Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib«...

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I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY » , itn J- itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjular iiw <n the Zipeer CTob iUrt- I^SO oherp. John F. BouooU, Br., »"<1 htir Dorotliy. o< Andoeer, fw- «f Moncheeter, are m st. IB, Mo., whert they will attend "weddina of Corporal John F. Jr., to MIm Jessie Hous- M of that city- Corporal BmsoU rationed at Camp Breckenridge, " Btucky. li'llaT. Joseph MarkowiU, a ■"h Driest, wiU be at 8t. James a D t» Saturday and Sunday. tall CEDARS I 1 N G O tonight ORANGE HALL Miss Norma J. Turklngton, daughter Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Turkinglon of 55 '''7"**’' spending a ten-day vacaUon with friends at Sharon. Mass. jltaw Si tsotalBS tS the C. 8. MarithM Service Su- tton, Sheepshead Bay. N. F., is N. F Del Greco. 28, of 78 Foxcroft drive, Manchester. Before enroll- ing he was employed the United Aircraft Corp. plant in East Hart- ford. The Registrars of Voters, Rob- ert N. Veitch and Edward F. Atpri- arty, will be at the town clerk s of- fice next Friday from nOon until B o’clock in the evening for the purpose of enrolling voters for the different caucuses and making last minute changes in the present primary lists. | at. Margaret’s Circle, Daugh- ters of Isabella, will have a social Tuesday evening, July 25, at the home of the regent. Wn. P. R Brannlck of 22 North Elm street. No business is planned. The com- mittee in charge Includes Mrs. Charles Donahue, Mrs. Tennis Sullivan, Mrs. Herbert Wylie, Mrs. Maude Foley and Mrs. Brannlck. The social is for members and their friends. floor laying and sanding Itafliiishinc snd Waslns- Estimates Gladly Given CALL 8 2 5 4 ALICE OOFBAN (Kaown As Queep Alice) SPnUTTJAL MKDWM " pmnMhter of i Seventh BWD With a Van. iga DaSy, laeltidlng Saaday> to S P. M. Or By Appelnt- __ Id the Sendee e* the Pee- for S8 Teaia. Ohareh Street, Hartford, Oeaa. Phone S-S0t4 nOOPIMC |\e.SIDIHC • Estlinatea Freely Olyea. 0 Worionaashlp Onaranteed. • Highest qnallty Btoterials • Tlnie PayiaeBts Arranged. A. A. DION, INC. CXIMTRACnOBS 2M Aatoasa-St. Tel. 4880 Roofing—Asbestos Sidi^ and Rodt Wool I iw I b H oii Insnladiig Go. I St Histtiad Hartford SX-4SM Police Court Arrest Youth For Burglary Charles Lee, of Loomis Street, Bound Over to Superior Court Today. Charles Lee. ,3 7, of 177 Loomis street, arrested on June 28 and charged with breaking and enter- ing m the night eeason pleaded not guilty. Probable cause was found, and he was bound over to the next term of the Superior Court, under a bond of 4200. i. The nolice were notified that Lee j W8B at‘ hid home suffering from a bullet wound in ths hip. He was taken W> the Manches- ter Memorial hospital whert he has been until today. Upon fur- ther Investigation by the police Lee admitted that he had broken into the home of Charles Moxxer of 40 Crestwood Drive st 2 s. m. on Juno 26 and had atolen two re- volvers snd then went to Hart- ford where he. met two other boys and hid the revolvers in the cel- lar of one of their homes. On Junjr^28 they took the re- volvers Xo Riverside Park where they shot off 6 bullets. Then they returned to the house and were fobllng with the guna and one was a^charged. the bullet atriktng m^the left side snd lodging in his hip. ' Lee tiiien hitch-hiked to Manchee. ter by auto -and went to hie home. Lee was sentenced to the Cheshire Reformatory last June. The sen- tence was suspended for breaking into the same house and stealing He was taken back to Camp, Sampson for' being A.W.O.L. anj deserted again, came home and broke into the aame house. Edwhrd Nowak of 444 Center I street pleaded not guilty to thej charge of non-support of his wile ■ when presented bei'ore DepuU' Judge George C. Lesener in police, court thle morning. _ i He was found guilty snd sen- tenced to 30 days In Jail. The sen-1 tence was suspended snd he was placed on probation for 6 months and ordered to fumlah a bond of 8100 and to pay hie wife 87 a week. Public Records Warrantee Deeds Louie and Carmella Felice to Hariild W. Garrity, property at the j comer of Eldridge and Clinton streets. I John 8 . and Grace E. VAenrel. to the Allen Realty Company, proper- ly on Cooper Hill street. The Allen Realty Company, to Altee E. Powell, property on Coo- per Hill street. Louis A. Forgstte #t si to the, I Allen Realty Company, property on Summer street. Herman Deal and Martha Gates, to Frank and Annie Kaiser, prop- erty at the comer of Norman and School streets. Alexander Jai^s to GreCnbrooke Homes, Inc., property lii Morning- side Park. GreenbTooke Homes, Inc.. to Charles E. Johnson, et al, proper- ty In Morningside Park. William F. Johnson to Beulah 'M. Eddis, property on Vernon street, guiding Permits Building permits have been granted to the Oreenbrooke Homes, Inc., for the erection of 12 dwell- ings each to coat 85,500. Three win be erected on Goodwin street, elx on Parker street and three on Earl streeL Getting Ready For Big Rally Mrs. William Crawfortl Member o f Committee For G. O. P. Gathering Mrs. William G. Crawford of Academy street, president of the Manchester Women's Republican club, la a member of the commit- tee arranging for the G.O.P. R^tly at Lake Compounce, Bristol, Wed- nesday evening, July 26, when Senator John A. Danaher will ad- dress the gathering. The affair la under the auspices of the Hartford County Republi- can Women's association of which Mrs. Roacoe N. Gray of Hartford is president, and Mrt. Alice Russ Cochran, vice chalfmaij of the Re- publican State Central committee. Prominent members of the com- mittees met with Mrs, Cbchran at luncheon yesterday at ■ the Hotel Bend to plan details of the coming campaign as well as the outing. The problem of catering for such a large party will be solved ■by the women, who will provide and decorate box lunches for two in the old-fashioned . manner. An auctioneer will be on hand to aell them to the highest bidders. No doubt there will be more boxes than men to buy them, but the more they buy the bigger lunch they will have and the more fun. Judging by the box socials of for- mer years. NORMAN BENTZ Sheet Metal Work — Eaves Troughs. Now Is the time to have Eaves Troughs Installed or repaired. CALL 8966 Bathing Caps Thermos and Picnic Jugs and Supplies. fIR IH U R / ODD FELLOWS BLDG. TELEPHONE 2-1182 FOR SALE Sgecial boy la a rsor-Haam Slafle ** Street. Thia eottage haa twa f ' stalra add there la a two-ear •« price Is $8JM». It eaa be poreha^ for •> <ow m f aad the bafauiee la moathly paymeals Hke real. This pi available for oecoptwey. STUART J, WASLEY Real Katata ai FTATE THEATER BUIUHNG telephone . 1M« Raterved Dignity In Modem MemoriaU Oor Memorlala ara PRODOLT bout to bo PRODDL* ow ed. Bao '*oor pceasot stoek of MoaaoNota o( aO typaa.aod prioea. or let oa asaka aoggootloas withoat aay obllgatlaa Manchester Memorial G>mpany ,. ft' 1 .. [f). A. AlmaML Prof^ Comer Pearl aad Harrisoa Bta. Opea Boadaya. Boy Oiiaot aad Bava MdiMy! TeL 17B1 or 83*7 AdvertiBe in The HePRld— It pRys POR TOP VALUE n A NEW HOME the Ones B dn( Bvilt By GREENBROOKE HOMES, INC O h WslMr StTBBt m asetao, InliiiiMHMi sail at ___ Jarvis Oo. olBee oo siMSt or at 8B Alexaadei ; 4113 or 3376 • MOTOR TUNE-UP • WHEEL ALIGNMENT • BRAKES • VALVE GRINDING • OVERHAULING Quick Service Expert Workmanship MANCHESTER MOTOR SALES, INC West Center St. Tel. 41.74 Summer Dresses Reduced REG., $12.98 DRES.SES ' NOW . . . .................. —V REG. $10.98 DRES^E§^ REG. $8.98 DRESSES NOW ............. .. ............... . REG. $6.98 DRESSES NOW ............................... REG. $5.98 DRESSES NOW ....................... An Sales Final. This kit includes cottons, spuA rayons and crepes. Sites 12 to 42. LION BRAND Deluxe Sheer e h 1 f f o a weight made from High Twist Rayon on 45 gauge ma- chines. Flattering' Summer Tan^ shade.s. > 's Tire Retreading Service Tires brought in on or be fore Monday, returned. (Hr Thursday, and tires brought in Tuesdiiy. Wednesday and Thursday, returned the fol- lowing Monday. TWICE A WEEK ^ SERVICE! WE RECAP ANY TIRE! 10-Day, Service On Truck Tires. * We Do Our Own VULCANIZING ONE-DAY SERVICE! ' .,k VAN'S Service Statibn 427 Htfd. Road Tel. 5864 III— .01 Pair. TOILETRIES, Etc. *35c Skol Suntan Lotion ............................................... 29c ■"DuBarry Face Rodder ,.$1.00 ♦Max Factor Pancake -ll-l*® ♦Revlon Lipsticks ............... .... .40c'and $1,00 -Yardley Lavender Soap ............... v ... . box $1.00 ♦Filled Powder Mitts. .................................. 69c ♦Sutton. Bubble Bath ............. ♦Sheertone Liquid Stiickings , 54k:. Ipana Tooth Paste . . ; . . 40c Colgate Tcioth Powder .. ♦$1.00 Hind’s Almond Cream .......... ..... " ............ .. ••••'*9c ♦ Arrid Deodorant Cream....... . , .......... 39c and 59c ♦Plus 20% Tax. \ - I • a • • a 59c tasaaaaaaoaapo* • JlaOO • a * a a a a # * * » * « * » * » * 7^*^ -••.aaaaaaaaaa*oa**PB'' n»JWIIAL4 coM MANCHfsreii. CO hn * Be Smart Now! Buy Your Fur Conts From Hale’s Advance Showing Of 1945 Investment Furs! Green Stamps Given With Cash Sales. Colorful Summer Pillows $1.00 Bright, colorful floral and stripes in rough weaves, chintiz, and cre- tonne. ' Glli^imering ^ilver $398 Tax Included.; N.. / / .. - / 2-Piece Bar- Harbor Sets _ .6 9 and $ 1 .9 8 1 Replace those -old cushions witL, phaerful, colorful pfinti^ florals. \ .r - - -?~ _ ROLEY p 6 l EY ' KNIT DAVENPORT AND CHAIR Slip Cover Sets ' Chairs *3-98" Davmiports *6.98 W ill fit most chairs and divans. Wine, blue,, and green. Oval Braided Rugs - Colorful oval braided rugs for A .O every room. e*X^ OTHER RUGS................................................n.98 to.$2.98 STORE OPEN SATl’RDAY NIGHtS UNTIL 9. SPECIAL GROUP - , PRICED SPECIALLY FOR THIS EVENT $298 Tax Induded. Mink Blend — Northern Back Muskrat Ombre Muriirat v The New Forrest Mink Blend Muskrat ' The New Natural Rinsiim Squirrel Paw The New Labrador Seal HIGH FASHION FURS SENSIBLY PRICED - Tax Iniehided. The New Stone Marten Dynd Raccooi The.New Nntnral Bloiide Otter The New Natural Rnmlaa Sqnlrrel The New Sable Blend RiuMlan Squirrel The New Gray Indian Lamb The New Persian Lamb HoDnadBr FcatliBrUU The New 36” Length ForrcBt. Mink » ^^krat $298 -- Tax Induded. FREE STORAGE IN OUR OWN CpLD STORAGE VAULTS 10% I^WN 10 MONTHS TO PAY BAU^CE TN J W H A I^ com MANCHISTIR COMM* AveniKe tM lf CiraiUition' Far ths Joao, 1M4 Memthn H the Awmt Mmammm- naltoMsMOi fcufntttg w rald X M an chester—^ City of Village Charm Tht Wcatker Foioeoat SI U. 8. Wenthsr Boreau t ' " Fair today, tonight mod Sunday: gentle to moderate southwest winds. VOL. Lxnin NO. 249 on rata it) MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, JULY 22,1944 (TWELVE PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS Hitler Says Move To Assume Power Has Been Crushed f Expresses Confidence in Order of Day to Ger- num Troops Army Will Fight With Exemplary Obedience and Loyalty —100 High Officers Die Soviets See Attack Link In Big Plot London, Jyly 22.— (/P)— Adolf Hitler asserted in an | order of the day to German I troops today that an attempt- ed' coup d’etat by “a small circle of unscrupulous offi- cers” had.been crushed, and expressed confidence the Army “will fight with exem- plary obedience and loyalty until victory ia ours in spite of' all.” Wiped Out or Arreatsd ‘* ^ immediate and vigorous ac- tion by loyal officers and men at, the Army at home, the traitor clique- wss wiped out or arrested in the matter of a few hours,” HiUer said. "A smaU circle of unscrupulous officers had made an attempt to murder me and the general staff and to seise power In the state,” but "Providence caused the at- tempt to" miscarry.” His order, an obiriojjts attempt to reassure his own followers in Army ranks and to 'discourage ' any further revolt, came as press and eye-witness accounts indicated that nownere had the enemies of Hitler succeeded in seizing power or taking over key positions. Purge L mU s RebeUloa A rapid, bloody and ruthless purge apparently had stamped out the rebellion. Reports reaching Stockholm said that peihaps 100 generals or high officers had been executed. Travelers to Sweden said more than 1,000 persons had been arrested through Friday. (An NBC broadcast from Lon- don declared Field Marshal Rom- mel had been forced to change two armored division command- ers in Normandy for "political reasons.” The two divisional generals were replaced, before the Thursday attempt on Hitler’s life, by "two Juvenile political colonels, ‘ )>oth under 33, who have a record of fanatical Nazi loyalty,” **-- broadcast said.) A dispatch, clearing through Berlin censorship to De Bund at Bern, Switzerland, today said any effort at revolt could be consid- ered to have collapsed./ Govern- ment quarters in the,derman cap- ital were'blocked off Friday “by troops of the army and the armed SS for many hours, presumably tp carry out purge meaaures,” the dispatch said A welter of rumors concerning the attelnpted coup persisted, and First Purple Heart Thank Robot Bombs ,.,V' :■> -i 's '*■ ' 'S"*' ■« Major Crisis Believed Facing Germany t Generals Dissatisfied On Strategy Vsed. Moscow, July 22—( ^ — Tass (Commentator NUmlai Budrov de- clared in Izvestia today that the attack on Hitler did not represent an iaolat^ incident but was "one link in a huge military plot by generals and officers.” This explanation was accepted ■by the Russians who for several weeks have been bearing from captured high German command- ers of the antagonism again.<it Hitleo Statement May Be Up Off Lieut. (Sen. Edmund Hofmeis- ter’a statement to the Red Army command on July 19 that the old German generals were dissatisfied with Hitler’s strategy in refusing to retreat ^ y be the tip off^ to theaituatidn. “Prom Hitler’s comments,” said the Tass writer, ’’the plot em- barrassed considerablv wider cir- cles than Hitler attempted to prove. "Reports prove that events in Germany have assumed a major crisis. It is obvious the Ger- many of today ItviNi under a bursting political crisis.” Liberation of Gua Pushed Ahead Fast; Apra Steadily Reinforced Americans Swarming Off Ships; Swift Pro* gress, Light Casual* ties Reported by Com* muniques and War Correspondent Eyewit* of Landings^ Soviets Roll Back Nazi Rearguards 1 Mud Prevents Only 90 Maes from' Warsaw; Nazi Posi- tion in Baltics Bad. M mitt,'. h fcWMO ifctA 6 Pictured in their English hospital beds are the first WACs to receive the Purple Heart Medal. Injured In a robot bomb accident, they’are, left to right: Pfc. Effle M. GiblxMis, of Lewlstort.^Ioaho; Pvt Margaret Johnson, of Madison. Wls.; Pvt. Leona J. Galyon, of Ode.isa, Tex.; and Pfc. Dorothy Whitfield of Schenectady, N. Y. WAC officers, standing, are Ciapt. Rose F. Ros.«t, left, of New York City, commanding officer, and Lleut.-Ctol. Anna M. Wilson. WAC director for the European 'Theater of Operations. __________ ____________ . British Fliers Pound Berlin; Refinery Hit Mosquitos Attack Ger- man Capital as Ital- ian Based Bombers Go Into Czechoslbvakia (Coattnned oa Page Bight) Sees Turning Point Reached ^doglio Says If Offi- '\cers, Rovolted Ger- many Has Lost War. Rome, July 22—Ut )—Marshal Pietro Badoglio, commenting on the present events in Germany in an interview almost a year to the day after the coup , which over- threw Mussolini in Italy, said to- day that ‘if a group of officerg has revolted against Hitler It is be- cause Oermany has lost the wsr.” The veteran Italian soldicv said there seemed to be no doubt Uiat Ciermsny had reached a' turning point for two reasons—first, that evidently the German . Ariny no longer Is able to atop the Russian offensives, and second, that Ger- many has no more reserves to throw into the fighting in Italy and Normandy. Referring to the announcements that on the Russian front one . Army General and 23 other gen- erals, among whom were corps commanders, had ' surrender^ Badoglio declared: “If generals of that rank are caught, :t Is because the masses of troops'In frpnt of them either went . over to the enemy or ran away.” INscoaata CSvl^aa Aettoa Badoglio. oho of thq moat promi- nent figura in Italy's surrender, said he believed a German revolt may have been planned by Field ' Marshal Karl Rudolf ■ ,G«d wm Runstedt and others of the same military traditij^ He discounted the possibility ^ a peoples’ rebel- lion. , "The only peopac In Germany are women, children,-old men, and M,*' 000,000 fersigners, such as prison' era snd forced kborera. All other Germans are in the Army and a revolt must come there.” Makes No PradlcUoa Badoglio said he evas too sea- soned a campaigner to predict when a Ckrman collapse would comt* **ProplMelss qra for cafs dUat- tantes,*^ hs declsM . ‘The end can (^mc suddenly or be delayed some zooiitha. There le no doubt, how- eflaaetaned ea ease jaresV See Upheaval Giving Ilitler Tighter Hold Best' Estimate in Offi- cial Washington Also Predicts Weaker Sup- port Will Be Result. By John M. Hightower Washington, July 22.—(J*).—The best estimate of the German up- heaval in official quarters here today ia that Hitler and his re- gime will meerge with a. tighter hold over the German Army and people but a much weaker support from them. /•' This support will weaken from here on, it is believed, reaching a fatal point when the people and soldiers realize that they are be- ing expended in an utterly useless extension o'f the war. At that point, according to this estimate, there will be another and more successful atetmut to throw Hitler out of power and one sf the factions contmdlng against him will bring about the stirren-: der of Germany, No Serious B^orf'on Peace.Bids So far ta'the war, it can K re- porte(Loti excellent grounds,, there has been no serious effort' made by anyone pf authority in Ger Bulletin! London, July 32—(flV-Be- tween 600 and 760 American heavy bomben roared out from Italian liases and attack- ed the PloestI oil area of Ro- manis today. Truman Wins Fight Upon Second Ballot Missouri Senator Chosen! A llied T f CIODS Over Wallace by Dem-; s ocrats to Carry Bat- Push Neai^er tie to Republicans. London, July 22.—(A*)—British Mosquitos, kept the air assault on Germany rolling overnight by bombing Berlin while Italian-based bombers struck into Czechoslo- vakia for the second time in less than 24 hours and hammered an oil.refinery at Pardubice, 60 miles east of Prague. A targe explosion and fire was reported seen in the Pardubice re- finery, the fifth largest in Elurope outside Romania. Bad flying weather across the English CTiannel apparently grounded the. heavy home-baaed bombers of the R. A. F. and threatened to bring to a halt the week-long series of massive day raids from the west. Black smoke drifted today from the great synthetic oil plant at Chicago, July 22.— (/P)— The Democratic party called on a vigorous, practical poli- tician t^ay in Harry S. Tru- man of Missouri, its new vice presidential nominee, to car- ry the fight to the Republi- cans in a campaign for a fourth White House term for President Roosevelt. Ths 60-year- old piano-thumping senator, whoM To Florence Moscow, July 22.— (fl*)— ' Red Army tank and infantry forces, making a supreme bid for Warsaw, rolled back Ger- man rearguards today on a jagged 200-mile battle line, and front dispatches said some Soviet forces were only 90 miles from the Polish capi- tal. At the same time the German poaition in the Baltics grew worse hourly, as Col. Geh. Ivan I. Mas- lennikov’a troops captufed Ostrov, cleared 17 miles of the Ostrov- Pskov railway, and left Pskov, 35 miles north of Ostrov. in an un- tenable salient. Tishina, seven miles from Latvia’s northeastern boundary, was occupied. Pour Through Breaches The Red tide ^ured . through dozens of breaches in the make- shift German line onto the Polish plains, where Hitler once swag- gered in victory, and where now Further Gains In Normandy Ativanee Infantry Ele- ments Only 14 Miles From Qty a* Three Columns Advancing Rome, July 22—(4>i—Fifth and Eighth Army troops closed stead- grin*’ is"klndT^'”by srtiu'biue’ eftitiiy in on Florence from three dlrec- (Conttnuei: on Page Two) Wallace Hajipy After Losing Thinks' Fight for Rff- tiiomihation Advanced ' Cause o f Liberalism. - (Coattniied oa Page Two) Plotters Hit Hard by Ley Nazi Lal^r Chief At<^ tacks .' ^Idiotic Nobil- ity^ Diuring His Speech London, July 22.—(/P)—Dr. Rob- ert Ley, Nazi labor chief, in an ad- dress today before several thou- sand armament workers at a fac- tory aoknewhere in Germany, lash- ed out at ”«n idiotic nobility that has nothing better to do than plot against our .(Hiehrer.” In a speech broadcast'directly from the . scute by the German radio, the Nazi leader blashemp- ed Jews, plutocrats and foreignera as the instigatora of the attempted assassination of Hitler, then add- -ed: . "While German workera labor 12 to 16 hours without a-Sunday Or holiday, an idiotic nobility has nothing, better to do than plot against our Fuehrer.” Says Heavy BUae Used Ley aoaerted that a "mlnei of the heaviest type impm'ted frqm Britain” was used in the aasassi- natkm attempt, hut did not explain how the explosion of Such a p<>wer- ful device only a abort diatance from Hitler winfid reoult In but minor Injuries. ‘Ths fact ha was saved does not mean that the battle is won,” Ley shouted. He implored fata to “give ue (Coattaned aa Fata Twa> Chicago. July 22.—(>Pi —Henry A. Wallace came up smiling today after losing the biggest battle of his political career. "I’m happy about-it—I reaHy am.” ■ he'v told eympathlzers who filed through' his hotel suite last night. He was happy, he explained, be- cause he thought the flight he had made for renomination had ad- vanced further the cause of politi- cal and economic liberalism which .le espouses. * * . Will Give Full Support' And he made it clear he would go all the way for'the Roosevelt- Truman ticket this fall. If he felt that the president, by making known that Senator Truman would be acceptable' as running mate, had contrlhutet. to hi* defeat, he gave no sign of it- "1 believe more' strongly than ever that President Roosevelt U the voice of western lib'raltsin for the world,” he said in a dictated statement. ”It is exceedingly im- portant that that volee goes on. I hope all true liberals will do their part to see that the voice is able to carry on in 1946.” Message To Truman. To Senator Triiman hetaent this message: , “Congratulatlona upon your en- laiged opportunity to help the president and the people. Both of us will do our maximum for Roose- velt and adial Roosevelt stands for.” ^ V Wallace had stayed away from the convention hall during the bal- loting on vice president, secluding himself In his Sherman hotel rooms. White fJie preliminaries were going on he took a nap. A handful of hU poUUcal backers, and members of his staff, sat In an ad- joining room llstent^ to the pro- gram on the radio. Mid-way in the first ballat he moved Into the radio-equipped I (CsaUaued m Itage Twe) behind thick-lensed spectacles, beat Henry A. Wallace to the sec- ond place nomination in an eight- hour windup session of the Dem- ocratic National convention yes- terday. Inherita Campaign Task 'W ith the Job he inherited the task of conducting a campaign for which the president' said he had Httle Ume. Just as Mr. Roosevelt's selec- tion for a fourth term was kept from being unanimous by 89 votes for Senator Harry F. Byrd and one for James- A. Farley, so the nomination of the chui^y chair- man of the Senate^a War liTvesti- gating committee went into the record with this count: For Tniman, 1,031; Wallace, 105: Justice William O. Douglas of the Supreme Court four; Gov. Prentice Cooper of Tennessee, 26; Senator Alben W. Barkley ot Kentucky, six; Manpower Cora mlsaioner Paul V. McNutt, one. Three of the'1,176 delegates were absent. The vice presidential balloting, which began on a bitter note of strife between the CIO Political Action committee and the hlg-clty Democratic chjeftains who have bad a great deal to say about par- it y affairs in the last - 12 years, '^'ende? on a publicly harmoniout pitch: . Dixie Dissent Remains But there remained a note of Dixie dissent, petliapa most.clear- tlona today 'With advance Infantry elements only 14 nviles from the historic city’s edge directly to the eouth. In this cloeest thrust, the Fifth Army capured Tavernelle and the neighboring towns of Barberino dal D'Elsa and CNpanne. An American column advancing through the Elsa valley toward the Arno river line captured- Castel Fiorentlno, 17 miles southwest of Florence, and British troops of the Eighth Army, fighting in the area of SanGiovknni in the upper Arno valley, were 18 milea to the south- east. ' Artillery Duels Rage -- On the west coast American patrols probing the enemy’s new defenses in the Arno valley reached a ^Jnt within four miles of Pisa. Artlltary duels raged between large coqcentrationa of German guns on nigh ground north of the river and thC^^Pifth Army's long range guns. ' On the Adrlatl^pd of the battle line Polish troops pushed forward two or three miles andv^^de con- tact with the retreading^ enemy four miles from the flshifig port of Senigallia, at the mouth of^Jlie Misa river. '^x. Interrogation of, newest prison- ers showed that two or more Nazi divisions which were former ong-^ Inaliy for the Russian front, had been brought 4o Italy and broken up to supply' reinforcements for the battei^ remnants of the Ger- hia troop* faced diaaster. The battle for Warsaw develop- ed from these giant thrusts by Marsral Konstantin K. Rokossov cky’s apparently Inexhaustible of- fensive : After cutting the Bialystok- Brest-Lltovsk railway at Czerem- cha, 95 airline miles northeast of Warsaw two days ago, Soviet units now were reported to have advanc- ed at least five miles. Other Red Army forces were forging a ring of steel around Brest-Litovsk, 90 miles east of Warsaw, after mopping up German pockets to (he southeast, including Vielkoryta, 18 miles distant on the Brest-Lltovak railway. Rout Ge'nnane From Sawin Leaving the western Bug nine or more miles behind, Red Army veterans routed the Germans from Sawin, 36. miles east of Lublin, and a fortress 62 miles from the head watera of the Wisla (Vistula) and 124 mtlea southeast of Warsaw. The Sawin victory outflanked th* German strohgpoint of (^elm, 10 miles southeastward. Elsewhere in the east the Ger- (Conttmicd ti t Pag* Two) (Continued on Pnge Eight) Dixie Leaders Nurse Wounds Southerners MollifieiL Only by Defeat of Wal- lace for Second Place. (Conttnned on Pnge rwn) Classroom, Teachers Paid More, But Cut in Ranks Hartford, July 22-— (ic)—' Due-JSfil; Hartford 82,422; Meriden 82;' to the reducticoL in the number of classroom teachers, (Connecticut in 11 years bOs been able to in- x;rease salaries of its classroom teachers 18 per cent, with an in- crease of only 12 per cent in total expenditure. This face ia Indl- study of teachers’ sal- 129; New Britain 82,017; Stamford 82.334; Waterbury 82,350; West Hartford '$2,014, and Windham $2,- 234. Far Down on Ust ! Far down on the list were; Beth- ; lehem .$1,233; Coventry 31,292; KillingWorth 81^225; (Sherman 31.- Thompson cated in a . arlea for 1943-44 Just completed ; 217; Sterling $1,292; in the State Department of Edu- ; 81,258; Warren 81.250. cation ' ' Among th^ average a4I4ries of Since the depres-ion year of [Junior high school teachers are: 1032-33 elemehtiiiy teachers’ sal- ! Hartford $2,514; Stamford 32,483 arleai have gone up 24 per cent. Junior high school Salaries 22 per cent, and high school faculty aal- ariea 11 per cent. During that period there was a net loss of 87« classroom teachers. A reduction among elementary teachers was 1,204 and there were Incrcasca of 93- Junior high school tcachm and 233 senior high school faculty members. - —. Salartfs lacroaaod la Year During the past year under pressure of wartime condition! teachers’ salaries in Ckmnectlcut have Increased aa fo'Uows: Bile- _ mentary $109 to | l,m ; JOhtOF [high 62,668; for 1042-48: elemen high $119 to $2.286;'senior high $49 to $2,878. Only one fulltime teacher In the state was icpcnod aa receiving, as low as $1J)00. Towns Ilatec*' among the highest Westport $2,403; West Hartford $2,089. Among senior high schools'av- erage aalaries are: (Canton $1,485 Cheater $1,500; Bridgeport $2,432 Greenwich 12,89(1; Hartford $3,- 357; New Britain $2,520; New Ha ben $2.60$; Thompoon $1,561 Waahingtor, '$1,483; Waterbury $3,078; West HsrtfoH 82.533 Wethersfield $2,148; Windsor. $1 940; Newington 31.807; Bloomfield 32,012; Stamford $2,896; Bast Hartford $2,431. For 1932-33 public school enroll ment totalled: Elementary 306,- 083; Junior high 16)367: senior tary 161,633; junior high-18,392 senior high school 58,461, a net loss of 55.832. Reports oh ths 1948-44 school year are now being rs- celved: The firtt 40 towns report- \^By William F. Arbogast. Chicago, July 22.—(M^MolIified only b^the defeat of Henry A. Wallace f^..the vice presidential nomination, Qlxie Democrata took their clty-lnfllctCd. political wounds back to the peace arid quiet of the South today to decidCxtheir future role in national politics. A rough week at the Democratic National convention left some of their leaders in a militant mood and calling for an organization of southern party leaders to prevent future kicklnga-around. aa they put it, from their northern col leagues. Just what they would do. though, they were far- from agreed on. Some called for foi-thright or ganizatlon of a third , party built around' the traditionally “solid South.” Threaten, Election Fight Allies Bogged Down Without Any Advance In Past 24 Hours; Es- - quay Loss Only News. Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force, July 22—(g*) —The vast Allied military organi- zation in Normandy bogged down in the mud of France today with- out a single advance being report- ed to the supreme command in the past 24 hours. The war a briefest communique for an operation as great as the Allied invasion summed up the sit- uation in five words: "There ia nothing to report.” Reports Loss of Esqusy The only change reported was the loaa of Elaquay, southwest of Caen between tae Orne and Odon rivera. The supreme command's report did not atate whether the loss was due to (Serman action or whether the town merely waa abandoned to ho man’s land be- cau((e it is iii low ground. In the lull the supreme com- mand checked battle reports and found that conflicting field dis- patches had led to some erroneous beliefs which were passed on to press conferancea. The re-checks showed the Ger- mans still held Maltot between the Orne and Odon, that it la not clear whether St. Martin de Fontenay is in Allied or German hands that Noyers still Is held by the Ger- mans as is nearby Monta, and that the Germans still are astride the Bayeux-St. Lo road at Berigny. Represent Minor CTian^ All these points represented minor changes from previously re- ported positions and had no effect on the battle front as a whole. . A supreme command spokesman stressed that these towns were not lost through enemy action but that reports of their capture had resulted from garbled or misinter- preted field advices. Combat patrols were active overnight along the American sec- tor of the front, and the Yanks re- ported Inflicting casualties on the Germans in numerous small arms clashes. 8econdary Roads Hazard Secondary roads attll were so mired artd slippery that they were more of a traffic hazard to aupply columns than the enemy’s periodic artillery bursts. The Germans^.^ also weather bound, made no attempt to ad- vance although the cloud cover gave them opportunity to bring up more reinforcements. The Allied Tactical Air Forces nesses U. S. Pacific Fleet Head- quarters, Pearl Harbor, July 22.— (JP)—The liberation ol Guam—avenging the tiny/ American garrison ovemin by ^panese hordes in De- cen1oer,_ 1941—-.was pushed i ahead of schedule today by Steadily reinforced Yanks swarming off ships onto that fort mer U. S.'Tmtpost. They threat* ened to pinch off and quickly cap. ture Port,Aprs, core of Guam’i defense system on the west coast. Scale Heights In Rear From mile-long beachhead* easily won north and south ot the fine harbor. Marines land aol-, dlers moved inland to seal* heights dominating its rear. ♦ (^mmuniqiies and war corre- spondent eyewitness reports from the scene of Thursday's invaaioa told of swift progress and light casualties. Tokyo radio, belatedly announc- ing the invasion to a homeland al- ready beset by a war , cabinet -shakeup, said a division' (about 12,000 men) and 150 tanka landed . in the vicinity of Asan north of the harbor and a half division at Agat, to the south. John R. Henry, representing ths combined Allied press, reportiMl f)om a flagship at Guam that all Japs and shore 'defenses wer*.'’ gouged out of the landing areas by some of the 10,000 tons of ex- ' f ilosives Spread over the island ' hrough 17 straight days by war- , ships and planes. In the last eight minutes before the first Yankg landed at 8:28 a. m., Thursday, ths warships alone poured more than 60 tons of expiring steel each- minute on the enemy. "We simply blasted the Japs to Hru out of there and up into the trees,” said Rear Admiral Richard;-' W. Conolly, commanding opera- tions. The Yanks encountered stiffen- (Continued on Page Eight) Flashes! (Late Bulletins ol the un Wlra). (Continued on Page Two) Dewev Again of C7 Visits Farm Busy Week Is Climaxed With Johiistqn Talk On Russia Conditions. with respect to average elemenr 1 Ing show a very alight dur- taiy salaries were: Greenwich $2,- ■ ing the Tecent school year. Others threatened .to carry their fight into the November election— not by voting for Republican Thomas E. Dewey but by support/ ing him indirecUy through the medium of sending to the electoral college electors w’ho would not vote for Franklin D. Roosevelt but for some other Democrat, possibly Senator Harry F, Byrd of Vir- ginia. This threat came from Texas and Mississippi Democrata and It might well be a serious one if the November election should be close in northern states. ' Loss of normally-Democratlr southern electeffs conceivably could throw the election to Dewey In a close race, or toss It into the House of Representatives, where south- erners iiow hold the balance of power, for a decision. Some believed though the best course to follow would be to for- get all about the convention and hope for a better break in the fu- turo. . Lay Orgaalzatiaa Orooadwork The groundwortc for organiza- tion of dlMlitent Dixians was laid (Osattaaed *a Pm SevsaJ Pawling. N. Y . July 22—(8V- The restful atmosphere of bis. Quaker Hill farm claimed Gov. Thomas E. Dewey again today after a busy^week climaxeq by a lengthy discussion of conditions in Russia with Eric A. Johnston, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce. John.aon,_. Dewey’s, dinner guest at.the executive mansion in Al- bany last night, returned July 13 from Russia where he talked with Premier Joseph Stalin, visited factories, and waa a front-line ob- server of the Russian army in ac- tion. “Great Trade Opportunltie*’* He *aid~he told the Republican :pre«identlal nominee that the United States had "jrrsat trade oppoctunitiea ' with the Soviet Union” but that the granting- of long-term credit to Russia "wlU be essential.” By "iong” credit terms, John- ston explained, he meant 15 to 30 ■yeara. ,■ Asserting the Umted States "can do any amount of buslneta with Russia, depending enUrely upon the length of credit terms, be said there 1* ' ~ Two Subs Reported Lost Washington,.^ July 23—<A*)—-tsea_ of two (T. 8. submarine^ ths ' Trdut,’^which slipped past Japao-’ ese shore, batteries under, cover si darkness to carry out ' vasi amounts of gold from the Treosary of the Philippine government, aaa the TulUbee was announced by DM Navy today. Both submarine* are listed as o\erdue from patrol and presumed lost with tbeli rrew:s of about 65 ofOoers and men on each vessel. The toSses' bring to 37 the number of Ameri- can sobniarlnes lost since the wo*- started.' .All but lour are listed as overdue on war patrols, ■ • * Cliiims 1,700 Tanks Destroyed London, July 33—<A^--The Go** man news agency DNB said ta a . broadcast today that 1,700 Alllad tank^ ' prlnel|lally ' Shermani,. Cromwells . and Churchills, hi^ bepii dcstroyi^d In the Nurniwidy The n^ure w e wholly without Allied oiipreme hendquM'-- ters confirmation. * '* ' Rumor Kesselrlng .Arrested New York, July 33.— TRo Geneva newspaper lot Sulsae soM today that Field Marshal Gen.JU* bert Kesselrlng. German oomnma- der hi Italy anc rivwl of Erwin Rommel, was rumored ta haw been arrested on sUSplcloa M romplicity In the plot againM Hlt- ler. along with two generajaaoa tU'b colonels of his stab. Reseri ring was reported to ^ ed a meeting between HIMer aiW Benito Mussolini Thursday, imW; his arrest following. »*'«1 the , i>atrh Zs reported to the Ollica a* , War Information. (Csatlaned *a Pag* Sovea) {* Retasea Mor« .InfonnatioB London. Jtdy 33.--<^7J]l broadcasts today said the govemmeat had refused t o « nicate any further with: th« ' on the Uljlng s f 86 RrtttaR Allied iler* rftor brealrn fr w < man prison camps la March, atatoment broadcast by the Gerwtaa goveromeat stroagly repudiates” tba charges Ihst the mea wet* dered. , __ _______ Treaaarj Bahuic* Washington, July 22.- ___ _______ position of the Treoswiy, s “trymepdOMS ,__Beestpta, $ 9 l.7 3 8 .«M lf.i 9302.313h* ------ .44^: anee, $32,869,738.44 I /■

Transcript of Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib«...

Page 1: Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjular iiw

I^TELVB

ibout Town

Manchester Evening HeraldniroAT, JULY » , itn

J -

itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjulariiw <n the Zipeer CTob iU rt-

I^S O oherp.

John F. BouooU, Br., »"<1 htir Dorotliy. o< Andoeer, fw - ■ « f Moncheeter, are m st.

IB, Mo., whert they will attend "weddina of Corporal John F.

Jr., to MIm Jessie Hous- M of that city- Corporal BmsoU ra tion ed at Camp Breckenridge," Btucky.

li'llaT. Joseph MarkowiU, a ■"h Driest, wiU be at 8t. James a

D t» Saturday and Sunday.

t a l l CEDARS

I 1 N G Oton igh tORANGE HALL

Miss Norma J. Turklngton, daughter Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Turkinglon o f 55 '''7"**’' spending a ten-day vacaUon with friends at Sharon. Mass.

jltaw Si tsotalBS tS the C. 8. MarithM Service S u ­tton, Sheepshead Bay. N. F., is N. F Del Greco. 28, of 78 Foxcroft drive, Manchester. Before enroll­ing he was employed the United Aircraft Corp. plant in East Hart­ford.

The Registrars of Voters, Rob­ert N. Veitch and Edward F. Atpri- arty, will be at the town clerk s o f­fice next Friday from nOon until B o’clock in the evening for the purpose of enrolling voters for the different caucuses and making last minute changes in the present primary lists. |

at. Margaret’s Circle, Daugh­ters of Isabella, will have a social Tuesday evening, July 25, at the home of the regent. W n. P. R Brannlck of 22 North Elm street. No business is planned. The com­mittee in charge Includes Mrs. Charles Donahue, Mrs. Tennis Sullivan, Mrs. Herbert Wylie, Mrs. Maude Foley and Mrs. Brannlck. The social is for members and their friends.

f l o o r l a y in ga n d s a n d in g

Itafliiishinc snd W aslns- E stim ates Gladly Given

CALL 8254

ALICE OOFBAN (Kaown As Queep Alice) SPnUTTJAL MKDWM" pmnMhter of i Seventh

BWD With a Van. iga DaSy, laeltidlng Saaday>

to S P. M. Or By Appelnt- __ Id the Sendee e* the Pee- for S8 Teaia.Ohareh Street, Hartford, Oeaa.

Phone S-S0t4

nOOPIMC| \e .S ID IH C

• Estlinatea Freely Olyea.0 Worionaashlp Onaranteed.• Highest qnallty Btoterials• Tlnie PayiaeBts Arranged.

A. A. DION, INC.CXIMTRACnOBS

2M Aatoasa-St. Tel. 4880

Roofing—AsbestosS id i^ and RodtWool Ii w IbHoii

Insnladiig Go.I St Hi sttiadHartford SX-4SM

Police Court

Arrest Youth For Burglary

Charles Lee, o f Loomis Street, Bound Over to Superior Court Today.Charles Lee. ,3 7, of 177 Loomis

street, arrested on June 28 and charged with breaking and enter­ing m the night eeason pleaded not guilty. Probable cause was found, and he was bound over to the next term of the Superior Court, under a bond of 4200. i.

The nolice were notified that Lee j W8B at‘ hid home suffering from a bullet wound in ths hip.

He was taken W> the Manches­ter Memorial hospital whert he has been until today. Upon fur- ther Investigation by the police Lee admitted that he had broken into the home of Charles Moxxer of 40 Crestwood Drive st 2 s. m. on Juno 26 and had atolen two re­volvers snd then went to Hart­ford where he. met two other boys and hid the revolvers in the cel­lar of one of their homes.

On Junjr^28 they took the re­volvers Xo Riverside Park where they shot off 6 bullets. Then they returned to the house and were fobllng with the guna and one was a^charged. the bullet atriktng m^the left side snd lodging in his hip. '

Lee tiiien hitch-hiked to Manchee. ter by auto -and went to hie home. Lee was sentenced to the Cheshire Reformatory last June. The sen­tence was suspended for breaking

into the same house and stealing

He was taken back to Camp, Sampson for' being A.W.O.L. anj deserted again, came home and broke into the aame house.

Edwhrd Nowak of 444 Center I street pleaded not guilty to thej charge of non-support of his wile ■ when presented bei'ore DepuU' Judge George C. Lesener in police, court thle morning. _ i

He was found guilty snd sen­tenced to 30 days In Jail. The sen-1 tence was suspended snd he was placed on probation for 6 months and ordered to fumlah a bond of 8100 and to pay hie wife 87 a week.

Public RecordsWarrantee Deeds

Louie and Carmella Felice to Hariild W. Garrity, property at the j comer of Eldridge and Clinton streets. • I

John 8 . and Grace E. VAenrel. to the Allen Realty Company, proper­ly on Cooper Hill street.

The Allen Realty Company, to Altee E. Powell, property on Coo­per Hill street.

Louis A. Forgstte #t si to the,I Allen Realty Company, property on Summer street.

Herman Deal and Martha Gates, to Frank and Annie Kaiser, prop­erty at the comer of Norman and School streets.

Alexander Jai^s to GreCnbrooke Homes, Inc., property lii Morning- side Park.

GreenbTooke Homes, Inc.. to Charles E. Johnson, et al, proper­ty In Morningside Park.

William F. Johnson to Beulah 'M. Eddis, property on Vernon street,

guiding PermitsBuilding permits have been

granted to the Oreenbrooke Homes, Inc., for the erection of 12 dwell­ings each to coat 85,500. Three win be erected on Goodwin street, elx on Parker street and three on Earl streeL

Getting Ready For Big Rally

Mrs. William Crawfortl Member o f Committee For G. O. P. GatheringMrs. William G. Crawford of

Academy street, president of the Manchester Women's Republican club, la a member of the commit­tee arranging for the G.O.P. R^tly at Lake Compounce, Bristol, Wed­nesday evening, July 26, when Senator John A. Danaher will ad­dress the gathering.

The affair la under the auspices of the Hartford County Republi­can Women's association of which Mrs. Roacoe N. Gray of Hartford is president, and Mrt. Alice Russ Cochran, vice chalfmaij of the Re­publican State Central committee. Prominent members of the com­

mittees met with Mrs, Cbchran at luncheon yesterday at ■ the Hotel Bend to plan details of the coming campaign as well as the outing.

The problem of catering for such a large party will be solved ■by the women, who will provide and decorate box lunches for two in the old-fashioned . manner. An auctioneer will be on hand to aell them to the highest bidders. No doubt there will be more boxes than men to buy them, but the more they buy the bigger lunch they will have and the more fun. Judging by the box socials of for­mer years.

NORMAN BENTZSheet Metal Work — Eaves Troughs. Now Is the time to have Eaves Troughs Installed or repaired.

CALL 8966

Bathing CapsThermos and Picnic Jugs

and Supplies.

f I R I H U R

/

ODD FELLOWS BLDG. TELEPHONE 2-1182

FOR SALESgecial boy la a rsor-Haam Slafle **Street. Thia eottage haa twa f 'stalra add there la a two-ear •«price Is $8JM». It eaa be p o r e h a ^ for •> <ow m f aad the bafauiee la moathly paymeals Hke real. This pi available for oecoptwey.

STUART J, WASLEYReal Katata ai

FT ATE THEATER BUIUHNG t e l e p h o n e . 1M«

Raterved Dignity In Modem MemoriaUOor Memorlala ara PRODOLT

bout to bo PRODDL* ow ed. Bao '*oor pceasot stoek of MoaaoNota o( aO typaa.aod prioea. or let oa asaka aoggootloas withoat aay obllgatlaa

Manchester Memorial G>mpany,. ft' 1.. [ f ).

A. AlmaML Prof^ Comer Pearl aad Harrisoa Bta.

Opea Boadaya.Boy Oiiaot aad Bava MdiMy!

TeL 17B1 or 83*7

AdvertiBe in The HePRld— It pRys

POR TOP VALUE n A NEW HOMEthe Ones B dn ( Bvilt By

GREENBROOKE HOMES, INC

O h WslMr StTBBtm asetao, InliiiiMHMi sail at

___ Jarvis Oo. olBee oosiMSt or at 8B Alexaadei

; 4113 or 3376

• MOTOR TUNE-UP• WHEEL ALIGNMENT• BRAKES• VALVE GRINDING• OVERHAULING

Quick Service Expert Workmanship

MANCHESTER MOTOR SALES, INCWest Center St. Tel. 41.74

Summer Dr esses R ed u ced

REG., $12.98 DRES.SES ' NOW . . . ..................

— V

REG. $10.98 DRES^E§^

REG. $8 .98 DRESSES N O W ..............................

.

REG. $6 .98 DRESSES NOW ...............................

REG. $5 .98 DRESSES NOW .......................

An Sales Final. This kit includes cottons, spuA rayons and crepes.Sites 12 to 42.

LION BRAND

Deluxe

Sheer e h 1 f f o a weight made from High Twist Rayon on 45 gauge ma­chines. Flattering' S u m m e r Ta n^ shade.s. >

's Tire Retreading

ServiceTires brought in on or be

fore Monday, returned. (Hr Thursday, and tires brought in Tuesdiiy. Wednesday and Thursday, returned the fol­lowing Monday.

TWICE A WEEK ^ SERVICE!

WE RECAP ANY TIRE! 10-Day, Service On Truck

Tires.*

We Do Our Own VULCANIZING

ONE-DAY SERVICE!' .,k

VAN'SService Statibn

427 Htfd. Road Tel. 5864

III— .01Pair.

TOILETRIES, Etc.*35c Skol Suntan Lotion ...............................................29c■"DuBarry Face Rodder ,.$1.00♦Max Factor Pancake -ll-l*®♦Revlon Lipsticks ............... .... .40c'and $1,00-Yardley Lavender Soap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v . . . .box $1.00♦Filled Powder M itts................................... 69c♦Sutton. Bubble Bath .............♦Sheertone Liquid Stiickings ,

54k:. Ipana Tooth Paste . . ; . .40c Colgate Tcioth Powder ..

♦$1.00 Hind’s Almond Cream .......... . . . . . " ............ .. • • ••'*9c♦ Arrid Deodorant Cream. . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . 39c and 59c♦Plus 20% Tax. \ -

I • a • • a • • 59ct asaaaaaaoaapo* • JlaOO• a * a aaa#* * » * « * » * » * 7 *^ - ••. aaaaaaaaaa*oa**PB' '

n » J W I I A L 4 coMM A N C H f s r e i i . C O h n *

Be Smart Now!Buy Your Fur ContsFrom Hale’s Advance Showing

Of 1945 Investment Furs!

Green Stamps

Given With

Cash Sales.

Colorful Summer Pillows$ 1.00Bright, colorful floral and stripes

in rough weaves, chintiz, and cre­tonne. ’ '

G l l i ^ i m e r i n g

^ i l v e r

$398Tax Included.;

N ..

//

.. - /

2-Piece

Bar- Harbor Sets_ . 6 9 a n d $ 1 . 9 8

1 Replace those -old cushions witL, phaerful, colorful pfinti^ florals. \ “ .r - - -?~

_ • ROLEY p 6 l EY 'KNIT DAVENPORT AND CHAIR

Slip Cover Sets 'C h a ir s * 3 - 9 8 " D a v m ip o r t s * 6 . 9 8

W ill fit most chairs and divans. Wine, blue,, and green.

Oval Braided Rugs -Colorful oval braided rugs for A . O

every room. e * X ^

OTHER RUGS................................................n .9 8 to.$2.98

STORE OPEN SATl’ RDAY NIGHtS UNTIL 9.

SPECIAL GROUP - ,PRICED SPECIALLY FOR THIS EVENT

$298 Tax Induded.

Mink Blend — Northern Back Muskrat Ombre Muriirat v

The New Forrest Mink Blend Muskrat ' The New Natural Rinsiim Squirrel Paw

The New Labrador Seal

HIGH FASHION FURSSENSIBLY PRICED -

Tax Iniehided.

The New Stone Marten Dynd Raccooi The.New Nntnral Bloiide Otter

The New Natural Rnmlaa Sqnlrrel The New Sable Blend RiuMlan Squirrel

The New Gray Indian Lamb The New Persian Lamb HoDnadBr FcatliBrUU

The New 36” Length ForrcBt. Mink

»^ ^ k r a t

$298-- Tax Induded.

FREE STORAGE IN OUR OWN CpLD STORAGE VAULTS

1 0 % I ^ W N

10 MONTHS TO PAY B A U ^C E

TN J W H A I ^ c o mMANCHISTIR COMM*

A ven iK e t M l f C ira iU ition 'Far ths Joao, 1M4

Memthn H the AwmtMmammm- naltoMsMOi

f c u f n t t t g w r a l dX M a n c h e s t e r — ^ C i t y o f V i l l a g e C h a r m

T h t W catk erFoioeoat SI U. 8. Wenthsr Boreau

t ' "Fair today, tonight mod Sunday:

gentle to moderate southwest winds.

VOL. L x n in NO. 249 on ra ta i t ) MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, JULY 22,1944 (TWELVE PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS

Hitler Says Move To Assume Power Has Been Crushed

f

Expresses Confidence in Order o f Day to Ger- num Troops Army Will Fight With Exemplary Obedience and Loyalty —100 High Officers Die

Soviets See Attack Link In Big Plot

London, Jyly 22.— (/P)— Adolf Hitler asserted in an | order of the day to German I troops today that an attempt­ed' coup d’etat by “ a small circle of unscrupulous offi­cers” had.been crushed, and expressed confidence the Army “ will fight with exem­plary obedience and loyalty until victory ia ours in spite of' all.”

Wiped Out or Arreatsd ‘* ^ immediate and vigorous ac­

tion by loyal officers and men at, the Army at home, the traitor clique- wss wiped out or arrested in the matter o f a few hours,” HiUer said.

"A smaU circle o f unscrupulous officers had made an attempt to murder me and the general staff and to seise power In the state,” but "Providence caused the at­tempt to" miscarry.”

His order, an obiriojjts attempt to reassure his own followers in Army ranks and to 'discourage

' any further revolt, came as press and eye-witness accounts indicated that nownere had the enemies of Hitler succeeded in seizing power or taking over key positions.

Purge LmUs RebeUloa A rapid, bloody and ruthless

purge apparently had stamped out the rebellion. Reports reaching Stockholm said that peihaps 100 generals or high officers had been executed. Travelers to Sweden said more than 1,000 persons had been arrested through Friday.

(An NBC broadcast from Lon­don declared Field Marshal Rom­mel had been forced to change two armored division command­ers in Normandy for "political reasons.” The two divisional generals were replaced, before the Thursday attempt on Hitler’s life, by "two Juvenile political colonels,

‘ )>oth under 33, who have a record o f fanatical Nazi loyalty,” **-- broadcast said.)

A dispatch, clearing through Berlin censorship to De Bund at Bern, Switzerland, today said any effort at revolt could be consid­ered to have collapsed./ Govern­ment quarters in the,derman cap- ital were'blocked off Friday “by troops o f the army and the armed SS for many hours, presumably tp carry out purge meaaures,” the dispatch said

A welter o f rumors concerning the attelnpted coup persisted, and

First Purple Heart Thank Robot Bombs

,.,V' :■> -i's '*■' 'S"*' ■«

Major Crisis Believed Facing Germany t Generals Dissatisfied On Strategy Vsed.Moscow, July 22—( ^ — Tass

(Commentator NUmlai Budrov de­clared in Izvestia today that the attack on Hitler did not represent an iaolat^ incident but was "one link in a huge military plot by generals and officers.”

This explanation was accepted ■by the Russians who for several weeks have been bearing from captured high German command­ers of the antagonism again.<it Hitleo

Statement May Be U p OffLieut. (Sen. Edmund Hofmeis-

ter’a statement to the Red Army command on July 19 that the old German generals were dissatisfied with Hitler’s strategy in refusing to retreat ^ y be the tip off to theaituatidn.

“Prom Hitler’s comments,” said the Tass writer, ’’the plot em­barrassed considerablv wider cir­cles than Hitler attempted to prove.

"Reports prove that events in Germany have assumed a major crisis. It is obvious the Ger­many o f today ItviNi under a bursting political crisis.”

Liberation of Gua Pushed Ahead Fast;

ApraSteadily R e i n f o r c e d

Americans Swarming Off Ships; Swift Pro* gress, Light Casual* ties Reported by Com* muniques and War Correspondent Eyewit*

o f Landings^

Soviets Roll Back Nazi Rearguards

1 Mud PreventsOnly 90 Maes from'Warsaw; Nazi Posi­tion in Baltics Bad.

M mitt,'. hfcWMO ifctA 6 ■Pictured in their English hospital beds are the first WACs to receive the Purple Heart Medal.

Injured In a robot bomb accident, they’are, left to right: Pfc. Effle M. GiblxMis, of Lewlstort.^Ioaho; Pvt Margaret Johnson, of Madison. Wls.; Pvt. Leona J. Galyon, of Ode.isa, Tex.; and Pfc. Dorothy Whitfield of Schenectady, N. Y. WAC officers, standing, are Ciapt. Rose F. Ros.«t, left, of New York City, commanding officer, and Lleut.-Ctol. Anna M. Wilson. WAC director for the European 'Theater of Operations. ______________________ .

British Fliers Pound Berlin;

Refinery HitMosquitos Attack Ger­

man Capital as Ital­ian Based Bombers Go Into Czechoslbvakia

(Coattnned oa Page Bight)

Sees Turning Point Reached

^ d o g lio Says If Offi- '\cers, Rovolted Ger­

many Has Lost War.Rome, July 22—Ut)— Marshal

Pietro Badoglio, commenting on the present events in Germany in an interview almost a year to the day after the coup , which over­threw Mussolini in Italy, said to­day that ‘i f a group of officerg has revolted against Hitler It is be­cause Oermany has lost the wsr.”

The veteran Italian soldicv said there seemed to be no doubt Uiat Ciermsny had reached a' turning point for two reasons— first, that evidently the German . Ariny no longer Is able to atop the Russian offensives, and second, that Ger­many has no more reserves to throw into the fighting in Italy and Normandy.

Referring to the announcements that on the Russian front one

. Army General and 23 other gen­erals, among whom were corps commanders, had ' surrender^ Badoglio declared:

“ If generals o f that rank are caught, :t Is because the masses of troops'In frpnt of them either went

. over to the enemy or ran away.” INscoaata CSvl^aa Aettoa

Badoglio. oho of thq moat promi­nent fig u ra in Italy's surrender, said he believed a German revolt may have been planned by Field

' Marshal Karl Rudolf ■ ,G « d wm Runstedt and others o f the same military traditij^ He discounted the possibility ^ a peoples’ rebel­lion. ,

"The only peopac In Germany are women, children,-old men, and M,*' 000,000 fersigners, such as prison' era snd forced kborera. All other Germans are in the Army and a revolt must come there.”

Makes No PradlcUoa Badoglio said he evas too sea­

soned a campaigner to predict when a Ckrman collapse would comt*

**ProplMelss qra for cafs dUat- tantes,*^ hs d eclsM . ‘The end can (^mc suddenly or be delayed some zooiitha. There le no doubt, how-

eflaaetaned ea ease ja resV

See Upheaval Giving Ilitler

Tighter HoldBest' Estimate in Offi­

cial Washington Also Predicts Weaker Sup­port Will Be Result.

By John M. HightowerWashington, July 22.—(J*).—The

best estimate of the German up­heaval in official quarters here today ia that Hitler and his re­gime will meerge with a . tighter hold over the German Army and people but a much weaker support from them. /•'

This support will weaken from here on, it is believed, reaching a fatal point when the people and soldiers realize that they are be­ing expended in an utterly useless extension o'f the war.

A t that point, according to this estimate, there will be another and more successful atetmut to throw Hitler out o f power and one sf the factions contmdlng against him will bring about the stirren-: der of Germany,No Serious B ^orf'on Peace.Bids

So far ta'the war, it can K re- porte(Loti excellent grounds,, there has been no serious effort' made by anyone pf authority in Ger

Bulletin!London, July 32— (flV-Be-

tween 600 and 760 American heavy bomben roared out from Italian liases and attack­ed the PloestI oil area of Ro­manis today.

Truman Wins Fight Upon Second Ballot

Missouri Senator Chosen! A l l i e d T f CIODS Over Wallace by Dem-; socrats to Carry Bat- Push Neai^ertie to Republicans.

London, July 22.—(A*)—British Mosquitos, kept the air assault on Germany rolling overnight by bombing Berlin while Italian-based bombers struck into Czechoslo­vakia for the second time in less than 24 hours and hammered an oil.refinery at Pardubice, 60 miles east of Prague.

A targe explosion and fire was reported seen in the Pardubice re­finery, the fifth largest in Elurope outside Romania.

Bad flying weather across the English CTiannel apparently grounded the. heavy home-baaed bombers of the R. A. F. and threatened to bring to a halt the week-long series of massive day raids from the west.

Black smoke drifted today from the great synthetic oil plant at

Chicago, July 22.—(/P)— The Democratic party called on a vigorous, practical poli­tician t^ a y in Harry S. Tru­man of Missouri, its new vice presidential nominee, to car­ry the fight to the Republi­cans in a campaign for a fourth White House term forPresident Roosevelt. Ths 60-year- old piano-thumping senator, whoM

To Florence

Moscow, July 22.— (fl*)— ' Red Army tank and infantry forces, making a supreme bid for Warsaw, rolled back Ger­man rearguards today on a jagged 200-mile battle line, and front dispatches said some Soviet forces were only 90 miles from the Polish capi­tal. At the same time the German poaition in the Baltics grew worse hourly, as Col. Geh. Ivan I. Mas- lennikov’a troops captufed Ostrov, cleared 17 miles of the Ostrov- Pskov railway, and left Pskov, 35 miles north of Ostrov. in an un­tenable salient. Tishina, seven miles from Latvia’s northeastern boundary, was occupied.

Pour Through Breaches The Red tide ^ured . through

dozens of breaches in the make­shift German line onto the Polish plains, where Hitler once swag­gered in victory, and where now

Further Gains In Normandy

Ativanee Infantry Ele­ments Only 14 Miles From Qty a* Three Columns AdvancingRome, July 22—(4>i—Fifth and

Eighth Army troops closed stead- grin*’ is"klndT^'”by srtiu'biue’ e ft it i iy in on Florence from three dlrec-

(Conttnuei: on Page Two)

Wallace Hajipy After Losing

Thinks' Fight for Rff- tiiomihation Advanced

' Cause o f Liberalism.

- (Coattniied oa Page Two)

Plotters Hit Hard by Ley

Nazi Lal^r Chief At< tacks .' ^Idiotic Nobil­ity Diuring His SpeechLondon, July 22.—(/P)— Dr. Rob­

ert Ley, Nazi labor chief, in an ad­dress today before several thou­sand armament workers at a fac­tory aoknewhere in Germany, lash­ed out at ”«n idiotic nobility that has nothing better to do than plot against our .(Hiehrer.”

In a speech broadcast'directly from the . scute by the German radio, the Nazi leader blashemp- ed Jews, plutocrats and foreignera as the instigatora o f the attempted assassination of Hitler, then add- -ed: .

"While German workera labor 12 to 16 hours without a-Sunday Or holiday, an idiotic nobility has nothing, better to do than plot against our Fuehrer.”

Says Heavy BUae Used Ley aoaerted that a "mlnei of

the heaviest type impm'ted frqm Britain” was used in the aasassi- natkm attempt, hut did not explain how the explosion o f Such a p<>wer- ful device only a abort diatance from Hitler winfid reoult In but minor Injuries.

‘T hs fact ha was saved does not mean that the battle is won,” Ley shouted.

He implored fata to “ give ue

(Coattaned aa Fata Twa>

Chicago. July 22.—(>Pi —Henry A. Wallace came up smiling today after losing the biggest battle of his political career.

"I ’m happy about-it—I reaHy am.” ■ he'v told eympathlzers who filed through' his hotel suite last night.

He was happy, he explained, be­cause he thought the flight he had made for renomination had ad­vanced further the cause of politi­cal and economic liberalism which .le espouses. * * .

Will Give Full Support'And he made it clear he would

go all the way for'the Roosevelt- Truman ticket this fall. If he felt that the president, by making known that Senator Truman would be acceptable' as running mate, had contrlhutet. to hi* defeat, he gave no sign of it-

"1 believe more' strongly than ever that President Roosevelt U the voice of western lib'raltsin for the world,” he said in a dictated statement. ” It is exceedingly im­portant that that volee goes on. I hope all true liberals will do their part to see that the voice is able to carry on in 1946.”

Message To Truman.To Senator Triiman hetaent this

message:, “Congratulatlona upon your en- laiged opportunity to help the president and the people. Both of us will do our maximum for Roose­velt and adial Roosevelt stands for.” V

Wallace had stayed away from the convention hall during the bal­loting on vice president, secluding himself In his Sherman hotel rooms. White fJie preliminaries were going on he took a nap. A handful of hU poUUcal backers, and members o f his staff, sat In an ad­joining room llstent^ to the pro­gram on the radio.

Mid-way in the first ballat he moved Into the radio-equipped

I (CsaUaued m Itage Twe)

behind thick-lensed spectacles, beat Henry A. Wallace to the sec­ond place nomination in an eight- hour windup session o f the Dem­ocratic National convention yes­terday.

Inherita Campaign Task'W ith the Job he inherited the

task o f conducting a campaign for which the president' said he had Httle Ume.

Just as Mr. Roosevelt's selec­tion for a fourth term was kept from being unanimous by 89 votes for Senator Harry F. Byrd and one for James- A. Farley, so the nomination of the chui^y chair­man of the Senate^a War liTvesti- gating committee went into the record with this count:

For Tniman, 1,031; Wallace, 105: Justice William O. Douglas of the Supreme Court four; Gov. Prentice Cooper of Tennessee, 26; Senator Alben W. Barkley ot Kentucky, six; Manpower Cora mlsaioner Paul V. McNutt, one. Three of the'1,176 delegates were absent.

The vice presidential balloting, which began on a bitter note of strife between the CIO Political Action committee and the hlg-clty Democratic chjeftains who have bad a great deal to say about par­

i t y affairs in the last - 12 years, '^'ende? on a publicly harmoniout

pitch:. Dixie Dissent Remains

But there remained a note of Dixie dissent, petliapa most.clear-

tlona today 'With advance Infantry elements only 14 nviles from the historic city’s edge directly to the eouth.

In this cloeest thrust, the Fifth Army capured Tavernelle and the neighboring towns of Barberino dal D'Elsa and CNpanne.

An American column advancing through the Elsa valley toward the Arno river line captured- Castel Fiorentlno, 17 miles southwest of Florence, and British troops of the Eighth Army, fighting in the area of SanGiovknni in the upper Arno valley, were 18 milea to the south­east.

' Artillery Duels Rage --On the west coast American

patrols probing the enemy’s new defenses in the Arno valley reached a ^Jnt within four miles of Pisa. Artlltary duels raged between large coqcentrationa of German guns on nigh ground north of the river and thC^^Pifth Army's long range guns. '

On the A drlatl^pd of the battle line Polish troops pushed forward two or three miles andv^^de con­tact with the retreading^ enemy four miles from the flshifig port of Senigallia, at the mouth o f^ J lie Misa river. • ' x.

Interrogation of, newest prison­ers showed that two or more Nazi divisions which were former ong- Inaliy for the Russian front, had been brought 4o Italy and broken up to supply' reinforcements for the ba tte i^ remnants o f the Ger-

hia troop* faced diaaster.The battle for Warsaw develop­

ed from these giant thrusts by Marsral Konstantin K. Rokossov cky’s apparently Inexhaustible of­fensive :

After cutting the Bialystok- Brest-Lltovsk railway at Czerem- cha, 95 airline miles northeast of Warsaw two days ago, Soviet units now were reported to have advanc­ed at least five miles.

Other Red Army forces were forging a ring of steel around Brest-Litovsk, 90 miles east of Warsaw, after mopping up German pockets to (he southeast, including Vielkoryta, 18 miles distant on the Brest-Lltovak railway.

Rout Ge'nnane From SawinLeaving the western Bug nine

or more miles behind, Red Army veterans routed the Germans from Sawin, 36. miles east of Lublin, and a fortress 62 miles from the head watera of the Wisla (Vistula) and 124 mtlea southeast of Warsaw.

The Sawin victory outflanked th* German strohgpoint of (^elm, 10 miles southeastward.

Elsewhere in the east the Ger-

(Conttmicd ti t Pag* Two)

(Continued on Pnge Eight)

Dixie Leaders Nurse Wounds

Southerners MollifieiL Only by Defeat of Wal­lace for Second Place.

(Conttnned on Pnge rwn)

Classroom, Teachers Paid More, But Cut in Ranks

Hartford, July 22-— (ic)— ' Due-JSfil; Hartford 82,422; Meriden 82;'to the reducticoL in the number of classroom teachers, (Connecticut in 11 years bOs been able to in- x;rease salaries of its classroom teachers 18 per cent, with an in­crease of only 12 per cent in total expenditure. This face ia Indl-

study of teachers’ sal-

129; New Britain 82,017; Stamford 82.334; Waterbury 82,350; West Hartford '$2,014, and Windham $2,- 234.

Far Down on Ust ! Far down on the list were; Beth- ; lehem .$1,233; Coventry 31,292; KillingWorth 81^225; (Sherman 31.-

Thompsoncated in a .arlea for 1943-44 Just completed ; 217; Sterling $1,292; in the State Department of Edu- ; 81,258; Warren 81.250. cation ' ' Among th^ average a4I4ries of

Since the depres-ion year o f [Junior high school teachers are: 1032-33 elemehtiiiy teachers’ sal- ! Hartford $2,514; Stamford 32,483arleai have gone up 24 per cent.Junior high school Salaries 22 per cent, and high school faculty aal- ariea 11 per cent. During that period there was a net loss o f 87« classroom teachers. A reduction among elementary teachers was 1,204 and there were Incrcasca of 93- Junior high school tcach m and 233 senior high school faculty members. - — —.

Salartfs lacroaaod la Year During the past year under

pressure o f wartime condition! teachers’ salaries in Ckmnectlcut have Increased aa fo'Uows: Bile- _mentary $109 to | l ,m ; JOhtOF [high 62,668; for 1042-48: elemenhigh $119 to $2.286;'senior high $49 to $2,878. Only one fulltime teacher In the state was icpcnod aa receiving, as low as $1J)00.

Towns Ilatec*' among the highest

Westport $2,403; West Hartford $2,089.

Among senior high schools'av­erage aalaries are: (Canton $1,485 Cheater $1,500; Bridgeport $2,432 Greenwich 12,89(1; Hartford $3,- 357; New Britain $2,520; New Ha ben $2.60$; Thompoon $1,561 Waahingtor, '$1,483; Waterbury $3,078; West HsrtfoH 82.533 Wethersfield $2,148; Windsor. $1 940; Newington 31.807; Bloomfield 32,012; Stamford $2,896; Bast Hartford $2,431.

For 1932-33 public school enroll ment totalled: Elementary 306,- 083; Junior high 16)367: senior

tary 161,633; junior h igh -18,392 senior high school 58,461, a net loss of 55.832. Reports oh ths 1948-44 school year are now being rs- celved: The firtt 40 towns report-

\^By William F. Arbogast.Chicago, July 22.—(M^MolIified

only b ^ th e defeat of Henry A. Wallace f^ ..the vice presidential nomination, Qlxie Democrata took their clty-lnfllctCd. political wounds back to the peace arid quiet of the South today to decidCxtheir future role in national politics.

A rough week at the Democratic National convention left some of their leaders in a militant mood and calling for an organization of southern party leaders to prevent future kicklnga-around. aa they put it, from their northern col leagues.

Just what they would do. though, they were far- from agreed on.

Some called for foi-thright or ganizatlon of a third , party built around' the traditionally “solid South.”

Threaten, Election Fight

Allies Bogged Down Without Any Advance In Past 24 Hours; Es-

- quay Loss Only News.Supreme Headquarters Allied

Expeditionary Force, July 22—(g*)—The vast Allied military organi­zation in Normandy bogged down in the mud o f France today with­out a single advance being report­ed to the supreme command in the past 24 hours.

The war a briefest communique for an operation as great as the Allied invasion summed up the sit­uation in five words: "There ia nothing to report.”

Reports Loss of Esqusy The only change reported was

the loaa of Elaquay, southwest of Caen between tae Orne and Odon rivera. The supreme command's report did not atate whether the loss was due to (Serman action or whether the town merely waa abandoned to ho man’s land be- cau((e it is iii low ground.

In the lull the supreme com­mand checked battle reports and found that conflicting field dis­patches had led to some erroneous beliefs which were passed on to press conferancea.

The re-checks showed the Ger­mans still held Maltot between the Orne and Odon, that it la not clear whether St. Martin de Fontenay is in Allied or German hands that Noyers still Is held by the Ger­mans as is nearby Monta, and that the Germans still are astride the Bayeux-St. Lo road at Berigny.

Represent Minor C Tian^All these points represented

minor changes from previously re­ported positions and had no effect on the battle front as a whole. . A supreme command spokesman stressed that these towns were not lost through enemy action but that reports of their capture had resulted from garbled or misinter­preted field advices.

Combat patrols were active overnight along the American sec­tor of the front, and the Yanks re­ported Inflicting casualties on the Germans in numerous small arms clashes.

■ 8econdary Roads Hazard Secondary roads attll were so

mired artd slippery that they were more of a traffic hazard to aupply columns than the enemy’s periodic artillery bursts.

The Germans . also weather bound, made no attempt to ad­vance although the cloud cover gave them opportunity to bring up more reinforcements.

The Allied Tactical Air Forces

nessesU. S. Pacific Fleet Head­

quarters, Pearl Harbor, July 22.— (JP)—The liberation ol Guam—avenging the tiny/ American garrison ovemin by ^panese hordes in De- cen1oer,_ 1941—-.was pushed i ahead of schedule today by Steadily reinforced Yanks swarming off ships onto that fort mer U. S.'Tmtpost. They threat* ened to pinch off and quickly cap. ture Port,Aprs, core o f Guam’i defense system on the west coast.

Scale Heights In Rear From mile-long beachhead*

easily won north and south ot the fine harbor. Marines land aol-, dlers moved inland to seal* heights dominating its rear.♦ (^mmuniqiies and war corre­spondent eyewitness reports from the scene of Thursday's invaaioatold of swift progress and light casualties.

Tokyo radio, belatedly announc­ing the invasion to a homeland al­ready beset by a war , cabinet -shakeup, said a division' (about 12,000 men) and 150 tanka landed . in the vicinity of Asan north of the harbor and a half division at Agat, to the south.

John R. Henry, representing ths combined Allied press, reportiMl f)om a flagship at Guam that all Japs and shore 'defenses wer*.'’ gouged out of the landing areas by some of the 10,000 tons of ex- 'filosives Spread over the island ' hrough 17 straight days by war- ,

ships and planes. In the last eight minutes before the first Yankg landed at 8:28 a. m., Thursday, ths warships alone poured more than 60 tons of exp iring steel each- minute on the enemy.

"We simply blasted the Japs to Hru out of there and up into the trees,” said Rear Admiral Richard;-' W. Conolly, commanding opera­tions.

The Yanks encountered stiffen-

(Continued on Page Eight)

Flashes!(Late Bulletins ol the un Wlra).

(Continued on Page Two)

Dewev Againof C7

Visits FarmBusy Week Is Climaxed

With Johiistqn Talk On Russia Conditions.

with respect to average elemenr 1 Ing show a very alight dur- taiy salaries were: Greenwich $2,- ■ ing the Tecent school year.

Others threatened .to carry their fight into the November election— not by voting for Republican Thomas E. Dewey but by support/ ing him indirecUy through the medium of sending to the electoral college electors w’ho would not vote for Franklin D. Roosevelt but for some other Democrat, possibly Senator Harry F, Byrd o f Vir­ginia. This threat came from Texas and Mississippi Democrata and It might well be a serious one if the November election should be close in northern states. '

Loss of normally-Democratlr southern electeffs conceivably could throw the election to Dewey In a close race, or toss It into the House o f Representatives, where south­erners iiow hold the balance of power, for a decision.

Some believed though the best course to follow would be to for­get all about the convention and hope for a better break in the fu- turo. . ■

Lay Orgaalzatiaa Orooadwork The groundwortc for organiza­

tion o f dlMlitent Dixians was laid

(Osattaaed *a Pm SevsaJ

Pawling. N. Y . July 22—(8V - The restful atmosphere of bis. Quaker Hill farm claimed Gov. Thomas E. Dewey again today after a busy^week climaxeq by a lengthy discussion of conditions in Russia with Eric A. Johnston, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce.

John.aon,_. Dewey’s, dinner guest at.the executive mansion in Al­bany last night, returned July 13 from Russia where he talked with Premier Joseph Stalin, visited factories, and waa a front-line ob­server of the Russian army in ac­tion.

“Great Trade Opportunltie*’*He *aid~he told the Republican

:pre«identlal nominee that the United States had "jrrsat trade oppoctunitiea ' with the Soviet Union” but that the granting- o f long-term credit to Russia "wlU be essential.”

By "iong” credit terms, John­ston explained, he meant 15 to 30 ■yeara. ,■

Asserting the Umted States "can do any amount of buslneta with Russia, depending enUrely upon the length of credit terms, be said there 1* ' ~

Two Subs Reported LostWashington,.^ July 23—<A*)—-tsea_

of two (T. 8. submarine^ ths 'Trdut,’ which slipped past Japao-’ ese shore, batteries under, cover si darkness to carry out ' vasi amounts of gold from the Treosary of the Philippine government, aaa the TulUbee was announced by DM Navy today. Both submarine* are listed as o\erdue from patrol and presumed lost with tbeli rrew:s o f about 65 ofOoers and men on each vessel. The toSses' bring to 37 the number of Ameri­can sobniarlnes lost since the wo*- started.' .All but lour are listed as overdue on war patrols,

■ • * •Cliiims 1,700 Tanks Destroyed

London, July 33—<A^--The Go** man news agency DNB said ta a . broadcast today that 1,700 Alllad tank^ ' prlnel|lally ' Shermani,. Cromwells . and Churchills, hi^ bepii dcstroyi^d In the Nurniwidy

The n^ure w e wholly without Allied oiipreme hendquM'-- ters confirmation.• * '* 'Rum or Kesselrlng .Arrested

New York, July 33.— TRo Geneva newspaper lot Sulsae soM today that Field Marshal Gen.JU* bert Kesselrlng. German oomnma- der hi Italy anc rivwl of Erwin Rommel, was rumored ta haw been arrested on sUSplcloa M romplicity In the plot againM Hlt- ler. along with two generajaaoa tU'b colonels of his stab. Reseri ring was reported to ^ed a meeting between HIMer aiW Benito Mussolini Thursday, imW; his arrest following. »*'«1 the , i>atrh Zs reported to the Ollica a* , War Information.

(Csatlaned *a Pag* Sovea)

— {*Retasea Mor« .InfonnatioB

London. Jtdy 33.--<^7J]l broadcasts today said the govemmeat had refused t o « nicate any further with: th« ' on the Uljlng sf 86 RrtttaR Allied iler* rftor brealrn fr w < man prison camps la March, atatoment broadcast by the Gerwtaa goveromeat stroagly repudiates” tba charges Ihst the mea wet* dered. , __ _______

Treaaarj Bahuic*Washington, July 22. -

___ _______ position o f the Treoswiy,s “trymepdOMS ,__Beestpta, $9l.738.«M lf.i9 3 0 2 . 3 1 3 h*

------ . 4 4 ^ :anee, $32,869,738.44

I / ■

Page 2: Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjular iiw

M A N C H E S T E R E V E N IN G H E R A L D , M A N C H E S T E R , C O N N , 5 A T U R D A T , J L L T 22. 194«

Highlights From Latest Booksulle. Marshal Petain

^ O ro u ^ f Into Sharp FocusTiW)'timely boolu on r rehchmen prisoner Mi-ho Is r e le s ^ •w'hentthe

wm be Span*”*;^*Matory may deal with them, are I laentlficatlon bracelet to

•TThe Truth About De Gaulle, j followed by more Identillca- M b r Andre Rlrelonp (Aiwot W ), «"<• I lion bracelete. and the j*«y

^ t a ln , the X>\A Man of France,” i master plan. He flies to Cuba, thenby Janet Flanner (Simon * Schue- ; winds up'In Mexico with a gal

£ * t*r- 111. The former coincides whom he marrfcs for expediency a ■ with de OauUe'a visit to the United sake (a matter o f passports» only' states, and the latter, consisting ] to And that It was a goodwas a good idea

a series o f four articles which anywaiy. There’s impersonation, ^aBDeared In the New yorker,-is a > doiible-dealin#. . bloods both hot

oM l^ ion p lece in that , ft was I and cold, gun play, and a f last the Charles de 1 the hero feels qualified to breathe.

oompanionpiece Petain .whomOa«ito World W ar I Idolleed

• and it walk petain who passed a ' death sentence, on the de Gaulle

o f World W ar I I who dared to _ organize the Fighting French liondon, and fight on.

. lUvcloup writes pretty much as BosweU to de OauUe. An ardent

' follower, he presents the lanky French general as France's only •hope, and as the choice of troe French patriots everywhere. The book Is more than a plug for de Oaulle however; It gives a clear ■ortralt o f the unsmiling general, and of the Internal conditions in

„ : France which prevented it from S'- recognizing the farsightedness of ' a man who ‘‘invented” mechan-

ised war as it was used by he 'Oannans to crush his own land.-

Miss Planner has achieved an .aneellent, brief biography of Pe. tain, the dyed-in'the>wool defeat 1st who banded ovef France on a

" ' silver platter. His attitude in the . ta rt great - war, even though he

■ ' was aoclaimed as the hero o f Ver- 'thm, was one o f hopelessness, and when you get to know him as he

(r was then, his remark made ^four ' years ago comes as no' great sur-

prise: “ A nation hka to be whipped ,1;. sometimes . . . the country ought ■"' * to know we have been beaten.

Por two years 1 have been repeat- i '" Ing it to myself every morning.”■* The story o f the Old Man of

France is the story of France as weU. Both are tragic.

L ea n Amsrieaa“American Dialect Dictionary.”

5 Harold Wentworth (Crowek; ), while compiled for students

i o f American speech, authors, Itaariisrs, Is a fascinating book for

the reader who falls into none of those categories.

Thera are some 60,000 quota- tioos, a rich eollecUoh o f Ameri- ea'a dolorful crazy-qullt o f pro^ mHielations and uaages I f you want to make a gams o f discover­in g the gsographical origin of some one, say the most urbane N ew Yorker, Jot down some off- trall word, j^raec, o r usage .that do«m ’t quite belong with the feet o f hie vocabulary, then look it up in thia dictionary. Ten to one you'U ta d It. with the name of the state,

. or states, and aometlmee even the c fw lictdar section o f the state where it Is in common usage.

Many o f the phrases will strike M you as quaint and nmuslng, i f you ™ don't happen to hail from the neck

t { the woods w l^ra they’re

'“ We’ve won, darling.’

’’LebabPioneer Romani-e

I Doubleday-Doran; $2.50) Is Bsth the title and the name of theNnain character o f this tale of the eaHy 19th century. It is primarily theS(tory of Lebanon Falrgale, dark bcrfHty of the Geor gia lowlands. W h o^ ad all the skills needed to trackva deer or tan a hide, but po#eessed.,^ne of the womanly wile# n e c e M ^ to Win the love of a handsome^alti- more gentleman.

When Lebanon discovers her love is unreturned, ahe mar­ries Fernald D’Aiissy. and to- gether they set forth westward. The pioneering life o f Femald and his wife was one o f Joy and heartbreak, triumph and tragedy.

The reader concliules the book with a feeling o f gicat admira­tion for the heroine's courage and strength, and a slight feeling of wondepment at her ability to live through so much and still retain her nalvs faith In people and life.

1 ...

V::

Mud Prevents Further Gains

In Normandy(Ccathined fireni Page One)

See Upheaval Giving Hitler Tighter Hold

(Gontlnued from Page One) .

many to negotiate a peace or In­quire about aurrender teriria. Un­authorized persona and undercov­er agents are constantly putUng out feelers and rumors -In neutral capitals, but to date there has not been a true German pekee-move.

Such a move evidently was the intention of that faction of the Army high command which sought to assassinate Hitler two^ days . ago. In all there arc prob-, ably four factions In Germany’s | political and mlliUry ■ leadcr.ship Involved In the present struggle for power.

The issue of the struggle is what each of these groups wants tp do about Germany's immediate criti­cal future.

The faction led by Hitler is be­lieved here to be devoted to the idea of fighting the' war uselessly to the last German defending the last alleyway In Berlin. In the face o f certain defeat Hitler ia believed determined to pull down Geripany and Europe with him in ruins.

Junkers at tHher ExlremeA t the other extreme arc the

linker generals, htstoncally the ters of Germany's fate for,

many decade.s. They think of wars ties and would like to end

this oiie with Germany strong enough to fight again some day. Convinced now of defeat, they are rapidly becoming a pcace-at-any- prtce group. *. In the Nazi party itself there Is a third German faction, ft's main motivation la that it would like to make peace with Russia In order to introduce Oommunlsm into Ger­many as a dynamic and revolu- tlonaiy ideology for the future.

The fourth faction, believed to | Includp ultra-conseryattve Army elements and some Nazi-party Communist-baiters would also like to split the Anglo-American-Rus- sian combination by making a separate peace with Britain and the United States.

Dream of Pan-American Road Nears Fulfillment As Bridges Are Finished

■■— ■ ■ - ■— e

Longest suspension bridge In Central America, Puente Cuscatlan s|mns the l.eiii|ia R ver In K1 Salvador.

British Fliers Pound Berrin;

Refinery Hit' (Continued from Page One)

were grounded completely "for the first time since U-day.

Although superior, in men and material on the ground, Montgom­ery has been unable to advance his ground forces for any deep penetration elnee Tueaday, when Allied planes blew a "corridor” in the German defenses.

Since Tuesday the weather has permitted Allied planes to give otily local support.

Germans Fully Warned The swift Oermsn withdrawal

from their Orne positions and the capture of only a few hundred

day talk. (Such as “ nack woods.") Down in Appalachia a *1sat-a)ong” is a small child who haa progreaasd to the point where he oan Jiist manage to sit up by himself. In Georgia, If a girl

!? ibould “much” a chap, it means that ahe likes him, sees him a lot.

j Common trsnsistion for "peanuts" j in the South is "pinders,” or "gooi

, [ bers.“ - In Pennsylvania, a “hap'IH is a bed covering. So let's not be

' annoyed with foreign languages J i heoauae adlalact spoken in one \ ! region is unintelligible to us be< ’{ £ (MUSS we Isarned another one in 4 achooL W e do all right in Amer- f, Ic^ ourselves.

Spy SonffleI f you can relish your spy-sabo­

tage * ■ niurderreading fare with an ample sprin­kle o f aalt and a dash o f corn, dire into Kathleen Moore Knight’s “ Intrigue for Empire" (Crime Club: 12).

Meet believable feature is the nD-dver master-minding o f a plot designed to Naslfy enough o f our southerly neighbors, especially Mmtlco. to the foul end o f adding ttw Americas, us included, to Hit laris list o f trophies. We. know that Oermqpy has its sympathisers in the republics, and the highly elastic tolerance o f the average mystsry redder permits the author to stretch the point to the dimen- sfcms Miss Knight achJevea, with hardly a protest... Pst Torreon, Franco political

Soviets Roll Back Nazi Rearguards

(CoBtinued frupi Page One)

man generals still taking orders from the Nazi hierarchy were buf­feted anew by fierce Soviet “ at­tacks.

Gernian-Finnish forces were ousted from more than 20 settle- msnU as the Karelian offensive was renewed north and west o f the road and rail junction of Suojarvl by Gen. Kyrill A. Mcretskov’s

By NEA Service.Washington. July 22.\ Inter­

national bridges now link 10 American republics along the neve. Pan-American Hlghw.ay, aO- cceleratlng production and truns- portatioh of critical war mate- jials. Latest of the international bridges to be completed Is the 480-foot Rio Grascoran highway bridge connecting El Salvador and Hoiuliira.s.

To provide improved, land ■communications south of the bor­der. chiefly in Mexico and Gen- tral America. U. S. Army Engi- I'cated parts lused in construction of peers pushed a pioneer mad

Brux in Sudetenland—the largest producer o f synthetic motor fuel in German-occupied Europe— which was attacked yesterday by up to 500 AmeriPa.. heavy bombers.On«e Believed Safe From Attack The U. 8. 15th A ir Force dealt a

heavy blow u> the region the Nazis once believed safe from air attack. The Brux plant first was attacked by Britain-based bombers In May.

R. A. F. bombers made the first attack of the war last night on the Pardubice refinery^ Seventeen Italy-based planes were missing from these and other operations against* enemy communications in northern Italy and Yugoslavia and 12 enemy aircraft were destroyed.

The rain which has bogged both air and ground operations on the Normandy battle front continued Intermittently through the fore- nOon today anc by midday there had been no rgporte o f air activity over the English channel.

Some 6,000 American heavy bombers from Britain and Italy have loosed around 18,(XH> tons of explosivea on installations within Germany during coordi­nated raids from the west and the south.

Aircraft Factories Targeto Their targeU Included at least

11 aircraft factories, eight air­fields. four ball bearing plants,three railiroad yards, two syn­thetic oil plants, two flying bomb experimental laboratories, chemi­cal plants, ordnance depots and motor works.

While the weather cut the air j activity In Normandy, It alao hanu 1 pered the channel defenses against I German flying bombs, many of ■ which clattered into London and ! other southern England sectors i last night and early today.

In bombing Berlin for the fourth time In seven nights last

: night block buster-carrj’lng Mos- I qultoa chalked up their 13th con- Isecutive hlght operation and their 16th this month.

Provide Water For New Tract

South End to Extend Mains to Give Fire Pro- teetioii.^or Homes.The Commis^nera of the South

Manchester Fire District have worked out a plan that will give re.sldcnts o f the two ilriiielopnients on the acuth aide of Mlddl* Turn­pike, west, fire protection, now lacking because of low water supply.

A 600 foot extension will be built from the town owned-water mains at Hemlock and Edgerton streets to tunnel under the rail­road tracks and extend north to within 1,000 feel of Middle turn­pike. "Two more 300 feet exten­sions would be made directly west to South Hawthorne and South Alton streets. Thia would make it possible to protect the houses In the rear of the developments whlcli would hardly be possible with the supp/y furnished at pres­ent from the street side.

f rtlTiTTndhta' ri«IBSDB9ylVDDBsBB^Vi^p

TODAY AN D SU N D A Y .

PLUS: "TH E D E IM L A y E R *

LAST c h a p t e r , “ BATM AN ”

LATEST NEW S! SHORTS!

STARTS M ONDAY “COVER GIRL”

“TW O M AN SUB”

.\mcrU’iin Highway route is still Impassable.

One of the moat notable of the modcMT. highway bridges Is the .'jTpO.t'OO Cuscatlan Bridge span- pinp the Lempa river in thie inte­rior of Ei Salvador., Puente Cu.s- catlan ia the longest suspension

• bridge in Central America.Pre l'abricateil Bridges' .

Because of scarcity o f proper materials, fabrication equipment; _ t . U ’sand skilled local labor In certaiii | t f e a u f l g l l t c r s s| I t localities in Central America, a l CJiiriaconsiderable portion of the bridge I I O U T M e r c h a n t matciiali came from the United j London, July 22.— The R.

, State.s. In addition to pre-fabri-' A. F. coastal command reported

. . troops,rear gu»rds._ln the oltanaiva tndl- The (o "g static-sector south ofcated that the Germans had full warning of the attack.

Although the Germana have been able to glean little by air reconnaiiaance, the confined area of the Allied position made stir- priae virtually impossible. Briti.ih troops had withdrawn a short dis­tance along, the front lines Just, before hundreds o f bombers came j over to blast the Germans, giving an. indication that aomethtng was under way.- The "cloak of ellencc” that Montgomery threw over the battle front Just before the operation al­ao gave warning that an attack vyas brewing. Press radios In the British sector, active to a point Immediately before the attack, suddenly, were shut down for 18 hours, on orders o f the 21st Army group.

Lack o f German armor in the battle, and the well defended screen Montgomery's tanks ran Up agairuii five miles south o< Caen, Indlcatod that the Germans were well prepared for the irt- tack. ''

PloUerg HitHard by Ley

. (Continued from Page One)

b a tU e^ w ar until w t succumb to exhaustion. Give us bombs and grenades B’ -erythlng we are ready to bear and endure. Only preserve Hitler for us.’’

His speech touched off a hysterL cal demonstration reminiscent of those in Hitler’s heydey.

Tarnopol was the scene of another Soviet push which reached Buc- zaez, northeast of the Mountain passes into Hungary.

The Moscow communique told of continued successes in the assrult on tottering Lwow, with one Nazi Infantry division defeatejl north of the %qw'n and one tank battal­ion w hlp^d with a loss of more than 60 tarika.

Front dtspst^hes said that Viet bombers andBtormovlks ed an attack on 'the four Nazi divisions sUri^nded in the region of Brody, east Of.^LWow, af­ter the iftpture of 2,0<H) -prisoners.

The Germans were losing heav­ily In trucks, automobiles, loOomo- tives and cars, in which troops were tightly packed, under con­stant attack by the Russian "fly- ingartillery.”

Seize Two - BridgesA correspondent for Pravda,

telling o f the Bug crossings^ said that Russian cavalry had' seized two-bridges west of Lubomi before the Germans hgd .time to destroy them. .

During the capture o f the bridges and heavy fighting that followed to keep them, Soviet en­gineers strung dozens of pontoon bridges across the Bug.

One of the first groups to cross the Bug employed American made amphibious ..vehicles, which.._ the Russians are using now in large nurhbers.10ther front dispatches, describ­

ing the four-day fight for Ostrov, said not a single German was left alive after an artillery and bomber attack on the "Panther line” which took ths Todt organization six- months to build ftom the .Piikfiv- skoe lake southward to Ostrov.

The Germans set Ostrov ablaze, these dispatches said; «

throup’h gaps in the Pan-.Vnleri- can Highway route through )8 countries. They withdrew from the project on. October 31, 1043, because their seiA-lces were urgent­ly needed elsewhere.

War-expanded bridge and road construction has reduced the number of unspanned rivers on the highway route, between La­redo. Tex., and Buenoa* Aires and Rio de Janeiro, but bridges are atill needed in souUiem Mexico,, Nicaragua, CJostu Rica and north­ern Panama, as .well as In South America.

Meanwhile, bridges aris being constructed .along the Inter- American Highway roiiU In Costa Rics by the Public Roada Ad­ministration oLthe United States Federal W ork^Agency under the Inter-American cooperative road- biiUding program. In South America, bridges atil remain to be built in several parts of the Pan-American Highway system to provide all-weather, all-year travel. This . ia, of course, particularly true of .sertiona Where the Pan-

...-.r,. , today nhat British Besuflghtersthe railroad bridge on the Mexican- |-had attacked an enemy Guatemalan border, 93 prefabri- ' 40 vessels off Helgoland, hitting cated timber bridges and eight ; four m6rchant ships with abandoned steel bridges were i does, two of which were left bought In the United Stajtes and i sinking, setting five eKort vesselsshipp^ to Central America by Army,' engineers. The pre-fabrl- cated llr-iber bridges ranged in length from 60 to 100 feet and were designed as one-way structures with a 15-foot clear roadway and H-15 loading. ■ The ateel bridges that were dismantled and recondi­tioned for shipment had spans of -from 80 to 184 feet.

A fter the war. when wide­spread travel Is possible again, tremendous benefits for the good o'f all the Americas w)ll undoubt­edly result from this great high- | way’s completion. In Central | America, one o f the chief bar­riers to a better standard of living will have been removed. To aL most as great an extents the high­way can perform the same service for South America.

The new highway bridges are vitally cBsenti^ in making th ir "dream of a century"—as the Sal­vadorans put ft—come true.

afire and damaging most of the other ships In the .convoy.

The operation waa carried out shortly after dusk last evening, an A ir Ministry communique said, adding that the British planes pressed home their attack despite a heavy barrage of rockets and flak sent up by the enemy ships.

Helgoland Is an Udand In- the North sea 85 miles northybf the German coast.

Wallace HappyAfter Losing

(ConOnued From Fags One)

room to listen too. Hopes of the Wallace followers were high then. Shouts and cheers could be heard as each new bloc of votes were cast for him.

As soon as the second ballot tabulation gave Truman a major­ity, Wallace admitted the waitljig reporters and photographers. A few close friends alao crowded in to shake hands.

Least Disheartened In ^oomThe defeated vice-president. In

shirt sleeves and smiling broadly, seemed the least disheartened In the room.

He replied “ of course” to a ques­tion whether he ‘would campaign actively for the ticket.

" i l ie cause of liberalism haa been advanced—that’s the main thing,” he declared.

Did he mean, he was asked, that he did not consider his own defeat a blow to liberalism.

' ” I don’t look on it as a blow to Uberallsm,’’ came the answer, think we have made a real start toward a vital, liberal democracy, Roosevelt must be supported dur­ing the emergency of the war, and durihg the making of the peace.

Then he put on Rla coat and went out—for a walk.

"I'-need a little exerciae," he ex- plltaed.__ , __

DANCEM ILLER'S H A LL

Tolland^ Turnpikt

Sat. Night, 1uly 22 8 to 12

Modern and Old Fashioned. Peter Miller, Prompter.

A Good Time for Yoeag sad OM

Oeta Rid o f Oost

cular concrete ,:pillboxes, manned by suicide squads. North o f the Ai-no river patrols found all wood­lands heavily mined. roKds demol­ished and blocked by felled trees:

Advance Three MilesIn the upper Arno river area

Eighth Army units advanced three miles beyond Montogarchi and cap­tured' 50 more prisoners, while in the upper Tiber valley Indian troops repulsed 10 enemy counter­attacks in a single day. '

Eaatward In the ,.Sentino river valley the' towrnf ' of Perticarto, Seegia and Sassoferrato were oc­cupied. II.

The Italians captured the 'vil­la pe Of Belvedere in a fierce fight

AUied Troops Nearer

To t^loreiice—

(Continued F rom ''^ ge One)

mans* lOtli and 14th A rn o ld A-Hied headquarters said.

Six DH’laiona Sent To Ita ly .These two brought to six the

total o f fresh enemy divisions rush­ed to Italy since the opening Of the Allied offensive May 11. This was roughly the equivalent o f .one-fourth o f the number already | “ ftp'’ occupying lese and near

thcL eastem-coaat ,the Poles odcu-

Decatur, 111.— —James Curr^ .Decatur’s dog catcherr picked up a stray goat, in line o f duty, and took him home for safe keeping— but the goat, aaya CJurry, “ got his goat.” The animal displayed de­structive propensltlee, greatly pro­voking the dog catcher. Hla an­tics included the trampling of (Jurry’a oean -patch. (Jurry didn’t wait for the goat’s owner to claim him ~he gave him to a man who happened'lnHilB home.

available in thia theater.One new^ftsttatjon was thrown

into the Itne to rescue the 278th In­fantry diyislon. which fell back from Ancona SfteP, losing 2.000 prisoners to the Poles. ,

A t road Junctions and curves the Allies were encountering rhany cir-

pied a number of ^burhs, tncliulingMontemarciano.

It 'Was disclosed officially thatthe attack on Grosiwto earlier In the campaign was made by the U. S. Fourth coi-pst commanded- by MuJ, Gen. Willia D. Crittenberger.

Men find Women of the Serylce Invited I

DAN CEAl Gentile and his

Orchestra

EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT

K .p f C . Ballroom28 Prospect St. Hartford

Benefit Service Fund!

T I ; JMANCHLS1FN

SUN. - MON. - TUBS.

POiNI-ftB mi NO CBUNCrON lOVEI

A 'l i i i OiNrui r i O i M f c t »

STATEHARTFORD

I M T A f i l O S Q V ll U k N i m STAG! 5H0W/.....MCAPI f

K iE P 'E M iiiiIflUGHlHG™LIONEL KAYE

S THE (JAFFY AUCTIONEER

-V, » Jfiy J A MM tn lAMPlH 'H

(OF.IOIM WA'KilYN- U i r / I C-MTi s PROV-Jd'JI 'ORP.M.N'I

KAni i i (o t m iM o fn . n m r m >w

/SSS'JOMIF 0 0 ^

iM PM n sHoiirShrFMMF s

PLU S : “Meet The People"

ENDS TO D AYl ChM. H oyt» In “ O ASU O H T” Floai ‘ALLERGIC TO LOVE*

Heard At

The Management of

Kactory-Controlled

REeAPPI^GW ITH AMERICAN-MADE

SYNTHETIC RUBBER

- 6.00 X 1 «

TIRE

Per lencw alleice u d finer qnsUtf, have jronr tiree recapped bp the nreetone Paetorj-Oontrolled Method. Faetory- trained-eKperte will do the Job. Our r e c ^ Mregniranteed.

N a RATIONING CIRTIPICATE REQUIRED TO RECAP

ANY TYPE TIRE

Is Happy to -Announce

That They Have B o o k ^

“The Talk of the Town Trio"HENRY LEWIS, SEB SHONTY

AND SAL LOMBARDO

Then

BarIn response to many re­

quests we are serving lunch- eonq. from 11 to 2. Dlnnere atill served from 5 *111 11 P. M.

Our regular Saturday eve­ning party holds forth to­night. Dial 8802 for a choice

. booth.

You Aircraft workers wUl be entertained royally here, (You don’t work, tomorrow). No minimum, cover, and only 10^ dance tax at ‘The Shari- dan.

Johnny, our tinging bar­man. waa going toW ew York ton l^ t. to . see hla “ red- haired” girt friend. A fter hearing that beer costs 98c a gUas there, at the smart clube, he decided he would stay and sing hehe with us, as he , d id ' not have quite enough money.

UnloB Service Seooad OoogtegatloBal aad North Methodist Chureheo

A t theCougregatloaal Church

North Mala Street Rev. Ferris E. Reynolds, Ph.

Morning service at 10:45. Ser­mon subject, "N o Other King.” Music by the choir under the di­rection o f Samuel Ramette, organ­ist.Prelude—M ed iU U on ........Dunham

' Anthem—Teach Me, O Lord . . ............... Atwood

Offertory—Idylie ................FlavellPoetlude— Maeatoso ...Arm strong

< A t 4:30 Sunday afternoon, the young people will meet at the

i church to go to the Church lot for • their meeting. Young people of 'th e community are Invited.

NotesThe Vacation Church school wUl

close Monday evening. Special ex- ’ ercisea for the parents and the ' public will be held In the Congre­

gational church at 7:^0. Through i dramatization, songs,' and exhibiU 1 the program of the school will be depicted. Mrs. Beatrice Vetrano,

( the director, will have charge of the evening’s program.

Union services will be held lii the Congregational church next Sun­day morning, July 30.

South Methodist ChurchMain Street and Hnrtford Road

-Rmr. W . Ralph Ward, Jr„ Minister ’ Janies Newoomb, GrganUt and

O io lr Director

St. Jnases’s Bomaa .CMlMille Bav. MUUnin J. Dunn. Pastor

Rear. Edmnad Barrett, Asehrtnnt Bear. Frederick McLean, Assistant

Sunday mssssa:For adults, 5:30, 7, 8:30, 9:45,

and I I a. m.Children’s mass at 8:30, down­

stair*.Rev. Joseph- Markowitz, Poliah

priest, is at the church today and tomorrow.

Gargo Ships Built by U. S.To Ply World’s Trade Lanes

Merchant Marine Conc^rates on Freighters instead of Liners

St. Bridget’s R. C.Rev. James E. TIimniiiB, Pastor

Rev. Rronlslaw OadarowshI Assistant | ^ t o r _ .

Masses on Sunday at 7:30, 9, 10 and 11 a. m..

St. John’s Polish Church Oolwny Street

Rev. S. J. Ssczdpkowskl Walter Orzyb, Grgnnist

re-8:30— First mass.10:30— Second mass. Choir

hearaals following each mass.9 W 11:30 a. m. —Wednesday,

Friday and Saturday— Vacation school, for.children 5 to 14i

W ill Resume Siegel Casej

All Others Scheduled For Tuesday Expected To Be Postponed.

Hartford. July 22—(J>>—AU oth­er cases scheduled for ’Tuesday in U. .8. District court here are ex­pected to be postponed to permit rasumptlor. of the denaturaliza­tion proceedings against Dr. Theo­dor Kart Siegel, German language professor at the University of Connecticut.

W ith Siegel on the stand as the first defense, witness, the esse was Interrupted Friday to permit hear­ing o f a motion for retrial in a gas coupon counterfeiting conspiracy

Rationing DataFurnished By

Office of Price AdmiBlstmtloii Regloaal Oepartnasat at lafSsiiiallaa

85 T icn oa t Btniirt, Boatoa, t ,

Gospel Hall 415 Centor Street

Paaaenger Uners.ltke the de luxe America, which now aer\'es as the troop transport West Point, must be completely refitted after the war. MariGme experte predict that k year wUl pass before the fln t Americnri pneaenger Ship Is ready to cross the aea. ,

10:20 a. m.—^Breaking o f bread. 12:15 p. m.— Sunday school.7 p. m.—Gospel sendee.7:16 p. m. Tuesday — Prayer

meeting and Bible reading.

Union ServiceMorning worship, 10:45 a. m.

Organ Prelude. ’ ’2nd Fugue E.Minor” , ............... .. J- S. Bach

Processional Hymn, "Joyful, Joy­ful We Adore Thee” . .Beethoven

Anthem, "Souls of the Righteous”............................... T. T. Noble

H)rmn, "Draw Thgu My Soul, OChrist” ........................ Sullivan

Sermon, "The Religion We Lose and the Religion We , keep” ................................... Mr. Ward

Recessional Hymn. ”Ood the Omni­potent” ......................... Lvov

Organ Postlude, "Finale” ........................ ............. Eduardo- Torres7;00 p. m.—Evening vesper serv­

ice on west lawn of church. Ser­mon by Rev. Otis Lee Monson of Wlllimantic. David Hutchinson of South church choir will be guest soloist, with Mrs. D. M., Bennett a t the organ.

’The WllllmanUc Assembly be­gins tomorrow and lasts through nsxt Sunday. Dr. Philip L. Frick preaches tomorrow morning, 'Biahop L. O. Hartman o f Boston, next Sunday morning and after­noon. and Rev. R. G. Belcher next Sunday evening. Dally program thU week morning, afternoon and evening. Mr. Ward will speak on M otitay at 2:30 p. m.

Zion Lartheraa Chnrah Cooper aad High Streets

Rev. Panl O. Prokopy, Pastor

Sunday School, 9 a. m.Morning Worship, English 10

a. m., German 11 a. m.Guest speaker, ’ Rev. Martin

Duchow.

The Salvation Amqr 681 Mate Street

Major naf* BIrs. J. H. Sweet

P. S.i 9:80—Sunday school Y. (W iUtam Hall in charge.S 11:00—Holiness meeting. Major *'Bweet, leader.• 7:18— Service In the park. Spe- JeUl music. Major Sweet, leader.

Tueaday. Wednesday, Thursday Land Friday—VacaUon Bible school

9:30 on each o f the above days. sAU children ..re invited.1 ’Thursday, 7:30—Open Air.

<r Friday, 7:30--^olineaa meeting.* Saturday, 7:30—Open Air." A welcome to all to these serv- •ices!

r Center Congregational Church Marina A . Munson.

y Director o f ReUgtons Education * Jesse F. Davis, Mnslc Director

Waldo Newboiy. Organist

: Uo.:45 a. m.— Morning Worship, ^tlnion service at South Me.thodlat -^burch. Rev. W. Ralph Ward, Jr,, •Mill preachm Sendees will be held In South sMethodiet church, July 23. 30 and ^ u g . S, They will be held In Cen- e4er Church, Aug. 13, 20, 27 and MBept. 2. .

Concordia Lutheran a Oardea-nad Wtetar Streets

Rev. Karl BIcbter, Paator.

^ 8:60 a. m., Sunday school and ^ ib le clasaea. Alfred Lang, su- {Mrintendent.g 10:30 a. m.. Union services In ^oncord la with EUnanud. David ^utchlnaon, baritone, w ill be the iguest aoloist.

**raleottvUle ‘CangregatioBal Church 4 Rev. HioinaB Street, Minister.

Church of the Nazarene 466 Mate Street, Manchester

Rev. James A. Young, Pastor

Sunday services:9:30 s. m.—Church school. You

will enjoy the study of the Bible In a class that suits your need. Tennyson McFall, superintendent.

10:45 a. m.—Morning worship. Sermon by the pastor: “The Dis­pensation of the Holy Spirit.”

6:30 p. m.—N. Y. P. S. Miss Marion E. Janes, president.

7:30T»rm.— BlvangeUstlc service. Pastor’s subject: “ Life for the New Era.”

The WeekWednesday at 7:30 p. m.— Praise

and Prayer meeting with the pas­tor in charge.

Labor Group ]Backs Ticketj

-------- s 1I TO Political Action

Committee Minimizes Setback on Wallace.

Chicago, July 22.— (JP)— The CIO Political Action Committee mini­mized a setback in the Democratic National convention today by cast­ing its full strength behind the Roose'velt-Truman ticket.

Wielding influence without pre­cedent in a*national convention, the CIO leaders nevertheless fell short of their goal—renomination of Henry A. Wallace, their choice for the vice presidential spot long before the Chicago meeting and on whom they refused to trade. They spumed the blandishments of the best known names In the Demo-

Pope W ill Receive American Prelate

Beer here, by the"’ way. Is still 10c a giaaa. ^

Nsxt Thursday wa’re nm- ning^our minstrel show. Most o f the help will be in i t

A few hours' fun In tbs nicsst grill in Msnchestsr will do you a ^ r l d o f good.

MORIARTY BROTHERSE ^V E L AT CENTER AND BROAD STS.

: Services, Sunday, July 23: m 10:45 a. m.. Morning Worship. jBermon subject, “L ife ’s Pllgrlm-£ ge.'” Ta lk to the young people

bout "The Baby in the Mining .Mtemp." >

There w ill be the usual meeting or surgical dresainga on Tuesday veiling and all day Thunday.Mrs. Georga Townsrad will te

lad to take care o f the small chu- o f thoss parents who Wish to

jettond ths morning servica.

m S t Mary's Epteespal Cknreh 4 Rev. AUred L. WUItems, Rector ^ Rev. EtUsen F. Marrtn, Curate

2 Seventh Sondiw after Trinity, S a. m.— Holy Communion.

10:45 a. m.— Morning Prayer id eermon by the Rev. EUison F.

rin, cniatA Second in the se- ot summer addreesfs, on the

ibject: "The Meaning -ef the lurch' and. Her Sacramdnts To- y .” Subject: T h e Church-' fir oly."roceesionsl Hymn— "Lead On, O K ing Btemal”Sermon Hymn—"Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord”

i^ e r t o r y Anthem— "Behold theHeaven’* .......................By Gaul

Jleceasloiial Hymn— “O Mavioor, V Precious Saviour”

Ths Week • Rrsdneaday noon, Interoeasiaoa fo r V ictory and Paaoe. 7:15 p. n . ^ B o y Scouts.^ n n is 6 8 J b < ^ £ > * v

Rome, July 22— (JPt— Archbishop Spellman of New Yprk, who ar­rived In Rome yeaterday, Celebra- tea maaa at Saint Peter’s thia morning and waa to be received by Pope Plus, X II later in the day.

The archbishop plans ter visit the Italian wa; reonta and military hospitals and will offer maaa at American cemeteries at Salerno, Casslno and Anzlo.

The anphblahop was accompan­ied by btoj. William J. Moran of San Francisco, Calif., assistant chaplain In the Italian theater, and Col. John A. O’Keefe, adjutant of the North African wing of the A ir Transpeut command.' He was flown to Ita ly by Lieut. Peter Alcure o f 96 West End ave­nue, New York City. Alcure’a fa­ther is an Infantry colonel now on active duty In Normandy.

The archbishop celebrated mass at St. Peter’s at the same altar where he Waa 'consecrated aa a bishop. A fter on extensive tour of the Italian front ho w ill idslt Brit­ain. India and China.

Electrical Therapy Used as Last Hope

Los Angeles, July 22— (A’)-^Elec- trical therapy is being administer­ed to Lawrence Schone, 31-year- old ' hiccoughing : machinist, in 'practically our last hope” to

terminate the seizure, now In the 14th day. Dr. Lloyd P. Talnter an­nounced today.

Two - six-volt shocks brought sleep and temporary relief, one re­spite lasting three hours, and heaV' ier tfiocka were planned, the doc tor said.

"Prevloualy I tried some 50 aug- geations in 2,000 megsages from well-wishers all over, the country," Dr. Talnter relatedl "When we tried hypnosis, Schone seemet. wor­ried altout not being able to find a suitable place for his family to live,"

W las gSAOO Verdict

Sacramento, Calif,, July 22— OP) —George Brandenburg, who start-^ led a Superior court jury at trial Of his peraonfil injury suit by drop- pteg to his knees and praying, won z 85,000 judgment against the Pa­cific Oga A Electric Company. The Jury deUberatod an hour and half, then held in favor o f Bran­denburg.

Sere* SoMtora Drown

'Anchorage, Alaska, Jtoy 22— UPt — Seven Bfudlers apparently drown'

By S. Burton Health N EA Staff Correapondeiit

New York—When Americanshipping men look tnt!> the. post­war future with pride and hope­fulness, It is o f the cargo trade that they are thinking—not the pasaenger. So fa r as the latter ia concerned, the British will be in position to dominate the aeaa aa they always have, unless we pull some smart rabbits out our maritime hat.

We shall be top dog in both quantity and quality of cargo i

^ 28,000-ton Capetown Oistle, the Ebpress of Scotland (nee Em­press of Japan)) and the Empreas of Australia, toe. Dominion Mark, Franconia, Aorangl, Queen of Bermuda, Asturias, and toe Dutchessea o f Athol, Bedford. Richmond and York.

Right here, if there were no further complications, is enough for our shipping men to worry about. But there is another gim­mick. Our Army completely re­converted our liners for trans­port use, tearing them up almost to toe hull and refitting their in­

craft. In passenger liners we terlors. I t will take at lea^ a

cratlc organization to uphold that stand.

Even before Senator Harry S. Truman's nomination waa official, Sidney Hillman, Political Action chairman, issued his statement of confidence in toe Miasourjan, leav­ing no chance for speculation on possible bitterness. A F L leaders went down the line for iVuman, although formally undeclared.

Not Opposed To Another Said Hillman: Support of Wal­

lace “did not carry with it opposi­tion to another candidate whom toe convention might select.

We believe that Senator Tru­man ia eminently qualified for the office of vice president. Hb will make a splendid rtinnlng mate for the president. We are confident that ROosevelt and Truman will be the winning team on Nov. 7. They will have" our complete and whole­hearted support”

Criticism, however, came from John J. O’Connor, former represen­tative from New York, who viewed! the CIO’s Impact on toe conven­tion as “un-American, truly as­tounding and alarming.” O’Connor was leader of an antl-New Deal Democratic group.

’Th is Influence,” said. O’Connor in a statement “ Is no less than amazing. The Democratic party has become the victim of a viola­tion of a great truism, probably first laid jdown by Plato, viz: 'One sure way to get fleas is to He down with dogs’.” ■ ^

shall emerge from this war as far behind the eight bail aa we went in.

A couple of obscure observers at the Aineiican Merchant Marine Institute recalled, offhand, loss.of the Presidents Coolldge, Harding, Harrison and Grant, the Santa Barbara, Santa (Jlara, Santa Ele­na, Stana Lucia, and at least two Export liners.

What does that leave? Presum­ably .tire President Line’s nine new ships built in 1940-1942 but never used in civirian trade; toe three Africans— Comet, Meteor and Planet—never used before the Government grabbed toem r Moore-McCormack’s Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay; Matson’s Lurllne, Maricossa and Monterey,

The America, toe Manhattan and toe Washington, best-known American transatlantic and cruise ships, sUU are afloat, but they have been written off for clidUan passenger use.

The old George Washington and America,' 1906-model Ger­man-built liners taken over a f t^ World W ar I, have been com­pletely modernized and atream- lined by the Army as transports, but nobody thinks they could pay their wav in competition with what the British, toe French, the Swedes or toe Dutch 'wlU have to offer.' The British have lost a lot of good liners. Among them were the -Empress of Britain and Can­ada, toe Athenia, Brittanic, Cale­donia, Carinthia, Andora Star and Dark Star, Georgia, Niagara and Transylvania. ■"

Imposing List .of Liners .. But they still have a mighty imposing. list of liners with bet­ter known names than tlm best we can offer: toe 83.000-t(m lux­ury liner Queen Elizabeth, the 81,000-ton de luxe Queen Mary, the 46,000-ton Aquitania, toe 35- 000-ton new Mauretania, toe new

Sanday School LessonThe Story of Deborah, Who Inspired

__ People to Wiii'^Their FreedomHer

By William E. OUroy, D. O,One of the strange contrasts of

history Is between toe power and influence that .women have exer­cised and toe part that' they have played in toe affairs of nations, and the fact that at most times and In moet* plaocs the position bf women has been in ferior . to” that of men, toe inferiority In some instances amounting to ac­tual degradation.

In Ehi^land, for instance, the contrast is marked by the fact that while even to our own times itoe.legal position o f women has been very much limited, two of England’s greatest aovereignSi Elizabeth and Victoria, .were women. ' In other lands and times, morwver, womei^ in spite o f their sea, have been outstand­ing in leadership and action. Their action' haa not always been for good. Evil women, as well as good women, have exercised g m t power; aomie women, like .^ th erin e o f

recordRussia,

o f goodhave a and bad

ed in overturning i t their sklir in a June l l salvage expedition in the Valdqs Arm, the Alaska Depart­ment Headquarters haa reported. The overturned boat’ haa been found but no bodlea^have been re­covered. Names of the men were not discIoMd.

Te Bstabllah iasiiranoe Unit

i July 22. - (( f )—Britain to about to,«atabIiah a M inirtiy of Social Insurance, it waa learnqd

itoM jt ^

mixed rule.

Among the laraelites women occupied an honorable yet some­what inferior place. Note,, for Instance, Saint Paul’s prejudice aj^dnst women aesuming any equal part with men in toe early church. Ybt Paul reveals how Important a place Priscilla and other good women occupied - in

early days o f Christianity— i f he had not been fd influenced by prejudices in this matter he might have remembered the greatneqs o f Deborah, and the part ahe played, in a time of danger and crisis, and toe way in which she saved Israel.

Deborah stands as one o f the magnificent, heroic figures in his­tory; a woman as remarkabls In bar strength o f character, devo- tkm to her poopM. sad eapacity for action aa Joan or Are! She was s BrotftolMA d V ^ P S awMc

'• a palm tree, and we read that toe - children of Israel came up to her for judgment. ' That in itself tells her character and wisdom. No oiie appointed her judge; she wasn’t elected. Her people had been conqhered and iii bondage for 20 years, cowed into' subjection by King Jabin of Cklnaan, and bis Captain Slsera, with their 900 chariots o f . iron. — Deborah ruled by force of character and toe peo­ple came to her because they trusted, her.

She 'was like a Ibader of an underground movement among an -enslaved people. But in her heart and her hopes she was not afraid o f Sisera and his Iron chat^ lots. She trusted In Gk>d and she watched, for too hour to strike, and she planned her strategy. When the hour came ahe sent for Barak, the soldier. Barak wasn't a coward; but he was a soldier, accustomed to measure forces and chances of success. When Deb­orah told of her strategy and urged him to go against Sisera,. he refused to go unless Deborah went with hint There waa aly humor in Deborah’s answer. She would go, but all toe honor o f the victory would go to a woman. Barak was wiqp enough to aee jiow much greater waa Deborsh, even If she waa a woman. To hla credit be It said that be cared more for the result than fo r the honor.

So he led his forcea to M L Tabor, and the victory waa com­plete. Sisera fled, to meet death by toe hand o f JaeL

But Deborah was iSe^ reiU* con­queror and the reql hero. Mfith- out her, Barak wouldn’t have dared attack.

BlesBings on the man who hiur a Deborah to. go with him and inspire him with faith and cour­age when be has a job to do! The war la revealing many De- boraha today.

year to put toe first American liner back into toe passenger business.

The British, on toe contrary, did a minimum of interior chang­ing. It is estimated that at least one of toe two Queens can be plying regularly between New York and Southampton within three montoa after toe Cunard line gets them back.

Intensive CompetitionThere wUi also be intensive

competition from such other name liners as the French He de France, Pasteur and de Grasse; the Dutch New Amsterdam: toe- Norwegian Bergensfjord; toe Swedish Grips- holm and Drottingholm and per­haps toe Stockholm, never yet de­livered by its Italian builders. Also too German Berlin, MUwaukeee, St. Louis and . Potsdam—under some other flag, perhaps—may be In the race.

And finally there is dread of air transport; Huge, fast, com­fortable, safe air liners coiild be flying from New York to the cap­itals o f the world ‘ very quickly after peace returns. Undoubted­ly they v/lll. < ‘

I t is not to be assumed that barnstorming teachers, clerks and small businesi- men will be pre­pared to pay air fares at once, but there will be plenty o f o.toers who-can and will pay that toll— and they will be toe cream-of- the-crop passengers, who, on a .ship, would occupy de luxe cab­ins and expensive suites— whose patronage might mean the dif­ference between profit and loss in passenger operation.

Seen as ‘Splinter’ Rather Than Plank

New York, July 22.—(J>)--The National Association for toe Ad- vrfheement of Colored People says toe part o f the Democratic plat­form concerning Negroes could be best characterized aa a splinter”

rather than a plank.“ Badgered by professional

bigots from toe south and dictated to by northern political machines more Interested' In votes than principle, toe Democratic moun­tain labored and brought forth a mouse of evasion,” toe association said in a statemenL

Neither toe Republican nor Democratic platform on toe Ne­gro ” ia satisfactory to Intelligent Negroes,” the statement added.

Testifies Letters Colored • Charged by toe government

With holding mental reservations when he became naturalized In 1938 and that he had openly fav­ored the Nazi cause, Siegel testi­fied that he had colored letters to hia mother In Germany.

‘T may have written to her that I would return because, after she lost her husband and became a cripple, she always wrote asking me to share the remainder of her life in Germany,” he stated. ■

He offered numerous real estate purchases by him as evidence that he intended to stay in this country and declared that, among his at­tempts to aid the war effort of the United States, he had -delivered a “ pep talk’ to nis students to dis­pel any feeling of pacificism they might be harboring.

Explains PoUtioal Theories In his effort to prove he had not

sworn falsely in taking his oath of allegiance to toe United States, Siegel, father of two children, ex- plaliied' his political theories to the court.

" I have always held the pet idea,” be said, "that toe three great countries,' toe United States, Great Britain and Germany, should agree on some common policy.. I f t ^ y once agreed on common aims and spheres of InteresL their strength would be i-jual and no country would be tempted to wage war. It is in this connection-that I spoke against Roosevelt’s for­eign policies which continued to frustrate my pet idea.”

He explain^ he. had expressed satisfaction when Germany ’’go t even” with France because ” I went through toe German defeat o f 1918, I expressed- sadness at toe Inva- sloii of the smaller countries like Holland, however,” he added.

Thomas J. Dodd, Jr., special as­sistant to toe attorney general, representing toe government ex­pects to begin cross-examination o f Siegel early next week.

Meats, Fata, EkuBook Four red sUmps as

through Z8 valid Indefinitely.Processed Foods

Book. Four blue stamps astorougl. Z8, anc AS valid Indefi­nitely.

SugarBook Four stamps 30, 31, and 32

valid indefinitely for five {^unds each; stamp 40 food for five pounds for home canning through Feb. 28, 1945;

ShoesAirplane stamps 1 and 2 in Book

Three valid Indefinitely.Gasoline'

In northeast and southeast 10-A coupons good for three gallons through Aug- '8. Elsewhere. 12-A coupons good for three gallons

f through Sept 21. B-8, B-41, OS 04 coupons good everywhere for flva gallons.

Fuel OUPeriod Four and Five conpona

valid in all ana,, through Sept 80; new period one coupons may ba used as soon as received frote ration boards.

The Local War Price and Ra­tioning Board is locatec. In the Un- coln school, opposite the poet of-* flee. New office hours are as fol­lows:

Monday, 10 a. m. to 4:30. p. m.'Tuesday, closed all day.Wednesday, 2 to 6:15 p. m.Thursday, 10 a. m.- to 5:15 p. m.Friday, 10 a. m. to 5:15 p. m.Saturday, 10 a. m. to 12:80 p. te.The telephone number Is 2-0494.

Evacuee Trains Behind Schedule

liftiiig. or modifying of blackout regulations next winter. Morrison -said he hopes to make . an aa« nouncement Atig. 13, when summer time ends.

Inin, Spain, ■ July 22.—(J*)—De­layed In Fraiyce because'of rail traffic disrupted by Allied bomb­ings and partisan advances, trains with 414 British civilians and oth­er evacuees, scheduled to'arrive at toe French-Spanlsh border July 6, finally pulled into Irun yesterday.

The trains proceeded to Lisbon, where toe evacuees are to be ex­changed for German nationals now. in Lisbon harbor aboard toe Swedish liner Drottnlngholm.

May Modify Blackout

London, July 22.—(Ji)—Homo Security Minister Herbert S. Mor­rison said today he had been con­ferring with “ chiefs of services and other leaders” on toe possible

Brazilians Lose Naval Auxiliai^

Rio de Janeiro, July_.22.—(J^ — The Brasilian Navy • ministry an­nounced ftoday that toe Navy aux­iliary vessel “ 'Vital de Oliveira,” ' had been torpedoed and sunk by an enemy submarine.

The announcement gave no de­tails as to time or place, but most of the crew was rescued and brought to this port.

(Jane's Fighting Ships lists the “Vital de OUvelra” as having a displacement o f 1300 tons, carry­ing two four-inch guns and tw « six-pounder and launched in 1910.)

Papers to Regain Control of News

Algiers, July 22.— (JP>— Henry Bonnet. Information minister of the French Committee 'o f Nation­al Liberation, said yesterday that Agence Fraiicalse de Press, now subsidised by the committee, would be returned to toe control o f French newspapers aa soon Os conditions within France permit.

He said tge committee's June 22 decree designating Agence Fran- caiae as the only authorized newrs distributing agency in France was “apparently . misunderstood abroad.” H e . InsiatM that the de­cree waa only a temporary meas­ure.

Congratulated on EsMpe

London, July 73.—{JP)— A Tokyo broadcast said today that -Emperor Hirohlto 9>f Japan had sent a message to 'A do lf Hitler congratu­lating him on escaping assassina­tion.

m / u n / M G

f l i P A I R S

Attention Home Owners

Oiir expert earpentera are now available for any and nil types of home re; pairs and alterations.

Estimates cheerfully given.

Wm. F. JohnsonBroad Street'

'TELEPHONE 7426Or Can Artoitr Ayers

Coventry — Tel OW -W d

"Habit is a cable; we weave a thread, of it every day,**

UNION SF.RVICE.Sof the

EMANUEL AND CONCORDIA LUTHERAN CHURCHES

Sunday, July 23AT 10:30 .4. M.

At the

Concordia LutheranGarden and Winter Streets.

REV. KARL RICHTER, Pastor.FRED B. WERNER, Organist.DAVID HUTCHINSON, Soloist.

YOU ARE WELCOMEl

jShmuner dsiviMig danger sdgnalsL

UNION SERVICECENTER CONGREGATIONAL AND

SOUTH METHODIST CHURCHESAt ■

South Methodist ChurchMain Street and Hartford Road

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

* ^ e Religion We Losq and the Religion We Km p .**

1'

~T:00P.M..OUTDOOR VESPER SERVICE

Sermon By Rev. Otis Lee Monson, Winimantie Methodist Church.

\ . a l l WELCOMEl

Snmmcr driving, can be hard on tire* and dangerou* ta engines unless proper precautions are taken. T o save rubber, let your Pontiac dealer repair even the smallest- cracks— and be sure your car's front wheels are ‘in alignment. T o save engine wear,

^ BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS

K E f f _ _

AMERICA FRU!

let your Pontiac dealer check crankcase ventilation. These trouble sources, plus others, are w atched—and co rrec ted — when- you see your Pontiac dealer n gm lsr ly .

F a in ts to R a m a m b a n‘ I ;• ■

• We have competent me­chanics

• We-use genuine parts

• Wp have spqcially-designed fopls to r^uce repair .tisM

1,

j - r e F / s r e r r a t

COLE MOTORSRl-93 Center StrsH

Page 3: Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjular iiw

FOUR . 'r M A N C H C S T C i'R ITVBJMIWG H B K A l iP , M A IVCTIE3TC IC ,' CTJNH., S A T U R D A Y , J U L Y 22, 1 M 4 HAITUHESTBK BTENING HlIKALD, HAX'lLJHESTEn. OOWW-. 5ATUKDAT, JULT 22, 194« FA O R T IV i

Ifr. and Mrs. North Bow To Obstinate Doorman

imm lfe«tm ii A P VtataTM W rttw

Naw Tork—Two tUnfii happen- 0B6 Sunday afternoon 11 yeara

la OrMnwieh Village that IP save to the world o f make believe P w eo new aleuths: "Mr. and Mra

North.” The wife of the drama erlUc of the New York Sun, Mra. Mebard Lockridge, had an argu- anmt with the doorman o f the Whitney Muaeum o f American A rt

. (ha wmddn’t admit her becauae ahe waa carrying what he called a "hcndle”—ahe demurred It waa Juat a bunch o f flowerajf.

In a fine, female'huff ahe headed *19, liOMe SHd eklHoded the- epl- aode at her huaband, who bad a Mhanter-piece In the typewriter. He yanked It out and ran up a few pagea on hia' vefaSon of what p r i^ b ly happened at the muae- tun ahd It ultimately waa pub- Uahed In a magalne.

Franoea LockrWge Inalated on Sctttloua namea for the charac-

. tana—ahe waa aqueamlah about having Her own uaed—and thua "Mr. and Mra. North” were aprung Into the allck paper world.' CkdncldenUlly. Mra. Lnckridge began, aa people will, to write a murder myatery. She hadn't touch­ed a typewriter since she'd been a reporter In Knaaaa a t y 10 years .before. Certainly she hadn’t had -any personal experience with un- ' aatural death.

She almply had a penchant for Sgurlng out ways a neighbor

.Mrs. Richard Lockrldge ..She Makes Crime Pay.

■ V - inight ~be . murdered without the oopa catching the kilter until page 8S8. Lockrldge admired her plot­ting but thought a cerUin amount o f levity could be Injected into the thriller If "Mr. and Mrs. North*' wore along. Aa It turned out he waa righ t \

"W e wrote live novels . about the North's right there," Frances, eonlalned, nodding toward a tiny,

v%Qreaileratlcally neat study in ,1. their four room apartment over- y. looking Washington Square. Also

a Broadway play and 100 short Stories were tossed off by the

fi' Leckrldges In that same little room.■ "W e used to have fun doing It

<; (Dick Is noyir a Navy lleuUnant and the oollaboratldn la over for

the time being). For two or three months we would talk things over. I outlined the plot— made a list of characters and dreamed tip a set­ting. .

Lockridge typed out tbs results in about six weeks—and then there was another month spent in revisions. The radio show running now: "Mr. and Mrs. North” Wed' nesday nights at 8 o'clock over NBC is under the supervision of Frances. She doesn't write the show but the name belongs to her and Dick. They make $500 - a month on the radio rights.

The movie version— not done by them—netted the Lockridges only $10,000. However, they have cornforting royalties from amateur and summer theater rights. Also In on the North prosperity Is a restaurant around the comer from the Lockrldge’s.

Mr. and Mrs. North have run away with Mr. and Mrs. Lock' ridge. People at parties slip and call Frances Mrs. North." “ I have moments of being Mrs. North," Frances admits— “but not in pub­lic.”

Post-War Plans In Washkigti

vBuilding E x p a n s i o n > Indicates Big (govern*

ment It to Stay.

By Jack SUnnett -Washington — -Add poat - war

Idans: the "deoentralisation” of J| idincial Washington, bUt not the

-game kind o f decentralisation that has taken so many agencies to

; '.ether cities.This post-war plan Is the coii-

Oeptlon of the National Capital ’i; Fnrk and Planning commission, '' Beaded by MaJ. Gen. U. S. Grant i' Xn. The general doesn't make any

Jreat olalms for his post-war plan, e says it isn't anything that can

be tOMed off In five or even 15 Fears; but actually he's way ahead o f some of the post-war dreamers.

because they are going to start this year on one of the four new bridges across ths Potomac and No. 1 on the after-V-day priority Hat is the gigantic new Oeaeral Accounting Office building.

iCven visitors- to Washington rarely realise what the concentrS'- Uon of government along the Mall in the m’ile-and-a-half from the Capitol 'to the Lincoln Memorial jnOans. In this area, almost 300,000 government workers toE daily. The toaffiC congestion is torrific dur« ing morning and evening rush hours. From Silver Springs and Chevy Chase in Maryland and Alexandria In Virginia,, to mention only three suburban areas, thouS' ands o f workers have to converge on this heart of the working city.

Manchester Evening Herald

Claasifitid, AdvertisementsCount sis avaFsse words to a line

laitlala auaiaero and abbraviations eaeh.oouDl aa a word and eompound wolde aa two words. HlaimniD . lasries oi tbras llnsa

Uos ratss bar day Cor treasiani

VoellTo Merob It. is nCaSb Obarsa 1 otsl I CIS

I o t s l l l Ota otalll eta

A ll ordars tor irresular insartiooa will bo ebersad el tbs one tias rate.

Sneelal rates *or Ions tarm avary day advartistns aivan noon ragneat.

uai. e OetMaonttra Uays . . . i 1 t QbBSaonUvs Days . . . i t I Say ......................... Ill

Ads ordered eaneslled before tba ltd or Ith day will be oharasd only (or tba aotnal aumbarsol ifmaa tbs

abPaarad. eharsms at the rata samad but ao allowance or reruoda eaa ba made ob aii time ads atoopad after the flfth day

No ''till forbids"' display lloss ootbold. » ........'-Tba Herald will ooi ba raaponaibla tor mora than one loeorreet inser­tion of any advert laamant ardsrad (or mors ttaao one tima.

Tba ipadvartant omiasioa ot in- oorract publleatioo ot advartisins will be raotifled ooly by oancellallon of tba ebarare inada for tba'sarvlca tendered '

All edvartisementa luuei ooororm to etyle, copy and lyposrspby arllb rasufaitona enforced by the publlab-' era and tjiey ret'arTS ‘tba liaht to adit rtvita or rajeei any eaoy cod- aidarad oblaetionabla

CUrSINa HUUKS—Claasitlcd ads to ba poblisbad sams day must be reealved by It o'elork noon Satur- dartf io:to

Telephone Your Want AdsAds are aoesptad over taa tala-

bhooa at Ibe CUAKUB Aa TB ewan above as a'ooavanleDca to saver- I Sara, but tba CA8B RA'iBb win be

-aroapiad aa PULX PATMBNT If •aid at tba bualnaaa ottlea on or oa. (pra tba aavtotb day fotlowios tba

-Is**’'**®" el aacb ad otbarwiae tba CHAKtlB RATE will ba eollact-

Ifo rtVDontlblllty (ot^ •rrors to ft-di «rlll M antf

aooaracy eabnot b» cuftrbB-

Funeral Home Well Located

Holloran''s Is Most Con> venient on Center Street; Has Ambulance

The T. P. Hallonut Funeral Home located at 175 Center street Is one of quiet and dignity. This home is conveniently located and is wall known throughout Man­chester and vicinity. So many peo­ple who hnve used this modem fu­neral home have commented on its convenience and . mstfu), dAora- tions. I t is a hom^ well "equipped to handle all types of services at moderate tost. The rooms are fur- nislfed with dignity and taste and Mr. Holloran Is well known as a funeral director. You will find him ayaltable at all times to talk over matters pertaining to the services offered, at this modern funeral home. Hia experience through the years stand him in good stead In offering advice to people who need hia help ahd assistance. He offers a complete 24-hour service and the doors o f this home are never closed. You have only to phone him at 3060 and he will Immedl? ately respond.

His Ambulanee Men'iceO f course Mr. Holloran Is well

known for his ambulance service. H* has a large, completely equip­ped ambulance which Is an c ail 24 noura o f the day for tenhee. No one who has not experienced the discomfort of riding huddled in the back seat o f a car, can fully ap­preciate the absolute comfort of being moved In an ambulance

■ as Is the ambulAnce own- by Mr, Holloran. A a injured or

sick person can be moved In safe­ty in this perfectly equipped am bulance. Mr. Holloran and his as- siatanta are fully trained in the manner in which to handle Injured or sick people. An Invalid can be moved to a new honrie or to the shore fo r a health-giving vacation at an extremely moderate cosL I f you like, phone Mr, Holloran at 3060 and he will gladly quote prices for this service to you.

Accident victims have reason to be grateful for this swift-moving ambulance, for speed and careful handling are successful in getting an I n ju ^ person to a hospital. The first thought is of Mr. Hollo- ran'a ambulance and in a few min­utes he is speeding the Injured per son to the hospital. Remember his phone number 3060.

D ave Your Oil Changed Frequently This Summer

Painting Jobs | Are in Order *

Johnson Paint Company Is Headquarters for The Best in Market.

Now that summer weatheV with ^product which Van heartily en- its heat has arrived, no doubt you ' dorses, have had your oil changed to a thinner grade long ago, but Van's Service Station warns Its custom­ers that It Is necessary to have your oil changed frequently. Back In the days when everyone drove aa many miles as they wanted to. It WAS routine to have the oil changed every so often, but now

new set the next time you short trips, we are sometimes are at Van’s Service Station and

Champion Spark Plugs need no I Introduction to the people of Mao- ‘ cheater — they have been popular throughout the motoring years. I f : you are in need o f spark'plugs, you 'could not get a more dependable I product than Champion. They ; stand up and deliver where a lesser product gives out in a short time,

that our cars are used mainly for ,. Put in a

the necessity for , see what a difference they will oil. Strangely make In the performance o f your

carelesa about changing the enough. It is more important now to have the oil changed frequently than It was when we drove more. The next time you are In Van’s Service Station located at 427 Hartford Road, ask about this— they will gladly, explain the rea.son for this and .s<m that your oil Is changed.

WUI Prdva Its WorthI f you are a regular customer at

Van’s Service Station you are no stranger to ' McMillan Ring Free Motor Oil and you know Just how good It Is. Van's Service Station heartily recommends its use. and have been its agent for a long time. They will tell you o f niany customers who have tried It for the first time, only to return again, and again to' have this particularly fine motor oil put into their car. I t Is a jihproughly satisfactory

car.You customers o f Van’s Service

Station know of his Fast Battery Charger that ebargea the battery right In your car In 30 minutes. There is no fuss or bother. Just driir* in, lea-ve the battery right in your ear and In 30 minutes your car Is ready to start out on the road again.

You will find the service satis­factory In every respect at Van’s Ser\1ce’ Station. They take a gen­uine interest In you and your car and will do their best to keep your car in good running order. I f you have not been in the habit o f go­ing to this super Service Station, start right in now. I f you want to 'phqiie them to check your car oyer, the telephone number is 3868 and you will'be sure of a g o ^ Job, well done.

Have you been looking over the | paint Job on your house with a > critical eye recently and thinking that it Just w ill not weather an­other winter without a coat of paint?. I f so, better head for the Johnson Paint Company located at- 6M Main street Johnson Pamt Company Is headquarters fet Du­Pont Paints, and D u P ^ t on a paint can or Jar is ^-symbol of good paint. You are'sure o f a long lasting paint, qn4 that will stand up through hot sun and freeslng weather and retain its gloss and color. You -will find a large range o f colors, to choose from, but if by chance you want a slightly differ­ent shade than that shown on the chart Just consult Mr. Johnson. He la an expert In this matter- and (Will gladly give advice on what matures to buy to ^produce the color you have In.mlno. While you are looking fo r outside paint, you might be interested in looking over the color chart for inside paints. You will find a wide assortment of colors to choose from.

Of courap, people In Manchester know that Johnson Paint Company is the logical place to go to pick out wallpaper. There are so many patterns to pick from It really Lp quite a problem to decide Just which p a ^ r you like the best. One thing you may be sure of, the paper you chqose wllT ^ fadeproof and waterproof. No longer do we wonder If the paper we choose

•With its delicate design will -with-, stand the sunlight. We know that it will, that Its colors will be Just as pretty at the end of a few'yeara as It is the day It -was put on. F o f the family with small children, we suggest that you look at the at­tractive designs in washable paper. They are so attractive and no one would guess that the paper la washable— but what a relief if la to the mother o f small children! No more worries about little dirty finger smeard on the new wall paper. A swish of a cloth and they dlsapppear.

Don't put off shopping at:<John- son Pahrt-Company another “day, call them at 6^ and get busy right now.,

What even few residents realise Is 'that nearly 200,000 of these governmen*- workers are housed in "temporary” buildings. These range from the little cracker box- ee that have been tossed up along the Mall in the last two years to the elongated, three-story' Navy- .and Munitions buildings, which were built as temporaries in World W ar L

The commission has on its agen- -da. the rasing of all these tempo- mries and. in the vicinity of the Washinli^'on monumept and the Lincoln Memorial, landscaping the terrain and. aimidlng construction of any other^uildh\gs In that area.

Instead the new constructloih will push south and east toward the Anaeostia river w hen there now is a slum section.

The four ne\ bridges will open up ‘ new residential dietricta Iti Virginia and spread the traffic from those already settled. The sprawling Pentagon building Is already a step in the direction of decentralization and In post-war years probably it can house both the Army and Navyr*-

With that burden off the heart- of-the-city and the huge new GAO scheduled to break ground at-Fifth and G streets NW, about three blocks outside the present Jamipad quadrangle, MaJ. Gm . Grant’s commission has gone fa r toward realization o f its post-war dream. _ A n InterMtlng factor in the rommisaion's plans is that it does materially reducing the number of not consider there’s a chance of government workers In Washing- ton and all blueprints are based b'n about the same number we now havii. That fits Into the i^re- dictlo'n frequently heard here, even by some o f the economy-minded congressmen: "B ig government is here bo stay.” —.

RedCross

Notes *

Offic*, 958 Mala at.—TM. 6687

Production—Center closed until soma time In September.

Surgical Dressings — Monday evening 7:30-10:00, Center church; Wednesday, 10 a- m.-4:30 p. m„ American Legion hall.

Nutritlon^Enroll for'new class; call office or Miss Jensen, 4040.

Blood Donors— Next mobile unit visit Auguat 25; make ap­pointments now with Mrs. Custer, 3017.

Fined For Klrking Dog

Denver— OP)—W. J. D o r ^ 66, waa fined $}5 by County Judge C. Edgar Kettering on a woman's complaint that he kicked her bull­dog out' of his tulip garden In vio- lation 'of a city ordinance agatnst .chielty to animals. Doran protest-

in vain, that he didn’t dislike dogs. In fact, ,■ he said, ha once owned,a dog which had been -bis beat friend, next to hia wlfa.

VOLUNTEER BLANH ^ BiX)OD DONOR SERVICE Manchester Chapter, The Aneiicaa R ^ Cross

1 Want To Donate BkMtd for tho Aitey and Nary

^^ ***^^ * * • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• •0*«»»«*00«jp*«HOaH|^

Phono . . . . . . . . Age,T8-20.. . . Age, 21-60s' pbaek hoar yon prefer appointment: .* ' 12-1...,, J-2. . . . . 2-8..... S-4......

F1U in and mail to ,Americhn Bed CroMi Houee A Hale Building — ^

Monday—Nurses' Aides at the hospital.Surgical , Dresslnga, Center

Church hall, 7:30 p. m.' Tuesday— ,

Nurses’ Aides at the hospital.Home Service commlttea met­

ing, 8 p. m., e'haptar office..Wednesday— ^N uraea'A ldea'at the hospital.Surgical Oresslngat American

Legion hall. 'Thursday—Nurses’ Aides at the hospital.Friday—Nurses' Aides at the hospital.Saturday—Nurses' Aides at tlie hospital.Chapter office. cloMd in 'a fte r ­

noon.Nutiltioa and Canteen

Plana are—iindap—way to start a new class In nutrition, or {lome feeding, Just as soon aa there ara a sufflrient number o f persons en­rolled fo r I t TbU will ba a day­time clam', and w ill cover. ^ phases" o f planning, purchasing and .praparing food fo r tha fam­ily,' helping to removy the sting from shortages .and rationing. Further information may be ob­tained by calling the Red Cross office, 6637, and enrollmenta may be made m that maimar.

When this course Is completed, those persona who wish to do oo may continue on in the course In Canteen, or group feeding, and qualify to become members o f tha Canteen Corps, which plana and prepares the snacka and- meals

when the blood donor mobile unit Is In town. More Canteen work-« era are very neces.wy, and this provides a good Opportunity for women who want to give some time and service to the Red Cross, but who cannot sew or knit or be Nurses'. Aides.

Surgical Dressings ' ThUi past week wa.s a goo<I one

for surgical dresslnga, and the cbmmittse la very much gratified at the response to the appeals for more help. Monday evening the parish hall at Center church -was opened, and over .one hundred workers turned out and accom­plished a tremendous amount. On Wednesday, the attendance at the American*Legion Hall was much improved, and there, too, a lot of work was done. I f attendance continues to be so good. It looks as thoii.gh the quota could be fin­ished very quickly, and tha com­mittee has counted upon the con­tinued help o f these voluntelrs and has promised Area Head­quarters that the 66,000 dressings

HEIP VOUR CAR a t flGHTINO PAR

By Ravtag t t avv ioed A t \ # A k J ^ C 8BKVIVB ▼ A n d STA 'nO N

4Xt RartfWd Bead TeL tiM

ROOFINGAsphalt Shingles Flat or Built Up

Tin Roofs - All Typos Handled By YOUR LOCAL ROOFER:

E D CO UG H LIN .17707 390 Woodland Street

SEE WARD^S FIRSTFOR A COMPLETE LINB OP ROOFING, INSULA- tIOIL BUILDING MATERIALS, PLUMBING AND

HEATING SUPPLIES

I V lo n t g o m e r y W ard824-828 Main SL TeL 6161

would be finished and on their way within the next two weeks.

Benefit by Stocking

Carlisle, Two fisher­men from Philadelphia said they never saw such trout cishing In Pennsylvania. Both took tha lim it from Letort spring. Then they learned the spot had been stocked with 150 trout Just 45 minutes earlier. ,

See The "Wine Doctor.n

.At ■ ■

FRED'S PACKAGE

STO R E D117 Spruce Street

The proper wtoeo, proparty served with the right fooda. eoa add much to your eojoymaat ait a meal. For the boot la wtooa for every oeeaolaa. eoma bera sad get our advioe. tea, ragaid- lag OM sorving el ■ama

A good suntan oil can be made by mixing one cup of vinegar, one cup o f olive oil and one tea- spoodtul o f Iodine. Black tea can be substituted for Iodine In case o f allergy.

QUALITY P R I N T IN G I

n w priattng |olr w ade (er y e a w i l l

setle- iry, be-

H wlU be prodooed loodera, atllriaat ear aatlmete.Depaadabla Qaollty —

WILLIAM H. 8CH1BLDGBUS Sproee Bteeat fbL

CHRYSLER, DE SOTO, PLYM O UTH

SERVICE AND GENUINE PARTS

E X PE R T -A U TO M O B Ii.E R EPAffi W O R K

DEFOT SQUARE GARAGEBniddt Rey, Prop. *

241 NO. MAIN STREET TEU ills

^ -^ F O R -* .Dupont Paint Producto

WALLPAPER PICTURE FRAM ING

MIRRORSS B B ' .

JOHNSON PAINT CO.699 MAIN STREET TEL. 9884

GET ONE OP OUR PERAM NENlis '

For C o ro p l^ SattafaeUea . . . and have year hair styled fo r Sommer. Easier t « keep looking neat and lovely.

WELDON BEAUTY STUDIO

.•rilE CAR YO U O W N. . . I f In rnanlng ordw, is a real aaoet. Wa ara atiU a long ways from sew cars. Let as help beep yoor present ear In the best possible mechanical oonditioii. Be eonslstent aboet having It. cheeked and servioed here. I t win pay.

V ,

COOK’S SERVICE ST A.Maacheater Green Phone 8896

Landscapingand

Tree. SurgeryConn. State License Work Carefully and

Neatly Done.

JOHN S. WOLCOTT ft SON111 Hell^tot at. Phene 8697

J. R. BraithwaiteKejrs Made, Locks Repaired

‘-Tooh Ground— Lawn Mowers Sharpened

Electrical Uttlitiea Re-ConditionedGuns Repaired

52 Pearl St. Phone 4200

W e Have Been in the Plumbing and Heat­ing Business for Many Years.Rely on our etperience and derviee for bftit results.

Johnson & Little145 Ma in street

Phone 5876

GIBSON 'SGARAGE

B. B. OUwag . P rap,

BBAnWheel AUgameat.

GOrimretor(lervteet

185 Main SL Phone 5012.

Bny Yonr Hardwire

and Housewares

Needs at

CAMPBELL'S;Hardware Store

Cor. Main and Mlddle'fVk.

Griswold'sAtlantTc

Service Station289 Mala Strsdt

GenerbI Automobile . Service

L B C L B R C F U N E R A L S E R Y J O L —

WbltW. a. Loalan. Otteatat.

TIW Oaarwoy lb

• s 'u A ^ V * , MAMtaunmni'

HIGH GRADEPRINTING

JOB AND COMMERCIAL PRINTING

Prompt and Bfficieiit Printing of An .HInda

COMMUNITY PRESSA. B. Holmca J. Mr Bar*Cor. No. Main and Nn. Seheol

Streets — Telephone 5727

Get Yoor Supplips Of

Ox-Line PaintNow for Those PaIntInR Job&

Manchester Hardware Co.

Peter OattaMo — Joseph Bairett Prupe.

248 North Main Street . TeL 6265

Johnson Bros.Electrical Contractors

53.3 Main Street *TeL 6227 • 7606

We Win Glady Give You Bstimatee.

BILL'S TIREand

REPAIR SHOPWn. H. Green. Prop.

Columbia end Elk Bicycles. U. 8. Urea. <

Repairs. Servlee. Acecasories.

180 Spruce SL Phone 5450

KRAUSE'SGREENHOUSES

S21 Hartford Oeod Maaehestar

Spaelal Atlaattoa Olveo Po «PlMMie Ordam IW. STeo. apeetaUots la Pa- aeraJ sad Wad- d l a g Arraage- la e a ^

Dot Flowers.Potted Pleats.

Cattle and Poultry<•

Are 'BrinRing Top Prices!

M O O N 'S FEEDSrOR BEST RESULIBI

LARSEN'SREED SERVICE ,

is Depot deeare Phaea M9S

. T. P. HolloranFUNERAL HOME

Ideally*why traoi tha baay thotoegb- (a m Ptatlactlva Barylag ihUM-

AMBIILANCB SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT

175 Ceatar 8L IPboae 8060

CAPITOL GRINDING CX).

.18 Main 8L . Tel. 7958“When rhlnge Are UuO. Our Bosineae^ Good’' SAWS OF ALL KINDS

8B1 AND FILED Rand and Power

Lawnmowere Sharpened and Overhauled

Ageota tor NaemUlaa tOL— Osaf tor AIMMsMI OaghMa

Thara's a day coming when the enemy w ill be licked, beaten, whipped to a fare-thee-well—every last ves­tige of fight knocked out of him. ^

And there’s a day coming when every mother’s son o f us w ill want to stand up and yell, to cheer ourselves

• hoarse over the greatest victory in history.But let's not start the cheering yet.In fact, let’s not start it at a ll—over here. Let’s leave

it to the fellow s who are doing the job—the only

fellows who wittx^know when it’s done—to begin the celebrating. \

t

Our leaders have told, us over and over again mat the smashing of the Axis Will be a islow job, a danger­ous job, a bloody job. \ . .

And they’ve told us what oilr own comnion sense confirms: that if we at home staH throwing our hats in the air and easing up before thk^ob’s completely

done, it w ill be slower, more dangerous, bloodier.R igh t now, it’s still Up to us to buy W ar Bonds—

and to keep on buying W ar Bonds.

Let's do that. Let’s keep bearing down till we get the. news of final victory from the only place such news* can come: the battle-line. \

I f we do that, w e ll have tho right to join the cheer­ing when the time comes.

ANDERSON GREENHOUSES ANDERSON & JOHNSON BANTLY O IL COMPANY * .

J.^F. BARSTOW.F. E. BRAY

. JOHN B. BURKE FUNERAL MOME - BURSACK BROTHERS

CAPITOL GRINDING CO. CARROLL CUT RATE , V

CARTER Ch e v r o l e t c o ., in c . C A V E rS GRILL

c e n t e r PHARMACY CORNER SODA SHOP

'■A--

DAVIS HOME BAKERY D EW EY.R iaiM AN CO.

DILLON SALES An 6 SERVICE J A ^ ’ BEAUTY SALON FTNDeL l a n d SWANSON

FOSTER’S M ARKET FRED’S PACKAGE STORE GORMAN MOTOR SALES

1 _^E O R G E L. GRAZIADIO JOHNSON & U T T L ^

LARSEN’S FEED SERVICE MANCHESTER DRY CLEANERS

■ MANCHESTER HARDWARE CO.. MANCHESTER MEMORIAL CO. IVIANGHESTER PUBUC M ARKET MAPLE SUPER SHELL STATION

METTER’ S SMOKE SHOP M ILIKOW SKI, THE FLORIST

MURPHY’S IIESTAURANT AND BOWLING NOREN’S Q UALITY FOOD STORE

NORTH END PACKAGE STORE OAK ST. PACKAGE STORE .

B. D. PEARL, FURNITURE-APPLIANCES PANTALEO BROTHERS

PARK H nX JTO W E R SHOP PENTLANdT t HE n^ORIST

QUISH FUNERAL HOME W ILLIAM H. SCHIELDGE-PRINTINC

THE SEAMAN FUEL & SUPPLY CO.STATE SHOE REPAIR SHOP

_ _ U. S. CLEANERSW . D. STAR MARKET

WERBNER’S SHOE STORE WEST SIDE DAIRY

WILROSE DRESS SHOP L . T b WOODCO.

4

Page 4: Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjular iiw

W - r''"- -> ..... •y - '

t *«l3

WOB SIX

Manchester Evening Herald

IMiMt Com. iCt^HT m i

1 M AN CH ESTER EVEN IN G H ER A LD . M A N C ^ S T E R . C O N N , 5A T U R D A T , JU LT 72. 194«

■IncloDoU woitoni

MAtmmMltl IMM 9»f*p»f**** *

rto spn ' o'Mag28.*a »s:::::::feSTbo

onUtli

- orw> rwMw.. „.J0O I# •oduolvoll' Hoo Of r*pvl>Ue»tUm of •■• ‘ to M or Mt

0i>4•U now* 4Mr*fo>>f ^ I L r j

fUopoOruiii

Inc.

._j»U»Uo«t of opofioJ or* oloo ro*o^o4.

*t of >f. r. *• »*rru»

VubtkJolluaTortt.

TO* l^ywflotr

a niMBWr* HUMAU o r

;'js;J5ni5i!ir.:»W'o'¥•atiMiArr July n

IV lif T thimui MmI< ItBowtor M»ny •- Trun»n I* po

pool Ur* Moot to 0>* Domoc r*tw Ucket, M O orm or m«tMr is posiurf assst in ths sorrsspofldiAif pcMritisn si| tfcs lUpwWiinn' Uckst, 8en»t«r TrumM was not asisetad to be • poafttrs afsat. Altar Jamas r . B/nias bad baso atiminatad. th* Oswocfattc oonvantion.bad no iwaitlr* asists to eboosa from. It took tsM tor Truman a# an aseaba from srbat it tboufbt to bs a US' biuty. It was probably eorraet in jiidKlnc Vis* rrsMdsnt Wallasa to

' bo Busb • Uability, avsn tbough it may bar* baan wronf in aoma. j< It* masons for n ftettof Wallasa

Tba whoia procass by wbisb tba questton visa prasidansywas iattlad^ mora intarastinc and 4gnifleant and ravaaltnf than the astual idanUty of tbs aaadl- date Wmsalf. fanator Truman, as Candidato Dsway is Ukaty to eau, iTH srlgin^y sponsorad by a Missouri poUtisal gaag as bad as any bt this sountry. Whan tha pane was pioaadutad and bustod, Banatar Tnunan saad* good, bon orably, an bis own. Ha ssoms to have Iwsn'a batter than avaraga nanator. bandUng bis invaaUgation of war eontracta intsUlgantly and with soma d^ifsa of non partisan

ConnecticutY a n k e e

By A. B. 0.

out a <X‘hltc flag. And that will be the surrender march through Ber- Um refusoi ol miliiono'd <Jl«rw*no, Ho has ovary one of them In hu tivlliao and soidlor. to go down io j proper post of dishonor.tha Wtur, bloody and with Hitler ; . ■ ■■ ..........end bis Noais, ‘ Hitlar and .bia tfMts know, always bav# known, that there could ba no ordinary brand of dafeU for tham in this war. ISIthar thay win. or tbay dia.Undarstandahiy. than. Hltiar and his Nssis have tba datorminatian of aomarqd besots, the datormina> tian to i l^ t an to the end. to ^ U M mush Mood s* can b* spiUad.

They bava, tor nionths past, been trying to persuade the Oaf' mao p * ^ , tba Oarnun army, to follow them into this Anal def^ar- •u biood'bath. *ut that even a small group of Oermans Mwutd determine to free Oarmaoy of this horrible obligation is evidence enough that tha death pact is not going to he kept. Oermans outside Hitler and the Nasis ars going to end this war, to spar* Oarman lives, to spar* Ckrmany damage, to try to save aomathing for an- other war, now that HiOar's war has been lost. That is the hand' wrtUng Hitter can ssa on tha wall of avsn Ms moat tmpregnsMs chamber.

The Gernuia Paul Revere

Hitldr Ad Tbd AUMThe stotomant of Oanaral Hoff>

msistor foUowing bis capture by tha Rad Army makes intoresting, fascinating roadlng. But tba im- pUcations of bis Jtotemant should bo flatly rotootsd by AUlad minds.

What Oeneral iM m eister did was to denounce Hitler and place on him the blame for every 'impow> tant Nasi defeat an the Rijasiaa front He doeumantad bis charges wan with revelation of tba dars be himself roeMved-Horders not adapted to tba reaUUa* of tba tlussian offensive, and orders wtaieb seemingly mad* bis own d*. fast and eaptur* inavttabi*. And then, for good maasurs, this <!«> man ganarsl throw to a porsonal daseription of Hitler blmaalf, as a* appaatod at a iweant pep nweting of Oerman generals. Tb» dsserip« tlon strongly siiggaatod tbgt Hitr l

Assuming that Oovsmor Bald- wih wins r*aiaetion and than baa tha instinct to make Ms mark on the atato with something more than routine admnilstration, wbat would be .the most serious obsto' cles in his path?

On* ean begia Msiiiw, as the •ret ehatacls. tbs Oovarnor's awa piaaaaat aatar*. Ha baa. at various parted* la Us eflrear. caged anm aenm remoto Date* aassWiy t o taka a drastic past' tiaa. But th* Dutch strUa must h* thia sad rathar aaeUy swayed by softer lastiaetst it dees act stoy domlaaat Isag. Thus,, alfhengb hs had aerve easugb to preps** tbs origlaal dual Jab bilC he sat omOow aito pisasaatly avaaiva at his dealt while it was betag emaseniatsd

Thus. whUa Ito oaes aough to read a cst' out sf the party, be

later eaaw to accept that ■am* leader a* an* *f U* own Impor- taat local Usutsaant*. .Tba strong, th* right tbiin I*

seldom pleasant, in politics. Oov' amor Baldwin, when be finds out bow positively unpleasant and in­convenient it can be, is capable of

get tough

13(40->WNBC—Parade of Btor*. AfliSO^-WnO —

I /V ..

turning“ frlenAy

agreeable. He is_____ iy" Oovemor, really friend

ly to everybody, not like Cross, who had warmth for no on*. This makes him likeable, but It Is not logically the perfset equipment for progress and reform, which al­ways offend soma one Involved In

U O o v er^ Baldwin does turn consIstonUy purposeful, he will, of oourse, And ranged against him those stolid yet not unclcver forces of Inertia who often seem tba real nnsssn government of Connecti­cut They are fond of decreeing that nothing shall ever happen. Tbs Idas of change is In itself re­pugnant to them, long before tb*y even know what tba change pro posed may be.

This O op^ttcut tendency le meet ploassntly expressed In the terns **lsuid of steady Habits." ■lore accurate descriptions are

>(S98SI|*

it

1.1

> But it was not Banator Tru- asan’s reeerd wblob was in the

of th* convention. The ^aet la that tha rejecUon of

'Wa]lad»..9ra* the main concern of majority d f the delegatee, and that a large section of this majority, from the Southern atptes, waa against Wallace be- eauae he had liberal ideas'rrgard- Ing ths place of the Negrtf \ln Amarican life. This kind of oppo- altion honored Wallace, even when

succeeded In defeating him. Ithough the defeat of Wallace

may^'kave been politically wise, at least onSvOf the main reasons for that defe«'5^M an unworthy rea- son..

An equally iln^rthy reason prevented the selecusn of Byrnes, th* convention's best iltomatlv*. Here It .waa not Southernkl^try which administered the vet^.put the cupidity pf the supposedly. lUK oral, the supposedly crusading CIO. It turned thumbs down ou Byrnes because, as director of eco­nomic stabilisation on the home front, he had courageously Insist­ed that the “Uttle Steel Formula" be held against the wage-seeking demands of CIO unions. If that formula hadn’t been held as well as It has been held, we would all now be In thCj throes of .inflation. Standing firm behind that formu­la waa, then, one of the best acta of Byrnes’ public life, and should, in a fair and intelligent democra­cy, have been a cogent argument for his nomination. .

Between ita Southern bigots and jts would-be CIO dictatorship, tha Democratic party had little true choice of Its bwn.

--------------------------

Death Pact Won’t Be Kept« ■1 After the real thli^ of an actu-

al attempt on Hitler’* life, any J kind of hopeful rumor and epecu-

latlon U Ucepsed' from this time CO. We will have tales of Hitler retreating in fear to bis mountain tower, tales of German troope la revolt, tale* of Pruaeian plots— In short, on* might as well start his Own favorite rumor.

Behind ell this smoke oT rumor, '^ Iher* will be some tire. Tba offl-

.glal- statements of Hitler and oth- Naxi leaders are proof enough

[«g that.That fir* will not be put out,

matter what new blood baths and Himmler may ilecrea.

will spread. And aome daiy, it

ipta th* front lines, end we

opposite our troops wiU their, own officers and put

ler himself w m nottUng Ise* than insane. It notod, vary significant­ly, that although the younger gen­erals appsarsd to think with HH- Isr, ths wts* eld tradltion'ai men of ths German army were cool to­ward him 'end distinctly of their own mind.' All this is treated, by the Mos­cow' press, and by the American press too, as if It were a sensa­tion. On the surface, of course, it is news for a German general to be criticizing Hitler.

Actually, however, there was nothing unexpected about such a statement. It was Inevitable that, sooner or later, the traditional war lords of Germany should try to establish alibi for their de­feat in this war.. It was inevitable that they should try to make Hit-

S their alibi. It is inevitable that y will try to get Into the mind the German people;, into the

history hoQks of tha world, the idea that tW .German high com­mand could have won this war—if it had not been for the fanatic, lU' natlc Interference of a man named Hitler.

Hitler waa able to lead the GeC' man people into this new war only, because he was a successful ealee-man of tha idea that Germany could have , won the first world

ar—if only it had not been for a hdme front stab In the back to the German armies at the front Ac­tually, course, Germany only sued for peaes In 1918 because the Army sent woH back home" that it was beaten aim ^uld not fight on.

Now, the traditlonarx^rmanarmy clique Is already prep^ng its argtiment for a third wdrld war. The argument is and will be that this war could have been won if only the German High Com­mand had not been saddled with a lunatic.

To. the nourUbment of this Idea, old line^Germah officers can be expected to devot* every talent from this time on. Captured, they will denounce Hitler. They kre not unlikely to provoke their 'own dismissals from important com­mands, Bo-that thejTwiu not be in charge at the moment of defeat. They are not beyond awassinating Hitler in dramatic proof of their differences with. him’. When von Rundstedt left the western command, he probably b eg^ planning Ms memoirs, in which Hitler will be proved the goat But although they may slip and surrender and retire their way out of the final act of this war, there need niH be the slight- eet doubt that .'they themselves have their full ahare of .responsi­bility for Germany’s defeat They produced their military best and Hitter actiuttly waa only their great tool, who produced for them ttie war they wanted anil then ceased to be of importance, until

present need for an alibi,

old line German officers, and any Vise Allied plan will sec to it that

the Governor get fired with zeal to do anything, let him eet his tc«th and resotoe to carry througb on It and it will seem that the very rocks and swamps of the state oppose It Since they consistently vote a majori­ty In the Oeneral Assembly, their oppoeltloa I* formidable and Important.Beyond such routine opposition,

there are various itate party

_ '

Comment - -From The River Road

By Mfllcolm MoltenMr. MoHan, Jietlrsd editor of The Herald, preserves Us eonteet with his former dally readers by andtlng e praskly letter fqr these eohmusi, in whtob he expreeees bis owh telaurely at oonvutlooe oonoemlng some major tnattera and bis qb ttons oonoemlng eoirn vary mlaol onea, aa sean from hls bom*

“ * banks of the NJaatia Hvar. Look for big aontributloaon thet -and-

W llO —IINW WDBU—U«0

• '

Today's Radw ^S^lWar lUM

1:00—w n c — News: WDRO Grand Cmtral Station; News) WTHT — Nswsj Music; WNBO —4t*pert from London.

1;1B—y v iro — Market Report and Agricultural News; WTHT — Orem Program; WNBC — News.

1:80—w n o — Indiana Indlfo; WDRO — Tour Oardsn and You —Douglas M. J'eUowt: WNBO

1 :4 » - 'tna BhUt WTIO — John MaoVane;

B a l u t e

■triet^ Sports r|olBls; w n ;

ers, most of them ambitious adta- ■elvse, who have always b*dn un- Impresaed by the fHendly Baldwin qualittea. Borne << them were burned In various vatfu during the Baldwin' week of indecision.

It is no sebret that some of those \yhp'*were most assiduous in urging Baldwin to reconsider bis decision were that way because they considered his first decision completely final. Therefore, al- thc^gh they considered it safe to urge reconsideration by day, they spend their nights planning their own assumption of party office and control., W« "an absolve them from one feeling—th* bitter feel­ing that perhaps they themselves overplayed their hand and urged too hard. The Goyernor was per­suaded not by them but by many people, many Of them entirely re­moved from politics.

Gthers In the party committed sthe opposite error—that of ac­cepting the Governor’s first decl- MOn as final and trotting their oWn ambitions Joyously out into the opm. Such were really singed by the Eventual reconsideration.

Such mesMOts to thO party have an instinctive grudge agalnsl the GoVsfnor because he did flaelly ehsngc hi* mtod end. thereby Meet end frustrate their secret or their open planf. They ere net pwttoutorly .big men, those who had their sohmiiee out short |ty the recon­sideration, end ttaey’B be wait­ing for their eheaoe at eons* Bmdwln sebpme.

Agatoet aU this, Baldwto can have the people, an^ the pMple can, oo ooeasloa, be powerfoL can wrtn.

Great minds—many of them—.^that the better world about which are absorbed with the problem of'soMpahy are thinking, each to bis making this a better world, after ; qvm^way. will have to be a world 4he-frenzy of the fighting sh^l'largely made up of people like Jim have worn Itself out; not mefely Turnbull.' American Jim Turn- becauae it is obviously dbsirable | bulls, British Jim Turnbulls, Rus- to have such a world to live in but sian, Chinese, French Jim 'turn- because it is Imj^efatlvely neces- bulls, JlmXTurnbulls of scores of sary If the hutoan race is to con- j nationalities For I feel that our Unue to eartti In it at aU. Tl\e Jim Turnbull and the compara- probUoM -Confronting the great j lively few UkS him have set the

ore, seemingly, numberleae. I pattern for th*\^nly poraible way find enormously complicated and of lUe that can e ^ permanently

Mediocre. In- to a world as sifi^ as tbU on*untrained In sustained; has become. , \

tovqjved.tolUgenoes,

Adopted tion Cliecks

Waohlngton, Jul^^SS—(^ —Ra­tion checks drawn on nqn-exlstent ration bank accounts niquid be charged to the depositor who re­ceived the check, thm OffI Price Administration nna in ed its district offices.

This policy is being adopted, the agency explained, became the de positor usually can recover th* polntti with least delay imd difin- culty.

Such, checks generally ar* drawn through ‘‘oversight or careless­ness,’’ OPA said.

Hm Better Method

■ Sant* Monica. Calif.— — Tk* sea manual differs, but Staff Sc'rgt Jerrold O. U s of Dodge City, Kans., thinks . b* has the tieat method for combatting sharka. He and four other men spent seven days on a raft after theUr plane was forced down in th* south Pacific. ‘The Mok said to bof them on the nose." U s relat "We did, but that only made them madder. So we let tbem alone and prayed."

mental effort, ar* prone to weary of them even before they have grasped th* problems’ Import; so­lacing themselves with the eede- tlve consolation thkt those who do persist are highbrow cranks who ar* reaching for the unattainable —and turning their backs upon the, precipice toward'which the flood of human' Ilf* has been flow­ing for countless centurlsa—and thslr faces toward the baaeball scoreboard.

I do not rate my own mind among the great onsis—far, .far Indeed from any such vain imag­ining. 1 can see but such a very Uttle way into the processes by \yblch tbe cancer of conflict must be healed that I cannot hope to be ^ any active aid in the per­formance Of th* operation. I have only the faint light of a tlny^taper that penetrates a fraction of a milimeter under the painted sur­face of human behavior. But even ttot slight ray showa ms some­thing. j

I do not know how to bring tit about, but I can see what .a really good vrarld would be Bk*. It wduld be a world to which .the ruling to- flueno* wae eubstoattally ths same cod* as . that which controlled the life of Jim Turnbull, that fine clUv zen of Manchester whose term of life so regrettably expired load i week and whose rare and . admira­ble qualities were so beautifully deeerlbed in a Herald editorial ten days ago.'

A PeraonUtoattoaI knew Jim Turnbull, not inttr

mately perhaps but, I think, quit* well; Arid I saw to him the per- tonification the mass citizen­ship of that better world which 'v e must have before too long if w to have any world at all. He an abla and highly effi­cient w c^er who saw no merit or attraction texf. life o f idleness and oontlnuoua plaaaur* seeking. He had th* woritore ..keen apprecla- Uofi bf periods of earned recre*- tioB and that tov* of travel which ta, after all, as much an expresalon of ria earnest Interest In, man­kind aa of feUowahlp with the

pit aatura. Ho never in bis Ufe sought on unduo advan- 'fg is ' nnr aoboptod odu. He was broadly toclualv* to bto friendh- neee. Orood. maennsM. falsity never had tbo elightost chance to enter Into him ttuough bU gen- the armor woven tron tha shining

of the Golden Rule.X am not seeking to addi any­

thing to the appreciationa already

Bo-bots, RobotsFor quite a while, npw, I have

been listening with p^Ucularly careful attention to news broad­casters and commentators\ when­ever they gave indication o\ ap­proaching the subject of thri. so- called robot bombs, in amtlcipa- Uon that some time one of them will pronounce the word as if it were spelled r-o-b-b-e-t, instead of anywhere from rowbot to i boat.

To .be sure, Webster's New In­ternational Dictionary gives pref­erence to the long o in the first syllable but it makes the short o permissible, and the first time ever heard tbe word pronounc(^ it was used with the short o sound. Robot was a brand new word then, which was In the early twenties. It was an adaptation from the Czech word robots, meaning com­pulsory servitude, and was em­ployed by Karel Capsk, author of tbe play R. U. R. (Rossum’s Uni- veraiil Robots), which Attracted a tremendous amount of attention all over the world at th* time. It dealt with th* technology subject by having this Rossum person mtaufecturs for sale large num- ppra of automatic human beings who could doHJl sorts of work and had all sorts of aktlla but, of oourse, no. souls smd. no real hu­man attributes.

I saw tbe play in Boston, where It was presented by a first clSM company. I really cant remember as much of It aa I’d Uke'to, emept that the robota became more hu- man than their creator ever In­tended and raised particular bell, but I very distinctly do recall that the actors Invariably pronounced the word "rpbbet’’ with a. short a 1 should think, oven now; that they must have been at ‘Some painii to discover bow the authbr intended to have bis new word pronounced to XngUsb.

AmeHcaa Target?Already then’s a good dsM of

talk going on about the'possibili­ty, even the Ukelihoofb that the Germans mayifyst build and put in action, some of thoes robot-bomba capable. of flying aa far ga the eastern seaboard of tha United States. It would ba just like tbem, for they are, to any tmdaretand- ing at the psychqtogy of other peoples, the stupideat race on earth.

Because New Torkera have that cockney coneervatiem thaf

last thrae-quatien of a ' century, ths Hun* may be tabbrtog under the ^luslon tbat^^Jimerlcan temp­ers iue ehocjt^roof, at least off th* battlfi-ffekl. Which ie a very dangerous miatak* for them to n^kis and on* on which they bad better not act

1 suspect the Naal Ugh com­mand would be to for tba eurprls* of ita life if and whan iU air ex­perts did contrive to land a sli)gl* robot bomb to New Tork, because about tba surest thing you know le that to such event we ^ u ld o* treated to a epectaela that no one now living can remember, that of the biggest town In this coun' getting completely, all-out on Its ear. God help the s\illen Hun sympathlzera of .TorkvlU* on that' day, for there has been nothing like it before and* nothing even ap­proaching It since the draft rtota of GJvil war days.

Tbsriq is a lot of truth to. tbe frequently made assertion that tha American' people, even now, a n a long way Irpm being fully aware of this war. But I fancy that ths day when tbe first robot bomb falls on United States soil, be it in New Tork or Bangor or Wash­ington, will blow the last sigm of truth of Utat assertion with one tremendous bang—and forever end whatever chance there may be at present of so many as three persons, between Boston and the

.Golden Gate, jotolng In a demand \|iat we be lenient with tbe “poor, iriisguidsd common people of Ger- mariyV

A \obot bomb Is doubtless Just the one thing needed here to turn the modi preoccupied and war-un- conacious\among ua into a fren­zied crier-out for vengeance, per­fectly wlJUng to have the German nation exterminated. So, such be­ing tbe case arid it being ths h e i^ t at folly fqr the Hitlerites to arouas^this coqntry to new heights of martial effort, we can be almost sure that that la just what they will do. If they can« it the war lasts long cn ou ^

WDRC — Treasury WTHT — Beyond VI c t o ' y — What?

8:00—WTIC » Here’s to TouUi; WDRC - Of Men and Books; WTHT — Baseball — Braves vs. CardlnaU: WNBC — Newf; Women in Blue.

8:15—WDRC — Adventures to Bclanc*.

3:85—WHO — Orantland Riot; WDRO— Btrictty Swing: WNBC —flee You.

8:00—WTIC — News — Minstrel Mslodies; WNBO—News; Twsn- ty-Onc Btora.

8:80—WTIC — Music on Display; WDRC — Visiting Hour; WNBC —BddI* Condon’s Jan Contort

4:00—WHO — Rupert Hufebes: WDRC — The OoloneU Newt; WTHT — Variety Program; WNBC — News; .Horace Hetdt.

4:15 — WTIC -r> . Queetlonnaire Handicap. '

4:80—w n e^ R h yth m Workshop; WDRO — Hors* Races; WTHT .—-liriato.

4;45—WDRC — Report from Lon- ' don; WTHT — Freedom on th*

Land Forever.5:00—WTIC — Tour Atosrica;

WDRC — Casey—Press Photo­grapher; WTHT — Navy Bulle- jUn Board; WNBC — News; flat- urday Concert.

5:80—^WTIO—Rhythms for Satur­day; WDRC — News; Baseball Scores; WTHT — Jimmy Palm­er’s Orchestra. ,

5:45—WHO — Btorrlng Curt Mas- ■ev: WDRC — Swoon or Croon; WNBC — HsUo, Sweetheart

6:00—New* on all stattona.6:15— WHC — Hietory In th*

HeadUnee; WDRC — People's Platform: WTHT — Muilc; WNBC — ShsU Digest: Race Reeulta.

WTHT — HawaU Crifls; WNBCl —Hany Wlsmer'e SporU Show. I

6:45—WHO — London Column;I WDRC — New*; WNBC — LeonI Hendarson. I

T:00—WHO — They Call Me Jo*;| WDRC — xv* Maritime: WTHTi —News: Mualo; WNBC — Blue) Correspondanta Abroad.

7:16—WNBC — Uland Stowe.7:80 — W HC — BUeiy Qu««n;

WDRO — Mrs Mtotver; w t h t I —Arthur HMs; WNBC—Music | America Lovea Bast

7:45—WTHT Lanl McIntyre’s jOrdhsatra.

6:00—W HC — Abie’s Irish Rose;! WDRC —Kenny Baker , w t h t - F rank Slnglser; WNBC — Early American Dance Music. |

i:16—w n iT —Musiel Polish Pro-S:ram.

08:f0—WHC — Author’s Play l house; WDRO -dinner Sanctum; j News; WNBO — Esplanade Con-j oerta. " I

•:00 — WHC — Nattonsd Barnj Dance; WDRC — Klt^arade.

9:18—WTHT — OMfiago Theater.9:80—WHO-Oan You Top This?; I

WNBO-^'ipotti^t Bands; Quick9:48--^7lMtCV>«am Beraion.lOiOO—WHC —Barry WOod-Patsy!

Kelly Show; WTHT — Roi’ali Arch Ounnlaon; WNBC — Guyj Lombardo.

10:18—WDRO—OorrecUon Plea**;! WTHT — Bob Stanley’s Orchss- tra.

10:80—WHC — G r ^ Old Opry; WNBC — Army flendee Forces [ Prsaent

10:45—WDRC — Talks; WTJHT ■Bob Strong’s Orchsstra.

11:00—Nsws on sU stations.11:15—WHC — Amsriean String!

Quartstto; WDRC—Dance Or'I cbestra; WTHT — California | Melodies; WNBC — Voice of tbe |i Army.

11:80 — WHO — X Sustain the i Wings; WDRC — Dean Hudson’s Orchsstra; WTHT TommyJ Tucker's Orehsatra; WNBC — ! Hooslsr Hop; Nows.

13fl)0— WHC —* News; Thomas i Peluso’e Orehsatra; WDRC --i| News; WTHT—Nsws. 18:4B^wnC — Lsa Kms. Plan-'

r 1st; Nswa.

JV. y. Philharm onic Lists^- A n -A ll-Russian ProgramNew York, July 22—UP)—Ex-^nim; 2:30, Lee Swsettand for John

cerpta from DmlHirl ShosUkovlch’s phas Thomas: 3:30. Army Hour;orcl...t,.Uon or CMou-1 ™ 5 ’ SSSInoff,” by Moussorgsky, will have an American radio premiere Sun­day afternoon when the New York Philharmonic Symphony presenU an An-Rosslair program in iU weekly eerieo on CBS. Selected as soloist to Alexander Kipnls, Rus- sian-American basso, with Fritz

Dorsey and Al Jolson; 8, Oracle Fields and Ekldle Cantor; 10, PhilSpltalny Girls....... CBS — 12:30,Trans-Atlantic Call, Portland, Me-; 5. Eileen Farrell concert; 6:30, AmlBrica in the Airr 8, Wal­ter Pldgeon and Hedy Lamarr; 9 ,1 Conrad Nagel Theater; 9:30,

James Melton's concert; 10, Phil ] We tho People.Reiner conducting.The 90-minute Baker quiz; 10:30, We tho People.

concert opens at 3. Shostakevich'a ..BLU—1'30, Sammy Kaye"Lieningrad’’ eymph'i.ny was prem- .......................lered cn the air by the orchestra last April.

In the first Jewish broadcast from former Nazi occupied terri­tory, a thanksgriving service at the synagog;ue of Rome, wllivbe car­ried out at 1:15 p. m. Sunday by NBC from the short waves. Prof. Anton Zelll, 73-year-old chief rab­bi qf Italy, will officiate. He had been in hiding in the «ine months the Germans had full control in Rome.'

Capt. Aaron Paperman of Balti­more and New York, chaplain at­tached to the Fifth Army, also will participate.

Serenade; 3, Listen the Women; 4:30, World of Song; 6, Paul Whiteman Music; 7:30, Quiz Kids; 9:16, Basin Street: 10:30, Pre­miere, Frellng Foster's Column-___MBS—2, Sky Riders quto:3:30, Mysterious Traveler drama; 5:30, Bulldog Drummond; 8, Medi- auon Board: 9. Walter Hampden drama) 9:30, Name of Song quto| 10:15, Good Will program.

.President Roosevelt’s radio talk to the Democratic convention from his train at a west coast naval base was made possible by field

ulpmsnt set up secretly ahead I rind NBCMl

Ime by CBSnstrs. Included w e^c^ecial and

engl-I and

tbe public

Dogs on BeechesI am no dog hater. I like *91-

mos sdl doge—all but the ugly onesr-And X admire some oC tbem more than Tdo most peopls. But I think that persons ,wbo their dogs with them to a crowd­ed little bathing beach such as ours ought tb hava their pets tait- «n away from them and put to the pottod. Or pertiaps It would be better yet If th ^ -w en put to the pound themaelvee.

A dog on a bathing berioh can be mora kinds of a nuisance in aa hour than be could be anywhere else, even to church, to a year. Particularly If he is one of those ham footed creatures with a ganl- da for upsetting little children, scrambling over a dosen beach towels to trie course of ten aec- onda end a&dwering juat-dried off batbera with wet eend and gravel.

What wa nirnd down here on our pubrio bathing beech to a law. And greet Mg teeth, like Red Rid-' tog Hood’s wolTa, to that tow. Bool

M. M.Ntantle River Reed,Wetozford, Conn.

On Saturday night Ust: .NBC—7, They Call Me Joe, new

drama: 8, Abie’s IrUb Roe*; 9, Bam Dance; 9:80, Can You Top This; 10:80, Grand Ole O pry...,, CBSt—7:30, Mrs. Miniver; 8, Ken-

w-i__nv Baker show; 8:30, Inner Sanc-^ ■ tu m ; 9, Sinatra and Hits; 10:15.

Correction Please; 10:46, Secre­tary Morgenthau on Monetary Conference.. . . . BLU—7 :S0, Music Afnerica Loves; 8:30, Boston Els- pirinade concert; 9:80, Cab Cel­lo way bead; 10, Guy Lombardo; 10:80, Army Service Foreaa, dra- ina.....MZto—7, American Begto Club; 8:80, ClecO Kid; 9, Chicago TbsaUr “A Womrin of Arles;’’ U, California Melodies.

Expect Thefts T * :

Belt Lake Clty-^Cff>—An open alrMcyele shop operated tiy U** younger Mt has bash closed by polios. Tha oS lom found newly prilnted frames banging from trsee and-.. stock of wheels, handlebars and othor-parts on band for re­

emergency lines t address s^ e ro at the Chicago stadium and an networks. Because the president’s itinerary In war­time to not revealed, the engineers referred to the origination point aa "Shangri-La.”

Sunday talka:m b s—12 noon, Reviewing

Stand, “Democratic Party of 1944;’’ NBC-t1:80. Roundtable"Should Labor Unlona Aim for Political Power?” CBS—1:80, Wm. A.' Burden on Poat-War Avi­ation. I

Other progranu:NBC—2, Church to Action F o

' A ' ■M ANCHE5TER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER CONN- SATURDAY, JULY 22, 1914 V A G E

Meets Manchester Boys On French BeachheadHiliMkl Namrs tb«

H ii Town Ladi HeInvRslonj

SayrMw^^oPB There"An tnvMrton: plfmle.”

writei pvt, WKnigktoa street in a letter to The

Jerald *»«"* "SomewKs^ to

“Aiui, bqy, these were hot when w* arrivsA” 4*' eUraa Ja* who oonttouee)

"About ton days agoT met a few Manchester boy*. "Although I have been In th* Army for 49

. foonthe It took me a long time and a long way to nest them. Awong theiii were: Walter Archlvy, of 35 North SMiool street, Stanley Sum* totoskt at 12 Kerry street. John Aceto ef W F o l^ road, B|U Afary of 9 Purnell Place. I also met Stan­ley Choman and Joe Cansonerl of Ifanahestor. You know i feit Uka as if I waa haek in Manehaatar again. I am 4sUgtited an4 sur> pftoed to see how Well Manchester is rapreaanted in the invasion of France. . There must be a lot of home boys here if I can find that nuuiv myself” .

NtItosM left fop England and landed there to January, He trained there for four months prior to the Invasion. On June oth, he headed across the channel for France and landed there in about two hours on th* beachhead.

ToUimd

Monday expectations:^NBC—10:30 a. m.; Ptodera

Keepers quiz; 2:15 p. m., Todays Children: 6:16, Serenade to Amer­ica....... CBS — 1:30,- BemardlneFlynn; 4, Broadway Matinee; 6:15,Lynn Murray music....... BLU—12:30, Farm and Home Makers; 2:30, La^e* Be Seated; 4:15, DonNorman show.......MBS — 1:30,Luncheon^ with Lopez; 3:15, At Two KeyMsrda; 4:80, Music fop Half-Hour.

-------- 111 rf I •*

Help Keep Home FITee BurningChicago — WP) —Mrs. Margaret

JBallard helps her husband, Wil­lard., keep the home fires burning for thslr seven children by ehoraj- ing coal — tons and tons ofTt. Mrs. Ballard, 43 and weighing 117 pounds, got a job as a coal ahovel- ar a,yeat.ago snd.^dally asslfte her husband. 'Their usual stint . to emptying a' 55-ton car in 6% hours, but often she does a bigger job. Yesterday, for example, she shoveled 40 ton's—which Is 676 times Ijer oym weight— in coaL

Dixie Leaders Nurse Wounds

(Oentleued fPem Peg* One)

last night at a meeting to the hotel •ulto of fopmop Gov. Mike Cornier of Mtoetoetppl- A smell group of southern lesflers i but not the isrge gathering that had been eupeoted •>-4MaemDled there to diseuee the situation and as they broke up. Conncp said they had arrived at no decision.

"It to obvious that we of th* south, whUt believing In tha same, principles, eannot win our fight unless wa organtoa effaoUvely,” he said. "What we shall do about It waa net deoided. but there was a gtnaral faallng that tbs south must organto* U it Intends to have itt. Mntfoal prinoiplaa reoogniaed.”

"wa have been kicked around ]eng> enough,’’ said another. "In lean years wa have held tha party Uvauiar, but in yaara of plenty, whan wa are not needed ao much, wa have bean traatod ahabbily,"

pate of floatherBars Rara'a what happened to the

•outhemera this week:.Thatr demand tfor restoration of

the two-thlrda nominating rule waa i^actad.

Their InMatonoa on inclusion of a "white supromaoY’ plank In tho party platform not only waa ig- norsd. mit th* platform oontained a daolaratton of equal rights fop aU, including equaJity ox voting privUsgea, ragardlesa of color.

Sols sMaoe for the south waa tha dsfsat of Wallaot. Ths south- aro delagatoa pitohed in heartily to Clinch ths nomination of Senator Harry Truman of Mtosouri.

"But w* loet our main fights,” Conner said. "Despite ths defeat ef Wallace, th* convention ignored our pleas for support of principles w* have always believed In. Th< Democratic party as nowoonatltU' ted and th* Republican party do not stai)d for the principles we ad­vocate. We have no way to forn now.”

Mr. and Mrs- Arthur Bushneii have had oe a recent guest Uisir Stater from Monson.* Maas.

Mrs. Mabel Morganaon of Rock villa waa a guest at Tolland friends Tuesday afternoon July 18.

Mr. and Mr*, Woodrow Usher are the parent* at e Uttle oon horn lost week in Tolland.

Members of the Rookvills Amer­ican Legion Auxiliary held an out ing at the cottage ol the 40 and 8 to East Tolland, July 18.

Harold Buibe* of West Wllllng- tpn haa purona«ed th* farm of Mr. Utly owned for a short time on the east aide of Tolland, purahased from Mr. Cornell Greep, Br,. Whq owned that property fox' many yean. Mr. and Mn. Bu|rt»e* and family ar* soon to move mere.

The regular meeting of Tolland Orange wee held at the Commun­ity house Tuesday, July 18, at r o'clock, with about 80 present in- eluding Roy gcQUU and Uietr load­ers. After a short business session the Grange elosed in the fourth degree and proeeeded as on open meeting. There were aevcral num hers given by the Boy geeutsthat were interesting and pleasing. Thsra wera games and music with sU taking part. Frankforts, cake and soft drinks were furnished by the Grange in a regular picnic ar­rangement

Rev. Hollis French, new paator of the Tolland Federated ohurch will preach his first sermon aa pas ter of ths church nsxt flunday morning, July 23. He has bean in the ministry 18 years. He is graduate of Wesleyan University. Middletown, Conn., where he raoeived hit A. B. Ten years follow­ing Ms graduation from Wesleyan hs returned for further study. For a number of years he was assocln ted with the New York Northern Conference of the Methodist church. H* lias served at North Western. Mae*., Warehouse Foint. Gales Ferry and other placee. For the past ^ r , taking a sablMtioal leave, he has been associated with the Radio League in Hartford, do­ing research work. Rev, Franch W ith his wife and children are moving Into the Tolland pastorate this week. They have two sons, one 18 and the other 11, and

churchberf are pleased th*t agalfi they

“ istor, after e past ten

months.Mr. and Mrs. Btanlcy Csarnecks

of Mils Hill. Tolland, are the par­ents of a son born Sunday, July 18, at the Rockville City hospital.

Miss Helen Chapin and cousin. Mrs. Donald Alien of Qradel, N. J.. ar* aptndlDg some time in Tol­land at th* lata Charlsa C. Talcott home.

Mias Elisabeth Leonard of Kart>ford spent a brief visit with her

[\oiso Named As Premier

For JapanYonai Hecomes Navy

Miniflter an4 Alio to Be ‘TcmpOFRiw dep­uty Prim* Miniitor*.By The Afli0ciAt«4 Er«MG*n. Kuniaki Kelso, former gov-

•rnor-general of Korea and long an advopats of Japanese expansion has been na,n>ed preml»r qf Japan in a new eabinst in which Admiral MJteumasa Tonal became Navy minister, it wa* announced to a Domei newa agency dispatob broadcast from Tokyo today.

Dome!-said Tonal al*o wouW serve as "temporary deputy prim* minister,”

Heading ths first nsw cabinst to Japan since tbe attack on ftoart Harbor. Koiso sucessda Gen. Hide- kl Tojo, whose government resign­ed five days ago almost simultane­ously with tha first Japanss* ac- American toroes of flaipan. a ba** th*t put* V . fl, Buper-Fortrssae* within bombing range of Japari'a. main cities.

Two Holdaver* hi OriHiPIn the new cabinet there were

two hold overs from ths ToJo cabinet.

Besides Koieo end Tonal toe broadcast, recorded by Th* A**o- cisted Pre*s, listed toes* other cabinet members:

Foreign minister and Graster East Asia minister, Mantpni Shigemlteu; War, Field Marshal Gen Sugiyama: Horns Affairs, flhi gao Odaohi; Finance, HoUro Ishi, wata; Justlcs.' Hiromaaa MatoU' saka; Education, Haruablg* Nino miya; Welfare, Hlsatoda Hirose Munitlohe. GinJifo FuJiwara; AgrL culture and Commerce, TosHU Shimada; Transportation and Communications, Voneso Maeda Ministers of Btate Affairs, Chuj Machida. Hidto Yodama and Take fora Ogate.

Th* naw 84-ysar-eld pr*mi«r waschief of staff *f ths Kwantung Army in Manohuria bsfer* H* be­came gov«rnor-g*n*r*l of Korea.

Ja p s F e a r -In c e n d ia r y R a id s D u r i n g ‘ Id e a l’ B o m b in g D a y s

SmtiH fffffforfM end Nemn Ars Men Vtdnnebk to Attegh

This is the asm* Army group to

Manchester Date Book

AnnuM outing. Hose Co. N% I, M. F. O., fit Garden Grove.

Ptoaday, July tteB urgl^ d r i ^ M group gMste

Center chureb half at 7:80.Paper salvage in the northwest

section of Monehester.Tnesdair, July 88

Republican Town Caucito at High ^hoo) ha>l at A-

Wednesday, July M Surgical drassing* for Red Cross

Amarican L«flon hall, Laonard street, 10 a. m. to 4:30 p. m.

Hatusdoy, July 99 Two-day outiny, Hose Co. No, 8,

IB. If. F. D., at Manchester R ^ and Gun Club, Oovsotey Lak*.

Monday, July 81 Special town) meeting at High

SehSbl hall at 8.<Ene*4ay, Aoi- 1

Veterans^ Aid meeting at Ameri- ean L*P*n Home-

Outlng?*Mlsnlojm§|ioh Trito *fRed Men it Villa Iqiiisri.,

DlingReiOn Fire

I h I q it h # H o k H ^eatipH H ifhCan Emptied Fi

that drilte a n hold and thm to

.. - - Jt* ath* High school, whaa#|

there are 800 pupils and a story building, w s snttoa can bs empUid in from ’ tsro two and a ball minutea.

In to* oto*r schools to tbers to no school mora tha|i stories high and most at them be emptied quicker.

jSeeiB Turning

Always Usad Prapsy Bias*Gtodwyns, Pa.'\= m «- Ifai^ I

township polio# repteted that te*. man who ransacked to* house ^-j

I Tnomas Fisher, Jr., during htoon more

fks high on Btlquetts, lows to, and left TitoSF mw ht

Point Reached» *a*^**''** '^^ properglaso-brandlea from inj^r

Flra and earthquake nr* Japan’s greatest drwul. Holocauste Rke this 198* fife wMrtl rased flWbatri •re f**raoraely lemembeMd. Now tha Jap* as* pnepartng to"lr people to antlrh>ato similar devaste-

Uea whea Tanka launch incendiary raid* on home* and toetone*.------------------------ ---------------------- - F

Rockville

larents at Tolland avenue, Tol­land. _

Miss Grac*~E. Clough of V*r- non WBS a recant guest of ToUand

Dewey AgainVisitsFarm

fOsatlsaad fceai Pag* Oaa)

markat” to ths fleviat for durableCOOdfe

Win Sopport D*wey Jobitoton said that “boto as a

fts^Mleaa and as a bustossstnan” he would support D*w*y and add­ed that h* conferred with to* gov­ernor because "I think he should havt'a r#orLon things I found to th* Soviet. Union." Johnston said he alrmdy bad talked with Seo- Ntarv of State Cordell Hull on hto obaervattons to Ruseia.

Johnstpa told reporters b* nai- thar sought iu>r obtained any m- aetton from Dewo^ on hto view* but fouxid th* latter "much inter-

, astod in Russian production, tbs attltud# of Russtona toward- th* Amariean paopto and my Imprea- ■iotu of tbe Ited A m y.

Appraetoto America’s Help "Strilin told-me their progress

was mad* posalhto only by th* as- slstanca fooa Amartea,” Johnaton said, adding that all Russians with whom ht talked, "down to the bumbleat factory worker,” war* "moat apprrictotive" of Amerioa’a hefo.

The govaxnor toft Albany linme- dlataly after Johqston’s departun last n M t and mptorad 97 miles to spqnd'the wae&'-end at hto i naar Pawling.

rajativas and attanded worship .ssfylc* Sunday at th* Tqltond Federated church.

Mr. and Mrs. Chester Clough of New London spent Sunday in Tol­land at bto farm.

There ha* not b*«n any work for the Red Cross Tolland class for three w««k*.

Mr. and Mrs. John K. Steel* eor tertelned several of their friends from Manchester recently.

Miss Lueile Agard has returned from several weeks in Byracuss, N. y., Vermont and other Jnter- eating' plae**. Mis* Carol Need­ham ha* acted as asstotant at the ’lOlland library while Miss Agard, ngiflar librarian, was absent.. Rev. Leonard fltryker will preaoh at 9 t John’s church In RockViUt July 28.

which Tojo belongs. It has played a loading ro|« in Jspanaaa affatra since the invaaion of Manohuria in IBS! and ainea then has constantly

-lapaaeaa govarnmanto to adopt a more Vigorou* •apansiorilst program..

Kelso was evareea* minister in Admiral Yonai's cabinet that held office from January to July, 1040, and In the Klranuma cabinet

Tokyo previously announcad Em­peror Hlrohito had ordered Yonai, a former premier, to cb-6perata with Koiso in the forming of a naw government. It intimated the two would serve os eo-preipier*.

Full Navy flappert Sam Ths U. B. Office ef W*r Infor­

mation interpreted Tonal's pre*- enc* In the oablnst as presumably lending full Navy approval to the governmant jointly Mlected by the t wo m*n. Yonai *erv*d a* com-

morning | mander-to'Ohtof of the coinbtnsd

See* M**riag to Italy

Rome, July 88— Th* organ of the Italian .Democratic Labor paxty reported today that Presi- dant Roosevelt almost c4rtalnly will meet Prime Minister Church­ill and other Allied leaders in Italy soon,'because (ff th* swiftly mov­ing events to Oarmaoy.

Prayers for Xbaaka Ordered

London, July 82.—(P)-r-Th# Oer- m*B radio broadcast an announce- mmotoday that prayara of,thauxa . „ . „for Hitter’s escape from death had, fow w ra been ordered tomorrow In all Pro-|*” ” **^ teatant and Catholic church** of Oennany.

Japan*** fISat In 1986-88 eno waaNavy minister from 1987 to 1939,

Shigemitsu, who remains as for­eign minister, takss over th* addi­tional portfolio of Greater Ea*t Asia minister formerly held by Kasuo Aoki. This portfolio, hith­erto kept apart from that of the foreign minister, encompass** the problems connected with the ad­ministration of Japanese-occupied areas.

Sugiyama, who was removed as Army chief of staff lost FsbruaiY, succeeds to on* of Tojo’s jobs.

Fujlwara, the new munitions minister, is on* of Japan’s leading industrialists, being associated with ttto giant Mitsui industrial- eommsrClsil eomblns.

As mayor of Tokyo, Odaehl, th* new Home Affairs minister, played an important role In the program begun during th* Tojo regime to jnvpara for mass raids through tho paroal *vaeuatton of government puUdlngs and vital Industrial *•- tablishmenta from large cities.

Council Meel Seen Success

B

B o c k v iU # G a t h f f r in f T a k e U p P r o b l e in * o l T h e P o e t -W a r E r a - ,

RockvUle, July 38— (•pfolal) — A well attended meeting at th* Vernon War Council and Re-em­ployment Committee waa held Fri- day evening to th* Council room* udth Dt, Georg# Brooke*, pre-■ld>"g- „Th# meeting was attend^ by Wilbur Markham of th* United ■tetas Employment isrvto* and Major Cat* of th* Governor’s Com- mission on Rs-*mployment.^ R*P- rasentetiv** from all of th* sub- commlttsea ware in attahdano* .

Th* functions of the ^veriou# pommlttess were explalnsd In de. ail together with the working out of oommltUas in sunilar places in the state. It is planned to set up a central Information and Re­ferral Center In the city, the exact location to be announced shorttv. Returned vetarana and others wm be referred to the proper commit­tee to handle their problems *t this plaos, It to also planned to set up a card system for reeords to be kept, and to carry on an educa­tional program for the community as to th* scope of work being oar- ritd on. _Paul Droblewskl, Service oBlrer

the American Legion, wo* named as a member of the Vstor-

. ans Committee, and Vernon k . ^Vcloh. president of the Rockville Civic Aispciatlon, was named a member of th* Occupational Op­portunity committee.*^The next maetlng tolR b# held at th* eall ef the ehatrm^

By ThonM* M. JohNso*KEA MiUtery Writer

Japan is preparing to suffer what she reoognlsas a* th* worst Of all oalamlttes; "Kaji to jlishin” -rdevostatlon by fire and earth­quake. Both ars combinsd in air bombing, which aoon ca|i aom* at hs^rat from' China atone but also frdK ttia Marianas, and perhapi even from our earri**a.

77)4 sooner the woroe, for Japan, A two months' period wh*n weath- *r will help th* bomber ha* Just begun, Usually it hinder*, protect­ing Japan with *torm* and tricky wind*. But from mid-July to mid- ieptembar thar* i* frequwtly * peculiar ml*t through which bomb- •le can ssa far beitar than they ar# seen. That give* them a chance to deal blow* to Japan'* induitrial citie* in way* that ar# new-

Thui far the B-|9’a hav# bomb­ed largely iteel mills and naval in­stallations. But those, In Japan, are frequently stron|Jy built to

^months these will b* dry as tinder and flare like esHulold. Flam** wdll spread literally like wildfire In tha crowded regions 'o f aueh alttoa as Osaka and Kobe whtra ana shaek is jsmmsd against a?i- other and streets are track* as narrow as fiv* fast, or sometimes nonexiStont.

Homa WoFkaliops In such homaa » au^rlaln*

amount of manufacture ef amali war artteie* goea on. Often they use eiectrielty with open wiring. Many of the worker* in larger factories live in thd** komeo.

(CoatUiuad from Pag* Qua)

#v*r, that Germany la in a tragic moment...,”

Bsdofiio mad* no eommant on I tha anniversary of th* ovtrthrow | of Mussolini sxospt to my that of all the satsllite* Italy waa th* only | one whlsh broke from th* Ger­mans. .>

Hs closed the Interview by point-1 ing to an oneient telephone on a ptdeaial In the study of hi* uaa- cious villa. A plaque on the dedite-1 tal says;

"This to the telephone srith I which BodogUo dlrseied tha baU ties of Plave, Vittorio, Vensto"— decisive engagsmsnte against th* | Auatrisna to tha last war.

era,' Hquera from tiny ”|h|rnfe glasses, Scoteh and sod* I r * « | highball glasses.

TOP DOLLAgf FOR MOTORCYCLEDRegardtom ol CandlHmt Any year, Mske or Model.

OABH WAITINOI WHY NOT BULL TO DBI

TIREU4 MOTORS40 OWEN BTREET

Off FarmlXgtM Ayenmi KAKTrOBD .

TeL 88-7885 4p 81-8808

Betbaok Partyp will to

Columbia

Nearly All Homeiji In Tract Sold

Alsf* ndm’ Jarvto, tb* developer of Grmnbtooks Hoin**, haa nearly complatad the UO houasa ptonaad for th* d*v*lopui*nL H* has al­ready sold 95 of tb* tkoua** and ho* k watting list that sssm* mora than suSlctont to laka.eare of tboso being flntohad.

In addition to tho houses to the Oresnbrook* development Mr. Jar-

Tbe Columbia Dairy and Poul­try Club held ito monthly meeting Thursday night at ths horns of Hinker Nuhfer. The boys brought vegetables of different kinds to re­ceive inatrucUon frofft Jamas Latd- Inw how to recognlM what oon-

perfeet product, and what point to look for to judg­ing, After the buslneaa meetlnff a social time was enjoyed.

Mrs. David Hudson, of Washing- tonvUl*. N. T., and Mias Ruth Broivn of Salisbury Milto, N. T. era guest* *t th* parsondt*. Rev. Rrlpb Rowland and hto fathar are In Clifton, N. J., for busineaa for

few dajm..111* honor roll for tbe Cslumbto

Catholic bojra and girls in service will to biassed *t the Sunday ssr- vlce at Bt Columba’s Chap«L

Mario Belli o f Chestnut Hill to th* latest Columbia boy to *nt*r the service, having left last w*ek.

John WUk* to home on furlough from North Carolina.

Beglnnihg July 34, the Saxton B. Uttle Ubrary will, until fiurther notice, again to opan irom '7 to 8 p. m. every Monday evening. This hour wa* discontinued during ths winter ,but Increased patronage has made l^ seem advtoahls to re­sume tha schedule. Other hour* which the Ubrary to open are Fri­days from 3 to 4 and ^ t o 8.

PUot Gets LaaghA 15th Air Force Base to Ifoly

r-0^—A long line at big four-*n- glned American bombers juat back from a raid waa circling around ito home field awaiting Instructions to land when a pilot radioed th* eon< trot tower: "Uke permtoalon to land immsdiatoly-^only on* engln* working.” Th* tower gave Ito okay end a lone Mustang flgfater darted out of the formattoo at heavy bombers and bteesed to. Its

vithaUnd "Kajl to jlTshln.’ ’ Since lO!

igi: iTsi

the last disaster 4n 1098 th# Tekyo- Yok'nhama area and others too, have been rabuilt to an effort to ase'ape anotper ordeal- To pravent fire 'from *w**plng too far. the Jap* hey* opened many new parka and widi etreste, and have bUilt concrete fire-walls *t right angls* to prevailing Wind* which often are hl8h. Th*y hav* built many modern fireproof and ehock-prort buildings, either in the. centers ef the cities qr in the ourakirts.

]5ut to modernlae all of them was beyond even Jap diligencei So the large cities remain largely a firebugs' Paradise.. There are quite a few roofs of copper and tile, but many smaller faetorle* and hastily erected war-buildings are of wood, stucco and even ply- board, with paper partitions, Many house* are mads of these mat*rial*r4)ut even more, use rice- straw mat*. For th* n*xL

Many believe the quickest way to man’s war industry j* not

to bomb the etrong*r lactoriss

Ms.toe’s Taaaa MavkoB Pa|8

Kaitoae cxty^iln — WiUiam H^in, In charts of delinquent tax oelleotions, aaid that th* taxas ef Pvt. Paul L. PeVaul. 31-year-o|d

'Marin* on Balpan. Had tosn.ma)rkT ed paid in full. Part of th* tax pay-

.................oUto-

rtjl

with high explosive bomb* whlehl a Tot^ffratake space on a bomber.

but to bomb the smaller plants and homes in tneir vicinity with small] incendiaries which can do far morel damage pdr bomb. We have a new Incendiary, apparently mad* to or­der for Japan. It throws a jasolin*

ment was mad* with a Wood i ed, 60-yen Japanese note.

LiaCOB riBNITytwi or ArriAcituni

soo feet When it into flam* *nd {

jelly os far as hits. It burets sttehs.

Although In these ehonty-towns, war werk and war workars are In- sxtrieahly intermingled, th* Jap- anee* hope our soft humanitarian' Ism win prevent our <istng this weapon. Doubtless th*y will howl if ws do, and psrhap* thay will •*- soute mor* of our flysrs, But th*y-| ara trying to g*t ready, Th*lr fir# department* ar* tore*, though mdetly ill-equip^d. The Jape have

civil detene* force trained

fitera.; Permit far tb* sal*

a largefor 10 years in air-raid' drills far more realistic than ours.

Already they have evaouatod allsave essential workers from som# _____ .oitiel. Th* Jap* hava' announced businss* is owned by' First that they have a nlan for moss I Stores. Ine*. ef Peiic endTouJo SvenjKM. Emit H*rttord, Conn., and wiuovacuctlon of Tokyo, now they are K ^cuct*d by Carl if. Abibtrf of 1* preparing a _ deoontraltoation | Manch«ter, Conn., -

of aleoholle |louor on th* prsmlsse of .%6 1-2 H*|n Mr«*t. UsnobooUr. Conn. Tha busln*** I* ownad by First Na- tkwsl |tor*s. In*,, of Fork sad Oeb- land avssuos. K**t Hartford and will wcondiKtod by Robort J. F r i^ of 41 Ch*steut strsot, Ifoncbester, Conn.. ip*rmttta«, ____ __

kOBffXT J. FHTPAT DeUd rist of July, 1*44,H-7-32-44.

tiatrOB FEBMITMOTICB or aPFUCATIONThl* I* to stve noUc* that I Cell 9.

Ahlbers. of IS gsoex stroot. itaarii**- Ur, Conn., hav* fll*d *n appHctUon d*ted tlw ri*t of July, 1*44 wifh tb* Uquor Control CoininiMikm for a Fsek- ■s* ator* Boor Permit for the sol* of aleohollo liquor on tho pmrols** of 14 Coon*r (tr**t, M*neb*«t*r. Conn. Th* ' (rationalOakland

fohemo" to giv# moro authority to permittee, local governors, in case tho central government has to flee. Thera is even talk of taking the Empsror | to Manchukuo.

H-7-a2-44.CARI, O. AH1,BBRG Ost*d July 91. 1*44.

A setback party will be held this evening at the DobeonriU# echod houaefor the benefit qf the Vernon Firt Company No.. 8.

Oueet SpeakerDr. wnuam U Btldger of B ^

ton. radio preacher, world traveler s ^ auSor wlU be the gu##* •P**'*' er dn Sunday at 10:46 a. m. at theUnion Congregational church. Thl*

tha flret of the gueet speaker* for th* iummer. He will have for hie eubjoct. "They Wera Exp*nd. able.” ’nier# will be epsctol music.

1 I At Camp ^A Urge group at men from Com­

pany C, ffoimecttcut Btet* Guard, win leavk on Sunday for Nlantlc whero thdy will carnp for ** woek, headed by Ckptaln Francis Cratty with -Flret lieutenant William Mc­Laughlin and Second lieutenant Julius May also attending. There will bo other unite of ths Second Mttalion preeont at th* oamp atoo. The men Will take their own equip­ment including btonkste.

Ooeat PreacherRev. Leonard W. 8. Stryker D.D

who spend* hto summers In Tol­land will be th* guest preacher at Bt John's Sptoeopal ehufeh; on Sunday morning at th* service at ten o’clock. ^ a-

Now Beevloo noor Th* morning service of worship

at tha Rockville Baptist church will be held at 9:80 o’clock through the summer months. Due to th* Urge number present at th* serrica last i Sunday, It to indlested that tbe change to th* hpur of th* service to meeting with the approval of the members.

To Attead Beeelsoe Rev. F. A, Dyckman, pastor of

the RockvlUe and Vernon Metho- diet churches and a number of the members of both churches will at­tend the Summer Assembly and Christian Barvtce Institute which will start on Sunday at the WUU- mantle Camp Grounds and oon- ttoue throughout th* week.

Rev. Dyckman will preach at th* service oo Wednesday evening, the them* for tb* toetura period to be held each aTterneon and evening being "Ths Church in tb* World of Tomorrow.” Rev. Dyckmaa will atoo conduct a claaa on "Th* Mean­ing and Purpose of Prayer" for tbe fint throe mornings,

t HohUng Oottag The Ladies of Maple Grove hold

Ukcit todMg At tiM

grove on Franklin street, starting Ito afternoon. --At six o’clock a turksy dinner will be served.

Under ArreetDavid WllUama 18. of Talcott

avenue, driver of an automobllfi which craiAed June 8 in ToUsnd, killing two ef hie eompanlons, has been arrested by State 'Policeman John Koarney and released under $ 82,000 bond for appearance In court at Tolland next week. He to charged with misconduct in the

FOR SALE Duplex House

5 Rootni Each Side. 61 ESSEX STREET

operation of a motor vshicls so as] to cause death.

Carl E. Abrahamseii, 18, and] Ronald J. Underwood, 13, betb died as the result of the accident and Coroner Bernard J. Ackerman re­cently found th# two deathi to be “caused by the criminal act and] earalesanesa" of Williams.

BOILERS A I ^ FURNACESVacuum eleaned by high power method. Get top eflleiehoy from . your heating plant.

For Real Satlsfaetlon . .CALL MANCHESTER 9-0185

BULLDOZER TO RENT

By Day, Hoar or Job.All Kinds of Alteration

Work Takon.Call ^

George GriffinTelephone 3429 or 3802

WHEN YOU BUT

SCREENSBUY

Storm Sosh Too!BB CHANGED

iBiOSBCOBdSTh* houatboMet** draaaet Ko I mora fnaotog w ith toddeee, ■*! mote storm wtodoiee stored la | Mm seller. Me neete ewaelland pofftog to j)N a ge 8n

BUSOO OOM BINAnOW W INDOW S

effailwnte aS thei. Ih w «< Mea atorw wladain^ eweeiand sre n tlM r'stilp p In flB SM l

tM H Tjn ft B^ V w ito 8e i n Bneea Wtodnw froen an stone enah. -YMennalM enoh wtodewe fnee MBIDBtiTTS OVER OLD BUSOO to n nwtnl w ith eeenbtontlnn h in*t*ll*d evot yow pen

Aom . toeprovea the ■ee of yon? ham*, ne lonantly taotnOod —■anal removnl oa e

BAOI PROOF, DBAffT PBBlk BUSOO mnhM natUathw ne^ ■Ibta, ■nmnwr and wtatar, ertOh oat totting to enow or tnin no# withont ennelng drafts, fepn for iteelf to winter fnni snninse. Phone as or mall n pent nord me mom tafonanttoo.

THEBARTLETT-BRAINARD

COMPANYlog Woodbtii* SL, Bnrtftod (•)' Hartford — Tel. 2-1269

givn. sad Son. Hartford 9-5879- i’ . - """T

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|iuinwinniniiHnuHuiitniiiiuinmiiiiiniiiiHiniiiminiiniuiiiiiniiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii |

l/u s f Received!SPORT SHIRTSPlaids Plain Colors — Whites

SHORT SLEEVES„ « 2 aud 82.50

LONG SLEEVES83. and $3.50

AH WoolGABARDINE TROUSERS

Tan or Brown810.50

NOTICEW E A R E F U L L Y E Q U IP P E D T O

_ D Q ^ L K IN D S O F

AUTOMOBILE REPAIR WORK

^ d w e b a ^ th e m e c h a n ic s .. O iuTprTces are w ell b e lo w eelU n g . F o r e x a m p le !

INSTALL CLUTCH IN ANY V.8 LABOR AND PARTS P B

TUNE MOTOR—ANY FORD — LABOR AND PARTS INCLUDED

$12.00$3.00

VALVES GROUND ON ANY 6-CYL. CAR—LABOR AND PARTS ............. $12.00^

Close-Ont — All STRAW HATS81.00

Vahies to $5,001

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•A* ItoBvIdMl As Year PtageeprtaP* 887 Main 8L. Neat to Federal Bake Shop

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Page 5: Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjular iiw

. ------ ;

ISteE inGifr\

Ingine Output To Be Lower

<*i U n i t e d Air* craft Told Producllon Being Stabilized.

X a»at Hartford. July »2.—<«V- Production requirement# at the

I 'i, Pratt a Whitney Aircraft division ' - o f United Aircraft corporation.

' after Uperingr ff f jrradually for T the past eeveral monthi, are being:V atabillacd for the balance of the

year, employee were told in a let­ter mailed yesterday by W. P. Gwlnn, general manager.

- In a statement issued today, the I ebinpany said: ‘ ‘EJarjy this year we . announced that our production re­

quirements In the Elaat Hartford and aatelllte plants would not be as great as oiiginally contemplat­ed. Since that time, there has been a continuous rearrangement of procurement schedules by theArmy and Navy to balance our sc-tual production against the actual

■ combat requirements of. the mili­tary services. Since aircraft pro-

. ductlon has been uniformly high and combat losses have fortunate­ly been lower than anticipated, the services have revised some of their Immediate requirements down-

; ward As a result the production achsdules for Pratt A Whitney pngines by our East Hartford and aatellite plants have been tapering oO gradually ani are now approxl-

. matsly 15 per cent lower than had* been expected earlier. As far as we , know now, these schedules wtll be■ sUbilized for the balance of the

[1. year, but this of course dependsupon the progress of the war.

Some StIU Ovsr-Manned “ A reduction In our total overall

working force to conform to' these Ll*' new requirements has already been / largely accomplished, principally

through normal labor turnover and’ losaea to the military services of employee who have not been re­placed. 8ome.departmenU are still over-manned, however, and we estimate that our total working force wlU need to be further re­duced .by approximately 6 per cent over the next' few weeks. This re­duction will be consistent with our

? new production Setoedules. and ■“ wherever possible transfers will be

made to other departments still under-manned."

The letter to employes pointed ■" out that the company still faced* the problem of completing the

changeover to the production of Us nevirest and most powerful engines, and urged the continued coopers- jtion of employes In giving the Army nad Navy "the most power­ful 'and finest engines In the

.w orld .’

M A N C H E S T E R E V E N D fO B E R A L D . M A N C H E S T E R . C O N N ., S A T U R D A Y , J t n -Y 22, 1944

Weddings' C om ing M arriage

The marriage of Miss Nancy 0111 o f Hartford, formeTly of this town, to William Shuteran of Rockville, will take place on Monday morn­ing. .Tuly 24 at 10 o'clock, at St. Joaeph's Cathedral, Hartford.

Triiiiiaii Is Victor Oil Second Ballot(Continued from Page One)

Leo Schendel In New Post

To Assume ManagementOf«s^i11iams Oil Co.;Has Long Experience.JLeo W. Schendel, of 218 ’ Main

street, on Monday will assume management of the Williams Oil Service, Inc., with a plant located on Broad street. Mi^ Schendel Is a veteran in the gaaolinb, fuel, and range oil bualneaa havihg been aa-

■ Books Added- At €hcney Library

rt

Boohs added recently at the * Mary Chany Mbrary are as, fol-

lows:^ A, A. P.. "Phs Official Guide to

tiha Army A ir Forces"; Ahern, |. Blsano.r, "New Washday” ; Berry. R . B., "Gunners Get Glory"; Cof-

’".fin, Carlyn, "Dogwatch” Corey, Paul, "Buv an Acre"; Dean, Am­ber, "Dead Man’s Float"; De Sola, H a ^ , "Microfilming":. Detaer, K. ’W .,^A rm y Reader;" Eaton. Eve-

■ lym ‘ Tn What Torn Ship” ; Fiach- '• ar. Mrs. M. M., “ My LHes in Rus- ‘ ala” ; Gatti, Mrs. E. M. W., "Ex-' ploring We Would Go": Gayn, M: |

J., "Jourtiey from the E asfi^por- don, Ruth. "Over Twenty^ne” ; Halifax, C. L„ V iscount,/"L ord

..- Halifax’s Ghost Book Hard, Mrs. M. 8., "This Is Kate” L«echt, Ben, "Guide for the Bed^illed"; Hiett, Helen, "No M atter Where” ; Howe. W . D., " C h a ^ Lrfimb and His jvienda": H oj^ J. R „ "Manual for Aviation Cadets": Jonea, R. M.. "Radiant Ulfe” : Jong, Louis de and ■toppelihan, J. W. F., "Lion Ram-

Judah, C. B.. "Tom Bone"; on. Mrs. M. M„ "Anna and

King of Siam"; Ley, .Willy, ikets” : ■ Mack, Gerstle, “ Land

DUided": Miller,- Mrs. Caroline,- "Lebanon’ ; Miller, F. T., "Eisen­hower, Man and Soldier"; Miller, Max, “Daybreak for 0\ir Carrier"; Scott, Bradford, “Trail Herd” ;

^ r t , J. L„ “Can Our Cities Sur­vive?” : Birkenhead. S h e i l a ,

, "Against Oblivion” : Sforza, Carlo, "Contemporary Italy” : Kraiis, Rene, "Old Master”: SouthmayU, H J.,.ahd Sniith, Geddes, "Small Community Hospitals” : Talbot, Constance, "Complete Home Cafe

■ of Your Family Wardrobe": Van de W’ater, F. F., "Mrs. Applegate’s

< ^ ffa lr " ; Wheatley. Dannis. "Sword * olSFate": White. Marion,. "Mother

Hubbard's Cook Book." .

ly expressed by Senator Kenneth b. McKellar of Tennessee, who arose to complain that his state’s 26. yotes remained to the last re­corded for Governor Cooper,

McKeUar’s protest was lost In the banging of Chairman Samuel D. Jackson’s gavel, which dented the speakers’ stand earlier in the day in attempts-to quell demon- ■strations from the, galleries for Wallace apparentlj^ touched off by CIO sympathisers.

It was. admittedly, a test of strength between the adherents of Wallace, who had received a luke­warm endorsement from the pres­ident, and the men like Mayor Ed­ward Kelly of Chicago, National Committeeman Edward J. Flynn of New 'li ork, and Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City who like ■their politics uncomplicated.

The Kelly-Flynn-Hagtie combj- natlon, aided by Democratic Na­tional (Chairman Robert E. Han- negan, won in a see-saw battle that Sidney Hillman, chairman of the CIO Political Action commit­tee, had predicted would find Wal­lace victorious.

South Provides Votea The south, led by Oklahoma In

the southwest which made the first break toward Truman, pro­vided in a pinch the necessary votea to put the Missourian over after a first ballot on which Wal­lace, who remained in a downtown hotel, rolled up 429 1-2 votes. Tru­man had 319 1-2 on the Initial count apd the rest were divided between 14 also-rans.

Down on the sardine-packed floor of the convention, with sweating delegates mopping their brows around him, Senator Burnet May- bank of South Carolina gave re­porters an example o f the South’s viewpoint Just after the first re­sults were announced.

Said Maybank: "W e’re going to anybody who ca'n beat Wallace. We may support Truman on the next ballot.”

Breaks Come Fast The breaks came fast on the sec­

ond roll call, and the futile din of gallerltes-^soiiie of whom were University 3f Chicago and North western University students too young to vote— could not stem the tide against Wallace, k

Tossed aside after a four-year "Washington career o f presiding over the Senate, attending cabinet .sessions, and directing foreign eco­nomic warfare until relieved by the President, the Iowan had only kind words for the new ticket.

"O f course,” said the man who will be vice president until next Janusry, he would support the ticket.

The cause of Hberallsm has been advanced,", lie added. H«; had pitched tyis campaign for a place on the ' November ballot largely otyihe contention that he appeale(Fco the ‘liberal’ and labor clemeprw of the country.

s Hillman, too, was philoso

socisted in this line for the past H years. He has an extensiveclientele in Manchester and sur­rounding communities.

William F. Johnson is the presi­dent of the Williams company. The firm has tanks on Broad street with a storage capacity of 400,000 gallons. Later the firm plans to announce a new connection with one of the largest gasoline snd oil companies.

Guam Liberation Goes Aheail Fast; Menace Port Apra

(CoatTaned from. Page Oae)

Famine Threatens ParisHungry Capital Eagerly Atvaits Allied

Victory

Dog TrialsRichest Yet

Hospital Notes

|l-r<Admitted yesterday: Ronald

Shute, Rockville:. Mrs.'-. Barbara Daly, Bolton; Carl Earn; 26 Ke'e- Bey Street.,' Admitted today: Harold Haiina. 44 Union street; Louise and Don­ald Cassells. 32 Pleasant street; Linda Carpenter, R.F.D. 2. .Ail-

, dover; Mrs. Gertnjde Lockwood,’ 63 Ridge street: Barbara Dayido- j.wlcz. 45 North' street; Clarence j, Wilson, Sandy- Beach, R.F.D. 1,I R o^ville. ■I Discharged yesterday; Mrs.' Alma Cowles, 16 Proctor road; Pa­

tricia- Donovan, R.FD:, Rockville; Thomas J. Smith,' 115 Hilliard street; Mre. John Lynch and" B ^ghter, South Coventry.

• Discharged today;'Andre Lleb- B »n , Rockville. i’ Births today: Daughter to Mr. ASM Mrs. Ouillette, 237 Woodland

, Mraet; a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. .ijjbavld Toomey, Bolton- a daughter ’' 'f o Ml. and ..tii.s. George UUuld,.36. |^>iive E. Silver Lane 110111 ,

phical about the outcome, telling Reporters.

“It’s a good ticket. We were for Wallace, but if w» hadn’t been for him, we would have been for Truman. ' He has s very' good rec­ord.”

Generously expansive, the party leading victors wpre willing to let bye-gones remain that way.

Hannegan Re-Election Assured"It’s a grand, ticket—we’ve got

the best candidate of all,” 'exclaim­ed Hannegan. whose re-election as chairman at a National committee meeting today virtually was as­sured by the outcome.

'"W e ’re all Democrat^ now,” said Kelly. "The CIO had a right to be for Wallace. Sometimes they were a little out of line, but that’s all right."

"All's well that ends well,".quip­ped Flynn.

Triiman. w-.ho came up from a Missouri county judgeship 10 years ago when the Kansas city Pender- gast organization cast about for a senatorial candidate, told the con­vention that he was perfectly drill­ing to undertake “the very great reapionaibility” it had bestowed upon him and tc “ continue the ef­fort to shorten the war and win the peace under the leadership of our great president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt." ’

Later, after most conVentloil delegates had gone, home, he, told a press co.iference that he will resign immediately as chalnpan'bf the W’ar Investigating committee, will hold on to his senatorial post "until 1 am sworn in as vice presi­dent, will leave it up to "the com­mander In .chief and the Demo­cratic Natiopiil coihmittee" the part he wilLplay in the cam pai»;

His resignation would .“ pnators Carl Hatch of'New Mexi­co and James Mead of New York, both Democrats, as possible con­tenders for chairmanship of the inquiry committee.'

ing resistance inland, but they had tanks to lead them, artillery at their backs. OlTshore, battleships, cruisers and destroyers held un­challenged command of the seas. Above, American planes apparent­ly monopolized the skies for Ad­miral Chester W. Nlmltz’ com­muniques made no mention of the enemy air force.

Henry characterized the Guam undertaking aa the amoothcat am­phibious operation of the Pacific war. Less than four hours after the landings, the beaches "were crammed with incoming necessi­ties of warfare dike ammunition, rations, water 'and medical sup- pliea and gaeoline."

Tokyo Claims Refuted Tokyo radio’s claim of "tremen-

douB losaea Inflicted by our forcea" waa refuted by a Nlmitx commujil- que last night aUtipg ’’preliminary eatlmatea indicate that our casu­alties are moderate."

"Dead Americans were hard to find," Henry wrote.

The preparatory air and Naval attacks quadrupled in length those which preceded the landings flvs weeks ago on Saipan, 125 mllea to the north of Guam In the same Marianas chain. .

"Naval gunfire literally exca­vated the Japanese coastal de­fenses, camouflaged blockhouaes and ’ beach barriers" at Guam, Henry said.

Establish Padfifle RecordOn the day preceding the land­

ings, carrier planes established a Pacific record by dropping .627 tons of bombs and 147 individual rockets. The day o f the landing, the warahtps aprayed Guam de­fenses with i,lQ0 tons of shells.

Niraitz's communiques last, night listed a new atrike by Navy land- based Liberators, presumably op­erating from Saipan, at Chichi .lima and Haha Jima which, are in the Bonin islands, a little oyer 600 miles south of ’Tokyo. A Jap destroyer was among targets bombed.

In the Southwest Pacific, bomb­ers in Gen. Douglas MacArthur^s command area added to their amazing score of Nipponese ships sunk or damaged. They sank an oil-ladcn. ship and two coastal vessels off northwest Dutch New Guinea and left another coastal vessel in flames oft Timor.

Parisians wait patiently In line for slim pickings In stores shelvM are almost barrbn of foodstuBs

whose

Plentiful Glass Containers Replace Scarce Packaging

Bv’ Rosette Hargrove i »hops. Prices show an almost■ NEA .StaB Corres^ndent ! vertical upward cmwe.

J , . . . - Life in the one-time Gay City^ndon - History has the unfor- standstill. The Gestapo, in

luhate habit of repeating itself, connivance with Laval, have ar- Reporta that have come out o f ' rested and deported thousands of P^ris since D Day indicate that Frisians. To avoid deportationPirisians are facing conditions similar to those which prevailed during the famous siege of 1&7<). The difference, however, is that trie Germans are now inside the capital and not batterhiR at its walls as they were 74 years ago.

Paris is threatened with ^ fa m ­ine. Long before the Allies ilRadcd Normandy there had been a short­age of truck drivers. portA's, car­riers and other such people to in­sure the delivery of packages and dii)tribute foodstuBs. All shipments of;foodstuBs from the Normandy ar^a stoppled completely from D Day. In any case, conditions had become chaotic as a result of Allied bombing raids on roadf, bridges and railways some weeks before the!famous June 6th. >

rman patrols' blocked all poads leading to Parib. and confis­cated foodstuBs which farmers have tried to send into ihe city. Paris reserves are said >to 'be_ low

■barely auSicient for two or. at most, three, weeks. In the city it­self the German authorities have requisitioned, without payment, all foodstuBs they can lay hands on In the large stores as wey as in the

Retired Risbnp Dies

^.Bqgsards Bay. Mass., July 12.— Blahop William F. AiqlersoB.

,t«tiAd, o f the Boston area of ' MMhodiat Episcopal Church, [ o f a heart attack V<’d*y his ner borne)

Fireman Is Hurt \nifle on'DriU

John R. Reggetts, of I05 Hem­lock street, a-member of Hose No, 3 of the South Manchester fire de­partment -w as injured during s drill last night. He was pulling a hose from the cart which had been run. to Globe Hollow, when the hose stuck as the 'wagon was being driven along. Hs was pulled for­ward and struck on his head. This caused a gash on the aide o f hit head which required two stitches to close. He alto Injured his shoul­der. 'An X-ray picture was taken of Um ahbuldar this soocning.

many men have fled from their homes and hidden as best they can; the number of workers still at work in the Paris region is said to be insignificant.

"Spirits are high—extremely high, despite the fact that there is less to eat thqn at any time previously in Mils war." "This is how a . report from a resident "somewhere in France,” dated June 24. starts. "The breadj-fation tn this town is less than two ounces a day - and we are in no way the unforhmatc exception.- But despite evAything people laugh, joke ai.d seem-.'pleased with this wicked world."

Confidence In the approaching victory is expressed in many ways. Thus on the black market there Is a rush to get rid of all inferior quality goods. A cut in prlces is being demanded. Inferior shoes costing 800 frtutes ($16.00) a month ago are now sold for half that price. Goods expected to ar­rive after the Allied Armies, like razor blades.' also show an amaz­ing drop—a blade costing 75 francs ($1.50) a month ago can now be bought for less than a dol­lar.

Obedience Tests to Be Most Important Staged In Several Years.

■ ■ ------ fThe fifth annual trials of the

Hartford Obedience Training Club, to be staged July 29-30, have been tabbed aa "the We.itminater of the obedience world," and for good reason that these are the richest trials of the year, aa well as being the most important to be staged in several years. Gas and other travel restrictions are all that stand In the way of these trials beating tbe world record of 192 en­tries set by Hartford OTC at Katonah in 1941. Early Indications point to these tHals taking world honors for the year in number and variety of entries as well as In the total valuation of awards. This will mark the third time in five yeara-that the local training club’s show values have hit the $1000 mark.

The standard five classes of obedience ring work will take place on the East Lawn of the Aetna Life Insurance Co. grounds on Farmington avemie, Saturday, July 29, with judging slated to start at 1:30 p. m. under a panel of five expert arbiters. The dlBicuIt tracking tests will be run oB Sun­day morning," July 30. on suitable grounds in ' Manchester and Glas­tonbury.

The show is to be held to bene­fit rehabilitation of veterans and will be under the sponsorship of the Robert E. Collins Post No. 131, American Legion, holders of the Department of Connecticut’s gold cup for the best work of any Le- gibn„pcat.in this regard.

Spectators at the trials will see the .finest obedience work of the year, for the top dogs now In com­petition have been sharpened up for an a.ssault on tpe r.ch awards of the show. Many of the mid- western obedience leaders have been studying timetables and vaca­tion schedules with a view of chal­lenging the beat the east has to ofler and thus make these trials the virtual national championships.

Contestants will ftinge from tiny toy breeds to the huge working dogs and cover all degrees of util­ity and interest, from the speed­sters of the hunting field to the stalwart dogs that have provided the bulk o f the United States K-9 Corps, which so fittingly has cov­ered itself with glory.

By Ann St«vlck NEA Stafl Correspondent

Washington—You may see glass containers replacing many of the cardboard ones -you find on shelves today. War Production Board has removed most restrictions on glass for. packing food, tooth powder and d n i^ .

The glass industry, by eliminat­ing whimsies of the Good did Days, like torao-shaped bottles, and sticUing to a few standard sizes and types, has worked Itself up to an unexpected pitch of bot­tle production.

There’ll be plenty, new WPB rules indicate, for you to have glass-packed spaghetti and mkca- ronl again, as well as corned beef hash and sauerkraut. )These bad been entirely oS the list. Candy and nut meats, which confectlon-

<^ers have been peddling out bf s big jar on tbs counter, because of restricted glass containers, can now go back Into separate jars. '

Foods In Glass On most standard food items

packers had been limited, to lOf per cent of glass used In. 1943 Now the sky’s the limit* for moat of them, with unlimited use ol aluminum an dreject tin lids tc top oB thb new abundance. Then is on hitch, however. Many foo4 products are permitted only lim­ited use o f shipping cartons. ^

Glass containers usually more carton materials than tin Manufacturers have become agili in War-time make-do, however Some are already testing the new less fragile glass in ' bulk, by-the- carload srilpments, using a mini­mum of packing. /

Hitler Says Move ‘ To Assume Power lias Been Crushed

(dbptiinMd from Page One)

Chindits Capture Two Villageg

Southeast Asia Command Headquarters, Kandy, Ceylon, July 22—(/P)— Chindits have cap­tured the villages -at Ngusharawng and Pungan, strategic junctions of jungle trails 17 miles west of MogaUng and fceven miles north­west of Taungni in north Burma, an Allied communique announced today.

In the Manipur hills the Brit­ish were reported slowly pressing back enemy rearguards at Mol- nom, 2 2 ^ ile s northeast of Palel on the track leading out of India to the Kabaw 'valley, and making progress southward from Imphal albng the -Tlddim road.

Japanese Garrison Reported Cut Off Now

Chunking, July 22.—(8 — Yhe Burma road between Lainglihg and Mangshih now has been blocked ef­fectively, and the Japanese -garri­son at Lungling is cut oB from the east, north and south, the Chinese high command announced today.

Main portions of a Japanese column which had attempted to relieve the enclrctied Pingka gar­rison, to the south, have com­pleted their withdrawal into Mangahlh after suffering serious losses, the high command said.

Chinese troops In the Plngka- Mengtill area are mopping up iso­lated enemy groups which 'were .separated from the main body, the communique added. -

Japs RtkpoH Heavy Fighting on Guam ,

London, July 22 — (85 — The Tokyo radio said today' that "heavy fighting" was continuing on Tluam .between the Japanese gsrrisoKs of Amiyajlma and enemy forces "who landed yesterday' and auBered’ heavy losses.’’

The broadcast, a follow-up of one last night In which the Japa­nese made their Brat acknowledge­ment that American forcea had landed on the island, carried the text o f an Imperial headquarters announcement which said briefly:

"On the morning o f July 21 about two enemy divisions started landing at Akaahl bay o n . the western shore and on Shows bay of Guam. 0«ir forcea iB that a n a

■ - -

Intercepted them and are engaged In fierce fighting.”..The first announcement by Tokyo

came several hours after Adm li^ Cheater ♦fimltz disclosed U. S. forcea had aecured "good beach- heada;’ with only moderate caaual- ties.

Today's broadcast, quoting first Japanese reports from the' Guam fighting front, clainried that heavy losses were inflicted on the Ameri­cana at Akashi and Showa bays. In Akashi bay 1,100 Americans were killed and the enemy waa left In "helpleaa diaorder," the broadcaat said, making no mention of Japaneae loases.

Laat night's Japanese bi’oadcast said the American forces landed one division and 150 tanka at Asan, on the west coast of Guam , north of Port Aprs, and half a division at Agat. to the south.

Crowded Rooms Result in Fine

Held in Default Of $10,000 Bond

Boston. July 22—(/P)—Two rooms of a South End house where I8 'teen aged Negroes from a South Carolina orphanage were housed were descrlbto as “worse than any- thingfl have read In Gharles Dick­ens" by Municipal Judge Elijah Adlow. ‘

One room was occupied by 10 girls and the other by eight boys.

Police said the group comes from a Charleston, S. G., orphanage and plays tn a street band.

Henry Lee, 43, Negro owner of the lodging house, was fined $100 for conducting a lodging houae without a license.' He appealed and was released in $1()0 bail.

Hartford. July 22-(85-^ Phillip Contlno, 28, o f New London, bnCe deticnbed by State’s Attorney Ar­thur M- Brown of New London county, as "a second John Dillin- ger.” _ today was held here In de­fault of $10,000 bond, charged with absconding from the Con­necticut district of Federal court in a counterfeit gasoline coupon case.

The State' OPA oBice which filed the original black market complaint said Contlno waa ar­raigned a month ago in New Lon­don. and released on his own rec­ognizance, thereaifter disappearing from Connecticut and not found until this week when state police notified the OPA that he was ap­prehended upon ieturning. to his home. . He was said to have gone to New Mexico where he sepa­rated from an accomplice. '

The New Lond'on Day said prior to his arraignment before Com­missioner William J. Wbolean at Hartford that he was sentenced to 11 yeara by the Superior court

1935 on charges of breakinginjail, burglary and 'theft, and at that ‘ time Attorney Brown was quoted as likening him to Dillln- ger. , Contlno was recently pa­roled by the state’s prison.

He will be given a hearing Fri­day before the commissioner in Hartford 'on charge at being a fugitive.

reliable information was diBicuIt to obtain tbrougli, the cloak of Nazi secrecy. '■

Indicative of this, 12 Germans reached Stockholin by plane from Berlin today, but wqre put under close watch by two Gestapo men attached to the German legation,. The Germans avoided questioning by newspapermen.

Broadcast by a German "news agency, the order declared:

"Soldiers of the Arm y:’"A small circle of unscrupulous '

officers has made an attempt to murder me and the general stafl and to seize (lower in the state.

“Providence caused tlje attempt to' miscarry.

"By jmmediate and vigorous ac­tion. by loyal officers and men of the Army at home the traitor clique was wi[ied out or arrested in the matter o f a few hours.

I ex)>ected nothing else.I know that, as hitherto, you

will fight with exemplar^ obedience and loyalty until victory is ours in spite of all."

niustrloiM Figures VictimsThrough Switzerland came an

unconfirmed re{iort that the Gesta­po may have alaughtered some of the most illustrious figures in the Army, all long-time foes of the Nazi regime.

These were said to Include Field Marshals Walther von Brauchitsch, Karl Gerd von Rundstedt, Sigmund Wilhelm List and Fritz Erich von Mannstein—none of whom has been heard from aince Berlin an­nounced two days ago that. Adolf Hitler had narrowly escaped ' as- aaasinatlon. .

Two re(>orts, wholly unconflnti- ed, indicated unrest In the German Navy as well as the Army.

Radio Prance 'in Algiers quoted

purporting to be that of an oBl- cer In the Wehrmacht, announced this morning that “action is con­tinuing.” '

Urges Resistance to Oesta|M>The speaker urged fellow oBl-

cers to oBcr continued armed re­sistance to the Heinrich Himm­ler’s Gastapo. Identifying the ■man who paid for his life for planting" the bomb as Col. Count Claus von StauBenberg. the broadcaster declared:

"Let Hitler know this much for certain—there Is more than one .StauBenberg. StauBenbergs are here tn the thousands.”

Whether the sjieakcr actually was broadcasting from Frankfurt or from an underground station (losing as Frankfurt was uncer­tain, but The Associated Press listener In London said it sounded authentic.

Propaganda Minister Paul Joseph Goebbels put out a story last night that Insurgent gen­erals attempted to grab vital lines of communication at the helghth o f the plot—including lines direct to the front—and troops actually marched on government buildings In Berlin under “ false" orders. According to Goebbels, the Inter­vention of Hitler hlpiself was necessary to calm the crisis.

The whole German press this morning, a Berlin broadcast said, carried stories- declaring steps were being taken so that such an "attempt ion Hitler’s life) of July 20 will in the future be an impos­sibility.”

And in a succinct warning to the ■Strife-ridden Reich. Hitler’s own Voelkischer Beobachter asserted that Himmler’s ap()ointment as commander ir chief of home front forces “ guarantees that this task will be accomplished.’'

In Throes of Crisis Here in London, after nearly

tvto days of. sifting and examining a flurry of Nazi- re()orta, there seemed to be general agreement that there was no question but that Germany was In the throes of a crisis—tUthough every new re- ()ort was treated-with careful re­serve.

The conservative London Tlme8 commented:

"Whether a conspiracy has fail­ed and been suppressed or is still In being and may yet succeed, a momentous event has occurred. It would still be a (lortent even If the enemy "had for hia own pur­poses deliberately fabricated an imaginary coup d’etat. That sup- (loaltion, however, may be dis- ihiased.”

Board Formed For Post-War

George Waddell Elected Chairniuii; Purpose ol Local Unit Outlined.

WPB Begins Slow Reconversion ' Program for Household Goods

Reports New German Government Formed

London, July 22—(85— A Mos­cow broadcasF today quoted Radio Atlantic as say^g that h new Ger­man im(>erlal giwernment had b««n formed.

Radio Atlantic is a . clandestine German-language station which long, has-carried on an anti-Nazi propaganda campaign and. wl|Ose location and connections never have been disclosed.

New Books Added To Whiton Library

The initial meeting of the Man­chester Post-War Planning com­mittee was held last night, anc Town Treasurer George Waddeb. U’ae elected permanent chnirmaa Mrs. Clara IVrklngton was elect­ed permanent secretary. Th« prime interest of this new com- mitee Is to give all (loasible - ale and vocational assistahee to re­turning service men. The neces­sity of a liaison d'Bicer was dis­cussed and It ^was decided that someone who is completely fa­

miliar with Uie medical as well at the employment problems oj these returning men should b< chosen. The question of hiring a person who qualified thoroughly for this job was brought up by William Roscoe, rehabilitatibn au­thority, He stated tbat one fut time man familiar with the indi­vidual problems, both medical anc vocational, could do more th(ui tht whole town.

Henry Mallory stated that b4 was a member of the Area L^t^i Management Committee on Man­power and t h ^ the Committee at recent meetings hsd disedssed ths question of veterans’ ediployme.it He said that the present manpow­er'regulations governing employ­ment in this area required anyone seeking work to go through th« U. S. Employment OBic^. Ths Man(x>wer Conunlttee, however, had in the case of veterans mads an exception so that veterani would be'exempt from certain re- stribtiona generally a(>pllcatde ir the arba. At the present time, a veteran can be employed by any business or industry whether ii not such industry Is classed as es­sential and regardless of the ceil­ing of employment placed on the industry^ However, he is required to go through the U. S. Employ­ment OBice. Mr. Mallory also em­phasized the point that the com­munity was faced with a serioua problem In connection with ths return of veterans and felt that there should be a Clear-cut dis­tinction In the Defense Council Ck>mmittee's work between the employment of veterans and tbs rebabUiUtlon u id taospiUUaatlon of veterans.

The meeting last night' was mainly to clarify the duties re­garding steps to be taken to aid returning veterans,

Mail Delivery111 New Streets

/ .,

re(M>rta from Basel that it was gen- crsdly believed there that N*val

-equipment is less limited. Theseoqds a ^ ends won't do for wash-

macni

By ArftoStevlck NEA StaB ^rreatrandent

Washingtnn-^'Ypu can wear out ing machUi'es or vacuum cleanera your floor mop before there'll be but they add u'p to some aid. and new vacuum cleaners. That’s an comfort .for the homefolks liiforinal W ar Prixiuction Board ' ' -Servlce-Statloa SleutlMestimate of how long it will take Don’t be surprised if yqur ser-for the goods-for-the-homefblks \ vice-station man gives B - and C program, beginning Aug. 15, to put ' cou(x>ns -s(>ecial scrutiny from now an^hing in your hand. * I on. First counterfeit serially num-

The August 115 starting date be red stamp haa turned up, so. .Of- only begins a longbow of adjust- flee of Price Administration haaments of restrictive orders, care­ful weighing, of labor facilities and war contracts in thb aFca where a factory is found free to start work.

While- getting ready slowly to make things that will show up in your household, -WPB goes on add­ing a bit here and there to less ahowy homefront equipment where a little will do the' most good without causing cotnpUca- tions. Last month’s orders 'added new items of resta'irant snd dry- cleaning equipment,

Limlta on metal in medical and surgical furniture were removed. Meta) windows can be made for more users. Frames for 'orrectlve S(>ectaclea can now be made of nickel. Plumbing, and besting

sent out country-wide , warnings. Service station attendants are to check each cou(x>n to sec that it has the license number of your car written on i t You’re, safe if you came by your ration book by ordi­nary means. Yo- can’t get hold of counterfeit cou(>ona by accident unless you buy, borrow, or accept cou(x>ns a» a ^ ft .

-Odds and EndsYou no longer have to turn in

old-electric heater cords in order tc ^ t a new one. . . ; New ceiling pficea on turkeys add a cent two a pound to p r i ^ o f heavy birds, take oB a cent on light ones . . . Platinum ia at. scarce not even scrap can be allowed for jewelry repair) WPB reports.

units at'K iel and Stettin had re­belled. The Brazzaville radio re­ported unrest among Naval imits In Norwegian ports and said an organisation called “ the'Fraternal Association of all German Sailors” ap(>eared ta b(; behind the move- ment.-

Flfhting 8tfR Centtnnlng A Madrid .di8(Mtch said one re­

port from- a German embassy source there lndlcate<!l certain Army elements'.had revolted iii aopthern Germany and that fight­ing atill was continuing.

Dr. Robert Ley, Na'zi labor chief, declared In a broadcast address this morning to (3erman armament workers that the fact Hitler "was saved does not mesn. the battle is' won," then added:'

"W hile' German workers labor 12'and 16 hours without a Sun­day or holiday the Miotic pobUlty has nothing better to do than plot agalnat our feuhrer." •

Word emerged through Sweden of mass arrests in Berlin with larges forces of SS .(Elite Guard) troo(>s ringing the capital and (>a- trolling the streets in armored cars. :, ■’ -

While the Nazis, through vari­ous broadcasts, claimed to have suppressed the revolt with at least two o f the alleged rlngipad- era dead—Coi. Ocn. Ludwig Beck, farmed chief at the German -gea- eral staB, and the Count von StauBenberg, accused by Hitler at placing the bomb—a voice on tha Praakfurt tadie wave taigtk.

New books added this iftonth at the Whiton Library, North Main street, include the following;

Downey, Jezebel the Jeep; Evans. All In a Twilight: Gaither, The Red Cock Crows; Hard, This

. ’Ils Katd; Lea. Sailor’s SUr; Mac- lean. Faiewell To Tharrui: Mally, The Mocking Bird Is Singing; Rob­ertson, Wre- Bell in the Night; Zwelg, The Royal Oame._

In Non-Fiction: Bailey, Boot; A MBrine in the Making; Bowen, Yankee From Olympus; Cli|mber- lln. The Russian Enigma; Clayton, Heaven' Below; Daniel, Islands of the East Indies; Ooahal, The Peo­ple of India; Grew, Ten Yeara In Japan; Jones, Small-Town Boy; Mead, Tell the Folks Back, Home Packard, Our Air-Age World Parker, Headquarters At Buda­pest; Price, Giraud and the African Scene.

Asks Bus Service For Farm Workers

Notice haa been given that hearing will be held by the Public ‘Utilities Commission on Thursday, JuIjL 27, at 11 a. m., at its office. Room 585. State Office building, 165 Capitol avenue, HartfOid, Con­necticut. on the a(>pUcatian of lU y- mond W. Ooodale of Andover, for authority to operate a CSeneral Livery Senrje^ from a headquar­ters in Andover.

The nature aiid extent of the services to be rendered are as fol­lows:

"Transportation o f giria for W o­men’s Land Army C o m between Women's Land Army Corps cfm p at Andovar and points in Town Bast Windsor; slso, bstwssn ths Woman’s Ismd Arn)y Corps camp st Andoirer and (Mints in Towns o f Columbia, Windham (Willimantic)

Postmaster H. Olln Grant has received authorization to extend free delivery of mads and parce) (xiajt to the. resfdenta of South Al­ton and South Hawthprne streets. The necessary provlaioha have been made and now those who are to get the sei'Vice must see that there are the pro(>er receptacles provldiid for the mail when it Is delivered.

Mr. Grant expects to have the service in o(ieration st once.

About TownCor(Mral Elizabeth R. Klein of

49 Buckland street is home on a ' furlough from Fort Gesrge Meade, Md.. Corporal Klein who U the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ferdi­nand- Klein, was the first Iqcsl girl to join the Woman’s Army Coiqis. She enilated in October 1942, train­ed st Des Moines, Iowa, and - in January 1943, waa assigned to Fort Meade. She gave up a posi­tion with the Aetna Life Insurance to enter this branch o f the service, and la still enthuslsatla about her ■work.

Miss Florence C. Donohue and her brother, Francis A. Donohue, of Pearl streetl Miss Claire Stevens and Miss Ruth D. Sonnik- sen of Middle Turnpike East,., are spending their vacation on Ca(M

• - — ____ •' IDavid Hawley, son o f Mr. and

Mrs. Robert F. Hawley of Coburn road, has received the distinction of having his name on the honor roll fo. the first marking period of the Summer School at WUbraham Academy. - WUbraham, Massi. as announced by Chariea L. Stevens, Headmaster o f the Acadmny^ At the conclusion of the 'Sum m er- School, the third commencement exercises held this year wUl take place. These exercises are ^le re­sult 'of the accelerated program which is dealfflbd to hblp boys gain admission to coUeg* M o re theyare called for Induction under the. 'teen ege draft Jaw. The Greduatlon program will be held on September 2nd with the Fall session starting SenUmber aotk.

Defeat South End Fire­men by 6 to 5 in a Fast Game o f Softball at the Y Playgronnd.

, 'The Buicldee continued their march of victories last evening by

.defeating the SouU Mancheeter firemen in the local Softball league by the score of 6 to 5.

The fire-eaters started peck away at “ the giant killers,” in the o()enihg frame by scoring one run In the first Inning, only ta have tha North Enders come back in their half to tie matter up at one all. Again the South Bndeni fought back and ecored two more in the second and one more in the third. The best that the Suicides could do in the meantime waa to chalk one up in their half of the third, to have the score read 4 to 2 In favor of the firemen.

The South Enders again scored one more In their time up in the fifth only to have the Suicides even things up at five all when Kosak got bis second home run of the night with two mates aboard. , •

The beginning of the sixth mn- ing teen the score tied, and the fire-eaters could not help their score at all. "Hook” Brennan, first to bat far the Suicides hit a h l^ , deep fly out near the right field fence on which the fielder could not hold on to, and, Bren­nan aided by his own speed* made It count and scam(>ered across the home plate with the winning run, as the South Enders in the sev­enth went down In one. two, three manner.

Monday nlght’8 game wlU bring together the Suicides who have been certainly knocking down all apposition lately and the unde­feated league leaders, Cheney Bros. "Hook” Brennan will un­doubtedly get the call for the (Etching assignment for the North Enders. The manager of the Cheney Brothers told this writer that he will take no chances and win bring "Pop" Gleason from Vernon to pitch this battle.

R seems to be a pitchers” bat­tle for Monday’s game with the winners getting the breaks. A g ^ crowd is expected to witness this game,

*nie Box Soar*Following is the box score of

last night's game:So. End Firemen

AB R HPO A Slemclnsky. sf ..3 1 1 4 0Kerr, sa .............2 0 1 2 flWilkinson, ss . .1 0 1 0 0Arfnstrong, If ..3 O i l 0 L. Frelheit. 2b .8 1 0 0 0Benson, p ...........8 1 2 0 SMoorehouse, cf .3 0 1 0 0C. Frelheit. lb ,..8 0 0 6 0Sullivan, rt . . . . 8 0 0 0 flRubacha, 3b . .3 2 2 3 3

Fracchia, e . . . . 2 0 1 2 f

Leading Hitter

Bagby May Pitch Club Into Pennant Scrap

M A N U H E S'nilK B V B N I N G H E K A L tl. M A N C M E ST B R . tXIISTN, S A T U R D A Y , J U L Y 22, 1944

Suicides Continue P. A. s Whitewash Han Uton Props by 9-March to Victory

Couple o f Bench Wamiera

lim O n r o SalH That He ®«thit the Pirates. Frankie 2 J i m u n c e a a m m a t three hlU were a big factorWould Never Do Lick f(Lou Boudreau.

Frankie Zak'al in|

a Pittsburgh's 5-3 night victory._ . , - _ wi 1 1 Horn Dalleaaandro's two-run ILick for Team , Under homer in Uit eighth broke a 2-2 tie

for Chicago’s 4- 2 margin over the I Braves after Bill Nicholson's 16th I round tripper had given Chicago an early lead. Both Red Lynn of I the Cubs and Elen Cardonl of the I Braves were seeking their first vie-1 tory.

Bobby Doerr.

rtae Boston Red Sox are in the thick of the American League (lennant race^ and one of their chief reasons is the batting and fielding of Bobby Doerr. Doerr, the peer of the second sackers in the majors. Is enjoying one of his best yeara. and currently is the leading bqtter in the league with a .844 mark.

EaateraW.

Hartford . . .Albany ........WilliamsportUtica ............Binghamton .Elmira ........ .Wilkes-Barre Scranton -----

St. Louis . . . New xork ., Boston . . . . .Detroit ........Cleveland . . Washington (Chicago . . . . Philadelphia

AmeriranW.

........ 50:~ V . 45

Pet..718.688.558.518.430.427.400.325

Pet. .562

— 'JM2 .617 .500 .500 .477 .469 .430

NationalW.

St. Louis . . . Cincinnati .. Pittsburgh.. New York . Philadelphia (Chicago . . . . Brooklyn .. Boston ........

By Jack Hand i(A. P. 8 (>orta Writer) ]

Jim Bagby who once vpwed he’d !ver pitch another game for j

Cleveland under Manager Lou j Boudreau today stood out as the man who may boost the tribe into the thick of the (lennant scrap.

When Bagby joined tha Mer­chant Marine after last season, he said he was through with Cleve­land. But after being rejected by the draft earlier In the week, the I'fjgame winner of '42 and ’43 hustled to the trial wigiyam and last night stoppto Philadelphia with five hits as Boudreau’s In­dians took a 4-1 decision over Luke Hamlin to sweep the scries, i

"While the Yankees and Browns took turns knocking one another’s brains out, without disturbing St. Louis’ 2-game margin, Cleveland and Detroit made motions toward serious contention. The St. Louis- New York series ended yesterday when Alley Donald outpltched A1 Hollingsworth for an 8-2 Yank vic­tory ahd an^even break.

Takes Four S tra lf^Detroit took four straight from

Washington, all by one-run matr gins to keep pace with Cleveland in a fourth place tie, 1% games back of Boston and 6% off the top. Dizzy Trout captured win No. 13 at the expense of 'reliefer Early Wynn of the Senators as Roger Cramer nammered -home two De­troit runs and scored the other in a last of the ninth rally for 6-5 edge. ‘

Boston lost ground by falling be­fore Chicago, 5-3, for the second time in 14 starts. Buck Ross fin­ally hit the win side of the ledger as Yank Terry suffered his seventh failure with Tom Turner’s four hits his main torture.

Harry Brecheen shut out the New York Giants, 5-0, to help the Cardinals move another step to­ward an early flag in the Nation- al. Johnny Hopp and Ray Sanders spanked home runs at the expense Of Harry Feldman and Ace Adams

Bums In the Basement Brooklyn’s long losing slump

finally dumped the Dodgers into the basement, tied with .Boston, after dropping a 3-2 game to Cin­cinnati’s Ed Heusser. Woody Wil­liams with two doubles and two singles for a perfect day helped drop Curt Davis below the .500 mark yrith his 6th setback.

Max Butcher boosted his win streak to five although the Phils

Box ScorePolish AinerlcMi*

AB R H POKeeney, 2b . . . . 4 0 0 4 3Haefs, cf ........ 3 2 2 0 0Katkaveek. c . . 3 3 2 5 0Bycholski, Ib . . 4 0 1 5 0Banks, r f . . . . . 4 2 8 2 0Dziadyk, 3b . . . . 4 1 . 1 0 0Becker, If . . . . 3 1 1 2 0May, a t .......... . 3 0 1 0 3Ballou, p . . . . . 3 0 n 1 0Green, -cf . . . . . . 1 0 0 0 1Surowlec, If . . . 1 0 0 2 0

Totals

Expect Fast Game Sunday!

Willimantic Fliers and I Plant J Will Provide Good Sport Tomorrow IThe ever dangerous WllUmantia

Fliers will be back in to’wn tomor­row afternoon for a Twilight League game with the Plant J Air­craft nine.

The Thread City nine, which baa registered four wins in eight starts to rest in second place in the league standings, has always play­ed commendable ball in previous loop engagements and Sunday’s attraction will be no exception.- With the addition o f several

new faces, the Fliers will present their strongest possible lineup and I Eddla Dziadus an ardent sports-1 that means Specs Johnson, Dusty man has been admitted to the Ooo.n

9 U 21 7 5

H PO A E 3 7 0 0

Jimmy Foxx (right), who last week ended his active pUying career to become catching conch for the Chicago Cuba, talks baseball with another baseball immoral -Mohdecai (Three-Finger) Brown, of Terre Haute, Ind., who was a pitching star In baseball’s pioneer era, at Wrigley Field In Chicago. Brown took part In a war-bond rally. (AP wirephoto).

Local Sport Chatter

Yesterday's ScoresEastern

2, 7; Scranton

-A

Williamsport 3

29 S 10 18 4Suicide*

AB R HPO AVUga, 8b . . . . . . 8 2 2 3 1Clifford, 2b . , . . 3 0 0 2 2Kosak, as .......... 3 2 2 X 1DubashtasM, ef 3 0 1 0 0Brennan, tt , . . . 2 1 1 1 0Maneggia, p . . . . 3 0 1 1 1Jarvis, 0 . . . . . . S 0 0 7 1Johnson, rt . , . . 3 0 0 0 1Capra, sf . . . . . .2 0 0 1 0Mason, lb ........ 2 1 1 6 0

27 6 8 21 7

Blackburn Made 134 Ringside Then Walloped ' Good Heavies: Held Own With Sam Langford

cook and Joe Lesneaki will be in the garden. Johnson Is one of the league’a leading sticker*. The in­ner defense wilt find Rabbit Me- noche, Leo Dadalt, Happy Mlela ■and slugging Sammy Roy on the infield. Li the (leraon of Dadalt and Roy, the Filers have two bat­ters well over the .400 mark.

Raymond May PitchDick Wargo hurled the All-Star

game last Thursday and is not ex- (jccted to start on the hill aa the rested Sam Raymond, the work­horse pitcher of the league, will be

ia the logical choice. Raymond haa won four games in six starts.

In the first game between these two teams, the Filers (Munded out a 7 to 4. win. •*’

The Aircraftei* are led by Jim­my Owens and whenever the Blast Hartford lad steps out on the dia­mond it spells trouble for their op­ponents. Eddie Saxby the fancy fielding shortstop, and Dave Beat- tie, have added new life ta the club, and tn breaking even in the sec­ond round, the newcomers have played an important ()art.. 'The starting pitching choice for the Aircrafters will be, either Beat- tie or Bud Hayden.

A tight game is forecast with a large crowd expected. The game will get under way at 4:45, with the usual attendance prize.

and Fox club. Here's hoping Eddie can keep the morale of the club at| I'fs high pitch.

East Hartford fans at last I nlght’a All-Star game numbered well over two hundred and the I visiting-rooters were treated to at first-class baseball game in addi-| Uon to copping the game by a 3 to | 0 score.

Hartford (7). 5,

UUca 5, 5;(7). 7.

Albany 5, 6 ; Wilkes-Barre 3 (7), 4.

Binghamton 8, Elmira 2.- Amertcan

Detroit 6, Waatalngton 5.New York 8, St. Loula 2. Chicago 6, Boston 3. Cleveland 4, Philadelphia 1. |

NationalChicago 4, Boston 2. 4Cincinnati 3, Brooklyn 2.St. Louis 5, New York 0. Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 3L!--------------------------- ----- --------

Hutt, lb ........Rollick, ,1b ..Tufferson, cf .Del Conte, if .Germano, ss Rostek, rf . . .Yarz^b, 2b . .Pongratz, c . .Casey, p . . . .Marco, p . . . .Crowley, cf .Wise, c ........Little, rf . . . .Morrissey, 2b

Totals . . . .P, A .s . . . . *Props ...

Runs batted in: Banks 4, Dzla- dyk, Becker 2, May. Two-’base hits: Katkaveek, Bycholskl, Banks, Becker. Threp-base hits; Banks. Double plays; May to Keeney to Bycholski. Left on bases; P. A.’s 3; Props'10. Bases Mn balls; Casey 1. Strike-outa: Ballou 3, Marco 8. Hits off; Casey 4 hits, 5 runs, in 2-3 innings; Marco, 6 hits, 4 runs, in 6 1-3 innings. Winning pitcher: Ballou. Losing pitcher, Casey. Um­pires: Mileski, Kote'h. Time 1:28.

S3 0 8 81 6 1 500 020 2—9 000 000 0—0

Let’s hope that the next time I these two rivals meet, the local players can get their signals set and not let easy pop fly balls drop! for base hits, as they did Thursday |

fielder to appear more often tn the league.

evening, in losing.The Suicides copped their second

straight softball W g u e contestcopped lall laa^

last night. Afte. a alow start the Cheney Brothers claim the dls-1 youngsters have come a long way

Unction of fielding the oldest team and at present arc capable of bowl-in the Softball League. George | Gibbon, Benny Schubert, Jimmy Durga, Henry Skoog, Pop Gleason and Cbamp Georgiettl , ars no youngsters. Are there any dis-i putea to the claim of the league leaders ?

ing over any of the loops teama The addition of Hook Brennan haa a lot to do with the rapid rise of the club. Next Monday avenlng, the Suicides-will meet the league leading, undefeated Machinists.

Twi League Standings

. Won Lost P, C.PA’s . . . . . . 1 0 1 .909Hamilton , .......... 7 4 .636Rockville .. . . . . . . 6 4 .600Wllllmnntlc . . . . . 4 4 .600West Sides .......... 4 7 .364Plant J . . . .......... 3 8 .273Oak Grill . ........ . .2 8 .200

Sports Roundup

Innings:So. End Firemen . . 121 010 0—6Suicides .................. 101 031 x—6

Runs batted in, Rubachi, Bren­nan; home runs, Kosak 2, Bensort;

Jarvis to CUlIord to

By Billy Roche Famous Referee

To convince Packey McFarland that he could do 138 (>ounds, Jack Blackburn did 134 ringelde for Gebrge Memsic. Tuo weeks later Blackburn knocked down Jim Bar­ry In giving that hard-hitting heavyweight'a pasting.

Blackburn sought a match with McFarland, who was not alont in wahUng no part of him.

Ja'ck Johnson calls Blackburn

Blackburn drifted to Indisna(>- olis, where he acquired the name Jack. They called him Jack the bootblack.

The happy-go lucky fellow was as fine a handler as he was a fighter. He brought out Bud Tay- lot and Sammy Mandell.

Blackburn calied everybody Chappie after Sam Langfoto re­turned from London with the term. Blackburn and Louis called each other Chappie.

At first Blackburn, who died indouble. playa,

1; winning pitcher. Maneggia; lo% i " . - ■> . " - - -tag pitcher, Benson; um()lre*,Stevenson, Vittner; soorata A.Cowles; time, 42 mtautaa.

Fish and Ohme^ News Hereabouts

The Ckmnectlcut Sportsmen an­nounced that •the Fail field trial will be neld at Felton’s paituro, September 16 and 17. Entry blanks have been mailed out and some of the best dogs ta the E<ast are expected to run. ”

By the-hard work of a few good s(>ortsmen the pheasant project of the Connecticut Sportsmen has been pushed through and the re­ward will be approximately 300 birds that will, be released ta an other three wieeks on this club’e land.

The birds released ta the Spring bava more than paid for them' aelvee. Sportamefi report tbat large broods of young birds have been seen qultq frequently where the breeder* were let go. It'looks like a good eeaaon, for the bird buntara. tT

Tha baas conteat haa L«e Fraq- cbla,in the lead with a 3 1-2 pound

. iargemouth. Aa. yet, no entries have been received ta the am mouth dlvlMon.

Windham Dog'Show

The all-breed A .K .C dog ahow o f tha Windham County Kennel Club will be held Sunday, August 18, at the Brooklyn, . Conn., -J[air grounds.

There Is a wonderful list of pritoa ta the breeds aa weir prize money to be awarded on tha graduatad plan. Tha panfl of judges U a strong one. Obedience clasaea. a feature of this show will be ta charge o f Ghpt Herman Schendel o f Manchester, Qonn.

Premium nate and. entry blanka will be ready for distribution ta a few days. Applications should be made to Emma A. Najae, sac tary, 64 Pinehurat avenue. Provi­dence.

was.Best known now aa the man who !

taught and devclo(>ed Joe Louie,' Blackburn, a rangy Negro, whose every rib showed, had to fight out of his class to get action.

Joe Oafis alone beat Blackburn while he was himself, taking a 15- round decision in , Baltimore in 1904. They met oh two other occa­sions — in six-round, no - decision contests ta Philadelphia.

JBlackburn battled Sam Lang­ford five times for a total of 58 rounds and the beat the fabuloua Boaton Tar Baby ever got was a draw.

Shooting Baited Career He apotted the su(>eriatively

clever Philadelphia Jack O’Brien 35 potmds and closed his right eye with wlwt became known as the lco(>-the-l6op punch, a right tossed as he moved away from the Irish- man’a jab.

Early in 1909’, at the height of his career, Blackburn .got- mixed up in 'a shooting affair ta Phila­delphia, and spent four yeara in a (>enitentlary, Where he acted as boxing''instructor to inmat.es and officials. e

Pardoned aftec being out of the ring for more than five ybars, Blackburn took on the heavy­weight, Gunboat Smith, in Phila- de l^ ia ta 1914, then disap(>eaired from the City of Brotherly Love.

Two yeara later a wiry, brown- skinned soldier with a whalebone body re(>ortod^to Gen. Hugh John­son of Gen. Pershtag'e s t ^ In the p'mlUve expedlttoQ into Mexico to chastise Pancho Villa.

Ttanea Glmaged With Louis The troops* confided to General

Johnaon that he . was Jack Black- burp, a prizefighter under a "eu- phoniouz" name, requested per­mission to stage boxing bouts, put on battles rivalling anything seen ta professional rings. In later years Blackburn frequently, re­turned to Mexico.

Blackburn — christened Charles Henry— was born ta Versalllea, Ky., ta 1383. He find Ms brother acM pa(>ers on the streets o f the languid little town, and at the age o f nine Jack was Inspired to be- coma, a fighter by a front page Uloatration of John L. Sullivan and Jamee J. Corbe.tt ta .battle array.

joining the Louis menage, holding that tocause. Joe was a Negro they couldn’t get lm(K)rtant money with him.

When Jack Blackburn saw Joe Loula ta action he changed his mind.

Times .had changed, too.

fT< '* **5- m.Tfl

Jack Blackbuni . . , Joe Louis luta aa aoeemellshed tastruetozi

Bv Hugh Fullerton, Jr,New York, July 22.—(85—Fresh

ammunition for shooting the breeze: . . . Re(>ort from St, Louis says visiting Major League clubs are peeved at the Cards' and Browns’ new plan of admitting wo­men on ladles’ days without even the tax payment . . . The local clubs figura the gals will s()end two bits each at the concessions and aboQt ten per cent will shell out for reserved scats, but the visitors don’t share ta these )tems . . , Look for a torrid discussion at.next winter’a meetings. . . , UUnois U. enters a claim 'to having the young­est of the 1944 crop of college footballers on a, squad of more than" 50 players under 18. He is Bob Goralski, 189-pound cehter who won’t be 17 until Jan. 8. . . . Ten- nls pros are talking about an In­ternational "open” trophy competi­tion after the Waf to rival the Dayls Cup ahow. x

Quote, Unqno^ .Frank Howard, ClbinBon U.

coach,, replying to PuWtaUor Joe Shermiui'a query whether the In (loundage during summer prac­tice doesn’t offset the gain 'ia knowledge: pMy gosh, Sherman, you don’t ex(>ect those kids to play football without even knowing what it is, do' you?” i '•(

Jimmy Johnston, announcing in a few thousand words that his heavyweight, Tony Shuceo, likely will be matched vvlth Lou Nova ta Boston If Tony-rdoes wMl against Washta^on’s Goorgie Parks M< day: • ‘TTioso 26 letters ta /the alphabet take an awful pok in ’ around.” .

The Ca p Cadets, a member of the softball league, deserve a round of credit for their’ showing in the loop. As players are all members of the Civil Air Phtroi Cadet. Corps, these lads are foriur nate in fielding a team, as many of the boys are tied up with pre-in­duction courses and haven't the time to play ball. One thing, the team has managed to scrape enough jdayers together to make it a league although all o f the tilts have been losing.affairs, the play­ers have stuck it out. That’s what makes a winner. .

Note to Tommy JJ’Nelll: Please use only one side of the paper in sending In your news. If you need paper The Herald will provlde>lt.

■ 'Pigskin Parade

State CoUege, Pa.—(85—Navy- Marine trainees will pass in for­mal review aa a preliide to Penn State’s home football games this fall.

Today’s Games' .

EAafora /(No games echeduled).*

AmericanNew York at Chicago (2). Philadelphia at Detroit. Washln^on, at Cleveland.Boston at St. Louis (night).

NationalChicago at New York. Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. Cincinnati at Philadelphia

(night).Rides Six U’inners

Vancouver, July 22.—(85—Jockey Jimmy Slvewrlght. of Calgary, rode six winners in seven races at Hastings Park yesterday, a feat believed to be a recoid for a (Cana­dian track. Ha finished second ta the race he failed to win.

Any bit of Information from any of the managers of the softbail teams will be welcomed by this corner at anytime. Just drop us a line and we will try our best to have-the league on par with the| 'Twilight League. It’s up to you.

TSivo of the\>a1dcst players In the Twilight League, Charlie Dziadyk and Johnny Dione, are among the youngest players in the loop. A high hair line may be their secret to success in league play, as both are outstanding on their res(iiec- live teams..

. Fafia, a not* to rememhrr Watch Jimmy Frsncolinl the Barons’ all-around man in-hia next game at the Oval. He can hit iiid field with the best, and the wav

Toothless Tigers Await York's Dog Days Before Conceding; Like Browns For A. L. PennantBy Harry Gray ton NEA Sports Editor

Chicago—While L»ey were a bit tired and discouraged as they Re­turned to Briggs Stadium follow- in f the eastern swing, the Detroit Tiger* W awalttaf Rudolph P ^e-^ ‘‘ “ f g^vatted directly at some-Irg the American League pennant.

TradltionaUy a hitting club.^the

Pre-Flight Schobl, he might t o off in his major league timing.

Right field is the $52,000 Beau­ty's s(K)t, and Steve O’Netll s|JOke of using old Charley Hostetler In center. Hostetler can outrun a fly bf.il, ahd the few times Doc Cra mer has hit the ball solidly it has

Bengals-are hardly batting their weight Jimmy Outlaw and Char­ley Hoatetar'are tho only .800 hlt- terti. Pinky Higgins is batting .282, Bojr Sw'ift .268, Eddie Mayo .265, Paul Richards .260, and then you drop downstairs.

The Tigers haven’t too much of

One-Mtaute Sparta Page

something short of sensational. Francolinl is a veteran In pro bail and currently I* a metator of the first , place Hartford Senators in the Esstern loop, playing only home games.

yt Is Interesting to note that Don Ballou, the Twi League’s leading hurier again In winning his sixth straight league game laat night, did not iisua a^slngle bate on ball*. Ia -88 1-3 frames, Don has allowed ofily two free tickets. -

The PA’S have scheduled the strong Bradley Field Filers tor next Tuesday evening at the Oval. The visitors come here with an im- preasive record io date and have a

Jack WUUama, to fn er Batabridge Navy bafketbaH coach, aa one of hia asaUtianta i t Columbia thia faU. WilUams, tormer Sam Houston all' around atar, la with the V-12 grdfip. BUI ($86,000) HelU, the Loulaiana oil ahd horse man, has leased 1,200 acres of hjstorio Ruieoeaa farm, where Harry Sinclair and Sam HiU dreth developed so many fine racers. . . . Herb Oaraffla, the Chi­cago Times aerito who apecializos in golf, has done a magaata* place on feminine liaeebaU and aoftbaU proe. The,gals really must hava Bomethtag . . Pete CawQion, the Brooklyn Hgera coach who Uv*a Ug Tuacaloosa, la high on a youngater named Warda who’ll play for Ala­bama. "He’a 17 yeara Md, ^toet- 3, welgha 216 and haa that nica ugly look,’ ’ aaya Pete.

Worcester, Mass.—PhU Terra- nova, 131, New York, outixfintsd Harold "Snoolca" Laeey, ISO, New Haven, 10. Frankie R o ^ 14i6 1-i; Boaton, outpointed Al Gaston, 181, Manebeater. N. H« fi.

he performa on the base paths is anything, and with Rudy/'-York----- '- * . . . 'hitting nothing to apeak of they

appear pretty helpless a good share of the time.

Dizzy Trout and young Hal Newhouser are atickout pitchers, but then the hurling de(>artment tapers off aharply~®keh one day, erratic the next '

18 Home Runs in August York can’t tell you why he goes

so well tn August Perhaps there is a little Saratoga in the huge Indian. Laat year he manufactured 18 home runs In August and he did the Same in 1938.T h a t tops Babe Ruth’s maximum, for the month In 1927, the year the Bambino es­tablished the major league record at 60. - ,

, York has been limited to eight iTour-masters this season. His high Is 37 ta 1987 The Georgia Red- aopd has recently been potheried by a bad ankle and a bniiaed lit­tle finger on his throwing hand which prevents his (iropcrly grl(»- ping the bat.

York is fielding • weU and bua- tllng, and is vastly more than ade­quate at making all the playa around first base.

First Word’ that young Dick Wakefield might return to base- baU failed to create aa much en- thusiaain ta the D « ^ t dugout aa one would ima^na.

Wakefield batted .816 hia first jrear up and gets around >110 bases well, but veterans' ta the party aay that while to la an accomplished hitter he U not a good outfielder beenuae he does not apply bimselL All the loose-limbed Md wants to do Is h it That Is not exacUy

Look for Lou UJMle to nama lineup studded with Minor Leaguehall players. The outstanding member o f the team Is Capt. "Dig” Johnson, a Veteran of many months overseas, who directs the team from . first baSe. Johnaon la currently starring with the Bavltt Gems.

Bill George of the Propts was an interesting s{>ectator at last night’s game. George Is the league leading sticker and hia loss waa keenly felt. The PA’s were minus Bucky Jacobs, on* of the club’s Isadlng stickers.

In the third irmtng wltli ona out and runners on first aiid third fo r the Propa, Tufferson Uned out to Jake Banks ta centarfleld. Aftertha catch the runner, Casey taggad up and when Banks threw a per-1 fault, tnit dthar things are bn(>or*

body.The 'ngers are 8 1-2 games off

the, pa‘'e, and there U as much danger of their getting worse as there is chance of improving.

Right now their choice for the pennant is the St. Louis Browns.

"■You judge a club by the way It goea against you," says Mike Higgins, "and tho brow n s knock our heads off."

The Biowns returned west with a 2 1-2 game margin. They hqve two more atands at home.

"See you in St. Looie. Lodle."

ftot atrike to Katkaveek, Oaaey acampered back to third. The throw pt Banka was easily tha'best throw at any outfielder at tha Oval this year. Hera’a hoping that tha.

tant, toaHostetler to Oeater

It was pointed out tbat while Wakefield amseked tho sphere often and for magnificent dia-

PA’a can Indues ttw hard hltUitfVtiBOta to tha unlfona of tha Iowa

Polish - Americans Heavy Bat Barrage Smother Opponents iitfj Game Filled with G oo^ Plays by Both Nines| Big Leaguer PIThe one* mighty HamOta|^

Props fell before a heavy bal barrage laid down by tha PolW^j Americans laat night at ths Wart Side Oval in a Twilight League counter, by a score* of 9 to 0, Thg'< PA’B countered with their art hurier, Don Ballou, who eanw through with flying colors In tw ti^ ' tag his first shutout of the Beaaoh, ’ ahd his sixth straight league vl0> tory without suffering a defeaL-

Jake". Banks made an unheralded ap(>earance with the wlnnera e ^ paced the turn with three hit* hr' tour trips. The former St. LotdS Cardinal outfielder collected A.

'Single, a double and a triplw In ad* dltion to displaying a big league arm. Banks also drove Ih tour, runs and tallied twice Mmself to steal the ahow.

Casey Driven Off George Casey started on the hUI

tor the Props and was routed be-'' tore the side was retired in- the first inning. The Pa’s teed off go; Casey’s offering for five runs ba- tore Mike Marco came in to rettial the Bide after two men were out. Marco pitched good ball thereafter.) and Increased his strike out totel by whiffing eight patters.

A fast double play was pulled off by the winners In the Initial stanza. George May started tha twin killing by Kooplng up Piakjr Tufferson’* roller, throwing to ■■ Cliff Keeney for a tore* p la / at second, the latter’s throw , to flirt was in time and Tufferson was out-

Oained Sweet RevengeThe league leaders gained s w ^ .

revenge for the previous d e ^ t handed them In the first round o l ' play, which inetdentty is the onjp 1 defeat suffered--by the PA’s in th* league.

Banka in'collecting three hltfi; emerged as the games stand0*|lv slugger. The winners capable. ro :' celver, Katkaveek collect two In'd; winning cause. Bill Hutt thd slender Hamilton first sacker ’witb" three hits, all singles and Pixjqr Tufferson with twi hita, paced th r Prop 0ff«ft81V* that ooiiliiii't ‘mS f started.

Starting Casey proved to h s . fatal tor the Props as the PA'S, teed off on' the offerings o f thd'l veteran ta the first stansa for ; runs. After Keeney rolled ouV-l Hank Haeto singled and advanced : to second as Mickey Katkavetrt walked. Buck BycholsM filed out to short for the second out, but- Jake Banka came through with . \ line aingle to right to drive homd.^ Haefs and Katkaveek. Banks scot5 ed a moment later-when CharilA'I Dziadyk singled to center. Butdk'f Becker doubled to left and DzladyAL rode home. George May stagtadl over second to tallle Becker with ' the PA'S.fifth run the taataf./ Marco replaced C ^ey and forcad''| Ballou to ffy out to Larry RostelC | in deep rlghtfleld.

Props Never Recover The Props never recovered froai.:|

the furious onslaught of the loop.l 'leaders and were guilty of poor ] fielding. The Pro(>s, once they war* behind seemed to lose the pep and.I zing that makes a winner. A fast I double play in the Props half eind*-) ed the frame for the losers.

Both teams went down in prdeg.'l in th* second. In the laat of tlMii| third, the Props loaded'the with, only .one out on two stngl«£'l and an error. Tufferson filed out totT Banks and the Prop# ddin’t ca n trt| attempt to score after the catch--' Two successive errors placed bas6 runner* on the paths in _ fourth with no outs, but ItaIloii|: I seemed to get totter as the'gSR tsj progressed and retired the sldS f without any scoring. .

Begins To Ro|l Agala The vaunted PA offensive togOR |

to roll again tfi the fifth. Haefh i and Katkaveek singled. BycholahL.| fanned. Banks doubled over thS'f road tor two more runs as Hasfk and Katkaveek scored. Th* win­ners held a comfortable 7 to 0 I margin going into the fifth. In thtg-] frame the Props, managed $•'1 again place two runners on, but [ the cool Ballou was the msstrt ahd the result was no scoring for I the Props. Neither team threatei»*‘| ed in the sixth but the wtansfS^I again countered in the seventh ; two more runs. With one out, K*^-| kayeck doubled, and scored Banjis triple to center. Crowley,! misjud^d the’ bail and Jake r*-F ceived a gift triple. He scored %l minute later on Dziadyk’*. Un,\alto1 gle to right. Trailing by nine ruHL! the Props in their lost times 6|r| bat managed to get two runner* siK I via singles, but the master B*lleQ,-‘| fanned Morrissey and Red G«e .| mane was an easy out to to end th* game.

Keeqe^l

Softball League Standing

TeamCh«*neys........Woods ............Suicides M. F. D. .* .... S. M. r . D. . . CJUP. Cadets

I'tha:

Ptavoclto At

New York, July 22.- tag topwetght o f 120 PrtacequUlo was favored early odds to win today's Quastionnair* handicap at J race track.

The other entries tor and five’ furloughs ronto i Rock, Lord Oalvert.Eys fP r ' Byih M rtda Moor M alden.

/X -

Page 6: Evening... · I^TELVB ibout Town Manchester Evening Herald niroAT, JULY », itn J-itonomoh Trib« No. 68, ft|i- „ Ordtr ot R«J Me^ WlU tU wjular iiw

TENMANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN,, SATURDAY, ,TtJLY 22, 1944

Qatsified [AdvertisementoFor SaleTo Bay

For Rent To SeD

Lost and l<uund L Anitouncomenla 2 Automobiles for Sale

L o^ aad Foundv ic a u m r of vium

__ teown ond white cockerid with one eye. Call 8509,

OA8 RATION BOOK8 'AfC, War ration hooka m-IV. eeieoene coupons No. 208263. louU Miner, RFD. 2, Andover, conn.

LOST —GUERNSEY COW ON Dempkoer pasture. Martin Gill, R. F. D. No. 2, Rockville, Conn.

LOST—WESTERN FUBait man’s bicycle, |15 reward If returned to 188 Spencer street

LOST—PASS BOOK'NO. '52335— NoUce la hereby given that Pass Book No. 52335 issued by The Savings Bank of Manchester has been lost or destroyed, and writ­ten application has been made to said bank by the Person In whose name such book was Issued,. for payment of the amount of deposit represented by said book, or for the issuance of a duplicate book therefor.

LOST—IN CEJNTBR SPRINGS park, main entrance, near first table and vicinity, opal ring, sen­timental value to owner. Liberal reward for return of same. Call 2-0213. .

STEEPLE TOM CLEANS Out chimneys, specialty. Call Mag- neir^ Drug Co., Main street

LOST— SMALL BROWN purse with money, red and blue tokens. Reward. CaU 8875.

NEED MONEY! ARE YOU buy­ing a used car? Do you need car repairs? Let us help you with your flnancing. Immediate service. Gall 2-1735 now. The Manchester Home Credit 869 Main street, Manchester, Conn. Rooms 5-6-7.

uIt

FOR SA LE!7-Room Single With

2-Car Garage.OWNER LEAVING

TOWN.Nleely landscaped prop­

erty a t No. 2 Gerard S tnet. House Is hisu- lated, has steam heat oU b m e r, tile bath, extra lavatory. Fireplace, re«- rsatlOn room, electrio dish sraaher.PRICED FOR QUICK

SALEIFor appointmettt to fai-

gpect ciUI

ARTH U R A. KN O FLA875 Main Street

Veleplione 8448 or 5988 .

MakeYour Home

n The City Of Village jGhorm

f a i r v i e W s t r e e t —6-Room Single, tile kitch­

en, marbleiied breakfast WMm, fireplace, aun parlor, lie bath with electric heat- ir, sewing room, garage. Irautifnl grounds. Priced or quick sale!

OAK STREET—6-Room Single, oil heat.

Kirch, 2-ca'r gantge, Beau- ifol gronnds, fruit trees, ot 65 * '366 ft. Shown by

^pointm eiit only.HILLIARD STREET—

K-Room Single, screencd- n porch, furnace heat, 2-

^ icar garage, large lot. A ^lf4rtal good buy. Small down

layment.WALKER STREET—

5 and 5 FlaL steam heat, porch, large lot. A good InTestment.HAWTHORNE STREET-^

8 and 6 Duplex, glassed-in

Krch, hot w a^r heaL IcedYor quick shlcl

COOPER HILL STREET- 6 and 6 Duplex, ail mod­

em conveniences, furnace heat, located hear schoo and playground. Small down pa3 e n t required.MATHER STREET—

3-Tenement House, fur­nace heaL large lot. garage. €h>od revenue for invest- menL Place for chickens. Can be seen by appoint­ment.HOLLYWOOD SECTION—

Beautiful 3-Room House, Hollywood section. All im­provements. Can seen by appointment.ANDOVER—X' Nice Cotthtiy"TIome, rooms, modern conveni­ences, H if fb elevatidh. Beautiful viewt 3 acres o:' land. Owner moving.

JARVIS R EA LTY CO.

26 Alexander Street Manchester

Phones 4112 or 7275

LOST— BROWN dog, xnawer. to

AND WHITE Sandy, collar

with 43-44 taga.'belonga to boy In service. CaU 2-1360.

WANTED—RIDE TO COLTS Van Dyke plant/ 3:30 to 12 ahtft. Call 6625.

Automobiles for Sale 4JUST ARRIVED—31 LATE model used cars, 1941 Cadillac, ^941 Lin-

■ coin Zepher, 1941 Dodge sedan, *194i-;^hevrolet sedan, coaches, Station wason, 1941 Chrysler New Yorker s^dgn, 8,000 miles, 1939 Packard 6 Mdan, 1937 Bulck

1945 k Packard Rollo-

Announcem ents 2DEATH TO ROACHES—VVUl rid your home of roaches and ants, or . money refunded. $1.25. Weldon’a Pharmacy.

FOR SALE—g r e e n HARD wood for stove, furnace or fireplace, $15. cord, delivered in Manchester. Phone 7849.

DUPLEX82-84 FLORENCE ST.

5 and 5 rooms. All conven­iences. New roof. Rents $30 - $30. One side now vacant. Has been newly decorated. Price $6,000. Terms, ' y

LABORING MAN’S HOMEEast Glastonbury — 4-

Room House, 2 years old, Electricity, pump water. Lot 125 X 700 ft. About 30 cords of standing wood. Full price $1,800. Terms.

sedan. Also 194) son limousine. OPA'celllng $4,965, our price $3,900, this » r like new. AU these cars carry oiir 30 day guarantee, this Is all new stock, purchased from a large Eastern dealer retiring. Trades and termt, arranged. Brunner’s, 80- Oakland street. Call 5191. Open evenings till 9.

NEED MOTORS Overhauled? New brakes, valve Job, tires, Ijat- teries. Four mechanics to service

, you. Also have courtesy .car and ' time payment plan. Brunner’s, 60

Oakland street Open evenings.— 6191.

1941 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR sedan, special deluxe, $875. Radio, heat­er. Brunner's, 80 Oakland street Open evenings ’till 9.—5191.

1938 HUDSON SEDAN, radio, heater, $395. Terms and trades. Brunner's, 80 Oakland street. Open evenings. Call 5191.

1938 CHEVROLET CX)UPE with heater, LM9 Plymouth coupe, heater, terfes, trades accepted. Brunner’s, 8d Oakland street Open evenings.—5191.

1937 PLYMOUTH PANEL de­livery, good condition. Call ,5463.

1939 PLYMOUTH SEDAN, 1938 Old'smobile sedan, ' 1939 Dodge sedan, 1937 Dodge sedan, 1936 Dodge sedan, i930 Pontiac sedan, lfiS3 Plymouth coupe. Cole Motors. Phone 4164.

Motorcycles—Bicycles 11’TWO GIRLS BICYCLES, 3 boys

bicycles and 1 side walk bicycle. 468 Hartford Koad.

INDIAN MOTORCYCLE for sale, good mechanical condition, priced readonable. Call 2-1709, Barlow Motors, 16 Brainard Place.

Moving^Trucking—Storage 2U

AUS’n N A. CHAMBERS CO.— Trailer van service. Removals from coast .3 ebast deluxe equip­ment crating, packmg and stor­age. AGENT NOR’TH AMERI­CAN VAN LINES INC. Estl- matea to all parts o< U. 8. A. TH 5187.

Ll”e Stock—Vehicles 42

WEEKS OLD pigs, $5. eseb. 8. Patnode, Route 6, Bolton Notch,

Poultry and SuppUca 43FOR SALEI—176 LAYING and

ready to lay, N. H. red pullets. H. A. Frink, Wapplng. Call 7158.

Household Goods 51

I TWO TONE WALNUT buffet In perfect condition. 66 Phelp- Road.

2 SINGER SEWING machines, hand cleaner, electric Iron, Hoo­ver vacuum. 16 Ash street after 6p . Bl. .

Repairing 23 A rtic le for Sale 45P,IANO TUNINO and repairing; player piano specialty. John Cocherham, 28 Bigelow street Tel. 4219.

Private Instructions 28PERSONAL INSTRUCnON^ elo- cutlon, clear speech, ' tutoring In school subjects. White Studio, 709 Main street. Phone 2-1392.

WICKER BABY carriage, pre­war. Good condition. Call 2-1175.

FOR SALE—HAND CROCHED spread, twin size, no fringe, used with valsnce. Also Maple play pen. Inquire 33 Seaman Circle.

TWO 410 SHOT GUNS and one 12 guago shot gun. .call 3567 or 234 Oak street

WINDOW SHADES—VENETIAN blinds. Owing to our very low overhead, get our special low prices on high grade window shades and Venetian - bllnda com­pletely Installed. Samples furnish­ed. Capitol Window Shade Oo., 241 North Main street Phone 8819. Open evenings.

SAPRIFICINO EEAUTIFUL wal­nut baby grand piano, exquisite tone, lovely imported mahogany desk. 7 piece walnut bedroom Items. Call 2-0909 after 5 p. m. or all ay Sunday. '

Business Opportunities 32WILL PURCHASE Gift Shop—

library. State age, volume busi­ness, overhead. Morgan, 20 Bank street. New York 14.

Wanted Autos— Motorcycles 12

CASH f o r 1937 OR '38 Chevrolet In good condition. No dealers. CaU 2-1865.

Business Services Offered 133 FLOOR SANDING

Laying and Finishing J. E.'Jensen—Phone 2-0920

ll No Answer—5329ALL KINDS OF CARPENTRY. Houses remodeled, plenty oi ma­terial. Phone Rockville 453-4.

Walton W. Grant647 MAIN ST. HARTFORD

WEL. t-7584EvenMgs Mancbeeter 8180

FOR SALESUMMER

CO TTA G ESAt ■ . r’".

Coventry Lake(About 20 Miles East

of Hartford)These cottages have every convenience and the rental income for July and August ranges from $250 to $350. Prices are from $1,500 to $3,500 with moderate cash requirements, balance be ing carried by very reason­able monthly payments.

TH E A LLEN R EA LTY CO .

Realtors953 Main Street Tel. 3301

WE. . . Buy . . . S e l l . f ' .. Trade

REALESTATE

W hat Have You to O ffer? ^

A LEX A N D ERJA RV IS

Real Estate and Mortgages 26 Alexander Street Phone 4112 or 7275

Florists— Nurseries ’ 15FOR SALE—SNAP DRAGONS.

76c dozen, sweet peas, 50c dozen. CBll at Fred Schuetz, 40 Kensing­ton street.

Help Wanted—.Female 35WOULD UKE WOMAN or high school girl to care for 9 months old boy. 7-4. Call 4970.

WOMEN WANTED —Pleasant steady work now and post-war- Good hours, good pay. New Sys­tem Laundry, Harrison street.

LAUNDRY WORK, woman press operators and girls for flat work ironers, no experience necessary. Call 8416, Manchester Laundry, 72 Maple street.

WANTED—A PERSON to relieve a practical nurqp one day a week. Write Box O, Herald.

RELIABLE PERSON to care for 5 years old boy, two evenings a week. In vicinity of West Middle Turnpike. Call 2-1665.

Difimonds-rWatches—Jewelry 4 8 1

PRIVATE PARTY OFFERS Beau- tlful specially designed heart shape platinum, engagement ring, weight approximately 1 1-2 carat, surrounded by cluster, exquisitely set diamonds, cost originally $1650, will accept beat offer, tax free, no dealers. Write . Box R, Herald.

Machinery and Tools 52RECXlNDmONHUJ Fordson trac­tor, used tractor plows, cement mlxera milking machines, milk coolers, used riding cultivators. Dublin Tractor Company, Wllll- mantlc.

Wanted—To Buy 58

Too Late to Gassify Products

11 SINGLE SHOT .22 rifle. In very good condition. C^ll 5708.

50

QassifiedAdvertisements

For Sale To Buy

For Real To SeU

Apartments, Flats, Tenements 63

YOUNO OIRL w a n t s girl to share 4 room apartment Call 2-1540 between 6 and 7 p. m.

FOR REUT—3 ROOM apartment, 25 Kerry street. CaU 8047 a f te r5 : ^ ’..

4 ROOM rURNISHE^ apartment heat and hot water supplied. Call 7075.

TO RENT—TWO ROOM suite, heated, second floor front. 829 Main street. Suitable for offices or sleeping quarters. Apply O. E. Keith. CaU 3150.

FOR RENT—4 ROOMS for adults only. 916 Woodbridge street

FOR RE»7T—TWO ROOM fulv nished apartment and bath. In­quire 22 Hudson street, mornings.

CAULIFLOWER PLANTS. Joseph Novell! Farms. Call 6997.

Household (Soods 51

Roofing 17ROOFING A R8U>.UR of chim­neys, valleya flashings, and gut­ters. Done expertly anc reason­ably by your local rooter. E V. Coughlin. Tel. 7707, 390 Wood­land.

FOR RENTtarge Home, No. 84 Prospect Street. Oil burner, 2 fireplaces. 8 baths, spacious grounds, 2-car garage. 'SeeK ROBERT J. SMITH, INC.\ 963 Main Street

Help Wanted—Male 36AUTOMOBILE MEXUIANIC. pref- erably experienced with Chevrolet. Must have own tools. Permanent position. Good salary. Carter Chevrolet Co. Inc., 191 Center street, Manchester.

Dogs—Birds— Pets 41FOR SALE—FIELD-TRIAL male setter dog, reasonable price. W. H. Dougan, R. F. D. No. 1 An­dover, Time Farm Road.

FOR SALE—CROSS BREED pup­pies, 2 toy fox terriers, male, col­lie puppy, male. Zimmerman, Lake street. Phone 6287.

P R E-W A R WESTINGHOUSE | electric fan. CaU 6040.

REFRIOERATOR SALE! A llmlt- ed number of big, 50 lb. Insulated white refrigerators—only $39.50. Terms. Benson’s, 713 Main street.

MAPLE BEDS, BUREAUS. heaters add bicycle. 243 O nter street.

6-Room Single in the vicinity of West Center Street, near, has Une.

6-Room Duplex on the Weal Side. Nenr bus Une.'

6-Room Single In good eondi- tlon; large lot. Victelty of Na­than Hnle achooL

Small ‘Farm, 8 to 8 acres, with house and buildings. In vicinity of Glnstonbnry or East Hart­ford.

JARVIS REALTY CO.26 A lex an ^ St. Maaebester

Phootei d lM o t m s

ro k RENTSingle 4-Room

HouseOn Durant Street.

CALL 4386

Albert F. Knoflo

FOR SALE—8 WEEKS OLD Eng­lish setter, good pedigree. Mrs. Cordner, 144 Adams street, Buck- land.

LAKE COTTAGE FOR RENT

3-Room Cottage with improve­ments. Large screened porch. All lake privileges. 830 per week.

CallALLEN REALTY CO.

PHONE 8301

WHITE AND GRAY enamel gas | stove, reasonable. CaU 3498.

9 PIECE WALNUT Sheraton din- Ing room set, excellent condition. Call after 4 p. m. 4943.

HOUS^OLD Furniture, planU, fruit Jars, large Oriental rug tmd Grandfather’s clock and etc. CaU 6811.

PIANO, SMALL RADIO, Uhraryl tablet, exceptional vanity, card tables, magazine stands, . vege­table bin, night stand, Lawton love seat, ware., obe, boudoir chair, kitchen set, odd bureaus, chests, and chairs, scatter ruga, 9x12 rug, paaple bed room suite, double maple bed, chUd’a desk, chair and |

Oderman gas range, combination range and Crawford electric range. CaU 5187, Austin Cham­bers' Warehouse. Manchester | Green. Open daily 8-5. Saturday 7-12. Evenings, Monday, Wednes­day and Friday, 7:30-9.

ONE NEW GOLD MEDAL deluxe I Jumbo box spring, twin size. Call 8954.

WOULD LIKE TO BUY child's wagon. Call 3508.

I*WANTED TO BUY 2 girls Junior bicycles. Call 8912 or 4047.

Rooms Without Board 59PLEIASANT ROOMS, Ught house­keeping and laundry convei.icnceS If desired, continuous hot water. Reasonable ratea centraL Call 3986 or 14 Arch street.

ROOMS—1 DOUBLE, 1 single or double, continuous ‘ hot water, newly decorated, near Cbcney’s. Call 5290.

FOR REN*T—Fumlahed room on Main street for I or 2. Continu­ous hot water. Tel. 6803. <

Boarders Wanted 59-AFOR RENT—DOUBLE and single rooms a t North End of town. Meals If on first shift

Country Board-R esorts 60A QUEST HOUSE on shore, at Dennisport, Cape Cod has a few openings. Telephone 6881, Man­chester.

Houses for Rent 65FOR RENT—5 ROOM SINGLE. Adults preferred, $55. per month. Inquire 112 Summer street. Call 2-1219.

FOR RENT—AT BOLTON Center, 4 rooms and bath, adults only. Available' August 15, electric stove required, $35 a month. Call 7452.

Summer Homes for Rent 67LAKE AMSTON—5 ROOM mod- em cottage, available August 12, near beach, boat. Oall 6086.

Wanted to Rent $8WANTED—4 OR 5 ROOM flat or

house. Family of 8. Write Box A, Herald. _____ ____' '» " ■

5 OR 6 ROOM SINGLE house by middle aged couple. Reasonable rent. Central location. Write Box B, care of Herald.

Houses for Sale 72

Apartments, Flats, Tchements^ 63

FOR RENT—FURNISHED rooms, hot 'water. South Manchester, on bus line. ‘Telephone 2-0723 or 801 Main street

H ELP W ANTED M ALEI - - V,.

FOR SALE— buffet and a street.

BEDROOM S: table. 46 Blase!

ET,isell

FOR SA LESpecial buy in a Four-Room Single Cottage situated tm lEIdrIdge Street. This cottage has two rooms down and two rooms np- slolra and there is a two-car garage on this property. The sale price is 83,500. It can be purchased for as low as $500. dowa and the balance in monthly payments like rent. This place Is now available for occupancy.

STU A R T J. W ASLEYReal Estate and Insurance

STATE THEATER BUIUJINO TELEPHONE 6848 - 7146

Bare Midriff!

Help Wanted — Female Secretary

Mast be competent stenographer witti abilfty to handle executive’s detail

work.

C H EN EY BROTHERS146 HARTFORD ROAD

TO BE SOLDA modem Two-Family of five rooms each Hoop—live oa one

floor, collect tbe $38 rent from the other. Two-car garage goea with it. Located near bus Une. —

, Hamlin Street, Two-FamUy lCt;Room Duplex. One steam, one warm air heater. 'Plenty of garage space. Lot 85 x 1 4 6 ft. A good tavestment. ----

Other Homes — and soma choiM Bnlldfaig SItea for sale.

ROBERT J. SMITH,— . 'Real Estate and bsoraiice

963 MAIN STREET TEXEPHONE 8450

t O P pf^lCES

CARSWANTED

T K L .MANCHESTER

5191

80 OAKLAND ST. MANCHESTERO P E N E V E N I N G S T I L 9 : S A T . - 6

Paper Machine Tender. .Paper Machine Helper. Important War Work.

Hiring in compliance with W. M. C. regulations.

ROGERS PAPER MFC. CO.

Mill On Oakland Street

FOR SALE— DUPLEX House. Bissell street, near Spruce; elx rooms each Mde. Call after 6:00 p. m., 92 Bissell. ;>

MANCHESTER, CONN.— Beauti­ful 7 room house, 3 acres land, fruit trees, garden, cow, chickens. Price reasonable. Inquire 149 Union street.

FOR SALE—SIX ROOM house, with all Improvements and 8 acres of land, 600 feet on the highway. CaU after 6 p. m. 4607,

FOR SALERESTAURANT — F u l l y Equippi^. Doing Excellent BusinessT^^ui be purchased at convenient terms to right party.

Phone: 4842 or 2-1107

Howard R. Hastings101 Phelps Road,,

Crocheted^ Sacque

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M tiK E T F I W Compaajr

ffO U N O PRO O rZf YOU'LLyXlNDEffSTWhlD

WHY, SHE, WHEN VOU'

see—

r-7?

LANK LBOMAKD7!

Every girl wants one of the new "bare” sports dresses this sum­mer—and this one is particularly fetching done in a blue and white checked ebambray or rayon ahan- tung. You’U notice tbe pattern can alao be used for the ragulai- tion two-piece sporta dreae, too!

Pattern N a 8643 hi in aiaea U . 13, IS. 14, IB. 16, 18 and 30. Shw 13 requires 8 yarda of S9-lnch ma­terial.

,Por thla pattern, send 18 cents, plus 1 cent poataga, |n ooina, yoiit name, a d d r ^ Mse desired, and the pattern number to The’ Man- cheater Evening Herald Today's Pattern Servtea, 1180 Sixth Avan- ne. New York 10, N. y.

The smart new issue of the ndd- aunimer style book—paahhm ■ — has S3 pagea of oocU-loiOdiig; criap

n r aportawaar and summer , day frocka and. accesaoriea. Order

,yoUr copy now. Price 15 ednta.

By Mrs. Anne Cabot ^I t’s a darling c ' a UtUe aacque—

crocheted of white baby wool'and edged in pink wooL Tlie Uny roee- bud spraya are embroidered on tbe.Completed garment In pastel ailk Iwaa in colors. H m circular Jacket,\wliiob ties with aatln ribbon under tbe arms la axoeptionally aasy to ! Evening Herald 1150 Sixth avanue, eroohei as It is done all in ona ' New Torii 10, N. T.

piece# There are no seams. .To obtain coniplete crocheting

Inetructlotfe fd)* tbe Clreulat Crocheted Sacque (Pattern No. 5759) color chart for embroidering roeebuds, eend 15 cents In Ooln, plus 1 cent poetage. Your Name, Addreu and tb ^ t t e m Number to Anne Cabot The Manchester

•■py •. ......., : .

BIANGHESTEK AfSBALU, MANCUliiSTlUR, SATURUAX. JULY 22, 1944

S olids Jto a* By VielwlH Wolf Ce»rri«ht. t»44.

Hma attviee, ine*

Sense and^Nonsense for the support of the indigent widows and. orphans of the other half.

The Scene: A U. 8. Army hos­pital la a little Mdlvs vllliige la the heart of Algeria about the thne of the Americaa laadlnge la Norih Africa.

Chat With YvotlaeXVI

Thmigh Ahmed obvloueiy Hkad and aateemed Dr. MerrlU, he gave full credit for hie speedy recovery ^ ly to Allah, his Ood, Inch Allah was a sort of exclamation point after an hie not too frequent een- tsacas. Inch Allah If Good wills

"Why don't you believe that I raapect your religion?” George asked the day before .Ahmed left. “I truly do. and I feel eorry that 1 am mlsiilidarstood.”

“Our religion is Intolerant of European reUglons," Ahmed re- pUed. “How could youre be tol­erant of curs?”

"We are not Europeans. We are Americans!”

■Well, your religion is like Eu­ropean religion. It's all the aame to ua.”

”Hwa. why do you trust our General Staff?”

"That’s politics! Politics exist and reUgion exisU! The same as Hell exists and Heavah exists.

•Why don't you Uke the French government any raeiuT” .

"The French became weak and unjust,” Ahmed said rather re luctantly. “After the war we will have big changes over here."

"Do you mean eelf-govern- re n t? "

"I don't know, and If I did couldn't . discusa It. Biit big changes, aomabow."

The finality In his tone discour­aged further conversation. It was evident that Ahidecl felt he had commimttad himself tpo much al­ready.

One week after hla operation he left in a command car and was brought home for flhal recovery to' hla father's houae. which In aummer was a palatial home, and lit winter a desert tent.

Yvonne reported about her un­eventful morning. "Is there any­thing I rhould do?” she ques­tioned.

"No,' Juat watch and wait. What temperature?”

“)jne hundred four efid two- tenths degrees.”

“No benzldrlne'thli time," Dr. Merrill teased, flashing me e cryp­tic amlle.

“Whet does that mean?" asked Yvonne with quickly aroused suepiclon.

"Just'S Joke.” He gave me an­other smile of secret understand­ing, and nodding at Yvonne left the room with long sure strides.

Yvonne gazed after him, and ner eyes tried to follow him be­yond the closed door. “I k>ve the. way he walks,'.* she said." "I love the way he lights a cigairat I love 'the way he holds the knIfeV I love the way he buttons his coat. I cannot bear, Charlotte, that you know something about him . I do not know'! Tell me this benzidrlne story.”

“Billy!” 1 said. “It was Just a suggestion I once made.”

“Honsat ,y> goodness?” she asked.

"Of Course, apprehensive," said, readv to go

"(jome In again on your next round, Charlotte,” aha implored. "It is somehow comforting to liave you around. You seem so de­tached.”

(To Be Continued)

A father was giving hla aon a lesson in'finance and remarked that “mmiey had wings.” At the bank later the boy noted the pilea ol money)Ip the teller'a cage. "I see why they put that money' there," he said. "If they didn't have It In a- cage it would fly awpy.''*

some syrup left an the >aC.vanity becauae she had lookedkhe said:

Margaret—Mother dear, give me a spoon; my fork

Flowers at a funeral cannot atone for neglect of the living.

IfllMother (as daughter ddwned an

aspirin)—What are' you takini that pill fo rt

Daughter—I'm taking this pi to get rid of a. headache.

Mother—You sure can switch thlnga. Just awhile ago you used a headache to get rid of 'Jiat young pill that called on you.

Sentry—Halt! Whs goes there? PrivaU'-(A. W, O. L.)—Quiet,

won't you? 1 ain't going, I’m Just coming back.

One morning four-year-old Mar- xarct-had pancakes for breakfast. After she l*d eaten the cakes

Wifey—Why, Bob, I don’t be­lieve you have amoked a single one of thoac lovely cigars I gavs you for your birthday.

Bob—No, dear. I intend to keep them until Junior jpx>wa upland wants to learn to smoke.

Better not Invite trouble—it usu­ally accepts.

One of our clerical friends tells the a to r/ abopt the very plain maiden lady Who always wanted to confess some sin but was ao straight-laced she never bad any­thing to confess. One day she told her priest ahe was guilty of the sin

FUNNY BUSINESS

I

Sand

<)—Contrary to popular belief, the United States la not the coun- tn in which baseball leada all oth- ar sports in popularity by so wlda a margin as to make it the na­tional pastime without rival. Do you know what country la?

^A—Mexico.Q—Who of the following does

not belong In t|ie group;. jamea Russell Lowell, Amy Lowell, A. A. Milne, E. B. Cummings, T. S. EHot, Henry Wadsworth Longfel­low?

A.—A. A. Milne, British poet and playwright Others a rt Amer­ican.

0 —'What la igneous rock?A—That extremely hard variety,

such aa granite, formed by vol­canic action.

Q—If mares 'eat oats and doeseat oats what do little lahibs real­ly eat?

A—Ewe’s milk — unless they happen to be bottle babies.

Q—If you were bom this month, What ik your birthstone? ^

A—Blood stone.Q—Why la a pound eSTke so

called?. A—It Is tradltianlilly jnipposadto contain a pound of each of its various ingr^tenta.

Iiat com try uses the coin.

To Pattern Subscriber$Bsmihs or tiM trsmsadoas xmeant of maQ boing hinfllsi ny tiM poMsU aystam thsss Styx, and the aborts«a of labfli# art ash that you ba patlaht if you paltan IsbY SsUverad aa promptly M In tJM $aat- fba asaaoo ar baavy paUara orOsra ta otm undat isay aafl sriU abatlaas thrwish Baatar Tbaea art aouao tr or aoBsa Oalaya. Pattana art oiaUcd unm-claaa.Bad art (raquanUy

. Mayao haeaosa of poaUI oongesUoa. Be aara la retsda tar aaM- Sas eHSa peMasa ywe erflae. D you aavaaY raoaivad the pfittara hs a tsaaonahls lanith o4 thaa, plaaaa adrifla na tba aunNi M i $tm asiatad and wa wQl ehael) fo# aedar.

BBBMBISipdiBn

—On one of my rounds I had a ■chat with Yvonne who sat mood­ily on a chair next to th^jMdslde of an unconscious soldier and com­plained about- the waste of time.

"Ha la In a coma and rather dulL I wonder whj 1 am con-

, damned to watch him?""Bacausa Dr. Marrill truata you

XBora thaii the rest- of us.”"Do you really think so?”"Of course, Yvonnei It’s an hon-

ar and not a condemnation.”Hay face auddenly glowed with

ha^tacaa. "You raaily mean It,Chary? Do you know how good It la to hear you say that? One has so many doubts. See, he knowa I love him. I told him so. reiqember? And ha must feel It, too. But he remains calm and composed and never says the allghteat word that ifllght be en­couraging. Sometiniea he smiles a t me, his whole being smiles and 1 feel it over and over. But that's all!”

"A smile is a great deal, Yvonne.Nobody has such a. smile for me No other girt hero has such a smile all for herself. You only realize how much a smile can mean when you have lost it.”

Uke all fanatic lovers, she has no ear for anyone else. She Is convinced that she is the first truly levinff girl In vha world and baiMves as If i the secret

"But dear, it’s all ao different with me, you see. Nobody can findarstand how I feel! It la qa if he were e missionary and I his new convert Formerly, - I was a sinner, now I am, a saint. But,.1 need a word of recognition from, my miaaionkry. Shouldn't he gpve It ? .Wbrds aire made to be apoken, afen’tth e y ? ”

"That’a a bad slinUa,:'’ K vonne,Similes rarely do Justice to real­ity. He is Just aa much a nev; convert as you are. He, a man of work, auddenly baa to face a new problem.— love. It takes Urns tlU he adjusts his whole personality to such a reMluUonary fact. » « > |t o O N B R V U X B FOLKSYou should know that from ex­perience.” ,

“I don’t expect mlraclee," she said with the stubbomnesa of a child who doesn't want to grow up, "A nice word from time to time, or his liand . . . It would mean so much . . She broke off suddenly, as this very moment the door opened and Dr.'MtrriU came In.

Blushing Uks' a trapped thief.

into her mirror and deemed her­self beautiful.

Old Maid—What is the penance, father?

Priest — There la none, my daughter, for to make a mistake Is not a aln.

Ufe laauraace!Insurance sollcltora are ao In­

sistent! First, they convince you that yoli are likely to die any min ute,. to get you to apply for a pol ley. Then they won’t isipie'the pol icy until they convince themseivea that you are likely to live for yeara and yeara.

But we owe a world of gratitude to the Insurance men. Ttiey have done more than anyone body of workers to keep our taxes down. If it were not for their activities, half of us would be "broke" pay­ing taxes to'inaintain almshouses

RED RYDERVJE LUCKY “D ril

A lt. YOUR STOyW

Grahdpappy Morgan, a hiUbilly of the Ozarks, had wandered Into the woods and failed to return for supper, so young Tolliver w'ac sent to look for him. He found him standing In'the bushes:

Tolliver—Oltten’ dark, grand-pap-Orandpappy—Yep.

Holllver — Suppertime, grand-** Srandpfppy—Yep.

Tolllver-^Aln’t ye hungary? Orandpapto—Y ep,Tolliver—Wal air ye cornin'

home? .Orandpappy—Nope- Tblllver—Why ain't -ye ? Orandpappy—Can't. Tolllver-r-Why can’t ye?„. Orandpappy—Standin’ in 4

trap.A man la that large irrational

creature who is always looking for home atmosphere In a hotel and hotel service around the house.

bar

Most gii'I:< make up their faces more easily than their mindk.

The beat way to be popular iq to agree )vith everything the other fellow sava. '_______

Mother — How 6o you ktK>w Bill’s In love with you ?

Daughter — Oh, by the wey he looks at me when I’m not. looking.

> DeflnItloBsResort;'A place where the tired

grow more tired..Praise: What you receive when

you are no longer alive.Postcript: The only thing Inter­

esting In a woman’s letter.Politics: A Simple, matter of

passing the buck or passing the iloe.

Lady Movie-Goer (turning to man sitting behind her) —Shall 1 remove my hat?

Man—Please don’t. It's fuiinler than anything I've seen on the screen.

7-12COM. 1M# tv CM Ml s j m j

"Mind if I play through?”

Wait and See BY FRED HARMi

NOVO V0HA7 VOEi-u?t roR

EXaTCnENT/^

'Don? ©e-TOSUREc

LITTLC ,

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES No*Foolin’I BY EDGAR MARTII

1 TVVWWt

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**His'ttieiIw 8eat’6 al'ways back of a post I”

SIDE GLANCES BY GALBRAITH

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7 ^ ^

.1^OH . '^^O -Y Ci-fe 'ET

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she' had patented

The Situation: You have a drink with a friend who insists on pay­ing for It, though you feel you should take the check.

Wrong Way; Keep protesting, and if you can’t get hold of the check shove the money for your drink oyer to your friend saying, "Well, at least I can pay for my own.” —-~"-

Rlght Way: Accept the drink graciously, but if you like, say firmly, ’"nie next ones are on me. remember."

r'-

eOFH. 1»44 IHA MAFICC. WIC. T M fitC D $ FAT- QfF. 2 iL

ALLEY OOP Noble Animabi BY V .T .

f ITEU-VOO.OeCAB.I CANTTSTAWb MUCHMOlJE

^ OFTla© CMO NG niwr*VgHEW/

WHAT A . FBACA&.' BUT WE. MADE IT'

V MM 'M . t . t M t v w .w .? .a l w A

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS A ’Hiouaui^ Times No BY MERRILL BLOSSEK

‘I don't undcralund all (he hullabaloo about iiiuppowcr ~ when we fiirls can turn out a nice job like Hint!"

I ONoeaSTawo voo sovs stakteoQO\.p RUSH ! MAV i SEE THE VOU FDUWP r r-vn-------- -——7----------

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HMVM [ ITS TUF REAL MCCOy. ALL RIGHT ; HOW MUCH 010 VOUtt FATMee DkV fO t^ tMiS Lorf

■' SevEKTy L sucicsl

a

Tbm Buocs CHoar?

VeAH . IF FOP li^OK >- YOUft OFfEK n o OOST, US TtN BlWS MAVe HIS HEAD EXAMaiEO'

1M4 tr.ltCA Utvici t \Tw0.m

RY FONTAINE FOX WASH TUBBS Camera'Their Weapon BY LESLIE I'URNES

OETAIl FOR TOOAYIOstOM Sitrff

7WA SB IA M lA C K Is a Btfloe o< canvas wKb TOpM aKsidiM to oadt I

Ta-4bosa who have Just cn« I tend the Nsaqr or tho Cbeat Guard, tt is known as a bam- ntock, and the fcncral idea ia that I

. you. are suppeeed to sleep In IL After four or five attempta at fat­ting Into flm SRXAM I bo^ hecomaa acenatomad ia tbal Jar of faninf en tha deric. When I you’re finally aetOad in your] DREAM RACK ready for a foodf

' nlgbtHf $mp. yofi 1 not to.braaflM tee haarfly fisr! of fantog oat aalB. If yon M d.yoar tea m for th m fottl aalnalaa thla halpa a lot, ba«In that‘way yaa eaa fat at

^iaatoutolovteylO.1

UNCLE OjTO s Fa m o u s No s e

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WKWoifrwArr10 fg KNOCKID P0WM-1H16 TIMS, fA»yM.W$UPIVEj THiMillMITMC SRANyjAFBL

WEPROgASyWOMT! MIMMEl ClOUMUNTl TMimiliiMir OM30FDF

OUT OUR WAY7

BY J. R. WILLIAMS OUR BOARDINQ HOUSi: MAJOR UUOFl

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MpRKI IHlRIY YEARS TOO fiOOM

GALLRNT VEAVA. AN'MUO-(^DDUe mariners U3NESOME FOR.CAN com e back Novl BowreR. ANO I PUU&(SED t K t LSAKtN TWl^ OLD ORANlSe

C R -A Te'

SOME. MORE EP1C6 AeOUT HOOPLE.TUe'

IA«T MAM OFF THE BRIDGE,

FIRST ONE UP to t n e c a n n o n 's- MOOTM.' ^ ^

.-. . . . . AREVbO . 6E)N<S SARCA'Src? TiBAT aNOULO

efiti tF X / TOLD YOU X \

,LEFT THE S H IP ' FOR A F evsl HOURS' ^ PiStAliNG f

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CQe 'D S A :/. -OH .YEA HI-

Ryl'i.