er$ Claim Top Avia- 4 1.00 foods Evening Hearld_1944-07-29.pdfWounded Ride in Double-Decker Jeep...

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t^LVB Manchester Evening Herald 'About Town Mibl Berthold Woythaler ol' ipl« B«Ui^ Sholom, announce* ^ a 1 *€ff\’lc* for Sunday mom- at eight o'clock, in ob*er»*nc* ;the holiday, Tiahoh B'A*. TAfJ . OHDABS B I N G O TONIGHT ORANGE HALL Roofing'-’AsbestoB Siding and Rock Wool Insulation Bnerl wuikhianililp. All work naianteed. Bcaaonsbl* Pttoe*. «• ablltnOnn for *■ Mthnste. W rite. ^. "r- ^Burton Insulating Co. ' tSS Oxford St. Hartford PboM Hartford St-WlS Due to the tow-n meeUng Mon- day night, the meeting of the V. F, W, athedulev. on that date has been canceli^ until further notice. Mis* Incx Sea s t r a n d ^ i^*®“** sc'Jb.-w S a ! "Waahiifgton, d T C.7Vt>ere the has-^iindergone an operation, ir the hoptf of ing her eyesight. Misa Seastrand haa been given a transfusion and la now being treated with pneicll- lln. Mra. Mary Seaatrand. owner of the Raleigh Beauty Salon, is with her daughter. ^ , Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Richmond of 427 Main atreet are spending s few day* at Point O'Woods Bench. South Lyme, Conn. FOR TOP VALUE IN A NEW HOME See the Ones Being Built By GREENBROOKE HOMES, INC On^'alker Street For nartber Infomiatlo* oaU at g|«uuider Jarvis Co. office on Caater street o* at *S Alexander street. rboM*: 4UI or 7S76 The final union aervlee of the North Methodist and Second Con- gregational eburobea will be held Sunday morning at 10:45 at the Congregational church, when the paator, Rev. Dr. Ferris E. Rey- nolds will praach on the subject, ’’Deity Smamilned." Sunday morning, Aug. S. the union aer- vices of these two churches will transfer to the North Methodist church, and Its pastor. Rev. Dr. ‘I&ri H. Furgeson, . will be in charge. Fred E. Werner of 152 West street. weiT -known local organist and teacher, IS taking a summer course at the W«*tmlnater school In Princeton, N. J. ^ r . Werner was at the same achooMaat aea- son. and write* that neariy twlce as many young men and wompn are attending Ihia yeaf. * ' i’ Pfc. John W. Aceto, eon of Mr. i and Mra. Leonard Aceto, of 195 Spnice atreet, ha* been promoted I to Technician. 5th Grade, it haa ' been announced at a European base. He Is ter\-ing with a U. B. Armv Transportation Corps Port Battalion somewhere in the Euro- pean area. Mra. Elixabeth M. Phelan of 54 Chestnut atreet haa returned after spending a week with Mr.- and Mrs. John F. Phelan of Oneida. N. T. I Police Captain Herman O. Schendel,' who ir chairman of the Dog Obedience Trials to be held on the grounds of the Aetna Life Insurance Company in Hartford tomorrow afternoon, has an- nounced that Congressman Wil- liam Miller, who representa the Firat District, will be present and make the presentation of the tro- phy to the dog adjudged beat' in tha show. Mr*. Oeorg* H. Bryaa of 179 Tolland Turnpike, with friends from Hartford, Is spending two week* at Hampton Beach, N. H. Pvt Frederick Phillips teft Isst night f6r Sioux aty , lows, after a 10-day furlough at his home, 382 Hartford road. He was gradustad from the Chahute Field, 111.,-Army Air Forces Training Comniand, after taking the special purpose motor vehiclee m a i n t e n a n c e course. Mra. William Munsie and young sons, William and James, of Ben- ton street are vacationing at PidBt O* Woods, South Lyme. Chester as Speaker On Rehabilitation Edward P. Cheater, I^rector, Bureau of Rahabllitatloh, Depart- ment of Education, State of Con- necticut, will address the Rehabili- tation meeting at the American Legion Home on the functions of his Department as It pertains te veterans, nsxt Tussdsy svsning at eight o’clock. Arthur V. Geary, Veterans’ Placsmsnt Ofllcsr for OonnscUcut, U. S. Employment Service, will also address th* meeting. William C. Mullane, Oommandant, First District, Tbs Americarn Legion. Charles McOame, Past District Commander and Louis Chevalier State Executive Committeeman, Ihe Ameriean Legl<kii,'wi]l also bs prssent. raiDAT, JULY M, 1144 Bathing Caps Thermos and Pienk Jags and SoppHes. H A T H UK DRUG STORES k'^-1 ALICE OOFRAN (Known As <)ueen Alice) S P m m iA L MEDIUM Seventh Dnnghter of n Seventh Son V Bom With n VnIL - ReniUngn Dmlly, Inelodlng Snndny, S A. M. to S P. M. Or By Appoint- ment. ' In the Service of the Peo- ple for M'Venm- ISS Oinrch Stepet, Hertford, Conn. Pho«SS-2M4 NORMAN BENTZ hon4 Motel Work — Bnveo Trokgfce. Now la tbs ttni* to hnvo Eaves Tronghe Instelled er repaired. OAIX SSSS foods From HALE'S Self Serve and Health Harket . Lena Saasked Shoulders Lb. 29c. fUleed, Rladlma Bacon - Lb. 39c [Pure Lard 2 Lbs. 35c : 1 Dixie or Elgla 1 Oleomargarine Lb. 22c [Spam or Treet Can 33c 1 Anaonr** 1 Corned Beef Hash Can 25c 1 14-Oa. Bottle Solder’s [ Ketchup Bti. 19c 1 Con Camphell’e 1 Tdinato Juice 3 Cans 25c 1 Compben’s 1 Tomato Soup 3 Cans 29c Jar Lids for Mason Jars or Coffee Jars ______Doi. 11c Boll Dog or Crown Jar Rubbers Doz. 1 ,000-Sheet Ron Colonial Toilet Tissue Certo ^ 4 Rolls 25c Reg. Size BtL 21c Foncy Ripe Cantaloupes Average Pounds to 2 Pounds Each. d% for I ^ C s Honeydew Melons ■ Fresh, NaUve Celery Fresh Squash Lb. Preeh, Long, Green Cucumbers Snnsweet Prune Juice No. 2 Can Snider’s w Bart OIney Applesauce QL27c 2 Cans 25c New Long Islimd Potatoes 10 Lb,. 4 7 c Yellow Onions A li ».25 c Qt. Jar 35c ..b. 29c Lb. .lar 33c No. t Can Bart'OIney Golden Bantam Corn ____ : 2 r,n, 29c |v^ I No. 2 Can'’^ e g n e r Blended Oranqe and Grapefruit Juice _ 2 Cans 35c Koaber Stj’Ie Dill Pickles Chase t Sanborn Coffee 'Klaxwell House Coffee Taslle Chocolate Pudding i— i— 27 c Boll Gloss Top Mosdh Jars PINTS, ^2^ quarts , S^e the Junket Demonstration How To. Make Ice Cream - At Hale's... One Junket Renet TableL a tablespoon of cold water, two cops Ught cream, Vi cup sugar, one-quarter teaspoon of vanHIs makes one quart of Ice Cream. Special On Junket Rehet Tablets,' Package of 12 for 11c FLAVOfifUt MEALS FROM THE HEALTH MARKET We haven’t invented or discovered any new animals or kinds of meats, but here at the Health Market you’ll find that we usually have the best assortment and quan- tity of meat items for your selection. FRESH PORK Loin Roasts — Fresh Hams — Picnics and Boston Butts. BEEF Pol Roasts ~ Steaks — Tender Liver. VEAL Young Tender Meat for Roast or for the Broiler. LAMB Tender Chops md Stewing Cats. Corned Beef, Cold Cuts, Bocon, Cheese, Frankfurts, Etc. POULTRY... Plump Fowl, Small Roasters and BroilerSf The foregoing list was planned from our stock of today. Shop early for best choice! The JWHAU COhR M/UKHBSTm COMN- Seasonable Items at Savings CHILDREN’S SPORTSWEAR I Domestic Dept Reduced SHORTS, SPORT SHIRTS, PLAY SUITS AND DIRNDL SKIRTS Reg. $2.98 Values Now ................... Reg. Sli98 Values Now **sa*kk*hs**4*s Reg.' S I*59 Values Now ................... ***** WOMEN’S SPORTSWEAR Reduced PLAY SUITS AND SHORTS Reg. $10^98 Values Now ........................ ........... Rcgb $8.98 Values Reg. $7.98 Values Reg. $3.98 Values ^Joiv ................ GIRLS’ PINAFORES ^ Sizes 10 to 16. Reg. $5.98 Values ^iow .................. Reg. $3.98 Values INovv . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t All Sales Final SpIMER NEGUGEES and HOUSECOATS Beautiful Prints in v^p-around or semi-clofling. Sizes 12 to 20. Broken'sizes. « Reg. $6.98 Values Reg. $7.98*$8.98 Values Now • ••••s*sss Reg. $8.98 Values \ Special At $1.29 .PhmS0%Tu. Part Linen DISH TOWELS 4 $ 1.00 Towels that are really absorbent and will give years of aervic*. Colored border* in blu* and red. Heavy Drill IRONING BOARD COVERS 59^ Extra heavy qiiality driU that will outlast several cheaper grades. Will St any standard' site board. With drawstrings. Heavy Ironing Board Pads ............... ,59c Each Each. Beautiful New Choiille Bath Mat Sets $1.98 All color oombmations in Soral 'v patterns. SBt 81x99 UGHTWEIGHT SHEETS $1.39 Psr Snmmnr Use Although these sheets have a amaU amount of dresning in them, they wash real weU. Just ths sheet for Summer cottages and camps. \ Extra Heavy Genuine All White NAVY TOWELS / 79^ Made for the U. S. Navy. Bath towels that will last for years and years. A real he-man towel. ea. Cannon **PinwheeP* Patteni COLORED BATH TOWELS 79>^ Soft, absorbent Cannon towels that will wash and wear for years. Rose, blue, green, p ^ h C&* and yellow. U-rl Good Quality Solid Color FACE CLOTHS Five colors an4all white. Assorted packages of six. for QUILTED ROBES Tearose background with floral print. Just eight to sell. All sales final. SEERSUCKER PINAFORES $1,49 l-l Sizes 1 to 6x. Regular 61.98 Valum! Reduced for Quick Clearance: $6.00 TOILETRIES, ETC. Calorful Summef FABRIC HANDBAGS Buy one to flnish out the season. Pou^ or Envelops styles in multi or solid colors. Regular ^ e s 61>98. # ’^Presh Deodorant *Airid Deodorant ^Dubarry Pace Powder *MaxFactorPaacake ^Pilled Powder Mitts 60c Phillips’ Milk of M agnesia ....................... .. 60c Alka Scitxer. 26c Ex-Lax .............. ...................................... .. ♦ • Marlia Raimr Blades, ......................................... 60e Williams’ Shaving Cream ................................ Brsdt’s f.athcr Oil Shampoo Breck*s Rcgnlar Shampoo .............. .. ........................ •Pina Tax . .S.43C ' ..lOe-OOe b.61.00 ..61.50 ...:69c' ... ,34c .... 49c .. tv19C .... 25c ... ..39f ...61.50 ,. .$1.2.5 BTORE OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL9 0»&0CK jtft Grssa Stamps Givea With Cash Sales! n.JW.HAUooM MANrHISTSII CONM* t- 'h AveraE# Dslly Circulation For ths Meath at Jane, 1M4 8,762 . Member at Hw Andit *4 OifeolnUoas Manchester—’A City of Village Charm The Weather Foreeost of C. 8. Weather Bureau Showers today and tonight; Sun- day fair and moderatelT warm; moderate winds. VOL. LXni.. IW. 255 (CIssMSsd Advertiatag on Itego 10) Soviet Spearheads Push Ahead Within Sight of Warsaw MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1944 Wounded Ride in Double-Decker Jeep (TWELVE PAGES) PRICE THREE CE! Germans Report Other ^i^Mian Forces Pene- trat^v^tvian Rail Hub Of Jei||Hva; Threaten To Pincif\off Ger- man Baltic Divisions. London, July 29.— Red Army spearheads rollihx across the Polish plain were reported within sight of War- saw today and the German communique said other So- viet forces had penetrated the Latvian rail hub of Jel- gava, which would practically blssct the, Baltics. The German bulletin said a Nasi counter-at- taM!k bad thrown the Russian van- guard out of Jeigava. 120 miles southwest of Daugavpils (Dvinak) and about 21 mllae routhweat of- Riga on an arm of the Baltic sea. -Able to See Warsaw British diapatchea from the eastern front said Warsaw could be seen by advance Soviet forces in the Polish offanalve, made up of cavalry, acojt cara and tanks. Fighting apparantly raged on in the vicinity of Jalgava aa the Ruaaiana threatened to pinch off German Baltic diviaiona by gain- ing mastery of the rail line from Siauliai to Kaunas. The Ruaaiana already held Siauliai, 50 ' miles south of Jedgaya. The Gerthana declared they atUl held Siedlce, 50 miles east of War- saw, but Russian diapatchea aald Marshal Konstantin K. Rokos- sovsky’s right wing was moving on the city for the purpose of Joining forces which were battling Germans in the streets after cap- turing Brest-Litovak. Dispatches did not locate the RuMian. spear- head ix>8itions. As Ukrainian army units Ho the south seized Jaroalaw and Przemysl, Nazi strongholds on the route to Germany, Rokoaaov- aky’a ad\’ance unite stabbed for- ward during the night from Kol- biej, 20 miles southeast of War- saw, and powerful artillery pieces behind them were wheeled into position. (A London broadcast record by OWI said Russian troops had reached “the outer fdrtlflcationa of Warsaw.” quoting Moscow press dispatches.) Walt Too Long to Retreat 'The marshal left units undfcr .Kuban Cossack General PlieV to help apecial mopping up Squads take care of three Nazi divisions pinned against the western Bug river. Fielo dispatches sold it was the same old story—thousands of Yank Fliers Set Record , For Safety Squadron of Navy Land- Based Medium Bomb- \er$ Claim Top Avia- Ctip n Performance. X U. 8. Pahi^c Fleet .Headquarters. Peart HarborXljJy 29. — ^ — A aquadron of Na^tend-baaed me- dium bombers, operating from the Marshall islands, clalm4 the great- est safety record in the history of aviation—99.96 per cent operation- ally perfect. Not one pIShe was lost during' the 61 days of May and June. T))ese Ventura PV’a (patrol planes) have been attacking neu- tralized Japanese bases in the Mar- shalls, but that is only a portion of their atory. Flying 260 sorties, only one Ven- tura failed to laach the target area. There ie no Japanese aerial op- position and comparatively little flak during these miasions, but there always is the possibility of motor failure, adverse -jweather conditions or a navigational error. Chester W. Nimitz, Pacific com- mander, commented in a preaa release: "The PV has come Into its own." Dewey Stari3~ May Affect Senate Hope Appears Prepared to Take Quiet Hand in Selection of Notni- for New York. X British Jeep is converted into a double-decker to move men wounded on the Normandv front serosa a pontoon bridge spanning ■ the Ome river in Franco. '. Tahks Clash in Fierce Battles On Fen-Mile Normandy Sector New Zealand Veterans Rommel Reacts Violent- ly to American Of- Smash Nazi Defenses' To’Zr,. Knife Wav Into/ Line nee (OMtinned on Page Eight) . Rescue Squads Continue Hunt One Airman Still Unac- counted for as Five Others Are Located. f QreenviUve, Me., July 29—yP)— Rescue squads which in two days have brought safely out of north- ern Main’s wiktemesa four pilots and one paasStiger who eljther crashed, parachuted or landed in woodlands, resuiued their search today for the /one atrmkn unac- counted for in a flight of nine planes from Moncton, N. B., to [Dayton, Ohio. j The missing plane, piloted by I Kenneth tldd, 35, of tJayton, was I believed down in the area between I Baker Lake and the. St. John chain I of lakes north of Mooaehead Lake.' I It was^in this section that Isearcbera yesterday found Jamea ■Curl, 34, of Dayton and Ben Thy- |aon, 55, of Vandalia, O.,'. general _ . «ger of the Dayton Aircraft Icxchonge, walking along a wood “tote” road, and located Earl Ash- elford, SO, of Rockford, ni.; aittlhlT hurt on his wrecked craft. '11^- ' was a passenger in Curl’s' ! plane PIOBe Not Badly IteiiHMied Curl and ’Thyson, y # b ^ plane i not badly damaged, expressed et ’Tldd’a croft hod come down ^boat 85 miles from theirs. Three of th* planes, all ot which eft Moncton laist Wednesday, or- Ived on schedule at MlUlnocket, Ce. Another reached Megontic, , after landing and refueling Chomberliun lake in Maine, planes were purchased from he Canaffian . gmemment by. a ;roun of Dayton men. Amelford, sighted from the sir a Carii Air patrol pilot flying n e plant of Lieut Ool. Guy P. ponnett, Maine CAP -wing com- nonder, related that the planes sms separated in a rain storm their fuel supplies were nearly xlteuated. He saw Cui-l’s plane note into a ree os it landed and then brought ■Is own down In a swamp where : overturned. j He was without food for two kys. taklnjr ahalter from th* rain n his leaking plane and filtering rater into a grass-lined hols to k|s thirst Albany, N. Y. July 29—(iP)—Gov. Tbomaa E. Dewey, having ripped into a congreteionoJ race to bloat at the candidacy.of Rep. Hamilton Fish (R-NY) for renoralnation, ap- peareti prepared today to take a quiet hiinj in the selection of a Re- publican nominee for the United States Senate Iri NeW York. Although Edwin F. Jaeckle, state chairman, has declared "wide open” the choice of a (3.0.P, can- didate for the .aenatorship now held by Democratic Robert F. Wagner, Dewey was expected to have major influence in naming the man to run with him in a state which ftadera of both parties be- lieve they^ust carry to win the prealdency. Mtey Fhvor Ivee A half dozen or more prospec- tive candidates are on the horizon but reporta here are that Dewey may favor Irving M. Ivesj of Nor- (ConUnued on Page n r e e ) Texas Party , Fight Rages Pro and Anti-Roose- veil Democrats Seek .Conventions ‘ Control.. ^Austin, Texaa, July 29___(Jry— Pro and ontl-Rooaevelt Texas Dem- ocrats fight today for control of county conventions which name delegates to meet in Dallas Sept. U and aet up the party’s atate organization for- .tire next two i. < Texas holds two sUte Demo- year*. One, in May, names presi- crmtlc conventions in presidential dentiol blectora and selects a dele-, gstion to the National convention. Primary purpoees of the second are to certify nomineee for state offices and to elect a new State Ex- ecutive committee. The pio-RooseVelt group would take over from regular forces di- rection of the party by selecting a new ShcecuUve committee at the Sept 13 meeting, and would have that convention tnirist on Texas’ 23 Democratic electors supporting nstioiud nominees for prW ^nt and vice president ' Texas’ squabbling Democrats are in a fetid which broke in Austin May 23 and resulted in a pro- Roosevelt convention opposed to the regular state convention. The fight continued at the National Democratic convention in Chidigo. Equal ReoegaiUcffi Won There a pro-Roosevelt delegation won equal recognition with a dtle- gatioa of regman. ’The regulars had told their electors, held ^ the State Supreme court to have been legally selected, that they were not bound to support the national nora- .(CoaUadofl f Pnge three) fV-- Mountain Line Only . Five Miles from Flor- ence; Fighting Bitter. _____ I Rome, July 29.—(/P)_Des- ert-hardened New Zealand veterans have cracked Nazi defenses south of Florence and knifed their way into the last mountain line only five miles from the historic city, AllieiL headquarters announc- ed today. The break-through provoked strong German counter- attacks, and bitter fighting was reported in the hills overlooking Florence. Positiona Firmly Held The momentum of the savage counter-thruate by Nazi infantry and tiger tanks swept the leading company of New Zealanders back 600 yards, but official reports aaid the enemy then was brought to a halt and positiona in the bills were being firmly held. TTie New Zealand advance took off from a bridgehead over the small Pesa river at Cerbaia. The threat to Florence alsu grew as South African troops crossed the Greve river, two miles south of Imprunete, which is only five and a half miles from the city's boundaries. - Aside from tho bitter fighting in the New Zealanders' sector there was scant fighting of .consequence yesterday along the remainder tof the Italian front. Artillery Continuing Duel Official reports said the situa- tion on the Fifth Army front was* unchanged, with American and German artillery continuing a duel across the lower Amo river. No mention was made ’ of whether rtthei’ ^de waa shelling the city of Pisa after a plea by Pope Pius for consideration of its historical and religious aigniflcance. One extreme left wing of the (Continued <A» Page Three) 13,000 Loafing In Stoppages Another 7,b00 Settle Disputes and Prepare To. Resume Tasks. By The Associated Press The semaphore along the na- tion’s iabor_Jront flashed red and green today. Work' stoppages kept an esti- mated 13,000 employes away from their Joba at aaoUiet 7»000 aettled their dUputea omj prepared to re- sume their tasks. Detroit, scene of^many strikes, reported one controversy ended and one still in progress while ac- tivities in shipyards in Superior, Wla,, and Mobile,. Ala., were re- sumed after 48 hours of ' Idleness by 3,000 and 400 employes, rs- apecUvely. In Detroit. *|iproxl- nrntely 3,100 men were i(ll*. a; five plants of the Chevrolet Gear and Axle division, manufacturer of warplane engine parte. A dispute %roae /ifter five emptoye* were sus- pended for failure to maintain new production ratoa. Hotel Senrloh Beatoted Service at Detroit’s Hotel S u t- ler, virtually halted .for the lost eight days, was restored last night (Contiauefl ea Page ^kres) j ■J ; Oil Factory And Bremen ^ Hit in Raids American Attack Fol> lows British Blasting Of Three Otics and Bu2us - Bomb Bases. London, Jury 29.—(>Pi—A force of 1,100 American heavy bombers struck Germany’s Leuna synthetic oil plaqt at Merseburg for the sec- ond aucTOsaive day thia morning, and also attacked the northwestern port of Bremen. ' . TThe bjpw was in the ^(•ake of an attack by'1,000 heavy British war- planes which blasted Stuttgart, Hamburg, Frankfurt and buzz- bomb bases in France at a coat of 62 planes. > Some Attack Visually Some of the American Ambers attacked visually through breaks in the clouds. They also raked Nazi airdromes at Juvincouft and Laen-Cbuvn>n northeast of Paris. v A heavy escort of Thunderbolts, Mustangs and Lightnings accom- panied the bombing force. A German occupied village in the Brest peninsula believed to be a German headquarters was wiped out by R. A. F. Spitfire fighter bombers In an attack at breakfast time thia morning. The village of Scrighac. con-' sisting of between 300 and 400 houses, had been’evacuated of the civilian population and a German garrison had beeu installed. The only building left standing after the bombing was a church, which pilots reported remained amid a great heap of rubble.. An Air Ministry communique (Continued on Page Two) Supreme Headquarters Al- lied Expeditionary Force, Ju ly 29.(-—{fl*)— U, S. tanks clashed with counter-attack - ing German armor in fierce battles along a ten-mile sec- tor east of captured Cou- tances today as Field Marshal Erwin Rommel reacted vio- lently to the Americah offensive threatening to burst his lines blocking the way to th* hesrt-of France. More Than Dozen 'Tank Duels Associated Press Correspondent Hal Doyle reported more than a dozen tank, duels raged in a broad triangular area between Canisv, Notre Dame-le Cenllly, and Tessy- aur-Vire, from which American tank spearheads are lancing southward. Fighting centered around the hamlet of Pont Brocard, on a highway between Canlsy and No- tre Dame, after the Americana Jumped off at dawn on the fifth successive day of their offensive. (The British radio aaid a tanx column was driving on Brehal, 11 miles below Coutances and 2 1-2 miles from the sea. ^All main coastwise roads meet at Brehal. Aa heard originally by CBS the broadcast said the tanks had reached Brehal, but thia later was corrected by„„BBC.) The classic encircling movemient which' forced the enemy from his strong hedgerow and swamp posi- tions above Coutances was' being repeated, and one tank column drove westward to the. sea below' that Normantjy road center. Tank elements in a column miles long hammered on six miles south of Coutances aa a U; S. general on foot, with a prisoner he personally (Continued on Page Eight) Super-Bombers Hit Eastern Manchuria; Anshan Is Poundc' Japs Flee South On Tinian Island Yanks Tighten Trap «« W flU Ij^Pssire Gains Sho^VU OH GaU node on Both Isles. I Torn in Lines sury Balance Washington.'^ly 29—(;p)— The position of the Tkeasiiry July 27: Receipts, $62. 834>436.36: expen- ditures, $903,188,395^: net bal- ance, $22,005,112,628.83. German Women Will Have To Bear Heavier Burdens U. S. Pacific Fleet Head- quarters, Pearl Harbor, July 29.—(/P)—Capturing a second air field, American.^ forces to- day chased fleeing Japanese into the south half of Tinian island while other Yanks tightened a trap on 2,000 Nips at Guam, swelling the total of more than 37,000 of the enemy killed in the Marianas. Impressive Gains Reported Impressive ground gains on both islands were reported by Ad- miral Chester W, Nimitz and front line correspondenta. The Marine drive on Tinian, the island next to conquered Saipan, was turning into a rout. Sweeping across eight square miles ip a move on shell-shattered ’I’lnlan toMm, the Leatherneckp'St times lost all contact with the Japanese, who were racing .toward eventuaf death in tha hUIy south sector. On Guam, Marines and soldiers punched 500 more yards out on Orote peninsula, pushing closer to the, seaward end the 2,000 Nips doomed to die in defense of an air- flrid and the Sumay Naval base. The defenders hold less than half the penjnsula on. Guam’s west coast. Repulse Counter-Attack North and south of the peninsu- la, the Yanks crashed inland for gains up to'two miles. They threw back a fierce counter-attack, kill- ing 2,000 Japs. They moved with- in 800 yards of Agana, Guam’s cap- ital city. They won three strategic heights, ranging up to more than 1,000 feet elevation. ' Conservativel.v, 4.700 Japs have been killed on Cluam through Thursday, one week after it was in- vaded, Nimitz reported. Mor« than 2,000 others have been slain on Tinian and 31.0.16 have been buried on Saipan. On Tinian, where the Jap-built 4,500-foot Ushi. air field already is I serving American planes, the Ma-' rlnes seized another airstrip near Gurguan point. Richard W. Johnston, represent- ing the combined Allied press, re- ported from a flagship at Tinian that; ‘"nie (conquered) area is consid- erably greater than ’ Tarawa,- Kwajalein and Eniwetok combined and is immeasurably more vital from a strategic standpoint.” "The leathernecks killed Japs at a ratio of better than 20 to 1.” . On Ushi air field, “ the wreckage (Continued on Page cHght) Ceriiian Tactics r May Supply Clues on How Long Resist Enemy WiR Europe, in By John M. Higbtow^ Washington, July 29.--4/P)—Ger- many's reaction to the smashing American breakthrough in Nor- mandy is (Waited in military quar- ter* here with most Intense inter- est because of .the clues it may supply on th* length of enemy re- sistance in Europe. Basically, the question ia wheth- er the German Armiea under Hit- ler’s new terror triumvirate, Himmler,. Goebbel'a and Goering, will- be oommitte. to a logical MayE Bulg vauuate ^aria Nazis London, July 29-— (/P» —Ger- many’s women will liave to*khoul- der heavier butdens on the home front. Nazi broadcasts disclosed today, aa Relchsminiater Paul Jo- seph Goebbela and his staff hasten- -I the" process of squeebing into the haid-pressed German Army the last available manpower fit for military’ltervice. , ' Extension of Jhe working wom- an’s age fbom 45 to 50 appeared among tho first measures expected in the latest "all out” mobilixaUon, aaid Tranaocean, N ^ propaganda agency. It addeo that "real em- ployment” 'or women waa contem- plated, noting that up to now many women, "although legally obliged to work did only nominal work by registering with reU- tlves." Gives Impreaoioa Barroclu Filled Apparently sttempUng to .'.put the best possible face on this new ac.'sping of the barrel for more men for tbs Army, the broadcast sought to give the impreaaion that barracks in Germany now were filled with' rasenres ready to rush to' th* froate. The speed of. mobil^tion of Oermsn^s reserves will depend on how quickly the berrecka can be emptied, Transocean said, adding: “For aa troops now in the boms • country’* balracka will go to the front, able-bodied <men from in- dustry and commerce will be draft- i ed. Their places . . . wil! be taken i by men and women from ehter- I prises and offices whlclF^re not j war-important.” Plans Broadcast Aug. 8 . Meanwhile, Swiss reports reach- ing Loiglon aaid Adolf HiUer waa planning an - important broaidoost to the German people on Aug. 3, anniversary of the founding of the SA (storm troopers). He will at- tempt to Justify his p4st policy as well as hia present military and home front measures, these reports said. London press reports Hit- ler would ,atmounce that he ia giv- ing Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himto- ler, now in command of the Ger- man Home Army, the rank of field marshal. .From ’Turkey came, rumblings ithat Hitler waa faced with a Hip- lumdtic setback there. Rumors cir- culated in Turkey that the Turks were plunging swiftly toward a break with the JLxia and .might even enter -the war. German en- voys were said to be admitting that a break in economic relations with ’Turkey waa imminent and that it might be followed by s dip- lomatic break. Signs Germans May Heed Request; Biilgars Ready for Defense. Istanbul. July 27—(Delayed):— (fl’i—The government of Premier Ivan Bagrianov has asked Ger- many to evacuate all (terman armed forces from Bulgaria and there are indications that the re- quest may be heeded, according to information received here today. The Bulgars were reported told that the government'would defend the nation against attack “from any quarter.” The Germans at first refused to grant the Bulgarian requesL the report said, on the ground that their other satellites might make the same demand and that pres- tige was involved, but develop- ments suggest that this stand was reconsidered. The Bulgars meanwhile Ore granting Soviet demands for es- tablishment of Ruablon consulates in most of the country’s chief porta and towns. ' < ’They have pointed out to the Germane, the report further rela- ted, that the Nasi troops'iB'^Bul- garia. estimated now at less then tWo divisions, are of no military help end drew Allied bombing. Among Indicationa the Nesia may be preparing to • get out of Bulgaria was a report from Rua- chuk that Germans, Just with- drawn from Voma and Burgas, now ore concentrated in Ruachuk on the I^ u b e Just across from the Romanian p<m of Olurglu. An- dtlier report agid Germane In aoutbem Bulgaria now ore mosaed close to the Greek frontier. These advices from Bulgaria strategy of fighting retreat or a fanatical plan of fighting to the last man for the sake of holding ground. Germans Seen Doomed Authoritative opinion here is that whatever the Germans try to do they are doomed by th* Allies’ superiority in every phase at the Ehiropean campaign on all fronts, 'i..it their strategy win directly af- fect the lengrth of time it takes Allied arms to triumph. 'The key to this belief is that the Germans are considered no longer to have an abundance of first line reserve troops. 'Thus when they try to strengthen one vulnerable point they weaken another, invit- ing Allied attack. '— Retreat Only Safe Strategy. 'Their only safe atrttegy is to re- treat in order to prevent H>e final destriictlon of their armies on the field of battle. The sure way to a short war Is for the Germans to refuse to retreat if Hitler orders them to stand and die. On the Normandy front the Germans had pinned their hopes on bottling up Allied forcea In the narrow lieachhead. They commu- ted to that task a.« many divisions as they could without vitally weakening their defenses df th* narrow part of the Ehiglish chan- nel around Calais. Now American troops . have ■mashed through the enemy's western flank into open and unde-, fended country. They can be coun-1 ter-attacked only -with fast mov-1 ing armored divisions. Fare Difficult Decision 1 But the. only quickly available j armored divisions are beyond Caen 1 and if the Germans weaken that sector the British will break I through. If they hold it and let the | Americans go, their Caen, area forces will be outflanked and h it, from the rear. . ' TheoretiGally,’ at least, the Ger-1 mans coulo throw pontoons across | the Seine and rush up some of j their armored divisions from the, L* Harve-Cplals sector. If they ! Weather Favorable for] Success of Massed^^l Raiders in First Day- light Assault; Drop > Bombs from High Al- titudes; p ty One ol^ Most Important PitK ducers of ChemicdUf A Super-Fortress Base Western China, July 29.^.^,., —B-29 Super-Fortresses day bombed Anshan in east- ern Manchuria. In the firat; daylight assault of thess long-ranging super'^bombei^ the gather was reported fa- , v^rable for the success of the 1 maased raiders, which loosed ’ bomba from high altitudes. Anshan, city of 200,000 in tha Mukden industrial region of Man- churia, is one of the most impor- M tant producers of chemical by- product# vital to Japan’s moau-‘ lecture of munition*. Its output ' includes sizeable percenUigea oi! the total empire production at * Mnzene, toluene, phenol and ayn- *■ thetic oils. The mills there an th#! second largest producers of pie , iron and the third largest of roU- ^ ed steel and ateel ingots in th# ' empire. Sink Jap Naval Veooel __ t'At the same time a commimi»i que from LieuL Gen. Joseph W. ^ Stllweii’; headquartera announced that American Liberators in a aaa _ sweep had sunk a 4,000-ton Jap- . Naval vessel and tvre < and dainaacd anotJbat freighter off Hong Kong. (Chinese reporU from Chung- king said Japanese authorities In' Formosa had ■ nitiated compulsory evacuation of non-essential real- ■ ; dent* from centers of the Islanfl ' vulnerable to air attack.! : The large force of B-29s td«lr< off in a brilliant lacquer-r«d dawn, which followed a thundentom. and hours later, the force brake its radio silence, flashed the code word saying that bombe were away over the target area., and re- porting the giant planes had wheel- ed for- the Jong homeward Journey. Hit Heavy Installations Slgnifitantly the great heavy bombers again singled out heavy : installations as. their primary tar- gets in this'powerful smash at the heart of Japan’s "greater easTAsla arsenal.” On- the two previous operatioiffi of the B-29s, major Installations also were the targets—at Yawata on June 15, and at YawaU and Sasebo, third largest Japanese Na- val base, on July 7. Both these attacks on Kyushu island in the Japanese homeland ■ (Continued on Page Eight) Flashes! (Lute Bullrtlns of the (>P|'\Vir«) (CXmtinued on Page Eight). Robots Sent y In Batdies (CeaUniMd *■ Two) Nazis. Adopt ‘^Mass At- tack' Technique; Lulls Between Onslaughts. London, July 29 — — Thk Nazis adopted a new "mass at- tack” technique in hurling 'flying bombs at London and southern England during the night, sending the robots over in batches with brief lulls between each onslaught. Ihe attacks took a fresh toll of casualties, including ^tients in a hospital which was badly damage ed. Nurse* Among Victim* Among the victims were nurses, some of whom despite their in- juries, helped volunteer rescue squa'da carry patients . from the hospital ynder showers of sparks and red hot embers. The back part of the hospital was wrecked, the main force of the bomb hitting an adjoining building that caught fire. The basement of a nearby warehouae was turned into an emergency hospitoL ' Lost night RJt.F. Halifaxeo, probably carrying alx-toit “earth - quake” oombe. attacked a aupj^ depot in the Pos-de-Calela area (CeaMaiied ea Page Three) Mine Sweeper Swer\-e Lost WaHhington. July ’29 __ i4»i—Loss of the mine sureper Swerve waa announced by the Navy > today, bringing to 172 the number , of .^mencan Naval vessels lost since, the war started. The 890-ton mine- sweeper, the , nvy said, was sunk III the Mediterranean reoently as the reauItjOf enemy ection, No in- ' formation was given on the num- ber of casualties aboard the mine- sweeper which carried a aormal coonplement of 60 officers and men. Top-Scoring ,*ce 5llssing OH City, P*.. July 20.—(PV j -TIm parents of iJeut. CoL Francis S. Gobreski, top scorlag ace in the U. S. ,\lr Force with 81 planes to hie credit, were notUled by the War deportment tiiday that be haa been "missing in setton” since July 20. Up to July 20, Ueui. CoL Gabrcskl had shot down 28 planes In the olr and destroyed three on the ground. If""'-: * * . -Let llive on Island / l.ondon, July 29— tP) —U)iity .5 Mitford, once colled U m C'“perfect type of Nordlc-heauty" by.Adolf Hitler, has been granted permln- 'sloB to live on the Island of Inch- kennetb In the Atlantic went ed Mull and hoe token up realdeoce there with her porenta. Lord and Lady Redesdole. It van dlecloaed today. The Island, off the cooet at Scotland, la owned by RedeadaJ* and the only other InhoMtaate are the ferryman and farm manager. it' • Centrels On Women Removed Hartford. Jnly 39—<(*) — 8tat« War Manpower Director WUIiaes J. Fltagerald today aanenneed the Immediete removal at War Man-. power Commlsnlon Mrtog oentrefat-; from women workera of the Haih*^ ford area. / In aa hatenrissr fet*^ lowlag Ml Booton eonflsmneai^i'^ with EegloaMl WMO Aettog A r ^ O. Gernes. ^ -- ' mm* ^ hmm majority mi witrsi Number Omm urltle^ -4 4-’’

Transcript of er$ Claim Top Avia- 4 1.00 foods Evening Hearld_1944-07-29.pdfWounded Ride in Double-Decker Jeep...

  • t ^ L V B Manchester Evening Herald

    'About TownMibl Berthold Woythaler ol' ipl« B«Uî Sholom, announce* ^ a 1 *€ff\’lc* for Sunday mom- at eight o'clock, in ob*er»*nc*

    ;the holiday, Tiahoh B'A*.

    TAf J . OHDABS

    B I N G OTONIGHTORANGE HALL

    Roofing'-’AsbestoB Siding and Rock Wool Insulation

    B n e rl w uikhianililp. A ll work naianteed. Bcaaonsbl* Pttoe*. «• ablltnOnn for *■ M thnste.

    W rite. .̂ "r-

    ^Burton Insulating Co.' tSS Oxford St. Hartford

    PboM Hartford St-W lS

    Due to the tow-n meeUng Monday night, the meeting of the V. F, W, athedulev. on that date has been canceli^ until further notice.

    Mis* Incx Sea s t r a n d ^ i^*®“**s c ' J b . - w S a ! "Waahiifgton, d T C.7Vt>ere the has-^iindergone an operation, ir the hoptf of ing her eyesight. Misa Seastrand haa been given a transfusion and la now being treated with pneicll- lln. Mra. Mary Seaatrand. owner of the Raleigh Beauty Salon, is with her daughter. ^ ,

    Mr. and Mrs. Jam ea Richm ond of 427 Main a tree t a re spending s few day* a t Point O'Woods Bench. South Lyme, Conn.

    FOR TOP VALUE IN A NEW HOME

    See the Ones Being Built ByGREENBROOKE

    HOMES, INCOn^'alker Street

    For nartber Infomiatlo* oaU at g|«uuider Jarvis Co. office on Caater street o* at *S Alexander street.

    rboM*: 4UI or 7S76

    The final union aervlee of the North Methodist and Second Congregational eburobea will be held Sunday morning a t 10:45 a t the Congregational church, when the paator, Rev. Dr. Ferris E. Reynolds will praach on the subject, ’’Deity Smamilned." Sunday morning, Aug. S. the union aer- vices of these two churches will transfer to the North Methodist church, and Its pastor. Rev. Dr. ‘I&ri H. Furgeson, . will be in charge.

    Fred E. Werner of 152 West street. weiT -known local organist and teacher, IS taking a summer course at the W«*tmlnater school In Princeton, N. J. ^ r . Werner was at the same achooMaat aea- son. and write* that neariy twlce as many young men and wompn are attending Ihia yeaf. *

    ' i’Pfc. John W. Aceto, eon of Mr.

    i and Mra. Leonard Aceto, of 195 Spnice atreet, ha* been promoted I to Technician. 5th Grade, it haa

    ' been announced at a European base. He Is ter\-ing with a U. B. Armv Transportation Corps Port Battalion somewhere in the European area.

    Mra. Elixabeth M. Phelan of 54 Chestnut atreet haa returned after spending a week with Mr.- and Mrs. John F. Phelan of Oneida.N. T. I

    Police Captain Herman O. Schendel,' who ir chairman of the Dog Obedience Trials to be held on the grounds of the Aetna Life Insurance Company in Hartford tomorrow afternoon, has announced that Congressman William Miller, who representa the Firat District, will be present and make the presentation of the trophy to the dog adjudged beat' in tha show.

    Mr*. Oeorg* H. Bryaa of 179 Tolland Turnpike, with friends from Hartford, Is spending two week* at Hampton Beach, N. H.

    P v t Frederick Phillips teft Isstnight f6r Sioux a ty , lows, after a 10-day furlough a t his home, 382 Hartford road. He was gradustad from the Chahute Field, 111.,-Army Air Forces Training Comniand, after taking the special purpose motor vehiclee m a i n t e n a n c e course.

    Mra. William Munsie and young sons, William and James, of Benton street are vacationing at PidBt O* Woods, South Lyme.

    Chester as Speaker On RehabilitationEdward P. Cheater, I^rector,

    Bureau of Rahabllitatloh, Department of Education, State of Connecticut, will address the Rehabilitation meeting at the American Legion Home on the functions of his Department as It pertains te

    veterans, nsxt Tussdsy svsning at eight o’clock.

    Arthur V. Geary, Veterans’ Placsmsnt Ofllcsr for OonnscUcut, U. S. Employment Service, will also address th* meeting. William C. Mullane, Oommandant, First District, Tbs Americarn Legion. Charles McOame, Past District Commander and Louis Chevalier State Executive Committeeman, Ih e Ameriean Legl ^Soft, absorbent Cannon towels

    that will wash and wear for years. Rose, blue, green, p ^ h C&* and yellow.

    U-rl

    Good Quality Solid Color

    FACE CLOTHSFive colors an4all white. Assorted packages of six.

    f o r

    QUILTED ROBESTearose background with floral print. Just eight to

    sell. All sales final.

    SEERSUCKER PINAFORES$ 1,49

    l-lSizes 1 to 6x.

    Regular 61.98 Valum! Reduced for Quick Clearance:

    $6.00 TOILETRIES, ETC.Calorful Summef

    FABRIC HANDBAGSB uy one to flnish o u t th e season. P o u ^ o r Envelops

    s ty les in m ulti o r solid colors. R egular ^ e s 61>98.

    #’̂ P resh Deodorant * A irid D eodorant ^D ubarry P ace Pow der * M a x F a c to rP a a c a k e ^Pilled Pow der M itts

    60c Phillips’ Milk o f M ag n e s ia .........................60c A lka Scitxer.26c Ex-L ax .............. ........................................ ♦ •M arlia Raim r B lades,.........................................60e W illiam s’ Shaving Cream ................................B rsd t’s f .a th c r Oil ShampooBreck*s R cgnlar Sham poo........................................

    •P in a T ax

    . .S.43C '..lOe-OOeb.61.00. .6 1 .5 0 . . . : 6 9 c ' . . . ,34c . . . . 4 9 c . . tv19C . . . .25c . . . ..39f . ..61.50 ,. .$1.2.5

    BTORE OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS UNTIL9 0»&0CK

    j t f t G rssa S tam p s Givea W ith Cash Sales!

    n.JW.HAUooMM A N r H IS T S II CONM*

    t- 'h AveraE# D slly C irculationFor ths Meath at Jane, 1M4

    8,762. Member at Hw Andit

    *4 OifeolnUoas

    Manchester—’A City of Village Charm

    The WeatherForeeost of C. 8. Weather Bureau

    Showers today and tonight; Sun-day fair and moderatelT warm;moderate winds.

    VOL. LXni.. IW. 255 (CIssMSsd Advertiatag on Itego 10)

    Soviet Spearheads Push Ahead Within

    Sight of Warsaw

    MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1944

    Wounded Ride in Double-Decker Jeep

    (TWELVE PAGES) PRICE THREE CE!

    Germans Report Other ^i^Mian Forces Pene- trat^v^tvian Rail Hub Of Jei||Hva; Threaten To P incif\o ff German Baltic Divisions.London, July 29.—

    Red Army spearheads rollihx across the Polish plain were reported within sight of Warsaw today and the German communique said other Soviet forces had penetrated the Latvian rail hub of Jel- gava, which would practically blssct the, Baltics. The German bulletin said a Nasi counter-at- taM!k bad thrown the Russian vanguard out of Jeigava. 120 miles southwest of Daugavpils (Dvinak) and about 21 mllae routhweat of- Riga on an arm of the Baltic sea.

    -Able to See Warsaw British diapatchea from the

    eastern front said Warsaw could be seen by advance Soviet forces in the Polish offanalve, made up of cavalry, acojt cara and tanks.

    Fighting apparantly raged on in the vicinity of Jalgava aa the Ruaaiana threatened to pinch off German Baltic diviaiona by gaining mastery of the rail line from Siauliai to Kaunas. The Ruaaiana already held Siauliai, 50 ' miles south of Jedgaya.

    The Gerthana declared they atUl held Siedlce, 50 miles east of Warsaw, but Russian diapatchea aald Marshal Konstantin K. Rokos- sovsky’s right wing was moving on the city for the purpose of Joining forces which were battling Germans in the streets after capturing Brest-Litovak. Dispatches did not locate the RuMian. spearhead ix>8itions.

    As Ukrainian army units Ho the south seized Jaroalaw and Przemysl, Nazi strongholds on the route to Germany, Rokoaaov- aky’a ad\’ance unite stabbed forward during the night from Kol- biej, 20 miles southeast of Warsaw, and powerful artillery pieces behind them were wheeled into position.

    (A London broadcast record by OWI said Russian troops had reached “the outer fdrtlflcationa of Warsaw.” quoting Moscow press dispatches.)

    Walt Too Long to Retreat 'The marshal left units undfcr

    .Kuban Cossack General PlieV to help apecial mopping up Squads take care of three Nazi divisions pinned against the western Bug river. Fielo dispatches sold it was the same old story—thousands of

    Yank Fliers Set Record

    , For SafetySquadron of Navy Land-

    Based Medium Bomb- \e r$ Claim Top Avia-

    Ctip n Performance.X —

    U. 8. Pahi^c Fleet .Headquarters. Peart HarborXljJy 29. — ^ — A aquadron of N a^tend-baaed medium bombers, operating from the Marshall islands, clalm4 the greatest safety record in the history of aviation—99.96 per cent operationally perfect.

    Not one pIShe was lost during' the 61 days of May and June.

    T))ese Ventura PV’a (patrol planes) have been attacking neutralized Japanese bases in the Marshalls, but that is only a portion of their atory.

    Flying 260 sorties, only one Ventura failed to laach the target area.

    There ie no Japanese aerial opposition and comparatively little flak during these miasions, but there always is the possibility of motor failure, adverse -jweather conditions or a navigational error.

    Chester W. Nimitz, Pacific commander, commented in a preaa release:

    "The PV has come Into its own."

    Dewey Stari3~ May Affect Senate Hope

    Appears Prepared to Take Quiet Hand in Selection of Notni-

    for New York.

    X British Jeep is converted into a double-decker to move men wounded on the Normandv front serosa a pontoon bridge spanning ■ the Ome river in Franco. ' .

    Tahks Clash in Fierce Battles On Fen-Mile Normandy Sector

    New Zealand Veterans Rommel Reacts Violently to American Of-Smash Nazi Defenses' To’Zr,.

    Knife Wav I n to /Line

    nee

    (OMtinned on Page Eight).

    Rescue Squads Continue Hunt

    One Airman Still Unaccounted for as Five Others Are Located.

    f

    QreenviUve, Me., July 29—yP)— Rescue squads which in two days have brought safely out of northern Main’s wiktemesa four pilots and one paasStiger who eljther crashed, parachuted or landed in woodlands, resuiued their search today for the /one atrmkn unaccounted for in a flight of nine planes from Moncton, N. B., to

    [Dayton, Ohio.j The missing plane, piloted by I Kenneth tldd, 35, of tJayton, was I believed down in the area between I Baker Lake and the. St. John chain I of lakes north of Mooaehead Lake.' I It was^in this section that Isearcbera yesterday found Jamea ■Curl, 34, of Dayton and Ben Thy- |aon, 55, of Vandalia, O.,'. general _ . «ger of the Dayton Aircraft Icxchonge, walking along a wood “tote” road, and located Earl Ash- elford, SO, of Rockford, ni.; aittlhlT

    hurt on his wrecked craft. '11^- ' was a passenger in Curl’s'

    ! planePIOBe Not Badly IteiiHMied

    Curl and ’Thyson, y # b ^ plane i not badly damaged, expressed et ’Tldd’a croft hod come down

    ^boat 85 miles from theirs.Three of th* planes, all ot which

    eft Moncton laist Wednesday, or- Ived on schedule at MlUlnocket, Ce. Another reached Megontic,

    , after landing and refueling Chomberliun lake in Maine,

    planes were purchased from he Canaffian . gmemment by. a ;roun of Dayton men.

    Amelford, sighted from the sir a Carii Air patrol pilot flying

    n e plant of Lieut Ool. Guy P. ponnett, Maine CAP -wing com- nonder, related that the planes

    sms separated in a rain storm their fuel supplies were nearly

    xlteuated.He saw Cui-l’s plane note into a

    ree os it landed and then brought ■Is own down In a swamp where : overturned.

    j He was without food for two kys. taklnjr ahalter from th* rain n his leaking plane and filtering rater into a grass-lined hols to

    k|s th irst ’

    Albany, N. Y. July 29—(iP)—Gov. Tbomaa E. Dewey, having ripped into a congreteionoJ race to bloat at the candidacy.of Rep. Hamilton Fish (R-NY) for renoralnation, ap- peareti prepared today to take a quiet hiinj in the selection of a Republican nominee for the United States Senate Iri NeW York.

    Although Edwin F. Jaeckle, state chairman, has declared "wide open” the choice of a (3.0.P, candidate for the .aenatorship now held by Democratic Robert F. Wagner, Dewey was expected to have major influence in naming the man to run with him in a state which ftadera of both parties believe th ey ^ u s t carry to win the prealdency.

    Mtey Fhvor IveeA half dozen or more prospec

    tive candidates are on the horizon but reporta here are that Dewey may favor Irving M. Ivesj of Nor-

    (ConUnued on Page n re e )

    Texas Party , Fight Rages

    Pro and Anti-Roose- veil Democrats Seek .Conventions ‘ Control..^Austin, Texaa, July 29___(Jry—

    Pro and ontl-Rooaevelt Texas Democrats fight today for control of county conventions which name delegates to meet in Dallas Sept. U and aet up the party’s atate organization for- .tire next two

    i .< Texas holds two sUte Demo- year*. One, in May, names presi- crmtlc conventions in presidential dentiol blectora and selects a dele-, gstion to the National convention. Primary purpoees of the second are to certify nomineee for state offices and to elect a new State Executive committee.

    The pio-RooseVelt group would take over from regular forces direction of the party by selecting a new ShcecuUve committee a t the Sept 13 meeting, and would have that convention tnirist on Texas’ 23 Democratic electors supporting nstioiud nominees for p rW ^nt and vice president ' Texas’ squabbling Democrats are

    in a fetid which broke in Austin May 23 and resulted in a pro- Roosevelt convention opposed to the regular state convention. The fight continued a t the National Democratic convention in Chidigo.

    Equal ReoegaiUcffi Won There a pro-Roosevelt delegation

    won equal recognition with a dtle- gatioa of regman. ’The regulars had told their electors, held ^ the State Supreme court to have been legally selected, that they were not bound to support the national nora-

    .(CoaUadofl f Pnge three)

    fV--

    Mountain Line Only . Five Miles from Flor

    ence; Fighting Bitter._____ I

    Rome, July 29.—(/P)_D esert-hardened New Zealand veterans have cracked Nazi defenses south of Florence and knifed their way into the last mountain line only five miles from the historic city, AllieiL headquarters announced today. The break-through provoked strong German counterattacks, and bitter fighting was reported in the hills overlooking Florence.

    Positiona Firmly HeldThe momentum of the savage

    counter-thruate by Nazi infantry and tiger tanks swept the leading company of New Zealanders back 600 yards, but official reports aaid the enemy then was brought to a halt and positiona in the bills were being firmly held.

    TTie New Zealand advance took off from a bridgehead over the small Pesa river at Cerbaia.

    The threat to Florence alsu grew as South African troops crossed the Greve river, two miles south of Imprunete, which is only five and a half miles from the city's boundaries. -

    Aside from tho bitter fighting in the New Zealanders' sector there was scant fighting of .consequence yesterday along the remainder tof the Italian front.

    Artillery Continuing Duel Official reports said the situa

    tion on the Fifth Army front was* unchanged, with American and German artillery continuing a duel across the lower Amo river. No mention was made ’ of whether rtthei’ ̂ de waa shelling the city of Pisa after a plea by Pope Pius for consideration of its historical and religious aigniflcance.

    One extreme left wing of the

    (Continued

    lows British Blasting Of Three Otics and Bu2us - Bomb Bases.London, Jury 29.—(>Pi—A force

    of 1,100 American heavy bombers struck Germany’s Leuna synthetic oil plaqt at Merseburg for the second aucTOsaive day thia morning, and also attacked the northwestern port of Bremen. ' .

    TThe bjpw was in the (̂•ake of an attack by'1,000 heavy British warplanes which blasted Stuttgart, Hamburg, Frankfurt and buzz- bomb bases in France at a coat of 62 planes. >

    Some Attack VisuallySome of the American Ambers

    attacked visually through breaks in the clouds.

    They also raked Nazi airdromes at Juvincouft and Laen-Cbuvn>n northeast of Paris. v

    A heavy escort of Thunderbolts, Mustangs and Lightnings accompanied the bombing force.

    A German occupied village in the Brest peninsula believed to be a German headquarters was wiped out by R. A. F. Spitfire fighter bombers In an attack at breakfast time thia morning.

    The village of Scrighac. con-' sisting of between 300 and 400 houses, had been’evacuated of the civilian population and a German garrison had beeu installed.

    The only building left standing after the bombing was a church, which pilots reported remained amid a great heap of rubble..

    An Air Ministry communique(Continued on Page Two)

    Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force, July 29.(-—{fl*)—U, S. tanks clashed with counter-attacking German arm or in fierce battles along a ten-mile secto r east of captured Cou- tances today as Field Marshal Erwin Rommel reacted violently to the Americah offensive threatening to burst his lines blocking the way to th* hesrt-of France.

    More Than Dozen 'Tank DuelsAssociated Press Correspondent

    Hal Doyle reported more than a dozen tank, duels raged in a broad triangular area between Canisv, Notre Dame-le Cenllly, and Tessy- aur-Vire, from which American tank spearheads are lancing southward.

    Fighting centered around the hamlet of Pont Brocard, on a highway between Canlsy and Notre Dame, after the Americana Jumped off at dawn on the fifth successive day of their offensive.

    (The British radio aaid a tanx column was driving on Brehal, 11 miles below Coutances and 2 1-2 miles from the sea. ^All main coastwise roads meet at Brehal. Aa heard originally by CBS the broadcast said the tanks had reached Brehal, but thia later was corrected by„„BBC.)

    The classic encircling movemient which' forced the enemy from his strong hedgerow and swamp positions above Coutances was' being repeated, and one tank column drove westward to the. sea below' that Normantjy road center.

    Tank elements in a column miles long hammered on six miles south of Coutances aa a U; S. general on foot, with a prisoner he personally

    (Continued on Page Eight)

    Super-Bombers Hit Eastern Manchuria; Anshan Is Poundc'

    Japs Flee South On Tinian Island

    Yanks Tighten Trap «« W f lU

    I j^ P s s ir e G a i n s S h o ^ V U O H G a U node on Both Isles. I

    Torn in Lines

    sury BalanceW ashington.'^ly 29—(;p)— The

    position of the Tkeasiiry July 27: Receipts, $62. 834>436.36: expen

    ditures, $903,188,395^: net balance, $22,005,112,628.83.

    German Women Will Have To Bear Heavier Burdens

    U. S. Pacific Fleet Headquarters, Pearl Harbor, July 29.—(/P)— Capturing a second air field, American.^ forces today chased fleeing Japanese into the south half of Tinian island while other Yanks tightened a trap on 2,000 Nips a t Guam, swelling thetotal of more than 37,000 of the enemy killed in the Marianas.

    Impressive Gains ReportedImpressive ground gains on

    both islands were reported by Admiral Chester W, Nimitz and front line correspondenta.

    The Marine drive on Tinian, the island next to conquered Saipan, was turning into a rout. Sweeping across eight square miles ip a move on shell-shattered ’I’lnlan toMm, the Leatherneckp'St times lost all contact with the Japanese, who were racing .toward eventuaf death in tha hUIy south sector.

    On Guam, Marines and soldiers punched 500 more yards out on Orote peninsula, pushing closer to the, seaward end the 2,000 Nips doomed to die in defense of an air- flrid and the Sumay Naval base. The defenders hold less than half the penjnsula on. Guam’s west coast.

    Repulse Counter-AttackNorth and south of the peninsu

    la, the Yanks crashed inland for gains up to'two miles. They threw back a fierce counter-attack, killing 2,000 Japs. They moved within 800 yards of Agana, Guam’s capital city. They won three strategic heights, ranging up to more than 1,000 feet elevation.' Conservativel.v, 4.700 Japs have been killed on Cluam through Thursday, one week after it was invaded, Nimitz reported. Mor« than 2,000 others have been slain on Tinian and 31.0.16 have been buried on Saipan.

    On Tinian, where the Jap-built 4,500-foot Ushi. air field already is I serving American planes, the Ma-' rlnes seized another airstrip near Gurguan point.

    Richard W. Johnston, representing the combined Allied press, reported from a flagship at Tinian that;

    ‘"nie (conquered) area is considerably greater than ’ Tarawa,- Kwajalein and Eniwetok combined and is immeasurably more vital from a strategic standpoint.”

    "The leathernecks killed Japs at a ratio of better than 20 to 1.”. On Ushi air field, “ the wreckage

    (Continued on Page cHght)

    Ceriiian Tactics r May Supply Clues on HowLongResist

    Enemy WiR Europe,in

    By John M. Higbtow^Washington, July 29.--4/P)—Ger

    many's reaction to the smashing American breakthrough in Normandy is (Waited in military quarter* here with most Intense interest because of . the clues it may supply on th* length of enemy resistance in Europe.

    Basically, the question ia whether the German Armiea under Hitler’s new terror triumvirate, Himmler,. Goebbel'a and Goering, will- be oommitte. to a logical

    MayEBulg

    vauuate ^aria Nazis

    London, July 29-— (/P» —Germany’s women will liave to*khoul- der heavier butdens on the home front. Nazi broadcasts disclosed today, aa Relchsminiater Paul Joseph Goebbela and his staff hasten-

    -I the" process of squeebing into the haid-pressed German Army the last available manpower fit for military’ltervice. , '

    Extension of Jhe working woman’s age fbom 45 to 50 appeared among tho first measures expected in the latest "all out” mobilixaUon, aaid Tranaocean, N ^ propaganda agency. It addeo that "real employment” 'or women waa contemplated, noting that up to now many women, "although legally obliged to work did only nominal work by registering with reU- tlves."Gives Impreaoioa Barroclu Filled

    Apparently sttempUng to .'.put the best possible face on this new ac.'sping of the barrel for more men for tbs Army, the broadcast sought to give the impreaaion that barracks in Germany now were filled with' rasenres ready to rush to' th* froate.

    The speed o f . m obil^tion of Oermsn^s reserves will depend on how quickly the berrecka can be emptied, Transocean said, adding: “For aa troops now in the boms

    • country’* balracka will go to the front, able-bodied < men from industry and commerce will be draft-

    i ed. Their places . . . wil! be taken i by men and women from ehter- I prises and offices whlclF^re not j war-important.”

    Plans Broadcast Aug. 8 . Meanwhile, Swiss reports reaching Loiglon aaid Adolf HiUer waa planning an - important broaidoost to the German people on Aug. 3, anniversary of the founding of the SA (storm troopers). He will a ttempt to Justify his p4st policy as well as hia present military and home front measures, these reports said.

    London press reports Hitler would ,atmounce that he ia giving Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himto- ler, now in command of the German Home Army, the rank of field marshal.

    .From ’Turkey came, rumblings ithat Hitler waa faced with a Hip- lumdtic setback there. Rumors circulated in Turkey that the Turks were plunging swiftly toward a break with the JLxia and .might even enter - the war. German envoys were said to be admitting that a break in economic relations with ’Turkey waa imminent and that it might be followed by s diplomatic break.

    Signs Germans May Heed Request; Biilgars Ready for Defense.Istanbul. July 27—(Delayed):—

    (fl’i—The government of Premier Ivan Bagrianov has asked Germany to evacuate all (terman armed forces from Bulgaria and there are indications that the request may be heeded, according to information received here today. The Bulgars were reported told that the government'would defend the nation against attack “from any quarter.”

    The Germans at first refused to grant the Bulgarian requesL the report said, on the ground that their other satellites might make the same demand and that prestige was involved, but developments suggest that this stand was reconsidered.

    The Bulgars meanwhile Ore granting Soviet demands for establishment of Ruablon consulates in most of the country’s chief porta and towns. ' <

    ’They have pointed out to the Germane, the report further related, that the Nasi troops'iB'^Bul- garia. estimated now at less then tWo divisions, are of no military help end drew Allied bombing.

    Among Indicationa the Nesia may be preparing to • get out of Bulgaria was a report from Rua- chuk that Germans, Just withdrawn from Voma and Burgas, now ore concentrated in Ruachuk on the I ^ u b e Just across from the Romanian p

  • •/

    TWO

    ^oneer House To Be Qosed

    Used by 90 G irls ^Employed on Para- dintes; Gone Home.

    W o n w Houm. off Forert 8ty u®6d to room ftbout 90 ®irto Joyed by the P lo n ^ Parechute npiuy. ta about to cloae. T^e ‘ tove either returned to tteir

    rrimifer homea In Northern New ^iDnctand or haiw aecured roome.etoewhera. ^""^***•£“ *' the furniture ha* been offered for

    i .t w>o *n«* ywrterday there remained L iMt a few email iteme.L The bouae waa the formfer home

    Clheney and when taken vver chanfOB ware made and An

    l^aM D ea inataUed. The property ia I t ownM by E. J. Holl who haa etart- 1'̂ ed to develop the land for building in Mrpoaaa and haa cut a new atnet I t f t ^ P a r h to Foreat etreet Thla

    lia ]|M named Otla atreet.I f ̂ ■

    Oil Factory And Bremen

    Hit in Raids(Cantoroed from Page One)

    ̂Mid ^ night bombera were en>. M ged In nuateroua eombata over

    S g lUlob by German night fight- ' a n and that the Brtttah ahbt down 'ad toaat M German planea and ■way wore probably were de-

    ' **^ 2a1 fcS 5?"5 lim ee oarried out r g lttitn on N a « aupply d îpota

    ■eni Wattan and Paa-De-Calaia. . Mteea alM wot* laid in enemy

    water*. ’CSandb Ohaenie Beaotta

    The Air Mtnlatry oommunique ̂ Mid tfelek elouda obaoured bomb- IM fMulta over Stuttgart, which

    ' MweleMly had bean battered three ****** In a week, but.retum-

    awpwe reported large fires were huraing la the Hamburg tar-[ J **g|eer’l«oeuultoe oarrying tw ^

    nba atruok at grankfurt

    MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN., 5ATURDAT, JTJLT 29^1944

    while other It. A. F, planea smashed at rocket.bomb bases in tha Paa-De-C5alal8 region.

    Stuttgart la 10th on the R. A. F.‘e list of important German target cltlei, and is the site of manufacturing plants producing essential parU for Nazi planes, ships, motor transport and buzz-bombf.

    The R .“ A. T. assault followed Intense aerial operations yeete^ day during which some 1.500 American heavy bombera from British and Italian bases hit Nazi oil centers at PloesU and Merae-hurg. ̂ _CloiiM IHuminated by FIree

    Oiie returning air crew said elouda over Hamburg were illuminated by great exploaiona and

    **TOe German radio assertedheavy Nazi fighter bombers attacked shipping concentraUons in Seine I'ay last night, claimed hits on two AUled destroyers and several landing craft, end damage to a 6,000-ton freighter.

    Transoccan, Nazi news agency said strong Russian air attacks were made against Kirkenes, on the northern tip of Norway, where bombere with strong fighter protection penetrated the harbor area. The Germans declared 14 bombers wore shot down.

    The Rueaian communique told of heavy air attacks on the Warsaw Buburbe. the rail Junction of Ineterburg in East Prussia and Krustplls on the Latvian rai^oad line between Dkugvaplls and Riga. The main Soviet Urgets were rail lines, trains and supplies.

    War Bond Prize

    Detroit, ̂ July 29'.— War bonds worth $2,500 await the winner of the 86-hole challenge golf match pitting the tournament ew - aaUon, Sam 83^ . against duration National Open champ Craig Wood today and Sunday at Plum Hollow golf club, but the Red Cross atan^ to be tha big winner In the benefit

    * * B ^ . the home pro. carded a 68 In pracUce yesterday to W oods 70. TTia course record 66 waa set by Chick Harbert in 1931. Par ia 72. The 18-hole rounds are booked to start at 2 P- »•

    Huaband (after a quarrel) — No! No, you didn’t run after me. But listen, babe! A trap doesn’t run after a mouae, either. But it fete it, Just the eartie. BeeT

    Rockville

    1 The Army anJNovy Club, Incorporated

    B I N G OB iggest Prizes In Town!

    Every Sot. N igh t A t 8 :30 Sharp!2d Games Including Sweepstakes

    Admission $1.00 a

    All Red Cross Laundry Free

    Rockville Man Doee the Work Despite Increase In Regular Business.Rockville, July 29.— (Special) —

    In spite of working^ conditions and their increased volume of work, the Swiei lAundry located on Orchard atreet. operated by Henry Klbler, has been giving Ita services to the Rockville Chapter of the American Red Cross for several mnnthe. free, of charge.

    All of the aheete. pillow casea and materials that were used at the emergency hospital in the East school were laundered and as the classes in Home Nursing, First Aid and Nurses Aides finish their courses, the bed linens and other materials used in these classes are laundered and ready for the new claea, without charge.

    Brothers UnitedMr. and Mrs. George Hartmann

    of Windsor avenue have received a joint letter from their two eons, Private Russell Hartmann and Raymond F. Hartmann S 2-c written from New Guinea. Pvt. Russell has been in the service since Octo- her. 1942 and in New Guinea aince January. Raymond haa been in the Navy a hHle over a year and arrived recently in New Guinea, immediately looking up hU brother- for a visit, which took place on July 8th.

    WeddingThe marriage of Ml** Marie

    Piohlet of Kansas City, Miawun and Ervin H. Niemeyer of ,Hartford took place in Rockville on July 26. the ceremony P**;'formed by Rev. Alvin D. pastor of the Rockville Baptist church. The bride made the trip to Connecticut by plane.

    Sunday 8»‘rvic*eDr George S. Brookes, P^^°^

    of the Union Congregational church, will preach on Sunday morning at 10:46 for him subject. Is Gift or a Trust?” Miss Vera Cobb will be the eololet on Sunday and the Junior choir will aeeiet in the

    ""itev. F. A. Dyckmsn^ pastor of the RBokville Methodist church.

    Never Too Old

    In typlckl feminirie fashion, women of Voullly, France, recently celebrated liberation of the town by turning up at church services decked out in new hate or refurbished old ones. . Even the old lady pictured above looked proudly toward the cameraman who waa attra-cted by her neat cap of crocheting and black velvet.

    lisle of Manchester. They have two children, Carlisle Peter Teabo .of Manchester, and Miss Dorothy Lorraine Teabp of this city, also three grandchildren.

    Mrs. Teabo is a member of the Pj^hian Sisters and a Past Chief. Mr. Teabo, a veteran of World War I haa been active in the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars of which he is a Past Commander.

    Doiiblrbeadpr Sunday There will be a doubleheader

    softball game played on Sunday, July 30th at the Cricket lot. The ;

    About TownPrivate First Claaa John C. Sum-

    ialaski, son o f Mrs. Mary Sumls- laskl, of 12 Kerry street, has been promoted to technician fifth grade. He la serving wtlh the U. S. Army Transportation Corps, Port Battalion. in the European theater of operations.

    Nutmeg District Loyal Orange Lodge, No. 21, will hold its semiannual meeting tonight at 7 o ’clock in Orange hall. All members are urged to be present.

    Mrs. Francis Oeisaler and son, David Francis, born July 21 at the Rockville hospital, have returned to their home, 108 Orchard etreet In that city;

    Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hynds and daughter, Roberta, o f Pleasant atreet, and their niece, Mlea Ednah Neville, of East Center street, with Miss Alice and Miss Doris Little ofS&aurel street, are spending their vacation at Mlequamicut, R. L

    Miss Esther M. Johnson of Clinton etreet left this morning for Kennebunk Beach, Maine, and will spend the comllig week at the Sea- view hotel.

    George Charles Beesette, Jr., of 67 Pine street, Philip Lewis, of 39 Bunce Drive, and Louis Angelo Rldolfi, of 52 Bissell street, were In a group of 105 that left the enrolling, office at New Haven recently for the U. S. Maritime Service training station ..at Sheepahead Bay, Brooklsm, N. Y. ’The average length of the course there la fronb three to six montha.

    Weddings ^Couldn't Resist*

    Ensign Elizabeth Whitten, ofthis town, who is with the U. S. Naval Retervea, the Waves, at Pensacola, Florida, was one of those enlisted women feted on the Pensacola Waves anniversary program held all this week. Merhbers

    .of the Waves were entertained by service clubs of Pensacola. Ensign Whitten, vyhq' is assistant

    will have for hie subject on Sunday '’Going Up!” Sunday is Camp Meeting Sunday at ‘ h* tic Canip Ground with Blanop L,owlo O. Hartman of HMten ^ a ch in g at' 11 o ’CliKk 2-30- ^ v : R. G. Belcher will praach at7:80 in the evening.

    The Vernon Methodist church will be closed for camp meeting and vacation untU September 6.

    The preacher • at St. John a Episcopal church on morning will be Rev. Leonard W 8. 'Stryker, D.D., o f Tolland.

    Obeera-e Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. 'Teabo of

    12 Mountain street will quietly ob- sen e their 25th-wedding anniversary on Sunday, July SOth, with a family reunion. They were married in 'Hartford. Mrs. Teabo be- Ing the former Mia* Marian Car-

    first gamfĉ , will start at* two o{j)c;«r on the staff ofo’clock with P ltkafs Tigers ■ and fc ie f o f Naval all- training, was the Rainbow Ti?rrors. representing ] (j,e ^ e s t of the Pilot Club diu-ing the Junior League, playing. . : the celebration.

    In the second game the Rock- i ____ville All-Stars will play the Man- i private Edward D. Jarvis, eon Chester All-Stars, the Rockville of Mrs. Arcelia Jarvis, of 84 Per- team being the pick of the Senior bins etreet, who has been home

    or. fur’lough, has been, transferred from Camp Planche, New Orleans, La., to Camp Reynolds, Pa. Before leaving he was guest of honor at a party and dog roast given by hia sister, Mra. Arthur Leduc of Edmund atreet. A cake surmounted by miniature flags was a feature of the refreshments. *

    T

    FOR SALE15 D E S IR A B L E LO TS

    IN L O V E L Y LA K E W O O D C IR C L Ea,

    AFFORDING A BEAUTIFUL VIEW OP THE LAKE AND THE MANCHESTER COUNTRY CLUB.

    WATER AND SEWER PIPES ARE IN THE STREET.

    5 Lot* A t $1,000 ,

    5 Lett A t $1,250 5 Lots A t $1,450-$2,000

    ARRANGE APPOINTMENTS WITH •C. ELMORE WATKDJS^R HENRY E. SMITH,

    MANCHESTER,OR YOUR OWN REAL ESTATE BROKER.

    ^UUn/NG

    H t P A I R S

    Attention Home Owners

    Oar expert carpenters are now available for any and all types of home* re- .paira and altefations.

    Estimates cheerfully given,

    Wm. F.JohnsonBroad Street,

    ̂ TELEPHONE 7426 Or ObU Arthnr Ayers

    Coventry - TeL 236S-W6

    league.Tlliese garnet are one of the se

    ries of events planned by the Summer Recreation Board for the coming weeks.-------Will Attend Wedding

    A number from Rockville will attend the wedding of Corporal Frederick John Arens. U. 8. Marines, who returned home from overseas Imet week after 25i months of service, to Miss Doris Clark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rkymond Clark of EUington,! which will take place on Simday afternoon at two o'clock at the Ellington church. Mr. Arens is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Areits of Ellington.

    District ConventionsTwo Republican district conven

    tions are being held this afternoon at the Warren Memorial Hall in Stafford Springs. The delegates to the State convention met at 2:30 to elect two delegates to the State convention and members of various state convention committees and at three the delegates to the Congressional convention are meeting at the same place to elect delegates at large to the Congressional convention.

    The CYP Club of Center church will meet tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock at the church, to begin work on a project for the service men from the congregation. All members are urged to attend and are asked to bring fountain pens.

    it III M ^t Boat Together

    Hoquiam, Wa*h.— —Two war wives who are living together here have learned that their, husbands are roommates, too—in a German prison camp. One ia Lieut. CoL Charles Ross Greening, a pilot in tbe Doolittle raid’ on. Tokyo and designer of the makeshift bomb- sight used by th raiders. Hr was erptured in lU ly. The other is Lieut. Col. Loren G. McCollom, shot down ov'er France. They were former Washington State college claa.smatee. Bald the wlvee: "Now we'll be able to meet the boat together.”

    II

    V a c t o i^ -C o n t r o lle d

    a E C A P P I N GWITH AMERICAN-MADE

    SYNTHETIC RUBBER

    6.00 X 16 TIRE

    fo r 1m |w B iliifi u d flaar qtuOity, Iiato your ttrai rowppod by tha Firatono fMtory-OontroUad Mothod. Faetory. lUTnid ospartt will do tho job. Our ro o ^ ire gwanloed.

    r

    N O iATIONINO.CERTIFICATE REQUIRED to RECAP

    A N Y TYPE TIRE

    Personal Notices

    In MemoriamIn Mil *11(1 lovln* memory of our

    win and brother. Leonard Oeorae Hewitt, who 'pa**e4 away on July 30. 1935:It's not th* tear* at’ the, moment ehed. That tell how loved waa the soul that

    n*d.It:» the silent toara frequently wept. And the aweet remembrance, , forever

    keptMother, Dad. Sister, and Brother.

    In MemoriamIn loving memory of Jame* Lennon,

    who passed away July 2. I93i: and Lesaelv G. Lennon who paaaed away July 30tft. 1932;We ahall mia* them, ever mia* them.' Mlaa their handclaspa. worda of cheer, Mlaa their happy smilea of walcom* That w* knew when they wer* hart;But w* hold them in aweet memory

    And we know they are not dead; - To the heavenly land eternal,They juat slept away ahead.• 4And .'ere Iona we know we’ ll meei .them In the realms of endleas days.When our tasks on earth are flnlahed And like them, we've a:one sway.

    * The Lennon Family.

    Mo r i a r t y b r o t h e r sON TBE LEVEL AT CENTER AND B|tOAD STS. TELEPHONE 8500

    May EvacuateBulgaria Nazis

    (Continued (rom Pnga Om )

    came in the midst of others that Bulgaria was negotiating with the Allies, including tha Onlted States, in an effort to get out of the war and reports that a break in economic and diplomatle relations between Germany and Turkey wan Immlnteit. German Ambassador Franz von Papen hurriedly returned to Ankara yeeterday from Istanbul.

    . (The O rm an radio said today in a broadcast heard In London that von Papen waa expected to discuss the .current political situation with Turkish officials anu review a re- yorted agreemesit between the

    Turks and Russia.(The Turkish Parliament meets

    next Wednesday. The German radio skid Premier Sukru Sara- coglu waa expected to'present It a confidential statement on foreign policy.

    ('The German broadcast said a Berlln..-Foreign Office spokesman detained at a praas ronference to discuss what he called "British and Soviet pPSMure” on the Turka.)

    W oito Better H um PlawMd

    Salt Lake City— OP)—Grocer Leo R. Jeiisen alwaya left $6.60 In small change in hia cash ragiater with the drawer open, believing that if burglars entered they’d take the money and not damage the costly depository. It worked even better than that. A burglar came, in, took the money and left without damaging anything. And he waa convicted o f third degree burglary, too, ^fter police caught him close by—^witb exactly 86.50 in email change in his pocket

    Dual W edding This Morning

    Nuptial Mass at St*Jameses Church asTwo Couples Marry.St. James's church was the scene

    of a double wedding this morning | at 9 o'clock when a sori.and daughter of Mr. and'Mrs. Paequale An- ntello of 14 Brainard Place, were imlted in marriage at a nuptial maas. The rector. Rev. William J. Dunn, performed the single ring ceremonies. Gladlolas predominated in the decoration of the altar.

    Miss Margaret Mildred Anniello became the bride of Frank Gentile, eon of Mrs. Lucy OentUe of Shelton, and Mlaa Patricia L. McMid. len, daughter of Mrs. Grace McMullen of Silver Lane Homea, waa wed to Patrick F. Anniello.

    Mlaa Anniello wore .a princess atylq gown o f white satin and lace with sweetheart neckline and leg o* mutton sleevea. Her veil o f illusion was of finger tip length and her bridal bouquet was o f white gladlolas. Her brother’s bride, Mias McMullen, waa attired in a white satin gown of identical design. with similar veil and bridal bouquet

    Attendants for the OentUe-An- jiiello nuptials were the bride's sisters, Miss Frances Anniello as maid of honor, and Mias Mary Anniello as bridesmaid. Carmen Gentile of Shelton was .best man for his brother.

    Miss Frances Anniello wore yellow crepe with arm, "bouquet of pink gladlolas, and Miss Mary Anniello wore aqua and carried yellow gladlolas.

    Miss Rose Anniello. sister o f the bridegroom, was maid of honor for Mies McMullen: Miaa Helen Annicl- lo, another sister, was bridesmaid, and Vincent Dei Mastro of Glastonbury was best man for Mr. Anniello. Miss McMullen’s maid o f honor wore a blue gown and carried pink gladlolas. and her bridesmai~Infielders Ralph Hogdin and Leroy Schalk have a private hitting streak contest as they powtr the White Sox winning spree.

    Hogdin, leading the Sox offensive at .6 .562 cHp in hia. last eight garnet with 21 bRo, bee made at least one hit hr his last 10 con- tesU^Jtetasnriiasn’ t missed beg- glOg’’'one or more' hits in his lest 11 encounters, batting .440.

    Hia Sox have won eight iff their last 10 games.

    VOLUNTEER ^LANR — BÎ OOD DONOR SERVICE Msnehestcr Chm|$ter. The Amoriegn Rod Crara

    1 Want To Donato Blood for tho A m j ond NayyNarao

    Addreea t ̂ m••••••9•t

    9 0 o o o a o o A O » o o a o o « o * ^ « o o

    9 O 0*0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o

    Phone »•o 0 o •04«0 0•o o •• Afo. 18-20.... Age, 21-60 Checic boor yoa prefer iappointmont:

    |2~1 . • * • • X4I • • • • • 24 . • a • IPill in and mail, to

    Atnerlrun Red Cn«8. House A Hale Building

    2-4.

    It’s hard to niu^a car sny- whsre, with no extra gai.' M> coma down end etlsbrste with . us at our SatiirdsjF night party.

    We've got some iee cold beverages waiting for you. You can get a delicioua dinner here from 6 p. m. on.

    For your dancing pleasure we have George Smith and . his Hammond Organ. Ralpir. Von Deck and -hia complets drum rythms. lovely June OUsy, yocslist, and John Anthony Cerrieo, our male slngeA

    No big type sdvt. neededfor ,t)ieae muoicians. but like the church bell on Sundays, we wish to remind you they are here.

    Dial 3802 if you wish a booUi rsserred.

    MoUy, Ennis, Virginia and Chubby may sing a aong for you. Johnny claims he urlU ten a joke youTl roally laugh a t .

    WE'LL BE a^ntlNO TOUl

    V

    The

    Sheridan

    DANCEM U .LER '5 H A L L

    ^Tolland Turnpike

    Sal. Night, ‘ July 29 8 to 12

    Modern and Old Fashioned.Peter Miller, Prompter.

    A Good Time for Young and Old

    :iT

    SUN. - MON.. TUES.

    Drama That Leaps Straight To Your Heart!

    TflCiixmeUTHE EVE

    OF ST. MARK

    PLUS; “ MEN ON —HEB MIND”

    ENDS TODAY:**2 Girls And A Sadlor”

    Plus* TsMiiea of Waahbiftau’

    Men and Women of tha Service Invited!

    D A N C EA1 Gentile and his

    OrchestraEVERY SUNDAY NIGHT

    K. of C. Ballroom28 Prospect St. Hartford

    Benefit Service Fund!

    tOKNA 0KAV O6AMT WITHERS ,

    Has h II f , tb .

    'T a lk o f the

    Town T r io "Fealerina

    Seb Shonty

    Henry Lewieandi

    Sol Lom bardo

    Playing, at the

    DEPOT SQUARE

    for your listening and dane- Ing pleasure every ThuwH day. Friday and Saturdajn evening.) j

    •* t, Delicious Steakd,Chops, Chicken*

    Spaghetti and' La PixEO.Business Men's Luncheon ^5r

    CHOICE LIQUORS ANt THE BES1 BEER

    ATOUlf BAR.

    DEPOT SQUARE

    GRILI14 Depot Square -TH. 5$^

    MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN., SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1944

    Packed Foods' Less

    Commercially- Canned Products Below Expec* tations This Year.

    ' Hartford, July 29.—State" War 'Administrator Henry ’ B. Mosle called attention today to government afatlsticB indicating that the 'Civilian supply o f commercially canned fruits 'and vegetables will be short o f demand in the next few months.

    Reports o f federal agencies deal' Ing with the food supply bring out, he said, that in spite of increased acreage of fruits and vegetables for commercial canning, the increased production haa only partly materialized.

    Because of acute labor shortsige in some areas and adveriw weather Conditions in oteers, some of the early crop packs are smaller than anticipated. The later maturing crops such as tomatoes, com and lima beans are now imperilled by drought (md heat

    Home Oanhldg NeedThe reports were gathered for

    tbe Home Food Preservation Committee o f the State War Council, and Mr. Moele said the coBCluoion to be drawn from them 4s that there la continued need for home canning to supplement commercial supplies.

    Because o f the larger number of men oveiXeas, canners were asked to set aside 70 per cent and 60 per («n V respectively, o f their 1942-43 annui^ production of canned fruits and vegetables. The need from this year's pack was estimated at 36 million (»aes of canned fruits and about 92 million cases of vegetables. This requirement exceeds tbe 1943 figures approximately 14 million cases of canned fruits and Juices, and 85 million cases o f canned vegetables.

    The commercial fruit pack Is expected to be larger this year than last, but tbe government requirements have increoMd to such an extent that fewer cases than last year are allocated to retailers. For example, out o f an estimated pack of 15 million cases o f peaches, clvUlsns this year wlU receive 5,212,000 cases which is about million cases fewer than last year.

    Demand GreaterCitrus fruit canners were re

    quired to increase their set-asides of grapefruit Juice from 88 to 41 per cent and o f orange juice from 42 per cent to 48 per cent for war purposes. Dry weather now threatens the Florida and Texas oiv chords.

    Although it ia too early in the season to know the size eff . the znM> P^ck, it is known that the pea crop did not reach expectations. Because Government quiremente must first be met, clvUisn consumers will not have any cans o f peas for their tables. The prospect ia that deliveries to the trade will not run more than 50 per cent to 60 per cent of quantitiee received from the 1943 pack.

    ■Ji

    13,000 LoafingIn Stoppages

    (Coatlnaed from Page One)* \

    when some 70b employes ended a worlf .stoppage.

    A work stoiqiage of 300 C9ilp- pers resulted in the closing of the General SteeT Castings company’s Commonwealth. plant- In Granite City, HI., and made 4,300 employes leave their Jobe. The chip- p en said they were abused by a foreman];! but the CIO United Steel Woricen union terme%the stoppage unauthorized.

    In Roebling. N. J., some 3,000 employes at tbe ̂ edm A. Jtoebllng A- Sons Co., engaged in wmr production. quit work and their walkout, said a management apokes- man, followed dinniasal o f nine worken.

    Protest Falhire To ActThe Anaconda Wire and Cable

    Company’s plant at Marion, Ind., waa closed after 1,100 AFL employes stopped work in protest against what a union spokesman said was failure of the War Labor Board to- act on a petition -for a wmge Increase.

    Production o f motor bearings at the San Francisco plant o f the Federal Mogul Corporation was halted when 100 machinists aUywl off the job. AFL machinists’ union leaders, who ordered the stoppage, said the local had ruled agahiat more than 48 hours o f work a week.'

    Disputes remained unsettled at the John R anch Bronze A Foundry Company in aeveland, affect- tngJOO employes; at the Western foundry in Chicago, keeping 400

    IMle. and at Radio Station K SIT Itn Minneapolis, involving 16 musi- leiank.

    Disputes setUed sent 8,000 CIO I United Ante Workers back to their I jobs at five plants o f tha Ohio ICiwnkshaft Company in Clevelsiid, Iwhlle also in Cleveland 1400 mem- Ibers o f the AFL Auto Workers |unit voted to end their stoppage

    at the Nstlonal Malleable and Steel ICastings Company and return to

    Monday.

    Plenty sC Heft

    Chicago, July $9—)—Tbere'U plenty o f heft ia the ooUegs

    all-star forward wall against tbs esdeago Bsars in tbs annual char

    ity foottwU d a sh at Oyeha Stadium Aug. so.

    Most racant additions to tbs collegiate squad whicb now aum-

    30 were George Heetat, 240- Bd guard from tba University Alabama, and Jaek ffltlaad,

    212-pound tackle from tbe Uni- jrerstty o f Utah. Hecht is topped

    waigbt by Clydf Jobnson. 260- ‘ tackle tbe UMversity

    Kentucky, who wai

    New Zealand .Yets Smash Nazi Lines(Coattnned from Page One)

    Eighth Army within tWo miles o f Bmpoll, oo the south banks of the Arno nearly 30 miles east of Pisa and within-2 1-2 miles of Monte Lupo.

    North o f Arezzo, where the Eighth Army has made sieant progress since the capture of th*. road junction town, enemy guns still were active but Britiah and Indian troops drove the foe from the Cam- priano area and captured the village of Scoiana

    Farther east in the Apennines only slight contacts with the enemy were reported. Sassoferrato aivd Perticano were found clear of enemy troops. .Italian troop* on the inland portion of Jhe Adriatic sector halted an enemy counter-attack southwest of Ostro, and Polish troops occupied the southern part of the coastal town of Senl- gallia. '

    An official announcement said the Fourth BriUah division waCIn the line maintaining contact with the retreating enemy in one sector. This division crossed the Ra- pido at the beginning of the offensive May 11 and entered CassinoWL WAfilr Ia Faf, The Fifth' Army disclosed its artillery observation pilots had flown tiny defenseless Cub planea 8,600 hours between May 6 and the fall of Rome June 3, spotting targets, and that practically all of the pilots have bqpn awarded air medals. j

    Allied Warplane*Blast o n Supplies

    Rome, July 29—OP)—Fanning out In a broad arc over enemy ter- Htory from southern France to Greece, Allied warplanes from Italian bases yesterday blasted en emy oil supplies and communications.

    Twelve enemy planes were shot down during the day’s operations, featured by an attack by more than 600 heavy bombers of the U.S. 15th Air Force on oil targets at PloesU. American pilote, using instruments to peneti^te a thick smoke-screen, Isft Jiuge oil storage tanka envelopcd in flames.

    A total oT'SS Allied planes, including 19' bombers, were lost. Most of the bombers apparenUy were vicUma of intense flak, since escorting • fighters prevented aggressive enemy Interceptors from reaching them.

    Halt yards, at, Fiorina, ureece, aNazi railhead, and troop roncentra- Uons were bombed by Liberators. R. A. F. BalUmbres and Mustangs made a hea'vy attack on rail t v - gets In Yugoslavia.

    American Thunderbolts strafed the Crest-ChatiUion area in the Rhone valley in France, hitting vehicles, trains, and an airdrome. R. A. F. Wellingtons started fires around a road and .rail bridge at Menton, 15 miles east c f Nice.

    Fighter bombers attacked gun positions south of Florence and cut roads in that batUe zone.

    The 15th Air Force fighter wing boosted its total o f enemy planes destroyed vto 1,008 when it shot down 11 over Ploesti. It has lost one plane for every six victims.

    Pilote contributing yesterday with one victory each included: L(eute. Jack B. Edge, 1826 26th street, Ensley StaUon, Birmingham, Ala.; Benjamin H. Emmert, Erwin, Tenn.; Harry A. P vker, 8 Grove street, M ilfo ^ N. H.

    Lieuts. Willarr* R. Skelton, 1726 Oak street, Parkersburg, W. Va., and Tom B. Bogt, Route One, Norwalk, Conn., shared one victim.

    Dewey Stand Miay Affect Senate Hope

    gram He will have as guests Dorothy James of Petersburg\ Va.; Areta* Way of Rldgeland. S. C.; Marilyn Sedoris of Edna, Kan., and Misa Bt-ss Haan ot Muskegon, Mich, all members of toe Methodist Youth Caravan.

    Membeis of the former Cecillan

    Club and others will meet Sunday evening at 5:30 at toe church, with Mrs. D. M. Bennett, to arrange the -' I music for toe service o f consecra-.' tion next Friday' evening conclud* ing toe Methodist Youth Caravaa‘4 program at toe church. -

    Members o f the Methodist Youth Caravan will be guests of tb» Kl- ■ , w w is Club Monday noon and will rt provide the program under toe direction of Rev, W. Ralph Ward, Jr-

    NOTICE!'The Board of Health o f tha Town of Manchester will pay $10.00 to anyone who will give us information that wlD Irad to tbe convIctlOB of aay person dallberately depositing garbage or rubbtah ot aay Und aloog the pubtle highways of the towa,-espa< cially Middle TarapllK West,

    D. C. r , MOORE, Chalrman-^Board o f Health,'

    *T am not afraid o f tomorrow, for I have seen yesterdity and I love today.*’

    UNION SERVICESof the

    EMANUEL AND CONCORDIA LUTHERAN CHECH ES

    Sunday, July 30AT 10:30 A.M.

    At the

    Concordia Luther̂ ChurchGarden and Winter Streets.

    REV. KARL RICHTER, Pastor.FRED E. WERNER, Organist.ELIZABETH WALTERS, Soloist.

    YOU ARE WELCOME!

    FOR SALESINGLE 8EVEN-ROOM HOUSE. Located on East Side. Largs lot. Hot Air heat. Sale Priee fSffOO. Dowa paymeat $8(Mh Now vaeaat.TW O -FAM ILY. Near East Canter Street. 6 rooms to each floor. Hot Air heat.' Two-car garage. Dowa paymeat $l,00fl.

    OTHER U SnN O S OM REQUEST,

    « U n j)B < 0 LOTS: On ft r k , Cbestaiit, Forest, CH$s Streets, SesZher- sogh Road. WetUagtoa Road, East Csater S t , ste.

    Other Lots hi both hasfaMss sad reidHratlal seetlsiis o f Town.

    . BOLTON LAKENearly two miles of lake frontage

    is s fle r^ la lots to suit yoor needs. Here yon have zmne of the flneet lake p r e p e ^ hi the State, located flve (5) mllM East of Manchester — mostly wooded, high aKItnde — «rith many portloM having ninning water,( dee- trie Ught service, hard surface roads aad other Improvements.

    Yoa may build your house here either for Snninier or all around year use. Lots may be purchaaed for eash or oa the time .

    Prloea raage from $200 to $1J)00 ̂according to location and imprave- monta farnlabed. Yon trill probably never again have the opportnnlty 'to seenra each flsslrable lake pcepmty at sneh a 'low price.

    Drive ont and aee for yoanelf. Bus sesvlee passes a part of the property dally,'sr better still, eaU at tha hsoM aft

    E D W A R D J. H O L LB IB A IA N I a.

    R O U i fR U il lO AlOBN*

    i o n rviceof

    Center Congregational and South Methodist Churches

    ' Held At . /

    South Methodist ChurchMain. Street and Hartford Road

    • . . 10:45 A. M.SeriqOn by Rev. W. Ralph Ward, Jr.

    Music by South Church Choir.James Newcomb, Organist and Choir Director.

    8:00 P.M.SERVICE OF WORSHIP

    “ Christ Above All”Led by

    . METHODIST YOUTH CARAVANERS

    _A I£JF E L 001IB t :

    '>’4̂2*.*.

  • I

    FOURMANCHE5TEK EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER, CONN, SATURDAY, JULY 29. 1M« , .

    MAHOHESIER EVENING HERALD/lf^CHESTER, ^N N ., SATURDAY, JULY 2— W illiam B. Miller, 76, of Greenwich, Conn., founder and chairman of the board of tbe^Norwalk Tire and Rubber company, dled/ThursOay at Flower-Fifth Avende hosplUl.■ A native of Mount 'Vernon, N. Y., he was one of.the founders of the Diamond Rubber company of Akron, O., and became vice president after It merged with the B. F. .Goodrich company in 1912.I As a breeder of thoroughbred horses, he orgaptaed and was presldeijt of Greenwich Stud, “

    eedirtg farm for ■xlngton. Conn.

    Tree SurgeryConn. SUte Ucenss Work Carefully and

    Neatly Done.

    JOHN S. WOLCOTT «SON117 HoUlstor St. Fhone S6S1

    Get Your SnppHo Of

    Ox-Line PaintNow for Those Psintinff Jobs.

    Mancheiter Hardware Co.

    tater Oallasaa » JeeapS WeefeW

    248 NoVtMSain Street . TeL 828ft

    Washington. Julythis on hand. They do not have a

    . full line o f colored paper for many Consumare may get replacements I colors are out entirely for the of sugar which la Moat, damaged,'I duration, but the chances are that destroyed or stolen by applying to | you will be able to fli^ what you

    race horses

    Deaths La0 Night

    London- Sir Ralph Fowler, 55 who helped ̂organize a liaison between American, British and Canadian scientists doing war work, and a pioneer,tn anti-aircraft gunnery.

    New York — Henry Thol. 48, creator of the syndicated comic strip "Slient Sam.” and who started as a cartoonist with The NeW York World.

    Princeton, N. J.—Mrs. Katherine Fullerton-Gerould, 65, author and casaylst-

    New York—Mrs- Marthc Lelsh- nian Hyds, (Jsughter of the late lobn G. A. Lelshman, who was successively American Ambassa- i>or to rorkey, Italy and Germany. She was married twice, to Cbuiit Louis de Contaut-Blron of France and Financier James Hazen Hyde.

    Philadelphia— Lester E. Swine- hart, 49, an executive of the advertising firm of,.Lewis and Gilman. He w'as a native of Chicago.

    No lBltHto* to Explosion

    Simsbury, Julythough windows were shattered m nearby factory buildings, there, were no personal Injuriee late yesterday In a minor exploelon In a

    I dump at the plant of the Bickford company. State Police U eu t Gene 8. Lenzl said the cauee of the explosion was not definitely determined but was believed to have resulted from discorded ex plosives.

    local 'War Price and Rationing boards for certificates, tbe Office of Price Administration announced today.• ’This action, effective Aug. 2,

    adds sugar to previous O PA regulations affecting meats, cheeses, butter, processed foods and other rsttoned food items, OPA said.

    ---- kBaldwin to Attend Conferenoe

    Hartford, July 29.— (dV-Gov. Raymond E. Baldwin has announced that he will leave Connecticut on Tuesday for St. Louis where he will attend a conference o f governors called by Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, Republican pi‘esl4cntial nominee. Chief busN ness o f the, conference, which will be Held Aug. F ^ d 3, will be to discuss campaign plajm and the part the governors wul take In the overau

    are looking for here. Do feeV free to drop in and ask to look over their paper etock— you do not need to feel obligated to either Mr. Holmee or J|r. Bars for U»U court- eay.

    For any and all kinds of printing, Community Press will fill the bill and at pricea that are very reasonable. You will find them co-operative and their work of the highest standard. ^

    j . R. BraifrhwaiteKeys Made. Locks RepsiiM

    Tools Groand Lawn Mowers Sharpened

    Electrical Utilities ^ConditionedGuns Repaired

    82 Pearl St. Phone 4200

    Johnion Bros.Electrical Contractore

    soft Main Street TcL 822777808

    We Wm.GM2 CSive You Bstiinites.

    X

    ■sas ~ Ealrtsetatare

    program.

    Washington. July 29— The flve-cent. cup of coffee, an old American Institution the war changed in some restaurants, will be.hack neajily everywhere next MondiCy.

    As announced earlier by the Office of Price, Administration, only eating places that charged more than a nickel for ooffee In October, 1942, may continue to do ao. All later hikes to six or ■even cents or more are out.

    The ruling Is part o f a regulation extending to the entire country the ’’freeze’’ of restaurant prices already In Effect in most states. •

    Killed By Train

    Brletol, July 29.-riF)— Raymond Lee Frink, 31, a war worker, was ■truck and Instanjly killed tonight by a train at Doolittle’s crosBing. 'rile body was dragged 80 feet,, police aatd, before the train could be brought to a stop. Frink la sur-

    Ivlved by his widow, Mr*- Virginia Frink, of Chester, S. C.

    ?00 Copies Mailed

    Hartford, July 29-— (F)— Approximately 700 copies of “ the History of Safety Progress In Connecticut." covering the years between 1936 and 1944 have been mailed by tbe Connecticut Highway Safety commission to state, municipal gnd poUcs officials and to newspaper editors throughout Connecticut. - In a forewmro. Justice Arthur F. Ells, who is chairman of the commission, says the publication is in answer to "queries as to the Connecticut plan for promoting safety.”

    820,008 oJLice I f Fire

    Danielson, July 28.—(F)— Fire last night destri>yed the farm of Henry J. Btetenson in South KiU- Ingly, causing damage . estimated by the owmer at 820,000. 4. large hay-filled barn burped with' the loss of 20. head of tattle, followad almost Immediately by 8 12-room farmhouse. Cause' of the blase aras undetermined.

    . Three Added to Faculty

    Putnam. JuVy 29— 'FI—'I^ree additions to the faculty have been announced 'jy officials of Mariana- polls academy here. 'They are: The Rev. Anthony Ignotas of Water- bury; the Rev. Francis BulOvas of Brooklyn, N. Y., and the Rev. Jota Petrauskaa of Gardner, Mass, ^ e fall term opens Sept 11. I t was also announced, that the academy would he represented by football, basketball and hasebaU teams during the coming school year The teams will be coached by Jerome Ryscavage. - . —

    Named Academy FttodpM ̂

    Putnam, July 2» - ( F ) -Seavey D. Morae, former princlpsd o f the Brookfield, Mam., high fohool, hM been appointed prlndiwl o f Woodstock academy here to succeed William A. Simpson, resigned. A graduate of S t Lawrence university, Morae formerly taught at Beichertown, Mass.

    By Ravtag It BervklM At « / A W |JC SERVICE V A N > STATION

    42T Bartferd Bosid TaL 2868

    ROOFINGAsphalt Shingles Flat or Built Up

    Tin Roofs Ail Types Handled By

    YOUR LOCAL ROOFER:

    ED COUGHLIN, 7707390 Woodland Street

    See The "W ine Doctor"'

    At

    FRED'S P A C K A G E *

    STO RE117 Spmee Street

    The proper wpiee. proper 1. served with the right foods, can add mnek t o yo «t eaJoyiiMBi al a meaL For the beat ta wtocs for every nnnaeloa. eonsa here and get oar advtoe. too. regarding ute aarvlag of w a a .

    We Have Been in Uie Plumhing and Heating Business for Many Years.Rely on oar experience and serrice for best resalts.

    Johnson & Little145 MAIN STREET

    Phone 5878

    BILL'S TIR Eand

    REPAIR SHOPWm. H, Green. Prep,

    Colombia and Elk Bicycles. U. S. Tires.

    Repairs. Service. Accessories.

    180 Sprace SL Pboae ft450

    q u a l it y P R I N T I N G !

    Iha prtating lob wa do for y o a wi l l prove aatl» factory, bo- eaoao H w«

    ato.Got

    GIBSON'SGARAGE

    a a. Oihamt Frop.apweatiaiei m

    BEAK ' Wheol AMgeamot.

    18ft 51ato SL ‘ Pboae S012

    Popaadahle Quality — Safvleal

    WILLIAM R.SCH1ELDGBISg Sornee Streot TW.

    Read Herald Advs.

    C H R Y S L ^ DE SOTO, PLYMOUTH

    SERVICE AND GENUINE PARTSA ■ , 1

    EXPERT AUTOMOBILE REPAIR

    Bny Your Hardware

    and H onaew im

    Needs at

    CAM PBELL'SHardware Store

    I Cor- tlalB-and Middle Fpk.WORK

    I-

    D EP O T SQ UAR E G A R A G E__ Ernest Roy, ^ p .241 NO. MAIN STREET TEL 8118

    SEE W A R i^$ FIRSTFOR A COBIPLBTE LINE OF ROOFING. INSULA- TION. BUILDING MATERIALS. PLUMBING AND

    HEATING SUPPLIES

    ^ M o n t g o m e r y W a r d

    824-828 Main SL

    " i " —

    TaL f i l l Msacbeatar

    /•

    — f o r —

    Dupont Point Products >> ^A LLP A P E R '

    PICTUR Ie F8 A M IN G

    MIRRORS■ ■ ■

    JOHNSON T A IN T CO.ft « MAIN STREET t e l lift*

    - t

    Griswold's^ A tlantic Service Station

    289 Mala Street

    " General Autom obile^

    Service \

    LECLBRCFUNERAL SERVICB

    Wattw M. l.iilMi. OUMtoi

    Doorway (*

    8s aun

    KRAUSE'SGREENHOUSES

    I S81 BaHfWi loadEtaeciai Olvaa fo Otdwe. DM Sisa

    laelaBrta la PW

    Oat Pto

    Cattle and Pooltry Are Briacing Top Prleesl

    FEED

    M O O N 'S FEEDSFOR BEST RESULTS!

    LARSEN'SFEED SERVICE

    y . P. HolloranFUNERAL HOME

    UeaB]away

    am r

    AMBULANCE SERVICE - DAY AND NIGHT

    17ft*Ccatsr SL Pboae 8080,

    CAPITOLGRINPING CO.

    28 Mata SL TeL 7058“When rblnge Art” Dad Oar Baeiaeee le Good” SAWS OF ALL KINDS

    SKI AND FII.KD Band and Power

    LawBBKiwere Sbaraeaed laled

    yon guys who write thoae hlstoiy books.

    Here ig « spma notes fo r that volume titled W orld War II.

    Look up the papers and 8ee who hacked their way through those ^Mmpassable jungles on Buna and wiped the smiles o ff those “ invincible” Japs who planned to dicUte pdace in the White House. That’s right brother. The Infantry, U. S.

    Ask yourself who crawled throngKffiosa modem conveniences on Attn—including cold running water and hot ty in g lead— to fight men they couldn’ t see— and ratted them out when every other effort failed. Right again, brother. Infantry.

    ^W ho faced German M ’s at 200 yards at Salerno— and held— under conditions that would make heU look like’Sunday at the shore? You hit iL Infantry. -

    Who shot it put with crack Naai troops so close'thcy could spit in their eye— and did— at the skirmish o f the atone walls on HiU 609— and cracked open tha

    road, to Biaerte? Infantry. Doughboys. The guys who spell ft with rifles."

    Sure. Give the Marines their due. Don’ t sell the A ir Forces shorL Don’ t sink the Navy, A ll the arms and services count— plenty.

    f We just ask you to write a few o f these things between the lines and in tha foot- notes because we o f the Infantry wrota them out In blood.

    And, brother, there’s plenty more where that came from . W e’va got other chapters to add— and we write a bold hand. You’ ll see our footnotes on tha beaches o f France. You’ ll find us crossing our t’ s In the Hills o f Baftum. You’ll recognize our style iii Flanders’ fields. We’U make our X with crossed rifles all the way across the world.

    And when that last word is written, take a good look at the period after “ peace.” It was put th^re by a bayonet in the hands o f a guy named Joe.

    # 4

    ANDERSON GREENHOUSES ANDERSON & JOHNSON BANTtY OIL COMPANY

    J. F- BARSTOW ' F. E. BRAY

    JOHN B. BURKE FUNEr A HOME BURSACK BROTHERS ,

    s CAPITOL GRINDING CO. CARROLL CUT RATE

    CARTER CHEVROLET CO.; INC CAVEY’SC R H X

    CENTER PHARMACY ' CORNER SQDA SHOP

    DAVIS HOME BAKERY DEWEY-RICmiAN CO.

    DtLLON SALES AND SERVICE JAAfDS* BEAUTY SAliON

    ^FINDELL An d SWANSON FOSTER’S MARKET

    FRED’S PACKAGE STORE GORMAN MOTOR SALES GEORGE L. GRAZIADIO

    JOHNSON A UTTLEl a r 8e ?fs f e e d s e r v ic e

    MANCHESTER DRY CLEANERS

    '‘MANCHESTER HARDWARE CO. \ M A N C ^ T E R MEMORIAL CO.

    MANCHESTER PUBUC MARKET MAPUC SUPER SHELL STATION

    METTER’S SMOKE SHOPM H jK ow sK viraffi: f l o r is t

    MURPHY’S RESTAURANT AND BOWLING NOREN’S QUALITY FOOD STORE

    NORTH END PACKAGE STORE OAK ST. PACKAGE STORE /

    B. D. PEARL, FURNITURE-APPLIANCES t PANTALEO BROTHERS

    PARK HHJ. FLOWER SHOP PENTLAND, THE FLORIST

    QUISH FUNERAL HOME W H IM M H. SCHIEXJ^^PRINTING

    THE SEAMAN FUEL A SUPPLY 00. STATE SHOE REPAIR SHOP

    U .S . CLEANERS W . D. STAR MARKET

    WERBNER’S SHOE STORE . WEST an>E JIAIRT w n jt o re DRESS SHOP

    L . T . i r o o D o a ;

    1

    aad Ovfrbaalrf teat* tm ttamsiiaa uS.

    tat Atr-OMMi tm

    TU i k an t f U. S. Ttaaaurjr advmtkatmnî pnimnd undar am/gem of StMur^ Ds^arim^ and ̂ CtawadlL

    ^ ^ .... ■■ 7

    ■/

  • ■ f t . (f •>■*•*}

    MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN.. SATURDAY. JULY 29. 1944 /'■ inr’ 'IU . ■

    MAJNUnpSTER CVBNING WBRALD, MANCHESTER. CONN.. SATURDAY. JULY 29, 1944

    Manchester 'Evening Herald

    1* StrMtICkBChMter, Co“"i„ THOUA3 FBROUTON a«l>enlOctober 1. IMl

    gIjSflCBIPTXON BATHS

    tl*

    s » oo:....$ .75

    Copy . .; . ....................... I ,:oo«d On« T«*r .'AV...........S.4ongtstw Bad Ĵ PO"------ mrVRgR OT '

    *gr::r.«s BBw. puburt.«d her.. _ rtpubllcatlon ofaIm reserved.

    Jae.ReprBienUtl ve»: The

    er* to take care of our regular Ceo-raphlc' affrcement. The Rua-er* re-u lar bomt> ! cians are in Rumania, across the

    " Viatu’a, the Americans are in

    , tSSu CWea«o. Detroit and Bostc^''mbhbbr audit■fnarntATlONB.

    bureau of

    atsB Herald,Saturday, July 2»

    -Constructive ApproachAa Oovemor Dewey adroltt^

    ^ a aetUns forth hia program for the approaching °BapubUcan governors, there 1 J S ln g "novel” in

    • rights oontiweray. I t haa^ rroya been recurrenOy a part ot

    ha, beeh the Republican party which has reiogniaed the need or a strong federal government, mo

    nmnocratlc party which ^ ^unpioned the doctrine that the individual sUtes should r*t»tn m a te r sovereignty, than the Constitution Itself intended them to

    Jn this present campaign, there are BepubUcans who would tfs m s e this position, and make thsmselvea the champions of States’ rlghU, while accusing the Dsmocrata of responsiblUty for ovsr development of federal pow- sr Getting down to brass .tacks, the prime reason foe thU is pro^ ably the fact that the Democrats happen to be In federal powtt during this campaign.

    Oovemor Dewey has eo far

    military chore.s ar.J Ing assignments and still take on the robot plane menace on the Aide. Thus, at the very same time

    e'were giving General Montgomery’s break-through offensive at Caen the moat Intensive kind of air support, we were sending 750 Flying Fortresses up to the Baltic to attack what wa thought ware robot factories and testing grounds. Sines last September, in fact, a heavy proportion of Allied bombing effort has been diverted to the robot menace. It apparently succeeded in delaying the launching of the flying bomb attack

    Now, when the Germans have succeeded in starUng the atUck by buildingasmaller and portable launching mechanisms, easily camouflaged, we are devoUng constant air strength to the search for these sites. It probably takes a good msmy attacks to be sure of one success; the flying bombs still come over.

    ’There^ls ho complete summary of the total tons of Allied bombs diverted from other targets by toe, robot problem, but it is obviously a tremendous tonnage.

    The fact that we have also had toe air power to perform other functlona to cover the battlefield of Normandy, to conUnue toe general' air war over Germany, is something for which to be grateful. But it is also apparent that the present 'German situation could well be much worse, and our purely military atUck be even more effecUve, if toe tonnage devoted to toe flying bomb menace had, during these months, been available for normal uses. So much, and it is a great deal, toe Germans have gained by their new weapon. Had Allied abundance in planes and bombs been anything less, toe flying bombs might well have prolonged the war and cost us many soldier lives.

    ---------i,--------------

    Rome.

    ConnecticutYankee

    By A. H. o.' The lawyer-like approach ia evident through most of the preliminary report of thej^ ju dicial Study Commission. In some instances, toe value of the method is quesUonable. In others, it may be just toe ticket

    It is the legal mind in one of its more beneficial roles—that of smooth peace-making—which Is on evidence in toe Commission’s nonchalant, straight-faced proposal for changes of jurisdiction of toe common pleas court. A brash layman, for instance, might have written it down that the 1941 General Assembly, guided by high legal advice but motivated princl' pally by its desire to create 1 handsome job or 'two, passed 1 common pleas court - act which was unconstitutional and which was so held by a superior court judge, and only restored to technical constitutionality by an emer gency decision of toe supreme court.

    But toe Judicial Study Cotn- mlasion la smoother. It merely recommends, as a casual Incidental, that “the civil business now done by the munlclpa^

    CommentsFrom The R iver R oad

    < By Malcolm MoIIan ^Ur Uollan, retired editor of The Herald, preserves 'ais contact with his former dally readers by writing a weekly letter for these columns. In which he expresses his own ‘«M|ure y. arri^d- a t convlctiona concerning sofne major matters and his observe tiona concerning eome very minor ones, u on the of the Nlantic river. Look for his cpntribution

    each week-end. '

    Possible Rommel Being Watched

    One thing, a t least, has resulted render to the Russians on toe from the gang war that exploded east, to the British, American and last week lii Gernumy. That one 1 Allied forces in lUly, to the Althing la a fairly widespread real-: lied forces in France. We may isatlon that tha much Ulked | liberate most, perhaps all. of Ger about “collapse” of Germany man-invaded Europe. But before through the inability of Ita people the war can be over and done with to “take it,” for which ao many ‘ our fighting men will have to de- Americans have been looking aa stroy, in toe passes of toe Alps,

    I InevlUble eventuality, never] in forests and farmsteads, had a ch*"*** of transpiring. It house fortresses and rubbled build- nevsr had any definite outline. It ings of a thousand German towns was a formless sort of pipe dream ] and cities, toe most desperate which bore no relation to to e ; gang of outlawed criminals status of tod civilian population

    ‘ . ______dbsA

    that

    The Last HopeThe Ruaaian-Polish situation has

    had so many ups and downs in the past, year, with each slight new sign of hope usually followed by some new Russian summing of the door, that toe opening of the last desperate hope Is not yet any grdwd for Jubilation.

    Nonetheless, that hope has ap-triaely refused to take any ex- peered, after Russian poUcy hadtremist attitude, and his program for the cc|pference of Republican governors does not commit him to any such attitude.

    Rather, as promulgated by him, the amference program seems a aane attempt to get away from the dangerous ground of vague hut sweeping charges and head toward a decent and Intelligent ^valuation of state and federal relations in individual fields. Governor Dewey listS' th of these fields, admitting that in some of them there may be UtUe difference of opinion or quarrel with preeent federal functions, while in others there may be much. What he is Bsoking is some program which could, for a time at least, serve aa a guiding chart for the most efficient allocation and division of responsibility. Such a chart, if generally accepted, would quiet and quell the present continual Controversy, and leave the federal government and toe individual ■Utes at least a temporarily unchallenged freedom of action in

    • their respective fields.As Governor Dewey himself has

    previously said, much of toe complexity of the modem federal government is “utterly Inescapa-

    i We,” and no sane program devised . a t Bt. Louis can ignore the fact

    certain functions, no matter how highly they may be prized by the individual states, can only be

    1* performed efficiently and fairly• ■ by toe federal government. He j*. himself, in fact, expects to take »■ toe role of a prospective federal

    official at toe conference,' ̂ which promises that he will hot approve any eictreme proposals the Republican party itself would have to discard the moment it assumed direction of the federal government.

    Governor Dewey's approach to the problem, then, is in no mood of destructive criticism, but one of constructive common sense. It is by such constructiveness that he can best demonstrate hia worthiness of the office he seeks.

    seemed hard and complete. I t appears in the fact that toe head of toe Polish Government in Exile has flown to Moscow to seek compromise agreement with Stalin and the puppet government Stalin has created for Poland.

    The wllUngnass of the Moscow government to have Premier Mik- olajczyk come on such a mission represents toe opening of hope. It has previously Ignored him and his government, denied his and ita authority or IsgaUty, and refused to negotiate with it, not even through toe good officae of Britain or toe United States, which have been offered.

    Now, permission for the London Polish leaders to visit Moscow has obviously been gained by British and possibly American intercession with Stalin. It is toe first time British o r '’American diplomacy has been aWe to gain even toe s^ghtest of concessions from Russia in the PoUto matter.

    So much, then, is welcome news. That Moscow will now relax still further and condescend to employ negotiation instead of force for toe final solution of toe Polish problem Is still more than past Russian conduct would indicate,but not impossible.

    I t ’s The V istula

    leri:Robot Dividends

    Not only must the German flying bombs he given their due

    weapon of considerable 'and tragic destructive talent for this trar, and as toe terrible forecast

    | t of what another war stould be Uka, but they have, aside from

    {« the direct damage dona to London and southern England, paid their developara well In this war.

    The robot bombs have had their greatest influence on the progrdsa af **«»« arar not in the damage done to London, but in the dls- traetioa Jmposed upon Allied boofelBg fiotees. I t is a ntatter for

    good clwer that we ae- tuaUif seem li^liave enough bomb-

    One oi; toe most absurd coups ever put over on the supposedly wide-awake American press was toe agreement, reached several months ago, that news reports would accept the National Geographic spelling of place names as standard. By that agreement, s war which was strange enough for most'Americans suddenly became stranger still. The Russians, who had been beading toward a country called Rumania by Ameri' can textbooks from time immemorial, were Suddenly at toe borders of something called Romania. The Allies in Italy, who had been taught that Rome was their goal, were now shifted into a campaign for Roma. And the less familiar the place in question was originally, the more confusing the new terminology could be.

    In the past few days, a brilliant Russian campaign which was crystal clear and Magnificently inqfiiring in most respects ran in' to an entirely' unpredictable diffi culty. Half the time it was reaching a tremendously important river, hitheHo known as toe ‘Vistula. ' But no sooner did one get ready to celebrate that accomplishment than it appeared that tha Tivar the Russians had really reached was only- toe Wisla.

    At least part of this nonsense the press has had the good taste and the courtesy bo its readers to

    courts be tume,. over to the common pleas court and ghat the appellate jurisdiction which the court now possesses to hear appeals from toning boards, boards of tax review, the liquor control commission and the like be transferred to the superior court." Which would make the common pleas courts constitutional again, and all without any sensational criticism of the 1941 Assembly or the legal talents who counseled It.The lawyer-like mind is on less

    favorable view in toe Judicial Study CopimlBSion’s preliminary findings on the probate court problem. It is an established; talent of toe legal mind to cut through to toe simple heart of a complicated problem. But sometimes that talent operates in reverse, and we get ambitious complication of a problem which rsaliy has limited simple solutions. So, in toe case of the probate courta toe commission proposes standard salaries and tees, and, by indirection, pro- vldaa for outside supervision of probate court accoimte, and then, having actually proposed all that really needs to 1»e proposed, chases up arid down everybody’s imagination raising so many other non- vllal Issues that it finally decides that a new commission should be created just to handle toe probate court problem. Here the legal mind did not know when to stop.

    On a third matter, wO may be flattering the legal strategy Involved, but we hope not. The great single problem in court reform Is the aohlevement of justice which is pure and not Influenced by etther political or bnslness outside tlea of the officers oi JusUoe. Any ideal reaU- cation of this goal woidd require that state’s attorney’s, jvho frequently have much more , power over toe course of justice than the judges themeelves,' should be given full-time Jobe whitel would make it unnecessary for them to maintain outside prac- tloe or outalde poUtical careers. This highly desirable reform is

    not mentioned once in the Qom- mission's report. Yet the Commission was obviously not blind w the evils Involved in dual interests on the part of any officer of usUce. In lU discussion of pro- >ate courts, tha Commieeion notes that “some criticism., has been voiced of the fact that both toe other business interest! of toe judge of probate and his social acquaintance with«the parties appearing in his' court clash with a perfectly Impartial judicial attitude.”' ̂ .

    And, In the propoeed act es- tabUehing a Judloial Department to govern to" admlnietratloh of Connecticut courts, the Oommla-' eion provides that “no officer or employe” of the departiUent’e administrative “shall engage directly or indirectly in the practice of law.’’This pure unequivocal recogni

    tion of a principle which should obviously- apply . everywfiers through toe state’s judicial system can be construed, by a hopeful and anticipatory lay mind, as having some possible future connection-with toe propoeed adml^ Istretive system under which tM judges of the euperlor court could issue orders and rules determining the “qualifications, number, duties and salaries” of toe officers of the state courts, which -might 025^ day mean full time dutiea and fuU time' salaries for state’s attom ewers

    of tos Reich—nor any to toe ac tual sltuaOon in tha Germany of 191S as opposed to that of 1944.

    World War I wa# fought by a Reich whose dvUian population still poseeeeed some email trace of power, some remaining freedom of acUon—anough, however, to tip tha balanca between the continuance of a war that oouid not he won and yielding to M enemy which, a t woret. could Do ^ pended on to Isave Germany intact and which could ^swindled into providing h « wito pportunlty to renew the

    London, July 29.—(ffi—The poe- slblllty that even , Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, long- regarded as a Hitler-favorite, might have a Nazi party member. watching bis moves was suggested by a Berlin radio announcement today that MaJ. Gen. Edgar Feutchtlnger la an aide to Rommel.

    Feutchtlnger, who is 49, has In the past organized Numberg Nazi party spectacles and converted captured French tanks to German use. The broadcast said that some time ago Hitler entrusted

    Feutchting'er with the development of special weapons.”■ He commands the 21st Tank di

    vision with a battld record second only to that of toe Hitler Jugend S3 Tank division, too broadcast added.

    Cause Traffic Tangle

    crossing the Intersection against a red light. In the buggy was a threee-year-old glri and propellln:; Itf was her four-year-old brother. Carter said the children had wandered away from home and "borrowed” toe buggy from in front ot a furniture store. •

    Paints House Over AgainPhiladelphia— Jockey Harts Back

    Seattta, July 39—0F>— Jockey Ralph Neves has had a variety of aooidonts to bis racing career but yesterday waa ths first tims he ever waa grounded by—of all things—a golf gams. Ha hurt hia back on a hefty swing and da> veloped a stiff neek.

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    EICfH f^MANCHESTER TEVENTNO HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN., SATURDAY. JULY 29. 1944

    - t

    ipa>ForU H itEast Manchuria;

    Pounded

    How Red-Sponsured Poles W ould Slice Up Germany

    Oalty

    Bight, kw-levri nnartM.r*i minion wm*I nt MnnchurU from tn« air

    tlw flrrt dayUehtt«rg«t« xrom hifh am-

    Huca btnowa of smokeSdnatrial a m at Anthan black- >ad the target, which sticka out

    BiM îUv in the Manchurian was eetlmateil offlclally,

    at It wlU Uke 12 months to r^4d some of the intricate instai-

    j 5fctioiis. ^gtrtke at Railway Yards

    Tti a diversionary attack, anoth- r ar force of the giant raiders stiw k i^at the caienghslen ̂ nnrthem Honan province, bot-

    U«T«k o” Se l»elplng-Hankowmy which the

    , are rrtulWing *«\eriBhly. Th® dl- {1‘ttrBlonary force

    time as tlw S' The code word Mary, wm w rtOld the world ol the * 'W air raid on Manchuria was ►’ S m n by Col. Roy Lynn Holton

    of Kansas, communicaUons .«C the 20th Bomber command, in

    flashed by other squadrons. Jjjdy tnu chosen by MaJ. Selby CalWnsfor his seven*yeaf-old daughter,JS o Uve. at W21 C oo^r avenu^ Detroit. Mich.; and "Aiyce ^wM -erected by MaJ. Francis B. Mor- J S a ! ^ iJlB wife, who lives Sccthwest 46th street, Miami. Fla.

    P int Daylight AttachBy Super-Fortresse$

    Washington. July 29— (ff)— The jcrving American fleet of Fhttifoees struck today at Japan a transplanted war Industries in Itaacburia in the flrat daylight attack of the 20th Bomber command.

    A tarse communique, issued heret r the 20th Air Force. a lly that the B-29 s atUcked “in- dnstrial objectives in the Mukden

    : erca. Manchuria” and added t ^ t BO further detalU were »vaUable

    ,a t Uie time (1:51 a. m.. e.w.U 7 ' I then dayUght in Manchuria,

    The two previous operations of the 20th Bomber command

    tflgainst Yawata pn June 16 and u a ln st YawaU and Sasebo, third

    Naval base of Japan, on jV j 5» Y —were night attacks, at low r{.,lsveL

    To Test DayUght OperationOnh of the purposes of today’s

    strike apparently was to teat out la the B-29a in daylight operation. I t IfleVing detalU, those who studied |I the brief report on the attack as- l i auined that the hlgh-alUtude. pre-

    dsion bonding technique used by ethw dayUght strategic bombing

    [ t force