z . 9,10 - manchesterhistory.org evening hearld_1945-07-25.pdfv robert schaller, who owns prop-,...

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» jm Mdinchester Evening ■ f.-' - ^ ---- -------- ------------------------- : iroi TUESDAY, :rULT^*4,19<» Z. OWll Q«orr* A. Bryw ot 17» _____‘ Turnpike, In eompnny "'nrttli from Hartford, la , t peiwitiig ^veek* at Hampton “■ Beach, N. H. fc' Unna Lodfa, No. 7J, Knlfhta of r ^^ythla* hold IJ* ^m eeting tomorronr night at eight o’clock In OrMge hah. AU three ranka will be ennf«*Ted^ R udolf Wennergren, who 1» home on furlough from the Array. Barbaras McCarthy and MMle Fognrty have returned frpm Philadelphia after two weeks’ vacation with their ■ cle and aunt, Mr. gnd .'H*'*- George Moonan. A meeting ot the Life ••dh Grawth oommlttee wlB be held at tonnuel Lutheran church this •vmlng at eight o’clock.. Mra. Tloran'ce E. Flah oJ. Wg- arton street, and Mrs. Newton Taggart of Woodland atrenL are vacationing at NarraganeetL R- L, and are registered at the At- lantle Hotel. ICr. 'and Mrs. Allan 8 j' Taylor and small daughters, Mn^Vn and ■uaanne, have returned to their home, 86 Henry street, after a ^ eation at lAke Wlnnepesaukee. The Study grou* of the South Methodist .W. S. C. S. jdH ^ t THhuisdsy •fttnioon at wtui Mrs. Ines ’Tniax of 80 Street The study book on South- will b® completed it tbie time. ReporU from the r^ewt We S. C Norwich Dletrict me«ft- will be ghw by the aecretary, | Mrs. A r t ^ Gibson. Mr. and Mrs. fted A. McCarthy and family have returned after antiwh"g a few days In Danielson. ttiiM Joyce Fortin of that town re- turned with them for a two pfhkt’ atiay herb. , . v M n. Evelyn Pagpnl, of 1J5 Charter Oak atreeV was admitted to the Hartford |iospltal, Sunday. One caae d poliomyelitis was reported fran Manchester thie past waak, according to the-^^te HMdth department bulletin. ’The tifitA • ahild. is at the isolation >Kj.pltM Bl Hartford. It is not coq- 'iri^rod S severe attack and thh bestth authorities, upoh -in- yastigmtlon, found that there had baan no contact with other children ' and no cause for alarm. One caae of lobar pneunibrila In Wwn was also reported, Ruth P. Upplttcott, of 121 St. John street has received her pro- - motion from Private to Technician >iv»th Grade at the Oliver General hiMpltal recently. T-5 IJpplncott is.a member of the 10*th WAC compar Zone^Ghaiigc^ Agaiii l^bated "N. Commission Hojils Sec- ond Hewings on Sec- tion of NeW-.MBfL- The Zoning Commtesion'ncjd Its second hearing last night on proposed new lonlng map lor lf»e town. The eeeilon Was not largely attended only those who had .-nat- tera relating tS" the map section Being present. In each case they were represented by a lawyer. VRobert Schaller, who owns prop-, erty between Hartford road and WeetvCenter street asked, through his attorney, George C. Leasner, for a <diangc In the sohe.- The property . puf<i^baod In 1928 was soned for business its entire length. He owns 810 feet on Center street and 628 feet on Hartford road. The new map woWd allow but 200 feet of this for biisinafs. ' Mr. Schaller askedJhat the en- tire property be left aa It was apcl showed that If the 200 feet was set aa the limit it would,mean tn.nt paK of hlk present garage would be Iji two sonea. , When Property Was Bought Mr. Schaller bought the proper- ty In June, 1928, and it was show-n by the records of the commission J ... . ------- " ’alter thi' .street likewise changed, Pronei'lV owndd^y; the Sheridan Corporation at Majn and Pearl ■streets shown as h^ng zoned for 100 feet , was aekSd to be changed to take in the oiht?; 10 **^omae ftuUlvan asked >^at- pnaporty owned by him a.hd hla brothete, two now In the service, be allowed to remain aa buelnaea from McNe* Mreet to .Lynesa street, e distance of 450 feet ami 229 feet along McKee street. Ha said that he had plan* to erect a lew building to carry on hla pres- huslness. Torilslit the commission will «ive hekftngs on the section of the" town soTrth. of Middle 'Turn- pike and east'ofT^iiln street. The commission ,met.for tneir first session last night to'^sd^Wer the request so far made ano'-^lU meet again tonight after the ?lo of the hearing to give fUrthepT jj,. .consideration before , making changes -on the map.,- ■a* .,-y Soi^^xpected From Pacific Couple Get lietter fi’om Shipmate Tellipf Of thts Facf, Local Camp .eilhag Price Lists Issued tain 'Mr. and Mrs. H J e h ^ Nasslff, of 88 Hormaa ttreeU/ia* delighted to leam .that th e ljj^ , Salem Naa- alff, CarpenteryMate 1-e. will ar - rive bom* ^ffer an abaence of,.i6, montiw. S4lem Naaslff, ';i^o ha's spent OiM yearn In the'Wavy la held Jm high eateem by Wa ahlp- in^AB. Mr. Nasslff received the following letter from Charles ■entzen, which speaka for Itself; ^k^JMr.Wasaiff: - . ■ ProbJtbly ,Sam has mentioned my liame in^hls letters So you’ll ! kiipw whb I airS>4n case you don’t, '■J'Ve spent nine- nmntlja over here with Sam ipd carl trtrtjcaay he ' has been my closest ship.mkte. If _________ _ ___ known-or- ^fdil8t"and teacher of,'music, ae- ,.%Rfpanled three local'boys, Rich- ard Schbbert, Walter Grzyb and Ralnn Azlnger to Princeton, N. J„ yesterday, to attend- the andual ,V^al oamp session now being con- ducted by Professor Wllllamaon. for three weeks at Westminster Choir College. •I,t ia the second aeaaon for Rich- ard Schubert, aon of Mr. and Mrs. Max Schubert of 57 Cooper street, who sings'In the choir ot the Con- cordia LiUtheran church.' and the first aeasion for tha other two boys. All, three sing In the local High school choirs. Ralph, who 'Is tKe^on of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Azlnger of 48 Cobum road, olso sings in Emanuel choir. Walter Grzyb, son of‘Mr. and Mrs. Joaep.h ’Orzyb of 37 Mill street, singi and playa the brg;an at St. John’s chUreh on Oolway street and la a piipll of Mr. Wer- ner. ' . Gompact ‘' Booklet on Meat Cuts Available At Local Ration Office. Compact celling price lists cov- ering all retail cuts of mekt are now available upon request at the War Price- and Rationing Board Office at the State Armory, the chairman said today. - He, described the lisU as ‘•hand5f pocketbook. size’-’ and a "convenient reference for every housewife In the community.” The list specifies the top legal celling ■ price on all grades and cuta of beef, veal,,lamb and pork, the chairman said, and ”ls much smaller than the 114ta heretofore available.” , As Ibng ka the au^^ply lasts, the ItsU will ba distributed to any resident ef the wbio a s k s foV ons. T f the demand la anytUag like the number ot questions we get dally eu tha eelUng pricaa of mest,” tha ohalyman aaid, "we should exhaust the supply wlthla a week." STUFFED tOYS In VMoor and Leather Washable. Arthur Drug Stores 848 Mate St. Tel. 8806 Hospital company. that at the request of Mrs. W . oicott the commission had, on fhc receipt of a letter from her, Changed the entire property to biiklnesa when she BWi she could selKlf the change Vss made. This May 23, 1928. MrX^haller.'Satd that plans that he had forTuture developments would rkq^re the entire property left as It^ at present Attorney Jay Rublnow called attention t^w hat appeared to be an arror in tlM new map relating to a few lota\Bwned by the Oak Hin Oori«ratlbn which were soned as AA when the remainder of the property was soned as A. 'b^. Rublnow kliw asked that- ths section east o ^ Broad street and aouth of Little ^treet, which on the new njap Is zoned for Resi- dence B be left as It was when first zoned, industrial. This prop- erty is owned by E, , J. Hpll. Further Petlthms , Judge Raymond It Howete pra- sented a petition asking that the south side of Center street from Winter street to New street re- .maln In, a business, zone and not %e, changed aa it was proposed by the\new map. Ha rapreseii|^ John\R Allan. / ^ Jud^ Bbsren also asked that the propwty Xjwnld .by Alexwider Jarvis ^M aln' gnd LioliUBt atreeta which Is shp«’n . on the new map SB ^ing toned for business for a distance of 150 feet be mada to cortfortft with the property, or 160 feet. Mr. Rublnow aaked^ that prop- erty owned by hla father \acrosa Xm 'D X 'ci t i I were his father I’d be very pri, t\(P Sl^llS I/O S l i for having such a clean living, tpl / .1 erSnt son. Today wss rather sad ^ ' for me since Sam left, he is on his _ way hom'e. I sure hated to see olm Compiamllllg . go. ■lo'iR with two other of our close shipmates. It shouldn’t be long sfter receiving, this letter that Sam will be back on the good soil 1of United States. ! ,J know that all of you are going to have a Joyous month when he gets there. '*■ Please tell him to write to my home and let them know the dates of his leave. 'Thanks. Sarh’a Friend, . ' . Charles Arentzen. Mr. and Mrs. Nasslff also have two othc> sons In the service, Corp. George Nasslff, who has been In Burma for the past two years and ■Frederick George'Naasiff. Electri- cians Mats S-c who entered the Navy two years ago spd gradu- ated from E. I. C; School In Wash- ington. Frederick Nassiff left for thv South Pacific last Thursday and ao will Just mias seeing his brother Salem. Z Co. H, State Guard, Position 4 Years. Capt. Chesterfield Pirle, former commanding -officer of Company H, State Guard of this town, has resigned from the State Guard'and the comrqand of Company H find ^ the Adjutant, General In special i order dated July 19- has ordered | that the transfer of all state and | federal property be made to i-ieut. , Maurice Miller, next senior offi- cer trf the oompany. ' ^ ' Lieutenant Miller, 6 rodent of Rockville, has been a member of the local company for more than two years, having been promoted from 1st Sergeant of the Com- pany, receiving a, eommlaaloii as 2nd Lieutenant and advancement to hla present eommlaaloned grad*. Mafie T raw ler Officer Capt. Royal E. Ramadell, of the G-4 Section, Brigade Staff -has been designated by the Adjutant General aa transfer officer and she- property transfer officer will see that Lieutenant Miller, the new commanding officer o4_tljf pany will be bonded. T14I actual transfer of the companjs to Lleu- tenahf Miller’s command jylH be made after the property aCcounta have been forwarded to the State Property Officer by Captain Ramadell, Captain Pirle. a veteran of the Yankee Division in World War 1. haa been a commissioned officer In the Connecticut State Guard for the past four years. He succeeded to the command of Company H. Capt. David McCOHum. of Flor- cne'e Street, ASHES AND RUBBISH REMOVED Cellara and Tarda Cleaned. Call 5848 or 7487 R.CAMPOSEO Materials Still Needed!!! HOU^ R.\GS . .. . .3c Lb.‘ BUNDLED PAPERS, ~ 50c Hundred Lbs. Phone 5879 Wm. Qstrinsky 182 Bissell Street 1^ ^ FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE BUILDING LOTS AT THE GREEN i* , ' - Sss . William Kailehl General CoBfnetor 519 Center St. TeL 7778 ■"T- •X . HALE'S HEALTH MARKET LOBSTERS Lobsters are here again! Fresh from the cold Atlantic waters. Come in and pick out the size you wont. Other Varieties of Fresh Sea Foods Will Arrive In the /Morn- ing From the Boston Filh^PierSs tiM JMC HAM MAitCHisTen Coiiw Austin H. Briggs Has Decorations ______ , . ,\ . Auetln H. Brigga of T7 Laurd. ktreet, who has Just been honoramy ffiacharged from the U. S. Army, thw morning received the Bfonze Stair giedal for “merltorloue serv- ice duiHng the period. January 1, 1945 to March 1, 1945, In Ger- many.” He also holds the Silver Star for gallantry In imtlon at 'Thala, TunlalkKln February, 1943 After graduating from Manchea- ter High school in 1936 he entered the eiuploy of the ftoyal Typewrit- ter company, and,,was one of the ftrat selectees to leave for aervlce In 1941. ; LECLERC FUNERAL hDmE 23 Main S t r e e t / Phone 52ttt REAL ESTATE wanted TO BUT — Blagla. 6-Fainlly Hnoaea — Large, and dmatl FarnM — la Manobester, Boltoo, Vemoa and So. Wind-' eor. An traneneftona (UASH). What have ynor unn, Wrtta at .Phone— Mnncheatar 4SEI .or 6-1102 (Any Ttane). HOWARD HASTINGS ’Re^ InewMe U1 Pbelpa Bond, Oor. Oreee B8. Fire Insurance ,, On Yonr FURNITURE And Personal Effects. We can protect yon tor aa low M $4.00 peg. 81,000 for I yearn* ttme. Mlnlmnm Prenriom 85.00. Let me call at yonr home and explain detalle or Arthur A. Knofla ’Tile Fnmitnre Pirn . InnoDMioe Man" OHIoe Open Dally and Thorn. Evening 2 to 8 P. M. 825 MAIN t^ B E T Telephone 6440 or 6988 . If You Want To Buy Or Sell REAL ESTATE . N Fdir-Priees Can Wm. F. Johnson Bailder — Real EsUts Johnson-Bnllt Homes BROAD STREET TELEPHONE 7426 Hospital Expense Plan For Men, Women and Children PAYS FOR: Stekneae or accident expennea when confined In nny himpitnl anywhere In the D. & A. or Oaiiads. ' Room and board ex- panaea op to $8.00 per day for drat 80 day^ eonflnement— 88.00 per day for next 90 days' ooallncsneat. Thin plan may be changed npd denigned to dt the needs, of any. Individual group of famamd worhnia.. No aiedl- eal examlnatloQ. Phone, Write or Call On ALLENT& . .ITCHCOCK All lltnea ot Inmmnen 088 MAIM STREET TEL, 8106 EAVES-TROUGH \ id Condnetom Need Repniring Repineing On Tour'-Homo? GALL KOBMAN BEMTZ 898 Boat Center Strecd Til^onnam ALL MAKES RADIOS RepaiPed Reasonably I Tubes Tested Large Stock Parts Si 889-841 'MAIN 8* Open 'Thorsday Until 9 P. M .' Closed Saturday At 5:30 P. M| I WANTED 3-YEAR LICENSEb OPERATOR 5-DAY WEEK^^ 5 \ ^ NELL'S BEAUTY 35 MAIN STREET TELEPHONE Kiwanis Vacation Cliilclren Relnrir The 41 children who were given a two weeka’ vacation at the Sal- vation Army Cfimp at gouth Cov- entry Lake, retunied home today. The annual outing for the children la sponsored by the .Manchester ^w anis Club and members of that orlumization furnished cars- to bring the children home. DON WILLIS GARAGE Complete Auto Serriee 18 Mata S t Tel.8085 l".f.' Due To Necessary Alterations Being ^ a d e In Our Kitchen# Food S ^ i c e , A*~ Cav<^y's G rill 45 East Center Street WILL BE OMITTED. TODAY AND TOMORROW (^nriee At Oar Bar Will Contlnae> Food Sendee Gtntinues 'Again Thursday T AUbBOOFRAN . ; '' (Knowh^Aa ()neea 'Allee> j. SevMitiKDaai^ter of a Seventh Son r W m With a Veil Readinga Dally, taglndtag S$nMay, 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Og B v ^ A ^ n t- 1 ment. In the Servligrfif the Peo- ' pie for SO .VearSv 't^?-'’-«PIRITUAl. MEDIUM 1 169 Church Street. Hartford, Conn. Phone 6-2024' PIANO TUNING Repairinff ■ Rebulldinff BouRht and Sdid A. G. McCROHON Phono 6619 G. E. WILLIS & SON, INC. Lumber of All Kinds Mason Suppj^a—rPaint— Hardware Balsam Wool Insulation COAL COKE 2 Main St. Tet. 5125 Suites-~ln Basi^over EASr TERMS! - ALL W0I(K GUARANTEED ' Large Sele^lten ot Fabrics Prompt Delivoryl We Cany Our Own Accounts acDONALD UPHOLSTERY CO. 983 MAIN STREET HARTFORD TEL. 2-41*7 ^ 1^11 Special AUenttoa Gives Oat-of-towa Oaatomen COME IN D GET YOUR HATS My store isygoing to be tom down and rebailt, so that it will be necessary to clear oat all stock. ~ V . B>e sure to come in on or before Satarday, July 28. i JIM'S HAT CLEANING PARLQR 24 Oak Street - BRITISH WAR V rthbans * ORANGEHALL -- TO-NIGHf Good PrizcM i Weekly Door Prize U. S. Bond ^nd of Each Month Start S p* 03. Admission 25 Cen|a OUCH! $10,000 PLEASE Sports accidents are only one pf MANY cauaea ot oostly claims., us tell you how aa Aatna ComprMianaiva Personal LiabOl^ Policy will safeguard you from rsanlttv m>*n aimtdents both oa.. year peoparty <w otaowhers. Remqmber, . AB «8 OOMB n WIUi LappeaL JOHN H. LAPPEN ZELCraOMB 26U Oil Burners Bad - Furnaces A Few StlD Available. RACKUFFE OH. CO. « Btopis Avsms - TeL narttstd T-SISI NOTICE! The Office of Dr. C. M. Parker Will Be CLOSED Until August ,10 Kinds of Insurancs 175 East Center Street TA $665 MancheBter Plumbing A Supply G>. '-K- wn MAIM ST. TEL. 4428 Mrs. Delia Sullivan. SPENCER OOBSETIEK 5 Broad Street Can 2-0900 for Appotate aimt At . Toar Home er Mine.. THE FIRST STEP ^E N PLANNING A NEW HOME! ^ Timr Srst s^'^should be to get all the facts aboat ear popular Direct Redoctloa Mortgage loan. For prompt acUoa.'Meadiy wirtiee, aboeoee of red tape afid MINIMUM OF COST ytM'wllI Ond aethhig to equal thia unusual "boine pasrment plaa. Make aa appolntmeat by ’phooe today with oor aecretary, Mrs. Hi*’' or oor Vlee-PresMeat, Mr. Taylor, aod let tbefis explafai th i. easiest of, ways to laaooe a new home. ie/iey.S te t: BUILDING W LOAN ASSOCIATION, INC --------- -- 0fiCAN/2£D APRIL 1891 --------------- ---- “Before My Vacation” I brought, an my dry cleaning to Rainbow, on Harrison Street They'do such beantifnl work, reasonably, too, It’s THE placebo «o for QUALITY DRY CLEANING Thank you, misa! We ARE proud of our careful work- manship. Bring YOUR dry cleaning, to A~'-. aiMme^UUMDERm verage Dally Far Ihs Moa ilation 1848 9,10 Member ot the Aadli Borsaa ot droolMtoae X ^AHfaneheHer^J City of Village C har^ Tbt Wtather. I of U. S. Weatbee ! Partly Noady^ Uttle ebaoge ten^rature t^ght aad 1taua^\ day; scaStered showen powMe lo Interior Thursday. ii^k. fi'- \ \ VOL. LXIV., NO. 256 ^^(ClassMU Adregdabig ea IS) MANCHESTERix^NN^ WEDNpDAY, 25, 1946 (FOURTEEN PAGES) ^lUCE THREE <^NTR Maintains Silence \ Old Soldier Refuses to ^"Apawer (^eatf6n|]|/bn Telegram Praising Ger- man Victory at Dii^pe And Asking to Use Troops for Defense. Bulletin!' Paris, -July 25.—</P)—For- mer President Albert Lebrnn testified today that Marshal Petain threatened to resign from the Reynaud govemr ment unless it asked an armi- stice from Germany and later the same day took a complete cabinet list from a. pocket lyhen '.-a.sked to form a neW administration. Lebrun re- counted how three .-unnamed Vichy officials demanded his resignation as'pre^dent. He said he refused and was oust- ed by the Vichy regime’s a tion in suspending the c^m ^ I tution and making Pettiin a dictator. Dozen Going Minus Sleep:^^ Long Period ■> ^ Cohtcientidut Objeclort Subject to Experiment Td Study Fatigue*g Ef- feet od^j^uman Systepi ' Puaendeiia, pallf^, July A dozen ileepy conzcibn(lou)F^ ob- jector* todxy yawned, uid played through the Uilf^day M.a acheduled 112-houP'no-aIeep teat, California DiiRUtute of Tech- nology la cprtductlng the experi- ment for the armed forcea to atudy fatiguy^reffe^t on the human aya- iatiguy4 tem^ /The 1 'theirifiay Ipg^ doii alaying i Paris, July>26.-^/P)—-Mut- Itering ana protests arose from jyirtm and spectators' at the^ir^son trial of Marshal i-^^in today when the old soldier curtly refused to an- questions about tele- granm\pongratulating the Germans oir^eir success at Dieppe and seekbig:;Mrmisslbn for French troops to ^rtteipate In dMenae of Vichy terrltoryAlong- Bide the German*. Befoaea . to Answer Qoestiaaa Petain atolldly refused to an- swer queationa, adhering to hla 'VOW on the' first, day Of the trUU. Ju ^ e Paul Monglbeaux then read l.teto the . record what he aaid was a telegram from Petain to Hitler asking permission for Vichy traops to help the Germans in de- fense. -4. 'The issue arose dunng the cross eRaminaUon of Former Premier Edouard Daladier, whose angry testimony was punctuated by chair alaminlng and shouts. ' Daladier was followed to the stand by the last elected president of the third republic, Albert Le- brun. ' Lebrun recited a succession ot military defeats which preceded the French armistice. Read In Re*poiiaf| to Qaeatlon The telegram wak read In re- aponse to a juror’s questioning.-, of Former Premier Edouard Dara- dier, who had testified that "all the traitors of Frande" flocked to Vichy after the armistice and that the'- Petain regime deatr^ed the republic. Daladier had declared that France' was not unarmed when the Germans struck, in 1940, The same Juror awked Daladier (Coatlaaed on l^ga Eight) lilinocent Man BelievedNoW Serv^ Three .Years am Four Months in Pris- 4yn; ^DouBIe’ Cxmvictta volunteer subjects spend ya chopping wood, garden- doing Janitoriai work and . _ volley ball and basketball. By night they stroll Pasadena streets In a group. A medical attendant auperylaea their activity. The atay-awake ^ n d began at 5:45-a. m. Monday and will end at 10 p. m. Friday., Strike List NowRising; 60,( HighMt T ^ I in Almost ^Wieeks; Indica- tion's 15)000 Return Dispute Settle^. By Tho Associaibfi Proas The nation’s strike list was In poo* with the current Imat wave, heading upward today, 4 Mtasing the 60,000 mark for tee^ighest total In almost three^,iweks..' New repmte^ of worl{ stoppages, idling thouMhds, dissipated hopes of 24 hydra ago that the country’s toteO^ff Jobs through labor dia^ itea would drop below 40,000. The 60,000 idle from more than a score oYwork stoppages'was the biggest since the end of the rub- ber strikes in Akron, O., early this month. Indications were that some 15,000 workers returned to their jobs as disputes were set- tled. *1216 largest single., contri- buting factor to the upward trend was a labor dispute at the Wright Aerpnautibat Corp. plants^ in New Jersey. ' .Xr 18,800 Empleyea Off Jobs A CIO-United A^totnobtle Work- 8 spokesman ' X z: Memorial Marines..* Okina'iva Bureau Raps Proposal Mor^enthau's Sugges- tion Job Be Returned To TreasuiT^ Opposed. Wdrii^gton, July 25—<<iIV-Hen' ry Mor^mthfiu’a swan-aong propo - sal to •‘retunixthe Job of prepar- ing the prealdenrk budget to the Treasury echoed ahabu^ in the Budget bureau today. ___ Budget Director Harold'xn. 24/tours. Smith aaM ho felt "a certate'Wfir astonishment” because the ’Tr«a». ury never haa had the reapoitri bUlty of prei^ring the govern' ment’s annual fiscal estimate. Never Under Tfw|sk >7 Control , Smith added'te a reporter that although the Budget bureau bad a "loose c^nnectloh’^ with the de^ partment until 1939, it never was under ’Treasury control. "■ Otecr budget officials flatly op- posed Morgenthau'a suggestion, saying the -bureau la not an tJiter- atlhg agency but a part of the president’s staff, and should re- main so. ' The Budget bureau shift was among several Morgenthau recom- mended In a final report to Con' gress, made public last night. Morgenthau said the department he turned, over to Fred M. Vinson Monday should have firmer com troi over financial policies of the goveojment. ' f ' To accompliiBh that he suggest- ed that the ’Treasuty be given pol- icy ecgitrol over the. spending, lending, borrowing and Insuring sctlvltise o6->jsuch government agencies as*, the'. Reconstruction Finance corporatlpit, the Agricul- ture department, Natldnaj^ Hous- ing agency apd the Fedend D»v posit Insurance corporation; OaaH Be Real Watchdog Under the present; aet-up Mor- rjfi ln Wood- ^ Bt Fater* obs l(OOd' vlrtpal 15,500 employes In pi Ridge, Paterten and aon, N.'J., were off theti that‘production of B-29 eni Super-Fortresses at the Ridge factory wail’ at a standstill. The strike wjiich started in the Wood-Ridge factory Friday and spread to the other two plants re- sulted, said a union spokesman, over discharge of a steward. John McGrall,'president of UA-tV Local 699, however, termed the walkout unauthorized and aaid union mem- bers were urged to return to work. Strikers claimed the stoppage stemmed from steward’s dis- charge and de)ay‘ln a War Labor board decision on a contract dis- pute. The. company said the WLB and the contract were not involved and said It would give Imteedigte hearing on the stew- aid’s case after resumption of pro- duction. tSvo Other loige Walkouts . . . MaJ. Gen. Fred C. Wallace, (left foreground) commanding gen- Island command on Okinawa, reads the inscription on the mOteprial tablet; in the cemetery foe U. S. Marine.) who died' during tee bdtQe for Okinawa. Photo by Max Deafor, AP staff photographer .with teeXir^lmg still picture pooL •V'*' Gt)ast Also P< Chinese Units Enter Yangso, Former Base ’Two pteer large''walkouts were (o tee list during tee lart added In Savanhah, ’ 'Ga., a Ikout of 'MW mfichlnt^ In- a wagc.diBputs at the Souteeastern ghlpbuHdteg Corp., idled' more than' T.STOSmwkers in the building at AV-1 shlpSr - Another 7,500 was idle at the Cheyrolet division of GeneralvMotors in CHfirinnatl in a dispute over transfer o i l plant manager. ' Union officials 8ald-h.ie returh would end the \valkout. Meat supplies In the St. Louis metroj^lltan area hit a 'new low as the strike of AFL . butchers spread to a fifth plant, putting the total on strike at 1.900. ■ The butchers. Ignoring a WLB back to work order, struck te a dispute Over wage negotiations. Biggest Return In Detroit ’The biggest return of workers to their Jobs, was In Detroit Most of the more than 10.000 Idl^ by the closing of 200 lumber yards in the Detroit area Were back on \1 New York,; July 88.'— --Au Innocent busln^m ui who served three yrius and four months |fi Sing Sing prison stood cleared to- day of a crime committed by his "double,’’ described as one of tee natlon*9^ "smoothest bigtime ctpolw.” 7 Asslstaift U . s'. Attorney John J. Donovan diaclotod teat .tee Vie- tim .lh tee cruel case of rnistaken. Identity was Bertram M-; Camp-' bell, 57-y«to'Old former securities dealer, who bad continually pro- tested his innocence^ when he was convicted of forgery In 1937. . Bank employys Identified Camp-' bell as the man who drew ..a 8^- IBQ forged check. Actoal’ Forger fSeattfied Donovan identified tee actual I foegsr yesterday as Alexander D. L. 721I 6I, whhoi ba deacribed as one of the country’s "smoothest crooks’’ and who waa sentenced .to. tour yeatrs* hnpriaonment for another offenao-rVlolatioa ot the national stolen property itet- - Donovan said ’Thiel- had' admit - ted the forgery for which Camp- bell waa aent to prison, and had I added teat be tried to help the in- nocent man-by oonunittlng anoUK er forgery which would prove that Campbell could act have commit- ted the original crime. ’The scheme failed, . but netted 'Thiel 818,000, Donovan said; WUI Ask FoU Pardon Campbell, who Uvea In -Floral Park, N. with his wife and three chlldri^ plana to ask Gov. ’Tbomaa B. Dewey for a full par- don. « * A friend of GOsapbell’s read of TItleTa arreat in Lsoington, Ky. last March and notad tee strildng . (Coatbnied on Page Eight) 3 Firefighters Beii^ought Mexicans Missing 'in Idaho; 200)000 Acres Of Rangeland Burned. (Uoattoaed oa'^t’aaa Portland, Ore., July 25—(flfi*— While crews doggedly -battled, ^pragon's 140-aquare-mile TiDa- ffidm forest blase three Mexican firefighters were reported missing across the state line in Idaho where flamss had charred more than 200,000 acriis of rangeland. Two planea w err to scout tee area near Shoshone, Idaho, today In an effort to find the three flroiL fighters, but a similar search yes- terday waa trultleas. The men Were employes of a power com- panYfi labor ramp which was help- ing, bring the fire under control District Orasier Jack Keith sa'd he believed the flames wpuld be halted sometime today. Fire Fairly Well Chocked In the 'Tillamook area of Oregon the huge fire was fairly well .tffiecked today and atate foreater Nela Rogers said th e '3,000 fire fighters were "holding thelt own.” He said they had managed to trail about two-thlrda of the eohflagra- tldn. Planea wer* used to sight spot flres4, that flared Up within the boundaries of the trails. Renewed hope for favorable weather came in today’s forecast of cloudy weather with showers and lowering tempetature. ‘Tt.all depends on the Weather,' said Rogers, who reported three other forest - hlaaea te ' tha" south IMse virtually ooaqm r^ (Contlnnedton Page FoOr) Rollback Plans Shunted Aside Lucas ^ ^ lls Critics Lay C&ihds on Table I I. "■ I,.. .■ ll■ ail. — iM .... -,- S Britl* Party Ranked Among Greiit' Ppeiiments of History;! To Hear Vote Wafihirisrton, July .25.M^ Churchill, Eden -Sfingtor Lucas (D., Dl.),! Attlee Arrange Chances for Cut in Re? (ail Prices o f ' Cloth- ing Get Another jolt. Washington, July 28—(JP )— The government’s plans for rolling back clothing prices appeared to- day to be side-tracked indefinitely. Chances for a six to seven per cent'cut In retail prices—the goal set early this year—received an- other Jolt as the OPA granted further price.condesalons to fabric manufaCTurers. The agency announced -last n^;ht' that-for the rest of this year producers bt woolen and worsted fabrics can turn out about the same price lines of .merchan- dise they did before tee rollback waa ordered. Beginnihg in 1946 they will b« required to trim tedr average prices aomiv^ but not aa much aa originally planned. The revia^ order will be based oh 'prices' slightly less than those which pre- vailed in 1944, rather than on 1948 prices. T h is iS(,lnliw done, ^OPA sai(L because rollitaiy reqpitomenta and,restrictions on the use of vir- gin wool in 1943 made teat period "unrepteaentative of .normal civil- ian operation*.” Only Esbrics Affected Now While' qnly fabrics are .affepti^ at present, it was learned that OpA soon will make "similar {Ad- justments fo^ garment manuflc- turera. This'* means that at least part of the projected retail out will be wiped out for auch appar- el as men’s aults and overcoata, children’a anowaulta, glrla* sUrta,' women’a coata and a wide variety of other Items. OPA. acknowledged that afijuat- menta to fabric produc- ers had just about eliminated any hope of price -cuts Tor such gar- meqte this year. What can be ciipilenKed any critics ot the | United Nations charter in ^ the Senate today to lay their; cards on -the table now—“not' a year hence,” Speaking on the third day of general de- bate on the treaty, Lucas forecast the charter "will rank amohg tee greatest documents In hlstei^vv No irtiater, he stressed,- should vote for it -iLtecause he believes it politically darigerous to do other- wise.” Reply to Wheeler . Lucas’ remarks were Ih t ^ na- ture of a reply to Senator Wheel- er (D., Mont.), who 'said ■yester- 'dky he woiild vote.fOr tbs, treaty but promised a ' “battle" op the stibsequent agreements stipulating the U. S. contribution in troops and resources to the .world-organ - ization. Charter suppK>ri;ers con- tended teen that, any limitation later-would be a breach oi good faith., -"Let.no one vote tor this world documrint," Lucas said, ’’with the belief teat some day when the im- plementing statutes'and the sper clal agreements come to us for congressional actibn. ^U1 be tee hofir to draw tee nilliU^[y teeth from this new international agreement “If there fire those who havC j^ervatiena or amendments, now is the time to present them.” Wlmt Administration Wants.. What'^the admin'istcaOon wants, aa outlined by several senators, is this: , , ; 1..Rktification'of 'tee 'charter wlte' explicit understanding that tee United States thus ia. commit- UU8i of att4 Re- Conferciice. Bulletin! Potsdam, July 28 —(;P)—^ President Truman will fly to U. S. Army headquarters at Frankfurt tomorrow and re- view Americnn trOops, taking iMlvantage of the off-day In the Big Three schedule, ofll- dala announced today. General Eisenhower, commander of ' United States forces In the Eu- ropean theater, wlU meet the prosldeht In Fntnkfnrt, where they will Inspect the S4th In- fantry nnd Third Armored divisions. The tww will have luncheett together. (OUnttnoed oa Page FonT) Potsdam, July 25—(JP )—A fbur- en^ned passenger- plane carrying Prinie Minister Churchill and his party took off for England from a strongly guarded klrport here this .afternoon following another meet- ing of the Big 'Hiree. Churchill, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Clement R. Attlee, Labo; paVty:leader attend- ing the conference aa an observer, arranged a- recess so they could be in London when results of' the British election July 6' are an- nounced Thursday. , / No Formal Farewell /'- Four Army sedans from /the British compound took, tee patsen- gets to the airport. There was no Break ' Through South Gate of Town to Bat- tle Streets^ Rail Line Blocked Again. Caiungklng, July .28.—(JP) — CJhl- neae troops have broken through tee south gate of the walled town of Taqgso, site of a; former U. 8. t4te -Air Force base 44 milea aouth of the prize JapaneM-heid city of KWellin, the Chlnea^ high com- mand announced today.'' The announcement aal<) street fighting was in progress In Yangso, which is on a subsidiary highway between Liuchow and Kweillh.' The Chinese alsor: reported thw had driven another wedge Into tea Munan-Kwangsi railroad to seal more effectively the enemy eaca^ route from Kivangsl to HunaLn,- ’They eatabllahed a road block acroaa the raila 88 mlloe north east-of Kweilin - and 'nine miles southwest of the Japanese bastion at ChuanbalCn.' ETghting waa still -in process In this sector today sA .tee invaders tned to make the Chi- nese relax their hold.- Japanese Attack Repelled f The high command''6ald several hundred Japanese troops ^from Dong Dang. 85 milea northeast of Hanoi, capital 'pf French Indo- china, delivered an attack against Chinese positions at Chennankwan on the Chineae side of .the 'Indo- china frontier and at Pingaiang, 11 nUlea north of Dong Dang/ but weCe..repelIed. Chinese tr^p s striking eaatwanl along the nnkh China coastal high- way reached- tee suburbs of Qie imports^ hl(te\Vay Junction of Yeungkong, .125 'mfies southwest of CMtbn. YeujigkOng. wffilch is 5 0 -Iniles east of Tlnpak. from wffilch point the Chinese launched tijelr current drive, was und^ di- rect attack. Control 50 Miles ot Coast *1116 Chinese advance gave them control of a fifty-mile stretch o^- ■’invasion’! coast fronting on . SonUT^ China sea. ■ , In Klangst tee. Chinese repelled With heavy enemy casualUOs Japanese counter-attack 12 milea northeast of tee liberated airbase cjity of Suichwan, roughly midway betweeri'-Hong Kong and -Rankow, ■rhe counter-atU^ presumably was made in an/attempt to dis- perse Chinese forcea likely to In- Stage Reddy ToEliminate Ptice Curbs 11 .*1 I Wide Variety, of Minor Commodities^ W il l Have' Controls Lifted In jOradual Process. Washington, July 25—(d’l— ’The stage la set for gradual elimina- tion ot price Controls on a wide variety of minor commodities. Granted this auteoritY-by Sta - bilization Director WiUikm - H. Davis, the OPA said It would help clear the way for the “gigantic task” of setting price ceilings for civilian gpods coming back Into .production.'’ ■The progrram, announced laat night by Davis and Price Adipliti Istrator (Xi'eater Bowles, p r id e s / (Conttnaed os Rage Eight) les 2,000 Japs £nemy Seek|ng Es- cape from ^ Trap jn Southern BunhR^Now. t \ (Contlnned on Page ;^oor) tVeasary- Balance W ashington,'" J u l y . 25.-—(/Pi—.Taie position of the Treasury July 23; Receipts. 8158,190,460.14; pendlturea, 8295.475,175.05; balance, 823,127,420.348 55. net (Oontlno^d on Page Fonr) T^^irig Heads Roniber Force To Share Supervisiun bf Strategic Boihhiiig of Japan with Doolittle. Washington, July 2»i^^^IP)^’rhe two men who directed the strate- gic bomb’ing of Germany, will share supervision ox'e# the, Sifper-Forf; ress blows that ate fiattehlng the. Japanese emplre>yrom the air. Halsey Yearns for Fleet . WT ••'t On Wheels to Chase Japs With^Brd U. 8. Fleet off J a p a n , " T h e combination of the B-29s, the ground power, of the Okinawa- baaed Air Forcea and the unstop- pable pin-point accuracy of the carrier planea are reducing. the enemy's air potential to that >f a painful nuisance," he said. , Capable of Doing Damage He warned .that Japaneais. sui- cide planea are still capable of do- ing .damage, but'teat “this can- not Sind will not atop us. "The ’Third fleet’s Job is-to hit the empire hard and often. This July * 25— dP) —Admiral Halsey yearn'ed today for a fleet with wheels'!,^ we. could chase the Japs inland after we drive them from tee coast." ' Halsey’s yearning waa proad- cast to tee U. ^8.. from-hls Third fleet flagship only lOQ miles off tee Japanese coast, even as his carrier planes were smashing at cowering remnants of the -Jap - anese fleet in the-Inland sea. New Phaise Entered Proclaiming' that Naval warfare i fighting outfit is doing Just that, had entered a new phase—"the ; he aaaerted opening of the final plunge into tfee heart of Japan." the tough- tolklfig admiral said: "The Allied team is working with speed and devaatetlng preci- sion apd If the Nips do not know they are a-doomed nation they're eorte- stupider than I think they are." Halaey then described what had been done In the past 18 days: ■Reawy Navsl guns had wrought *hudMllevable destruction" in the Borthent Industrial areas. Lighter units hsd smacked' the mouth of 'lyxkyo bay and amgahed shipping UuMs aijjd shot op coastal totaoto. The harried JapAfiese must .lave found little solace in hie vocal blast; “I said after the far-flung bat- Ue for Leyte gulf teat tee 'ap- aneae fleet was routed, beaten and broken and nothing has happened since-to change my opinion," Hal - sey declared. T h e abortive rally, of the Ya- mato (Japanese battleship simkln a desperate sortie towards tee Ryukyus In early. April) was a piece of-stupid panic. What’s left of the Jsp Navy is helpless, but, Just- for good luck we u-ill hunt thaas sMt M tkiir bolea.” In ■ThU became h)iown in an Army Air Forcea announcement, teat Lieut. Oeri. Nathan F. Twining will command th^; 20th'Air- Force in the Marianas. -Aa head. of the 15th Air Force. Twining biaafed the Germans from Africa ba** deep into their own homeland Lieut, 'Gen. -dames H." Doolittle already has arrived in the I^cific ahd has said nis 8th Air. Force will will be in action against Japan-by next week. Will Itavolve Only' Super-Forts The pair thus w ill. resume, even gteater strength, their aerial onslaughts against the remaining portion of tee Axis, enemy. 3ut whereas Twining and Doolittle dl rected lighter types of heavy bbmbera over Europe, their com' mands against Japan will Involve only the giant B-29 SUper-Fort- reases. ■The new assignment for Twin ing was disclose at a news con fere'nce yesterday by Lieut. Gen, ,,Irst C. Baker, deputy AAF com 'mander. Twining 'succeeds MaJ. Gen. Curtis E. .LeMay, who, be- ‘tomes chief of staff to Geh. Carl Spaats, commander of . all Bacifi’c Strate^c Air Forces. • Baker sadd bomb tonnages being dumped- on Japan how are 60 per cent as heavy aa those dropped on -Permaniy and will exceed tee European figure by tee end of the yew, By next March, be added, they Will reach a peak ot 270,(XX) tons a month, compared with the record 188,000-ton monthly total agfiinat the Reich. led Calcutta, July 2 5 .- ^ — troops Have killed more than Japanese iii a three-day batUe wl< enemy forcea seeking to escape from a trap In southern Buraia and reach the Slttang riybr, Southewt Asia nommsuid headquartera nouncied todscy. These casualtiea coupled with 282 prisoners and u r uncounted number killed by artillery and by planes, have re^uhed by mors than one-Jialf' a^Japanese force esti- mated at 8;000 In the Pegu ^ k e L R e d r Fighting Contlanea . ykxommunlque said heavy flght- ihg continued today along a . 77' mile stretch of road between Toun- goo and '-Nyaunglebin. A large body o f. tee enemy which- crossed tee road by night was engaged by guns and mortars. , . ' Two--villagea, five mites north - east of P^, were occupied by Allied troops following a success- ful strike. Advancing eastwards from Heho, a 3,000-f6ot high, trad Ing cehter in the" Shan state, the Allies occupied Taunggyl and pa- trolled east of the town. Strohg..forces of Spitfires and ’Thunderbolts are supporting the grpund troop# in . tee -Toungoo- Nyaenglebin' corridoi'. ' Sfi ^Attoeka Dally (A Dome! broadcast recorded by the FCC said teat Allied counter- attacks against the Sittahg and Myltkyo areas had "mounteA in strength, despite tee fact that the rainy, seaso'h has set in.'-' The enemy agency’s correspondent said Allied troops were carrying Mitsubishi) Hayama aud / Asaishi Plants Targets In Second Attack by Big Bombers Within 36 Hours; Garrier Planes Smash at Smok- ing Remhants of Jap Navy at Kure Base. Guam, Thursday* July 26. {IP )—American Super- Torts struck three Japanese oil refineries near Tokyo at midnight last night within a /ew hours after Third fle^ carrier planes and warsK!^ pounded coastal..def'enses on the enemy. . homeland.' Be- tween 75..ana 160 big B-29s bit tbs Mitsubishi, Hayama and AAalahl refineries, all-within a few him -' dred yards of each other, at Ka- wasaki 'bn Tokyo .bay, about JO miles from Tokyo city. It waa tha . second Super-Fortress raid. <m Nippon in 36 hours. ' Smash a t DMXtol. Navy Carrier planea/smashed for tho' second consecutiv* day at sfiioh- ing remnanto/of Japan’s daa^ Navy in' huge Kure NaVal base aftei/beavlly damaging asia- an, warships 'yesterday. ' ral Nlmiitz did not ..rsvaal ingth of today's assault ba^ presumed equal to dhy'a 1.200 plane‘‘a ^ k e . / Air fields and other n 'stallatlons on the ma)n/home is-., lahd of Honshu nlaa-inTO blL Ra* tunteig pilots reported destruction of Japanese ^anee on tee ground. -Ahsuciatadxlmsa CorrespondaBt 'chard/0^Malley, aboard the car- » |b%ahip, bald a thick hlankat of)tog closed in late in tee day. \ Move BokU^gBohon m cruisers and. destroyaro moved boldly Inshore eai!^ today ahd ahelleaimoteer Japaii^ flgh^ Ing lair—teV seaplane base^ and airfield at Kushtaoto oh the aodfl^ western Up of Hoinshu. (Tokyo radio heard In Lotidon reported that eUU other warahipa bombarded Kansgawa s prefeetim . bn Honahu, Just s o u t h T o k y o bay. Kanagawa ia across th* mouth of tee bay from Cap* MO- (ConUnued on Pag* FOor) (Late BoUeUw ot Uw (ff) Wise) (OonMnned ba Page Eight) Britain Waits VoteResulte Returns Expected T(> Trickling in About Nuon Tomormw London. July Britain awaited today without .visible signs of excitement ajunouncement of the results dt the July; 5 pariia- meiitary elections, which wUl de- termine whether Prime Minist-r Churchill is to tejnaln at the head of the government upon wh-'-se shoulders will fail., the task of nrosecuting the war against Japan It is expected that the first re- turns vrill start trickling-in from .the naUon’s 640 districts about noon Jtomorrow (7 a. m. e.w.t.), and that the bulk of the votes vill be tabulated within tee next five hours. The'..British Press A880 Ciati<<r. aud Exchange Telegraph have, combined their newsgrtherlng services to obtain and tabulate the results quickly. , May Not Deckle Control There is an outside chance that tomorrow's count may not decide control of tee House of Commons If the race between the-. Conserva- Uve and Labor parUes la cibae. The 'votes In 11 university seats will not be tabulated unUl Aug. 1 and the ballots In one district in Hull will not be added unUl a week later. It ia eoacejvable that the bal- miec of power in the Hapee—which Reeelvea Controversial BID Hartford. July 28^-(fl>—Oeaeto nor Baldwin has recelved'-th* ooa- . troverslal oU tax Mil Inypiviag about 81,250,000 In state Kventia a n d ' Immediately began to feel pressure from groups urging a veto and Ms approval, Tlmagh - ready for hie signature or rejeto tion, the MU, aUeged to have been pressured through the Leglslataia - by oil company Ipbbieu, waa m- ceiving'serious cousideralfon from the governor, with ue Indleutlbh - as ye^^ven as to Ms attitude to-\ wari|psfesJI'biM . measure, wMcfi- uiil Affc(?rt collection eaaea utnv Ending in the courts aa pqrt I of the state’s nrograra tq tores pa.vment -of about. $l;fi00,000 froth oil companies, is being denounced - as a “grab” by oil dlstributora. Held " criminally. ’Responsible J Waterbury, Jiily, 25.—(JV—Do-' elaring that the fatal stabbing et Mrs. Douglas Hatch^ s7, July 14 was “ a planned, deliberate act for:, 'which no legal excuae or^JnatUl- cation exists," eproner Stephen A* Homirk today found Nicholaa La>'' carelli, 38, formerly of Port Ches- ter, N .'Y ., criniiinaUy responsIWo for the wohmn's death . .... B 8L Vote to Return to Work"*^ St. -Louis.’ .luly 25— A ma- jority of the approximately 1,000 AFL butchers who have been on fitrikr In five pnektog plants lere •voted today to return to work - pending iwttlcment of^ demands that they be allowed certain on-- cessions granted by the War La- bor Board to employes of the ol'S five packing firms. The demanu| Include furnishing- and laundeiinc of work clotMng, time allowaucei for sharpening tools and othet awarils deecribed aa "fringe” in-, creases, A majority of the work- ers went back., to their Joha Im- mediately. others wtU retara to- morrow. ' • . # « Found Not Guilty of Blaa Hartford Jnly 28—(A5—In first caae of chargee of diseriahana- tlon agaiast Negraea^ever b t n ^ t - Into poUoe court herSi Jeka Iw*.- toed, night clerk at the Hotel tox. .srfee fonad aet guilty of Non ot Seetloa 88 ef the Btatntae. Nartocd waa,aee M rs. Ethel Thnnipisa. 7 . court, Provldeae^ B. L. ed tog to Shot n a ' (( « .1

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  • » jm Mdinchester Evening■ ■ f.- ' - ^ ---- -------- -------------------------: iroiTUESDAY, :rULT^*4,19Kj.pltM Bl H artford. I t is not coq-

    ' i r i^ ro d S severe a ttack and th h ’ bes tth authorities, upoh -in- yastigmtlon, found th a t there had baan no contact w ith other children

    ' and no cause for alarm . One caae of lobar pneunibrila In Wwn was also reported,

    R uth P . U pplttcott, of 121 St. John s tree t has received her pro-

    - motion from Private to Technician >iv»th Grade a t the Oliver General

    hiMpltal recently. T-5 IJpplncott i s .a member of the 10*th WAC

    compar

    Zone^Ghaiigc^ Agaiii l^bated

    "N.Commission Hojils Second Hewings on Section of NeW-.MBfL-The Zoning Commtesion'ncjd Its

    second hearing last night on proposed new lonlng map lo r lf»e town. The eeeilon Was not largely attended only those w ho had .-nat- tera relating tS" the m ap section Being present. In each case they were represented by a lawyer.V Robert Schaller, who owns prop-,

    erty between H artford road and WeetvCenter street asked, through his attorney, George C. Leasner, for a »'- Sss .

    William KailehlGeneral CoBfnetor

    519 Center St. TeL 7778■"T-

    •X

    . HALE'S HEALTH MARKET

    LOBSTERSLobsters are here again! Fresh

    from the cold Atlantic waters. Come in and pick out the size you wont.

    Other Varieties of Fresh Sea Foods Will Arrive In the /Morning From the Boston Filh^PierSs

    tiM JMC HAMM A itCH isTen C o iiw

    Austin H. Briggs Has Decorations

    ______ , . , \. Auetln H. Brigga of T7 Laurd.

    k tree t, who has Just been honoramy ffiacharged from the U. S. Army, thw morning received the Bfonze Stair giedal for “merltorloue service duiHng the period. January 1, 1945 to M arch 1, 1945, In Germany.” H e also holds the Silver S tar fo r gallantry In imtlon a t 'Thala, TunlalkKln February, 1943

    A fter graduating from Manchea- te r H igh school in 1936 he entered the eiuploy of the ftoyal Typewrit- te r company, and,,was one of the ftrat selectees to leave fo r aervlce In 1941. ;

    LECLERCFUNERAL hDmE

    23 Main S treet/ Phone 52ttt

    REAL ESTATEw a n t e d TO BUT — Blagla. 6-Fainlly Hnoaea — Large, and dmatl FarnM — la Manobester, Boltoo, Vemoa and So. Wind-' eor. An traneneftona (UASH).What have ynor unn, Wrtta at

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    Arthur A. Knofla’T ile F nm itnre Pirn .

    InnoDMioe Man"OHIoe Open Dally

    and Thorn. Evening 2 to 8 P. M. 825 MAIN t ^ B E T

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    If You Want To Buy Or Sell

    REALESTATE

    . NFdir-Priees

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    Wm. F. JohnsonBailder — Real EsUts Johnson-Bnllt Homes

    BROAD STREET TELEPHONE 7426

    Hospital Expense PlanFor Men, Women and

    Children PAYS FOR:

    Stekneae or accident expennea when confined In nny himpitnl anywhere In the D. & A. or Oaiiads. ' Room and board ex- panaea op to $8.00 per day for d rat 80 d ay ^ eonflnement— 88.00 per day for next 90 days' ooallncsneat. Thin plan may be changed npd denigned to d t the needs, of any. Individual group of famamd worhnia.. No aiedl- eal examlnatloQ.

    Phone, W rite o r Call On

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    088 MAIM STREET TEL, 8106

    EAVES-TROUGH \ id Condnetom Need Repniring

    Repineing On Tour'-Homo?GALL KOBMAN BEMTZ

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    ALL MAKES RADIOS RepaiPed

    Reasonably I Tubes Tested

    Large Stock Parts

    Si889-841

    'M AIN 8 *

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    W ANTED3-YEAR LICENSEb OPERATOR

    5-DAY WEEK^^ 5 \ ^

    NELL'S BEAUTY35 MAIN STREET TELEPHONE

    Kiwanis Vacation Cliilclren Relnrir

    The 41 children who were given a two weeka’ vacation a t the Salvation Arm y Cfimp a t gouth Coven try Lake, retun ied home today. The annual outing fo r the children la sponsored by the .Manchester ^ w a n is Club and members of th a t orlumization furnished cars- to b ring the children home.

    DON WILLIS GARAGE

    Complete Auto Serriee 18 Mata S t Tel.8085

    l".f.'

    Due To Necessary Alterations Being ^ a d e In Our Kitchen# Food S ^ ic e , A*~

    Cave sure to come in on or before Satarday, July 28. i

    JIM'S HAT CLEANING PARLQR24 Oak Street -

    B R IT IS H W A RV r t h b a n s

    * ORANGEHALL - -

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    r s a n l t tv m>*n aimtdents both oa.. year peoparty .'-K-

    w n MAIM ST. TEL. 4428

    Mrs. Delia Sullivan.SPENCER OOBSETIEK

    5 Broad Street

    Can 2-0900 for

    Appotate aimt At .

    Toar Home er Mine..

    THE FIRST STEP^ E N PLANNING A NEW HOME! ^Timr Srst s^'^should be to get all the facts aboat ear popular Direct Redoctloa Mortgage loan. For prompt acUoa.'M eadiy wirtiee, aboeoee of red tape afid MINIMUM OF COST ytM'wllI Ond aethhig to equal thia unusual "boine pasrment plaa. Make aa appolntmeat by ’phooe today with oor aecretary, Mrs. Hi*’' or oor Vlee-PresMeat, Mr. Taylor, aod let tbefis explafai th i. easiest of, ways to laaooe a new home.

    ie/iey.S te t :BUILDING W LOAN ASSOCIATION, INC--------- --— 0 f iC A N / 2 £ D A P R I L 1 8 9 1 --------------- ----

    “Before My Vacation”I brought, an my dry cleaning to Rainbow, on Harrison Street They'do such beantifnl work, reasonably, too, It’s THE placebo «o for

    QUALITY DRY CLEANINGThank you, misa! We ARE proud of our careful workmanship. Bring YOUR dry cleaning, to

    A~'-.

    aiM me^UUM DERm

    verage DallyF a r Ih s Moa

    ilation18489,10

    Member o t the A adli B orsaa ot droolM toae

    X

    ^AHfaneheHer^J City o f Village C h a r ^

    Tbt Wtather.I of U. S. Weatbee !

    Partly Noady ̂ Uttle ebaoge ten^rature t^ g h t aad 1taua^\ day; scaStered showen powMe lo Interior Thursday.

    iî k. fi'-\

    \

    VOL. LXIV., NO. 256 ^^(ClassMU Adregdabig ea IS) MANCHESTERix^NN^ WEDNpDAY, 25, 1946 (FOURTEEN PAGES) ^lUCE THREE 7 Control , Smith ad d ed 'te a reporter th a t

    although the Budget bureau bad a "loose c^nnectloh’̂ w ith the dê partm ent until 1939, i t never was under ’Treasury control. "■

    O tecr budget officials flatly opposed M orgenthau'a suggestion, saying the -bureau la not an tJiter- atlhg agency but a p a r t of the president’s staff, and should rem ain so. '

    The Budget bureau sh ift was am ong several M orgenthau recommended In a final report to Con' gress, made public la s t night. M orgenthau said the departm ent he turned, over to Fred M. Vinson Monday should have firmer com tro i over financial policies of the goveojment. ' f' To accompliiBh th a t he suggested th a t the ’Treasuty be given policy ecgitrol over the. spending, lending, borrowing and Insuring sctlvltise o6->jsuch government agencies as*, the '. Reconstruction Finance corporatlpit, the Agricultu re departm ent, Natldnaj^ Housing agency apd the Fedend D»v posit Insurance corporation;

    OaaH Be Real W atchdog Under the present; aet-up Mor-

    rjfi ln Wood-^ Bt Fater*

    obs

    l(OOd' vlrtpal

    15,500 employes In pi Ridge, P a te rten and aon, N .'J ., were off theti th a t ‘production of B-29 eni Super-Fortresses a t the Ridge factory wail’ a t a standstill.

    The strike wjiich s ta rted in the Wood-Ridge factory F riday and spread to the other two plants resulted, said a union spokesman, over discharge of a steward. John M cGrall,'president of UA-tV Local 699, however, term ed the w alkout unauthorized and aaid union members were urged to return to work.

    S trikers claimed the stoppage stemmed from stew ard’s discharge and de)ay‘ln a W ar Labor board decision on a contract dispute. T he. company said the WLB and th e contract were not involved and said I t would give Imteedigte hearing on the stew- a id ’s case a fte r resumption of production.

    tSvo O ther lo ig e W alkouts

    . . . MaJ. Gen. F red C. W allace, (left foreground) commanding gen-Island command on Okinawa, reads the inscription on the

    ■ mOteprial tablet; in the cem etery foe U. S. Marine.) who died' during tee bdtQe for Okinawa. Photo by Max Deafor, A P staff photographer .with te e X ir^ lm g still picture pooL

    •V'*'

    Gt)ast Also P<Chinese Units Enter Yangso,

    Former Base

    ’Two p teer large''w alkouts were (o tee list during te e la rtadded

    In Savanhah, ’'Ga., a Ikout of 'M W m fic h ln t^ In- a

    wagc.diBputs a t the Souteeastern ghlpbuHdteg Corp., idled' more than ' T.STOSmwkers in th e building a t AV-1 shlpSr - A nother 7,500 was idle a t the Cheyrolet division of GeneralvMotors in CHfirinnatl in a dispute over tran sfe r o i l plant m anager. ' Union officials 8ald-h.ie re tu rh would end the \valkout.

    M eat supplies In the St. Louis m etro j^ lltan area h it a 'new low a s the strike of A FL . butchers spread to a fifth plant, pu tting the to ta l on strike a t 1.900. ■ The butchers. Ignoring a W LB back to w ork order, struck te a dispute Over wage negotiations.

    Biggest R eturn In D etroit ’The biggest re tu rn of workers

    to the ir Jobs, w as In D etro it Most of the more than 10.000 Id l^ by the closing of 200 lumber yards in the D etroit area Were back on

    \1

    New Y o rk ,; Ju ly 88.'— --Au Innocent b u s ln ^ m u i who served three y riu s and four months |fi Sing Sing prison stood cleared today of a crime committed by his "double,’’ described as one of te e natlon*9^ "smoothest bigtim e ctpolw.” 7

    Asslstaift U. s'. A ttorney John J . Donovan diaclotod te a t .tee Vie- tim .lh tee cruel case of rnistaken. Identity was B ertram M-; Camp-' bell, 57-y«to'Old form er securities dealer, who bad continually protested his innocence^ when he was convicted of forgery In 1937. .

    Bank employys Identified Camp-' bell as the m an who drew ..a 8 ^ - IBQ forged check.

    A ctoal’ F orger fSeattfied Donovan identified te e actual I foegsr yesterday a s Alexander D.

    L. 721I6I, whhoi ba deacribed as one of the cou n try ’s "sm oothest crooks’’ and who waa sentenced

    .to . tour yeatrs* hnpriaonm ent for another offenao-rVlolatioa o t the national stolen property ite t- - Donovan said ’Thiel- had' adm itted the forgery for which Campbell w aa aent to prison, and had

    I added te a t be tried to help the innocent m an-by oonunittlng anoUK er forgery which would prove th a t Campbell could a c t have committed th e original crime.

    ’The scheme failed, . bu t netted 'Thiel 818,000, Donovan said;

    WUI Ask FoU Pardon Campbell, who Uvea In -Floral

    P ark , N. w ith his wife and th ree ch lld r i^ plana to ask Gov. ’Tbomaa B. Dewey for a full par- don. « *

    A friend of GOsapbell’s read of TItleTa arreat in Lsoington, Ky. last M arch and notad te e strildng

    . (Coatbnied on Page E ight)

    3 Firefighters B e ii^ o u g h t

    Mexicans Missing 'in Idaho; 200)000 Acres Of Rangeland Burned.

    (Uoattoaed oa'^t’a a a

    Portland, Ore., July 25—(flfi*— While crews doggedly -battled,

    ^pragon's 140-aquare-mile TiDa- ffidm forest blase th ree Mexican firefighters were reported missing across the s ta te line in Idaho where flam ss had charred more than 200,000 acriis of rangeland.

    Two planea w e r r to scout tee a rea near Shoshone, Idaho, today In an effort to find the three flroiL fighters, b u t a sim ilar search yesterday waa trultleas. The men Were employes of a power com- panYfi labor ram p which w as helping, bring the fire under control D istrict O rasier Jack Keith sa 'd he believed the flam es wpuld be halted sometime today.

    F ire F airly Well Chocked In the 'Tillamook area of Oregon

    th e huge fire w as fairly well .tffiecked today and a tate foreater Nela Rogers said t h e '3,000 fire fighters were "holding th e lt own.” He said they had m anaged to trail about two-thlrda of the eohflagra- tldn. Planea wer* used to sight spot flres4, th a t flared Up within the boundaries of the trails.

    Renewed hope fo r favorable w eather cam e in today’s forecast of cloudy w eather w ith showers and lowering tem petature.

    ‘T t.all depends on th e Weather,' said Rogers, who reported th ree other forest - hlaaea t e ' tha" south IMse virtually o o a q m r ^

    (Contlnnedton Page FoOr)

    Rollback Plans Shunted Aside

    Lucas ^ ^ lls Critics Lay C&ihds on T able

    I I. " ■ I,.. .■ll■ ail. — iM....-,-

    S B ritl* PartyRanked Among Greiit'Ppeiiments of History;!

    To Hear VoteWafihirisrton, July .25.M^ Churchill, Eden

    -Sfingtor Lucas (D., Dl.),! Attlee Arrange

    Chances for Cut in Re? (ail Prices o f ' Clothing Get Another jolt.W ashington, Ju ly 28—(JP)— The

    government’s plans for rolling back clothing prices appeared to day to be side-tracked indefinitely.

    Chances for a six to seven per c e n t'c u t In retail prices—the goal se t early th is year—received an o ther Jolt as the OPA granted fu rther price.condesalons to fabric manufaCTurers.

    The agency announced -las t n ^ ;h t' th a t- fo r the rest of this year producers bt woolen and worsted fabrics can tu rn out about th e sam e price lines of .merchandise they did before te e rollback waa ordered.

    Beginnihg in 1946 they will b« required to trim t e d r average prices aomiv^ bu t not aa much aa originally planned. The re v ia ^ order will be based oh 'prices' slightly less than those which prevailed in 1944, ra th e r than on 1948 prices.

    T h is iS(,lnliw done, ^OPA sai(L because rollitaiy reqpitomenta a n d ,restrictions on the use of v irgin wool in 1943 made te a t period "unrepteaentative of .normal civilian operation*.”

    Only Esbrics Affected NowWhile' qnly fabrics are .affepti^

    a t present, it was learned th a t OpA soon will m ake "similar {Adjustm ents fo^ garm en t m anuflc- turera. This'* means th a t a t least p a r t of the projected retail out will be wiped o u t for auch ap p a rel as men’s aults and overcoata, children’a anowaulta, glrla* sUrta,' women’a coata and a wide variety of other Items.

    OPA. acknowledged th a t afijuat- m enta to fabric produce rs had ju s t about elim inated any hope of price -cuts Tor such gar- meqte th is year. W hat can be

    ciipilenKed any critics o t the | United Nations charter in ̂the Senate today to lay their; cards on -the table now—“not' a year hence,” Speaking on the third day of general debate on the treaty, Lucas forecast the charter "will rank amohg tee g rea test documents In hlstei^vv

    No irtia te r, he stressed,- should vote for i t -iLtecause he believes it politically darigerous to do otherwise.”

    Reply to Wheeler . Lucas’ rem arks were Ih t ^ nature of a reply to Senator Wheeler (D., Mont.), who 'said ■yester- 'dky he woiild vote.fOr tbs, trea ty but promised a ' “battle" op the stibsequent agreem ents stipulating the U. S. contribution in troops and resources to the .world-organization. C harter suppK>ri;ers contended teen th a t, any lim itation later-w ould be a breach oi goodfa ith .,

    -"Let.no one vote to r th is world documrint," Lucas said, ’’w ith the belief t e a t some day when the implementing s ta tu te s 'a n d the sper clal agreem ents come to us for congressional actibn. ^U1 be tee hofir to draw tee nilliU^[y teeth from th is new international agreem ent

    “I f there fire those who havC j^ e rv a t ie n a or amendments, now is the tim e to present them.”

    W lmt Administration Wants..What'^the admin'istcaOon w ants,

    aa outlined by several senators, is th is : , ,; 1 . .R ktification 'of 'te e 'c h a r te r wlte' explicit understanding th a t tee United S tates thus ia. commit-

    UU8i of

    att4 Re-

    Conferciice.Bulletin!

    Potsdam , Ju ly 28 —(;P)—̂ President Trum an will fly to U. S. Arm y headquarters a t F ran k fu rt tomorrow and review Americnn trOops, tak ing iMlvantage of the off-day In the Big Three schedule, ofll- d a la announced today. General Eisenhower, com mander of

    ' United S tates forces In the E uropean theater, wlU m eet the prosldeht In F ntnkfnrt, where they will Inspect the S4th Infan try nnd Third Armored divisions. T he tww will have luncheett together.

    (OUnttnoed oa Page FonT)

    Potsdam , July 25—(JP)—A fbur- en^ned passenger- plane carrying Prinie M inister Churchill and his p a rty took off for England from a strongly guarded klrport here this .afternoon following another m eeting of the Big 'Hiree.

    Churchill, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Clement R. Attlee, Labo; paVty:leader a ttending the conference aa an observer, arranged a- recess so they could be in London when results o f ' the British election July 6' are an nounced T hursday . , /

    No Form al Farewell /'- Four Arm y sedans from /th e

    British compound took, tee patsen- gets to the airport. There w as no

    Break ' Through South Gate of Town to Battle Streets^ Rail Line Blocked Again.Caiungklng, July .28.—(JP) — CJhl-

    neae troops have broken through tee south g a te of the walled town of Taqgso, site of a; form er U. 8. t4 te -Air Force base 44 milea aouth of the prize JapaneM -heid city of KWellin, the Chlnea^ high command announced to d ay .''

    The announcement aalyrom the air.

    Halsey Yearns fo r Fleet.. W T •• 't

    On Wheels to Chase Japs■ With^Brd U. 8. F leet off J a p a n , " T h e combination of the B-29s,

    the ground power, of the Okinawa- baaed A ir Forcea and the unstoppable pin-point accuracy of the carrie r planea are reducing. the enemy's a ir potential to th a t >f a painful nuisance," he said.

    , Capable of Doing Damage He w arned .th a t Japaneais. sui

    cide planea are still capable of doing .damage, b u t 't e a t “th is cannot Sind will not atop us.

    "The ’Third fleet’s Job is- to hit the empire hard and often. This

    July * 25— dP) —Admiral Halsey yearn'ed today for a fleet with w h e e ls '! ,^ we. could chase the Japs inland a fte r we drive them from te e coast." '

    Halsey’s yearning waa proad- cast to tee U. ̂ 8.. from -hls Third fleet flagship only lOQ miles off te e Japanese coast, even as his carrie r planes were sm ashing a t cowering rem nants of the - J a p anese fleet in the-Inland sea.

    New Phaise EnteredProclaiming' th a t Naval w arfare i fighting ou tfit is doing Just that,

    had entered a new phase—"the ; he aaaerted opening of the final plunge into tfee heart of Japan." the tough- tolk lfig adm iral said:

    "The Allied team is working w ith speed and devaatetlng precision apd If the Nips do not know they are a-doomed nation they 're eorte- stupider than I th ink they are."

    Halaey then described w hat had been done In the past 18 days:

    ■Reawy N avsl guns had w rought *hudMllevable destruction" in the Borthent Industrial areas. L ighter un its hsd smacked' the m outh of 'lyxkyo bay and amgahed shipping UuMs aijjd shot op coastal totaoto.

    The harried JapAfiese m ust .lave found little solace in hie vocal blast;

    “I said afte r the far-flung bat- Ue for Leyte gulf te a t tee 'ap- aneae fleet was routed, beaten and broken and nothing has happened since-to change my opinion," Halsey declared.

    T h e abortive ra lly , of the Ya- m ato (Japanese battleship sim kln a desperate sortie towards tee Ryukyus In e a r ly . April) was a piece of-stupid panic. W hat’s left of the J s p Navy is helpless, but, Just- for good luck we u-ill hunt thaas sMt M tk iir bolea.”

    In

    ■ThU became h)iown in an Arm y Air Forcea announcem ent, te a t Lieut. Oeri. Nathan F. Twining will command th^; 20th'A ir- Force in the M arianas. -Aa head . of the 15th A ir Force. Twining biaafed the Germans from Africa ba** deep into the ir own hom eland

    Lieut, 'Gen. -dames H." Doolittle a lready has arrived in the I^c ific ahd has said nis 8th Air. Force will will be in action against Japan-by next week.

    Will Itavolve Only' Super-Forts The pair thus w ill . resume,

    even g te a te r strength, th e ir aerial onslaughts against the rem aining portion of tee Axis, enemy. 3 u t whereas Twining and Doolittle dl rected ligh ter types of heavy bbmbera over Europe, the ir com' mands against Japan will Involve only the g iant B-29 SUper-Fort- reases.

    ■The new assignm ent for Twin ing was d isc lo se a t a news con fere'nce yesterday by Lieut. Gen,

    ,,Irst C. Baker, deputy A A F com 'mander. Twining 'succeeds MaJ. Gen. C urtis E. .LeMay, who, be-

    ‘tom es chief of staff to Geh. Carl Spaats, commander of . all Bacifi’c S tra te ^ c Air Forces.• B aker sadd bomb tonnages being

    dumped- on Japan how are 60 per cent a s heavy aa those dropped on -Permaniy and will exceed te e European figure by tee end of the yew , By next March, be added, they Will reach a peak ot 270,(XX) tons a m onth, compared w ith the record 188,000-ton monthly to ta l agfiinat the Reich.

    ledCalcutta, July 2 5 . - ^ — troops Have killed more than Japanese iii a three-day batUe wl< enemy forcea seeking to escape from a tra p In southern B uraia and reach the S lttang riybr, S outhew t A sia nommsuid headquartera nouncied todscy.

    These casualtiea coupled w ith 282 prisoners and u r uncounted num ber killed by artillery and by planes, have re^uhed by mors than one-Jialf' a ^ Ja p a n e se force estimated a t 8;000 In the Pegu ^ k e L

    R e d r F ighting Contlanea . ykxommunlque said heavy flght-

    ihg continued today along a . 77' mile s tre tch of road between Toun- goo and '-Nyaunglebin. A large body o f . te e enemy which- crossed tee road by night was engaged by guns and m ortars. , . '

    Two--villagea, five mites northeast of P ^ , were occupied by Allied troops following a successful strike. Advancing eastw ards from Heho, a 3,000-f6ot high, trad Ing ceh ter in the" Shan state , the Allies occupied Taunggyl and patrolled east of the town.

    Strohg..forces of Spitfires and ’Thunderbolts are supporting the grpund troop# in . tee -Toungoo- Nyaenglebin' corridoi'.

    ' Sfi ̂ Attoeka Dally (A Dome! broadcast recorded by

    the FCC said te a t Allied countera ttacks against the S ittahg and Myltkyo areas had "mounteA in strength, despite tee fact th a t the rainy, seaso'h has set in.'-' The enemy agency’s correspondent said Allied troops were carrying

    Mitsubishi) Hayama aud / Asaishi Plants Targets In Second Attack by Big Bombers Within 36 Hours; Garrier Planes Smash at Smoking Remhants of Jap Navy at Kure Base.Guam, Thursday* July 26.

    —{IP)—American S u p e r - Torts struck three Japanese

    oil refineries near Tokyo at midnight last night within a /ew hours after Third fle^ carrier planes and warsK!^ pounded coastal..def'enses on the enemy. . homeland.' Between 75..ana 160 big B-29s b it tb s Mitsubishi, Hayama and AAalahl refineries, all-w ith in a few h im - ' dred yards of each other, a t Kawasaki 'bn Tokyo .bay, about JO miles from Tokyo city. I t waa tha . second Super-Fortress raid.

  • MAN^UHESTER EVENING AERALD. MANCHESTElt.^NN^ WEDNESDAY.,^T?LT^5i 194S

    \

    /

    .••Sj.

    *75̂

    ■i?̂'

    f

    7

    Plan to Sia^i b d f f e

    ^alj^fembers Enthiini* ^afitie polIowhiK McGov- urn'll Talk LasK^ight.

    definite decision to. ii^aufu*rate a lodge' of E lks In Manchies-

    neetiniter-w as made a t a tpc^tng of local members of the of— I Mrs. Josephine F raser Holmes-Wps informed by the W ar d e p a rtm en t! yesterday th a t -her huabani}, MaJ. $ tanley Holmes, a 1943 W est Point ^ a d u a te who eluded the Japanese for a year and a half a f te r the. fall of Bataan, was killed last Dec. 15-. while being transported as. a prisoner 'Of w ar on a ^Japan- ese v e s se l., Mrs. Holmes, w h o ! has an eight year' old daughter,, left the Philippines four years ago to come to her aister's home here.

    In sta rting the lodge In ^ u th ln g - j pn the supefhatiiral and

    A '

    d have .These

    K

    '■■yw

    '1 -nV

    , Com m ittee,. Named ,Samuel J. Houston, past exalted

    ru ler o f Rockviye lodge, and secre ta ry of the S tate Elks Association, preaided a t last night’s meeting. Ha was named chairm an of a committee of three to further plans for a.new lodge In Mancheste r. The other members of . the committee affe Jam es M. Reardon .and Ronald H. Ferguson." Apother meeting will be held In a month and those present last n igh t will bring In lists of prospective members num bering a t least 50.

    L ast n igh t the members enjoye d -a f in e 's teak dinner fo r which C3ief Arnold Pagan! catered.

    of dream s coming true. I t was highly interesting and received w ith in tersat by hia Ustenera.

    Mr. Spieas who ,has a vast store of knowledge to draw from, apOke of I n d l ^ rellCB he had discovered, and ixtnv be had found them.

    Rotary member.s ■ enjoyed his ta jk immensely. - ‘

    Tliat's why wê Ve hrtmghi foryaiir selection the largest and mdsl heautifuTcollection of fur* coats In our history. l.uxiirioiis coats mailt? ,froni almost every type of fucv . Prieecl to fit yotir individual huilgel'. . .styled foV'e.very u No candying charges.Small down paynaent plus scheduled payments on Layaway plan.

    Coats Subject to 20% Tax

    . FREE STORAGE % L L CALLED FOR, /■

    New .Lfiw Has School Boards Besponsible for Acts of Teachers.The local Board of Education

    has taken under consideration the law ' ju s t enacted whl'dh m akes a school bosrd rcsnonsible for; acts of teachers, w h’ f,I may result Jin law suits. • ■ ‘

    T h e law provides tha tJtne teach - ' ers m ay be covered b y ' Insurance 4nd the board .Is investigating the coat.

    This law was snactsd Xfter a judgm ent had been granted a g a i i ^ si teacher for an alleged assau lt upon a jiupll I*' of the public schools In the sta te .

    The local board i t one of the, first In the s ta ie to seek th is kind of insurance as thers are about 155 W achets in the M anchester achp^N ,

    .......— 5p—— 7— —

    Serg6aiirFortin Arrives at Home

    gergeapt W alter Fortin la a t hia horns, 15 Hemlock street, for a 80-day leave, a fte r serving .more than a year In Europe. Recently he has besn sngsged In communications work in Southern Italy.. He enlisted In the Signal Corps In January , 1942, and received his tralnln.g a t F o rt Monmouth, N.J „ and MitcheU Field, Long Island. Hs left from Greensboro,N. C., for the B. T. O.

    "On com pletion' of his isavs Ssi> gean t Fortin wlU rspo rt to F o rt Ddvens fo r re-asslgnm eht He 1* the son of -Mr. and Mrs. W. J . .Fortin. Hia fsther, a veteran of Worid W ar 1, is a Unotyper on th is paper. n, ■ ' ■

    lie.Moors Introduced the art" of • r m aking Into Burops In the |>

    via 8 l^ n «

    NOWPLAYING

    WARNER

    STATETOGETHER ( C L O S t l A O A I N I

    tPINCEIt KATMAIIINC '

    TRACY*HEPBURNm M-O-MV

    \ o w ^ ^s t a r t s SUNDAVt **SON OF LASSIE"

    T m r r

    lE fitiSm , F R ID A YSUN.

    K lV U I

    AIHHBURSOYA I

    B A T R A W * R A T I ■ B g m W A R T

    V

    ip m aT O B BVBNiyq HERAM). MANCHieg’f EH. pOWM.. WK1XN^E«DAY.-JULY 'J5.11? 19'■ F.Ar.p; TTniFffi

    Rogiers ’A

    jocad Corporation Develops Superior Type ^ f EW tric Insulatiop.

    AcUlUon of a radically new electrical insulating m ateria l, has been made by R ogers Corporation whose offibl)^ have pronounced It superior to any previous insulating m aterial produced byj the company.

    Called "DUROK" ju»d manufactured in its, Goodyear mill, the new %ojgers product anticipates a postwar heed in the electrical field and has already-been giVen nationwide distribution.

    See Big Demand ,. Normally enjoying a substantial

    portion of the slot celt insulation >usineas In the electrical motor field, Rogers believes,that its new m aterial will be In.!greater demand than ever matqjf^acturerti of hermetl.cally sealed refrigerator- m'dtors,'becauBe of Its excellent chemical characteristics.

    Trio Sent to BefonnathryStamford, July 25-^ont'sfor Pimples

    'Dbn'^t scratch — don't, squeeze pimples—yo’d 'may,-infect .Voiirseif. D'o^i't Buffer from 'Itching of p»n'- pleS, Eczema^ angry red ■ blotcheie, d r other ifHfattons, when soothing Peterson’s Ointment offers you quick relief,.' Makes the skin look ^ t t e r , feel better, ,35c all drug-

    |. gists. Money back If .«)ne-'application does not delight .you. Peterson’s Ointrnent also^quothes irritated, tired dw itchy feet and cracks between the .toes.

    , So many patents were filed on bu tter churns between the years 1830 and 1900«thkt a n?\v type of churn could have beeij ■ available .every two weeks.

    8ipecial luncheons

    Beginnlal: tomorrow noon Ca- vey’s GrTll oil Easf Center s t r e ^ will sriwe business nton's - lunchsa front 12 noon until 2 in the after-, rtoon., Luncheon service hss .not been available a t the grill for some- tlme.'iCavey’s is now under the new management of Malcolm L. Juno and George R. Miller and a new chef has been employed. | . Dinners tvlll be served a t tha i

    grill from 5 p. m. until 9 p, m. and ; a special for Fridays will be la-Tge ' fresh lobsters, served on a full dinner. The excellent bar service whictj'jhas always been a feature

    ■̂ t CaVey's Will be maintained oy tlje new management.

    — ... .. .. ........Hudson's "Bay company., wim

    formed In England tong ths United Ctates Louisiana te r r i ts ^ .

    bdiight the'-ti.

    ' 1' Trirŵatfi 1 iiiisliii • Crtv-”- y'1 ■ 1 '

    End

    4/frt4/ 8. Hob*!,donor of the Ncbd' Pesce Prize, invented dfotttfite io 1866.

    Choice of the House, Res "of Fol'mer Price!

    SALE STILL COOING ON DURING ALTERATION OUTSIDE OF THE

    BUILDING

    Dressy, Silk, Sheer or Print

    BLOUSESV "ALSO P E A S A ^ SHEER

    DOTTED SWISS . ; . , . . . . .SHEER JABOT BI.OUSES REGULARLY $4.98 . . . ; . . . TT:

    White Gabardine TwillSHORTALLS . . . . . .PastelSLACaCS WITH ZIPPERPastel and Taffeta .SKIRTS _____ . . . . V

    $2,49^ . 9 8

    . $2.98Reg. $4.98

    , $4.98Reg. $6.98

    PtIPioneered, Perfected

    III ta'd Patented the Htllow ' ' ' Grmmd hltde*-* difTercnt, .

    modem blade. Shaves with just •"Feather Touch" because Pal is jIndUt io the nzor—follows ' fatial contours. N o need to ■’•’beir down". Blades last ///

    longer, too. Try them

    h

    M

    4isrM|rn t u t k EDtC

    J i

    • X‘X

    Smart

    —attached to m attress and boxspring your choice for a i^ l l addtftonal... charge.

    Now you can transform any-Win size mat- t-ress and boxapring into a smart up-to-the- minute Hollywood bed, at a barggin price. Choice of blue or blue and beige leatherette upholstered styles, choice of several styles y..- in glazed chintz. See them soon, oui; stock' is limited; '

    OPRX TharMUy NlfhIA Until CLOSED W©d. A i "Soon.

    f * # / » O F m ;eiihrs1115 M A IN ST O P P O S IfE HIGH SCHOOL

    M A N C H E S T E

    • -/ . .%.« • .i» ’$ 3 . 9 8Reg. 85.M

    ^ COSTUME JEWELRY — BATHING SUITB \ ' REDUCED!

    -

    TEL.2-1683 ESTER

    846 MAI^ STREET

    MANCHESTKR O ppd^te G rant's S lnra

    HANDY GARAGE LAMPS2S .FL Coed IQgh Tanalon' wifad and rnhbar eovarad ■>r#oaY oil emd off zwilch in head and sireng4^. A Bulb Gaga-

    HEAVY DUTY STORAGE B A n ER YiMSafi • Trifl* X l*t aulek. sura •tails aad •aSra eapndtr.-'QitaU- Uy luUl Thrauvhuul tar lo a v Uta. Pric* taclu4M TttaU la. 4$ Plata tar Prtds. Cbriv.. PlynMutk. Dedva aad ^ f i COibnCcnr— . V ^ a 0 9t l - l ^ tar Fard Y-t —H.naM la a f <Oraarol Motaia Cara—

    Dal 5M tar lata

    8.20

    SEALER BEAM CONVERSION KITSFar aU IM 4 ta IS4S ran . I

    iSCtad!* **■* — 's tno i $4.ivtHneB ipi

    canmac ss - •• camuac is- caiv. tr .ss "USaUS M.$t taMUt $$•o u t $4.it OtM

    *•335 4.00

    nODOZ PtSOTO ftTSm M.iaoaaaait s$.if mroaoa st-st n an it.tT STVonaa $$.$14 3 S

    t-f MA2IA SEIIEIKAM MT RHUSla ta aw abaw aa« a l IMI A O

    wad Utar Cara-M k a V A

    AU Sales Final! No Exchanges or RBfuiidal

    ■*>

    TRiPU m sroRis681 MAIN STREET MA'NCH^TER

    TELEPHONE 0771

    r •j we iih 'sI l l s M A IN ST O P P O S IT E HIGH SCHOOL

    M A N C H E S T E

    E A R L Y A M E R IC A N M A P L E 5 -P IEC E D IN E T T E S ET

    $4 9 .5 0Table is popular refectory style, axtends for

    , extra guests in a Jiffy.. .no separate leaves to bother with. Chairs unusually'heavy con- > struction with -comfortable saddle-shape seats.. Colonial ladderback styls. .Smooth, maple finish. . •

    6PEN Tliarpiday Nighta Ca«U SiSe. CLOSED Wad. At Maaw

    • • %

    MODERN STYLING IN RICH WALNUT. . .

    . 5 0 AT KEITH’S

    FIoBr Samples and Odds-and-Ends at 5avine's to 50%

    SW.95 MATTRESS S9.93

    I Ftill size m attress filled with fluffy Mown cotton. -Ticking is slightly soiled, sold "as is.”

    Se.'i.OO MATTRESS AND BOXSPRING

    .432.50Coil boxapring and felt m attress | covered in ' matching dam ask tick. Floor aampta outfit a tsaving! 1

    S24.95 SIMMONS FELT MATTRESS

    $19.95Us label speaks for its good quality and comfort. All felt, vvoven atripe tick. Full size floor sample only. A bargain! ,

    ' 80-COIL STEEL -x BEDSPRING

    S9;95All ateal. Deep oil tempered coila aacurely reinfdrced with acorea of smalt helical coila.. Equipped with-aide stabdlgera.

    ’> ■ - ■-$9.95 COFFEE

    TABLE, WALNUT $4.95

    A good size table with a m irrored glass top. Rich w alnut finish..... You’ll save- S4.97. If you coma early. A few only!

    $49.95 QUALITY LOUNGE CHAIR

    $39.75Knuckle arm chair of deep and' | roomy proportions. Cqyarad In

    [’.firmly woven brown ta p e s try .. . springs In seat and the back..

    $79.95 FAN BACK PERIOD CHAIR

    $49.95Covarad in very Sne and heavy weava. brocatalla.' Chair ia da- eorstlva, graceful, cbipfortabla. An ISth Century riaproduetion.

    SEWING CABINET -----$7.95

    Priscilla type sawing cablhat in walnut ffnish. L arger than naual size. Shelf tmderneath.

    REGULAR $34.95 PLATFORM ROCKER

    $24.75Spring-filled seat and a form- fitted back. Aaiprted eevars. Graceful shaped ilnodaa, arm s and rocker'baae mahogany flnri a h a d . • . . . . . \

    $239.50 LAWSOH LIVING ROOM SET

    $123.75Coil' sptfng scat cuahkma on a \ spring bass. Covered in lustroua- stripad damask. Includes sofa and ^matching Lawson club chair. ' -i ' . . “ '

    $3.95 CHECK-SHAG SCATTER RUGS

    $24)5 .The shaggy type rug th a t U a fashion hit. Fringed on four sides. CTioice of colors; for bad- roem,-bath, nuraary, halla--

    $12.50 RUSTIC HICKORY ROCKERS

    $9.95The oldentime outdoor favorite you seldom see these days. For

    ■ porches and lawns. Have apllnt- like double woven seats.

    $109.50 PHYFE LOVE SEAT

    - $69.00Period reproduction, solid m a-.| hogany fram'e w ith its tapered-Vl feet tipped w ith brass claws. Has Colonial tapestry cover.

    $2 95 baby t r a in e r SEAT

    $1.98 “Clamps securely to regular

    Inolict seat. Htss safety strap.- Made of har.dwood in maple fin- -Ish. ■'

    $12.95 BABY PLAY YARDS

    $7.95Keeps baby safe and happy whUe mother ta busy. Has aolid. floor. .Folds compactly when not needed. ,t '

    " REGULAR $3.9.5 PIN-UP LAMPS

    $2.95

    V

    V 7 - -.REG.I169..W

    The good modern design You'll And leading the fashion parade tomor^w. They sire generously Igrige and soundly constructed pieces. Check them inside and out, you’ll see ample evidence, of fine cabinetwork. The rich walnut ve> neerfara amouth and gleaming;^ Inclildes bed, chesty dresser. ChilYorobe available.

    OTHEB BKITH BEOBOOM SUITES FBOM IS8.Se. . ----------------------------------^ ■ ■" ■

  • Ulcg ^ ̂ •X i l-iK - K V ^ I N G FTBflALJD.' M AN(7 ITKPTER. OONTM- W E D N E S D A T , JXTLt 2 ^ 1948; >

    Meets DektliDrowning r

    Olr5tiiarv

    I, Paul R« 'Brandt of This ' Town Victim of Acci

    dent at Woodland.

    Pku) a. of 110 » r c h■tm t, fornwr wjiiow^ block'Bnin- ttfaifcturer here oiwl •bl-

    ' pioytd ot the Ca*e A par min » t Woodtsnd. was dr$wi}«^ to tlic pond at the w Tf of the P«P«*^

    .^U l aometinie during Hia body wa^ found at 11:30 this morning by two boye who weredahlng In the pond. ___' ,

    Last Seen At, 10 O Clock /Mr. Brandt was aeen by Mlow..

    employes at the reat of tpe jnWl a ^ o n the banka of the pond about 10 o’clock last night. Aa far as could be ascertained by East Hartford polled. Investigating the case under Chief TunoOiy 3- Keileher, he had not been been since theji. The two boys who reported the : ce(e» were Stanley Brazauakaa. 12. of SUUon 42, Burnside avenue. Bast Hartford, and Charles Veci. 12, of. 47. Cummings gtreet. East Hartford.' • ■ ^

    Notioe Man’s Coat The boys were first attn^cted by

    the fact that a jnart’s coat waa found on a log near the pond which la formed by damning the Hocka- num river at that point. 'Hiey then note2 8̂ $4.98

    During. July nnd August, .Close Saturdsjrs A t 6 P. M.

    M B 04IK IVS S H O P S

    PINEHURSToffers a shipmen.t of Frflsll Fish for Thursday shop- pfirs.Skinless Fresh

    cop FILLETSFresh, Shiny

    y MACKEREL / 25c pound

    But'tertlsh Steak Cod

    We win also have a small shipmeht of

    Frozen Perch Filpfs Birds Bye Pgn

    Bicmhle Bee /CRAB MEAT Ponhd can 99c• w -- I

    SUMMER SALAD ̂VEGETABLES

    AT PINEHURST .Cnenmbers

    Pascal Cfliery White Celery

    freberff Lettnce '. Ripe Tolhatoes

    X New Cabbage Peppers

    OTHER VEGETABLESl^ ts ^ Carrots

    White Onions Red* Slicin*'Onions r

    Green Beans Summer Squash

    SUMMER DRINKS AND A P P E 'n Z E R S

    - Tomato Juice Cocktail * ITc and 22c Bottle

    Apnle Juice Four IrQt. Bottles 96c V-8 Vegetable Codttall

    18c and Sle Can Clicquot Ginger Ale'

    ' We exoect to liave Cher- riee. Plume, Blueberriee, Raspberries, Peaches, and plenty of Jnice Oranges.

    For especiaHy fine quality... try Pinehuret Ripe Peaches ̂and Honeydew M ^ n s . 'x

    COM^ TO PINEHURST ■OIURSDAT

    Ton will find amny hard | to get items en omr shelve*.

    m

    I

    >/

    Bossy says “The best feeds keep the farmyard folks happy and produciii|s more milk, eggs, etc. Buy thein at LarSen’s.' 9̂

    -■ ii

    ' ' these days it’s a fight

    iright through the season

    to keep"ahead o f insects

    and blights. We have the

    spray materials

    SPECIAL!REGULAR 512.50 -

    ANPHOLE^^C r e m e W a v e

    ,$8.5G

    ' VIVIAN f-’ESPERANCE, Trop.21 ST.JOHN/STREET TELEPHONE 3620

    Whaps-roe good word?...HayeXCoca-Cola

    1

    I'll U.S.MAILR.r.D. 4

    \

    , e \ a first-class way to make frien d sHaveŷ ̂Coif is one greeting that elways geu the right eftswer, h's

    .a happ^pistoin as'well known on the byways as on the highways

    of the lan^L^ere’s good, old down-to-earth friendlinesa aliodt it—

    a truly' Araerickh way to say RSlaxi M t Salk about tbingt. let’s!■ , ■ ' . /■■■ ' /

    Have a CokSl *soTTiiD uNDti AOtMosnr or tki coca-coi* comsaht •»

    COCA - COLA BOfTLING COMPANY, EAST HART '̂ORD, CONN.•4 ' ' ■ -■ . ' ■

    • • t' 'V' •

    You n ttan lly h tir C»cs-Cots . calkd to its Mtndljr tbbnviatiaB ̂Tokt*. Both DiMn tlw qvality ptoA act of Tho Cocotlol* estapaas.

    .o IMS Km C-C ..

    •MONTGOMERY WXW>

    DRESS SHOP597 MAIN STREET

    Buy WithConfidence / .At Wiirose

    SHERIDAN BUILDING earance Sale!

    U depot SQUARE TELEPHONE 5406

    These Stores Are

    ■ V a..

    and --•y -

    9 a c i n . t o 9 p . m .

    toM a-c o u

    CLHDUSe-’SOM.. ' INC.

    eeew rPLAY Men’s

    WORKCANNING COLD PACK

    SHOES ^ SHOES JARS CANNERSGroup of Play Shoeŝ O.P.A. Release

    Regular Quart or Pint Sizes. While They 8-Quart Capacity

    From 2.19 to 3.98 Sizes 9 and Larger I a s I . ' Clearance!1 97 1 87 d w . 4.29X eft/ f X 9'4.

    ■ /

    Free Cold Storage Until Wanted

    V ' ■’s.

    PRICES CUT! SAVE AT WARDSCHILDRl^N’S ANKLETSSolid colors! size* 8 and 9 oaly ........................

    D IS H C L O T H S _

    LA D IE S * S T R A W IlA l!^D BAG SDecoratefi straw*. .Were 2.98........._

    LA D IE SV W H IT E G LO VE SDelayed shipment! Clrortuicc! Pa ir- .............^

    LA D IE S * SC A R FSChiffons lil-'pastel colora. Clearance . .........

    M E N ’S L E A T H E R B E LTSPlate and Fancy. Were 1.)18. Clearance.. . , . , .

    V ' ' '8 * ■ . ̂ 'M EI'K§ H I-eU T S — N O N R A T IO N E D ,O.P.A. Itelteuie. 10-Inch, large size* only

    HOME FURNISHINGS REDUCEDBUFFET—ITNPAINTED Vsize 18 X 48 IpcJies, 86 InrJies high. \Origlnany '18.95. Clearance*.......... i ............... ' * ’ ’ .......

    KNEEHOLE DESK—UNPAlNTEDLarge szle. Originally 18.95. Clearance..........

    WALL SHELFUnfinished. Hegulariy 4.49. Clearance . . . . . . . .

    CIRCULAR MIRRORS24>lnch, slight, defects. Clearanca.

    HEAVY CHENILLE RUGS9 * lO'/i Inches. Reversible rugs. ^Regnlafly28.95. Clearance 'h, . v .

    BRAIDED FELT SCATTER RUGSO n ly* few of a kind! Were SM. Sala

    HARDWARE SPECIALLY REDUCED!HOUSEHOLD SCREWDRIVEMVarious sizes. Clearance! 'Each..,

    CEILING LIGHT FIXTURESCleariinoe .............. I .

    COLD CHISELS ^ ^ > LAssortment! Clearance . ............

    ODD GLAS.S SALAD PI.AXESWere 55c each. Clearance....... . . . . .

    HEAVY BLUE GLAZE PIE PLATESWere 89c. Clearance ................. .

    VEGETABLE BAGS /Were' 75c. ' t^learanca' ............ ..'

    CHICK FEEDERSAluminum Star Shaped Feederw. Cl®*™****

    CLEARANCE OF FURN ITURELOITNGING CHAIRS -

    , Odd,J^ts! AU Reduced! ................,\-

    DINETTE SETS,t*bje-with 4 chairs, maple finish........

    LIVING ROOM SUITES-Picoe, covered with figured tapestry, springs. 199.50. Clearance . . . . . . .

    ADIRONDACK CHAIRSNot painted. - Regularly 9.96. Clearance

    GROUP OF FANCY MIRRORSSome with and some without frames. Clearance

    RESINTONE PAINTWaaliaUe flat wall paint at a low price!

    20% Off 20% Off

    ^ '6 9 .9 5

    . . 2 . 6 9' ''

    20% Off 2.18Galloa

    The sbove Lcopardlne Coat Is an oRtstaHdini i ; value. Trimmed with Mouton, 'TuFe- do front and cuffs. Skes' 10to to. .'ji V ' ■ \i PlasTax* 824-828 MAIN STREET TELEraONB flfilL

  • \ . -

    PA(iE SIXW A N ('H F,S^TER e v e n i n g H E R A L l^ M A N )

    J U t i n c h e s l e F

    E v e n i n g H l e r a l d^OBUSHED BT -Ti

    RINTINO CC IlMcri 8tre«t':

    BRALD PRINTING CO. INC.is fcu'AIinchMUr. ^ n n .

    T^M A S r»R«JtJ80' GMntral IUn»f«r

    'rpundtd October LITOa

    L' ’ n'i'.v W has iointis headed 3?y the Very ?htion .which plooeered In th a t extrem e liberalization, of the cu rriculum which hA>>een the popula r mode fo r the *■ p as t thirt> years. ! . '

    Publtsbed BeerySundeye end Holtdeye. Entered th* Poet OO'ce et Mencheeter. Con?., ee S ro n d g e e . Well Matter._________ _

    SUBSCRIPTION BATB8

    W estern Stetei end APO

    .-W heeler’s S t r a te g y

    W a r C a s u a l t i e s

    .Amiv >V»r rasu a ltle sTti'e- W ar Depirrtment, ahnotmces

    for-the 'U nited States as a whole 21S casualties for July .24, 1945, classified as foM ow s:-^killed. 112 wounded, !i mlssljrg, and ho p r i^ oners of w a j.-^ ^ .

    Also anhpunced for the ^ ^ o le United State*- Is a total or t h r ^

    ■ . '-om.-Oef-

    picloue BeRAt* unanimity on railn- „ . _

    s :: :ourwhen fears ' win possei hearts. . ' X .

    Our boya and girls Will b* coni!, ing home nieding guidance until they cam And themaelves onci ihore Itumvil activities,

    ESTER. CONN

    '*Nfs ^

    WEDNESDAY, 25, 1945

    ' VV

    t know 06d. how c a n ^ lh e -^ Ia ite r’* for this g rea t work which I have Oommlsaiotved you Jo do ?• W illia m ^ : Keith

    don’ws guUM them 'arigtit'? He haa been oiirNheJp'Tn ages past, and

    only oah A ow us the way and «a In theNlaya and the tasks

    ■JustNahead. ”ATe ye able, saya

    S torrs Woman Suicide

    The B-29 is powered with four 2,000 horsepower englf^s.

    Storrs. July 25—lA*)—The body of M rs;'M uriel B. King^ 41. wife of .^lian V. King, was found hanging In her home here yOstexday,' and

    Dr. Brae Rafferty of Willimantlc medical examiner, said th s dsaUi was a suicide. He said >frs. King, who leaves a son andW brother besides - her ^ugband, hsd been despondent because of,^in health.

    .tixoo

    Ml- UBiiBBR O*. t u b A B SugaTED PKA8- ' The AssocistoO Press 's oxcmsiyel.y •n tu ieo to Uu us* ol republieetion In* newsdtspstche.,9redtMa t® o tbsnnse eJedijaiJ

    , slso tbo iQCsl BOWS p u b lish ^ here.All n sb ts ol ropubliootton o.' s p ^ s l

    dlspstches hereto. • ". IMll serTlee el'ent of N. B. ,* 8er»ic# ISe. ' , '

    publlBbers RepresenUttsss; j - l t u s Usthows^ftMClsl Tork, Chtesso, Detroit #nd Boston.■ ICBMBER AUDIT BORBSC OF

    • C1RCUIAT1.0N8. « '“ Ths H sriia Prlnllns

    " sastimes no flnanclal respoMibU1& Wr tvpocrsphleal errors appeartns MrtiKmenU 'S Ths Uanehestsr Bre-

    . oing Herald. ________ ~I Wednesday, July 25,

    I SSMte unanimity on ra tm - 1 ^n iiy Dead—raptfle ‘ Reglona | cation of urn San Franclacb Char-1 BrexenSkl, Adsrfti, Pfc . son of ter, the isoliHonlst cal has been | Mrs. Stella j ^ e n s k i . lU T .S latc peeking warliyXmt of the bag, j j__ p^.j,, ionYesterday it flnal^; leaped out. I M rsr'pose M^deHp, 184 Mainsl'akina all its nlh#''iivea on th e : street, Portland., : _

    ' iunn th.-i It t-fth reduce ' Artnv Wounded—Paclflr Regions proposition tha t It j ' LoVenzetU, Thomas, Rfc . son r f■formal ratm catlon of the \C harter i Lorcn?e;ttl, 171 .Rjoapectto a plea.sant and pious form ^tty, j-street, BristoL . , , j

    ' lawl .W ancUki, Albert M.’. Jr,., . ' i . X son of Mrs. Esther Wildmail, 3o>worid-\Cooperation apart by 74 Brookfield Center. ■

    fusing to have the United S ta te s V j^ ^ y Missing—Pm’lflc Regions assume any of Its'obligations u n - : ^ r e v o t ; FredOriC.P., J r , 2nd L.t.,

    ths r -h s r t^ ^ — ; sonNpf *’’f*doric P. Prevot, Sr., 155der the Chwtdr.^ • H a r ^ - ie w avenue, Bridgeport;

    When Uie"tiat finally leaped out, I "It was wearing the fam iliar face | of Senatoy Burton,, K. Wheeler, j whose consistent hypocrisy doned all Its usual pretense ^as 'declared tha t he would, Vote f o r X ^ o e * from W R t^ n t le Canlp ratification of the Charter, but j X fight, iater, to prevent the U nited ,

    Opeii Forum

    Harvard Turns &ck

    States from cooperating with it Senator'W heeler, and those oth

    er members of the Senate who are

    For year* the la t f ReV, W. D Woodward, a . retired aijdv much beloved MefhbdUt mirtister.

    Harvard University more lees pioneered in permitting that, curricular freedom which Is now the feature of many American ed- ucaUonal Institutions. The freedom consisted In allowing students to select more and more of their own coursei. while *ewer and few er' specified courses were required of" all students. 'This system has, unquesUopably, benefited many atudenU who were fully qualified 'ter pursuits In special ifielda. But, on the other -hand; It has a ^ operated to^.-^roduce col Itgc g radua^^ whb ■ found the elecUve system merely a, conven- le q fw a y o>.aVdiding contact w ith any real or baalc knowledge about anything. In short, there a re always some' students a'ho are ■capabli^ enough and deserving

    I enou|hi to benefit from a great de- i gree of freedom. And there are ■ always m ote students who - will * merely use this fwedom to escaps ' a sound aducatlon of any type,

    f o r these students, a college education, so-called, may fepresent .a waste of time and money. >

    Rlnce H arvard -waa the p^nfeer in th is modem freedom of eduta- tlrih, i t is,̂ doubly significant th a t it i t now also Harvard which U p ro po i^g a return to a system In which cerU in basic studies wiU be re q u lr^ of every student a t

    rvard. ^The proposed new Harvard,

    syatam, which will probably take effect a t the end of the war, deliberately provides that, whether he' likes it or not, each student •hall take a ' common, se t of eouraea designed to provide lUm w ith a sound general education.

    er m em orrs 01 .u r " X , b rough t to these.csjum n.s ver>Xn- .still following him, *>*';«; teresU ng new s fro ih the W ilh^

    .............................. m antle cam pground.been more' honest If he had .simply said tha t he would vote against the Charter itself. But he read

    a place 'where he liked to be.

    Since his paesing there has beenthe last election re-turns X "his vote , no one to tell us, of the good w°7k

    \ . that is still berng carried on eachfor the Charter is going to be a jform of. insurance which, he'hopes, j many of the older folks because will protect him politically l n \ h i s ,o f th e 'g re a t spiritual uplift they later sabotage of thd C harter; received as they s a t under the

    But however cMever he may ’ fancy hl.s game to be, he himself i^as given It away. iThis country cih-..)tnow w hat Is coming from him aVî -’-ills fellow isolstjonlsts. and It can prepare for It, just as it preparsd for the approaching ratiflcaflon of the ‘Charter. To ratify the C harter, and then deny it iU cbMCs to wprk, would be a worse breach* of faith ■ than It would be to reject the Charter in the first place. , ■

    Let those w ho,are going \.o'\ry to keep the Charte,r frqm working, the WTieeier# and the T-afta and the rest of them, be honest enough to vote against the Charte r now.

    B ut if they will not, i t Is up to the people of this country to see tha t their strategy, which is 0- to hide themselves during the country ’s present mood, and then reappear during w hat they hope will be a relaxation of tbla country ’s determlnatlop to make world cooperation 'for peace '■ aucoeed.does, not work. If the real battle is not to come with ■•ratification, but with ..later meaaures fmpor-' tan t to America’s membership in the United Natlone, th is country cernnot afford to relax until tha t fight, too. la won.

    received .trees in th a t beautiful out of doors auditorium a,nd listened to strong men of God 'a s ■ they pro- Walmed the '^tjnsearchable riches of Christ. , ^ ,

    'The eighth-sixth .session OjT this campmeetingv now called Summer • Assenvbly and Christfan Service! Institute, was-ctmcluded laat S u n - . day e v e n i n g . 2 2 n d , w ith a serm on. by ,Rev. C. Hom.er Ginns. ' former minister ’of the .N btth M e th i^ s f church; now minister ^ the Methodist church a t H a z ^ - vllle. Conn. Me brought y v e r y , stirring message to the 'y o u n g II people of the camp, on ."The G reat-1 | er Glory-’’ Mr. Ginns is secre- ; tary pf the New England 'South- 11 ern -Conference of the M ethodiat; I church, and very highly regarded 11 by young and old alike, apd. h is . audience consisted of many white j haired veterans of the cross o f . Christ who Were worshiping, in ■

    /loving Christian fellowship with the young disciples.

    ■One of the Interesting {lar^s of this splendid service was th e sing- j tng of one of bur old hymns, ^Lead On O k ing Eternal, the Day o f] March. Haa Come," by a chorus Of ministerii. who sang •with th e en- | thusiasm and spiritual fervor of the old camp meeting- dkys. -which

    His Own MedicineThe New Tork State Commu

    ne m atter where his special In- political A i(y:latlon has vol-terests may lie. Whether he likes i t or not, he will have" to study the fundamental f ic ts 'about the

    the w riter of these-lines can. recall so well. j. Sixty-three years ago, w a . boyj of 12 yeari, we were a t thia aam el delightful place wUb.An older slater. and well do we remember hoW the platform was filled with the m inisters of tRe district, and [ .some visiting clergymen, with four to five thousand people in the] audience,. and they 'lif ted up the old hymns -of the church until it did. seem tha t heaven's arches must have rung with the melody] of their Songs. Unbridled emb- tionaiism, did I hear someone say? Perhaps so, but how ■we'-do wish

    ̂th is same emotionalism, born of ! the ‘Spirit of God. would s tir th e

    ed to return to its sta tys as a political party, and to recommend tha t the ’national association do

    hUtory, society, culture and liter j uin^ig* w hich. is full compUaftce hearts of Christians once more, ature of the world in which he “ | with the instructions recently r e - ' and send them out slnginB they .'] going to live. Whether he likes t abrosd from a French ?o, "Lead On O King E ternal’’ |

    nd Imd t e h d l m l l l T n d I ' ^ ‘ "'American ^^^Rne *s".*han“ w*hli;lJer'The ’ ',^thing sound and fimdamental ana Q„mnJunlsU. In other words, a re gweet am en of peace. For not

    ■ting for hlE Utn« through with the modesixOrocesa j with ■words loud: crashing, nor^ney. - i of restra ln lnr their..gctivttiiM in of sUrring clrumf, x^ith deeds

    reversal of Harvard pbl- oefeVenc. to the was,' and .a^re!Icy,-cbmifig a t the top of dun edu- catloiflaK system, - is interfestlng and, i t s^ m s to us, -sound and wise; '■

    again out to enjoy their full cori^i^ Tj,e new leader of the camp ]stltutlonal liberty of conspiring to change''^our]^fom of government.

    That w as expected''the moment

    etlng la Dr. . Orville E. .. Crain,' now^ Norwich district superintendr ept. \ W e were pleased w ith the | eam esthcsa Of his leadership,- and I

    But those \]h o have formulated j the-new Inatnictlons from abroad 1 tg^^jing with sfrAe of the old ttm th is proposed Xew H arvard'policy .appeared. What_ Is remarkable | era, who h ad 'b e en on the camp

    'a re quite awareXpf the fact th a t | about this present and latest | *** through the last week, they such a policy of sbund .fundamen-1 epangs in Communist policytals hi education' is peeded even mors drastically in our secondary schools than, it Is in the unlVersi-

    a-ssiired-us. th a t Under pis leader- ship, old*,, Willlm'ahtic cam p-'

    th a t the Communists are bother- ground' wa8».’pe of educaUon -easy aljy^ and then his ta ik jto dis-i and. plan to use them for a sum-th a t childr.en wiU learn to type- 1 band his party and support Rqpse-w rite and even take shorthand before they know how to spell. Most

    ' of this specialized modem education ia daslgned, i \ is true, to en-

    . able the student to' begin aaminjg a living immediately afte r graduation from b l ^ school. That it m ay dpj bu t r i neglects to give the student th a t general education which la M esntlal to good, Intelligent, happy citizenship. Various ta ste given during this w ar lUus- tra ts , for instance, bow little m any of pur high acbool gradu- • ta s and fimny of our college stu- Msata a t well, know, about theirMMB OONRUy, '. I t to abou t tiaae thera w as a

    'back t o . (uniiamentals. AMI aa w* said, be-

    tbM

    veil when Russia was in the war, 'and he performed both tasks with as much sickly efficiency as any' Communist leader could muster in America. ^

    But, apparently, he followed the party line once too often. He Is now being criticized and Ignored, and th i word to him ia that he is tric t Maine Conference, great pmacher. w ith a marvelous ouUlde the party vmles* ■ he 1 voice a n ^ his meaaage iiriU Unger chooses to come back and, make atj-pieshy Communist confession .of ains h* never, did commit. We must confess th a t there is some aadiattc pleasure in seeing Mr. Browder finally get his heU'yful of hto owh-.st'stem.

    Five dollari tô j each half mmCe carried was the charge whan the mmM Ebbtsm a t y u d .

    $172.00 Duni rosi striped

    Phyfe 'R ofa in iiask. .$149.00

    $289.00^$29.75

    $89.50 o ^ e c e Ma'ple B reakfast Group ^ C o lo n ia l style; red f a b r lk o ld ^ a t u p h o ls te ry ....

    ........................................ $40.15

    $70.00 5-Piece Brbakfaat Group in white enamel with formica table top; blue fabrikold seat upholstery .................. .$69.50

    $6.95 and $8.50 Mexican Side Chairs w ith hand woven tule

    .aeata; hand 'decorated green, blue, red or yellow finishes. One or few-of-a-kind.Choice $8.98

    $19.75 W hite ffinaniieled Kitchen Table-with draw er; 36x40-inch top-.................................... .$9.$5

    $99.50 42-inch Kitchen Sink U nit w ith white base, rejl linoleum top. chrome m atal tnm s. complete w ith sink. leas fauceta ............................$15.00

    fipw on. , | lbutside inferesta would like to

    purch'ftsf this beautiful grove owned by the Metha^tats since 1860. Some say let them have 1 it, arW we''Wi-U”7)uUd a more mod-'il ern camp elsewpere. Bqt w e |i say . no, a thousand tim es no. ■ Spare this hilV of Zion for w:hat i ■ it has done in the past, apd a la^ il for, w hat it can do in the future ]' under new .Inspired leaders.

    New roads have been built,] starting a t .the entrance, and continuing up tbe hill and a il through ] the grounds. Several of the cottages which have been empty for some. time, have been sold, and the

    mer home.Even the- squirrels seem to]

    sense a new feeling of enthusiasm as they go chattering from .tree to tree, wUli their mouths, full of food th a t th e y ''’•'obtain w ithout ] pointa, as yet.

    The-preacher .a t both the mom- ] ing and afternoon aervicea Sunday was Dr, H erbert F. Aldrich superintendent of Augusta dls-

    - He ia a

    in ^ b e 'iie a rts of his listeners for many days, as thpy go • back to their home churchea to carryASn for God.

    The influence of th is old cam pground, ita fire and enthusiasm, h as saved many of our churches from spiritual death down through the years. And wa are going to need thU same apirltual energy to keep ua alive in th e -d a y s upon which w f are about to enter. Anxious days, ar# ahead for everyone

    $54.00 9x12 Rush Square Ruga ' $89.60$13.50. Td. Special Size Rush

    Squares; 9 feet wide, cut in even yards only;' P er lineal yard . . ...............$10.5$

    $139.95 Three-Piece Group; bentwood frames, u p h o ls te r^ in tan leatherette. Sofa and

    , .two arm ch a ira .. . ; . . .g l 19.00$15.75 Step End Table in cream

    finished wood and fibre. .$9.95'$19.76 (2) Woven Fibre Chairs ■ In ivory w ith turquoto uphol-

    . stery. Each . . . . . . . . .'.gl4;95$11J>0 Bentwood ¥able In stick

    reed finish ............. ..........$8.95$85.00 Three-piece Sectional,

    Sofa; bentwood with ros«,' grey and, blue covering, $69A0

    $23.50 6-fobt Trestle Table in varnish finish; folds compactly for sto rage; m etal fixtures ....................... $17.25

    $21.50 5-foot'’Trestle Table like ̂one above' - ............... ■ $15.35 '

    $198.00 S-Piece Sunroom Group wlt'h davenport, 3-arm chatos, glass top coffee table and step-end table; bentwood and fibre in ivory, with plum and green upholstery . . . . .$149.00

    $13.50 Com er Table of ■ bentwood in cream flnlah.. . .$9.95

    $32.50 Driftwood Arm Chair; plain coral upholstered back and s e a t ' ...................... ..$19.15

    $24"'.50 (2) Driftwood SideV.>;.ChAini; plain'^“coral 'webbed

    back and upholstered seats. Each ...................... .. .914.95

    $65.00 Com er t^ v e Seat; plain green seata, rose printed cre-

    “'N'.. tonne backs . . . . . . . . . .$48A0". , $90.00 Two-Piece Reed Love'l

    Seat in rose and yellow, niped' in yelloto $89,50

    Kitchen—LBreakfast Room$75.00 'S-Pitce- Group in blond

    oak 'With refectory top; bone fabrikoid te a t upholsterv .. .

    ______ . . 'T . , . . . .................$89.88$85.00 5-Place Colonial Group in

    maple w ith refectory table top; w ood-teat chairs. .$59,18

    $79.06 5-Ptees Blond Birch Modem Group w ith refsetory ta ble; red s e a t . upholstery. . . .

    ................ $68.50$78A0 5-Plece Blond Oak Mod

    em Group w ith blue formica rsfeotory top; blue seats.

    - 9A8$9A00 (8) 6-Ptoee r r tn c lf Pro

    vincial OfOttpil in blond birch; P u e form ica rafectory top w ith blue seats; or, tan formica -top wHh Bed seata.

    .JCach ................... . . . . . .8 8 4 .5 8

    Micrors

    $18.50 Unfram ed Venetian Buffe t M irror w ith gold-deco- n ited blue gtasa panels a t top and bottom. Can also be hung aa a console m irror..;;

    .............$9,95

    $8,95 Unfram ed Venetian Mirror, same design as above, only smaller- a lM .. . . . - .$6.95

    $25.00 34-lnch Round tJnfram ed Venetian M irror, allghtly chippedL ta is ...............$12JJ8

    $18.50 28-lnch. Round Venetian M irror w ith Kslloped and etphed edge ................... $12JM

    $35.60 E ighteenth Century M irror w ith delicate urn top; gold finish ..$17.69

    129.56 A rchitectural Empire Console or D resser M irror in genuine im aid m ahogany .. . ............. ........... 9III.O6

    $39.50 ICighteenth Century Console M irror ip gold with white antiquing . . ’.-. V.............$I9A5'

    $14.95 Moderh M irror w ith blach fram e on sides and bottom ......... ...$7.95

    Dining Room Pieces

    $215.00 9-Plece Diiihig Room in E ighteenth Century Design; Credenaa buffet; Duncan

    , Phyfe taWe; Heppelwhite chiiia; Sheraton arm chair

    ,afi8 5 side chairs--.. . .$249.00$15.00 (21 Console Servers,

    semi-circular Sheraton design with cabinet base and draw e r; genuine m ahogany with 'Satinwood bandings.E a c h .......................... ...$68.00• S

    $43.60 (21 Sheraton 48-inch Console-Servers; genuine m ahogany; Each .X .i- ,- .$29.75

    $69.50 Hand Made Cohrole- S er\e r of genuine mahogany w ith 'in la id top and legs..................... 859.75

    $36.00 Sheraton Seml-circdfar Console-Server " of genuine m ahogany ................. ...$19.75

    $85.00 Ehetensibn Conaole-Din- e tte Table in Chippendale style, for; apartm ents and living-dining combination rooms

    S89A9$146.00 Hand Made Lowboy

    B ^ a t with ball-and-daw feat; atlver tray in center draw er; genuine m ahogany..

    gll9.00

    $55.00 Drop-leaf Etotenaion Dinr e tte ’TaUe for uae in living rooms for combination purposes, and dmettes; Mahogany veneered . . . . . ' . . . .$49,50

    $69.50 (2) Host Chairs; all-upholstered high backed chairs w ith square wlnga. Striped blue or green damasks.Each . ; • ; ......... $49.75

    Be4room Pieces

    $337.85 4-Piece French Provincial Group in ivory and grey enamel w ith gold trim ; single twin bed. dresser with separate m irror, small Cheat of .drawers and .a bedside ta ble w ith book shelf. . ’.$249.00

    $306.75 4-Piece Modern Group w ith rose dam ask upholaterea headboard. Vanity, bench and chest in princewood and elm . ........................ .... .$170.00

    $59.60 Mobern Dresser Base w ith unfrawed m ir ro n r pin-

    V striped w alnut veneers and ivory beadinga • e a * • . $89.50

    $48.45 Modem P in -8 t n u t Dresser Base fram ed m irror .

    $16.00 F isneh Provincial Bed- ■tde.Table wrtth bookshelf; soft antique green 'fin ish .. . . .$8.25

    $29.50 Large Southern Colonial Bedside Table in genuine wair nut; shelf and d ra w e r ..$14.95•

    Boudoir Chairs

    $19.7$ Chair in rose printed glo- sheen . . ^ . ........................$12.50

    $10.75 Chair In p lum ' printed cretonne ...................... .$18.50

    $37.50 Lounga Design In sm art grey printed chlnU . , . ,$19,75

    $29.75 Plllowback Model in tur--^ quoise printed sailcloth. $19.75

    $19.75 Chair In iroae printed glo-. •been ...$14,95

    $35.00 PlU ow back-D esign inrose printed sailcloth . .$22J10

    Living Room Sofas i - Groups

    . ‘...$208.00 2*Ptece Modern Uphol-

    atered Group ; in blue snd beige tapestry : birch legs. $iofa and chair . .......$135.00

    $249.06 (2) 2-Piece MaptoKnuckle-arm Groups, msuve- snd-bslgs tap astiy .coyer. Sofa and c h a ir . . . . . . .$198.0$

    $139.95 3-Plece- Modern Group wdth blond bentwood ash fram es: tan leathsre tte up- >oiathobtery .

    chairs . .Sofa and two arm

    ................ .$119,08

    $50.75 Sheraton Oval Dinette Table with inlaid top; spider base; genuine m ahoganv...............................• • • •V

    tokiWM

    $269.00 Square Arm Lounge Sofa I® rose figured tanestry ; Grand Rapids madb. .$219.00

    $110.00 Lounga C hair to sofa above ..................... $08.80

    1189.00 Regency Sofa having Duncan Phyfe style legs: aU

    '• iiphbUterad am is , and back. Rose dam ask w ith •.."C J™

    'Stripe in soft b lue-----$125.00$249.00 Modernized to-«je-flM r

    Lawson Sofa in rotdlum b lw textured c o v e r ..............$225.08

    $195.00 London Club‘s Lotoige Sofa in antiqued Pin**j2P22 dusty blue yelvet.........$189.00

    $198.00 Lawwm Sofa In blue textured homeepun . .S18S.00

    $169.00 Ikigltob Lounge Bpfo w ith knife-edge arm s; tu r- quolae green and u red d a m a s k ................$125.98

    $19SJ)0 Chippendirie Ball-and- CIsw foot Sofa: tm alL oslf- figured dusty rose d a m a s k ;^

    .••■•••••e*eeeess«».«* OmstW •

    base$15.95 M ap leS aw buck Coffee

    Table with shaped and decorated oblong top. $9.95

    $75.00 Sheraton Consol?'* Table w ith cabinet baae and drawer; genuine wahogany,-satln->

    ' w’ood banded ..................$59.00$32.50 All-Mirror- Coffee Table;■ top allghtly chipped, as i s . . .

    ................... .................. fie.'fS

    $13.50 Maple Sewing . Stand, complete with th rea d . ; . 88.95

    $32.50 British Oak Sofa Table, w ith s h e l f ....................... $19.75

    $12.50 (2) Duncan JPbyfe Coffee Tables,' simulated leather presaboard . tops: mahogany finished fram es and legs.Each . . . . . -----. . ' ...........$9.95

    I $32.50 Solid M ahogany End Table with tooled green tea ther

    'sh e lf . . . . ; .............$?2.5009.50 Square-top Lam p Ta^to

    of Genuine w alnut: Colonial style with shelf and draw er. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $14.95

    $32.50 (21 M odenj All-Mirror Lamp ’Tables;. round tdna.

    • E a d h .........-X '*’ ..........919-75137.50 M ode^ All-Mirror Coffee

    Table. ,lnese m irror pieces are also used wdth 18th Cen- tu rv te m ltu re for a'sma*? feci ....................X .........K tM

    Living Room Chairs|98.00 ( 21 Large Lounge

    Chairs: to-the-floqr models: rose,^ or wine frieze cov,»r». E ach -................................. $89.00

    $49.75 (2V F an Back Chairs In prin tsd yellow cretonne; light, delicate scale.Each, as' (s ........... $44.50

    $ri5.00 Deep. Low Lounge Chair in eeli-fimired Ught

    ■ -blue dam ask; short fringevalance: beige fringe t r ‘

    *98.00

    $115.00 Modernized T.awaon Lounge Chair In tn-the-floorstyle; rose, textured b/vm*.s p u n ................... ..............$98.00

    $05.00 Queen Anne W ing Chair In Mue-green sateen; feather seat. S llehtlv soiled, but de- signed for re-covering o- edVering . . . . ; . •. • • • < ■ ■ 879.00

    $125.00 Plllowback Lounge ' Chair In silver and

    striped dam ask . . . . . ..6 9 8 0 019.00 (6) Tpfted Back Club

    sirs, sn r ln r ' conatnietlon. C h 8 t t» ^ (41 green. (q> figured. taneatrieS. Each *•** 50

    $75 .00' ' (2) AdluaMble E»sv eclairs w ith m atching o tto mans.. Choice of: cnral-cose j tapestiy oi' burgundv *-,'*:-t ■ . . TT. . . . . . . V ................. aao.i.V

    $85.00 Adlilfta.ble Eaav Cliair w ith fo o t s to o l i r hur"n*~d*.frieze;.'’ tufted b a c k . . . .*■•" 50

    ' , *̂*1.. $75 00 (21 Tufted BgcV Adbiat-

    aWf O a* rs and oftomansi} t»xtilred turquoi.se Cove- Each $89.50

    $29.75 P latform :R orker In ms-- hoganv'floiah, Cogs've'l atvie; nnholstered In r plain .uc-bt blue, . . . . . . ____ _ . . . . * ’0 75

    $39.50 Manle Easv Chair i" gundv strlbe co v e r----- 8’9.75

    $59.75 Small Queen Anne t^ iib Chair with nleated back: fig-

    • ured gold dam ask cov*- . .889.50

    $75.00 Small Pleated-back Club Chair, lustrous ru st dam ask ..

    ........ $64.50. $95.00 Chippendale -Wing Chair,

    stretcher base; dusty rose^ .^ap es try .$84.50$89.00 English Queen Ann*. Wing Chair, se lf-figured

    green danlaek; feather s e a t . . • ............ $74.68

    |,,^119'.00'(2 ) Q ueenf Anne W ing (fla irs, 'tangennge linen cover.. Each .............. .. ..$ 9 8 .0 8

    $79.00 Sheraton B arre l. ..Chair 'w ith tu fted ' back; 6gured cocoa dam ask ........... .888AO

    $85.00 Fanback (Thalr in ,se lf- figured dusty rose d a m a sk ..

    ........ 874.50$98.00 Sheraton Fanback Chair

    in self-figured blue dam aak .. ..................... 879A0

    $89.00 Queen Anne Barrel Chair, burgundy dam ask ...*879.68

    $110.00 Sheraton Barrel Chair with tufted te a t; turquoise dam ask . . 889.00

    $89.00 Chippendale Chair, ball-and-claw

    tu f te d back; green dam ask .........................

    B arrelmodel;figured.889.50

    $52.00 Sheraton Occasional Chair, . M artha Waehington type; muRi-colored turnuola?' dam ask ................. ...".8W A0

    $18>50 Occasional C h a i r ^ bur- guhf l^ m a sk ; QuSsn

    Antie aty lei/each ........$14.95 OccasionalNChal^n g r ^ n

    tapestry . . . . . . . . . »$9.95$2f .50 Occaalonal C hkt^)n wine■ figured tapestryi-'w pering leg

    Sheraton e t ^ ...............8^7.95$6.95 and $8.50 Mexican SMe

    Chairs - w ith hiind-decorated fin ise s ; hand-wovgn tule s e ^ . 5 green, 2 yellow, 1 red. Choice ............... ...8 8 .9 8

    $5.50 Mexican Side Chaira in youth size with hand-woven rush seats. Yellow, white, blue. Choice .$8.75

    $59.76 (2) Small Upholstered - Queen Anne C h a in w ith bu tton-back and te a t; tapaatry covered. Each . . . . . . . .$49.75

    $59J5 Louis XVI Oacaaionai' Chairs . available in pairs. Choice of turquolae or dusty rose dam ask, or plain E m p ln

    ■ green covers. Each . .8$458

    $51.00 Maple. Lounge Ch%»r - In cocoa figured U pestry ; Tni- type quality ..................839 50

    $89.50 Small Club Chair in h—

    Mrs. Alice''O'Brien and her fa ther asked' th a t their farm property ip .Highland P ark .be left as | now Zoned, rurtil and not changed ' to Aa .. — , .i

    Claim IRrec^veJtoNbred

    Stamford, ^ l y 25—t/P)— Whli# emplo'^e-'()f the Schick- Rasor company returned to work yesterday afte r a labor < dispute, . the Union W l̂re and Dye company, a war. Tilant', shut down .after 15 employes, walked o u t claiming non-

    In one year, 1852, nearly 1,500 mules were driven from Santa Fe to Miasourir ' /

    AcU IndigestionRMieved Ib S ednetes or deaU s year ssessw beckWkM « pwpl# wh6 rmHy «nff«r from M era iMtalae Uw autek,

    _ art that Um ia a jar of loa- ' the touch of thia (roaty-whita cTtaa, ym w a aeteaUr fatl Urad wuscln

    wlaT, aa ]---- ------------ ' ‘ 'to

    thrllttof anal Mint. IjB dni

    Complete Stock of AlTV T T A M IN .S

    A t Leweet Prices!Artbar Drag Stores

    s a Btala St. Tel. 5868

    ALICE OOFRAir (KaowP Aa Qneen Alicel

    Serentb D'anghter of a Seventh Son Bora W ith w Veil

    Readfaigs-Dally, Inclnding Sunday, 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. Or By Aplmlnt- ment. 'In the Service of the People for 88 Years.

    S Pm iTD A L MEDltTM M8 Cknrch S treet, H artfo ia , Goan.

    ' Phone 6-2924

    Petition le PreecnTedMr. Lessner, last night, in fur- I '• “»• •» dmtiuu:

    . __ No IsiAtlvs. BelNino brinti ramfm̂ In s7JtffV or ■eiAlo four foonoqr o8^;oo rtturs of bMtlo

    Isa. aa voof fast rWBoad alaww tastahtlr ita lef twliiae aoolaaaa. 7b iialp aoftaa

    ras.aad wlloniw, thaWa aothlDs batur thaa Sitoiriiiat lea-Riat. So gat a jar today aad anJor tha bliaaful faalins that aomaa with SltTwy foot comfort. At ail orussiata.

    Use Blair’s Lay-away Plan NOW for purchasing your next Winter's Coat.

    ■ . . u . -Each garment fully guaranteed. We have in stock (or will obtain for you) any style or any fur you desire.

    J. H. LEE ROOFING CO. Roofing Repairing Specializing in Slate

    ̂ TELEPHONE 7770

    LECLERCFUNERAL HOME 'S8 Main Street

    Phone SZfif

    Budget Termsf

    Priced to Please

    Good Housekeeping* Seal of Attpeovai

    H o s p i t a l s ^

    E x p e n s e P l q n ^For Men, WomejPand

    Children PAYS F O ^

    - Sickness nr sccldMit ezpcnsM when cnnflned In sny hitspital anytihere hi D. A A. or Canada. .^-Rnoro and board expenses Up to $8,110 per day tor- first SO da.Ts’ onnflnemcnt— $3.00 per day tor next 90 days' confinement. This plan may be changfd and designed to-Bt the needs, of any. Indlridijal group of Insured workers. No medical examination.

    Phone, W rite' or Call On

    ALLEN & HITCHCOCK

    Alt Llnee of Insaranee 958 SIAIN STREET

    / TEL. 5106

    complisncp w ith a WLB directiva concerning the retroactive payment of Wages. A Committee of the In tem atibnat Aeaociatton of

    Machinists (AFL) w aa' r e p o r t^ planning to go to Boston Monday to discuss the m atter ’̂ t h the WLB.

    Lewis snd CHsrk wars the Diu pathfinders to mark out a w from B t Louis to the moiith the Columbia river.

    B E N S O N ’S R A D I O S E R V I C E

    “ JILL MAKES We Specialize Qn

    P H I L ^ P R O D U C T SPick Up and DeOyery

    On Largs Radios and ConM nations.

    ZENITH BATTERY PACKS • CALL S.’SSS

    » B E N S O N ’ S . - . ^ ]118 MAIN STREET

    A

    ■■■ ■' t

    V "

    Clearance !

    Both'For $1.49

    JitwJ'- ’

    Tikm ioh ifJ

    ■ V.. . new radios lyfll be here....fust a 0 few at first, naturally, as War plants

    begin to reconvert. ..

    Along with them will come ranges.. .electric, gas, oil, and cximbinatioji.s.X Vasherd;- ironers. . .electric clefiilers . . . refrigerators . . '. and all those smaller appliancht that make Hying so muOh mo»e pleasant, so-much more

    Who will receive those first few Postwar appliances? The very homes that need therti m ost., .thoee-homes

    .which have the foresight to place their.orders at Watkins.... now! This plan was actually suggested by one of our customers. There are.no pay-

    ypu want is here, ready for deliver.i'. So cOme in and sign dp at once. Get -into Watkins Priority List '

    Print or Pastel

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    hVKNINU H K R A tU . M AN CH ESTER. OONN^ W ED N ESU AV. JU l.T 25,-------------------- — ----------- ^ ^ ^ ' — ^ -------------------------------------------------

    MANCHSih’CR EVENING H EB ALD M I^dB ESTXR , C50NN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2 5 ,194S

    IreiTitory Statement Caii^e of >11

    [flutter as Petain^ M a iih ^ ^ n s S U d h ce On W i ^ H e Sent

    '/■t.Ifnn^an W ill Be A ik cd !

    E x p la i iv X ^ ^ * * Meant by Saying No Spoils Sought by U. S.

    Manehepter Date Book

    By ilame*Waahtngtoh. July —

    *■ ’ preadent Tm «»n la a^mch to be ' asked what he rjenhV by

    ;:*TTiere la not one piece ofr territory ;We want out ol this war.

    ■Jhe statement —made at W Anjerican flag-raising ceremony dn Berlin—has caused much speculation here. ’ ■ 'i _ 'Will Ask Him to Explain

    i i Almost certainly reporters will ' 1 ask him to explain before he lenses

    • Europe or when he resumes rhls < White House news conferenceshere.

    He could have meant or bothof- two things

    1. We want no territory our troops took in Europe.

    2. We want no/territory Uk^nfrom Japan in the Pacific.

    ' If he was talking of Europe only,; h« was aaylng nothing neW; We’ve

    never figured on keeping European V, territory.i } But it was new and startling if ; he meant we want no Japanese tcr- i rltory under any circumstances.

    . It's doubtful he meant any nuch i thing. - . . ..J waata to K*e(j Some Islands

    {The Navy is pn'‘record-as wanting to keep some seiied Japanese islands as Naval outposts to guard against future attacks from Asia.I The Navy' is not- likely to be Ignor- «d. ^

    It's possIble-T-although Mr. Truman himself will have to clear up the point—that we do not Intend to hold Japanese islands and say outright, to'the world; “These belong henceforth to the United BUtea.**

    There is a way in which the United States could keep”iBosaos-

    ‘ alon of seised Jap territory for generations to come and yet not elalm fuil possession^

    ; This could be done under the- f trosteeship system of ,the United ) Nasons. That has to be explained.‘ Purpose of System

    ,,k- When ihe United mtiona drew ’ ;up their charter in San Francisco,‘ they provided for a trusteeship {'•gratem for seised Axis territory land aald its purpose ;would be to:} “ProBsote the political, economile, social and educational advance- i BMOt of the inhabitants of the ’• trust territories, and their p ^! gisaslirs development towards I asM gmrsmment or . independence : VB may ha apipropriate to the par- iHeaiar dreumstaneeg of each territory and its peopla . .

    -V OM d Take EuB 'Peeeeeslon We could—and ao one would

    ’ try to stop ua—taka fall posees- toCB, at seised Japueae islands, p r wa eould place them imder tmsteeahlp which, for aKample, acadd woric like this:

    Tislte Okinawa, adilch we won gg heavy port In Ufa and blood. Vtf9 to Japut's fraot yard and

    ha assM «B a Navy baas

    Saturday, July 2g-Meeting, Veterans’ Council., Le-

    '^on Home, Uepnard street, at 8 p, m.

    Sunday, Jul.v 29' Annual outing. Hose Co. No. 3,

    St M. F. D„ at Garden Grbve.Saturday: Aug, 11X

    Twentieth anniversary exhibit, Connecticut Gladiolus Society,Xat ’Masonic Temple, 2 to 9 p m. ' ^

    , Sunday, Aug. 12 Joint outing, ■',Miantonomah

    'Pribe, I.O.O.R.M.. and Red Men’s Social Cluh, at Villa liouisg.

    Annual outing. Cam ^lt" Council, k ; of C,, at Garden Grove!

    Sunday, Aug. 19 Annual outing. Hose Co; No. 4,

    S. M. F. D-, Villa tioulsa. Bolton.Monday,-Aug: 27

    Annual meeting, American Le- gion.'“at Legion Home, Leonard street.'

    Sunday, Sept. 28 Annual Clambake. Rockville

    Lodge of Elks, at Garden Grove.Saturday. Sept. 29

    All Service Night here by 8Ute Guard. Parade and exercises.

    . Sunday, Sept. SO Legion''OUting, Garden Grove,

    Keeney street.

    .A llies S la y* 2.0Q0 Japs

    {Continued From Page Ona)

    oUt "an average., of 35 ground at- tackr a 'day. made with support of a total of ioo fighter planea."

    (Uomel declared, however, that "our eounter-attiekP cpiitihue to fall the enemy's plans.’’ )

    A u s a ie s T w o M ile sD o w n E a s t B o rn e o C o a s t

    \

    oouM say t& the United Na- 'ttona: *Wa don’t want Okinawa for keepa. But wa want it for tong ttana aa a Naval bam. We'U put It under trusteeahip until ■one distant time when wt no longsr need It and are gdillng for the people on Okinawa.^to baveJ galnville island, which the Diggers

    Manila. July 25—UPi—Pushing a general Japanese withdrawal In the Mt. Batochampar area, Australian troops have moved two miles down the East Borneo'ccaat, General MacArthur repotted today. v/

    This placed them within 50 ihilea of their next big objective, the oil field at Samarinaa. Aussie 'Spitfires supporting the adyance, which was made ' -on Monday spotted s' Japanese truck convoy and probably got 38 trucks loaded with enemy troops.

    R.A.A.F. Liberators meanwhile attacked Celebes Islands to the east and Kittyhawks* teamed up with American -P-T boats to shoot up Japanese water craft and buildings in Mandar ( ^ f In the Celebes.

    C h o is e u l L ib e ra te d B y A u s tra lia n T r o o p s

    San Francisco, July 25—tP) .Aiutrallan troops have Invaded and "completely liberated Choiseul, by-passed SolomUn Island, the Australian Army broadcast today.

    'The announcement, heard by the Federal Communications commission. said 'Aussiet landed ̂ , some time ago on the island, aicrom narrow Bougainville strait froili Bou-i

    l\

    \

    fun Inde^ndence,"Would Submit 'iTerms

    We'd draw up the terms under wbii^ we’d place it under trusteeship. We'd submit those terms to the United Nations. Suppose that organization was satUfled.

    ijv. We’d make reports to the Unit ^ Nations on how we were ad- ministering our trusteeship—per haps on how we-treated ihe ' natives, educated them,' fed them—

    ' and the United Nations would send commissions to check up on us..

    Thus, by placing seized' Japanese territory under trusteeahip,' we would ndt. be taking full possession of it.' X

    But rerttvmber: ..\Ve''-, wouldn't have to do., that. We wdUldnR have to place It under trustee:4iip.

    ’■ If . we-offered to place it under,: trusteeship and the United Nations didn't like our plails. we could., tear up the plws .^d simply say we. had changed our minds .and wouldn’t plate' it under trus- teeshipr*’- -

    In that case” we’d take full possession. - ■ '

    are clearing of Nipponese A small Australian landing force

    has been "hat-rying the Japanese on Bougainville. "Some hundreds" of the enemy aoldiera hAve been killed. The brosdcaat from dowm under mentioned ho dates.

    tOentlnd^ ^Fakg^^e)

    whether hp knew of a telegram from Retain to Hitler congratulating the Germans on the bloody repulse of the Canadians at Dieppe.

    There was no immediate reply. Dalsdler*. agreed during croas

    examination with testimony yesterday Of Former Premier Paul Reyhaud that "oertaln concessions' in Africa” to Mussolini were considered in 3940 in an WTort to'keep Italy afpeaee.

    Hmyn Army Demoralised The true cau.se of wiir defeat.”

    Daladie.r said. "resuKcd from demoralization 'of the'^Army arid the old conception of the IrivlolSbility of the Ardennes”—the mountainous gap. of Belgium rind northeast France through which the Germans burst; French lines in 1940 rind purihed back the Aoiericans last December.

    He said the (Hfrat Alto sgas.due to military "tneapaefty” and ac.- tlviftet~of the Fifth .Column.

    ■'On Jime 25 1940,' we were told a new order was being constituted.’’. Daladler told the - cOUrt trying the aged rioldler for intelligence with the enemy and plotting against ths security • of France.

    It consisted of destroying republican institut,ions of France. The republic was destroyed contrary to the'-wiahea of the National Aasemblywhlch met at Vichy.. Aa delegatea^to the National Assembly 'left Vichy, we saw arriving all the traitors 'at, France. . The people of Franoe, stupefied, witnessed the Vichy coup d’etat.”

    Daladier was the second witness and continuing the statefnent he started yesterday. Petain ».ad raterpd the coiu-troom at 1:22 p.m: He was tha. first French chief of state to face a court since Louisxvi; *

    Slams Clialr to Floor The swarthy Daladlei: at one

    point picked up a- chair and slam- iped It to the floor as his 'ace flushed with anger. He was recounting the story of- the RiOm trials In wftlch the Vichy regime tried unsucc.essfully to pin the blanie for' the French collapse on him, Former, Premiers Paul Re.v- naud and Leon Blum, and G»n. Maurice Gamelin. ! /, He said he had learne.d' at Boiir- raaol that without beentried or condemnefi,'he had been sentenced to life imprisonment. He recalled that the former attorney' general, Gaston . Ca.{!ing arr.’ sted for me'mbershlp IrfXhe Cngoulard (a subversive right wing orgftnlzatlon) as Pierre Cot'save tn a book published In New Vork7’V Defense AttordeW Jean I.,emaire asked.

    "No. that la false,” Daladlerswerod. _>'

    The ri îdienee burst rnto/Taugh terXX'hen . Defense -/Attorney' JaequeS- Isorni read a/festirrionlal to Petain. written 1^1944 by the French poet, Paur Valery, who was being biirif^ today. Valery died last F i^ v . The room was filled with* mocking cries and jeiering laughter.

    Questioned further by.the defense. Ualadier said;

    "Of-hls IntieUlgence with Hitler, I knew nothing."

    I.ehrun Called to Stand , •Daladlr'r left the stand at 2:.55 p.m. and Albert Lebrun, last ■elected* president of the Frpneh rehubUc-'was called.

    .Lebrun appeared nervous. His mouth twitched, his voice quivered and he declined the court’s Invitation to sit down..

    He told of the fast meeting of the Superior War council and said that Gen. ■ Maxlme -rWeygand, French .commandep In chief! re-' ported after touring the front that the situation was serious. He said Weygand had a plan for a counter-attack.

    "There was a certain amount of weakness among my - colleagues.” Lebrun festified.

    f iv " said It was decided to strengthen the government and that Gen. Charles de Gaulle and others were brought In-

    ' ■ĵ Lebrun said Weygand ailaerted on June 9 that France must ask for an armistice. He testified that Reynaud, premier at -the time, would not hear of this while, the flejet and empire were intact. He reTOunted again the circumstances leading to the armistice and (he exchanges with Prime Minister Churchill.

    He then told of a meeting In which,. Petain read a- long , statement decJÊ ring that France -mist not be abandoned and "placing hts (Petaln’s) faiUrin some indefinite future.”

    erence, watchdog

    Budget Bureau^'' ! Raps Proposal!

    (Continned from P|^e

    genthau, toId''n- ngws "No man csn"be a* of the Treaswry.'’

    JJespite- some eVldencONor opposition in quai^ers other thhu the ^Budget buread, officials of 'tpe various flspAl agencies 'generairy were a g ^ ^ today that mofounlty is pee^d In fiscai policy. _

    it seemed likely to ob.Mrvers bat the White 'Wnd ' Con-ress" Indeed would strengthen the

    Treasury’s authortly -in many wayS'.with Vinson at the Helm. President, 'miman.'s desire to absorb agencies into the V-e'guIar departments and fo give his cabinet oiilcera more responsibility ia well known. '

    Morgenthau suggested that coordination Of flacal policy. ,.be achieved at first by forming a ‘f'na- tionai committee for fiscal affairs’’ with the Treasury secretary as chairman. Later, he adde(L4t probab