whole thtog mtuniinpoL.---etreoMS the wartime developRien'

    of cosehee a i m i n g role* thatthey never d«ed. Gaudino. als« --collect ' a double during the gam*, l^ng Ed Brown led th* local a ttec l^ lth three blhgleg, one a double. Jttnmy Gleason found, ®3 Beauregarff pitching to hi* taat* and rapped out two safe blow*.

    Thb, locals again cafne up with six more mlscufs, ®sst Hartford played errorless boil behind Beauregard.

    Outstanding FieMittgThe outstanding fielding ptey of , . ̂

    ths gams was a back hOhded stab | bits, 2 nms In by Gleason of Wade’s 11ns drive- Beauregard 1 fb the sixth. Al Hobro handled niqgs; hit by eight chances atr-second_for -ih# 1 Beauregard; losers- without * babble. .

    Off to# combined offering# of Vic Bronkic Snd JaeWt Robb. East Hartford was only able to punch out only five safetiea Bronkte'e wildness kept ths locsl-burler to trouble in the early Inning* before Robb Was waved in to pitch the third Inning on through Uie ^ U i.

    Tlie Red and White nine ^fererf nine ba.?ea with Red Degutis and Ntoo Aceto each stealing three.

    Flay by PtesK J ,' ' First lo a m -Manchester—Deguftr filed out

    to Krzyak. BriiWn doqbled over short. Oftudlna grounded . out, pitcher to first. Surowlec fanned.

    No runs, one hit. no errors.East Hartford — ..Beauregard

    walked. Hobro sjihgled over ,Uiird.v ■ doubled, scoringBeauregard and. Hebio. O'Brien was out trying to »tr*tch the hit to a triple. Kriyak grounded out pitch -to first. ThrefaUfannWl. •/-

    Two runs, ty a hits, no ertort.'.fiepOnd Innilng

    ManchrtWr — Levey Act to ,-w:̂ lked, .atole seco third. Gicason fonnedy/ Klein- •chmtdt walked. Bfonkie fanned.

    rW runs, no.hijhi- no'eiTOrt..East HarUord—Ptoney filed Out

    t;d Gaudino. Noten filed out to center GuIIl PWP«0

    No runs, no ^ ts , no errors.I Inning

    Mancheatef—Degutis singly to center, .? t^ *ecoi»d arid thirdtoas# on succemiv* pitch**. • DeguU* scored An a poiteed ball. Brown filed/out to right Cteudlao walked, stole second. Surowlec grounded out third to first. Lavey singled to center scoring Gaudino.Aceto walked. .Gleason doubled to left center scoring Larey.Kl'einachraidt grounded out short to first.

    Three nms. thre* hits, no errors.Ea*t Hartfcrd—Wade, fhed out

    to Lavey. Beauregard walked, went to second on a paised ball.Hobro walked. On an attempted double eteel Beauregard was out going Into third. O’Brien filed out to right. ..

    No runs, no hit*,, no .errors.Fourth inning

    Manchester —Bronkle grounded out second to first .pegutls filed

    S out in fo(il territory 'tn .^ n lan .Brown sir^lcd. Gaudino otmbled to right .erofing Brown. Surowlec grounded out short to first.

    One run. two hits, no errors.East Hartford—Krzyak safe on

    Brown's error. Went to second on a wild pitch but waa thrown out attempting to advance to third on the play. Threlfall Singled to center. Plnney grounded out pitch to first. , Noland lofted out to Aceto. >•

    No run*, (ine hit. on* error.' Fifth .inning

    M'^chester —Lavey • grtiunded out, second to first, Aceto went out. second to first filed out to abort, • /

    No runs, no hits, no error*.East H artford-W ade .single

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