manche.ster, conn., saturday, september 19.m (twelve … evening hearld... · 2020. 5. 6. · solid...

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1 '.V PAGE EIGHTEEN ilUmrlf^at^r !Ett^ning H^raUi FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968 About Town Mr. and Mr*, thomaa Eagleaon Cf Green Manor Bd. have juat re- turned from a two weeka vialt with their daughter, her huaband and Infant eon, in Lawton. Okla. Pfc. Arthur Bogliach la atatloned at Fori Sill. The trip waa made by plane. Mlaa Doria Madeline Oondlo of '186 Oak St. and Misa-Kathleen Allen Olmatead of 669 Tolland Tpke. are among the 372 new atu*- denta who will reglater Sept. 22 at Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Maas. The Maglianeae Society will hold a regular meeting Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the lU l -1 lan-American Club. At the close of the busineaa meeting there will be "merenta abichierala." All members ere urged to attend, a.s many important matters will he dtscussed. \ The Rev. Alfred L. Williams, lector of St, Mary's Church, is a member of the committee planning the annual Epi.scopal Clergy Con- ference of the.Dioceae of Connecti- cut to be held St^Avon Old Farm.s School in.Avon on S^ t, 9 and 10. ~Fai*ewell Parly For Miss Pease Legion to Seat New Officers Joint Installation Cere- mony . for Peterson And Mrs. Fairbanks Diiworth-Comell-Quey Post, No. 102.“Amerlcan Legion, will-hold a- Jolnt Installation of newly elected officers with its Auxiliary at the Legion Home on 20 Lsronard St., Tiiesday evening. Sept. 8, at 8 o’clock. E^/irl C. Petersen will be In- stalled as 'commander of tJie post. The Rev. ISorothy Wells Pease, who "has served as aide to The Rev. Clifford O. Slmp.son. minister of the Center Congregational Church Bince Septe.Tiber t>f 1947. and Is leaving for a similar position as Minister of Christian Education of the Central Baptist Church in Providence. R. I.. Sept. 1!5. will be honored with a farewell reception. Wedne.sday, Sept. 9. from 8 to 9 p. m. In the Federation room of the ehurch. All of her friends in the parish and town are eordially Invited to drop In during the recep- tion hour. A graduate of'Mount Holyoke college and Andover - Newton Theological School, she was^ or- dained in the'Flrst Baptist Church, Melro.se, Mass., and served that church and others of fhe 'rtchdmi-' nation in Springfield and W^ake- field. Mass., al.sp in Roehester-, N. Y. before coming to Manches- ter. Mi.s.s Pease was instrumental in organizing the Manche.ster Coun- cil of Church Women and served as its first president. She has al.so "beerr arttv-e in other local and out- cf town women's organizations. Earl Petersen (•'Allot Photo, i- Mr. Petersen was bom and ' brought up in Hartford and was j "laduated from Weaver High ! School in 1933. Shortly thereafter , he joined the TYavelers P'Ire in- surance Company with whom he is presently employed as Supervi.sor of the Reinsurance Department. During World War TI Mr. Peter- .sen was an Aviation M.P. in the Ninth Air Force with the grade of. Sergeant. Ha served for almost three years In ths Buropsan and American Theaters and was dis- charged in November of IMS. Mr. Petersen has been very ac- tive in the local Anterican Legion s'noe Joining in IM S and haa held office as adjutant and senior vice commander and served frequent- ly ss district and Department delegate. Past Commander Francis F. Miner, chairman of the Installa- tion Committee has announced that in.vtallation will be carried out by officers of the Department of Connecticut under the commander- ship of James H. Steinaon. { Officers snd representstlves of | many Legion Posts in ths State i and other Veteran organlaation.s | are expected to attend, as well as representatives from various Mah- chcater organlaationa and the town. government. 77ie complete listing of officers , as released by Past Commander ' Miner Includes: commander, Earl j C. Petersen; senior vice comman- • ' d»r. Robert T. Petersen; ^junior \ j vice commander, George A. Sco- ' I villr; adjutant, Henri Pe.ssini; fl- I nance officer, Kenneth Wlgren: i Service officer. William Downey; ; I chaplain. Harold Olds; Executive | Committee membera, Rene Gosse- . 1lln. C. L. Wlgren. Several of the neighboring posts and units have been invited, ns well as local patriotic organlza-ij tions to attend the Auxiliary in'^ stallatlon. Mrs. Wilber Little, past presi- dent of the unit and second vice- president of the district, wdll head the installing team canslsting of —past' presidents-of-the iHvlt. - Mrs. Theodore Fairbanks, whose husband is past commander or the Legion Post, will succeed Mrs. > Ra.vmond Gossriin as president of the. Auxiliary. t PRESCRIPTIONS 1 ►CAREFULLT COMPOUNDED ^ ^Arthur Dnis Stores i Ik M. A A'A ; BANTLY OIL CO. TEL. MI-9-4595 or MI-9-4596 RANGE AND FUEL OIL DISTRIBUTORS 333 Main Stroat TAMfAX Economy box lasts 4 months (ovaroga) Th«JM!HAUeo lAMnamrm C onn -. FRKIDAIRE Electric Ranges MUSICAL TUITION ANDREW R. WATSON (MINISTER OF MUSIC CENTER CO.NGREGATIONAL CHURCH MANCHESTER RESUMES TEACHING -PIANO-VOICE-. • WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 9 TEL. Mitchell 9-9870 or Mitchell 3-6568 TWO OVENS FULLY AUTOMATIC ' WONDER OVEN BAKCS AND BROILS SAME TIME SAME OVEN ' tO M I IH I U l ntNi^HQW^ rnr $ 184.95 ill CLOSED MONDAY, LABOR DAY Get Your Records NOW For Your Holiday Music lif " B e t s y Me' crisp back-to-school cottons by WE snu.HAVEA SOOD SEUenON OS ALBUMS Reg. $4 u .$6 Now fOOKPOBATCD 783 MAIN STREET Special Sale 3 SPEED PHONOGRAPH '§ 2 95 $<> 95 Now m (U P CARTRIDGE • TONE AND VOLUME CONTROL t Manchester’s I^argest Radio, Record, TV and Appliance Store Potterton’s 130 CENTER STREET CORNER OF CHURCH ( PLENTY OF PARKING * CU % Large telection of Cinderella dreties in plaids, solid colors, corduroys, prints and sweater dresses. Baby Shop, Sixes 3 to 6x $2.98 to $5.98—-Girls' Shop, Sizes 7 to 12 $3.98-$7.98 BABY SHOP Girls’ Underwear— Sizes 4-8 Sleeveless shirts ............ 59c and 69c Short sleeve shirts .......... 85c Spanky pants ................ 69c and 79c Slips— Nylon, rayon or cotton / Priced from ........... $1.00 to $3.98 Boys' Briefs— Sizes 4-8 . . 59c and *69c Sleeveless shirts ......... 59c and 69c Short steava s h ir t s .................... 85c Socks— Sizes 4-8 All new fall shades ... . Pr. 39c T oiletrieS; Etc. $1.38 LADY ESTHER CREAM ......... ^... 98c BLUE GRASS COLOGNE WITH POWDER ......... .. $1.65 WHITE MAGNOLIA COLOGNE ..... $ 1.25 TABU COLOGNE WITH SOLID COLOGNE $2.00 APRIL SHOWER COLOGNE WITH CREAM SACHET $ 1.00 LELONG SOLID COLOGNE ..... $1.10 MAX FACTOR NEW RED LIPSTICK . . . $1.10 LILT HOME PERMA- NENT REFILLS . . . $1.50 TONI HOME PERMA- NENT REFILLS . . . $1.50 BSe.NOXZEMA . . . 59e $ U 2 PEPSODENT CHLOROPHYLL TOOTH PASTE .... 69e JOHNSON BABY POWDER ........... .. . 49e It's so easy to b« firm ... in Warner's' French-stitched Bra . Lots of ^ stylo... for liftio monoyl Sizes I to 7 sl ib‘$|,98 LIFE a Vary bteeming lo litll* tolki, lhaia mog, long •(••v* pullovart. Fina- combad cotton — knit for good —y..... J...— .... looks, long waor, solid co«nfort.-Naw wothfoit pottami, ploidi, ploini. For boyi, gIrU, bobiat. Smart melhtrs tNck la GORDON knlKinf ■\ CHILDREN'S Ship'n Shore BLOUSES A tiiat 7 la 14 Solid color*, candy s., ,5c* ami check, patlcina with Petar Pan collara. $1*98 and S2.50 each f Sizaa 7 to 14. ,' It takaa your prettleat ahape - always holdi its own! Nq, 2076 ^ pre- ahrunk cotton broadcloth., tha cupa completely stitched. hsIf-Hned for extra firming. In white, A and B cupa. S2.2S. Other Warner Bras, A, B and C cu^. 81.28 to $2.99. CHILDREN’S FINE QUALITY _ NYLON REINFORCED MERCERIZEb Cotton Anklets Cotton anklets in English rib or turn back cuff styles. Whits snd colors. Sizes 8'a to ll._- 3 pair for $|.Q 0 We Have The -- Manjchgst„.Hi.gK Scho.ol Official Gym Suits in Yellow $4.50 THIS I.S THE FRESHMAN COLOR THiiS YEAR Sizes 10 to 20. Freshmen are urged to get .their ,yr orders in early. We alM have i-ed, aes foam blue and while gym suits In stock. Sportswear Dept.—Mneoad Flonr Green Stamps Gi%-en With Cash Sales Avcrajre Daily Net Press Run for the Week Eaded Aug. M, 1668 10,630 Member ot ttw Audit Buraou ct OirealaUaae - >1 Manchenlf>r-—A '(Aty of Village Charm Hit Waathtr rwaeadl ef D. ■. Weatbor Oama PneelMe showeps tonight. Fair, sHghtly eooler tomorrow. VOL. LXXII, NO. 287 (CUsolfled Advertlslug ea Pago 16) MANCHE.STER, CONN., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19.M (TWELVE PAGES) PRICE FIVE CENTS Iran Granted New U. S. Aid Denver, Sept. 5 (/P)— Preg-, Went Eisenhower today granted the new government of Iran 45 million dollars in emergency economic aid in an obvious move to prevent any i Iranian alignment withRua-j eia. Ike .^oto Swiftly The President acted just 10 days after Prime Minister Fatol- lah SSshedi appealed to him for swift assistance, saying Iran's treasury waa empty and that money waa needed urgently to en- able the country "to emerge from « state of economic and flnsncial chans.” 1 Last Tuesday Elsenhower made public a reply assuring Zahedi the United States would give ''sympa- thetic consideration'' to his appeal. Today the summer White House Issued this statement: ■'In reapohae to a request for urgent aaaiat'ance from the new government of -Iran, the-Prestdent haa made available on an emer- gency basis 48 million dollars which ydll be used for the imme- diate ernnomlC\saaiatanCe of Iran In accordance with the procedures of the Foreign Operations Admin- Puollah Zahedi Ike, Dulles To Review Asia Policy Denver, Sept. 6 (JP)— Pres- ident Eisenhower and Secre- tary of State Dulles will meet nere tomorrow for a foreign policy review with special L-mphaHifi on developments in Indo-China and other Far East areas. While House Silent Arrangements for the conference weia announced late yesterday by : the summer White House, which I declined to say why the session ; had been called. Washington officials said, how- ever, that It would deal with for- eign policy generally and Far East- ern developments in particular. TTie same officials said there waa no connection between the Elsen- h’owief-DuIlea meeting and the reac- tion abroad to some of the Secre- tary's comments on foreign Issues. They said Dulles arranged the conference several days ago bring- ing the vacationing President up lo date on recent_deveiqpmenta. T)iey 275 Americans Returned; PW Ends Tomorrow latration under the mutual secur- ity act. "Tbla-amount U In addition, to,., . ....... _ . .. existing United .9tatea technical, have not met since Aug. 10 when assistance and military programs "topped In Denver on ' In Iran. "There the Is grest need for Im- (Oontinoed op Page Four) Tension Is Mounting Over Trieste Issue Rome, Sept. 5 (4’)— Ten.sion mounted on both sides of the Italian-Yugoslav border today as the two nations j^ re d at each other across a pile of diplomatic protests itwrilving the -liitter Trie.ste dispute. Belgrade threatened ye.st^H^ay— in its in three day* - to • ' fourth protest rush its own tough troops to the Itsllsn border unless Italy hslted "provocative” maneuvers there. Rome Offers Reply Rome replied last night that Italian forces had taken only "pre- cautionary and pTOteetive meas- ures” The Italian note, however,, did not describe these meamires^ ’ With the final word thus the 7-day flareup of the old .ip^ar- West Germany Voters Ready To Cast Ballot Bon. Tfermany. Sept. 5 Drath Takea No Highway Holiday Rome *ald even If Ui'e Incident* campaign wound up today a* 3,7 were true they aeerned "oT very mUliim voters prepared to caat J modest nature” frir *o much hulls- ),„iiol» in what looked to the out- baloo / . giiie world like a contest between I On the oth/f hand, declared the a„d America. , Italian F«Wign Ministry. It has i c:hoire , hear.l n ^ in g from Belgrade to; To the average Onrman, how- dispel /Italy’s fear* that Yugo- . ^ver, there wa* no clear-cut East- ’ alavur plan* to annex occupation ^ choice such a* recent MOa- zopc of Trieste by force. | and Washington atatementa /The Adriatic frontier region, w'otild seem to Imply. ^ long disputed between Italy and The l;niled States: through Sec- Yugoslavl*. I* now an Inteina- relary of State Dulles, gave its tlonal Free Territory divided Into Thursday to Uhancellor two zones pending a settlement of Konrad Adenauer's pro-Western It* future. British and U. S. troop* ^ ConsetrvatiVe coalition government, occupy one section, including, the.' port, and Yugoslavia administers way bock from Korea and Japan to report on hia visit to those kreaa. Assistant White House press secretary Murray Snyder also an- nounced yesterday that Eisen- hower will confer here some time next week with Vice President Nixon. There was no Immediate word on the purpose of that vl.sit. Dulles told the American Legion conveption In St. Lztuis Wednesday that Red China might provoke a war between Itself and the Wes' by aggresiftn against Korea or Indochina. Other atatementa the cabinet of- ficer matie in that speech and j at a Washing.on ne\vj confeicn e' Thursday ton. bed off a itoriii of criticism in Weal Germany. Italy and IndU. And there ivere ilgns he | also may have mirtco Japan vi,h i his a'aleme^t that the United Slates 'wa* cai iyinx too big a load ^ on behalf of Japan. \ The Secretary made iiibstantial- ly the same statement at a news conference her* Aug. 10 after con- ferring with Eisenhower. While the new session with Ei- senhowar apparently had been ar-, ranged In advance of Dulles re- marks this week, It seemed the Secretary and the President might dlacuii at tomorrow's meeting the overseas reoetien to tb^ xe- fncliidH G«miiin Reds Prom ise Extra Delivery Panmunjom. Sept. .5 i/P) —A whopping 27.o AmericanK .streamed back to freedom todat and the rommimist.'t prom- ised to return another n o tomorrow, the !?:trd and final day of the big Korean war prisoner exchange. The second and laat Communist "bonus" delivery w ill* ------------------------ ------- ^ --------------- Automobile tratllc I* dangerous today—and doubly so during holiday periods, siirh as the l-ahor Day weekend. So bear In mind that your car— or some other driver's—con he a "Misguided .Mis- sile.” This arresting tralftr accident warning tvas erected near the main gale of Scott Field, near Eoat St. Ixiliis, III., for the benefit of airmen leaving the base on passes and furloughs. Dirksen Sees^^^y L iq U O r R u lc GOP ill Move ^ ^ Toward FEPt Stirs Controversy booRt iht number of Am^rii anA patriated to 283 mor€ than the Commiinlatii first prormaerl lo send berk .4hboiinre 'A f rrement Both aide* announced today th^y would complete the exchanjje to- morrow, The final delivery probably in- cliidea a email g^roup of Amencan Air Force and Marine pilots whom the Communists sard “confessed” to germ warfare rharge.s. The Allies said they would turn back on the last day 137 Chinese and 2.255 *Norlh Koreans, boosting: the total fe^alnaled lo 75,797 many more t^an 74.000 the U.sN. Qomma’nd first prorriised to r.etiun____ .V-. The Communists also promised to release .Sunday 1 South African. ' 8 British. 4 Turks and 1 Japane.se. Thi.i will r{iise to 12,753 the; number of Allied POWs returned. 10 short of the 12,763 the Commu- ' j msls said they would liberate. But the Reds have sin« e said \ more than 20 non-Koiean and 300 Korean prisoners refused repatri- ation and will be turned over to i the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission for disposition. I Both sides said the final figures 1 would include all prisoners who Dean Sent To Tokyo; Plans Rest Washington. Srpl. .V (.Ti Sen. j Dirksen (R-llli predicted today Washinglon, Sept. .5 l /P )— Some liquor industrv .^poke.smen Tokyo, Sept. r> iJP)— M tj. Gen. William F. Dean, liberat- ed ye.«ler(lay after more than three year.« in Communist pri.son.s. checked in at Tokyo Arrn\" Hospital todav where Tie plariheW f o r 'a 'r e s t airid phv.sical examination before heading home. Doctors dp.scribcd Dean's appe- tile a.s "amazing ' S4'hc(liil**s S'cwH C'oiiferenre He ha.s .srheduird his se<on<1 news (onfeieni e for Sunday m tht hospital auditorium The thin but apparently healthy form»*r (ommander of the V. R. 24th Division flew here this morn- ing’ from Koren after In.sperlinR an honor j*Tiarrt ai Fu^hth Army head- want to'return, in<’Uidin(f any who Seoul, had changed their mind at the last! ^ Before boarding a BIT for tha ,5-hour ftijcht lo Japan. Dean drove While the Reds held back until . sli eeis of South the very last airmen they charged Kore“"» capital smiling snd way- marks. The reaction .... i joined voices today with temperance advocates in condemning spread bacteria over North Korea, i Ibovisands of Korean* who RepvibUcan* will attempt to and Air Force'regulations allowing hard drink.s to the u. .s. command waa doing e^a-i^« to commissioned and non-commissioned officers on ' u i.n 7 % V ° camp wept (Oatlnued on Page Four) the other. Exchanges between Italy snd Yugoslavia over the issue have grown more bitter in the last few days despite expression* of con- fidence by leaders of both coun- tries that the new flareup wrtiild not lead to anything ciltical. West- ern oiplomals have urged a policy of calm.. Yugoslavia charged this week that Italian engineers were digging trenches and biiiiding pillboxes along the border and Italian tpnk.s were massing at Gorilza. Tile town Is not far across the frontier from the Yugoslav village of OkralagHca where. Yugoalav President TItn will make a mslor speech Sunday. Italian fears that TItn would use the occasion lo announce sn- . (ronllniied on Fag* Four) New England’s Long Hot Spell Coming to End passage of Fair Employment tices Commission (KEPCi legi tlon in the next jession of Con- gress. Abandon Kequiremrnt t"". approval Dirksen s prediction came after ; But other lawmakers, asking not th« Agriculture Department sn- militaiy [>oats. - There were expre.saions of con- a T I corn " from members of Congress 1*$ll V tl*CCl irvatri’e c Russia, jkthrough - .the official ____ ________ news agency Tasa, called last night B.v THE ASSOCIATED PRESS for the defeat of Adenauer and hlifi The Weather Bureau **y* ibe program of rearmament in alliance blew England hot spell will i-on- with the West ' tlniie today with more high hu- ' mldlty but one saving feature may noiinced il haa^ abamloned a <on- troverslal requirement that banks which make farm price Mipporl loans must promise not to practice racial diacrirhination in employ- ment. The .Senate in the past has hol- lo be quoted by name, the hope that the furore down before Congress leeonvenes In January. Said one: ".Anything you aay publicly ort thi.s IS w r o n g " The Army and" Air Force an- nouneed yesterday sales of liquor by the drink or bottle will be per IZX By Army Balk On Communists Washington, S4»pt. 5 ,/T Sen. MrCarthv (R-Wisit today a.sked tied up Civil Righla •nutted to p«r4 *ana ovw 21 At bara by the Houae, largely berau Soiitbern Democratic fllibiisterp agatnat au< h meaaurea. Sen Hill lD-A!a» aai<i in a the Issue in tnnaorrow'a Parliimen tary voting perhaps the most significant eleetion in postwar Eu- rope could point out that both parties with any chance of winning ar^ anti-Communlat. The oppoai- tlon Soclaliata are Juat as strongly opposed to .Moscow ss Adenauer's Christian Democrat*. Weather Bureau advisory said that if the weather behaves *.s pre- dicted. today will be the last of the proloiiged heat wave. fool .Air Moves la Cooler air from the west Is ad- vancing alowly eastward and is ex- pected to move through New Eng- land late today and tonight with to ineasui'c.s of this character, Dirk«en .said he realizes the ^Southerners may talk at", ienglh against an FEPC bill, but that "n.' believes Republicans should try lo kc U i I measure to laiiy cut and lounges operated by blffcera' and non-commissioned officers clubs at post* in the United Stater, and it* .possessions. Such club.s, while on government property, are not government enlerpri.ses. They are run by their member* under service regulations. Hammers Schumberg. Washing- ton representative of the National Liquor ~ ' But lo the outside world the dif* |accompanying showers and thun- ference was this: The triumph of the 77-ye*r-old Chancellor's Christian Democrats would commit West Germany to his program’ of raising German troops for the proposed Weal (CkinllnDed on Page - ’Four) 20 th Oiiturv “ Man Without a (Country'' derstorm* Fair and cooler weather 1* ex- pected tomorrow and Monday. Three drowning* yesterday sent the death toll lo 43 since the hot spell began eight day* ago Kath- erine Rennie, 6. of Boston drowned In a pool at Cunningham Park in Milton and Confessor Perez. * Pii’erto Rican working on a fruit farpi in Cheahlre. Conn., drowned in Qulnnlptac River there. Leo A. McGonlgle, 24. of Boston, drowned while swimming *t Magnolia Beach. Manchester. Mass. Yesterday's higheat tempera- tures were recorded at Lebanon. N. H.. and Bedford. Mass.. 92 de- grees. Other highs were chartered at Concord, N. H., 91; Hartford. Conn., and Worcester. Maas.. 98 and BuTlinjfton., V t„ 89. The predicted /.shower* are not expecteff ■ to relieve appreciably the drought and- forest fire, aitua-. tiona In Massachuaetts, where esti- mates tiaye placed the CJCQP Idas at Package Stores (S.ss .such a measure to la n y the new policy wa.s" campaign pledge.* made la.'t y*:"- •>i*;;aliy: morally and ethically A ytriety of prnpci.sal.s ^^-rong.” Srhumberg went on to sav in a statement; ' nave been madej'^^that of whidi caU-forc-entsbliaftmcnWof a federal- (Continued on Page Seven) prisoner MaJ Dean, three years of Red cap- tivity behind him. arrived m Tnkvo Saturday on the first lap of the happy trip home. Freed Friday, Dean was sent to Tokvo Secretary of the Army Stevens to /.rmy . . Hospital for a phy.sical tell Senate inves.tigators w'hv the |checkup. He said he had no idea Aim y wpn't provide names of mill- | tary personnel who cleared civil- . ians suspected of Communist ac- tivities. ' . j Plans on Appeal Declaring it was ju.st a.« im- portant to find out who gave rlear- jnace to a Communist a.s it waa to locate a Rcr). McCarthv had said earlier he would appeal to Secre- tary of Defen.se Wilson or even to President Elsenhower for the in- formation. if necessary. 1 But he told a news conference the airhase near Seoul. D"an bloody Koje Island POW camp wepi as he .said farewell to Gen. riots. . .Nfsxwell D. Taylor. Eighth Army The U N . Command would not commander, and other officers snd confirm It officiallv. but Sunday’s i rep'.e.'entalives of the Republic of dehverv presumablv will include Korea where he was military gov- the riot readers. Including North • *«nor during the occupaticm. Korean Col. Lee Hak Koo. j As he started to board the plane. The communists' most famoii.s D'‘«n looked at a group of small Gen viftliam K. jjirl.s u ho had presented (Continued on Pnfe Four) Beiidix Trophy Fillers Heading Across Nation News Tidhits Culled from AP Wires "This 1* completely contrary to today-he hopes "we don't have to the announced intention of the Ei- go any higher than . ‘Stevens " aenhcj.wer administration to dis-: "Stevens had nothing to do with courage government competition that order." McCarthy added. ' But with private business. If the policy , we would like to have him come in is allowed lo stand, there will he Tuesday, if that is conVenient with • mass uprising sgaiqst the Re-1 him. to testify m a .closed session publican par),y and the mother* o f' of the committee about the sitiia- bovs going,'into the service wiU tion" lead it." ' The Investigations subcommit- In Clev'elaivl. Willism W. Mitch- tee McCarthy heads held four F r e n c h military negotiators agree to turn back to Cambodian command five battalions of native troop*. . . fffergy "one'^of the poorest paid professions in th* world's nshest nation. " says Na.-. tional Council of Churches. One killed, three burned in 82.70.UOO warehouse fire in .Man- chester. N. H. '. . . Vatican re- porta death of Roman ' Catholic, Bl^pp of Yungtsl, in Red China. rhiUppJne .troop* find. slteleipniC " (Continued on Page Two) (Continued on Page ."seven) Loyalty Pledge As Democratic ashinglo.n: 'Sept. S (Ah ^^Sen.» ing i« more than fiveanUlion dollars. 4^;^r**i^^mia.U,g^ F adeS der .Kdward.^. Calif,' Sept. 5 -fP'- The Bendix Trophy Race . now an all-Alr Force event started at dawn .today at thi-4 de.aerl ba with Lt. Col. Mtrhael C. Hor of, Fairmont. Minn . the to lake off' on the fli^hi;- to Dayton. Ohio. ^ Horgah waa the/^irst of 10 Sabre jet pilot.9 ap4feduled lo leave a( ro minute iptervala. atartinp at 6 a. m . daylight time. He wav^heduled to make one ! stop fryt^uel at La Junta. Colo. Beilind' him. the takeoff order wiCs. f 2 Maj. Stevens H. Turner, slop- pin;: at Colorado Springs; 3 Capt. Jamek S. Carson, with slops .at Denver and Omaha; 4 Lt. Col Winton M. Marshall.’ Colorado Spring^s and Omaha; 5 Maj. Wil- ‘ lipjo T Whisnei. Topeka: 6 Maj William -J. Rvana. Albuquerque •him brtHffijiMs of fliSweis and said: ‘TaDanhi komapsupmida.” Korean for “thank, you very much." Wiih Dean on Ihe'fllght to Japan were two other repatriated veter- ans of the 24th Division, M. Sgt. Joseph Tupa of Honolulu, and Sgl. Alden Cook of Blijefleld. W, Va. At the airport to see him off was Col. Charles R. Rain, of Salem^ N. .1 . the former «xerutive officer of one regiment in the 24tb IXvi- iion when Dean was ' omm^der. Dean joked with R^dn and nudged him in the ^pib.s aeveral times. ./ Rain told Deaiv today was his birthday and t^an remarked: “I'm enjoying it A'^hell of a lot more than you (.Continued on Page Four) Bulletins from Ihe .\P Wire* ^ .. ... ; and Topeka. 7 Capt. John M,l eonv-entmn J Fit'zpaVrirV.’' ''T ^ Maj 4 lET PILOT SAFE Tokyo. Sept. 8 l.T)— A filer missing after yeslerclay's six Jql crashes "ualkeil out of the wiMxtV' unharmed tiatay as allll another .Air Force Sabre Jet crashed in Hokkaido, injuring the pilot. The Far Eoat Air Force said Ihe missing mnn. ciitighl in a violent atorm In. southwestern Japan yesterday, appariuitly hailed nut of his F6fi sahre over Ihe wild mountains John M ^ I*'""**- (iKF.EKS COl'.NT UJSS A the ns. G feeh«','”'RKpt;” 6’ (3VS»' Michael PatrMc O’Brien, today's "man wllhoul n rouniry,” hoa a rtumge In ncMiery In Rio de Janeiro,’Brazil, hut he's still without a country to coll hi* own. Previoualy he mode some 110 consecutive trips between Hong Kong m>d Macao on a ferry boat; authorittra refused to admit him at either port, because his papers weren't In order. Now O’Brien Is a pnooenger aboard the French liner Bretagne, and appears to be In for another scries of cruises. Brozll- llan authorities refuse to adnrit him even though l^e'hns a visa from Braoll's Hong Kong consulate. They say O'BrlAi Is an “undeslr- ahle,” and now he’s confined to the ship which soils Ivctwcen Oenno, Italy, and -Buenoa Alrea. He soya the worst part of his life Is the boiedon. How hnig heU be on the ''ahattle tour” lo hard to iny. 'Some 600 families in South Deerfield. . Maas, where outside use of water has been banned were reported in "dire straits" de- spite discovery of a well produc- ing ,80,000 gallons daily. Connecticut today could , look (Contlaued on Page Four) Herald lo (^rry Serie§ bv Oalis» NeW' York. Sept. 8 opi William N. Oatls. the AP correspondent who spent two years In a Czech prison, has written his own story. The byline "By William N. Oatis" will reappear in The Man- chester Herald. Monday. Sept. 14 over the first of a aeries of articles Oatis haa written giving a vivid deacription of hia ordeal. ' Oatia. a native of Indiana, Wrent to Prague in June, 1980, to b^ome chief of The Aiaoclated Preaa Bu- reau, reporting the newi of .Czec.hoalovakia."Hla efforta to get the newa would be coiiitdered nor- mal in any country with a frea pri graphical team. ... Atlantic hur- rica'ne 'Tarol" now within 2,80 miles of Bermuda. See new hope for settlement of Norwalk hat strike,’’ . . . British rector asks parishioners to pi ay for the Duke of Edinburgh, so that he may cure himself of hi* liking for playing polo or cricket on Sun- day.t Chinese Communists tiied ,aiid shot young Ameiiciin soldiei on false accusation that he killed a Chinese girl, liberated American risoner back home In Fitchbuig. ass., relates. ' ' Political revolution -in Maldlve | Islands, southwest of Ceylon, *1- | tribiilipd lo male resentment over new freedoms for women decreed by the deposed government......... Mrs. Diane Barr, Norris. 111., who ' will be 14 Monday, is mother of a | ton. Sen. Potter (R-MIch) says Oon- gresa should dtscuna whether to deny federal funds to schools whose teachers refuse to take loy- alty or non-Cummunist oaths. Dr. J. AVIlllam Watt, of West Haven, leading vejterinarian. is dead. . . Kansas City Jury. Indicts five union leaders on charges of « da Foca Twa) . T lovaliy pledge makes some Southerners erupt at the party se.salona in Chicago Sept. 14 and IS. .) Progress Reiiorted ■Stephen A. Mitchell, chalmran of the Democratic National Commit- tee, also repelled progress in heaj;_ ing the Noith-Soiith differences within Ihe party and said the meet- ing would not act on the pledge. But Mitchell declaied G«v. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina "haa read himself out of the party.” The' national.chairman spoke on; a CBS radio prcigiam last night. Byines. who supported President Eisenhower's'candidacy last year, announced he would not attend Ihe Chicago meeting. Douglas did not rule out the pos- .slbilitv that some Southerners who do attend may themselves bring up the future of the "loyalty pledge." If they do. he said. "It is highly Important that the people know what all the ahoutlng 1* about." Douglas in an interview denied nok- id 'be did nbU-' t-hihic- Che, .o rv.i r— q'lre Ir - Byrne*, '; and'■c f f i ’Ci^v/'Kkn^t^id'Yn- M ^;!’ The XIreeU government ,aid Ij» Junta. Colo. meeting would miss that, while sonic other. Soulhern Democrats were staying away, "there is no trend when four 'or five. (iOn't attend." He said a "great deal of pro- gress" has been made in reconcil- ing .Northern and 5?oulhern wings in the party. The 1952 DemfK'ratir conven- tion got into a roaring fight over proposed loyally rules. Sponsors said they wr.e designed merely lo prevent - a repetition of the 1948 situation in which some Southern slate ballots, listed '"Slates, Rights" <anclidstes. rath- er than lho.se cho.sen by the Na- tional Democratic Convention, as the Democratic candidates. Some Southerners, however, served notice they would resist any effort lo bind them in ad- vance to support candidates and platforms still to be selected. Rule Watererl IKtwn The rule finally adopted merely required delegates to pledge their Edward Johnston. The Winner will he determined on , Ihe basis of total elapsed time; from takeoff. All the Jets were ex- pected to reach +he finlsb pylon at Dayton In slightly more than three hours. , i They weie out to break the Ik.’il Bendix record set by Col. Keith K. Compton, who flew from Edwanl.s to Detroit at an average speed of .8.8.'!.86 miles an hour. The pilots were sllowe.l to make ' either one or two refueling slops at Air Force ba.se* along the way. ((tonllnued on Page Four) j day an official rnuni ahnwed' that 9.8 |»er «x-nl of the bulldinga on lh.1 'three quake-devmataled Ionian Nlnnds (lavr cnllapoed or are damaged beyond repair. embazzlement, asaaalt, and rob8 proper." he said, berji, Mitchell said the Chicago meet- that Northern Democrats ever had ; aid In getting the conyention's asked delegates .to national con- ! nominee* on their state*' ballots ventiona "to agree' In advance to ; under the Democratic party label, support candidate* or platforms ^And, ao far as the . 19.82 conven- that had not been agreed upon.” tion was concerned, delegates "That would be highly ini- were to tje excused from ' the (OoBtinned ob Page Tw6) 4. 1. . No Herald Monday Thr Manchester Eve- ning Herald .will not be publifHied on Monday, Sept. Idibor Day. RKE.Ak SOUND B.ARRIEB ■Nice. France, Sept. 5 lAh—-Twa Canadian Saher-)rt fighter planes broke, the sound harrier at S6,IH)0 fei‘l o*er Nice tnd%.v and caused a ncar-(fi»nlc In thia Rivlefa resort city. Firemen were callcd'/by frightened realdenia Mho thought three had been B gas rxpimion. i-PS .MOVIMJ DAY .Ajaccio, Corslra, Hept. 8 CTi—- The de|MMed Sultan nf Marorcn, his tun sons, three doughHra end two ys'lves were moved In- da.v from temporary city qnar- tent In a villa SO miles sniiUl of , this French Island eaplUll. RACEWAY PK4HIE SET New York, HepL. 8 (JD—Tha Slate MarnrM Kiu'lng Canaals* ■Ion today moved officially l« veallgote the Yonkers Raceway as a reault of dlsrloonrea nected witk tke unonlved olBjiag of union leader TbomBB P> ■/

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  • 1 ■ ' . V

    PAGE EIGHTEEN ilUmrlf^at^r !Ett^ning H r̂aUiFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1968

    About TownMr. and Mr*, thomaa Eagleaon

    Cf Green Manor Bd. have juat returned from a two weeka vialt with their daughter, her huaband and Infant eon, in Lawton. Okla. Pfc. Arthur Bogliach la atatloned at Fori Sill. The trip waa made by plane.

    Mlaa Doria Madeline Oondlo of '1 86 Oak St. and Misa-Kathleen

    Allen Olmatead of 669 Tolland Tpke. are among the 372 new atu*- denta who will reglater Sept. 22 at Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Maas.

    The Maglianeae Society will hold a regular meeting Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the lU l - 1 lan-American Club. At the close of the busineaa meeting there will be "merenta abichierala." All members ere urged to attend, a.s many important matters will he dtscussed.

    \ The Rev. Alfred L. Williams, lector of St, Mary's Church, is a member of the committee planning the annual Epi.scopal Clergy Conference of the.Dioceae of Connecticut to be held St^Avon Old Farm.s School in.Avon on S^ t , 9 and 10.

    ~Fai*ewell P a r lyF o r Miss Pease

    Legion to Seat New Officers

    Joint Installation Ceremony . for Peterson And Mrs. FairbanksDiiworth-Comell-Quey Post, No.

    102.“ Amerlcan Legion, will-hold a- Jolnt Installation of newly elected officers with its Auxiliary at the Legion Home on 20 Lsronard St., Tiiesday evening. Sept. 8, at 8 o’clock.

    Ê /irl C. Petersen will be Installed as 'commander o f tJie post.

    The Rev. ISorothy Wells Pease, who "has served as aide to The Rev. Clifford O. Slmp.son. minister of the Center Congregational Church Bince Septe.Tiber t>f 1947. and Is leaving for a similar position as Minister of Christian Education of the Central Baptist Church in Providence. R. I.. Sept. 1!5. will be honored with a farewell reception. Wedne.sday, Sept. 9. from 8 to 9 p. m. In the Federation room of the ehurch. All of her friends in the parish and town are eordially Invited to drop In during the reception hour.

    A graduate of'M ount Holyoke college and Andover - Newton Theological School, she was ̂ ordained in the'Flrst Baptist Church, Melro.se, Mass., and served that church and others of fhe 'rtchdmi-' nation in Springfield and W^ake- field. Mass., al.sp in Roehester-, N. Y. before coming to Manchester.

    Mi.s.s Pease was instrumental in organizing the Manche.ster Council of Church Women and served as its first president. She has al.so "beerr arttv-e in other local and out- c f town women's organizations.

    Earl Petersen(•'Allot Photo,

    i- Mr. Petersen was bom and ' brought up in Hartford and was j "laduated from Weaver High ! School in 1933. Shortly thereafter , he joined the TYavelers P'Ire in- ■ surance Company with whom he is presently employed as Supervi.sor of the Reinsurance Department. During World W ar TI Mr. Peter- .sen was an Aviation M.P. in the Ninth A ir Force with the grade of.

    Sergeant. Ha served for almost three years In ths Buropsan and American Theaters and was discharged in November o f IMS.

    Mr. Petersen has been very active in the local Anterican Legion s'noe Joining in IM S and haa held office as adjutant and senior vice commander and served frequently ss d istrict and Department delegate.

    Past Commander Francis F. Miner, chairman o f the Installation Committee has announced that in.vtallation will be carried out by officers o f the Department of Connecticut under the commander- ship o f James H. Steinaon. {

    Officers snd representstlves of | many Legion Posts in ths State i and other Veteran organlaation.s | are expected to attend, as well as representatives from various Mah- chcater organlaationa and the town. government.

    77ie complete listing of officers , as released by Past Commander ' Miner Includes: commander, Earl

    j C. Petersen; senior vice comman- •' d»r. Robert T. Petersen; ^junior \ j vice commander, George A. Sco- 'I villr; adjutant, Henri Pe.ssini; fl- I nance officer, Kenneth Wlgren: i Service officer. William Downey; ;

    I chaplain. Harold Olds; Executive | Committee membera, Rene Gosse- .

    1 lln. C. L. Wlgren.Several of the neighboring posts

    and units have been invited, ns well as local patriotic organlza-ij tions to attend the Auxiliary in'^ stallatlon.

    Mrs. Wilber Little, past president of the unit and second vice- president of the district, wdll head the installing team canslsting of

    —past' presidents-of-the iHvlt. -Mrs. Theodore Fairbanks, whose

    husband is past commander or the Legion Post, will succeed Mrs. > Ra.vmond Gossriin as president of the. Auxiliary.

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    VOL. LXXII, NO. 287 (CUsolfled Advertlslug ea Pago 16) MANCHE.STER, CONN., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19.M (TWELVE PAGES) PRICE FIVE CENTS

    Iran Granted New U. S. Aid

    Denver, Sept. 5 (/P)— Preg-, Went Eisenhower today granted the new government of Iran 45 million dollars in emergency economic aid in an obvious move to prevent any i Iranian alignment withRua-j eia.

    Ike .^oto SwiftlyThe President acted just 10

    days after Prime Minister Fatol- lah SSshedi appealed to him for swift assistance, saying Iran's treasury waa empty and that money waa needed urgently to enable the country " t o emerge from « state of economic and flnsncial chans.” 1

    Last Tuesday Elsenhower made public a reply assuring Zahedi the United States would give ''sympathetic consideration'' to his appeal.

    Today the summer White House Issued this statement:

    ■'In reapohae to a request for urgent aaaiat'ance from the new

    ■ government o f -Iran, the-Prestdent haa made available on an emergency basis 48 million dollars which ydll be used for the immediate ernnomlC\saaiatanCe of Iran In accordance with the procedures of the Foreign Operations Admin-

    Puollah Zahedi

    Ike, Dulles To Review Asia Policy

    Denver, Sept. 6 (JP)— President Eisenhower and Secretary of State Dulles will meet nere tomorrow for a foreign policy review with special L-mphaHifi on developments in Indo-China and other Far East areas.

    While House Silent Arrangements for the conference

    weia announced late yesterday by : the summer White House, which I declined to say why the session ; had been called.

    Washington officials said, however, that It would deal with foreign policy generally and Far Eastern developments in particular.

    TTie same officials said there waa no connection between the Elsen- h’owief-DuIlea meeting and the reaction abroad to some of the Secretary's comments on foreign Issues.

    They said Dulles arranged the conference several days ago bringing the vacationing President up lo date on recent_deveiqpmenta. T)iey

    275 Americans Returned;PW Ends T omorrow

    latration under the mutual security act.

    "Tbla-am ount U In addition, to ,., . ....... _ . .. „existing United .9tatea technical, have not met since Aug. 10 when assistance and military programs "topped In Denver on 'In Iran.

    "There

    the

    Is grest need for Im-

    (Oontinoed op Page Four)

    Tension Is Mounting Over Trieste Issue

    Rome, Sept. 5 (4’)— Ten.sion mounted on both sides of the Italian-Yugoslav border today as the two nations j^ r e d at each other across a pile of diplomatic protests itwrilving the

    -liitter Trie.ste dispute. Belgrade threatened ye.st^H^ay— in its in three day* - to • 'fourth protest

    rush its own tough troops to the Itsllsn border unless Italy hslted "provocative” maneuvers there.

    Rome Offers Reply Rome replied last night that

    Italian forces had taken only "precautionary and pTOteetive measures” The Italian note, however,, did not describe these meamires^’ With the final word thus the 7-day flareup of the old .ip^ar-

    West Germany Voters Ready To Cast Ballot

    Bon. Tfermany. Sept. 5 —

    Drath Takea No Highway Holiday

    Rome *ald even If Ui'e Incident* campaign wound up today a* 3,7 were true they aeerned "oT very mUliim voters prepared to caat J modest nature” frir *o much hulls- ),„ iio l» in what looked to the out- baloo / . giiie world like a contest between I

    On the oth/f hand, declared the a„d America. ,Italian F«W ign Ministry. It has i c:hoire ,hear.l n ^ in g from Belgrade to ; To the average Onrman, how- dispel /Italy’s fear* that Yugo- . ^ver, there wa* no clear-cut East- ’ alavur plan* to annex occupation ̂ choice such a* recent MOa-zopc of Trieste by force. | and Washington atatementa/The Adriatic frontier region, w'otild seem to Imply.

    ̂long disputed between Italy and The l;niled States: through Sec- Yugoslavl*. I* now an Inteina- relary of State Dulles, gave its tlonal Free Territory divided Into Thursday to Uhancellortwo zones pending a settlement of Konrad Adenauer's pro-Western It* future. British and U. S. troop* ̂ConsetrvatiVe coalition government, occupy one section, including, the.' port, and Yugoslavia administers

    way bock from Korea and Japan to report on hia visit to those kreaa.

    Assistant White House press secretary Murray Snyder also announced yesterday that Eisenhower will confer here some time next week with Vice President Nixon. There was no Immediate word on the purpose of that vl.sit.

    Dulles told the American Legion conveption In St. Lztuis Wednesday that Red China might provoke a war between Itself and the Wes' by aggresiftn against Korea or Indochina.

    Other atatementa the cabinet o fficer matie in that speech and j at a Washing.on ne\vj confeicn e ' Thursday ton. bed off a itoriii of criticism in Weal Germany. Italy and IndU. And there ivere ilgns he | also may have mirtco Japan v i,h i his a'aleme^t that the United Slates 'wa* cai iyinx too big a load ̂on behalf of Japan. \

    The Secretary made iiibstantial- ly the same statement at a news conference her* Aug. 10 after conferring with Eisenhower.

    While the new session with Ei- senhowar apparently had been ar-, ranged In advance of Dulles remarks this week, It seemed the Secretary and the President might dlacuii at tomorrow's meeting the overseas reoetien to t b ^ xe-

    fncliidH G«miiin

    R e d s P r o m i s e E x t r a D e l i v e r y

    Panmunjom. Sept. .5 i/P) — A whopping 27.o AmericanK .streamed back to freedom todat and the rommimist.'t promised to return another n o tomorrow, the !?:trd and final day of the big Korean war prisoner exchange. The second and laatCommunist "bonus" delivery w i l l* ------------------------ ------- -̂--------------

    Automobile tratllc I* dangerous today— and doubly so during holiday periods, siirh as the l-ahor Day weekend. So bear In mind that your car— or some other driver's— con he a "Misguided .Missile.” This arresting tralftr accident warning tvas erected near the main gale of Scott Field, near Eoat St. Ixiliis, III., for the benefit of airmen leaving the base on passes and furloughs.

    D irksen S e e s ^ ^ ^ y L i q U O r R u l cGOP ill Move ^ ^Toward FEPt S t ir s C o n tro ve rsy

    booRt i h t number of Am^rii anA patriated to 283 mor€ thanthe Commiinlatii first prormaerl lo send berk

    .4hboiinre 'A f rrementBoth aide* announced today th^y

    would complete the exchanjje tomorrow,

    The final delivery probably in- cliidea a email g r̂oup of Amencan Air Force and Marine pilots whom the Communists sard “ confessed” to germ warfare rharge.s.

    The Allies said they would turn back on the last day 137 Chinese and 2.255 *Norlh Koreans, boosting: the total fe^alnaled lo 75,797 many more t^an 74.000 theU.sN. Qomma’nd first prorriised to r.etiun____ .V-.

    The Communists also promised to release .Sunday 1 South African.

    ' 8 British. 4 Turks and 1 Japane.se.Thi.i will r{iise to 12,753 the;

    number of Allied POWs returned. 10 short of the 12,763 the Commu- '

    j msls said they would liberate.But the Reds have sin« e said

    \ more than 20 non-Koiean and 300 Korean prisoners refused repatriation and will be turned over to

    i the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission for disposition.

    I Both sides said the final figures 1 would include all prisoners who

    Dean Sent To Tokyo; Plans Rest

    Washington. Srpl. .V (.Ti Sen. j Dirksen (R -llli predicted today

    Washinglon, Sept. .5 l/P)— Some liquor industrv .̂ poke.smen

    Tokyo, Sept. r> iJP)— M t j . Gen. William F. Dean, liberated ye.«ler(lay after more than three year.« in Communist pri.son.s. checked in at Tokyo Arrn\" Hospital todav where Tie plariheW fo r 'a 'r e s t airid phv.sical examination before heading home.

    Doctors dp.scribcd Dean's appe- tile a.s "amazing '

    S4'hc(liil**s S'cwH C'oiiferenre He ha.s .srheduird his se

  • h

    MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953

    Coventry .

    N ew Sch o o l B u s R ou tes A n n o u n ced by P r in c ip a l

    No Herald Monday

    The Manchester Eve- ninK Herald will not be published on Monday, Sept. 7, I.abor Day.

    Bolton

    Vote M a k in g Sessions S e t; M u st L iv e Y ea r in S ta te

    North Retracts Loyalty Pledge For Democrats

    M A N C H E S T E *

    S T A T E SUN.'^"'TUES.

    Bolton, Sept. 5 — (S p ^ U l)Coventry, Sept. 5 (Special)— "-down Cron* and Hljfh Streeta and T>art two in the Dating of the j Fla^nd^ra Road^•Coventry school bus schedule, be- ̂ ̂ ,es.sion. return from Wind- gun yesterday, follows: jham by Route 31, Pine Lake

    Route 4, Wilton L. Rose, driver, 1 shores, include 11 first graders for morning session, first pick up at Center School, pick up villsge chil- Grange Hall on 44A at 7:30 a. m. dren to Robertson School with no to Swamp Road, stop at corner 'stop at Red House as these pupils Bread and Milk Street down go on Wiley's bus. .!Swamp Road. South Street, stops Noon trips, leave Center School ■corner Daley Road, Hinkel's devel- at noon with village children, opment, Gerald Park. Lakewood i2:10 p.m., leave Robertson School Heights, Robertson School at 8 for corner South Street and Daley a. m. Road; return to Robertson School. |

    Robertson and Brick Sihool 9 At 12:30 p.m. return a.m. session ..., ---------- ------------ - ------a. m. session, leave Robertson children home with a.m. route re-j lonal Alcoholic Beverage control N f •R*School at 8 a, m. for North Coven- versed. Assns said the loss in revenue to 1trv. pick up Brick School pupils,' Afternoon. Robertson School “̂ ^fnr sixm onths are eligible to beRoute 31 to 44A, Swamp Road to leave at 2:4.’) p.m. for village. Pine-'f'**^*" " I " be considerable and made voters. Naturailred aliensLove Lane, return, around Bread i.,ake Shore.'. Route 31 to Wind- j that some liquor dealers will be must present their citizenship pa-

    Ariiiy Li(|iior Rule Stirs (Controversy(OoBtiBMd from Pago One)

    ‘ ell, executive secretary of the Nat-

    i^during moiming worship on Sun-

    voters on the next two Saturdays whom ha may not have con-at sessions set for Sept. 12 and lacted.

    The Men's Fellowship of the church will meet in the parish room on Tuesday at 8 p m.

    Team Plays Hebron The local baseball team will play

    Hebron at the local school diamond tomborrow at. 2:30 and travel to

    Sept. 19 by the Board lor Admission of Electors, composed o f the Selectmen and the Town Clerk. Hours on Sept. 12 will be 9 a. m. to « p. m. at the Community Hall lihd on Sept. 19 from 9 a. m. until 8 p. m.

    The registrars of voters will also Columbia for a game on Monday be in attendance to register voters afternoon.In either the Democratic or Republican party. Persons over 21-years

    and Milk Street. Cedar S tv a m p ham, a m. route reversed, return- Road down Route 44 A. i ing Windham pupils home, a.m.

    Pick up 9 a. m. sc.qiion and Brick ' route reversed.School chibiren at Brewster Afternoon se.ssion children atStreet, to Grant Hill Road to Robert.son School 4 :4.’i p.m. return r'^J^Yiid be

    driven out of business. pers.However, a spokesman for the | i!‘ ' ! ! i o h e n e d

    mr""* ....la , la Walter and Thelma Burnett, whoBroadway and return. Route 44A pupils to corner Daley Road to j th'Tt” !)n*v'*rn Im"

    lervices,” «»nfl . a 7‘_ ___

    Manrhefiler RvMilnK Herald Bol> Ion ftorreftpoiMlrnt. Mr^. eluaeph D'ltalla. telephone Mitchell S*«VM5.

    WapphinHome (^are (Hass

    .Set bv Red ( ’ross, lage.to Experiment Faun to Brick

    School. l.,eave 24 first graders, re- Route 7. Henr.v Shlrshac, driver, j turn to 44 A to Brighaq^yavern, morning session children leaves River Road to Hamcrlin'^ return. 7:30 am. to Pucker Street, Bab-,Le'vis Hill Road, Cooper Ijine, cock Hill. Flandera Road. High Root Rond, last .stop comer Root Street to Robertson School at 8 Road, to Robertson School. Tmns- a.m.fer ?irst graders picked up .since Windham High route, leave, leaving Brick School to Earle Rose Robertson School at 8 a.m., pickI up 40 at Waterfront Manor. Lake- ' complete report from the Secre- ; available between

    armedconfidence that be tolerated In the handling these beveragea"

    Hill Asks ReportSen. Hill (D -A lai said in an in-

    tei;vlew:W ill certainly ask a full and

    Wapping, Sept. 5— (Special) — Local women may attend free classes In home care of the sick by

    will I the American Red Cross. The

    (Continued from Page Oue)

    pledge if it ran counter to state laws or parly rules. |

    Some delegates from Virginia. South Carolina and Louisiana refused to be bound even by this pledge and were nevertheless seated; ,

    Douglas said that the only question e im h v o lv e d was that o f delegates using their moral influence to have the national party candidates listed on ballots of all states as Democrats.

    •'All this does is assure that voters in each state at least Dave a chance to vote for the choices of the Democratic partj'.” -' he said.

    As an example, Douglas said he believes that Derhocratic gover- nora Byrnes and Allan Shivers of Texas complied with,the "loyalty pledge" during the last election even though they 'supported the Republican candidate.

    Douglas said the names of Gov. Adlal Stevenson of Illinois and Sen. John Sparkman of Alabama appeared on .the South Carolina and Texas ballots as the crntic presidential ticket.

    The Illinois Senator aaid

    SUNDAYMONDAYCanttnuauaA t2 P. M.

    Demo-

    sevenTrip To Ripley Hill | view Terrace,-Gerald Park, Water- tary of the Army on the new regu- | a.m. and abovit 1 a.m,front Park, return to school, to lallons and their effect when Con- : days a week.Pucker Street to Windham. greaa convenes. ' Diocese Subdivided

    Robertson School 9 a m. session. ' Rep. Rees IR-Kan), an avowed | The division of the Hartford Ro- return from Windham by Bab- dry and chairman of the House man Catholic Diocese this week cock,"'Pucker. "Sonttr, Bunker Hlll.-rClvtl Service Committee; in a aep--!-into thrs* parts created a, Norwich pick up five first graders to Rob-|arate interview said he was "sur- 'Diocese comprising the counties of

    prised snd disappointed'’ and that Tolland, Windham. New London the new policy would "not be a and Middlesex. ITntll now, the local morale builder or a morals St. Maurice Chapel has been a '

    Noon trip around Ripley Hill. Cooper Lane to Boynton's up Route 31 to Old Turnpike Road, return DAlcy. R.QB.f) around Jake to BChool with last slop at BelleView or Lakeview Drive, depending on load. Arrive Robertson School 12:20 p. m. Leave at 12:30 p. m. tp return a. m. ses-sion children home with a- m. route reversed. l,asl stop at Grange Hall.

    Afurnoon trip to ileave Robert- *'on School at 4:4,’) p. m. to return p. m. .session children home with noon route reversed, lAst stop on Cooper I-aite.

    Christensen does the Brick School and 2:4.’) p. m. route.s from Robert.son Schools in the afternoon

    ■ o n ly . ............ .. ■ '■— ..........Route R Schedule

    Route 5, Charles Christensen, driver, 9 a.m. session, start at corner Route 31 and 44A at 8M5 a.m., down houte 31 to Seagraves Road

    "to South Street, pick up in Lake- wood Height.' and Lakeview Terrs co to Robertson School at 8:35 a m. Ivave at 8:30 a.m. for fli.st grade trip around lake to Center School at 9 a m.

    Noon trip return W iley’s am. session pupils to North Coventry, ; out Seagraves Road to Routes 31 and 44A to Bread and Milk Street around Cedar Swamp Road, 44A to home.

    Brick .School p.m, trip only, leave arhool at 2 pm. down Rivci Road to 44.\ to Grant Hill to Broadway, leturn 44A to Swamp Road, to

    ett.'on School for transfer to Earle Rose bus.

    Robertson School, leave at 2:45 p.m. for Bunker Hill. South Street. Thicker Street, Babcock Hill to Windham, return with Windham pupils, reversing a.m, route.

    Afternoon trip, leave Robertson •School 4:45 p. m. for North Coventry by South .St,, Seagravc Hd.. to Route 31 to Talcott Rd., return 31 to 44A to corner Bread am! Milk .St., to 44. Tlien to Grant Hill

    -Rd . ■ Bioadway-, -return 44A-along to Experiment Farm to Brick .School, return 44A to Brigham Tavern to Hammerlin’s, return to l.,ewis Hill Rd.

    Manchester Evening Herald Coventry rnrreapnndent, Mrs. Charles I,. IJttle, telephone P ilgrim 2-A2.31.

    members of' and expreased i "roviai^’d algn was iiaed to Inform no iooaenes.s wll

    1-ocated on Route 44-A Just east of the bridge arron* Bollon l^k ebrooh, the new dining epot w ill ; i p̂ua ^ninnia sAid thef.peclali*e in light hmchee. eoda | clasaeA will begin Sept. 14 J^V apU ttiU ^roiie beraunefountain aervice and ice F PARENTS* M AGAZINE

    / ''M IG H T ROAD"with DO'tOTMV d ANBRIIMIE

    "S iA L A G 17”|iius

    •THE I MARKSMAN** |

    builder."One lawmaker with military ex

    perience said the situation was ticklish because:

    'The veterans who have been In the services and have hair on their chests, think the men can handle their liquor. And the chiirchwomen

    certificates and pinsAppointments for the clas.sea

    may be made by calDng Frank Masinda. local chtrman of the Red Cross at 8-2514, or Red Cross headquarters'at 'Hartfdfd 7-78917” ','

    Church NotesThe Drat fall meeting of the

    ,..apel has been a ' Rosary Altar Society of St. Fron- mlsslon of St. James’ Church injCia Church was held Friday nightManchester but will undoubtedly be administered by a parish in this county In the near future.

    Mass will be celebrated at St. Maurice Chapel,tomorrow at 8:30 and 10 a.m.

    The firemen's drive for funds toand similar groups are fighting obtain a reaiiacitator has had twoany sales o f liquor, or even beer." — Another,-«n evcnfantryman, put it this way:

    "This is full of political dyna-

    in the church ba.'ement. The an mini trip 'to a shrine for members and ladies of the church was discussed.

    Members of the society are reminded to wear their badges to the 8:30 a.m. 'Masa tomorrow when they take Holy Communion.

    I,eglon To MeetAbe. .E. ..Miller. .Ppaj.. Ah'*rj.can

    Legion will hold It.' first meeting

    Ellingtoneukoiid Visits

    Top Social FLvenlsWeekend visilir and varation

    ending.' marked the Ellington so-

    large subscriptions to date, both of them aignitlcaot, and aubstanr.Hal. Mrs. Esther Silversteln ofRoute 6 and 44 really started the of the season Tuesday evening at

    mite. I've been flooded with mail drive. Her g ift in the amount of 8 st the club rooms In Community on this liquor issue ih the serv- $50 wss msde in memory of her Hall, j ices. . . . \ , son. Jacob, who drowned Aug. 15, i Personal Mention

    "Anv comment you make on this I Mrs. Dwight Bsrber andjust gets vou into trouble " Yesterday Mr. and Mrs. Alexan-1 daughter. Mai-y, of New Jersey.

    However, Rep. Short i D'-Mq i. Corini contributed a simi-1 were the guests last week of Mr.I chairman of the Hou.se Armed amount in memors" of th eir; Barber s mother. Mrs. Msy Barber Services Committee, vomniented. >’‘’ ' " ’ 8 Robert, who lost his ' of Foster St. They have returned i " it ‘s better to have this siluatiou hf® last 1< rida,y in Bolton Lake. Mo their home.

    1 under vontrol." f hurch Notes ----i Unofficially, high military o f f i - ' t\mi\nimion will be admlni^stered ' cials summed up the philo.sophy of I nlted Methodist Churchwor- , the new system this way: •'►'■P serrice tomorrow at 10:45

    "Some of the men are going to ** Rev J. Rivhai d 1 eager 13.4419.I drink anywav so we might ss well deliver the wommunlon andI make it poaaible and attractive

    Manehem SHOW! Tony I MflU I I'lvaa- H o u d in r

    _I ^Hsn., SO "SlrsBKer W'nre A (fsa** p1u« ".Wais Street Ti« Rrnad**s>'* Air rnndttiANed Free Psrklnr

    Haitfonl. ( ’onn. iJ*) Connull- cul i» i-un'Kiering a strrner policy towai'3.' lawhrraking t e e n a g e (Irivera Too many of them, aaya Motor V e h I r 1 e a Commi'aioner Etarg

    Clair# Trrqttf“Stranger “ Main

    YVore A Street ToGun” Broadway”

    la rolor aad l-llB']0-«1:40-I0:l0 1:M - S;M - H:U

    -MfMleni. And. Did Faahloii«dDANCING EVERY

    SATURDAY NIGHT City Vltw Done* Holt

    490 Keeney Ht., Ho. Manchester PH IL (iRBeKN, Prompter

    Route 6 and 4 4 -A

    Bolton,Conn.

    NOW i :n d e r n e w o w n e r s h i p j lV OF AN TH O N Y F IAN O A {T f '

    ' . Y ̂ AND SONS

    ORCHESTRA FOR DANCING EVERY FRIDAY ond SATURDAY

    9 P. M. to 1 A. M.on one of ronnecHcut'a largest floors

    AM PLE FREE PARK IN G SP.^UEW * Cater To Weddings, lonquets and Parties

    Seating Ua|>acity 400 'For Reservations Call .MI-9-8fl'I.$

    FINEST FOODS a«i LE6AL BEVERAOESWe Featnre

    ML Ct f l l Wonderful Itolian CookingLuncheons and dinners served dally. Slop In for a bite to eat and yoor favorite drink before or after the movies at Manchester Drive-In nearhy.

    OpaR SuRBays 12 to 9 P.M.

    JMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu

    I you’ve 001 a Date! _ , 1S And what better place to spend it at than Club E = Chianti. Whether for a meal or a cocktail or two. E E you'll thoroughly enjoy yourself here. OTHERS E I HAVE AND SO WILL YOU! |i MUSIC BY THE i SLIGHTLY TERRIFIC

    I LOU JOUBERTHAVE YOU TRIED OUR i . LA PIZZA LATELY? |

    AIR-CONDITIONED I

    Club C h ianti 14 DEPOT SQUAREn iiiiiiiiiiiit iiiiiiiiim iiin iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiit im iiiiiiiiiu lf;;

    e^liNDwIN ThEMRI 1

    AIR.CONDITIONED

    ■)'

    GOING PLACES? DOING THINGS? <A

    Anvlhintr you miKht plan is more fun when it Z starts with a {food dinner. Sometime oyer this lonR ^ weekend dine at Three “J”s. You will be served ^ the finest f«>od in a quiet, restful setting that will. ^ put everyone ih the mood for a memorable holiday. ^

    HKaK sr.\. ss4 MON. lUb M.*. Is "orr i.iMmr’ " i.ast posse”

    bor'D ay ‘

    Jeaiia Waa a Worker. A lso!" Reresaional Hymn. "O Maater, I.,e.t

    Me Walk with Thee "- Postiude, Marche Aux P'lsiVibeaux ;

    Srotsnn Clark.1 Work” I

    Flrat fthurcti of me of Mra. Gary Wlnalow. 99 White St. Hostessea will be Mr*. "Ralph Blodgett and Mr*. Earl Butler.

    'The church school will not oj^nuntil. Rally Day. K«PL *?•

    ' g t John's PoHah Nntlonal ” Cstkollr Church

    • St Golway StreetEev. Stephen Rtryjewsky

    Mis* O nm Skmlmca, Organikt

    THOSE BOLANDS HAVE GONE

    ^ 4 -

    1T;S0 a.m., Flrat Maaa. 9:00 a.m.. High Maqi-

    MW TW H u n M T -n !

    TKYW TUMr LOMl

    TNEWE lEEUNt IME M i l

    SEE THEM BEFORE YOU BUY

    / NEW OR USED CAR!

    It savM Bollart - - and makes sansa - - to shop at your eloso-by

    Maaobostor itorao! They carry the same aatioaally adyortisad

    braids of morchandiso--at the same prieas you fiad alsawbore.

    By Mvinc the cost of gasoline or bus faro YOU eomo out ’way

    abaads Think 6! tbo sonvonionca; tool When you shop near homo,

    you eaa eomo **just as you ara” in bauso d iw or slaefct. Fark-

    iag ii ao diffieulty (you can park frn ia many placM). You’ll

    got through and got homo In minntosi not hours. Next time...

    ovorytimo... shop at homo. /

    BOUND MOTOIIS"YOUn HOME TOWN NASH DEALir*

    349 CENTin ST— n U P H O N I MI.3-4079

    OPEN T IL 9 EVERY NIGHT

    E im tiu gMEMBEE OF THE AU D IT B l'R E A U OF r lB C L X A n O N

    OVER 10,000 C IRCULATION D A ILYA

    Rend the ada In Ihr Hernlit lo keep up-to-date - < « "what’a doing” In local alorca.

    V' -

  • MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONNv SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1953 PAGE FIVE

    PAGE FOU*1“

    MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 5, 1953

    e d s P r o x t r a

    is e(Continued From Pai(e Unr)

    (Contlmied from P a jr Onr) deparluro Aug- 28, Slick rtisoppcar- , ' - — , c(1 from n Tokyo Army hospital

    long he will aln.v in Japan. ,n(i was AW OL for six days. He The contingent of 27S Americans returned voluntarily and there has

    returned Sattirda.v was by far th** f̂ p̂ n np amimincement of chal'ges ft fg e s t gfroiip of U. S. troops sent plowed agatn.st him. hark in one day. AH appeared in Although he i.s not ill. Slick is good health. . being flown home w ith _a group of

    Tlte Reds also handed hark 24 nnd wounded repatriates.Britons and 1 Australian. 11 South . — :Korean soldiers and 2 South Korean women Red Cross worltrrs

    Tlie Allies delivered about 2,100 North Korcaji POW.a.. who.ttirn-il up with a new propaganda trick ns they arnved at the exchange po.nt.

    Instead of the u.atial shouting | and flag waving, the Reds w> re I ,called sharply to attention hy Uw j ( i H i i e r o ! H o U S e III IMS' leader of each truck, then bowed' their heads and wept in tinison. ;

    Three Ameiicans returned Sat-1 ilrd.ay were airmen who said they ir-fitsed .lohn Papineaii. who has beenthreats of death to confrs.s ' . . . . .they dorpped germ bombs. j tmahls to move , Into his new

    The three, niemhers of a B2fi. house on Qrandview, St. beciiu.se rrew' shot down in Fehruar.v. 19.02. [ f,f eontrovers\' between the town

    European Army, a project the ̂United States supports. I

    A Socialist victory, however, j would bring in a policy of unarmed ! nentrallty in the Cold War, which | Moscow' demands. _

    For most Germans, however, the

    New England’s Long Hot Spell Coming to End

    ' (ContinueJ From Page One)

    . Mass forward to at least a rainy startH o i l P w a s W a n i n g a s Fdimnre, W. McAbce. Capt., for the long iJibor Day holiday.

    l\ «*a r F n i l hu.-hand of Jeannette MeAhee, i>S7 i Showers and scattered tl'unrtf' l l iX C n a i lg r s IT C a r Il,ll4l Framingham, Ma.ss. | showers, bringing a very definite

    West Germany Hebron GI Set Free;Voters Readyj P r i s o n e r Three Years To Cast Ballot

    Mrs. Thomas Schaeffer HTsVris’Hsu_ , Vftsaalboro^Maine. He also is iiai-Speechl«»« at from 99 Aeb* SV, Waltham,

    MaaB.FMlmmr

    •No Herald

    Monday

    The Manchester Eve- ninj; Herald will not be published on Monday, Sept. 7, I.abor Day.

    Mrs. Thomas E. Schaeffer of John J. Dillon, 421 North Spring Hebron said she was "overjoyed .jj Naugstuclc, f*onn

    Kdw'srd Dillon. 2nd U . son of 1 break In the long hot spell, were

    Neŵ Petition Seeks Sewer

    For mcM«t Germans, however, the apeerhleaa*’ this morninff when Walter L. Mayo. Jr.. 1̂ 1 let., sonmain qnestton waa: Which policy ■ ̂ . , . » , . . . « / i xtovn fit Wind-offers the most hope of achieving »he learned that her husband, a V ^ A v ^ Watertown Mass that All-Oermsn dse.sm of reiinlt- prisoner of war for almost three ' , y wilkins Uapt USMO. ing both the Soviet-occupied East ' years, has been repatriated by the ' , . 'p H 'wilkin-iZone and West Germany in peace Reds in Korea 7 Wshssh Ave.‘ Worcester, Ma.ss.and freedom? Sergeant Schaeffer, a regular p 1st Lt hin-

    Tass said host night th.st the mo- „r,ny man lor the past thirteen ■ P '• • r .q,',ment Adenauer schleves his gyal of y,ars, was captured In the mass v ’ Ma Western militaO' alkan. e Tt will thdrawal of allied troops in 19.W. Washiiivton St.. Rochester. N. H.

    piilefl Traci .May Be ,\l»lc lo Gel Service

    bci-omc impossible to revive the unity of Germany "

    OiilleH Given Opinion Dulles ileclared Adenauei’a de

    feat wpuld bo diSH.strous for the prospects t»f Geiman unific’fltion.

    The Socinh.sts jumped on Dulles' .statement with Mich fury that U

    H i was taken prisoner on .-nov, ; s, 171011,nshu.'^baiui of Grace A. Schaeffer.

    nie announcement of his release Hebron f'onn. , , , ,cfm e to Mrs. Schaeffer as hope Jo.sonh I.anilicrl. M Spl., li.n- w s beginning to wane. " I was hniul of \ lolet Lambert, Birch .si., v frv discouraged yesterday. The Leicester. Mass.ex'hnnge was coming lo an eni^nnd John M. EIwcH. Rgt. l.̂ t ., luis- hi name had not appeared op the b.ind of Mrs. John M. Elwell. 7

    Vernon .9t.. Baldwinville, Ma.s,s.became the hottest i.ssue of all in Rj s." she told The Heraldthe closing days of the lanipaign. drs. Schseffer last heard from .loseph Magnanl. l.st Lt., hus-

    They accused the American Sec- pf . hiijband, an infantry master , liand of. Norma Magnant, New retary of State o f'in tolerable" in- .se.geaiit, last May. She received a Vorl; I'lty ami son of Arman i

    ..................................................... . terfercnce in German dome.'tic a f - • je ter from him written in March yjacnanL 109 Bullard St., N 'wwere C'apt. Byron A. Dobbs. .1,1. of 1 , in w hose 1 fn i'" and cliarged jie not only wa.s at d not marked with any prisoner , Peilfo'r.l. Ma.ss.Clio. Mich,; Lt. James L. Stanley, ‘ re. in vxno.se | Gorman voters of war Camp number. ............24, of Decatur. Gft.; and S. Sgt. , Iracl his house is located, rnav ^ attempting to lor- RuthlessRichard Abbott of Wcllsville. N. Y. I sooa be able to look fiyward to ! peiln next month s proposed four- idarlter letters indicated he was

    They said- that for about six an-Improvement in hi.s liick. | power conference on Germany's at Camp .1, a camp from whRhmonths they were kicked, slappe,!. ; panineaii has been-'atvmied so I shocking POWstripped naked and forced lo stand ■ J ' ' . | Socialist Icailers clmmcd and st( ries have comeimdcr driving rain, thrown into fsr he< au.se of a - ly k -o f sanitary 1 American officials privately

    on the weatherman’* agenda for today.

    I''alr and much cooler weather was forecast for tomorrow, with a ’ possibilllv of "more of the same". | on Monday. |

    ,\nd n.s the holldv got under way, h one traffic death on the rec-

    J.-senh F. Breton. Ist Lt.. hiis- o'-I latc. Riirial will he In tlie East

    valion as,',a , vveapongjjto

    Iieople of Iran."It is hoped that, with our as-

    .Sislanee. there will be an increase ■

    The couple met and lied Cemetery.while both were .stationed at Carrip Blanding. Fla. .Mrs Schaeffer

    in the internal stability of Iian ^as then a Vv'AC. which will allow the development

    I of a healthy economy to which an 'early effective use of Iran's rich nil when he deliaiks. "M >sl

    Friends may call at the funeral home Monday evening from 7 to 9 o'clock.

    Mrs Schaetfei was . not Hiire to- dav t'U*. exiiects she wilt meet li'-r

    resources will contribute."Ho|m» New Oil Pact

    Th.it was a clear reference to Iranitin oil and the dispute with ; ,.-,odestlGreat Britain which ha* shut off i Schaeffer Is a native of Lewis-the supply despite U. S. efforts to i town. Mont., and Mrs. Srhaeffer

    /oitii M-ao i -"I , - - a set-Uonient, } \.'as honvin WithmanTrr. "W e .areraini. via. •’ '"8 Shortlv after Iranian Rovalists ' no,,. \ i., stihaetf'r

    made to suffer through no fault of overthrew the government of Prime ! ""riVv The' . ouple itv e w th

    of Ills family isrm the west loa-s',." .a!ie sa"l "1 think he might like In

    me when he lands," she added

    Funerals 1

    Tt 9 'o‘( lot k m .̂ t. Janir.s' ( ’hui Hip Huuh«'. ̂ wa.** k

    I'tr. An( the Soviet orbit.

    ' They called me Slick but it was ' extend from 90 Grandview S t.' The White House .statement re-; Pclyaeffei's sister,, sâ ij all a mistake. " he said. "I never ; southeily past a vacant lot and ferring to the 4,1 million dollar Schaeffer plans to remain m the thp funeral home last night lo pa .- day above 90 and it was a warmsquealed dn anybody to the Com-| land mined by Bray lo Papineau's grant as an emergency allocation armv. He is a member of Co. 3; i.-ist respei ts 78 during the night. Howevemiinists." ; property. . . . ...................... —

    tried without succc.ss to find an Italy railed f*ie Dulles state- 948 propo.sal it meni a betrayal, urn the entire . The semi-offirial Yugoslav

    Adriatic free zone over lo Italy, new.s agency Yugoprras Inlerpret- Kiseiihovver had only one sche’ti- ed Dulles' words as a.saiiranee that

    Hied engagement today. with the Trieste question would be aet- Janie.s C. Dunn, the th S. Amba.s- lied In a way favorable to Viigo- aador to Spain. There was no ad- slavia's vital Intereala. viince word on why Dunn was Italian military headquarters si calling. Udine, coiilrollmg the frontier

    The Pie.sident made several have denied repeatedly that any ehange.s in While Hoii.se Staff as- Italian soldiers have crossed the

    ̂ 'jp. .signiiicnt.s ye.slerday in a move to freintiyr.Crops xll'chgtheii White Hiiiise liaison Rjj, |)iack and white inetal vjsrii-

    wilh Congress .,|gns in five languages viverrHe appointed Jack .Marlin, for- posted more than a year Hfr on

    merly chief aiile to the late Sen roads north, east and west of that Robert A, Tall nf Ohio, lo be one forward Italian defense base. In of his adminlstinlive a.'wistants Italian. Slovene, French, German and advanceil GeraM D. Morgan, and English, they say.' until now a secomiary aide to Ki- Restrictions listedsenhovvei. to the rank, of sdniini.s- ' "To Hike photos, films, make

    arrival nf the northeilv b eerea Uative as.ai.»tant. Both will work , dniwinga. sketchea and to use field and showers which cracked the ™ legislative matters. . glasses within a range of fiveheal vvavc in Ohio. Early today, the 1 Another a|ipoinlnient was that kilometers (three milesi behind reading was 60 and the foici.:ast-.of...M»j. Cleii... WdUiii-B-—)'’-e>rsoivŝ ■-tkla-alfto.ia-.aLricU.y .forbidden, wa.s for cooler weather. Tempera- presently a special nssl.stant to the Guards are stationed to see thsl tiires dropped 13 degrees in l.'i, I’ lesldent, to be a deputy assi.stant. the rule is obeyed, minutes in Cincinnsli, which re- Persons will serve under Sherman Roughly the area covered hv theported a high o ' 93, Adam^i. Eisenhower’s chief aide, sighs is a belt rest of Udine, about

    That was the general pattern Of r ith the aim of relieving Adams of M mile* from the Yugoslav fron-the weather thro'ighout areas get- soiiTe of his work load tier, running north to the Anstrlan-

    thmiigh the lower Mississippi . . .VHllry «n.l moM o f th^ uppor Ohio 'VaII**y. Showers Hoc'ompnnio»I the \ 'cool air atvI temprrattirea thro\ij;hout most o f the miil-ron- tinent droppe was 97 in r iic a end 95 in Albany. New York O t ’-' -s hi"h was .̂5.

    F'or the O'st time in II davs the me*c»iry failed to reach 90 in Newark, N .L, hut there ua.® little

    Antonio relief with temueratures of 87 and humiditv of 61 per cent A h?'eak in' the. hot spell , was expected in New .Ier.se” around noon todnv.

    Washinjfton reuorted another

    Bcnclix Troi)hv___ •

    Fliers HfNulinjj ,4e ros.s Nation

    (Continued from Pbjc One)

    border, and a second belt 20 mile.® west of Udine along the Tajflia- mento River,

    These two belts have bee.n used* as first and second defensive lines ngamsl theoieliral invasion from the northeastr In most UsUsn-Army maneuvers for the past four years.

    Man) residents of the Udine region say they believe the signs are intended to prevent photographing of new defense works such as gijn emplacements and pillboxes

    Military authorities decline to confirm this. They say military fe- (uriiv m a frontier defense sone ( ould equ.illy mver such normal topographic details as hills, rivers, loads and bridges. t

    Ground crews were alerted to be prepared t(i refuel the .®hips and ma''e minor repans in three mm- tlle.s;.

    The Sabre .fet is powere^l by the Genera! Rlectnr .H7-27 jet e‘nftme.

    The Bundix Rae* is n feature nf Davton'.® National Airrra’ft Show,( ommemoralinK the .“rub Anniversary of power flight and Ohio's We wonder how

    -atatehorid sesquirentennial. ! seemed.

    An Oklahoma mnn who says he never drank, smoked or awore. rel- ehiatrdhis ninety-eighth birthday.

    long it realiy

    Slirk admitted' there was anl-, mosity in rt lo | Tokvo .'Vriuv Hospital, where he

    im7 Vn.'h< alo.'ri',r hu.spilal-i.s.sue pajama.-..

    to the new giant of t.5 million in emergency eennomir aid.

    Al)oiit Town

    ha l̂ been cleared.A -WHckman Intelligence f)ffi( er

    who broke lip the conversation said Slick was not in any kind of < u.s- tody and would, go home just like other returning POWs.

    Slick Not Wanted F'ellow repairmtos nboaid the

    AlUiougli r»ean appears hcHlthy. A lloy [)h\.sicians will give him a thorougli check before he can leave foT the United State.s.

    They jjaar compieUi-l-hcu^r examination .Sunday.

    A, hospital dietician said Dean was m excellent spirits with "an

    I..ady Robert.^ ledge \ydl meet Tuesday evening at 7/30 at the hmne of Mr.s. F'. H Parker, .30 .Academy St. Ho.ste.sses will be Mrs. ParlJer and Mrs Daisy Pot- tert^m- Members are reminded to bring prises for the mystery game.

    from hi.s son. a fighteF-bomher pilot. although young Dillon's com manding officer had written him to sav his .son had parachuted to safet’/ after his plane hurst into flames over North Korea la.st

    ; June.j Brother Ih ritot[ Dillon .said hi.s older son. Lt Uol..Tohn M Dillon also a pilot .siat-

    { ioned in Tokyo after completing 90 mission.s. had rea.sstired him ''because U looked good f̂ »r Kd- w ard" \

    F̂ a.sl Cemeterv.. 3 Âr̂ *'rs will h f ’ Oiepter Pmall

    Pvichaid Wa'lkins. Paul Kuchinski and Arthur Tremhiey.

    j Rockies after a couple of dav.s of •rnol weather. The' 7l at Great F'alls. .Mont,Thursday:

    compared to 44 on ,

    WE CAN USE YOU NOW FULL TIME

    Liitlicraii (]oiH‘lavc d'o Start Todav

    Beautiful .failLurcM Tourists

    Fast Point. Ga. The new$200.00 city jail in thi.« Atlanta

    •T. Philemon Anderson. aj»sistant for the past vear to Rev. Carl K.

    “ He wrote and told me \ot to Olson of Kmanuel Lutheran Ĵ bbtirh Ls so inviting in appear- worry.*’ he said. ^ • Church, will be toastmaster at the «nce that tourists sometime.s stop

    Dillon sa:d that his son had' banquet of the Hartford District seek accommodations, think-served a year in the Marine Corps. Luther I.^ague. which is holding >bg it is a hotel. 'attended New Britain Teachers its- 57th a'nnual convention here. Police Chief William H. Taylor CollegC'-and then enlisted in the Roger Loiicks, local tenor, w ill he helped design the pliish caiaboo.se A ir F'orce. two years ago. ’ song leader, and instrumental and I.s m igh ty proud of it but he

    . . » 1 1. . J ,» c- » i* o n His mother died shortlv after his mu.Hic will be furnished hv Clar- waivt.s to .scotch one report that'suraru ,.uuu. u. « . h .,u .-.m- k h- ron.-umad a „M^ak sandvv.rh, ' « Mr. and Mrs. Frank M .Spdianr , HHalnR and Barclay F. ffotten round. ‘ I l ’annt air-rondi-One of them said ™ ^ ' ' . The elder Diljon said his aon had ' Wood. . — ̂ ------------ ----- . .rtnned. 'the same as overybodv else ̂ le ping o T P*'‘ A " u ' n v . r. n a * i’oni'e home on fiiHough but snion- :The banquet spealvef -will be "I wiah it vsa.«." adds Taylor.

    The croup V ill leave Hu kanCl..- hosp.tal , , Ri>bert o f 160^.9rh•s.ns.les. Chatter ” U just smart

    Jesus

    strategy to change the topic of conversation.

    Say: "You look tired. Are you

    l.dsy. la.st day for-pupils if school ‘ Christ to what purpose are we because of an emer-building ? ■ gency.

    Are we laboring to accumulate June. 25, Friday, teachers to be » o i-w.-.” AI riche* of this world in preference , ,

    sure you re Al- ^ ,,, said . „ ,^ b School closesmost any man ulll forget a fr ix lK ' (,„hn 6:27i; "Do not labor for th e.j^^^ Windham Re-

    "m -D ing ^ .̂b,c)i periahe-s. but for thaU ,j; ,̂,bni

  • 1 1■

    PAGE SIX MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 195.̂A

    ■1 ■ ■ v :

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    ■it

    MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCrtl-:STER. CONN.. SATURDAY. SEPTE^kBER 5. 1U53 PAGE SEVEN

    tanri|pBtpr Ltipttitm ijpraUi

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    pbopla ahould go on a smaihlnR operation? WTiat I f the expected narrow margin of victory for Adenauer should really remain narrow, or turn into defeat? What right do we have to base our whole relationship with the nation of Rermahy upon th# vic lory o f one of its political candidates? I f we lose, what do we do then? Pretend that Germany no longer exisLe?

    Well, we do not seem in great langer of losing tomorrow. But one thing ran be said, and that is that if we rontiniie this busineas. c f making campaign apeerhea to the voters of other nations we are going to take losses again, as we have already taken one in Italy.

    Now the very strange thing about this particular performance on the part of Mr. Dulles, with its ttmo.aphere of toughness and .American intran.sigeance, is that there was an alternative kind of i smpaign speech for him to make, which might have been much more efferllve.

    Instead of such campaign bluster. Secretary Dtilles could have gone nto an interpretation of the latest three power note to Russia on the aubject of the unification of German.v. In that note.

    .‘■elves, there ia always the unexpected teat, the new and perhaps atimulating stress, the experience jtfhlch ahirta and altera perspective. Suddenly, we find there U more In summer, or in ouraelve.s, lhan we expected. Suddenl.v, new resources, o f a aurpriaing nature, manifest themaelves, and the story that was almost closed takes on new tangents which requires the writing of a whole new series cf chapters. And, for all we know, before we are through, these ncA’ and unexpected chapters mav

    SstilrdaV, September B

    Under That_RogghSecretary of State Dulles is on

    m e of his tough oratorical rampages, which do not always indi-

    A few days ago, in these aoliimns, w e were thinking of a conclusion which wrapped everything up-and said: “ No aummer;” And that would have been tru', from all the surface experience and indications of that momcrl. There had been no aummer. There had been no fa.ste of heat, no s'li- fering of humidity, no touch of drought. The aummer was done, and there hadn't really been any.

    And now the chapter has hern written which dominates the ,sca- .‘ on and is. for emotional life and for sense experience, the whole aummer.

    In life, too, we suspect, there Is

    Conn^irtieut

    Nutmeg GratingsBy m SCOTT

    Old P«m lllar Pattern J tinued heatwave ** * ‘ "Pj*;This week we fall Into a familiar So many heat prostrations were

    come to ba the really big atocy of.-pattern. One that has been very ; reported In the ^ Pthe summer or the life. m ich in the news spotlight for the « ' ' ' * , "___a tft VA'rirwUjindfl WerC ClOROfl TOr I^Mrpast few daVB. W « tried hard to woodlands were closed __

    fijrht It Qff—even went through f ir e . . . itaU and municipal em- our fllea In an effort to locale ploye.s were allowed an eariy^ieavt something else of general Interest from work to escape the withering - hut alwava ended up with the effect of the aun. same outlo‘ *s.WTHT—MusicWHAY- Sports; Supper S*r*nsd*. W TIi'—

    That's what the tVestefn Allies ' most ferventl.v desired.

    Toward this end. Britain had !

    The slogan, “ the tax burden on

    So this Southerner sat in- our to know the forecast for ton i. it . Adenauer publicly that Oer ...................house the other night and drfpped .nd tom orrow '''’ ’ many could count on support of W K NB -N *»s: Sikm-is Sirsphook.house the other nigni ana ph and Tomorrow , ^er interests if she continued her i: ls WONS- Musical 8ccr*b lihbwers fe"l in iiJSpef “ANIOS-;] UUIICU «L n. w s p , . * I np SnOWPrB iril in Iippri /vit/vn-

    ‘ sT h ! "■* “ couple Of County. Maine near the Cana-

    sratlered thundershowers, " " y “ defenseless neutralization." «,ia-WDBC-8ports RounduR. scaueten inunnersno and praLsing the Chancellor's d e - , v-'ONS- Krenu.x S i»i.

    i wnUon-to tRa-causa of-paaca .over"-4 :4* -WTHT—Una Ms* Cxrllsl..

    WDRC—Nk.s,

    This, .while w e .stuck to .behind it.a demand which conalituted our One pressure group has

    device for avoiding any r e S 'o ^ 'I l^ i 'a l^ o ; ; : ! | ^ n ^:^quar^r:mne „,r*r SP-.ri..cuasion of the unity of (.ermanv. Their pre.ssure and championing his aectlon o ; pjrpi. miip* out in I-iong Island , P

    In the aecond of the.se com e.s- fl„pni e in the General A.s.semhiv ; to"fasten onwe conceded. Joe the first j has been devoted joyouslv to thVi | " " "

    pledge our.selvea not to prolong ' ’ote light at^ihe mvth about New F jigland, f '^ n t co or. They were made o ff

    The direct Dullea references to I the dire results which might ac-

    time, th .t the “ status of the future i P^easam end - . . t i n g a porUon j r^ ran s i.iu n ! r . , o : r v" : 7 hllrs:*'* f "Of thPir own duty collpctois of | ipUine him that we ,revenue and handing that function • v»o».a • UAUoht fni rhancft-of season* . ........... "i. .17 "_________ 'the ru ff ” without consultation

    Oerman government" was some- , thing that could be disc\issed at a prospective conference with Russia, What we have insisted. fore, was that the future Genuaiiv must be hound to the West in a special military alliani'^ .̂ This in- Mstence of ours has been the key thing \yh.ich has made Gernu.n unity irrifio.ssible. There was no reason unijer the sun why Rus.sia should ever agree to this kind'of German unity, in whiih the future German government would already be committed to a military, alliance against Russia.• Now We have draum back from _t]us insistence, and seem to be heading toward an admission that a future government of all many would have its own diplomatic freedom without automatic commitment to anybody. We may be suggestiog. too, that we are \nlling to diswg: Dancinc

    Ki,» at t*««t it'ji iust IS ' ' estsiTi obsetwer* were merely WDRC-Broadway la My Rf can hoid*r b,,t St l*a.n Its jus^ ̂ stxUment rsm « | w oxs- ,..mk ;,onrmsufferahle. Teihsps mor* so wnsn ^ - n.rnUf . ***1 rh*in ' WHAY—N*w«; F,msnu*l K.voii consider that we've been liv in g '* " " PerniH a real chain ,:,s_wnAY-Am*rirsn M*—This Is Your l*ife.7;30—Arthur Murray Party. S.Otl—Sammy Kaye.

    •vnat''nr Hncr,*;00—Saturday Nivht Ttaviaw.of the "Hillstowm 'Hustlers" 4-H ̂ ..........

    were verv active during the ' io ob—M»^anTon*Ttl#at‘er Fair at Bradley Field laat 10 30~Prtvate Secretary.

    Saturday rnd Sunday^ I^OftMldn^Vht*Thaal•r.Those who are eligible to fill out | i j o —Newa.

    Music. .u iiif*Mler of the J^. Record Review. X '

    -#«■!! rv. Shnw. y

    A meeting of the Grange was , npplicn'ions in the Youth Achieve-, necticut. takes the pains to reaW.p held at the Grange Hall on Thura- , rnent contest a>-e requesien lo . 5 op—Western Theater, that one great mam rea.son state 'Round Roijth Am^rira.* 00—J«rkl» (flaanoh Show.* fiO—Two For Monav. ft -to— Maft Mnn«« ■

    in 00—Madallion Th^al»r. uvna- 1» » NF«a To M*. 11.0(k—L*l»- Show.

    AwndayA. M WNHC10 15— Bibl^ Puppets.1 »r30- -Ml, VN izaro

    8up«r Ctreua.P. M.WNHC ’12:00—Kit raraon.12:30—Zoo Parade.1 :iV>-Kavorit* Storv'.1 ;J0- Kronil*!, nf Faith 2;00—T^nnia FhAippionahip. 4;.30r-Nam* a Th* B*m#..S no-R*cital Hall.5..10—Rhi Krwin.6:00—Mr. and Mr*. Norths

    Ar* ThiT*.00-^lMinrn*lltMahon»ya

    \

    niii-a can.im.gn s l a t e - ' ' Mac ; c " ' ' " L ‘" 'w I Mrs; 'Wslter F. .Forrest upon the T.at^Your Pliytwe., ' , . State Senator -Herbert .S. M «c-|G r,pg ,, Mrs. Evelyn H. Coughlin ;.. , fifth ■ ,nn on Sunday *;00—T..a»t, 01 Tii. Town,r. we would think. Jiughl - Donald, chairman nf a new Com- ( was Swarded the 6rst prize in the .lo V , f Z - sI Is > , - -oxt persuMive., ca.se Mr. niisaion to Investigate the Rela- goft Rolled Molasaes Cookie arid Mr.«. Forrest Is a tm ^W h m a My lilJe.

    ; 11:1S—Flr^aidf Th^Al^r.

    '*r-i u/iritfik

    Ihtnj;.* whirl! niok^ iis look wronir. | ̂ Pojriona Judging at. ■ Aftf»r n rathrr routine suRpes- I East Central PomonA Meeting

    We suppose there may !>e a pnr- for Ihe srope and dirertion of ̂ Hebron Grange on Wedne.sdav.P0x*rJrL tJiis.-nf a . snri I f the Ru.*- t^e ro’nimi.ssion * work, the ̂s^pt. 2. Mr. Janies Coughlin wassians do iFRi^Jonr rom ession.s. and letter suddenly introdures a wug- • aeconfl prize winner in the make (*onre.s.sions of their own whi( h lead to a settlement of the German problem, we can say it

    Wra. Rita Sehaefef ,wHb ^

    ng wnrch .did it.. We^yxh sny w* fi'iKhlcncd the Ru.ssiaSns into it with our vigorous policy. On* kind of chsmpinnship w* wln ̂ st spy I St*. W * off*!', our conerssions in th* m.>8t f*rocioiis msnn*r.

    The Unexpected Fullne.ssWe know our .sumiiicis sboul as

    g*Stlon for "a study of th* « r i* - . v„„ging ront*st, quacy of *xistmg local tax >*- meeting of th* Grange Sew-soui'ies to cany obligations which ,|̂ g (.||,n was held on Monday eve- logically belong at the local levc|. Grange Hall. Mi.ss

    The heresy in this, of course. '» cyiithla Booth was ho.stess. The Ihe idea that there is any longei meeting will be held on Mon-any obligation which logically docs , at 8 p.m. Miss Beatrice Bngli not belong'tp the state. i will be the hostess

    The heresy becomes clearer m one. of the concluding paragraphs of the letter; *

    "While there sre in.'ctanrea where, because of the larger and superior facilities avaiiabl*. ' th*

    daughters,. Ckrol and Linda, and | i j oivwenir*.Mr, and Mrs. August Scha*f*r„of ; 12 »v—Family Thealr* Forbes St. have returned front a ' ’Tseation trip to Washington. D. C-

    Mrs. Fiances Totten and daughter. .loan, have returned from a vacation at, Block Island.

    kirs. Christine Schaefer has returned to her hnriie- on Hill* St, aftei; a two weeks' motor trip to N ova Scotia.

    James Coiiehlin. general chairman of the Hillatown Grange Fair Committee, has railed a meeting of the Booth Chairmen at the Grange Hall oh Ttieaday e-vemng at eight o'clock. The falr|lwiH he held at the Grange ^a ll on

    larger government unit can do a better job of public, service,' I wimid./uige your commi.ssioii to

    well as we know our lives. We are ■'•ui vey all opportunities Avhei eby

    forever making assesamehta, based ^ ^"lUYesf** p l-ticar/eon a portion of the record and c x - : Kept close to the people."]^perienre, of what the remainder of Thl* 1, a , polite a way a* that record and experience must Be ' ran Imagine for saying that It’ slike And we are ahvayx being aiir- pri.sed.

    Againat' our Assumption that a life or a summer must he thus and so, against our readiness to close th* book on th* aeason and oiir-

    / A . ■■

    about time for local politician* to i begin raising aonie o f their own I tux money.

    ' In Great Britain, farmers can I buy firecracker* aet to explode I at tnfervala to scar* birds from 1 their flejdi. • * ‘ ,> ' .

    ■* ' ■ ' V ' / A ■■■ - " . '/ - I ■ "

    V lsll* Neighhorlng lirange*The Grange has accepted invi-

    tatlcn* to neighbor with Suffield ,Grange at Mapleton Hall Monday ] Sept. 18 and 19. evening. Sept. 14, and Bristol' The Grange extends birthday Grange on Tuesdav evening, .Sept, . IfreetInga this week to Mrs. Shlr- J5. and will furnish a part of the ' ley Morrlaon. Ceres of Httlstown lecturer's program at each. ' .Sept. 4, and Mra. Evelyn Crae-

    The Young I„adlea’ Di ill team | mer, .Sept. 6. _has been invited to pre.sent their ?--------------- ------ ■.Floral Drill at Wallingford Grange ' ^ r a 1\.T‘ L adn Thursday evening, Oct. 1. M j e a t i l S L j O S t J l l g n tII' Several officers and members of , the Grange attended Ihe Neighbor !Night meeting at Ellington Aug. | B.v TH E AS.SOC1.ATED PRBW4 26 and ' presented a part of th e ' Rom e-Jack S. Gold, 31, on the lecturer’s' program.. Mrs. Evelyn j *taj? of the English language H. Coughlin, Lecturer of Hillstown Rome Daily American and Rome Grange, served as a judge at the ; correspondent for Newsweek Mag- competitive program at Meriden ] azine and Travel Magazine. Born Grange Aug. 28. _ I in Duluth, Minn., Gold had worked

    Several officers and member* o f , on newspapers in Buffalo. N. Y., the Grange who are alao membera' arid Loa Angeles. Died Friday.

    1:20—Sunday Matinee.4 (Hi—Armchair Theater,4 2M,..WU«- ....them a x ta t^** In New York, an Army colonel Preaented in ma: riage by her , position will require him to be re- ment aqnouncilTg it wilt he »ntiicl\

    frieze fabrics. He will concen trate his efforts on styling snd designing of these fabrics and will necessarily have to keep In close touch with the market and

    , customer demands. Mr. Pricone Elizabeth Colwell..t'|„ * graduate nf the Rho '■••-d Om Market 8L, Maloney, Jr., et al; 'Wtlham phone Rockville 9-1186. Grockel' et sis vs. Adolph F.Simons; Mary Hweatlaiid v*. The Connecticut Co. et ala.

    John S. Bls.iell vs. Harriet Miin- rhln et al; WllliariiW. Johnson va.Stephen C. F. Rose et al: Edith H.Klnne vs. C. F. Kuenhold; Frank I.iithl Admr. v.i. Ernest J. Brig- hum; Francis G. Clark ys. Joseph Otto; John C. Carey vs. Leonard

    gradeg 7 and,8. The Mlr.dham Board of Education plant lo take over the proposed regional high school project he* not been decided again, but seems hardly likely to be approved

    — Oruy Made Crntodlaa Harold U Gray has been ap-

    pi'Qved' a* custodian of the Hebron

    ford.

    town * almhoua* which i* slated for w h ir ilV '^ f abandonment soon. Welfare Direc- wneeier or Albert E. Behrend said yester

    day.Department worker* are continu

    ing to question the residents to determine how many" of them wHI find their own accommodations

    ■Full resp on .ilb ilitv fo r Inclusion of the controver.iial clau.6e in the contract* la being, assumed' by Karl D. Loos, the depai tm ehf* solicitor snd one of Ren.ion's fir.«t appoint ee.»

    I>oo* told repoiteia "the solici- tor's office" recommended the

    Behrend said the department I* i clause go in on the basi.« of a 1943

    Manchester Evening Herald Hebron eorrespondenl. Mlaa Susan Pendleton, telephone ,, ' Harrison S-SSS9.

    seeking rooms without board some.

    for

    N atiia ii H a le H o n r s N o te d b y P r in c ip a l

    .School hour* for the Nathah Hale school for the coming year

    (riark;"'David J. Dickson. Jr., et al I are as follows: Kindergarten, 8:45 vs Markoff Realty, Inc . Joseph P, to 11:15, 12:.30 to 2 45; 6rad* 1, Popielarczyk el als. d b.a. v*. Fred- eicik J. Raff, d b a. el ala; Catherine June Wheeler Miner vs. Roger B. Miner; George Coleman VS.Alexander M. STiearer el al; Benjamin Franklin Exr. vs. The Congregation Keneseth larael, Inc.;George W. Schaefer et al v*. The Algonquin Oa* Transmission Co. et ala; Freda Duffy/Vs. Walter C.Hlcktng et al*. "

    Ci^rk YenmMis calls alten-tion to the PubircUAct No. 200 of the 1953 January a«a*lop which prt>vides that all ca.sea claimed (or ijS jury docket prior Oct.- 1.' 19j3, ahall be tried by at-^ry. of six. unlea*

    8:45 to 11:45; 12:45 to ^:45;Grades 2 through 6 8:45 io 11:45, 12:45 lo 3:00..,

    Pupils being transported by bus will leave the fchool shortly after3,;00 p.m.

    Nathan Ha I e kindergarten children who were bom on or between January first 1948 and June 30. 1948 are requested lo report for Ihe afternoon seasion beginniiig at ; 12:30 p.m. Tho.se born on or be- ; tween July 1.1M 6 and January Iv j 1949 are to report at 8:45 a.ro. . ]

    PLEA.8ANT JOLT_________ _____ .St. .loaeph. Mo. tflh — Melvin

    alemenUry aehool and will begin Swepaton. eity liquor supervisor, his autle* Kept. 9, at th* opening had been deaf in ĥ s le ft ear for , of aehool. some time The other day he sc-

    Churrh Service* i cidentallw stepped o ff a sidewalkChurch aervice* Sunday In He- and got a jolt. , |

    bron and Gilead will be *a usual: A few minutes later SwepstonHebron Congregattonarst 10 a m.: i found he could hear perfectly with Gilead Congregational at 11:1.5 his left ear.Th*: pastor, John G. Beck, will of- ; - ------- ------------■flciate at both ohnrehea. Sundav j It's hard to look prosperous iin- aehool has not vet been resumed less you have a good lob. and hard since the aummer vacation. i to land a goo frontaRe X .‘too deep ............S180050 frontage x 98 deep.......... $ 1000

    PLUSLake front. 3-hedroom summer coUage, furnished.

    $6500Ijikc front winterized. 5 rooms. 100 ft. frontage,

    double lot, S I 2,800

    ON MAIN LAKE-ROAD1 summer cottage. 4 rodms,* large lot. $5000 '1 winterized, large kit. 4 (expandable to 6) '

    (jape Cod. $9500

    HAZEi: FLOYD, Agent I IANDOVF.R, CONN — TEI.. Pilgrim 2m 6&2

    ' •̂ 11 : ..... II ,..:...........

    Stop—L o o k —B uy !

    ASTERSDOZEN

    McCONVILLE’SGREENHOUSES and FLORIST

    .102 WOODBRIDCK ST. MI-9.5947

    - ;T t

    FOR SEPTIC TANK or SEWER LINE CLEANING

    Call Manchester's Specialists y v ' In The Business .

    McKi n n e y BROTHERSSEW AGE DISPOSAL . C O . .

    ■Expert wailmianalitp. Hundred* o f saU*lted.'lHHn>i ewaera and doians at ladM laUl (Irma wha call us for sewage dtapoaal prob- laoM w U t«o O ^ they can AL.W AVS rely on MeKInngy Brothers. W « ala* loelaB eeptle taah *]r*taiiis and newer lin e*.'

    '"-Hy

    J •.V

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    cA U naw ighROLTF. 195. 8TORR.S. CONN TF.L. 91.50

    EDITH C. McCOMB, Managec

    CLOSED FOR VACATION -U N T IL TUESDAY, SEPT. 15

    GIGANTIC NEW CAR

    T T . BOW 9 0 l i i9 OH

    —^ To illtfodlico tiM BfPe :ai: 1953 D dd^ CoroM

    For style, beauty and luxury, try the ectmomy Coronet 6. Drop in— gel the fjicl.*. See how easy it i« lo own • new '53 Dodge.

    During the month of September we are giving extra high trade-in allowances on good, clean, used cars.

    FROM $100 to $300Over actual value. —

    Trade now and save from $100 to $300 on the fall • and winter market. I'sed cars are dropping fast. Get that high dollar now and save,

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    Advertise in T W 'H e rd d — It P ays f

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    TOONERVILLE FOLKS BY FONTAINE FOX

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    A S i P E W A U K ’ C a f e I N T o o k e r v i i - l e i s j u s t o u t o f t h e q u e s t i o n

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    FUNNY BUSINESS BV HERSHBERGER

    C O N N „ S A T U R D A Y . S E P T E M B E R 5 . 1 9 5 3M A N C H E S T E R E V E N I N G H E R A L D . M A N C H E S T E R , C O N N . . S A T U R > ) A Y . S E P T E M B E R 5 , 1 9 5 3

    page nine

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    H a d td , a n d i h e p o in t e d o u t h e r s i g n a t u r e I n t h e l e f t h a n d b o t t o m c o r n e r : G e o r g ia N e e a e C la r k , T r e a s u r e r o f t h e U n i t e d B ta te a .

    A T e x a n p a s s e d a w a y a n d u p o n a r r i v i n g a t t h e g a te s o f h is e t e r n a l h o m e , r e m a r k e d ,

    T e x a n - - G e e , I n e v e r t h o u g h t H e a v e n w o u ld b e a o m u c h l i k e T e x a s ,

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    J i m — I w a a w a l k i n g a lo n g p e a c e f u l l y w h e n a l l o f a Hidden t h i s f e l l o w p o in t s a g u n a t m e and t e l l s m e t o g e t o f f h i s land.

    J o e - D i d h e t r y t o a h o o t y o u ? J i m - H e c o u ld n ’ t , I h a d m y

    A n g e r o v e r t h e h o le .

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    A y o u n g l a d y w a s a n s w e r in g a ( ( i ie a t lo n in a n a t u r a l a c ie n c e c o u r s e a t a k H 's l h ig h s c h o o l. I t w a s : " D e A n e a b o l t a n d n u t a n d e x p la in t h e d i f f e r e n c e . " T h e g i r l w r o t e :.....-••A b o l t j a * . t h i n g - l i k e . . a ..s tic k .

    o f h a r d m e t a l a u c h a t I r o n , w i t h a a q u a r a b u n c h o n o n e e n d a n d a l o t o f s c r a t c h in g w o u n d a r o u n d t h e o t h e r e n d . A n u t is s i m i l a r t o t h e b o l t o n ly J u s t t h e o p p o a l le . a h o le i n a c h u n k o f i r o n s a w e d o f f s h o r t . w i t h w r i n k le s a r o u n d t h a I n s id e , o f t h e h o le . ”

    'T h e s t a r t l e d p r o f e s ^ r m a r k e d t h e a n s w e r w i t h a n " A " .

    A c le v e r g i r l Is o n e w 'h o m a k e s y o u f e e l s h e Is t a k i n g d i n n e r w i t h y o u a n d n o t f r o m y o u . v.

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    l^ lv e a h o o t a b o u t a n y t h in g .

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    D e n t i s t - W e l l , M l d o I t a g a in t h i s t im e , b u t n o m o r e . B y e v e r y t e s t , th e s e s h o u ld A t y o u r m o u t h e a s i ly .

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    A n a r t v e s s c o n g r a t u l a t e d a w o m a n a u t h o r o n h e r b o o k :

    A r t r e a a I e n jo y e d I t . W h o w r o t e I t f o r y o u ?

    A u t h o r e s s ( p u r r i n g ! — D a r l i n g , W h o r e a dI I 'm s o g la d y o u l i k e d i t .

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    THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNR Just In Time BY WILSON SCRUGGS

    Duke, Maryland, West Virginia Best Teams on Atlantic Coast

    , C le m s o n , S . C . — ( N K A l Y o i i w o n ' t b e a b le t o p i c k a n A t l a n t i c

    . C o a s t C o n fe r e n c e c h a m p io n I n 1 9 5 3 h e c a i ia e t h e s e v e n m e m b e r s c h o o ls d o n ' t a l l p l a y e a c h o t h e r .

    T a k in g t h e o v e r - a l l r c c o rd .s . I t l o o k s l i k e D u k e a n d M a r y la n d a r e t o p h e a v y I n t a l e n t . T h e y s h o u ld b e t h e t e a m s t o b e a t .

    C le m a o n , S o u th C a f o l i n a , W a k e F o r e s t a n d N o r t h C a r ^ i l in a a r e o n j u s t a b o u t t h e a a in e l e y e l . . N o r t h C a r o l in a S t a le la t h e f a r t h e s t b e h in d a t l il .s In ie .

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    f i n d I t h a r d t o r e p la c e aa m a n y g o o d b o y s aa h e lo s t , l i k e J a c k

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    s H a n u l s k a r e p r o v e n I m l i v l d i i a l s ,S o u th C Y iro I ln o h a s f iv e b o v s

    h a c k w h o m a d e a l o t o f A l l - . S t a r ( ■ e s f f n r ~ " i i f r m » ' ' f t m e ic ' . im m - f t T » m e '

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    W i l k e F o r i - e t lo .s t a l o t in th e l in e , b u t r e t u r n i n g in t h e h a e k f ie ld a r e q n a r t e r h a e k S o n n y G e o r g e a n d h a l f b a c k s B i l l y H l | l e n h r a n d a n 'l B i l l C h i i r m .* N o r t h r a r n l l n i i h a a a a n n u - w l in t

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