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'Vi* ^ \- ; ■h WAGE EIGBTEEN v' 1. V. ManrlifgBtgr gpgtttttg Ifgiftdb FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 19BI H !. ' \MM»iitTown ' lioyal Ctrcl* ol Kla(a .will ntMt In th« yMarntton Itw of Uw Oeattf Church Uondar xUnr at T:4B. After tM rMuUr the groupN^U work on Junior W A T n hold on Hm mootuyt laat •vontne In tbo llhraxy o< MnneteooU^ n g h flehobt. 40|Hnt to oUwr mooUngu in town nttMMahc* w u not up to oiqMeto- itthf ried dnodngu h w . Ho thott opjoy OM wlU bo ,' n : moot migt( n "*“**»^ _ _ Ura. Rohort McNM on^ Mrn;<^'Wni- llnm Ruhdo. Mombtra arc ranitod- od to bringpnehagoo (ortho Kmga Dnughtoro homo donaUon day. 7. Iho tonal card party of Andan aon-Shoa Root M46. v m AincU laty Witt not bo h ^ tonight bo- cauoo M Good mday. Tho ca^ partioo will bo roaumed next waok. Ib e BttcU^ PTA annoiuices that althouih tlckota havo boon laauod boartiw tho dato at Saturday, April Sd;- for Ita “ Country Carnival," it la ohUgatod bocauso of cm fllct'of datas to poatpono tho carnlvn to Saturday, May 7, Ih o oonunittoo bMioo ovUryeno jdannlng to attond will roaorbo tho now da that tho affair wUI gain by dtUonai timo for proparaai dato, and ' tho ad' ion. ^ Tho Soraptlmlat Ctab win liaina n.buainooa mooting Monday at • p.m. in the otflco of the Sponew m bbor Producta Co. A (ifll attorn^ aneo ia bqnod for aa plana win bo comptotedTtw too toxtng~ conn tion too final Wookend of April. GREYHOUND UNIS '-"-Am eeeeet'™ t :- SPECIAL BUS SERVICE Saturday Only Starting Sat, April St SUFFOLKS DOWNS Mroet Bito-^o Chaaga Poet TtaM 1:45 P.M . Souad Trip $ 4 *7 5 ./ Phn'Tiaz" ' ,X lufelndoo Admiaalou fo^lTraek toto lioaroo StoS A; M. r rom CENTER TSAVSX AGENCY 4M Mata1St»-TH. Ml-SAOSS .... ...... ...... ? tlppa dad olootion' ot offieora waa ptol^ionyd untU too moeUng Thuriday ovoning of next weak too a r i^ library; 'Tha Olaanora Group of too South Mothodiat W8CS arin moot Monday at 7:iS p.m. in too ladloa parlor. All ntombora are urged to attend. .. l>anlol j. Sullivan, 4S0 B. Oontor St., ratumod 'homo today after m>omniiig four mohtha in St. Par toraburg, Fla. . Friohda In town have- rooolvad newa of tXo birth of a aon, Ken- neth 8., April 8, to tho Rev. Daniel D. and Mra. Betty R AUon, mia- alOnaneo in India for the paat aix yaara. They have two daughtora, Janet, 4, and Martha, A The Rev. Daniel Allen ia a aon of the Rev. affd MTa. Frederick. Allen, Putnam,^C!onn.. Tormarly of Man- cheOtor, and ho and hla fam ily ex- pect to Ball from Bombay, India, Slay 14, arriving in Now Toik June 30 fo r a.^year'a furiough. Bo e aha to further hla atuAea at Conn,' .'i " Temple Chapter, No. 83. date of Tuooday, April It, ti animal Opringsraninaga a ' hridIn motemplo. afon roquaeted to aet aaide tha- aalo. " / / 0 ANdaUghter, Xare&^Juna, waa bom jmaterday at m Hartford rou ted to Mr. and Mra. Qeorgo Froot, SI Bunco DT. N o^’^M^ha charge all of dm g ’ueede at HNE raUIUGY 384 Oentor StiHM l-t-tSU 7?, T / / / / tho tnw apirit of Eaator may wo extend to you. / "kur' valued cuatonora and to y ^ knai onea, the / aincero wiah that thla Kaater ^ It^^wiU be filled * / la abundance,with the good'btaaainga or ranowod / ' ' Falth,^ Hope and Courage. / [ ' 4APLE DRY C|.^NERS snd LAUNDERERS 72 MAPUB STREBT / '0 4- “T J Sienda Sentenced To Prison Term Stanley R^ Sienda. 21, o f 413 N. Main St, waa given a .one to three year prlimn term yastarday when priaantod In Superior Couft. on a- charge of attaoapfad robbery with v I o I gacg. Ho pleaded guilty to the riiargo, mode When ho waa ariraotod on Fth. 28 Hartford PtolM after a drunken rampogo In''which poHce /■ Here Sunday ho AarioUnt State' oent to the Wright 4m M. i four people. AUy. Dougteae. icnded to Judge that Sienda' M Priaon. Daugtaflo “moat Oerioua” . aoid at tho time that Sianda had at- up a Charter Otoe, atoro In Hartford end ‘ by too propriotroae, 1 afonn. Mann woo during Uiio im >. h o lB S w l-h ls incident ''apaitmani/of Mra. Jadiiott Jal' of BhrifOrd, end told the' and her . daughter ho had killed a man and ptooo Ware iookliig for aim Shortly thorbaftor, ha loft the am but aoon returned and _______ down the doOr, which had baaa lockad by Mra. Jelbeft in hia abaence. Sienda agata left the apartmtnt and pmetlcimywalked into the po- lloc, amiod>'by, tht'a tiixit with a deaerip^oh given them by Mra. Maa^-'' . Oburt oiriciala at that time aatd he waa unable to poet the llQ.OOd bond aet when hla caae waa bound over to Superior Court ftom the Hartford Ptoice Court in March. Towii Employes Get Gertincates U gh t municipal amployea will racahra certiScatm fvom tha In- tamatlonal City Manager’s Aaan. for complation of an in-aervice training program in administra- Uon at an informal party to be held April 20 at Omtar Springs Park tiodgO. - Those right and a ^ t other workem will receive cartifleatea from the town for completion of the couriM. ’fhoae reebivlag the ICMA oar- tiScates art Qaorgo Elliott, ikuper' intandont of comatorioo, Mias Jana Kelly, clerk in tho .cMitroIlar'e of- Sce, Fire Chief CUttord Maoon, Wilfred Maxwell, planning adminla- trator,. Horace MurpBey, park auparintendant James ,L. Parry, clerk-of-the-worka, Jamw Shaekey, angtnscr, and Fred Thrall, it aiawrbittodant ^ the Present Orptorio' At Chnt^ii Here Maundy aomricea at the Second Congregato^ Church last eva- nliig were highlighted by a ohort- tened ptaoentatlota of Caul’s ora- torio,/^Th# Holy a ty ,” the ad- mlnldtratlon .of Cimnmunton, tha bapaptlim o f 27 new members end Ehstpr Arnold Tbs^o confirma- tion clooo o f 18 boyo imd girls on confeariem. o f faith, i total of 43 onroUaS./ Tho oervico wao on- ttroly by candloMght, Improaab and oxeeptionally wall attended. The voatad chancri choir was under the direction of Mm, Bar- bara^ R. Badier of Bolton, with Organiat BarcUy Wood accompan- Ist^for the cantata and appropri- aia hymns. /Tha flisl aulu ; CM. iSalph T. CoL Ralph T. MlHet, the new provincial commander of the Sal- vation Army for New UnglMul. and Mrs. Miller, will hb speoUl guest speakers for tha Easter services of the local Salvation Arm y Cbrpa Sunday. \ One of the yoimgest'colonels to tha Army, he conimands the bnv province In the world. He'. ls a forceful apeaker and anargbtic to all that he does., * Hia wifa is the former Hulda Carlson,-slater of Bandmaster C. Peter Cerlaon of the Manchester Salvation Army Bond, tto will apeak at the Eeeter early momtag service Sunday, at the flagpole In the Caster Perk at 7 a.m.; also at the 10:48 holiness service .In'tha hall, whMi be will enroll new mem- ber* to the OoTpa,', commiarion the Junior Choir and aeveral local of- fleera. . , ’The Band and torngatan Will support him with ylurical numbers and Peggy/wolteradotfT ria- tars of Sandra/and daughters of Mr. and Mra. Ifbward Woltaradorf, urtto win recaive town cm> Mriaa only art Paul Oarvtol, ael- iaatqr of revaaua, Iftaa Mary Dalla Ftra, walfara dimeter, RaCreatien 'nreetor Jginba Hardie, Mm Bn<i thrr Nelson of toa Building Dapt, Chief Berman O. SchendsI, Fmnk 'Steele, eealstafit town en- gineer, Raymond Urtnabart, aoais- tant to the genarto manager, and Tax Aaaeaaor Bamy-Mutrie. Oeoerto Manager RMiard iCar-, tto will preaent tha town oertifl- M ahd the Intacnational City MoMogta’s Aoan. oertineataa wUI' be awarded by J e s ^ M. Lough- lln, state comnUerioner o f finance, who conducted the eoursc. \ ^ There will be entartaiameat and a lunch win be earved. ' 1 $ 58SHi 5 Ef ^OARBFDIXT oMppomroMD 'V,. < A rtlN ir Drag SHNi KERrS CARPETNEWS Ye« •t yMir locd Ji. WHAT AlbUT^ICIS? Oer carpel prioee ate u jt^ tJw ieadi ef avery toinllyNBd^ alhak da avetytlilag to held UM l Une (er yeu: '' Lsek to toe leaders to caipeto. Wi to-wa)l specialiBts. Whan Itou JCARFET-Thtak Of Dal MANCHESTER CARPI 388 MAIN North ef tool ,K ' ‘" T " ’ " ■" ' -'■id :.' 'V . ; I. I. li n i r II, - - ........ Foi?.Last MmiJte Easter S i- . \ ■■■ ■ -■ X ^ ■X' ■4 Artrath DsUy Net Fms R ob >br toe Weak SMad Aprti2^18M / 11,743 Mentoer of too Audit ■•mail at Olreidattoa Manche$tet A City of ViUagt Charm IlisW dstlifr ' af D. S. Waatoac I Totoght, Mdetly fair, toe itoper PTa Ta ly fair aad warm. Brides. vlriw la '■tl TOLi,LXXlV,NO.m (TWELVE PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN„ SATURDAY. APRIL f, 19SS. (OtaariAo* A4vertMag an Page 18) r- I^CE PIVB part waa ■ wtll token by Robert FoUette, tenor soloist of the choir. Joyce Weth- erell and Sandm Wpltohedorf, both of whom posadaa beautiful contral- to voice* and are membera Manchester High School A C la choir, aaiig the contralto 25 Auburn contralto di did Mra. Rylander. The who hu stage . poprano and in the cantata, as and Mrs. Marjorie director, Mrs. Becker, .Tie ac^irano voice and tha tiianeel rtiori^ra, aind pleased with her The same might be Albert Drigge, high 1^ the choir, .who rendered a arid in a commendable The chorus 'work wak and a l the olOee of Mr: Id v .x X DRDCQRV, \ MAM M m m i m h i X OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT (JNTI t V -^ SATURDAY STORE HOURS S A M . to A P.M. . -V .. 1. / the SARA LEE story By Roger W. ^Bennett Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal, *T3iicago—Oteriee W. Lri- bln, a jovial BO-year-oi^ Chi - cago baker with e pear- ah^wd figure, la today vdtlp-' ping up a sales success recipe .-with - some unorthodox ..to- gredlenta. I While coet-cutUng' doihl- nates the thoughts o f many another bualneeanuto' these days. Baker Lubln la find- ing that it can pay to be cx- Iravagmnt. For example, hla whotaaale bakery. Kitchens of SaraDse, Jnc., namad after his daughter, poura plenty of 'butter, fresh milk and eggs Into its cakes. It ahuna the 1cm expensive vegetable ahortentog. powdered milk and dried egga uaed by moet commercial bakera The aim; .To turn ouf cakm that ‘not even Rrandroa'a grandma could bake.’ ^ -‘Tha trend in the baking" , burineaa haa been for price to determtoeihe ingredients,’ Mr..Dubto.aey*. <1 baSeve a more aenrihlc method is to nuke the heat possible prod- uct and then aet whatever Is neewaatry:' Twa TeaFs SaliaT to HH $8 Mlillen.’’ Pinehunt footnote by “our Doibthy”. Forget your diet, at leaet once .a week and “splurge” on ope of BARA- LEE’S WfWDERFUL Coffee CaktoJ They aell at and are .wdi worth it. Keep them under refrig,-' eration /, .'serve them bcatfiS/v-i-It’a important that/^you heat before ig . . . Only Sara tastef eolgocxL Dia- yed tej/ ■ Prom a waste point of view ; less fat, no Shank, m> skin; M orrell ham U new ... BUT TOERE Is NO CHANGE IN THE WONDERFULb^VOR for which “this Pinehurst ' ready to est ham is fa- mous . . . In all brands of .hams MORRELL, RATH or SWIFT, we of- fer the popular,- but hard to get, small 10 to 12 Ib.- ri sizes. Buy a .whole or shank half of Morrell READY TO EAT HAM at 79c lb. Rgth and Swift hams with-the standard shank and trip, not the special Morrell trim , will ^ be available at lower prices. - NOW WE INTRODUCE WrilTE NECTAR PEACHES You wiU finYH o of these delicious peaches in a 303 can. They're dif- ferent, not many packed epeh year... betl^ buy ^ eans for '$1.19 or try a single can fo r 42c. T- i' DIPOST irto- Mr. Toxer- coi toa singers, saying he waa of toem. ' The pn^rrahi came to/an With all preoent right haiid of fellowi [> to newly enrolled mei chiuxb. / e r s ..* / V ;/ \ i&Kews Tlt?MI-f-t1fl UNTIL J fU, UUES-AZALEAS -HYAOlirn^ BUNWES mi BASKETS TOYS aii NQVam - lASm CARDSlOXES AND OTHER Gl CLOSED EASTER $UNDAY AT 12:30 f.M . - CHOCOLATES . ' . • trim /■ Vpur Easter Sui| Netidi a Ke have fam o^ make blouses W dacron, cotton a ^ silk, sheer nylon, nylon tricot, silk and rayon with the linen look Dressy'and tailored. SizM B2to38. \ to *7-^8 WNWTSWBABHSEOON^'lliOoIl j.:.- -. H ' BETTY HARTFORD pves this “colii-dotted” washable rayon crepe dresa'B full, gay, tucked skirt and a wide pique collar-over-aelf-eollaf. Jin Nair-Sizes 14V^ to 20>Y / New Spring Shades ,. , fN NYLON HOSIERY K rrt quality full fashioned with dirk or self seams. 'Also sheer ’seamless, i Vi No-M8n4 Taitad fJylon II.7S ind $1.65 Pr. New, Simulated Flowers" " ^ . on Pin XX; for suit Wear. Garden bbuqueta, .rioIeuC reeu, ete>^ 59^ S|.00 fV-'. Alba Blaiidtona- Nylons $1.15 to $1.50 - Saimtess^Sbeir Nylons $1.35 •nd$l.50Pr. Fancy Hsal Shoor - Nylon $1.00 and $1.35 Pr.' 60 Gauge Sbatar Dark S«am Nylon $1.00 Pr. '*... SLIP-ON STYLES Washable Fabric Cloves Plato or trim backs to nylM end doubla wovaa eoU;‘ ' ton. 1.50 to. N98 1^- CHIDDRBN’g .WA8RABLB 0L0V12B * 1.00 *|. pr. New Styles in HANDBAtfeS For Easter Wear" eelectian of fainek Pt?»tlc^t«nt and itoiiSe calf. Top handle atylm to WNONESTEg n.VimN 8 «ri X • PRED T. BLISH JR., Preg. and Treat. rra HARDWARE 1 ^ HAVE rr * V 877 ^ilAlK an ! ~ llAlijrCHESTER ' • d, ; '■i. 2 ®» C6ch I MaNaMPBraBiii Gbb8R P u ip a Givaa With Cegh Salsa . -K. J \ H u rr^ g to Onircli Smrvices' hufrim from U raar aa he errivee at toe. Nat bytertmi cauieh'ApiB t t o etteM Oeoi FHiey ewvlees. toe ear 8oer far toe cM*f exeoaftve la Henty Ntcbeleen. a i toe SVhlte BeuBe aberrt aerWee etog. (AF SWreilieta). JB^lls of S L Peter’s Y: .Vgtican GHy. April 9 (ff>-r-The big bronze bells of -St. Peter’s pealed out today announcing the end of Lent “and heraldinir Ghriat’a resurrection from the tomb. Bgfq^e the X . 10 ton *t!tflBpawmc,” matter bell of the BgiGps. abhadt ita fifiel Bbta, toa brila Uf Rome’e airy— --------’— — - most 800 otoer church** jotoedi in to* ringing chorus to proclaim the rigU of Kaater. Manea to Poterie Square "'‘Ware tbouuaflii of the vsat torong af Kaater touriita hen from many lands to be on hand ' tomorrow when TS^year-old Pop* Piua X II fi v•s bia blearing to the city end e world- , » __ gunahtoe _broke fitfu lly through Bght cloudk. ProapeCU were good, however,-for a sunny Eseter to 'Contrast ta laat year'a chill when snoWTaU on tho Alban HUli with- to right of the Eternal City. SSOtot Kxpaatod i. - X crowd as greet or greater than last Eaater'a - 390,000 is 'ex- pected to Jim S t Petto’s Square at noon tomomw when the stlU- bonvalescfng Pontiff appears on the balcony to' giva hla address. . Many believe U 'Will be—-aa oh laet Kaater—a plea for peace •in the atomic age. Hie words will be carried to the crowd by toudspeakar, and ta the world by Vatican Radio in hook- up With broadcasting systams to WBiy lands. Vatican announcament said totoewouhr be hookups with njllo natworka to France, Spain, Bel- gium. Holland, Portugal, the Saar, Oermahy, Austria, Switaeriaad. leixambourg qnd Monaco. Broad- caaU w ill be .beamed behind the Iron Curtain from Radio Free Eu tope; 'Tangier and Morocco.- Itabroadcaate dr parts of the mes- sage and benediction, will be car- ried by the NBC Bnd CBS in the Dnited States. ' > . This “Hbly Satui^y” mdntingi ^ a high Mass waa calebratad to S t Peter's and the other roajpr basUicas of Romri The Bells rang - out whan the aarricas-easehed the •.•Glorle.’' ~ t)th er “ HolyTBelurday*’ services at « t Peter’s included the Bices- of Fire in the atrium of the barillca aqd- .the Blseahig of Holy Watar pounta. ' KecaBs Aaeirat Rites Twelve Canons* of the Basilica, symbolic o f .the 12 Appatlea, than took aome of the newly-bleaaed . water, to. sprinkle *11 who were la the baaillcsr The ceremonyurecall' . od' ancient Holy Saturday rites when It waa the custom to_ad- mtoiater hapUatn. Throughout the day surpUced priests, accompanied by acolytes carrytog pots of bleeaad holy wa- ter, visited every burineor iend issioBiro*g ulUtDiei, vT iion|Er'oiGDF^ tog the homes and offiees. Meanwhile,, ChristlmiM in many fOseTasnSd Sri Page Five) Polio Vaccine Liist Ready for Release Ann Arbor, MIchV, April S (JV- Fktonta. of children in If'X tatei, Oanad* and Finlaiul.who partici- pated in laet year’s Salk polio vac-; cine testa wUl.leem by the eUd aisxt vRcek.who got the actual vao-J etna and who got a neutral control •uBatGiicG. * ■ Robert Volght, chief .etaUetieian at the PDliomycUtlB Jgveluatton Center at the IhUveratty of Michl- 'gau, aaid yaatarday the coded vaie- rinatiion records o f oome 74R000 children are being mailed to beuth depertmenta ia eroes where «hU- dren took part lu the mees experi- SIGI iL' Tnm toeao reoorda, boelto offi- I (to Page fiv*) \w rt~- G)i^i Ponders New job Offer By State Dept - Waahington, A p r i l —Ed- ward J. Oorai, biamtog “ anemias' for the hbrupt end of kik. special immiigretion poaC waa uiulecided ((toay 'krbejher to accept anotber Jbb'oifered to hiih by Secretary of State Duties. DiiUes yesterdey offered Coral » Job aurveying 7 ptaribi* raaettle- .ihent of bmnli^anta to Latin A toeriea iuid /etoewbare. Coral’s present eaaigmnent—thet o f help- ing speed a lagginglirogramtoed mit 214,000 refugees into the Unit ed States—ends tomorrow. That Job suddenly eras tided "tem' porary," Rhiaiee Fees lor Ouster Corel—a Republican with a pub- lic senrlca rcto)rd dating back to the Hoover administration blamed “enemies with the deperf- ment,.aa well a* out” for the un- expected termination o f hia refu- gee immigration Job. But T h e mentioned by name only ^Rep. Walter fD-Pa). He said he be- lieved tha State Department -was yieldiag Walter’s demeiide that he be ousted. ... In recent weeks, Walter repeat-l edly has cbargril the ItaUan-hom Oorai w4th past aaaoclatlona with Communist front grotm . Corsi yesterday daoertbed Walter's at- (fkuMeuad <ai gage Five) hoIdUw ^ d youth I 'afided hia Soviet Rule B stUq, A p ril' 9 (4>)— a So- viet youth, who defected to the West land saked for po- Uticsl ssylum last month wss returned to his parents'today behind the Iron Curtain. This waa done at hia own request, U.S. ofhcials said. ' The youth wm ValerJ' Lystkov, teenage son of A Russian Air Force.officer statibhed Just out- 'Mde East Berlin.^ His defectkm'to West BerUh Mareb-iS atlrred an teternetlpriel furor. Soviet Foteiga Mtulstor V. M. M<dotov charged that V^IL^u- thdrities' war* holdl against hie will end raturn. 'The United Sitatea'denied this. Id^elkoy met With.' hla - parents March 36 under the supervision, of U fi. officials to West Berlin. U.8. authoritiek said later that ha re- fiiaed to returii to Communist Bast Germany. Why he changed hia mind was not toiinediatety mads clear tw U ff, toficials. "If, V Fed Dp With *Prapagaada’ _Lffaikov had been ataytog to West OMmany udiile plana were being mad* to entry permit At a nevira conference to West Berlin March 28, LyaUiov said hia’ <•«••« was to go to the States, Where he hoped to become a pilot, aa ambition which he aaid hla father had forbidden h ^ ^ H e saiid he waa fed up vrlth to^C pmmuniata “lying propagan- U ff. officiaI''aafd Lyaikov waa *”^*L**‘ ^** perenta at noon. grant him n U.8. their "I h( Wbont te n accompanied by two officera, came to West an auto and picked up he was quite happy the official sauL Kifh. Commttftloii callGd m . arwh eonferenc*^S^temoon*to m - nounce L y a ik e ^ changq of mind. News of hia rettito leaked .out Juat before the conferee began: .. toto Weat Ber- “5 Marfch IffM d i^ed Vff. au- t^ttaa to grant fMUttcai asylum. This was done after he •aid he was through witti life un der Communism. . “I di4hft want to live wHn the Commimiata any more a n d ^ te n to thlilr lylp f propaganda.’’ kov told, a news conference. _ Beda OaO Boy Inunataire The Ruerians chatged U ^ o went ovef to the West beoauae ha trouble wltp hia school n iey 'deacribeit him aa ‘immature.” U.8. officials said Lyaikov is 17 years old.' The Rua- aiana said he ia 14^ ?^n>rfeaWred youth, told GW Momh 28 Wewa conferchco he hM made e^revtoua attempt to flee from hla"f*ther, Lt. Co], Alex- ander 1, Lyaikov, wh(f ia assigned to a Soviet ahr tnuiaport regiment ^ outride Berlin. That waa to January whoa-he hopped aboard an rievated train in East Berlin, he said. But Communist police caught him and seat'him back to his parenta. HU second try was simpler. ’*^***ed in e Ckrmen-made brown M t. end looking aaueh like any Eertto ym u^*r,^he strbUed toto fIMrweaterii sector e l ah M^.-uerded spot. A t the news ponferenoe to Weat Berlin he aeenied self-pos- sessed, smoked cigarettes and com- mented on everything from the cold war to what young Ruariana eall their girl frlMids. He rtaimed he ran away because he had become convinced Oommu- aiet-peopagende waa (UmTh* ^ agreed arith his father, a Oqm- munist end he Wanted to be a pilot He added tiuit he felt re-, niorseftil' at leaving his parenta. because they “most certainly will be punched.” ussia / -/v '■.'X ■i/' TroopsCal ] C4 >n3 idcred 1 ja~Alabania . Atlanta, April 9 (/^>--Gov;. James £. Foisom refnsed to Call the Nationgl Gaard to duty in the strife-ridden Southern Bell Telephone strike area - of Birmingham, Aliu, today but orderH the State Highway Patrol rein- forced there. Atlanta, April 9 (>P) — Re- dpubled efforts were being made in Atlahta today to set- tle the 27-day-old ^uthem Bell Telephone Co. strike in tile wake of violence or dis- order in most of the nine southeastern states affSeted^ -In two ..atates^Ala^toa and Florida—atrikers river* restrained by court order from niaas pickat- Ing. And.Gov. James E. Folaotn of Alabama called for a survey to determine whether to call out the National Guard to maintain brfief. The flareup of violence and dia- order was widespread. ^ •V'- A blast, apparently froni a dyna- inlie Chal-g^ damaged trunk lines at Chattanooga. Tenn., last lii^ t. and rifle.shots near New Orleans put 383 long d ia ^ c e linaa out of order ,for several hours. Another- cable was cut at Miami, Fla., th* 32nd act of/thia type of damage sine* thq atwa began. H ifl Egga sag. Eeek# A t Ifadalgb. N. C.. a uon-striktog worker told police he waa set upon a r be was leaving the .telephone p ^ t , and at DanviU*. Ky.. .eu un- ruly crowd-hurled eggs aad rocks 'as it milled to front of e phone company huildtog. It was th* f ^ violence to the month-old strike at Raleigh. Officials of the CIO Commimlce- ons Workers tit America have inlef| repeatedly that their mem- !M have'been responsible for vio- tenoa or damage to company prop- e r t y t h e strike began Harcb- 14 after failure to agree on e new contcect. ' . . The company announced it .had offered w kn tocreeaea of about six mUllon dMton. on' condition the union aecapt a no-strike clsup^ the cleuse w^ch the. com pl^ holds is the mein bar to e settle- Flying Platforni \ nr’--' 'Y <X"' F^act vdth Raab to STANUInr JOHNSON •(BV-^The Soviet Union informed the wegt- TWa nemmal alreraft, the *T1ylag Ptetfona.’* eehieves (n e tight vrith pllbt Phil Johasea at the eoatrels. The pilot ceatrols horlseatal light ef the oar-passenger craft by merely shifting Us w el^ t H I* the 8rst aircraft astag a ducted (an (or Hft aad propulsion to at- talB free light. It snw buUt by the HUIrr HeUeoptora, PUo Alto, OaUf. (D-S. Navy photo from NBA Telephoto). (Oeathmei ariPage Tbrce)^ Gunmen Seize (OsaWanad oa Page Five) Chef^kiiig Polio Vaccine A labaral oiy waeker imaa P®**“ Vhoeiae'at'a apectaBy-buHt t a w n r t ^ to Theama fbaaria will mahe;a to clMcli the eeadIMea at BHah. Dr. edAIleUgga Jeaa* K ~ ■“ •r »r- fbaaele Datoentoto riri* Jr„, wOI mahe‘/a repert. April 12 etidhe Dalventty r deveiaalri^lSnS: ^ ffWtol iin li to Ih* ltot& agatoet agatoet ;toatot at tto^ Susan MoCariey,. 3 and. Magnus McCariey. eight montka. . ' Six of tha victima were the chil- dren of Mrs. Jean McCariey. 23. James Clifbm wraa Mra. McGar- lay'a brother. Six of the riiUdren were found in their bed*. Cyndia’a body was found cloe* to an upstaira wtodow. No Chance to Escape . Fir* Chief Harold Fiak aaid the riiUdren “ didn’t have a prayer’* chance of eaciaplng that fire.” He Union ReCordspS^ ^ Pbllc# detectives Al Watera and R. D. Robarta said Mr*. McCariey, a divorcee, was atUndihg a movie at a drive-to theater at the time of the fir*. She waa bald for quaa- tiontog. Lkriy Amundaau, Plercs Coun- ty deputy coroner, aaid Mra. Mc- Cariey told him to* left the^houae About 8 p.m. 'ABrondseh quoted her as aaytog ahe thought the old, er children could “talto cere of thtoga:” The elamt wee turned In at 12188 a.m. Fisk aaid the blaze apparently started from a rtfrigerator mo- tor. . . The baby’a body and the body of Susai) were found to a downstalre front bedroom. The bodleo of Jtor- Seven Children Die As Fire Guts House V' ■ ' ''' ' 1 Tacoma, Wash./April 9 (JP}—rA flash fireobelieved to have started in a faulty rnrigerator, roared through a two story frame house here early today and burned seven children to death. The victims were James Clifton, 15, Nartcy McCariey. 12, Tbbmaa McCariey, 11, Cyndla^ McCariey. 8. Dafell McCariey, A ' ted Chicago, April 8 (JF) masked gtouhm kroke into offii of the International hei ' of the AFL Diatlllery, RartitytoL md Wtoe Woriceni Union’ yeatar- day .after tying .up two maa. Police, said the gunmen ran- eaeked the offhwe of tha unfdn and aeveral other union offices at 3M South Ashland Blyd. The in- teHiational office, contained rec- ord* of a former union eecretary- treaaurer. Sot C ll^to' and were iipder audit at ‘ the direeUon. of .JoMph. O’Neill,- the uulon’e toter- natloiiel president . Sdlaman Lippman,' attorney for th* tuUon, said it- vtas not teemed immediately what union racorda may have been taken.. Ha* added, however, that theft of the books “would not impede the progress o' the union’* .Inveatigatlon.” Lippman aaid the untoq booke were brought to Chicago from Union City, N, J., by order of CNelU. He said Cilentb quit the uBian post last November under •urtoeto'* from O’Neill, who filed uitar-union charges of mtsmanage- ment. ./Lippman aaid auditors bad been checking the books atece late last fr il and they had, he eald, dtscov, ered eome thinge he termbd “ques- tionable." The union attorney'said the New / (Coattaued-*■ Pape Etevea) Auto' Ffrmg to Aid UAWCoUect Dues Detroit, .^ r ii 8 CP)' nr . 8 ( P ) — ‘The nai tloB’e Big ikree automaker* ia-r dicatod today they probably will go along with a union eequeet to be- gin deducting an additional |S monthly to duu from their CfO United Auto Workera' emplsyc*. ' Ih e union dues boost timn-12.80 tci^JT.SO.a month waa.roproved by a wide m a^n laat at the Daw convention in CMvelan<L-The r 'ftwost will be used to putld a'strike fund iv the union’s current fight fdir a guaranteed anhual.-wage for Ito million membin. The .utilon yeaUrday iMked tlew- eml.Motors Oorp.rFord Motor Co. and Chrysteii to ;kegln do- I .(OMttaaoi SB Psg* Ptro) (OeaMaued *a Page Six) News Tidbit^ (?aBcd from AP W irct At least 23 or 24 foreign mtoie- Taie.er* expeeted to San FrancU- eo for - 10th anniveraary meettog at UuHad Nadtens during weak of June 20,. Quaena attorney in New York eaves fieto iMaaible eeitoua Injury Il-year-old girl who fell while trying to aiecep* from her locked -fifth-etoty ' hqdroom with sheel-eiid-blaiiket rope. Lattisyllle A MaahvUl*. Railroad UfU emberge on aU freight ehlp- nseats to “pracUcelly all point* of xyatom," vrith exception of live- Btock, periabeblee, end laet than cartoad Iota. ... Raaidenta af .Que- bec toaot of Chetseuguay 'Bmdn clear debria left by e^ n g flood While ., wat*iii ; of Cheteeuguey TUver rieb hack between their banka after 2-day. r a m p a g e through-etreet*. Oiirtoial* ot Cenade’e SociaUet iwrty.(OCF) aay 14 manibera ex- pelled for belongtog to orgentoe* tion they deseribed as Cbhununlet .,BiU making paadiM* 23-1 epMt at Travalera. Ina^ahce Ce. is riated for . paaeage Tuaoday to fftato Sonata. National SafatY CounoU ffaeoa’i expeet nation^ traffic deaths on Barter ffundiy to be.any highei' ttuidi than anyXothar Sunday to year., Ruaaiana spy they have deripheied nilimg of extinct Mayan.'Indians wjkoaO hianglypliiea hava: ganarktioas e(. otudenla. tif A-Blasts Today Fired at Yucca ^ Vegas, Nev., April 8 (P>— Ani atomic device was explodlM from e tower on tha Nevada des- ert at 4:30 ABO. (PST) today as a preliminary to a second rtiot, echa’dulod later .today, which may be ohe of .the largert of the 1868 test aeries. . n a first niMlear expldelon o f the busy teat -Jay was from the top of a 300-toot tower on' Yucca F lat Ifi Le* Vegas the blert produced a bright WMteneee that faded toto a rich yellow. The quick glo' of the pra-dawn *hot was aeetr as far away as Saii Francisco and laa Angeles. Evidence that the flirt ahot ot the day waa a comparatively'small one—as atom bomha go—waa seeii to the (act that observers said they did not (eel a shock wave from the test aiU about 75 miles (roRT here. Las Vegas abm.etlmes gets, a sturdy Jolt from the explo- sion of major atomic devices. Foreign Obeervers See TCet * Two sharp Jolts were felt at tha tart alte control center. Twenty- four British ami Canadian observ- ara watched the prerdawn expto- aion which was seen aa a bright flash in' Salt Lake City. It was from a 300-foot tower. (Ceattaned oa Page PVre) A X' Moscow, A ^ l 9 / . ___ em powtrs todiw it considered “unjustified” gny furtlisr delay in coitc]udin$ an Austrian treaty of independence. It expressed hope the to Moscow on Monday of Austrian Chancellor Julius Raab would lead to “ speedy conclusion” of the treaty, , . A Soviet Foreign Minister Vk. M. Molotov called in the diplo- matic representatives of the U iii(^ States. Britain and France and handed them identical notes .expressing the Sovidt SUitude. 4 (to Tuesday th* thro* western pewera had issued e Joint declera- tJou to the effect that they con- sidered the Austrian treaty a mat- ter for tour-power conrtderntion. More,than 250 marttngs of depu- ty foreign ministers and 15 top level sessions of the fpral^ rnlir- irtere themaelvee over the peat 10 years have felled to reach agree- ment on a treaty. ) Opialoae Exehaaged Tqday’e note aaid th* Soviet Union took into considerntlon that Austrian officinls had nirendy ex- changed opinion# on a traaty with officials of the western powers. It added: The s w ift gov»nuw4iit ex presses the hope that in caae there is a desire on the part of all slates concerned it vril! be poaelble to achieve an agreemfcnt for the eon- clUBlon o f an Austrian state treaty." (U.8. State Department oSidals waited for th* text of Molotov’s not* before making any fermal comment. Privately, they aaid they felt that Molotov was ad drsMlng hla demands to the wrong peopla— that he should have been .faking to himself. (Western powers have tried for several years to get p. pact signed which would remove ell occupa- tion Torcoe from Austria. Tha So- viets have never been willing to agrea except on conditions which would, either limit tha withdrawal or in some manner keep the threat of military occupation oyeMAus' tria. (The Weetem governments have said reoently they- hope this time Rusiria may find a way to 'conclude the. treaty and end the occup8- tion. Until Chancellor Raab talks srith Molotov, they will 'Hot know whether there are any un- acceptable conditions In Russia’s latest ph^ioiBIi^ 'file note said the aim of the Soviet proposal “ is to put an.and to the present abnormal situation whereby Austria 10 years aftei; its Iteration from HlUerito Germany ia stlli under' control of to* <>c- ciipytof powers. "It ha* become riear that at the present time there are poosIMUtias for speeding up a aetUement 'of the Austrian question by means of conclusion of a stato treaty.’’ Th* note* claimed th*, Soviet government Started trying to reach a big power agreemeni On Aus- tria at the Berlin Conference in January 1854.' H iey also said the Soviet Union proposed last Aipgurt that th* am- b s a ^ o r* of the ' U4S.8.R., the United States, Franc* and Britain to Auatrie meet'with Auatrian of- ficials'to "discuss tbs question of concluding an Austrian treaty.’’ N * Farley W M ....... ...... "Unfortunately,” the notes added, “such a conference waa net convened. “Attaching great importanc* to the eettlement ot th* Austrian is- sue, the iasu* ot a fully todepsnd- ant and democratic Austria, and the issue of .peace to Europe, the Soviet government considered that (Ooattoned *n Fag* Threa) SteEEDtra fiwiWilHiais Democrats See j^dlaU Dee Dispute on Far East Aims Washington, April greaalonal Democrat* will look for p ^ b l* foreign policy differences between Adlal Stevenson and Pres- ident Eisenhower whm Stevenpon dtacUsse* the Far Eastern Sltua- Uon to a radio talk Monday. Two networks will broadcast the address .nationally without cha^e as a jwblic service. •- ;..... Ih Ctolcago,' Stevenson was un- avaUable for comment on his talk. But William McCormick Blair, hla law partner'and aide,-said Steven- son feel*, p4rty politics havb 'iio plecs to discussion of U ff. policy in ths Far Itoet Outstife Forty Talk ■-For that reason, Blair\ said, Stevenson-did not seek clearance for the broadcast from the Drtno- oratlc party; leadership. Friends bald, Stevenson feels the pubUo nseda a’ piearer. picture o f ths Impilcatloni of tha U.S. port- tion to the Fbrinoaa Strait nteire^nn wqs said to be oaxr Meuiatty aaaiaaa t* dlacuae U.8. B'UFI—0>n-<^poUcy regarding to* Nattonaliet- r held offmore, islands of Quemoy and Matsu, threatened with to- vaaion from the Red China main- land. . : . . (Congress has voted Elsenhower authority to order military action if he feels any Red moves against ()uemoy and Matsu-pose a.threat to Nationalist rtroiigbold of 8'or- mosa. There has been no official statement of admiiUetretlon in- tention*-to au^ an event. Stevenaon'a plaae for a radio address on th* Far East situetiim river* discloaed -yeeter- day, 1^* (Jolumbia Broadcarttog System will carry it from Chicago from '10 to 10:30 p.m. (EOT) Mon- day, ahd.th* National Braadeast- Ing Co: wlU rebroadcart a half hoUrilater.' ■ ' ' ^ ;^ifft'eveason w ill apeak on hi* own 'InlUatlvc, Mdthout advance eqn' sultatlon with coogreertoaal lead- ers or Demeeratle National CBalr- et Goiincil Would Annul West Alliance Moscow (by phone to don)- April 9 — ^The Me viet Council of Ministers to-^ day called on the Parliament to ^ annul Die treaties o f. friendship and alliance which Russia signed with F r*BC8 and Britain during World Warn. The move was to’ retaliatton for th* British snd French ratlflea- tion of th* Paris agreements to rearm West Germany. ■' Tha Soviet Union had throab- *n*d to anpul the treatios if tha two ' Western' netione eppnyvod the pacts enllstlM West German troppe to weafem defans*. . Cancellation by th* Suprama ffovtrt—th* Parliament^waa a (oregano coheiurton. The ftoviet government delma the treetlea er* directed agatoet Russia. ' Announcament of , the govern- ment'a request to Fe'rUamrat was read at a new* conference oailM by the Soviet Foreign Mtoiatry, UUe Fact Agatoet Oenaaay 'Noting that the French-Ruertaa and Britieh-Ruaeian Pacta- provid- ed for eoUeboration and matnatrtn-' sirtance after the war, tha Soylst statemenu eald that all the/ toriaa.to these treatiM “toept re- snonsihUlty to prevent th* or German militarism i 01 to Join any egatoit oiie of Slid also not slUance /lilroeted the contracting powers" "Regardless of this, Ih* govern- ment o f’Great Britain rtgn^ and the British Parliament approv^ the Paris Agfaeuent provldliig for remllitanxatlon of western Ger- many, and it* tovolvement tn artll— - tary groupfog directed egatoat the "Soviet Union,’* the atatemenl on a the Britlsh-Ruuisp treaty-said. *' ^ An ideqtlcal statement was ,ts- - sued on ’the French-Ruaeian treaty. "Because of such actions, which .are direct violations of th* obli- gations .entered, toto under the .. British-Soviet treaty," th# state- ment conUhued. “ the O m ncffrrt---- ' Mlnistere, in line With the posi- tion of the Soviet-governmeht out- lined in its note tb Britain ot Doe. 20 end Feb. 28. has submittad to the PraeSidium of the Supreme 8c- .Viet a proposal fo r the annulKIwnt, of the said tm tifs." ■'jR ■ “X " Bulletins from the A P -W ^ JAP8 WANT TALKB.'AT DW Tokyo, . April 8 (ft- lagan *•- leased today text at a stem- ly-werded aete t* Russia urging that peace talks “ bo startM - prompUy” to New Yrtrlri! CMy. The note, which wm turned aver to Russia’s Uatted Natiaaa tmm. _ reSeatatlve F r t ^ hi New tor traaamlselen lie Moaeew, M g ' the effect at rojeettag " — *--t suggeetieas t* held th* either ia Takyo or Moscow. HARTFORD NBWSMAN D m Hartford, April 8 (ff)—ffehn A. Oleaeoa, for more than 88 year* aae at Hartford*, laeal n rid neat aqd eoiorfdl’pUMta figutoot died ahertly after 7 eunTteday at St, Fiaacto HeopMaL Ha wrote aa editorial page eehnon for the Hartford Thnee, i CHURCHILL NOMINATED Woodford, Eagiead, April 8 (JV-8lr W'iasteti Charchitt la> day was eeeurfd the aomtoaUea fa r ) distiict.' EOK SDUnEmnOMA SeetA April % ^ 8 ^ *A e Katea’a. F May his bdla at 1* tolutn (to MhiMer T. T. ~ iM *T*dge a DaMad NaftoM ■Ida .•aiM .«ake aeHpM]

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    W AGE E IG B T E E Nv '

    1.

    V. ManrlifgBtgr gpgtttttg IfgiftdbF R ID A Y , A P R IL 8, 19BI

    H !. ' \ M M » i i t T o w n' lioyal Ctrcl* ol K la(a .will ntMt In th« yMarntton Itw of Uw Oeattf Church Uondar xUnr at T:4B. A fter tM rMuUr

    the groupN^U work on

    Junior W A T n hold on Hm mootuyt laat •vontne In tbo llhraxy o< MnneteooU ̂n gh flehobt. 40|Hnt to oUwr mooUngu in town nttMMahc* w u not up to oiqMeto-

    itthfried dnodngu

    h w . Hothott opjoy

    OM wlU bo

    , 'n :

    moot m igt(n "*“**»̂ _ _Ura. Rohort McNM on^ Mrn;anlol j . Sullivan, 4S0 B. Oontor St., ratumod 'homo today after m>omniiig four mohtha in St. Par toraburg, Fla. .

    Friohda In town have- rooolvad newa of tXo birth of a aon, Kenneth 8., April 8, to tho Rev. Daniel D. and Mra. Betty R AUon, mia- alOnaneo in India for the paat aix yaara. They have two daughtora, Janet, 4, and Martha, A The Rev. Daniel Allen ia a aon of the Rev. affd MTa. Frederick. Allen, Putnam,̂ C!onn.. Tormarly of Man- cheOtor, and ho and hla family expect to Ball from Bombay, India, Slay 14, arriving in Now Toik June 30 fo r a.̂ year'a furiough. Boe aha to further hla atuAea at

    Conn,' .'i "

    Temple Chapter, No. 83.

    date o f Tuooday, April It , t i animal Opringsraninaga a ' h ridIn motemplo. afon roquaeted to aet aaide tha- aalo. " // ■ 0

    ANdaUghter, Xare&^Juna, waa bom jmaterday at m Hartford ro u ted to Mr. and Mra. Qeorgo Froot, SI Bunco DT.

    N o ^ ’̂ M^ha charge all of dmg ’ueede at

    HNE raUIUGY384 Oentor StiHM l-t-tSU

    7?,

    T

    / // /tho tnw apirit of Eaator may wo extend to you. /

    "kur' valued cuatonora and to y ^ knai onea, the / aincero wiah that thla Kaater ̂ It^^w iU be filled * / la abundance,with the good'btaaainga or ranowod / '

    ' Falth,̂ Hope and Courage. / [ ' ■

    4APLE DRY C|.^NERS snd LAUNDERERS72 MAPUB STREBT/

    ' 0

    4-

    “TJ

    Sienda Sentenced To Prison Term

    Stanley R^ Sienda. 21, o f 413 N. Main S t, waa given a .one to three year prlimn term yastarday when priaantod In Superior Couft. on a- charge of attaoapfad robbery with vIoIgacg.

    Ho pleaded guilty to the riiargo, mode When ho waa ariraotod on Fth. 28 Hartford PtolM after a drunken rampogo In''which poHce

    /■H e r e S u n d a y

    hoAarioUnt State'

    oent tothe

    Wright 4m M. i

    four people. AUy. Dougteae.

    icnded to Judge that Sienda' M

    Priaon. Daugtaflo “moat Oerioua”. aoid at tho time

    that Sianda had at- up a Charter Otoe,

    atoro In Hartford end ‘ by too propriotroae, 1 afonn. Mann woo

    during Uiio im >. holB Sw l-h ls

    incident

    ''apaitmani/of Mra. Jadiiott Jal' o f BhrifOrd, end told the'

    and her . daughter ho had killed a man and ptooo Ware

    iookliig for aimShortly thorbaftor, ha loft the

    am but aoon returned and_______ down the doOr, which hadbaaa lockad by Mra. Jelbeft in hia abaence.

    Sienda agata left the apartmtnt and pmetlcimywalked into the po- lloc, amiod>'by, tht'a tiixit with a deaerip^oh given them by Mra. M aa^-'' .

    Oburt oiriciala at that time aatd he waa unable to poet the llQ.OOd bond aet when hla caae waa bound over to Superior Court ftom the Hartford Ptoice Court in March.

    Towii Employes Get Gertincates

    Ught municipal amployea will racahra certiScatm fvom tha In- tamatlonal City Manager’s Aaan. for complation of an in-aervice training program in administra- Uon at an informal party to be held April 20 at Omtar Springs Park tiodgO.- Those right and a ^ t other workem will receive cartifleatea from the town for completion of the couriM.

    ’fhoae reebivlag the ICMA oar-tiScates art Qaorgo Elliott, ikuper' intandont of comatorioo, Mias Jana Kelly, clerk in tho .cMitroIlar'e of- Sce, Fire Chief CUttord Maoon, Wilfred Maxwell, planning adminla- trator,. Horace MurpBey, park auparintendant James ,L. Parry, clerk-of-the-worka, Jamw Shaekey,

    angtnscr, and Fred Thrall, it aiawrbittodant ^ the

    Present Orptorio' At Chnt^ii Here

    Maundy aomricea at the Second C ongregato^ Church last eva- nliig were highlighted by a ohort- tened ptaoentatlota of Caul’s oratorio,/^Th# Holy a ty ,” the ad- mlnldtratlon .of Cimnmunton, tha bapaptlim o f 27 new members end Ehstpr Arnold Tbs^o confirmation clooo o f 18 boyo imd girls on confeariem. of faith, i total of 43 onroUaS./ Tho oervico wao on- ttroly by candloMght, Improaab and oxeeptionally wall attended.

    The voatad chancri choir was under the direction of Mm, Barbara ̂ R. Badier of Bolton, with Organiat BarcUy Wood accompan- Ist^for the cantata and appropri- aia hymns./Tha flis l aulu

    ; CM. iSalph T.

    CoL Ralph T. MlHet, the new provincial commander o f the Salvation Army for New UnglMul. and Mrs. Miller, w ill hb speoUl guest speakers for tha Easter services of the local Salvation Army Cbrpa Sunday. \

    One of the yoimgest'colonels to tha Army, he conimands the bnv province In the world. He'. ls a forceful apeaker and anargbtic to all that he does., *

    Hia wifa is the former Hulda Carlson,-slater of Bandmaster C. Peter Cerlaon of the Manchester Salvation Army Bond, tto will apeak at the Eeeter early momtag service Sunday, at the flagpole In the Caster Perk at 7 a.m.; also at the 10:48 holiness service .In'tha hall, whMi be will enroll new member* to the OoTpa,', commiarion the Junior Choir and aeveral local of- fleera. . ,

    ’The Band and torngatan Will support him with ylurical numbers

    and Peggy/wolteradotfT ria- tars of Sandra/and daughters of Mr. and Mra. Ifbward Woltaradorf,

    urtto win recaive town cm>

    Mriaa only art Paul Oarvtol, ael- iaatqr o f revaaua, Iftaa Mary Dalla Ftra, walfara dimeter, RaCreatien 'nreetor Jginba Hardie, Mm Bnbr toe Weak SMadAprti2^18M /

    11,743Mentoer of too Audit ■•mail at Olreidattoa

    M a n ch e $ te t A C ity o f V iU a g t C h a rm

    I lis W d s t lifr ' af D. S. Waatoac I

    Totoght, Mdetly fair, toe itoper PTa Ta ly fair aad warm. B rides.

    vlriw la

    '■tl

    TOLi,LXXlV,NO.m (T W E L V E P A G E S ) M AN C H E STE R , C O N N „ S A T U R D A Y . A P R IL f , 19SS. (OtaariAo* A4vertMag an Page 18)r -

    I ^ C E P IV B

    part waa ■ wtll token by Robert FoUette, tenor soloist of the choir. Joyce Weth- erell and Sandm Wpltohedorf, both of whom posadaa beautiful contralto voice* and are membera Manchester High School A C la choir, aaiig the contralto

    25 Auburn contralto di did Mra. Rylander.

    Thewho hu stage

    . poprano and in the cantata, as and Mrs. Marjorie

    director, Mrs. Becker, .Tie ac îrano voice and tha tiianeel rtiori^ra,

    aind pleased with her The same might be

    Albert Drigge, high 1 ^ the choir, .who rendered a arid in a commendable

    The chorus 'work wak and a l the olOee of

    Mr:Id

    v.xX DRDCQRV,\M A M M m m i m h i

    X OPENFRIDAY NIGHT (JNTI t V - ^

    S A T U R D A Y STO RE H O U R S S A M . to A P .M .

    . -V

    ..

    1.

    /

    the S A R A L E E story

    By Roger W. ̂ Bennett

    Staff Reporter o f The Wall Street Journal,

    ■ *T3iicago—Oteriee W. Lri- bln, a jovial BO-year-oî Chicago baker with e pear- ah^wd figure, la today vdtlp-' ping up a sales success recipe

    .-with - some unorthodox ..to- gredlenta.

    I

    While coet-cutUng' doihl- nates the thoughts o f many another bualneeanuto' these days. Baker Lubln la finding that it can pay to be cx- Iravagmnt. For example, hla whotaaale bakery. Kitchens of SaraDse, Jnc., namad after his daughter, poura plenty of 'butter, fresh milk and eggs Into its cakes. It ahuna the 1cm expensive vegetable ahortentog. powdered milk and dried egga uaed by moet commercial bakera The aim; .To turn ouf cakm that ‘not even Rrandroa'a grandma could bake.’

    ̂-‘Tha trend in the baking" , burineaa haa been for price to determtoeihe ingredients,’ Mr..Dubto.aey*. to newly enrolled mei chiuxb.

    /

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    i&KewsT lt?M I-f-t1 fl

    UNTIL J f U ,

    UUES-AZALEAS- H Y A O l i r n ^

    BUNWES mi BASKETS TOYS aii NQVam-

    lA S m C A R D S l O X E SAND OTHER Gl

    CLOSED EASTER $UNDAY AT 12:30 f.M . -

    CHOCOLATES

    . ' . • ’ • • ‘ trim

    /■

    Vpur Easter Sui| Netidi a

    Ke have fa m o ^ make blouses W dacron, cotton a ^ silk, sheer nylon, nylon tricot, silk and rayon w ith the linen lo ok D ressy'and tailored. SizM B 2 to3 8 . \

    to * 7 - ^ 8

    WNWTSWBABHSEOON^'lliOoIl

    j. : .-

    -. H '

    B E T T Y H A R TFO R D p ve s th is “ colii-dotted” washable rayon crepe dresa'B fu ll, gay, tucked sk irt and a w ide pique collar-over-aelf-eollaf. Jin N a ir -S iz e s 14V^ to 20>Y /

    New Spring Shades,. , fN

    NYLON HOSIERYK r r t quality fu ll fashioned w ith d irk or se lf seams. 'A ls o sheer

    ’ seamless, i

    ViNo-M8n4 Taitad

    fJylonII.7S ind $1.65 Pr.

    New, Simulated Flowers" " ^ . on Pin XX;for suit Wear. Garden bbuqueta, .rioIeuCreeu , ete>^

    5 9 ^ S|.00

    fV-'.

    A lb a B laiidtona- N y lon s $1.15 to $1.50

    - S a im tess^S beir N ylons $1.35 • n d $ l . 5 0 P r .

    Fancy Hsal Shoor - Nylon

    $1.00 and $1.35 Pr.'60 Gauge Sbatar DarkS«am Nylon $1.00 Pr.

    '*...

    SLIP-ONSTYLES

    Washable Fabric ClovesPlato or trim backs to nylM end doubla wovaa eoU;‘ ' ton.

    1.50 to. N 9 8 1^-CHIDDRBN’g .WA8RABLB 0L0V12B

    * 1.00 * | . pr.

    New Styles in

    HANDBAtfeSFor Easter Wear"

    eelectian of fainek P t? »tlc^ t«n t and itoiiSe calf. Top handle atylm to

    WNONESTEg n.VimN8 «riX • PR E D T . B L IS H JR., Preg. and T rea t.

    rra HARDWARE 1̂ HAVE rr* V 877̂ ilAlK an! ~ llAlijrCHESTER

    ' • d, ; •'■i.

    2 ®» C6chI

    MaNaMPBraBiii Gbb8R Puipa Givaa With Cegh Salsa. -K. J

    \

    H u r r ^ g to Onircli Smrvices'

    hufrim from U raar aa he errivee at toe. Nat bytertmi cauieh'ApiB t t o etteM Oeoi FH iey ewvlees. toe ear 8oer far toe cM*f exeoaftve la Henty Ntcbeleen. a i toe SVhlte BeuBe aberrt aerWee etog. (A F SWreilieta).

    JB^lls o f S L P eter’sY :

    .Vgtican GHy. A p ril 9 (ff>-r-The b ig bronze bells o f -St. P eter’s pealed out today announcing the end o f Lent “and heraldinir Ghriat’a resurrection from the tomb. Bgfq^e the

    X . 10 ton *t!tflBpawm c,” m atter bell o f the BgiG ps. abhadt ita fifiel Bbta, toa brila Uf Rome’e airy— --------’— — -most 800 otoer church** jotoedi in to* ringing chorus to proclaim the rigU of Kaater.

    Manea to Poterie Square " '‘Ware tbouuaflii o f the vsat torong

    af Kaater touriita hen from many lands to be on hand ' tomorrow when TS^year-old Pop* Piua X IIf iv•s bia blearing to the city end

    e world- , »__ gunahtoe _broke fitfully throughBght cloudk. ProapeCU were good, however,-for a sunny Eseter to

    'Contrast ta laat year'a chill when snoWTaU on tho Alban HUli with- to right of the Eternal City.

    SSOtot Kxpaatodi. - X crowd as greet or greater

    than last Eaater'a - 390,000 is 'expected to Jim S t Petto’s Square at noon tomomw when the stlU- bonvalescfng Pontiff appears on the balcony to' giva hla address.. Many believe U 'Will be—-aa oh laet Kaater—a plea for peace • in the atomic age.

    Hie words will be carried to the crowd by toudspeakar, and ta the world by Vatican Radio in hook- up With broadcasting systams to WBiy lands.

    Vatican announcament said totoewouhr be hookups with n jllo natworka to France, Spain, Belgium. Holland, Portugal, the Saar, Oermahy, Austria, Switaeriaad. leixambourg qnd Monaco. Broad- caaU will be .beamed behind the Iron Curtain from Radio Free Eu tope; 'Tangier and Morocco.-

    Itabroadcaate dr parts of the message and benediction, will be carried by the NBC Bnd CBS in the Dnited States. ' >.

    This “Hbly Satu i^y” mdntingi ̂a high Mass waa calebratad to S t Peter's and the other roajpr basUicas of Romri The Bells rang

    - out whan the aarricas-easehed the •.•Glorle.’'~ t)th er “ HolyTBelurday*’ services at « t Peter’s included the Bices-

    of Fire in the atrium of the barillca aqd- .the Blseahig of Holy Watar pounta. '

    KecaBs Aaeirat Rites Twelve Canons* of the Basilica,

    symbolic of . the 12 Appatlea, than took aome of the newly-bleaaed

    . water, to. sprinkle *11 who were la the baaillcsr The ceremonyurecall'

    . od' ancient Holy Saturday rites when It waa the custom to_ad- mtoiater hapUatn.

    Throughout the day surpUced priests, accompanied by acolytes carrytog pots of bleeaad holy water, visited every burineor iendissioBiro*g ulUtDiei, vT iion|Er'oiGDF̂tog the homes and offiees.

    Meanwhile,, ChristlmiM in many

    fOseTasnSd Sri Page Five)

    Polio Vaccine Liist Ready for Release

    Ann Arbor, MIchV, April S (JV- Fktonta. of children in If'X tatei, Oanad* and Finlaiul. who participated in laet year’s Salk polio vac-; cine testa wUl.leem by the eUd aisxt vRcek.who got the actual vao-J etna and who got a neutral control •uBatGiicG.* ■ Robert Volght, chief .etaUetieian at the PDliomycUtlB Jgveluatton Center at the IhUveratty of Michl- 'gau, aaid yaatarday the coded vaie- rinatiion records of oome 74R000 children are being mailed to beuth depertmenta ia eroes where «hU- dren took part lu the mees experi- SIGIiL'

    Tnm toeao reoorda, boelto offi-

    I (to Page fiv * )

    • \wrt~- •

    G)i^i Ponders New job Offer By State Dept- Waahington, A p r i l — Ed

    ward J. Oorai, biamtog “anemias' for the hbrupt end of kik. special immiigretion poaC waa uiulecided ((toay 'krbejher to accept anotber Jbb'oifered to hiih by Secretary of State Duties.

    DiiUes yesterdey offered Coral » Job aurveying 7 ptaribi* raaettle-

    .ihent of bmnli^anta to Latin A toeriea iuid /etoewbare. Coral’s present eaaigmnent—thet of helping speed a lagginglirogramtoed mit 214,000 refugees into the Unit ed States—ends tomorrow. That Job suddenly eras tided "tem' porary,"

    Rhiaiee Fees lor OusterCorel—a Republican with a pub

    lic senrlca rcto)rd dating back to the Hoover administration blamed “enemies with the deperf- ment,.aa well a* out” for the unexpected termination o f hia refugee immigration Job. But The mentioned by name only ^Rep. Walter fD-Pa). He said he believed tha State Department - was yieldiag Walter’s demeiide that he be ousted. ...

    In recent weeks, Walter repeat-l edly has cbargril the ItaUan-hom Oorai w4th past aaaoclatlona with Communist front grotm . Corsi yesterday daoertbed Walter's at-

    (fkuMeuad )— a So

    v ie t youth, who defected to the W est land saked fo r po- Uticsl ssylum last month wss returned to his parents'today behind the Iron Curtain. This waa done a t hia own request, U.S. o fhcia ls said.' The youth w m ValerJ' Lystkov,

    teenage son of A Russian Air Force.officer statibhed Just out- 'Mde East Berlin.̂

    His defect km'to West BerUh Mareb-iS atlrred an teternetlpriel furor. Soviet Foteiga Mtulstor V. M. MrfeaWred youth, told GW Momh 28 Wewa conferchco he hM made e^revtoua attempt to flee from hla"f*ther, Lt. Co], Alexander 1, Lyaikov, wh(f ia assigned to a Soviet ahr tnuiaport regiment ^ outride Berlin. That waa to January whoa-he hopped aboard an rievated train in East Berlin, he said. But Communist police caught him and seat'him back to his parenta.

    HU second try was simpler. ’*^***ed in e Ckrmen-made brown M t. end looking aaueh like any Eertto ym u^*r,^he strbUed toto fIMrweaterii sector e l ah M .̂-uerded spot. A t the news ponferenoe to Weat Berlin he aeenied self-possessed, smoked cigarettes and commented on everything from the cold war to what young Ruariana eall their g irl frlMids.

    He rtaimed he ran away because he had become convinced Oommu- aiet-peopagende waa (UmTh* ^ agreed arith his father, a Oqm- munist end he Wanted to be a pilot He added tiuit he felt re-, niorseftil' at leaving his parenta. because they “most certainly will be punched.”

    ussia/

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    T r o o p s C a l ]C4>n3id c r e d1 j a ~ A la b a n ia

    . A tlan ta, A p ril 9 (/^>--Gov;. James £ . Foisom refnsed to Call the N ationgl Gaard to duty in the strife-ridden Southern Bell Telephone strike area - o f Birm ingham , Aliu , today but orderH the State H ighw ay Patro l reinforced there.

    A tlan ta, A p ril 9 (>P) — Re- dpubled e ffo rts w ere being made in A tlah ta today to settle the 27-day-old ^ u th e m Bell Telephone Co. strike in tile wake o f violence or disorder in m ost o f the nine southeastern states affSeted^ - In two ..atates^Ala^toa and Florida—atrikers river* restrained by court order from niaas pickat- Ing. And.Gov. James E. Folaotn of Alabama called for a survey to determine whether to call out the National Guard to maintain brfief.

    The flareup of violence and dia- order was widespread. ̂ •V'-

    A blast, apparently froni a dyna- inlie Chal-g^ damaged trunk lines at Chattanooga. Tenn., last lii^ t. and rifle. shots near New Orleans put 383 long d ia^ce linaa out of order , for several hours. Another- cable was cut at Miami, Fla., th* 32nd act of/thia type of damage sine* thq atwa began.

    H ifl Egga sag. Eeek#A t Ifadalgb. N. C.. a uon-striktog

    worker told police he waa set upon a r be was leaving the .telephone p ^ t , and at DanviU*. Ky.. .eu unruly crowd-hurled eggs aad rocks 'as it milled to front of e phone company huildtog. It was th* f ^ violence to the month-old strike at Raleigh.

    Officials of the CIO Commimlce-ons Workers tit America have inlef| repeatedly that their mem- !M have'been responsible for vio-

    tenoa or damage to company prope r t y t h e strike began Harcb- 14 after failure to agree on e new contcect. ' . .

    The company announced it .had offered w kn tocreeaea of about six mUllon dMton. on' condition the union aecapt a no-strike clsup^ the cleuse w^ch the. com pl^ holds is the mein bar to e settle-

    F ly in g P la t fo r n i \

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  • P '? v '- ‘W , ’V. .-“V W ,\ '4 0 W W .'--

    y.v.' t ■•Ui.'■* ;■• ■‘ • ■I y a rep- yeyadtative of the W^atehtower So- riety, S. D. Buck. On Sunday a t 3 p.m._he will give a public, lecture: "Communism or Christianity, m ic h Will it Be?" Thia vrill he followed- a t 4:16 pnw by Jtudy of March 1; Watphtower,^ subjdy^

    group/wald. Just before the meet m g adfoundd, th a t he eaw no ob- jecUon, regardleea of the eUpule Uoue made by his party of going ahead w ith the preitminery plena.

    *^8u||^rtlng Jchdvah’s Organlxa-

    AM,TaIeottrilte and Veraeu news , - - itenm are now being handledfa t 0:80 a.m. for _the [threuglr Tim M aachuter Evening

    Uinnid ReckvUlo Bureau. Jooatcd a t 4 -Market St,, telepfaeae Koric- riile ̂ A:S1S -/]^>e\d mantgMtured rigar

    binder If ex p eri^ to gp Into production herisarouBd May 1. It waa diaelpeed yeeterdayvv

    Jean E ,.8 hepatd Jh . prealdent and treaaurer of the c u m p a n y which will manufacture tna binder, emphaeized the binder bemfede entirely-of tobacco andNrill contain no tobacca subatltutee.

    (In the manufacture of cl the binder Is a sheet of lobaccb that'binds together the f m r that makes up the major porUon of the. rigaf.. l t is located Justvunder the wramter or outside cover of the rign 'l. .

    acfibing ths new binder aa. the "mdet pnvrcsstve eU^ in the cigar mduanry In 100 yeSn,"^ Shepard said machinde wUlJb*ansform the tobacco Into aheeta which hla company plana to atll to c l g A r manufacturera

    Thpmaa BurgsM Jr., chairman of the Tobacco Oommittee of the Connecticut Farm Buraau, aald that a t the present time the average ̂farmer. could not afford to sell his sound tobaoeo for this pro- f t o . They cOuld dispose of Uieir damaged leaves, how m r, he said.

    Virtually all. ths tobacco grown In Connecticut le used ritbo'- for binders or wrappers In clgats. ’’

    Shepard said his new cmnpany

    will Opetate in whaK was onos a asetiott r i ths RockriBf Journal’s gangs. 'He said the e o m ^ y wiU sta rt/Ih a installation. «m,speelal maeninary. a t 'onea althouj^-. the leas* la'not effeetlvf uuntll M ar 1.

    D ik t ih M 'L a s h

    TH E ASeO CIAiSO PHESg1 HUl, N.C/—Robert WU-

    (BOb) Madiy, 87, director of tha University of North Ohrriina News Bursau for 33 yorip and Cormsr New Tock, unaputenaea^

    In Scotland Neck, nTc , Died Frldey.

    Plttefautgh—Jaman J.";rity director for the N(_____

    PItttSbuigti- ftcatea otnee former ffiorU editor of the

    old Pittaburgh Sun and fpr gHny uni basriuUl eoiunmlat fob the teburgh Ckm TriegniEi^ Died

    ield, - Mo.-:-Mattin % a New Turk eaportcr lO-month sentence In for bribery of a gov- ' ‘ DIpd Friday.

    S ta te ]Vfaii K illedl I n A iito A c c id e n t

    Wol serving fderal pi ernmeat

    iu u j e d BT ;; T l U f _ A< » > W I M T B B N n m A T K a . X(») s p o a n nr aiviKw . / < U ) C I S C O U D ( t i l T H E C H J U S T O F a i C a *

    f i U O A B D n n K O W I T H»• i < M ) T m r ^ ^ S e ^ T O B T i ,•)i0 < e> Tov A saao.poa iT -lte t

    a o i ( U > I N j ^ t ^ ^ i r ^ A B A l l E «S)jnpr IS Y ota uuPK — ^ ^ M o a a p w ^Ii b i a h Vc m a o b s h o w

    a m ra .^ "8aca.eA8avMtowB'’ ( H i S E T M C a S O H __( e i) a a j u u c T n s b a m kI Y -• LMsCeeat'* ^

    :e ' m e i d t s h o w c T i n H t ^

    < i) _Vet)' iTOBA'ca4lS) BIO FI C l___^(IW ABMCHAia AdVi liaM) BEAT THE CL J A C a i B i - ( . t ) m k h ------------

    . ( I M i T l M _______ _________( i i ) w m E s n j i ( o(ti) STAB Tomoar

    t ;S e ( I ) B O T B I S I B B O L L Y W O O D (ti) T H B v n a ...• te e i t r i ) S P E O T A C V t A B — T h e

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    —“ B e « y M u m s **( s t4 i> T i r o r o a i v e h o n e y

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    lt> 4e 4U ) C O M P A t oM S ) R A U * a o c a D B A M A ( s » 4 i ) n u n r a B S K i N A L . f a t b -

    M M t ( M ^ o c a H I T F A B A D B( I W J & J N ’F D N M l ) W a W T L I N O

    U i t e < t ) H S m Y f O N S A S H O W" H e r C n y e l e s O to e y * * - at) L A T B W O B L r i ’ n W S

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    ( U > L A T B ____— " T h e ! I M a r Bee'

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    UM411 liellU ________. —rcfesehr* car"

    ( s) w B i w n u D i a -.(tl) HOTia ___< 1> M I O H T C A F T W a A T E B -^BerM FSlnr' raam aB( a> xawB

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    * “* * D m c a ns. , ' - ’ ’ ' ■

    Judgpient wga euspci dxtendad by 'Probation JsM s Dufty,'wbo told the Pdttildge is a Marine Corps ran who has been in many eranx* boipitals, was actually a lui- tive of Miami, Fla., and had .not an opportunity to get a license.

    Partridge told the Judge he Intended now to live in Connecticut. Judge Rottner said that ae soon as Probatioa Officer Duffy is satisfted thst Partridge now haa a driveria license, the suspended Judgment will trice effect,

    Thomas H. Dawkins, 30, of BOO W(N>dbridge St;, was Bned $0 pn a charge of passing a stop sign; add Eugene Rhodes, M, of Hartford, was fined 33 for passing a red light.

    in one other case^ Judgment was suspended, i t wqs that pf Richard T. IfcDonricl. ' 21'i of Hartford, charged with' going the wrong way on a OM 'way street. He told the court h^ had been away from the aiaa/for some time and was confused by Gri; Wilbur Cross Highway. I t there he was arrested, headed {he wrong way, on March IS " by -State Patrolman B3mer Neal

    m e ^a /r ia iM la eeconuMry,4nrih 'isBuee are wages and. an agreement by the eoihpany to arbitrate al l , disputes. \

    Federal mediators / conferred with both - sides in A tll^ta last night after Cgrector Joiieph F. Finnegan of tfie Federal MMati'cm and Omciliation Service callro for stepped up negotiations.

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    ( I » W A I T E B W I N C H E L L(iMi) r a a p waboto bbowMl) NEWS J_(lAAi) SToaa cLca (M) WNEBE WBBE YOEf (M). OBAL aoBaarc (M) caaisTorHEits 1 s> LQUCTTA ro p e d SHOW

    . "Ba A la r a y a -.O Miia a Ha»a”aSAI)( i a « 4>

    ISlMla JsSninit” ----i A ^ a r -

    HANK T WITH -“The FHa

    (it) ITS A OaiiAT u r a < i ) W H A T W H T U N B ( U ) M I L U O N ---------------( i t i l a t e W t _ __________( M ) i P T E N T I i B E B o r B L L B B T

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    umew - “ ■(U) H riu -'m ea muH Ml) SUNDAY CINrwa (n> iNHBaaAai

    WkBs

    ...WaSSAA’™"’( s) .rnasiDK tbbaTbb . —'JHal Ike Marrytac i

    r!322T.51US2Il®**,(it) NIOHRCAF NEWS

    J O H N I. O L S O N■rf^Da c o f f U r

    ' 7 4 *-.. .HENRY StDIEr .

    . TOMbaaowf araauoRTB Utee (3e> TBLaTHBAffRa -l I M t < t> B T B i a a I T B I C Ht.*ee (U)' aoBKBT a. lrwibS iS a ( H ) M A T I H B B

    M ORIARTY BROTHERSC O M P ' l FTE H t A T I N G SERVICE

    RANGE AND FUEL OIL ■in CENTER ST - P H O N E M|-3 t , l J 5

    TT"

    . *Y

    Robert'THircotte;The prosecuting attorney said Leister had been in court in-January and again -in MaMdi. on chargee of Intoxication

    A suspended 30 dsy jail sentence’ was given Isadc McGreanor, 70, of DO certain address, charged with intoxication. Judge .Rottn.ex warned Him that the next time he appeared/ in court .oh a rimllar charge /b e . would be charged. Main, y with ' being a common drunkard and would spend a con- xideriMle time in Jail

    Two Massachusetts drivers forfeited. 335 bonds on speeding charges, .They were Muiiei HoL- gan. 37,* o f Bui*imgtoib and Vibtor Medeiroe^ 40, of SmOt Dartmouth.

    A 137.fine was paid.by,Herbert Hutchinaon, 18,' of RFD 2. for speeding. He was arreated March 38 by Patrolman. John Mahoney. ̂ On rules of the road c o u n t a,

    Charles B prdlck,''lirbf 77 Green- wood Dr., and Raymimd A, Des- rosien, IB, of 341 Hilliard . SU were both fined 313 each.

    Others fined on the tame charge were Joe Soave. 80. of 118 El- drldgS S t. IB; and Peter4 feomana, 17. of Andover. Ig.

    Lois A. Herrick, 33,''of 177 Avery S t, had a charge at vlolht’idna of the rules of . the toed nolled after Prosecutor* Keith said he fell any acU C fr^ the',accidenl’ I'h' '̂whlch she was involved was probably & rivtl matter. The accident occurred OB Thursday.. Judgmriit waa suspended in the ease of Anthony P ... Pasquariello. 43, "of- Torrington, charged with a vlolatkm of the nilaa of the road iriter. hie arreet yesterday by Patrolman Raymond Peck. He told the Judge he had a long good driving record., FrancU S. Gifford. IS, 6f Bris

    tol, R l . waa fined $20. with glB remitted, on a charge of Operating an' unrej^teied motor vehicle. He .111 a leryleeman and appeared' In 'court' accompanied by. hie mother, since he is a minor.

    She told the Judge she felt the youth w as; hot a t fault aince she and her husband should have hXd .the cac^gegytfred as young OifV ford was in North OeroUna a t the time ' when registration ahould have been made, . . .

    Judge Rottner waa reluctant to., make a guUJ^ . finding but the facts ahowetrOiffotd Waa actually operating an uhraglstered ear a t the time of hie arrest. But he did show him leniency in imposing fine.

    Gn n charge of operating a motor. vehicle without a driver'a Ucepae made agaltiet R i c h a r d Partridge,' 30, of South Coventry,'

    se B o u n d O v e r T o l l i g h T r ib u n a lJudge Johii^S. G. Rottner today

    bound/he case « M ra . Helen Kennedy, 50, of 100 E ^ h St., charged with breaking and ^entering and larceny in connection' with the theft of 160 from Bartlett's Soda Shop, over to Superior Court.

    Mm. Kennedy waa brought to ifertford Coun^ Jrit paaidlng the Superior Court hearing after she failed to poet the 9S,00(r bond eet today by Judge Rottner.

    Rottner made the decision after Probation Officer James Duffy told him Mrs. K enne^ Is an atco- hobe who loses all sense of right and wrong when under the influe- ence of rieahaL .. . _

    Duffy said he' had interested Mca. K e n n e d y in Alcoholics Anonymous bbt her friends object ed to her saMciation with th( gpt>up .and she dropped out after a J>robatlan period.: \

    Mrs. Kennedy pleaded guilty to both breaking qnd -entering and

    ..larceny.The breakOcicurred -April 1,

    Police traced t ,e break to lire. Kennedy who admitted she : the store the cellcr, from her Own cellar, which adjoina-«• ■ . -V ■She told police she/wanted a drink and had no money to buy i t Abuoet all of the $80 etoira haa been lycovered. \ .

    - Mrs. KSnne^ wax 'arrea^M' ii) connection with the break on the same morning it occurred, she waa arrested-later in the day . for intoxication and fined 320 on that count in Town Couijt last Saturday.

    PoHee ArrefilsJftJfflehria, V)

    er Court, Rockville, an Clayton. - 28, Dorchester, were arrested by local poHCe today on kproharges.

    Nichols Was charged with operation a motor vehicle without, a license and released ' tmder 350 bond. Patrolman Newton Taggart made the arrest. -

    Clayton, arrested by S t a t e Policeman Charles ' Sanga. waa chafgad with speeding and released under bond. Both are elated to appear In court April 18.

    MOML HIAT

    F U f i l r e i l .

    M O R I A R T YB R O T H E R S

    O P 6 N

    ‘ i 4 H O U R S /S15 CcBtcrSL->TcL MI-8-51S5

    MOML K nosm E

    R A N G E i m .

    n sid e te dbama

    (Conthiued from

    union contends th » that

    / r :

    DeathsC. Henry Olmeted

    C. Henry Olmsted, 745 Burnside Ave., East Hartford, former director of public works in Blast Hartford, andfather of Richard S. OInr- sted of 33 Comstock Rd., died suddenly yeaterday afternoon a t hit home.

    He was a practicing civil engi-* neer in East Hartford for. many years.Xdirector of puUic works for mimy yrars until Us retirement, g member'! of the school building committee, and had served .as a member of the Town Plan .Commission, tbe Flood Control Com*, mittee andXother town’ boards in East HartfoVd

    He had alro served in the General Asaembl)E and was a director of the East elartford Trust Co,. ProMinehf .in i^urch rifairs, he was a member And lifetime' deacon of the F irn Congregational Church of Shut/Hartford.- Hewas also a member o{ the CXin- necticut 8o(dety of Civil Kn^- neers. Orient Lodge ^o . 62, A. F. and A. M nf ICn«t WjT4fr.r148STERDAY: rtf old; Mra.

    Rd.; W «- Stafford

    Hale, RPP 2. Cov- entry; Mfs. Ireds Lyons, 102 West St.. RockviUe;.1^x; Esther„Palri- mb, 48 SchC)Dl St.; Mra Betty Morrison, ' East Glastonbury; Edward; To^nxon, 4 Fox Hill 1^., Rbck- yUls; Wllilmn Schmidt ^ F D \ 1, Glastonbury; WlUiain Savi

    ______ I I n f M , * . — -

    Ellingtan; Mra. Sarah Burns. Center .g t; Ronald Gustafson,Glen wood S t : WUUam Nevus,, g Nathan Rd. ’■■ /

    BIRTHS YESTERDAY: a sbn to Mr. and Mrs. Munroe WeUnore, Vernon Trailer Court; a son to Mr. and Mra W riter Behrtnann, 37 Green S t / a eon to Mr. and Mra. William l^ tch . 18 Englewood Dr.

    BIRTHS TODAY: a daughterllr,_ind.Mih.-„D)uward'4diU^ Gardner-St V*'-

    DISCTIAROED. YESTB3tUAY: Robert LtaOK 39 North S tf Rriph

    tT WONT BE LOWL N O W -:>

    Before you know I f yen'll be Tending about a Heat Wave on the way. Heat to. beait you down during the day’aad keep yon awake rights. CBieer up — y«u don’t h u e to suffer. Hero’s aemething you can do.abopt H!

    •Right NOW la the time to take steps "te heat the heat OaU WUMama OU Swvlee teday f«v a fnip estimate «a G-E r ir coadl- tionlag for your home . 1,office . . or store. There’s no 'oSBtation.

    INSTAU

    AIR CONDniONING

    FOR REST lURNER FBRFORMANCE

    u s r . ^ m f SO U R

    i m OILO I t

    141 MibAD $T.

    S E R: V I C E8 . ! ■- ..I .

    TELMIfUS48

    Sloan Bros.?

    - /

    .'i-

    if’. A?Mt-

    J

    By now all,the ahoppiiii^a done—or. nearly so—and dress ^w h^ohls for the Easter parade are under way. I f mother

    ^and> the youngsters were, among the-hundreds fitted by us during the past fev ^ eek s theylcnow a.Jittie about our store,

    ' bur people,’ our genuine desire to serve you well. But most of a ll,;,they know how painstaking w ^arb to fit j ^ t properly —^̂ young and adult alike. ̂ • ,

    If you didn’t get around to prove fr yourself our ability to fit properly, do so another day. We know yoii’ll be more than satisfied. ' . ~

    r o R .■ V̂

    • X

    • • -V. #: (■- '• -• S H O E S121 MAIN ST.. MAKCMESTlî III MAIN STuNEff

  • "r--;>. ■̂• . i *( ■

    ■I..' .'t . r- -

    ■ V !\‘

    M. Jkwa* ■> CL ^Srarcli■0V. S9»m fC HMwe, Fatter

    B0V. Orrrge F. Itei lw »0V. M gar S. FtereU B0V. FkwMte Batter

    Buhdw Masete;; . \itelidulte, 6, 7, f , », 10 and>ll

    o'clock witli tOro U u«e«-at 0, one la ite main auditorium for adulta and one for the ctaildren la tbe liaaemcnt: ^ two Moaaea at 10.

    la the main auditorium and la Uw baaemcnt.

    CMreh of St.

    VMANGBESTER EVENING HERALp, MANCHEiSTER, SATURDAY. APRIL 9. 19S5

    MA1K:HE(9TEB E^ MABi^ESTER, COHÛ SATURDAY/ APRIL 9, ms P A ^ F IV E

    /

    Oeveaaat Oaa(l«catteaal ̂ . Ckurch ,

    ■dr. K. KJaor Raak. lUalater Mtaa Bute goadatroBi,

    Fariak Worker.Bln. Beaaetk Mdaoa. Orsaaiat'

    Aaawnpttea

    S:S0' and 10 a.BL

    ■. C. Church Delaaay, Paator

    Oarrell had Gabala, AaaUteata

    Sunday at 10and Bteaaea

    10:45 a.m.

    PaaterCBnate

    l̂ aater Simday. April 10.—0:80 .a.in., Sunday. School.10:45.a. m.. Morning Worship. Meatan:‘.‘*nie Glorious Baater

    MeasOge..: ■Special Kairter aelecUona by the

    church ch:dr.. '' Sunday School Baater

    at 7 p.m. in charge of Mlu Granatrom.

    The WeekTueaday—

    7 p̂ m̂ C!onflrma< Claaa.5 p.m.,g;15 p.m., Pl^aocal Evange)iim

    claaa.

    huaineaa ateetlng of 'a t .7:30 p. m., preceded

    ' of the Chur^ Board p.m/<

    lUng at the.Open H ea r th Ifiasion Hartford at 7:30 p.m. Friday...- /

    B aa ke th X l I l ^ a With the Woodstock gtfltaP. Bowers gym at 7:80 p.m. /Saturday/^

    C oydnant League meets

    thy dlaeaoaa; who redeemeth «U life from deatructioa;. who crovn^ eth thee with lovhog klndptea and tender mercies.'’ (Psaimy\10S:3-4).

    Correlative paasaces' from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Bddy, include^e following (p.473:84-30 A ll) :̂ A ll reality U' in God and

    Alveation, harmonious and bier- 1 That which He creates is good, id He 'makes all that Is made.

    Therefore the only reality of sin, sickness, or death >4 the awful fact that unrealities seem real to hpmaa, erring belief, until God apripa off their disculser. They aie

    ddot true, because they are |mt of *OodJ?

    8:t0, S:30 and 11 Bsl

    atdnireh J t 7:45 pm, srith Mra

    ce and BCrs. Anna snow

    'a ■. Uow up^ ____ y

    T»i«Mtayr^..." / ,.................... ‘1:30 p.m., Pi^er/Group. g -p.m.. Biding- Committee

    meeting ta/Seatry.Wednesday— ■2 p.ro:, Joy arcla7 p-tn., Choir rehearsal. , ,8 T-m,.: WBC8' masting:,

    H n. KsniheUi Itarli^t speaking end showing slidsa of'her work in

    Thursday, 7:30 -p.m., Church School teataers'meeting in veatry.

    EYidey, 7 p.m.. Adult Diactierion Group in ytotry.'

    Emanuel Latheran Church - part B. Olaon, Fqstor

    Xarry Bryuell, Aeat. to ttie Pastor Chartee 8. Wahely,

    Orgaalat and Choirmaster

    Eaater Sunday April 10—Divine Worehlp 9K)0 end 10:45.

    At 9:0Q 'o’clock Chuich School chll-

    C h r i s t Is R is e n

    A l l e f u i a ^ as.X

    C E N T E R

    C O N G R E G A T I O N A L

    C H U R C H

    i ' 7:15'Holy^Cemmunien .

    Morning Stryicti— 7:55-9: IS*11:00

    ‘ SERMON: 'V h E CROSS" '

    > VII. ^Tho Road bf DoothtDtho V W ayofLifo".

    Tiio T'asfo;r PrRochin ̂ :/.

    SpocisI MusicII&'

    •'L, ■ ‘ iThroo ypstoji p iioirs opd Ip^trufTnr̂ falisfc ,

    Diraetadby . ■ y Andraw R..Watson, Miniitor pf Music

    COME AND WORSHIP

    ^ tn ^ R Y ’s EnsGcmE <CHURCH ^ LOCUST STREET^

    E A S T E R/•

    Z6:00 A.M. Holy Communion with Easter\ntroit. No^nuslc.

    8:00 A.M. Holy Communion with tulf Senio^hoir. \ >

    '9:45 A.M. Holy Communion without music or Mrpit*. .\^ ___ __ __ ___ / - - X \ ~ - ~ A11:00 A.M. Holy Communion with sarmon by thf Ractor. Soni

    , Oholr. •— ... ;

    3:00 P.M. Chiidran's Servica with Mite Bbk PreSantation. Nbr^ \ through Grade 3. Boys'Choir. ‘ .

    4;30 PJM. Children's Service. o"d Mite Box Presentation ̂ TRi * through High School.*'Junior Choil.

    ■ S T R A N G E r X W E L C ( ^ ■

    PoliQ Vaccine List Ready foe Release

    (Centtaned frem Page One)

    dale will, learn; fch (he firrt time which of the GUldreh who wera given an injection received the Salk vaedne s«d which wcre glven placebos (dianmy shots)'. The placshos are ea ineffecUVe against poUotai water.

    It already la known in S3 other atates comprlaing what the evaluation center caUs "obMrved epn-

    . trot arau” that alt second graders wera inoculated with the vaccine while , first and third graders received nothing. The names of the latter were recorded simply to servo as a control group,' Tbs first lists were nieiled yesterday to (huieda, Finland, Utah, California; Waahlngton and Montana. Others go out today to New York, Maaaechuaetta, Alabama and Iowa:

    Lists will be mailed tO'Mlcliigen. ^Ohio and lUincla on Monday, the tay before the officiel report on the 'vaccine, is made In Ann Arbor.

    The report will be made by Di; Thomas EYancls jr.. overseer meUculou's evaluation study Spring’s Salk vaccine testa ta twt> ipillion children. It wi| bs/the first ■ pabiic-announcement qf the e10:45 Service. Service for the Nursery and BeginnerB*-groups in the Chapel at 9:P0 A. M. ,. X ' ~

    , PASTOR OLSON WILL CONCLUDE HIS MINISTRYi A T EMANUEL WITH THESE ser vices

    - ̂ . e ' .

    Come, Wotghip The Risen Christ!, / ̂ ji Cdtdial Weiep

    i EMANUEL LUTHEIUN CHURCH. a W R C H Shd CHESTNUT S T M ^ - ^

    /

    fectiveness, or Ipaff^iveneas, the vaccine agatast/Mlio.

    Newsmen will gM the etory as a ‘’summary of thnkiiraniarY' of the evaluation at .>''9:10 a.m. (EST) Tuesday in m Rackham Building on the l^verrity ’of Michigan campus. At 10 am. more then 400 top seJtatinc men will hoar a more

    report by Dr. Francis and nber of oth*r persona saao-

    Ited with the ts^ . including Jonar SalK,~ who dK^eldped'the

    'vacctaa.,MsanwhU*, In Washington,

    ■pokamnan for the Natlonar In- stitutesMffMealth (N IH ) chid yesterday ̂ e (]ecialonv whether to liv cense the 'vaccinf' for man.ufae-' ture and sale probably will be reached April U or 13.

    The spokeratan said Dr. W. G. Workman, oKief of tht NIH'a B1

    4trol Laboratory, will

    MeoaM N. Huagerferd,.'\ ■

    Sydaey W. MiaeAlplBe, Orgaaist ' . aad ChelrmaBtrir

    ----- Mi* .. W» K, Kleppawbyrg, ,__CkSdrsa’s Orgaalsi

    6 am.. Baster Day, April 10. ' S ajn., Holy Communion.

    Proceaaional — "Welcome H a j^ Morning!" ' ,

    Introit^"Christ Oiir FsMover"....Goss

    Gradual—"Jeeus Livesi?? Ott^ry-r-"Alleluia!” .\.,Handel Gloria in Excelais

    ----Old ScoUittt OiantReceaalonal---:--“ Jesua ~CtiTl»t~‘T *

    Rleen TodaY* \*8:45 am.. Holy .CommunUm.No introit used at this aervice. It. am.. Holy Communion.

    Processional—"Come Ye Falth- 'fU ir ,

    Introttr-’ ’airiat Our Paasover".. ....Goes

    Hunderford. Curate Ascription Hymn—“Jesus

    Is JUsen"Offertory—"b Sons and Daugh

    ters. Let Us Stag" . . . . . . . . ..,...15th Centhry French Carpi

    Recewional—’.’Come Ye Frithful" 4:3(> p.m., Children’a Seruice.

    (Fourth grade through •ScliobU.

    High

    Processional—"He Is Risen!"

    "Give

    SertponO’er"

    il— ‘̂He b Risen!" Hynta—"The Strife

    ..Handel

    Junior ChoirPsalm < Na 111—"I WUI

    T̂hanks Unto tbs Lord"Lteson—St. Matthew 28:1-10, 16-

    20—"I Am With You"Hymn—"C o ^ Ye Frithfid’'Crasd and C&ecta*’Presentation \of Lenten Mite

    Boxes ■■ yHymn—"Jesus Ltves!̂ ’Eaater .Story to' (be Rev..Alfred

    Williams, -Itector Offertory—"My Heart Ever Felth-

    fUl" ...............x ...,........iteohPrescntatloh—Baater Carol .. . . . .

    Old French Recessional — “Jesua Christ b

    Risen ’today." \Private B*s(e( Coinmunions wlU

    be administered aa requested this week./ Hiawever; the mid-week service Wedneedey at 10 a.m. .will he held as usual.

    announcement of the rasulta of the Held ttots. ^

    Workman will begin h**'analyeis of the data immedialriy, tbe spokesmah said. Re. added,

    . “ it b a good guess that a decision ; on licensing WiU be reached either

    April 12 or 13," Tbe-ep(d(temart.iMld ete-manu

    • factufers hare Applied- for Unsnsra to make add sell the vaccine.

    Under .law, the Secretary Welfare has the reaponaibtUty for lanuance of 'such' Ucenera on. the basis . of retomthsndatloas. troh Un surgeon general of the. Public Heelth Service. ' Technical kdyice to the surgeon general la prepared by. the biologies control labora M*T>

    Gloria ta Exctlai*. . . . . .Old Scottish Chint

    / 'Reesasio^—"At the Lemb’a Hlgb Feaaf^The seniof choir wUl sUig Byra’s

    Gommutam aerviee at the'i and 11 o’clock servioea No muate ac- oompaaies our worship at 6 or 8:45

    m.9^m ., Cbildrsa’AServica.^ilur-

    ̂Boys’ Choir ( ■ TMotto, Craed and Prayers Hymn—“God Whose Name b ■ -Love’,’ ' t ■ \Baster Carob by Nursery and

    KindergartenPreaentauon of Lenten Mite Boxes Hymn—"Fairest Lord Jesus" Easter- Story by UIs'Rev. Donald

    i .

    A C ord ia l In v ita tid n ,■ ii BO N D ED TO A(.t t h o s e ' / '

    .W HO'PO NOT HAVE/A CHOROtJ-HOME y t o WORSHIP w m v o s " — •

    SER V ICES; ^ EASTER SU N D AY ;

    8:00 A.M. Service of Holy 9owHunion. , ; /

    9:30 end 11:00 A.M. Idenj|fc4|l Services of Worship

    SERMON: "IT h a p p e n e d O N -^S TE R "Dr. Fred R. Edgar.

    (Nursefy care for small children provided of 9:30 ehd l l :0 0 )> Z

    , I ; 7:30 P.M. Evening Wo^hip*’ J

    • SERMON: "WE BEilEVE IN IMMORTALITY" .‘ Dr. Fred R. Edgar.

    (The members and friends of Washington Com-. mondery, Km'ghts TempiarXwill be guesti of honor )

    SO U TH M ETH O D IST

    Eaater Sunday:7:55, 9.15 and 11, Church aervlcea.

    _ Preludes, (a ) ’The Holy a tY ’, * a3Som.

    (b ) "Awake , Ihou Wintry Earth.” Baoh-Whitford.

    ’nviupets and Organ ̂Trumpeteir: Robert G. Smith and

    John MOran. .Anthems, "Christ / t h . Lord b

    Rlsrii Today,’' /l4th Osntury mslody.'j

    7amrek of the'Naiarews .

    466 Mate-Street p. E. Wteslew, Mteleter ..Florence Weed and

    Gertrude Wlleoa, Organiets

    MAIN STREET AT HARTFORD

    Eaater Sunday, April 10.Church School, a:so a.m.,'Nel*Mi

    Kilpatrick,, siipqrtatendent. Junior and" 'tttertaedUte dqtartm'enla meet at Youth Center ̂ Sheiwood Fleh, aapartatendmt

    Wormp Service, 10:46 a.m.; Meetege, "The Keye of Deeth."

    N. T. P. 8. 4:00 p.m., Martha McKinney, prealdent. .' Junior Society, t:p0'p.m., Rita Craft, sutwrrtaor. . /

    Evening ServicetJ7:00 p.m.: Me*- cage, "A. Day of De^ialr and Ds- Ught" . x lv i r - ,—

    the Week Wednesday, 7:80 p.m.. Mid-week

    prayer with miattonary emphasb. Ttattsday, 7:00 p.m.,̂ Caravan; ' Friday, 7:00 p.m., Youth Oiolr'

    and Fellowahlp.Saturday.- 11:00 a,iby Junior

    Choir reheoraal.Saturday, S:00 p.m., gupervlaed

    aettvittea at Touth Ctater,

    Veraou Metkodtet ChurchL Treadwell, Bfbrister

    _MarJotie Stephens, Orgaaist. EMna JetaMso, dorir Dtroctor

    Eaater Sunday:Worahlp^Serviee. 8:30. *.(taurrti School, 10:45.

    Sermqn: "to , I Am With You Al-

    Matthew 28.Hymns:

    "Rejoice, Ye Pure ta Heart" "Christ the Lord b Risen To-

    teY ’ ,"Crown Him With Many

    Oowna."

    Oenter Cengregsttenal Church CBfford O. Mmpoou, Mlalater

    Watoe* Wooeruff, D.D.Mlatoter Enerttus

    , Andrew K. Watsea Mlatoter ef Mnele

    ponders iVew Job ̂ Offer By State

    (Oontteoed IrOm Page Oae)7\

    tacks as "eittirsly unwarrant: ,̂ unfounded and inalncers..’’ Ths Pennsylvaqla Dftaocrat co-authored the McCarran-Walter Immigration Law. Coral has been an ouU spoken'Critic of that tow, which he called "Un-American’! and *‘dto- 'crimlnatory."

    "I. am being attacked for the things 1 stand for rather than., as an individual," said Coral. Ha said he t^ards himself aa a symbol of "Ul^al opposition" to the McOsr- rafi'Welter law, Which critics contend dtocrimthates agalnet peor plea of southern end central Eu- rope. . •

    Corel said Thursday night he had received surprise .moUncaUon .hto Job was about to run out. Corsi, hks Dulles a,l6iigtime associate of former Ges,’’—'Vn. ‘The Road of Death to tbe Wayof Life;" ' ------—

    Aitfheai. ‘TiaUsluJiihL_.j3honw’.'

    (Centtaned from Page One)

    lands today observe - with prayer the end of Lent and the heginping of the Eaater vigU.

    With Holy Week observances rising to the climax of pie resurrection. . churches opened their doors for services contmemorating ths hours wheii Christ lay In his tomb.

    Roman Catholic churches were decked with flowers aa-the 40-day Lgiten pwlod cameta arremh-The purple shrouda that' covbred the eacred -imagea and. altars during thos* penitential weeks were gone.

    FamUiee laid in laat-mlnute Eaater bunny treats for the chil dreii and slicked,up new clothes in preparation for the Joyous day ahead when Christendom cele- betes In ccata and Fugue ta

    D Mihta’,’’/Barii. * - ,8:15 Onirak 'Sch«>o], kindergarten

    lower Junior. *'(ureh SriHMl, nursery

    gi> lower Junior. ,./. The Week '

    ■ —7:0ft, Girl Scout Troop Oiih; 7:45, Losral Orel* of King’s Daughters.

    T>iesday-̂ 7:4S, Board of Deacatu . meettag.

    Wsdnesday—1:00, BaChany Group roeattag; 8:80, Pilgrim Oiolr Re- baaicta: 6:ML-Boy ScoutTyoop 85’; 7:00;. Girl: Scout Troop 66; 7:30, Senior Cheiir rehearsal; 8:00, Church Council msettag.

    T h u rsd a y—1:15, Bible Stuito Group; 7:00, Giri Scout Troop 7.

    M MeeaaEO by 6>1. MUler

    hpartte-snd city square* through- 4|omout the nation'.

    CtathrhhMr *v«fywhnw"iMhedutod extra servicea to mark the. solemn yet happy day.

    Weather Seen Good The wenther man forecast gen

    erally good weather for meet of the United SUtee, gladdening the hearts of those with new finery to wear for the Easter Parade.

    In New . York; ^owever, eome cloudtaess was expected to dull the gutter of the< annual fariUon proraeliade along 5th'Avenue.

    Parties for children promised to make the day a happy one for ipU- llcaa of small fry,. One of the biggest la tbe annuel Easter Egg Roil on thb great Iqwn ta New Yorii’a Oentral-Pwk, ’ ,

    The eerSm'Ony at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Arab Jeru ealeta was riimaxed when the Latin Patriarch conducted a Pontlf' Ida] Mass before the tomb.

    Four ’.bawhtokered Dragomen, wearing Red. tarbuataes and long curved swords, preceded the patri archal procession into the crum' bUng old Church beating thdr silver-tipped batons on the stone pavement of the courtyard to clear

    *Uulie diurch door again wae

    locked by the Moslem wardens while the Patriarch-paused near

    (Centtaued from Page OnerS,

    T)i* customary atomic doud rose to «bw t 15,000 feet and drifted rapidly away tô the south, south- saat, .

    Subaequehlly the ABC said the Wtadt were hnfavorable for the scheduled 9 a.HK (PST) Ume of the second test from''a 40-foot tower oh Frenchman-llat. itad It. wml i ^ - poned at least untiK (8:80 p.pi. EST),

    Plans for, the first shot Were fairly simple as compared with elaborate preperatione (or the later and more powerful expiodonX

    The AEC said the pre-daWn plosion wee to teat an atomic dV vice prepared by its laboratoiy at' Livemtore, Ca«f. Twenty-five Air fierce plahee Were in the area to coUect. effects data; The, plan also called for a fUght of 35 Navy , Janes for indoctrination purpoaea. 4o troops partidpated;

    The Departmtat of Defense Hqe made elaborate preparations - the later and more powerful'idiot; It will be a many-aided test of eup-- ply problemi in atomic-age cam- paigntag.

    Three ̂ t drones, directed by re- liOOto control, are to fly ijnto the target area—two of them so close to the blast that they are expected to be deS(royed.

    Many vehicles, fortifications and auppUes will be expos^,at varying distance from Ground Zero. Effects of blast, heat and radiation la to be measured on 'three ■urfacqs—an artlficiel lake. an asphalted surface and' a'.section of dry lake bed. .

    Structures have been built around the tower for.military and civil effects etudics. A group of l70 military obeervera will watch the big' teat from 5(8 miles away.

    The teUowtag pngiaas ape siBiitlsd by th* nuSc auaags- meat and iura MhJbet t* ehang* irtttioiit Bottca.

    i^y-HWeers

    **(m*.Y—Show Case WOC^Musm Boom 'WimB-Bporto T ^ y wnc—Roes MlUer WDRO—oeorae RtM WGT»-Uiial3il §SStt0̂ .’

    Parade at Mueie WCCC-Vuale room wKIfB—Yanka va OadeerS' im c-Rm * Miller'WSRC—Do It YoarMlf . W0TU--eay U With Mtulo

    ^ 't^ Y —Parade o( Huide WCC^Mnalo Room Wiom—Yanlu va. Dodftra WTIC-J^ MUler WDRO-Do It Yourmlf , WaTH—Say H With Muate

    Iise-WHAY—Parade, of Muate WCCC—Muate Room WKhTB Yanka va:_DodaeTe _ WTIC-Roaa MUler WDRO-Newa:

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    VMBdW J. MUtbtetpi I at tb«

    llANCBESTiCB S V 1P! ^ 6 O TRALD , M^kNOBEfifTBll, OONK^ SATURDAY, ^ R I L 1̂1^1985MANCHESTER EVENING ^ R A t D . M A N C ^ T E R , CONN. SATURDAY, APRIL 9. 1988

    r ■ ■■ ■- '

    a m

    • •••*«•••••••*•»

    j Th« A—ocHt*dJ ^ •BtttlcS to OM M of•n am,»)» - ■

    •Bdinirtly Vm ctIt, or

    î&tSgn_______cUmU Of N. B. a; Burr

    Mv«g*|y tlu » w* &atmd Hit lt>■M.' Parhapa U U in auch tflffieutt,

    almaat tmpoaaibla thlnfa th^ Uwra Uaa'tlia anly ehanea «ia£ Uiis aarth e( aura ahauld tupi (raad afatit'With a Und of hopa mad pnrpoaa. But lat ito not daludo eumlvta. ,Wo oaanot imaj^a wtiat Ufa m i^t Ka Mka, beyond tM banian' of odin- plaoancŷ and. prida and In- dividublistic apirit WIdidi bound us now. Add wa can even aa' pariahea a faaUnc aoidsadiat akin to annion aa wa contamplata a plunge Into a world of lova.\-Nonethelasa, Uila ilnuob ia into.

    ind can sea Ita chbica, and la walgbi|% It; as never befon In ita huit^. It ia perhaps the choice ara'̂ ^era placed on earth to maM,

    Connecticut Yankee

    R y A .H .0 .

    / lunepeeiwtattree: The*—uicy — K«w

    ^ OF

    J«.w adk a .w .ata ,lm per-)— fact aa wa_ artK »» y«t\ never marrtn, the tot

    gubiTcan victory The

    tnTlMl ̂Betald.DUptay advertlalBt tioalna hours* tor ■oBdaF-Î p. «• rar Tuesday— m. tor WodiiMdar-̂ p m. '

    rbr iatmay—1 s. nt̂ClaiBiflad daadTToa; ' UyeTpeblleatlee ^

    Saturday, April t

    /'■

    without impulse and Bopd.

    He DMerree Oar Respect

    The . atatutica to follow will surpiiaa everybody, ahd anoountar almost an automdtie dUbelief, to, which we can

    We wRe going to alam EDC through French ratification, pb matUr what atood in the way. Thkt- attitude- of ours was one thing which did stand in the way.

    These two prominent eamplea of Eden's personal leadership, during 1954, emphasise, clearly enough, that he is both inde* pendent and a factor to be rec*

    wm

    With Joe Owens

    icb - pro*

    Gol* •aid it beauty

    lip Sim*pleat and moat wonderful' story •vsr told, never jtow s old and never will. Tha/'&ueifixion,.-the fulfillment of tba'' Birth, is inborn* lists without T ^ eevento and last word of Jaeua from toe creea ta toe HaHe-

    early elma. We remember no yearfldjah Chorus of tog CSirlstian in which toe jdm buda..haVf befsl PaltoT When He cHsd out "Father,more thickly cluitered, or more anxious to burst, and tota weak they have been performing -̂ Um taat rita' before that - burstinll shifting toslr ewh mass tint ftbm obt^ot gray to a grseniah-yellow. Blit while toe elms are so advanced, toe sbadblow bud ta atill Ught and even toe swi^p miqple slow Co flower. -

    .TbiB Is toe week In which spring gave ua toe first.- light stroke of-toe brush. Now, the first day that ta Warm aad calta-r- posalbly tomorrow—will dsepsn and solidify too color, sl"io*t beyond reality, and' toe earth be given back to us, gneen and good, for sU pur pleasures

    SEN. KENNSDT nCTBOVESPalm Beach. FIs, April 9 '(SV-

    Sen. John F. Kennedy (D^Maaa) waa reported iinprovt^ aad "up and around some" at hia fatoec'a home here.

    The senator ia -recovering from aa operation gtowing out of war- lacurred injuries. It isn't Icnown when he wiU iotum to Washing* ton.

    He isn't ready to talk for publication; toe household reported. Hs expects to bs visited by Boston afWKiapennen soon’ and viU give

    ~ ■«*«. ifats firM intfarvisw at that , tons

    Into T ^ Hands. I Oommit YMy Spirit," toe angels of hcavtn must have sung'out in essence the words ;whlch Handel later set to music "Hallelujah! -for toe Lord Gougall ^ tta ^ t e r for an o v ^ ^ oU burner. Ne damage w4a done.

    The third call was for a amaU dbura oh toe /Property of Sam

    W^nua Of Ito'd. The cottage waa doniOUshad/W i most of his personal beljW "ff»waa eetlmiRed at 8500. The Willi-W tote-Jha-Deioalffientja^aa-

    Beck, Mrs. FfllfUbOdEtoott, Scotty Person. KUf ker, - Junior Foihes, Parker;

    and'X b a r s - X

    Ann ye O'-

    Jan Tbs- ' M iriam

    B utch

    Bolton, April ,S —(Spaclal) Soon aftar dawn breaks totnon

    Soracchi, CrOwford; Dsan

    /

    tri 'Tlollcemaa.

    paintings and watsrcolors dsvoted to toe theme of travel In a holiday mood, both at home and abroad, as Americans bavs known It for over a century..

    "Costume CoUecUon .̂ -Optstand- tog Additions to 1958-54”, Special Eitoihffion Gallery (April 15-May IS), Costumes, j^velry, textiles, fens, hats fh>m toa past 100 ytara

    ' MmIaI Iciwts''Tuesday, April 13, qt 13:80, RO-

    corded Music,, Brahms— Varla- tlona'on a TBsina by Haydn.’

    edhesday,'April 18, at 11 p.m.. Khow TouC Museum. lecture by Mr. Buckley, Curator, on "Maiaeen and French Porcelains, and Minor Alia” in toa Ato*>ieum. flfto In serisa of six weekly Wedneeday mqfning leetiBea for members and guests, preceded by morning coffee at l 4:15. Y

    Thursday,' ■April 14,; at 13:30, Recorded Music, Poulanc— Sextette for Ptamo and W)nd Instru- mehta.

    Also Thursday,, April 14, from 8 to 10:SO p.hi.. Mambtra' Anni Recaption and eitolbltkm of Off for toe HbUdays,Court.

    Site Seen By Y a^ ee At9te

    Monroe, IteM., April 9 (ffi — Informed aour^ said Ust^night toe Yankte./ZUomiC Electric Co. baa seleetpdR n^s sq u m p ^ In Mw Toe p i toe sUe of /it# prUpoaed

    lie power plaqt. e rm rt said toa plant would

    built near toe Deerfield River’s Sherman Dam and will be completed in .-IWd. It will -opeiv ate at a capacity of 100,000 kllo- watta, toe roport said. ' ' f

    Yankee A^aWc Electric Co.—r -ganized In September, 1504, by Bitlea compsues which simply

    about 90 per cent of N ^ Bn{ land’s powsr—last monto toe Atomic El for approval to power plant,

    The report said' toe proposed Monroe inaBt would be sold to Yankee member firtns wMeh Include: '■ '•' New Bkigland' Btoetrte Byetem, OonnecUebt Lijffit and PoWar Co., Boston Edtaon Co.. Hartford (Conn.) Electric U ^ t Co., Oon- nOUUcut Power Co., Central Maine PoeW Co.. Western Maeeechu- setts laectric jCo., Public Servlee Company of . New Hampshire, Basterti Utilities Aamistee, New England Gas- and Enctrtc Assn, and Central Vermont Public Service Corp.

    ' oi nvw ■ Mip-—last montb ^artted Energy Commiinion to bulfd toe ni^itar

    The fourth call'was for s Are In a truck owned by William Bltd- jeakl of WUltmanUc. About $150 damaga waa done to tofl_tiU$k which caught Are near H f Acres oh R t * The WUUmantlc Department also answered the call, ^

    Fire Chief Richard KT Davis States that there has been a aeriee of Arsa at toe town dump laUly apparenUy_caussd by some care- lesa peraon or persons who do, not know that, ho Ares are to he atsrted at toe dump by anyone other than Raymond CSarke, con- StabU. A reward ta being o ffe^ for anyone'having Information aa to toe peraoh pr persons kindling tueb Ares.

    Another Are prevention t>oiat brought up by Chief Davie ta tlie fact that at a recent meeting of Are chiefs a demonstration wai given ehowlng how highly InSau- maMe some Easter decorations and t^a are. Parents are csutlohed to examine articlee carefully ' to ta sure they afe Aameproof eepeeiall; certain plasQc materials.

    . . New. Arrival A daughter was bom to Mr̂ hnd

    Mrs. Arthur Cobb of West/i^ at toe Manchester MemoriU/Hospl- tal. Tha Cobbs have beeh very much in toe Hews this /Week as they are the proud omu n qt a.Ut- ter of Ave-hahy fhato bom to a goat owned by toeih last Saturday.

    UtUe Unda, toe Cobbs’ only other Clin®,"7waB ' televlehd over

    ' y evening wlto . Linda is stay-

    'grandparents, Mr. Yurkshot of

    while her- mother is in The tiniest gMt was Yurkabots for a few

    deys ax' It had to ta specislly hot- Uefe<

    ffiiow to Be GivenAll-Sfau' Show is tota pre-

    ited In Yeomans Hall on April at 8 p.m.’in ronnecUbn with- the

    euvreht Ctaneer DrWe toeaded by Mrs. Nathan Pe^-hhalrman.

    Walter Wolctok aad hta orcheŝ tm will bp ons of toe main f< turaa. BiUbî Olds, ventrcdi and toe ^toer followingK ns will ta featur^: Ce([

    an, operatic vdealisf; Cantor Melvin' Etra,' vocalirt; Nancy Smith; vocalist with j;uiUr accom-

    Iment; Elaie Deniore aad Patty Morga, tap dancers; Helede

    Shsffrtn, vocanrt: Miss Wetoerih’s baton -twirim from Windham High BchoOl; Shorey - Gardner, piano accompaiflst and Las Foster Of WUltataatic, mi mohieq

    Tirtceto are now qn Siarito’a Store and at Hi-Acrea Mrs. Pell states that anyone purchasing a ticket will in no further way ta aoUclted for toe campaign. Tickets svurChatore.. are'asked to arrite their names op JB* Bekstf. showing' (list they 'Rave cbntrilH uted. AU toe performers are donating their aervieee.

    'Oweoe Plaaned The- Rec. Oouneirs annual Spring

    Formal ia to be held on May 7 In Yeomans HaU. Mra AJt^.. Bofac- chl is chairman of toe affal/ and Earl Mitchell’a Orchestra has been engaged for toe dancing.

    FTA to See-Play ^A play ‘The Case'of toe ltas<

    Bonnet” ia to ta taesenUd membera of- toe PTA Tuesday eve-

    was also preseffiad to lento of the se h e e l

    iirsday at assembly. John Ls- ..oix, eighth grade toachcr, ta Bupondslng toe productlo(i.

    Schesl Mewta' .The menu for next week a( the

    Homes W. Porter School If aa follows: Monday, chow main with msat and noodlas, rice, - salfad, bakad appis; Tutsday, roast basf and gravy, inaabdd potatoes, crati- b i ^ sauce and paaebse; Wsdnes- day, cream of. tomato soup, meat, sandwiihes and eboirolaU cake; Thursday, spaghatU With m sat aaui»,-catroljtyqki^bnd cookies; , Friday, fish sticks, golden potsi/^=Y toes, peas and jello. .» y .

    As there was no school y to^ - • /. day lunch money Will be colleeted Mond4y.Tar toe coming week.

    Egg- HuntFirst grads students of

    Maurice Mormw had'in BistoF -̂— - sgg 'hunt Thursday atUarBpon on toe school gipunds.,H »jr^ made laper baskets to cm)aot;oMir agg*B., / '

    PerntaU 1Miaa Gloria" Stofatoiah ta home

    with her p im to/M r. and Mrs. TeOrge Stoinmw'of Rt.'#, for the Baster leueea n e ta a student at toe Pritt Instltoto, New York.— Laater^Cbope&lsoo o€ Mr. aad firy. LeatotYCpitar Sr. ef Rt. « Is also bmna/for toe hoUday. He is i itudentat'top Lancaster SduM of toe Hlbta, ^isitcaster. Pa.,

    New Antoni, diughtor whs bom to Lt aad

    M yi Scott Pstriquln at ths bass tal at F t Knox, Ky.. lebtat-

    Mra Petriquin is toe fanner CaroUne Ydtmg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jamas L, Young, of Johatoan Trumbull Highway. Mrs.' Young has left for Kentucky to spend eome -tlmswito her daughter.

    master of cere- st

    htng St toe meeGrig^ students of toe eighth grade of ihe Horace W. Porter School;

    Carol KiSkawlta ta tha director;

    Noacheater Evening HentM Oo- hunMn correspondent. Mra Fmnk i inn htan. telopbene AC S-5555.,

    ATTUfOANCE S P U E / ■ ' Flemington, N. J- (ffi —/Judge enry F. Schenk has cured toe

    chronic absehtcotam of a IS-year- old high achool aophomore. The boy h ^ ’t ekipped a day ef eebeol einm toa judge toiiatened to fine m lad’s parentp 15 for ovary day he stays hoi^ '

    tote eommuiaty wUl begin ebratloB of Easter wlto ed Mstoodlst Church S< les at 5:45 a.ro. It vrib ta held on to# Rotart D. Vatanttna property on tos brew pf a ,hUl ovtr- looking Bolton ~ '

    Vary fsw peopti wiU be walking to eburch/xesnomw in this rufiM to ^ m no iBastor petota is aaUaitotod except frdm church doors to pm ed cara (Uiurch serv- Icea Wi)ir oontlnus throughout top,

    wlthwie CongrsgatlonalChV---------- ----------------foto**9b by Easter breskiast Id toe parish room. RrMakfast

    'Win also ta served aj United Methodist Church following toe early merttlng service, \ /_ .Hm United MetopdUJ < Church

    Church wUl conduct two 'worship ' services at toa church for toe Ant

    'time tomorrow, ’ The Aral will ta held’irt 5-'50 am. and toa ascOnd at -11/ am. Both Protestant churehan will omiV(3>orch School ssesiona ancoumgfhg family at- teadaflea I t the regular Worthip nsrviCea

    The Rev. Arthur A. Wallace . 4, 5, 8, 7, 8 years. Stae 4, 1 7-6 ysrffi of S5-lnch; 1-8 yard contrast Twopatteriis, - '

    For these patterns, send 35c for each, ih'uoins, your ntane, sues dcairei and toe Pattarii Nrittirto SUE BU ®fETT.JE^ iniMwriim EVraONO HERALD, i S T A v k AMERICAS. NEW T D tX 88,N .T . Y Include an additional 35 cents art to ybur pattern order for the latest tasue of our pattern catalog Baflo UnuiUon. ' The ouamtar TM) tasaiyta

    ■ ■ ' /

    s. *(T|m B Da$!)

    pertect gift for Moti

    5562COLOR* .STAMP-ON4

    ' Here's an outfit toat ia idriid indoor or outdoor, wear! For kitchen duty, wear toe three-, po^ct apron without toe bib; for' gardening; just button-on tos bib and tie-On toe bonnet It’s trimmed wlto ansyto-usa stamp-1

    ith*jPattern No. 5563 contafau tta-

    sua . for ^ron and. bonnet; toriri requiramenU; seudag recUpna; color transfer for seven pansy moUfa , *

    Send 35c in coins, your, name, MUrem and toa pattern number uT aNNE C A B ^T H E BUN- CHEBTEB HV«nNO REBALO, US8 AVE. AMHBICAS, NEW YOBX88.N . y .

    Now avallabta toa 1855 Nsedlewacfc Album printed- In at- traeftae oolora. It' contains 68

    ris

    DUBALDOMUMCC8NTER

    111 MIDDLE TYK. WEST ' TEL. MI 8 8886

    GUERINi and BfOBESC^ Aecordkms -

    Privais InstracUons Instrom tnts sad Sivpiies

    ___ Orchflstn For Hirt

    Pfifltedl

    HOLUSTERTELEPHONE

    sery; ce

    . 4 ... ./.-'VtP 9 *'Mm MMkT

    MANCHESTERa u t o p a r t s

    ‘270 HROAD SIAt Year Sarrtee Bfar

    • m a c h in e s h o p s e b v io b, _ jU S fiB N T a p£ rIS ood lekoUt). e AOCK880E1E8e 8UPPLIBE ______ •e DUPONT PAINT. SUPFUBS

    d a y a iiia a p miSafandayli.^

    " T

    tiX :

    Dep̂ r̂inbM QpriHy-

    WilliMiHsScliidAiASI. 1W. MM-Wd

    S ’

    FOONDniONAND

    Pllll HIMft —d U ILU IIIII 'CONTRMTILJ.POLQMSU

    ‘ Phoned: Stttm or mtelifit

    ■r

    MERRILL’SMMKET

    ̂ 84 OddoRd Straw . TrL MI-3-7386

    Fra# DrHvŝOFIN SUNDAYS 8AM .raiF.M . 7

    SE A F O O D— A L T ^T B FEESn —

    ̂LOisiffS "/I' -•-or— •'09S

    Dsimif WlltM, Im .litH Epiroce Bt. TW. M1-8-48UI

    BitL^S TIREAND

    REPAIR SHOPW lU u B. Grain,

    C edom biar'' Goodyear HtpslrSp ~

    ■ A'i80/8prqc8 Sirodt

    bno MI-9-0859

    THS lUITHSTONEI W > F f l t _

    wrrba'is eaP — reeet er reetyto year old eae.CALL or SEE

    NORMAN It WDLOEMOLOOBT '

    •ed Mala St — s u m ISTEL. Ba-e-dsiD.

    DON WILLIS ,S S M 6E

    18 Msin St. Tel III-9-4SS1 SpiiciMhiRR hi

    I M K I SERVIM

    FlOTt IRDI ABfRIM Ht G sR sral RaRMr W t h

    mmm m sDIVE YOU UOTIIM SATISFADIMASOLD IXaUSiVW.Y IM MANCHOTI; jgJOHNSON PAINT

    tH MAIN 8T.. MANCHISTat FOOi^^‘ -*0 i

    3

  • ■ -•:\V ' : .

    ; . 'V :

    ' VI

    !•: . . , X ..'i|RillGE EIGHT BtANCHESTER EVENING I^ A L D , MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, APRIL 9,191^

    itoGS BUNNYk i. '..i okopm m io ju m o n yM

    M

    NOIMN/(CMOtiip/}IMUHKMjy

    A y o v ^ nan wlM beyoiud hia ymu% .iwMad iMtara' MMnrannv «

    mbo bad Mb«d him to gueaaw S K r—T oi nftiat' MM.,aorta

    ' ■ / • Tounc Man (with A MDUa)— bava, -aavaral idaaa/ Tha only tron ^ la that I hMtata wbatbar t i tjaba you tan vM a youngar'on account o< your >ooka, or ten yaara om r on accmmt of yotn* tntaiU- »anoe.- . ■

    Rad-headad Brabamar to Bald- haiadad / Conductor — Gaa whir, Baldy, I gueaa a*»an tbey ware givinjg: hair out you coma lata and thay didn’t bava any Jafu-.- - v ^ ,

    BaM-baadad Oooductor--^Taa, X waa lata. "When 1 fo t there they didn't have anyihiiv except a bis btmch of rad hair—and I wouldn't take that. .

    •> *BY X R. WILLIAMS

    /

    THCBAKdAIMOa^/K XIH C ^

    rvss'' A _ _ _ _____

    rrCN Yi^i&usr i put . yMERK >5K-VDLMA

    lU - K V j XZ -

    Sense and Nonsenselafo X apottad a leopard, ^Jlatener — That doaa it vl al- w an knew ha waa a likr̂ lAop- area .come that way.

    A concert waa bains hald in a Villen achool room, and it. waa Sahdy’a tom to Siva Ida baSplpa aola When he had flniahad and the apptauae had died down, a voice

    r̂pm tha back ahoutad: \Voice — Give ua “Annie Laurie,**

    Bahdylwandy — What, (aurpriaed. and

    flattered) askla? |Q̂Mora p e c ^ -m i^ . .pradtica

    economy if. Giagr. had libmathinc left to praotloa with. •

    My hUaband haiiî . aOmatMWf̂ te 1 common vdth both our' fl! our praaaht Prentdeht—hia Ui day aiwiveraary la Fab. Mi and hia initiala are D. t>. E.—Mra. David D. Brb, Denvar, ^

    around aaeb of tbasa' ̂ ./ ' . —Mb̂ ltana Rlddia,./

    - - nwo•jMUvem, Arh.

    Cnb of my hena h(ba- laid tan g fl* V'iib a wldta

    Oareful liclveri Ona who ta atiU ^anUHbr virith tha sadgata onhla

    BY DICK TURNBB

    , T ifafflc C6p Say you") you aaa ma wave at youT

    Mltlam — Tea you. freah. and if-Itanry ware here, he’d l you one for sefGhs ao freah.

    ̂ SHHHi NOT A WORDThe art of convaraaUoq'*a dying In fact, todayiit*a dead—People go out to aee each other Ihen watch TV Inatead.

    ..........y !'—^Maurioe Seltter.lA widely tiwvalad _

    waa boring guaatawith of]loM talk! about Ma eiq>lo|t(b>i;,.. ’Traveler — While X waa, wan- (tetlny through tM deAi, Jid

    LAST A6MTOM LBT'S

    StYMCRB A lib Wî crcMTHB

    u-vriM

    "* * * T i? ? ? ’* * "* '‘.* '•**** W B W 'lM n iisn T V d o n 't Iwant him coming to our houoo HJio fhooM ooelWor ^

    /T I li r f F fM id f iit

    AdUNM tStovaYbakoI ' COBBIIMK‘ w 2 S u * i«a ■ teVnH ed >“ * TKptaagle

    • AdJiMla

    A n i^ to Provioot hnoM

    ' Z

    KANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER. CONN„ SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 195S

    K'-. 1

    •4i-

    IJ UJ! i u n i I rnai-j! ,I ju uu jr 1U iJ Ut’J- <

    lliU kilu n n .u j I’ju nijL 'J im n u u u n c.-j| k ji

    u n r i i iMBMMi

    ifllia taB ^ WAUowaiieattr

    H 2 S 2 - 2 “ ^t iS S S m i UPkidnollem^ »M eZ S S L iim *»V etM « (ab.) «•MBaianaaBdm «

    U tS S iw ** ** *»!>z- . . ___________d iMavad’quIdily ItH lH ( » )

    n a y le o k /Of BeetifcMtMRfllBtNicMwr “ (canUfc ddfwnaWwE M B adpflT”

    fona) dSVeniflar n S e M la r .a ^

    X i

    ^MMi

    Will/

    in o .» ■'i\

    VAaaM

    ttNMieb.W Trtnmwi

    (ah.)'̂ 22l2LM.Whart >t Three-toad

    April S — T̂he Cleveland Indians wUl sud*.cesaiuliy defend their American League championship and will oMow either Milwaukee,. New York br Brooklyn in the World S«rtes. . . - \ i ■ 'x ;

    This ft the (̂ lisensus of 'the 16 nnajor league managers in a pTe-feasph Canvas hy the. Associated Press today. . ,« Only (toe pflot—A1 Lopegrot the Indians—was bold 'enodgh t o sriect ms ofm team. Two other^Lou Boudreaii of Kansas City andjCharlle Dreasen =bf WaAihgton—also nam^ the Indians. T h f others recognized Gev^nd’s strength but also showed respect f6r the Yankees and ̂ I t e Sox

    lS«mafl»hMbeMflbriD

    •-W-Wwi W'wa

    SSTnagMliSatpsyslilallm

    im diy m '

    (TfarwUmM(ceM b.fonn)

    SAttblsptaiee

    ifl'JlJIJIJIJI (iJliJJsS■■■ m cLUp 1 'p E V rnEJu r urrT *•1•MMmgmmfTrisrr1T r ~ ETrr . TI "te wr— irWwf"r FE t. in man0.*r np r JJ -p • - ""*P! ■ 5. iJ J

    tettonid Ia«cu«- mnnagar,,, w u wflttaB|ta go on the limb but all agm»S That the Bmv—. Giahta and Dptoara rated'tba.; top "three ■pMa, Eddie fltaaky of flt.- l^ ie . Birdie TebbetU of Cinciahatl Snd Mayo Smith o f PMladtiphia each' predicted that wouldalso be in the thick'of tha pennant race.

    Fan# No Fnachea

    yeat with the addition o f Ralph Klnef- and Herb Score. Klner will give us a Uttfc more pOWlir end Score wtil streaxthefl dur pltdilng. X don’t think we:ii win l l l ' gamcs ag{^^.hpWeVer: \ .“ fhe.Tahkees ought to give ua

    the most trouble'again. I expsict, --------- .them to be plenty lo«Wb,.̂ ThelOd no punches ea her White Sox o u ^ to baAix>iii theiothcf^i(»an_flag.___t same and the rest o fJ b A .J ea j^we looks a little stronger. The le a i^

    again A te yebr/^ the I P>t>bably Win be bftter bdftiined.’ ’ pilot sai d “We've got a j This la what the Other ihanagtn

    club "tbait. we had last'had to say:

    Caaey . Yaiitoea; “ Ihave the. beat club ia tha league outside of p it c h y and ahould be,Srst or second. Tbt ones who finished behind me N^t year haven’t improved eaottgh to pSaa km. My otitaeld ia the beat is'.the'lsaguc. sly eatchiag is the bSst ia the b u s in g AH my infleldars are proven big. league men. I t all panda on p it ^ iy . . \

    "The other Mup’s ttSaVeland) ptiebing stke saarear me. They got

    big m lb to uae against ua and Uuiee othimra who can beat, the rest of this Isagne. Tdba’t knoi^about the rest of tha iee|uc. If g couple, o f clubs g e l stronf ere;M /can 'beftt.Cicvelsnd more than year, IcaR win," / '

    M ai^ Marion, White 8m : “ I look- fo r 'a three teem race in the American Deagie with the White SOx. Indians and TanivMs battlins it put for the pennant. The return l odull time duty.of.BtllJPterceand-lby- JXeorgdsKen. plus improved qftenar pitching through tM 'adM tion of .new players ahould enable-ua..to cloao the gap which hfilBted bitween our

    Defend■ ■ .

    1

    -^rppaiUon at the cloae of laet^at^fg^nhd the top.'TUng of the

    LoU BeodiWw, Athlettee: “ I look for a two-team race between Cleva- isuid and New York but my pick ia Cleveland becauae of aupevtor pitching. Boaton and Oilcago Will be contenders. Detroit haa a team of promising .youngaterp add could be the dark horse. The'rest of ua will fight it out for the remeinlng positions.’' . '

    CharUe Drsssaa. S a n n te r a i '.̂ Whoever wins will have to beat Cleveland. They’ve got everything but apeed.'With'aU that power awl

    they don't need- too much « YankcM don’t hAve the

    they’ve' had the laat c o u ^ yenra but: they could be tough

    if ( i ^ ) lU ricy and (Don) Laraen come through.- ” I hear'Chicago,Boston' and De- tndt are.- improved but I think we can heat them olut for third'just

    ■■’e’ve got. real good . wVll win a lot of uose

    -ons-run gafiiM Washington haa been losing ^ last coupla of years '

    •Hm Higgins, Red Sm / ’T am It to famIHar with the rest of the

    . ague to try to evaluate where dre^ finish, ihi be able to tell more when X’va niado a swlhg around, the- league. But we’U improve on our won and lost standings of a year. ago. W ell be eloaeat to first piece UuBn the 42 games behind the Red Sox finished in IPM.’’

    Baeky Hants, 'ligers: “You havs fo acknowisdge tha strength of both, Cleveland and - New York. Detroit. sKould be on a par with Boaton'. No' sense sticking yow neck out- picking the winner— you.’ce liable to get it chopped'off,’ ’.

    FanI Richards, Orielea: “The experts figure New York, Cleveland And Chicago to be strong'with the fiv e ' others to be also-rans. "This aiuUysts might ha proven wrong. It qpuM- be. that one, two or three members of tha so-callsd ‘otber league’ with the American League, with a break or two, might ba able to clcee the gap considerably. As for who is going .to win. if it Isn’t going to be Baltimore, then X have no deaire to choose the -eventuet

    champion.’* >'Lee Ourocher, Otaeda: *‘I nmrer

    predict the outcome of a pennant raca and I don’t intend to start now. Bdt I wiH say that this one look# like one o f the closest battles in yeers-'̂ pn past record, ! suppose the- Braves and Dodgers look toughest but every teem in the league hap. improved, "from -:the Pirstes up: The Cardinals, in particular, could be dengeroux

    “As for"tiw Giahta, Jim Hearn has been a pitching standout for us ail spring and.Monts Irvln̂ ia hitting -like M Used So. Those two feliowa coula help-a great deal.’’

    Charlie Grimm, B|svm : “We’re going-to have a alam-bang affair this year with alx teahis nghting for the first dlvlaton. Nobody Is golBg to run sway with it- X think we Bkve e wonderful chance_to win. If we can stay tied together, we’ll give the Giants, Dodgers or anybody else a real battle."

    Walter Alstom Dodgers: *T look for a throe-way battle between New York. Milwaukee end uS al-'- though five or six clubs have - a

    chance!, Better pitching could p u t !. Frsd Haney, Flrateet “Yoa c w the CardA and Rada right up tkare. three in a fountaln^yaWe Should be hotter then last yaar If for no better rsaaen thah It looks llks Roy Csmpaaslla. aafî Don Nmicombe will hsip ha A,lK mors thah tbey did last.BeAaoif’

    Eddie fitaaky, G a r d lfin la t "You’ve got to respect thd Oianta because they’re the dtampkaia but T- foresee a nve-team 'race in a very tough laague. Tkm Cards are faster end bettw offenaivtly because o f Ken ^ y « t and BtU Vir- don but we'lLgo only aia far sA our pitching will take ua. We could finish anywhere from' first -to sixth.’’ -

    Birdie Tebbetta, RMIagai “ It will be a acramble this year, the difference between the t ^ and bottom should be the aauilMat ih years. NaturaUy, ths Giants, Braves end Dodgers art favored, but our.plub, St. Louis and Philadelphia have, enough so that with some luck any one of ua could. make it intareatIng. I think Chicago and Pitubui’fik bava improved, top.”

    take . your diolce between New York. Milwaukee afid Brooklyn. You have to ride with « winner, of co|M , and this means tha Giants,^

    But Milwalftca ia ahrong and , the Dodgers, ' b*>rlng ju r ie s , should do fine. AA fOr m y nratsA 1 ^ got a much better ban club— Imw much better I don’t k^mw. But we win be providlnc ainne Interesting momsnu for Avery dub this ssason.” ̂ ,

    May# Smith, PhUHeat **X havs •can only four clnba and nM much of them to form an opinion- R it I will say this. Xt ahould'ba a wide open race with the Olanta, Braves Xiodgera. .appearing to be a bit •tronger.

    Stan Haek; Onba: ‘T d probably have to go along with Milwaukee o> the basis of pitching depth, although the Giants ara the diam -' piona and confidant. The Cabs definitely art imprOSad and hava-

    x -

    V. _

    e first division potential. It all depends oh how much tha other clubs have improved.”

    For ChUdrtn Onlv ■X. BY AL VERMEER

    W o^erfai SpotKe n WINSTON

    BO O TS A N D H E R -B U D D IE S Som e G all BY E D G ^) MARTIN I

    J E F F C O B B

    MCAPTAIN EASY

    BUZ

    , \ BY JERRY SIEGEL sad MIKE ROYABOUT THR jK W O T I /J ^BBr^ TOU BM T O i4 M y ^ %

    .TILL HIM !>« CAN - ^ M . M l T H I R B Sr OP

    MV P R ir

    fx ' ■—

    BY PETER HOFFMAN

    Idlecoff Gains LeaaIll Masters," SHooi| 65

    —1>*^ irg of H.,the-'

    / Augusta, -Oa\ April • Wh—CaryY Nekt tn line with a 72-72—|>ar Mlddlecoff calls\the hugs Augusta 1144 was youthful Bob Rosburg Nationat a ''‘waltMg course”—and i San Francisco. Mike Souchak tha rest'of the g^ ers'tn the elite | big boy from. Durham, N. C , Maateta *Itoonieme»l were waiting I in sixth spot with 7l-74---14ji. today ta see 'if the former Molar 1 mar U.S. Open champ Julias MiThitp from M em pw fslUrs ih i of Mid Pines, N. C„ UAd ndfh Sou the third roBhd W l«eps affirm ,chak for second place'nfter the

    Srst jrotud, had a-lot o f pompsAyfirst round, had a -lot of at 146.

    Mlddlecoff, who tumM pro in 1M7 and gave himaelf/two years to determine w hether^ be a -golf-

    for {er or a dentist, made ohly one had

    grip on hia fourratroke 'fliAt Isn’t exactly what Middle-

    ' coff:-'had lif'ihind when he used /-tha term, hut htotory haahroved

    tima and again that in this classic:s r s ? 5 J ? T . 'S : b T . “ y 2 i s » t

    ' .. : i He looked up en;an iron ifiiet < teoften pre ____ _..,\^ithe 17U» grasn and got Ms only

    the round—and- thatAftar • ahooUng Ms, spectocuU81-34-68 yetttrday t?r a 137 ^tal, the tall, 84-year:old 1949 U.8 Open chaiSplon, who «flA er* of - Klamesha L ^ e , N. ,Y ^ coro-

    '''■'m enlad: ■• !------- '— WAlUag Course —

    * ^ ia Is Uie tenth time I’ve played hem. Last year was the first time I learned that this Is a ‘Valtihg fourae.” You have to wait

    \ for thinga to come your way. You \ can’t force birdies on thU course.

    ’ You beMn trying to force a Wrdie..M affm e l'.saM a a a lt K ■

    first round

    the competitive course record 84t set Lloyd Mangrum of NiVs. In., in the first rOund of the 194Q M uUrs. Par ia 36-36—72;’’ ’AboO played,'* in a Mi grum’iCary MLddI Tenn B-n tl

    wmen ' Cary called good a round as I eVer the lowhat ever scored

    .(■ters exohpt for Man-

    you wind w with a Jackta BurkA the

    leader, knowi^^xheUy what Hid- . 'Th

    [bhckby

    ^ b y ROY CRANK 1! ... ■■

    X:

    LEONARD

    A V nhiablc B ox . tv-. BY LESLIE TURNER AND HIS FRIENDS Fort I BY MERRILL C. BL08SER

    VIC FLINI

    ’'CM va iMni THCr ion, oosiuMsilM amswca tr «MJ. n woftrlAMSWCAtnJmSTiiuujoM

    _ WMOOUtES.^ ^ l ju « r p * o a s ^ cbG m ourH Q W jjH '

    lh e w chexciS a .

    Another Pietsre

    LErs*pu(S H v s j n rfiUWlOR

    ttCKNnAOBj^ l ^ AsSnSuif

    1-

    BY MICHAEL O’MALLET THE b>ORY OF MARTHA WAYNE Here She Isaw-wes,*̂

    BY W ILSO N SCRUGGS

    A t tm f i s i ^ v cURU71HfWHAtS >

    ANHOUft/

    OM.V%V»Mr 2 CANMR NSfiK1iaRr..THAr O TA ------ SutffwrrHwtM r

    fMDONMK,WrMfVOU IOIlRI|a-JN6CriMOINR

    'iM A im viM LOhuyis r n : : .

    /M

    dleoqff meana. 'Th e Wi^ea came hir way l i drovM Thursday-when «» got hia 67 -r food for a fou t-s^ ke tead—%ut'-̂ ha ueught a 7#ntch ol bogies yssUrflay and, took a 76. 'This d ipped Mm' thto a lie for tlstrSl plaee" with Sam -snead of White Sulphur Springs, W. Ve., Who hod Ftfiuult of 72*71^142k ' Thus, Burke, Who also ulks Kia^

    m e ^ Lake as .Ms golfing address, was six atrbhaa b i^ 4 instead cy four ond

    B&M flgan, from Fort Worth, Tex„>a«gMttanoa eaUed the ’’beaff' o f tna'Ahffuata National course, he- cauae 'w h is etmsiatentiy good ahowinga' htfe, 'made ,Ma bid for

    llneAS in the second rauml th u he fell ehort under Mldd)ecoff*s tecHlie onslaught sad had tir settle for 'eOcond {w ee at tha midpoint o f the teumamant Wl.UHt'141. ■

    atifikaa Ahead after the eec- rouod. a ahUt of 10 strokes in'

    1 HofSn. P W Worth. ■

    J a . "jt’.^KIamMl.-Like. N.y./ - \Boh Roaburg. PaIo,AII0, Cain. / ■

    Vam-Sooehslr,Skev- lUaglc, PbllsSallJuilua Boros, Southrrn

    N.C. /Ed Fwaol/ UaivaraUyTommr Bolt, Houttoe, Tasaa

    Hein phis,,rWorth. Tea. 7>6»-141 T>-7irl4S (T:1S-14S

    * D id Y o u S e e T h a t ? ’

    rinea.

    T3-7S-144n. . -O-J■71-7t-14(S' . /w-t m R71-14-̂ 14474d*-l«4

    ,74-70-144'Pelv Coopar. Oeirol?. H»tS.X7M*VI« S-Harvla Ward Jr„ ian FVao-\ - ', -Cisco. „ ■ , . -WaJ|î .fiur|icino, Birinii.Cent. Muter, 'Palm Serin,Calif. .' n-T.s-wmie Goodlpe, V^oata.

    ' Valley' Ga.,, ■U^^Msagraai.PrterThempe ,̂̂ ^Se|it

    447

    Brroa.

    lly 'Maxwell.

    7*r-I'47'"

    77-71—l a t . 77-71- 14J

    77-TJ-lA, T M l-l*Kd Oliver. Lcni Demr Shule, A!Robert J. Toski,Fla.Jajf Hebert, _ _xiSnice ci»M,/HSilsBd. *^Yprit, April pareifiiF- is t ^ n g the last fairexW orld Seriss,

    WXltarBiCleve-

    'Tfsttonal ' meet

    fello& th a ilO sn ll

    the umnal Adbunated Press prê ; seasoa niiQ.''fll sHSeted the Indiana to «B b X a e H o a a ~ X »^

    row; *)he_Yank*s, picked loyiabeat eal. Vunner-ups;

    d m w 4 i j S n A p l a d A - M P ^• thbdfjjM to ChioagO. WMW Box xt-

    tke jremainhig - two votes Fourth

    sonTXPtai pciMa,. with a . i^ U ^ vote worth #lght polhtSi

    a* aMjond pliica vbtF drorth seven points- and ao' on down tha line to One pOlhttor eighth ple«i,'’'toe Indiana n lp ^ tha YMfeaea. 831 ooMm Soi 80Oi, Tha 'WMta Sox totalled 686 p61w to far Outdistance the fourth-pMce BOiton Red Sox (480) aniLtoe fifth placa Detroit ’Dgera (46f). Weahington (846).- Baltimora (2 ^ ) and'Kafisas a ty U16) .flaithed poor alao-rans. ,

    Thb Hravaa aurpriaifigiy wefa aw ardi^a Mfgcr aeafgiB over the defending , champion OlanU than Oeveland -eiiloyed over toe Van .̂ keek MilwaiilcM reteived 60 firtt {dace vptea to only «T for 'the. Gianta kad a o fdv Brobklyn. The S t Louie Cardinals, only other team toT ^cW vrflm tph^ recognU Umt. drew three top fiallb^s.

    ■On point total. Milwaukee received 807 polnta to the runner-up aianta’s760 a n d - the-, third, place

    720. Tha CHrda-' aamad ■fourtjaulM with low eTtt order by Oncinnatl (467), PhllidfIpMn (346n O k k i^ (6P6>a n d w E t a b u r g h ' ' *" *

    i;Flekad f e s f l^ r ^ ,, Mak&r toe .ln4l*n YankeM,

    lor G)anU KfiBBived luMkm totm 'ffw o w m m

    Hi Bfid WMta » x ' iTaN jB et ttmt

    .p-,u the of

    American League wi a ;toeexact duplicate of last ys'aris finishes fcut the National «Lsagur differed In alt but three positions. The, Braves, wBb'fihltoed third in iM 'f climbsd two notches. The Giants and Dodgers each dropped one. The Cardinals jumped from

    voted in ̂ W f « i ^ exchanging plaohe with toe Philnea.

    (or Sltti

    ,v ■' 1 ■' -.,1.:: v '> v l z w ;

    only.-ti Baltimore Americah Mug)i M Ia|t piaca vol

    - lOiB 0bU69 Yorih’ 4 ' ■

    .'■ -/r 'v f '

    acagWand-reiHHcd'

    •Q —, With runners on 'flfxt and second, the hatte^ Mtt a pop fly which the u m p i r e immadlately naiiM a » infield fly. The wind car- rieifthe balk a*smy from toe Mon/ treal second baaeman and it Mt the runner, standing on aecOnd. It bounoed away and before it waa recovered/; both ruaners advanced a base* ft tolA l«g*17

    A As laag aa.̂ runnaa staadlng ea the bag. It Is § . ball ajM luaw ie can’t a d V n ^ Hewever, H' H * bbllBad bit h ta •a ^ kaa^t|M ,.ha would be ant

    Oh a'douhle play attempt, -the shorUtop threw n good peg to Om first basantan. it was la time, -but ths fielder dropped it. He wss Charged With an error. I thought n® ertora were given if okt matt Waa knocked off on a play of this sort.

    A : The error Is given If the throw ia dropped. It le nM “ We****** ****2rvnncee'IFa'WBd a( lUQ — y^ en a'JMttftr niid pitcher are lx>th nady and toe b a 11 a r withes to Map' out of the batter's box ia-ha auppoaad * * he just M # out a ik t“ — nmUcsO^TaSlIidt '

    A Vat neet H 'laaa

    Daytona Beach, Fla.. April 6 Shelley Mknn lost her chacce

    four titlM in toe N^onal AAU 's Indoor Snlmmlng Meet ly she goes after a triple k aeoond straight y « r ,

    TbeXtna, browa-MUred iT-year- Bid Mdlhxachooly aenior froin.Ar-' lington, 'Va.,.dafends her 1654 ^tle in the Hft-yard butterfly. She .already has .won tha 406-yaird li^i- Vidual medley end . 100-yard beo- atyle,/

    Ynsa Msnn"S Ihle as favoHEr t̂b rec>eat,as winaeir of the 100-ya^d backstroke didn't'hold upland that Mailed her cpance of our Individ- uai title

    Although she lost tost ermm. Miss Mann wasn't shut out yesterday. She and three teammates of th4F Walter -Reed -Hcapltal .Swim ^ub of WeMiiiigtoiv D. C.-, toek tk»'400-yard freeatyle relay.

    That one. a repeat '"ictory from last year, lUMi. * aiirvlvd a protest from- Gus Rapenguto, coach *of the LefeyattS; Ind., 8«1m Club.' He bb- lected beCaum W i ^ T R ^ CISach Stan Ptnfcham took MarieGlUettd o ff bis B team and moved her to

    C teanvio repUiee Dongle Gray, 'hactm a i l l Jus ‘ ‘

    race: ’Fmtest Disallowed

    J. 'Edodn Aspinwall of InfUana- poUs, ochalrMan of toe National AAU Wbman’a Sarimming Committee. said toe judges weN divided and ha telephoned Den Fenia. National ^ U ekecutive aaeratary in N*** Y ork 'for a ruling. The protest was Msallowed agaiiwt toe winning Waiter Reed O teem but the B team, which finished sixth, svas disqualified.. Two other flria repeated,,last y i^ a tiUaa—carol Talt of SanU e^ lar season, made it 6-5 with 'home run.

    Fotfi, Griaa H it Hard But toe l^ila acorad three times

    in their eighth tit Johnny SiUn« . I I I I

    eincinnatt at Milwaukee—Staley (7-18) ve. Spahn (21-12)',- St. Louis at Chicago — Law ranee (15-6) vs. Minner (11-11)

    The. most talkad-of golfer in toe countity at toe moment isn't, in the Masters’ Toumainsiit and hasn’t .even coma clOas to winning event 'of any impostance. He ia George Baysr, ther huge- fallow from San Gabriel. OaUf„ who musL aqeordipg to all acteounts, hit a ball ffom 80 to ,60 yards-farther' than any living ntortal. Wa had, until recently, been content to take the tales of 400-yard drives wlto a dash Of opium, but ran into ao many sports writers in {Trqj^a who had seen theM with their own eyes tha.t there can he no doubt they are truq, One man we muat believe swears th at. Bayer will outdrive Sam Sneadiat least 80 yarda to tha,

    Tha club executive who took toe: wereL beating all spring was. Joe -Q n ffl’. generatemanagar af tha Baatpii Rad Sox. AheiiC the time Jqe nettled Into his tlrM deep

    Pro Playoff Ca