8
(In .. . .W #11 ,/ i . / f. Arerage Dally Clrculatleii For U m Mentti of Deeeadmr, i *«8 6,613 at the A m at g tcnlaHniM ' / - A ' Mmth€$ter~^A CUy> of VjU^c Charm VOL. I X . NO. 97 i^»lr MANCHBSl l iR, CONNn THpR^PAY. JANUAkY 88*1941 (FOURTEEN PAGES) ^ -------- ^'1 PRICE THREE CENTS Shea Gets Delay oil Hurley’s, Plan For Airport Site Soldiers Practice Parachute 4 Senate Republican Lead- j tr Succt^s in Getting ^ rime to Study Pro- j vision of Bill Offered; By Governor’ to Buy, Land for .Mrfield* | State Capitol. Hartford, | Jan. 23.— <itP)— Action on a bill for the acquisition of a , northern (Connecticut site to be used aa a United States Army airport was delayed to- day in the Senate by a Repub- lican demand for more time to study its provisipnh after Gov. Robert A . Hurley had asked for its immediate pas- sage. Senator^ William J. Shea, Republican floor .eader, asserting/ that Republicans had not been consult^ on the measure, . unsuccessfully at tempted first to have-the bill referred to- the Appropria- tions Committee and then succeeded in, getting Demo- crats to agree to a temporary delay. Both houses receaaed to gl>'e its leaders an opportunity to confer on the measure, aubmltted earlier in the day by the governor to- gether with a special message urging "immediate action” on iU Debate Thla Afternoon Seen Leader* aaid the bill probably j would be debated late thlB aftcr- noon. . Hurley reconlmended to the General Aasembly that It author- ise immediate acquiaition of a 1700-acre alte. In his first special message to the Legislature, the chief execu- tive expresaed the belief that an “ emergency exiata, which requires your immediate action.” With the meaaage, he aent a bffl authortxing the state public works Sullivan Will Stand Trial On Feb. 18 Former State WPA Ad minUtrator and Four Others Plead Innocent To Any Irregularities. >i- f \ ' lilt' No Able to Win in British Take Seen War; AUVSava amaa^ wo*w. — -- _ __ commlaaloner to acquire the perty, located in Windsor ’ - Locks knd''8ufhcld within 15 miles of Hartford, one of the state’s prln- eipnl defense centers. WUl Lease Land The land will be leased to the (Contlna^ on Fage Four) Flashes! (Lafie BaUeUaa of the (F) Wire) Charge Unfair Fractloea Now l/Mdon, J ob . *5^—(F>— Ctarglng unfair labor praetteoa, about MO oarpeutera aad laborm employad on a hw lng project for the Navy at Orotoa, deoUned to report for work today. Wa----- T & f m e a n s haa tlif geaoral eoa tract, but BenJnmiB May a nsem bw of the firm, who waa at Orotoa, aaM ha had ao eonuneat to nwka. Neither did the Navy Pahllo Works Dofiartiaeat at the Kobaarlae Base, which pia the preject. The worhero who congregated outside the job ettn, said that that* waa *>0 otrlhe," only a ”wnlkont,” and aaM that It ^ cawed becaoee the oootraeter sent common laborcm out with tiaeln doing work which should ba doae by oarpeatero. liper'a Stern Stin Fhot New Yert^ dau. t$— (4>—The, V. S. Unea. eaM today that H wouM take at least another week to free the Hner Manhattan, agronad imnr Went Palm Beaeh, Fla. Three tags have paUed the W the liner about 10* feet | « t her eteni IS etin faot, the jo ML Mere than *00 membera tba eteward^ department huva the ehip and are an route to | Now Yetk- The pueeOugen tohau off the day after the hap.dea. IS. * • ... MhMe Sink dap 8Upe_ _ Changklag. CMua. dan S*.—(Fj .-Orntral Rewe. ageaey of the Cmtial ChhMae gevemaamt, re- ported taalght that Chlnea dapaueaw Mripa dan. 13 la the Taagtae river helou hew. The agency aeld Oi* ■me went dawn with the d om ^ gunhiit and n large **”* # # * jlarhelB At n Olanee New Tech. dan. S*. (F> - early mgy Cal- mlle < •ry Hartford, Jan. 38—(F>—Vincent J. Sullivan of Bridgeport who un- til last October waa state WPA admtnlafrator, pleaded innocent in Federal court here today to a group eff charges Involving al- leged Irreguiaritiea in office, in- cluding diversions of labor and ma- terial for improvemrat of his own home. Trial for Sullivan and four other present or former .. WPA men, including Frederick J. Mayo, .former director of operations for -Hie state, who also pleaded inno- cent YVlU be held in New Haven the week of- Feb. 18. Bentty PleeBi OuUty. James H. Beatty of New Ha- ven, former WPA administrator assistant pleaded guilty to three counts of defrauding the govern- ment with false travel vouchers. He Yvill be sentenced after tbe trial. J His brother, John R. Beattie, a (OoattBoed ou Page Two) TwoDie, 12 Injured When Plane Cracks T . & TV. Airliner Crashes While Making Land- ing at St. Louis Air^ port Before Dawn. St. Louis, Jan. 38.—(T)—Only a mile from safety, a big Transconr tinental and Western airliner crashed before dawn today ap- proaching Lambert-St Louis municipal qlrport, killing the chief pilot and a passenger and Injuring 13 other persona. - Flying oh Inatnunenta.’ cspt. P. T. W. Scott passed over the field at 4:18 a. m., cat, and three min- utes later he wia dead in the 'arreckage of the ship, "The Sky- Sleeper.” J. F. Mott, a TWA employe who boarded the plane aa a passenger at Kansas City, also was killed. Far behind acbedule, the air- liner, enrouta from Los Angeles to New York, flew low acroaa the field and then banked to the left in making a awing for a landtnc from tha aouthweat. Residanta of tbe neighborhood heard an angry roar at the tarin motors, apparently when the pilot "gunned" his engines In an effort to climb. A "big flarii” foUo'ved. BIpped Trees a a i Foie - ’•'J'’ . * 1 ^ U. 8. aoldlera In Fort Bennlng. Oa.. rehearse a parach'ite aaaault «S:*l"*‘ ment dropped separately by parachute. The men at right have just landed and released their chutes. 'Hte soldief in the background is just landing. Briton, Head O f Shanghai’s Council, Shot Japanese Riot When Body Voles Down Op- position to Tax Raise; Jap Labor Leader Held Bfelieve Some Fighting Continuing in Rumania Legations Declare Ari- tonescu Has Mastered Rebellion; High Gen- eral Joins Dissidents. Jan. 38—<F)—W. Sofia, Bulgaria, Jan. 23.— ( j P)— Although Rumanian le British Air Raiders Hit Ruhr Valley More Than 14,000 Pris- oners Seized in Capture O f Italian Base in Lib- ya; Four Generals and Admiral Included ,in Prisoners; British Cas- ualties Said to Be Un- der 500-*s. Attack. Cairo, Egypt. Jan. 23.— (A*) — British headquarters an- nounced today that the cap- ture o( Tobruk, Italian Lib- yan base, was completed last night and that more than J4,- 000 prisoners were taken. A communique said the prison- ers included four generals, one a corps commander and another a divisional com- mander, and an admiral. Brit- ish casualties were said to be less than 600. "Enemy casualties are not yet fully aacertalned,” said the Brit- ish command’s communique, "but 2,000 wounded already are being evacuated.” .. "A number of senior Army and Naval staff officers” were listed among the prisoners. Tobruk haa been called the beat harbor between Alexandria, and Xunls» - - - - ...... ..................... Refers to Otfenalve Italy Likely To Inflate Its Money Press and Financial Opinion Urge Increase In Supply to Meet Groicing War Costs, Lindbergh Flatly Asserts : United States and Brit- I ain Together CouM I Not Win CnroptaMt W ar *on Present Basis v And Urges ‘Negotiated PeaCfi’ ; (Collapse Be- hind Lines Solution- The communique made succinct 0011 X11 1, . 1 —u. 1 — *-• » . i v ” / ----------- __ a m j references to offensive actions Keswick BriUsh chairman of the gfitions in southeastern Eu- Pound at Dusseldorf against lUliM I ^ t Africa, hw- I 11—, r>— ' _ , . . 1 * e iLt dreda of milea from the pjonn R e g i o n in K a id o f Itle- African, or Libyan batU« line. h yiWMBry B*h»c* WaSUagbaa. foSttiaa « the Tba giant plane clipped a m^Ie c, 40 feet high, ripped a wing (OoaflaMd oa Page Foar) Drum Deems Test Useful First Army Head Is Sat isfield with the Air- craft Warning System. New York. Jan. 3*—<F)—Lieut. Gen. Hugh A. Drum, commanding tbe First Army, pralaed today the operatlona of tba Air Defenae Oommand aircraft 'aramlng ays- tom now in tba third day of day experimental teate. OeoMml Drum mads hla firrt In spectioB at Mltchel Fiald haad quarters where he oheervad oper- atloas of the plotting board which pictarea rapotta of volunteer ob- servers in New York, Ooimecticut, Rhode Island and MaHachuaatta. "Fm coavtnoad that it (the air- craft waraiag systom) ia prseti- cal and srm be efOciaat,'* tba gea- eral said. "Here Is a pletnra of the people doing something to peoteet Ua& own homes. It bt^igs it back to a case of erif-peeeervaUcei." Msl Drum oomBMUded the of MaJ. Oen. Jamea K. esmaey, commanding general of the Air Defense Oommand. Tbs comiMnd, Drum explained, sraa only ali^iUy more than a year old and stffl in a stata of devriop- awnt "aa Is the .sntlrs army." It sraa fortunota, be conUansd, that "Oensral Chaaegr served aa aa oboensris itariaad sad is aMa to apply to thfis'-ssaatry aB.ttht. Is rope declared today that Pre mier Gen. Ion Antonescu had . mastered Rumania’s rebel-1 lion, diplomatic sources here expressed belief that some disorders were still in prog- ress. They pointed out that at least one high general had joined dissident Iron Guaril- ista. Like atataments on behalf of the Bucharest government, lamed at Budapert and Sofia aaid In part that Oen. Oeorfle Petrovlcescu, former minister of Interior under Antonescu, had organised a ma- chlnegun attack on the premier’s office. Tbe attack was said to have been broken, but the statements did not say what had become of General Petrovlcescu. According to a legation atate- ment, Antonescu claimed continu- ed collaboration with "the majori- ty and responsible element” of the natlonalUtic Iron Guard. Hundreds Reported Killed Before the etatements were Issued hundreds were reported to |.have been klUed in tbe civil strife within the German-dominated na- tion. The rebels were said eariier to bb holding several mlnistrlee, the telephone headquarters and tho post office at Bucharest. At one time rebels plaimed to hold the upper-hand in moat cities In Rumanian Transylvania. Hungary, which won a Mg slice of tbe province of ’rmpsylvanla in an Axis-dictated settlement last fall, was reported in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, to be calling up addi- tional trooiMi hurriedly in connec- tion with evanta in exiled King Shanghai Municipal Council, and two Japanese council officials were slightly wounded today in full view of a meeting of 3,000 persons in a shooting fray precipi- tated by Japanese disapproval of a council vots. f Y. Hayaabl, 80-year-oM ehatr- man of the Association of- Japan- ese Street Unions, was taken into custody by Japanese consular po- lice, Spectators said he . waa seen to Jump to the platform with a pistol in his hand. Japanese embassy .officlsla said they were not prepared to admit that Hay- ashi was the nlan who wounded tho three, but said he was "de- tained as a suspect.” Informally they expressed re- gret for the attack on Keswick. . The meeting, an emergency ses- sion on taxation, was held' at the Shanghai race course. Police with submachine-guns, rifles and (Coatlaned On Page Twelve) Mrs. Strubing Tells Her Tale Greenwich Woman Re- lates Story of But- ler's Alleged Attack. Bridgeport, Jon. : 18—IF)— Mra. Elesinor Strubing, struggling to maintain her composure, told a croaa^examiner today of the ordeal aha underwent on a. night last _ __ !?*1 Carol’! formar domain. Obaarvei? ^ ,1 ^ ^ 81 -y ^ ld Na- YugosUv capltaT pointed Frontier, Joseph B ^i. out that Hungary wants still mwe Over ^ 4 ovw rte ^ TransylvanUu •I was frtgtbsned to death and Ttww-fc n-M-iO m could hardly breaUie." ^ ^ The pretty 83^ear-old Green- The Turkiah cabinet held _ wlch socialite told SpeU’a tawyer. three-hour meeUng to dlscuaa the Samuel E. Friedman, that only turbulence in Rumania and tbe feer for_,her life prevented her preeence of hundreds of thousands from ^ealsW the butler after heJof Oennan troops there. London, Jan. ^Ijr raldara .pounded.at the Dues - . — --- Induatrial Ruhr valley during the 1 eaUbllahed contact __ a_a A*.— AM* Moeea^iea^m^ F .& * i_ a aw^ night, the government announced today, ending aeveral nlghta of Inactivity caused by bad weather. The etUck, aaid to have been the 21at aimed at DueaaeldorTa steel, oil and munlUons works. M ^'d^rib^ as concentrate tat I British undiapute^control of 80 ' milea of the Libyan cosatltne and her rato a bed in the Strub- itig home. She did struggle, she said, when Spell first accosted her as aha came out of a shower-bath, and abe aereamad „ Iqudly hoping to arouse Spell’s wife, Vlrtus. aaleep OB the floor above. To Fricdman'a insistent queries whether she recalled "kicking him (Spell)" and “trying to tear at his face with your hoada," Mrs. StruMng replied: "Tried te K » Me." "I didn’t dare. Tha man tried to kill me oooe." Asked tf abe could not recall what aba had done. Mrs. Strubing. mr.tmrn, repUed: "I don’t remember, Mr. Frted- rve tried to forget It I The German aoldlera bad been expected to Intervene In tbe strife, tat apparently were ateerthg clear, since dispatches rsoeived through (I on Page Twe) dium Nights Scope; of Ends It toid of continued pressure .east of Metemma, on the Ethiopl- Innrtlvltv I an front and in Kenya colony, facing both Ethiopia and Italian -V. I Soraaillaad. 33—IF)—British I British troopa wlilch pursued the Italians from Kissala, in the Rome. Jan. 28—IF)—Recouraa to a "controlled’’ Inflation aa a means of meeting Italy's growing costs of war appeared likely to- day aa sSetions of tha press and financial opinion advocated an In- creased supply of money and credit with its affects tempered by government curhe. oo pricee and production. Proponents of a “paper money* solution to growing war de)^ argued tbe Fascist aUte could off- eet the traditional repercuaaiona of inflaUon (sweeping Increases la prices and Uving costa as the purchasing power of money d'vtB- dlea); _ WouM Avert Oenmnser Spending The issuance of additional money would maka liquid capital plentlfuL But tha government (Oonttnimd-On Pngs Twslvs)- Italy Admits * 1 British Now Hold Tobruk Washingtoi), Jon. 23.— — Col. Charles A. Lindbetigh flatly asserted today that even a combination of tho United States and Great Brit- ain could not win the Europe- an war “on the present bmsts^ and he urged a “negotiatad peace.” The famous flier toM the House Foreign Affairs Committee that he did not be- lieve that “anything abort of war or beyond ,wqr” would win the struggle umesa thero, was a coIlapM behind tha lines on one side or the other. Requested Uter to eUbocats en within Eritrea where the FasciaU tad taken up defensive positions domlnatliig Vlscla and Varentu. •tae capture of^Tobruk with a 36-hour land, air and aea aaaault culminated a aiege that gmva the wwmm \Awnv.aa*#x-%A eew - of only medium" scope because of the weather over the continent. (The official Oarman news agency reported in Berlin that a amaU number of bomba dropped in western Germany early last night cauped unimportant damage to private property. and started small fires which were quenched quickly. It said only a feyir planes parUclpated and apparently no casualUea resulted.) Launch Daylight Attacka Earlier, the Air Ministry re- ported R. A. F. fighter planes, with six Polish fliers among their crew, launched two daylight ma- chine-gun attacka yeaterday on German aircraft at landing fields and on t n x ^ and ground de- fenses In Naxi-occupied France from the channel coast to the Somme river. On the flrat trip, the Air Mlnia- tty News Service said, "ona of the pilots began the offensive by diving and firing at a number of amall motorboats met off th# french coast” The same filer. It waa said, ma- rittaM-gunned five MeaaeiSchmitt planes grounded at La Touquet Irdrome and then, on the way _ome, "met anti-aircraft fire and stopp^ long enough to aend all bia remadning ammunition apattarlng among the gima’ crews.. "< 5 ur fighters were not engaged by tbe enemy and all of them re- turried safely." a communique con- cluded. BelaUvely jQwlei^lght BrlUin eriJir^M a reUUvriy quiet night The Air and Home 8e- ciulty Minlatrtea reported "hardly Announce Vastly Supe- rior Force Occupies Portions of Stronghold After ‘Severe Losses’. Rome, Jan. 28— Italian high command announced today that a vastly superior force of Brit- lab troopa had occupied portions ei the Libyan atrtsigbold of Tobruk after auffering "espw:lally severe loeeee" inflicted by the Italian de- fenders. Tha Italians reported, however, that their troopa atlU ware offering “strenuoua reslatanee" in some positions to the west of the town. The dally Yirar bulletin aaid the Italian garrlaon defending Tobruk consisted of only one dlvlalpn plus Mveral detachments of sailors and frontier guards. HnrI n v a Fril INvIaleas Against this force the British were said to have hurled five full divisions. * Whan the British antored To- bruk, tha communique aaid. the __ I town was in flamaa and tha old More Than IDO Italian I cruiser Saa Olorglo. larhlch - - 'anchored in the harbor and had an'ideal base from which to con linue their weetWerd drive. Royal Air Force headquatlcra reported heavy raids Monday night on Dejma, 95 mUea west of Tobruk. The bombs started fires which the R. A. F. eeid could be aeen *0 miles away. Dema would ba the immsdUie major objecUvs of a British driva farther along the Libyan coast. ^ Barracks "and other .^nilitary (Contianed On Twelve) Planes Bomb Army Trucks this point, Lindberi^ said he did not iMlieve that Germany conid Invade England unless there h*d been a ”pnvioua coUapae" briiind the lines, and neither did he be- lieve England could Invada the Gennan-doBiiaated European eon- tinent— __ lelth tha Unttsd StatM aa an aBy—uiilaas had been a collapse ia ~ BeBevee Aid tm Brltatai "M M ahe He aaid he beUeved the stand o f "the American peopit” la faver of aidmg ths Britlah ”waa a nde- take. And he declared be tnm ap~ pooed to the leaae-lmd bin for British aid because it was "a atep away from democracy” and "one more step cloeer to war.” Entrance Into any foralgn war, Llndberi^ aaid, sbouM be ovoM ^ for ragardleeB of what happefiad abroad this country and thla ham- iaphere are "strong enough” to protect themselves. He advocated estsbUshment of a string of sir by thla coujiUy and tha err- atlon of an air force of shoot Ifi.- 000 first line plonee aiid an eqoet number* o f -reaervee. excloalve oC trainaral Such a force, ba askL would "Insure American aeewrity. But he told inquiring conmit* tee member!, tta United States now haa nowhere neer this force. It la "a mlatake" to export war planea when this country haa such a lack of thsm. bs addsd, (A ■hare of fighting craft eattanatta ntflOtoSO * now the (Oonttaoed on Page Twe) Draftee, 33, Fears Army Will Cut His Long^ Curls aty, Jan. ^ "Then, whea 1 grew up ita4 i<M 4 oji whn HbaVwcBt to scbool and thy ^ te a^ Oklahoma __ ,, ___ Ivan Baraells Hsiderieh who, lUie Sameon of old, takes great pride In )ua uatrimraed locks, faeied ap Induction board today with the fear that ths Army would be Ills Dettlah. and _____ ------- -- was so frightened, so petrified. I ■bout to breek down Friedman fhoul^ -lo n g r>ld naked tf Mie wwitod a ricsm, but declined. teen sat Impaarively through thaUiiid day of hla trial la a chair facing the witness stand and Jury. Mra. StruMng's husbanC John, a formar PrtocetoB football ptayar and New Tock advertialBg man, wte was away oo a burinias trip when the allaged attesk occtm ^ occupied a. tnat row aaat In U m dosed courtroom, watching hie wife latently. Mm. atrtaing taeUfisd nfidsr di- rect eaambietfeai yestsrday thrt 8p«|l toM her ha was "W ------ ------ ksp, fBseed her to wrKd _____ __________ _ gold- oa curli never have known'a bar- bar's sheon. Mew into town with a group of draftoee, oonsIderaMy irked because the Army waa about to get into We hair. What’s wonylng Ivan la that tf he is pomad m tbe examining board, ba wtUlace an Axmr proc- ifrrT-f In which the growth of a UfetUM ia doomed to be clipped down te the rsgnlatkm two-inda crop. PlMW Te FraSeet Tm gdag to ■pcotem." Ivan pMdalBMd. "1 dIdaY xrant to go to tks firatMaeA 1 don’t waat my hair cot Wnsa Z was a Uttla tay. ,X had banuttful coria aatd ‘ sqr Ijjsv ifsaMa't.qBt tkom. wanted to cut my hair, ----- let them. I don’t have say par^ ticulAT rfftfon for not WBOtloj? It cut, but rve gone this far ahd. yes. you might aay It’a got to be a hobby with me." Ivaa haa not bad much trouble with curious folk because he haan’t traveled much and tbe peo- ple around MarietU "have got used to it." ' nw»lid l^ ’ov While la Soheel When be wm a boy to school ba was heckled untU be ‘Wocked a few guys to convtoes them I wasna a simy." Now bis tall. lean. aaUd frams convinces Jta r -' onloeker IBat baf inPt. *,gr.ssss3J”W « i a n en the ttoda gawlUng .ai>4 Vehicles Destroyed by| Greeks In Gorge. BoBtitn! Atheae, * tan* **—(F^A two-way attack en ttoHaa oh- Jerttvee to the Greek war the- ater—mUltary buUdtogs am* tmaepert eancentmtfeee to Aibeale and the airdrome ef Maritas en the Dedecaaaae laWnd ef Khedee wee re- ported todayT^ the Britieh Rea^ Air Force. The aeeawit en Mariloa, see eC the few ■ctiene thne for agatoet Ital- loaa to the D llacensee le-- Inade. caused Dree among military buUdtoge nt the air- pert Wat Mght. tho eoeanraal- que saM. M U tt^ bnOdtogs at Beratt. Albania, alee wme damaged, the R. A. F. report- ed. while traneport on tlw Rfi- enm-Bemtt rend waa raked ■heed ef the Greek ceneter- to vealen -front. Athcaa, Jan. **.—(•)— )tora than 100 Italian Army trucks, trapped in a narrow BMuntain gorge when a bomb-dlaiodged boul- der blocked the road, ware destroy- ed by Greek bombing planea, tba Gretk Air Force r^Kwiad from the central Albanian front laat night Hgpeotod machine-gun and bomb ■ttyjta on Fascist troopa Wfre daacTtbad. gSwaaea ArttOory A government apokeamaa » a - Bounced advances of Greek a p - iary to new poeitiona ia the central front after infantry gains bed cleared tbe way. Xwo hundred TtaUaa m said to have.heea taken in the ag*»t 6.g and four counter-at- itacks "easily repulsed" with heavy been used aa a floating fortress, had been bknvn up with dynamite. The high oommand aaid "very (Conthensi Qin Fage Twelve) [Xry to Settle Strike Today I Stale, Federal Govern- ments Work Against Time in Wisconsin. By The AModsted Press SUte end Federel govemmenta. with a churchman recruited to help, woilced against ttmat o ^ to aetUela -defenaa toduMty Mrite to WiSCtoMlB, Whfta from elae^m Iketu cewM news at a work-curtail - ing shipyard dispute, and paeoaful |■gree|nant in two aircraft plants: ' The Wtocoasin strike, a 8**,000,00b of defonm torgMy Naval equipment, wan nt the AlUs-Chalmero company. Oov. JuUus P. HeU. who helped aettla a atrlke there to 1*8*. took a hand ■Bd the Labor Department sent Mmr Francis J. Hms at Catholic UBtverrity as n FederiU medlstor. "We offered to confer en every Ipotnt except the Mooed shop." snM Mex Babb, company preMdmt ^he d o ’s lepia— 8814 ^ 88Xt move wan_ “entirely" up to AlUn- Chalmere.' per' cent dr more, lia going to Britain aa fast as ■hips ara produced.) Naoriag Top Speed Lindbergh a&o told Repreemtae tive Vorya (R-Ohlo) that m lilti^ planci would not become otoolm (Ceetmaad an Page Fw»» .1 Bomber Sinks Cargo Vessel German Sub Oedhed Wilb Sinking 31,000 Ton# of Shif»|iin0* mouth. tong- wfio- ^ ____ _______ ___ "Be isdght have added: emv is acmam ” ’Tf the Without mentioning spedfie IhMaUties. a OreMs high eomniata eonununlque lart nifiht toM M l^euccesMUl k»e8i mperntlooa and Iof safe return to ou QreMt 4 daaw bmnh .attacka ^ Employea the Alainma Dry- dock azvd ShipbuUding Company ef iMoWla, a Navy dastroyar repair bam, stopped work without strOc- ling after confarences fhUad to nagotiata agreement on pay ta- -Jso. Mhos apokassiin said ( ult wotk at The togalto ag'Oerpetntlen yard to A t- , ;.,-N Vi.^4 Bolktln! Bette. Jaa. 35—‘Fv—A * i^ gle Oerama eemhat ’ ""‘ irsrs.Sf — Mg tree aed cxyla- ■orved. DNB. ______ efflcial _______ Berlin. Jan. 3#.— A range Nail bomber sank a X ton merchant vcasSl to toe Atlas- tic 135 tp i^ wait of IrMand yes- terday, tbe official German news' ■gency. DNB.^ reported today. A stogie Mt by a medium tnsah d D m vessel to go down m about R> mtoutao, toe news a*8h* ey aaid. .... . , Infocmad sources sao reported tbs «*"M«g of SI.000 toM qC ffdP* Mag tar n German subonnitt erattog "ovaraeaa." The craft al- ready has more than 100,000 tons to Ito ciedit.^t^ 8 ^ ^ ^ ^ The German h ^ eomnuirique leaned Inter meatton of toe same mnxnnntT. to the vessel as a "war- high <«8»®»8**6 East coast" wars attackea ly.sr* <ttvidual pianen l*st sight, ■hii* BrttiSb iwkrs^*toropped eendiariea and enphwven ere Germany." A comanmique aaid ao snatlal Urgtto'wm ona ctvtoan wan hSled n tojated. "SUakt prepnty Thsna Brtani to havn

I oil Hurley’s, Plan i For Airport Site RADIO SPECIAL! 4 ... Evening Hearld...In passing the academic and phy sical examinations on this,' his second try. Laat year he had been turned

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  • (In

    ... .W # 1 1

    ,/i . / f.

    Arerage Dally ClrculatleiiFor Um Mentti of Deeeadmr, i*«8

    6,613at the A m

    at g tcnlaHniM

    ' / - A

    ' M m th€$ter~^A CUy> o f V jU ^ c Charm

    VOL. I X . NO. 97 i^»lrMANCHBSl l iR, CONNn THpR^PAY. JANUAkY 88*1941 (FOURTEEN PAGES)

    ^ -------- '̂1

    PRICE THREE CENTS

    Shea Gets Delay oil Hurley’s, Plan

    For Airport Site

    Soldiers Practice Parachute

    4

    Senate Republican Lead- j tr S u cct^ s in Getting

    ^ rime to Study Pro- j vision o f Bill Offered; By Governor’ to Buy, Land for .Mrfield* |

    State Capitol. Hartford, | Jan. 23.— 'e its leaders an opportunity to confer on the measure, aubmltted earlier in the day by the governor together with a special message urging "immediate action” on iU

    Debate Thla Afternoon Seen Leader* aaid the bill probably j

    would be debated late thlB aftcr- noon. .Hurley reconlmended to the General Aasembly that It authorise immediate acquiaition of a 1700-acre alte.

    In his first special message to the Legislature, the chief executive expresaed the belief that an “emergency exiata, which requires your immediate action.”

    With the meaaage, he aent a bffl authortxing the state public works

    Sullivan Will Stand Trial

    On Feb. 18Form er State W PA Ad

    minUtrator and Four Others Plead Innocent To Any Irregularities.

    >i-

    f \

    ' lilt'

    NoAble to W in in British Take

    SeenWar;

    A U V S a v a a m a a ^ wo*w. — - - _ _ _commlaaloner to acquire the perty, located in Windsor ’ -Locksknd''8ufhcld within 15 miles of Hartford, one of the state’s prln- eipnl defense centers.

    WUl Lease Land The land will be leased to the

    ‘ (Contlna^ on Fage Four)

    Flashes!(Lafie BaUeUaa of the (F) Wire)

    Charge Unfair Fractloea Now l/Mdon, Job. *5^—(F>—

    Ctarglng unfair labor praetteoa, about MO oarpeutera aad laborm employad on a hw lng project for the Navy at Orotoa, deoUned toreport for work today. Wa-----T & f m e a n s haa tlif geaoral eoa tract, but BenJnmiB May a nsem bw of the firm, who waa at Orotoa, aaM ha had ao eonuneat to nwka. Neither did the Navy Pahllo Works Dofiartiaeat at the Kobaarlae Base, which pia the preject. The worhero who congregated outside the job ettn, said that that* waa *>0 otrlhe," only a ”wnlkont,” and aaM that It ^ cawed becaoee the oootraeter sent common laborcm out with tiaeln doing work which should ba doae by oarpeatero.

    liper'a Stern Stin Fhot New Yert̂ dau. t$— (4>—The,

    V. S. Unea. eaM today that H wouM take at least another week to free the Hner Manhattan, agronad imnr Went Palm Beaeh, Fla. Three tags have paUed the

    W the liner about 10* feet | «t her eteni IS etin faot, the

    joML Mere than *00 membera tba eteward ̂department huva

    the ehip and are an route to | Now Yetk- The pueeOugen tohau off the day after the hap.dea. IS.

    * • • ...MhMe Sink dap 8Upe_ „ _

    Changklag. CMua. dan S*.—(Fj .-Orntral Rewe. ageaey of the Cmtial ChhMae gevemaamt, reported taalght that Chlnea

    dapaueaw Mripa dan. 13 la the Taagtae river helou hew. The agency aeld Oi*■me went dawn with the d om^ gunhiit and n large**”* # # * jlarhelB At n Olanee

    New Tech. dan. S*. (F> ■- early mgy Cal-

    mlle <

    •ry

    Hartford, Jan. 38—(F>—Vincent J. Sullivan of Bridgeport who until last October waa state WPA admtnlafrator, pleaded innocent in Federal court here today to a group eff charges Involving alleged Irreguiaritiea in office, including diversions of labor and material for improvemrat of his own home.

    Trial for Sullivan and four other present or former .. WPA men, including Frederick J. Mayo,

    .former director of operations for -Hie state, who also pleaded innocent YVlU be held in New Haven the week of- Feb. 18.

    Bentty PleeBi OuUty.James H. Beatty of New Ha

    ven, former WPA administrator assistant pleaded guilty to three counts of defrauding the government with false travel vouchers. He Yvill be sentenced after tbe trial. J

    His brother, John R. Beattie, a(OoattBoed ou Page Two)

    Tw oDie, 12 Injured When

    Plane CracksT . & TV. Airliner Crashes

    W hile Making Landing at St. Louis Air^ port Before Dawn.

    St. Louis, Jan. 38.—(T)—Only a mile from safety, a big Transconr tinental and Western airliner crashed before dawn today approaching Lambert-St Louis municipal qlrport, killing the chief pilot and a passenger and Injuring 13 other persona. -

    Flying oh Inatnunenta.’ cspt. P. T. W. Scott passed over the field at 4:18 a. m., cat, and three minutes later he wia dead in the 'arreckage of the ship, "The Sky- Sleeper.”

    J. F. Mott, a TWA employe who boarded the plane aa a passenger at Kansas City, also was killed.

    Far behind acbedule, the airliner, enrouta from Los Angeles to New York, flew low acroaa the field and then banked to the left in making a awing for a landtnc from tha aouthweat.

    Residanta of tbe neighborhood heard an angry roar at the tarin motors, apparently when the pilot "gunned" his engines In an effort to climb. A "big flarii” foUo'ved.

    BIpped Trees aa i Foie

    ■-’•'J'’. *1̂

    U. 8. aoldlera In Fort Bennlng. Oa.. rehearse a parach'ite aaaault «S:*l"*‘ ment dropped separately by parachute. The men at right have just landed and released their chutes.'Hte soldief in the background is just landing.

    Briton, Head O f Shanghai’s

    Council, ShotJapanese Riot When

    Body Voles Down Opposition to Tax Raise; Jap Labor Leader Held

    Bfelieve Some Fighting Continuing in Rumania

    Legations Declare Ari- tonescu Has Mastered Rebellion; High General Joins Dissidents.

    Jan. 38— mtoutao, toe news a*8h*ey aaid. .... . ,

    Infocmad sources sao reported tbs «*"M«g of SI.000 toM qC ffdP* Mag tar n German subonnitt erattog "ovaraeaa." The craft already has more than 100,000 tons to Ito ciedit.^t^ 8 ^ ^ ^ ^

    The German h ^ eomnuirique leaned Inter meatton of toe same mnxnnntT.

    to the vessel as a "war-

    high

  • I t ur|> S=.T̂ ■ i' ' ■ • . ' - •-■ ■■ V.- H-. ;' ' ■ ’ •'^ '• I ■' ' I . •• ■ .

    M A N C H E S T E R E V E N IN G H E R A L D , M A N C H E S T E R . C O N N . T H L T ISD A Y , JA N U A R Y 2 3 ,1 9 4 1 P A G E

    r ii.'z : .'T > :*A.*rt‘: i r .S T i :h . c d n : j T T U R s n A V , J a n u a r y 2 c , 1 9 4 1 1

    Sbciefy Sponsors Preparedness Meet T&day

    ̂ p a t t Society >■ «I»MOTtng ^ medical care anddvUUB prepared-1

    WM today.'-H n conference la to be held a t

    4 o’cladi a t the Hunt Manorial.nM .pco(rain for the conference

    erOl Indiide an. outline of plana Ihr atate riefenae by Oen. Sanford

    . H. W adhama d ia im a h of the jHftrt Bxeeuttve Defenae Ooenmlt- tee of the aUte; plaM and p ro g iw of the AnMCtcan Aedtpal AoaocU- tfcm hi the held of preparedneea by Or, SUnley H. Oeborn. eUte bealU oonaalaaioDer. echo la a member of the National Medical Preparedneea OwiBilttee: an outline of the ac- tteltlea of the State Medical Society In connection with the organ- MaUon of the medical boards aen,’-

    r O R H O M E D E F E N S E " M to buUd battar family

    „ For over 85 yoara FatherMedicine haa given atrong-

    a r protactlon agalnat colda and n th ^ w tn ta r 111a. Rich In vlUmlna'-A mnA D.

    -

    Rirthtlay Bail Slate Deinocrats Dislike Plans Shaped Committee Assignments

    C o m m i t t e f ; W o r k i n g t o I n s i i r r S u c c e s s o f I x i ; c a l D r i v e E f f o r t s .

    To Ten Hoapital riana Plana and progrea# of tha fan-

    eral hoepltala In the atate to meet emergeoplea arUlng from are to be presented by Albert vV. ]^cl(, director of the Charlotte Hungerford Hospital. Torrlngton. who la chairman of the Prepared- neas Committee of the State Hospital AasoclatKW

    Plana of the| aUte hurslng or- ganlRation and otitllp^ of the par- UrlpaUon of the several chapters of the American Red Cross con- aldeHng dlaaajet and emergency relief also alU he dlacuaBed. /

    The conference will be opened by Dr. A rthur B. Landry, president of the State Medical Soclaty. Dr. George N. Smith of Hne Orchard, Chairman of the State Committee on Medical Preparedneaa, wUl preside. V

    P e r s o n a ] N o t i c e s |

    Washington, Jan. *5— Con-*currency, with adioae chairman necticift’s new Democratic mem- ■ Ste**V* **•era of tha House are dlhsatiafled with their committee assignments

    In M em oriam' In lovlna Laehsy, who

    memory died Jan.

    of doseuli tSrd, 1»«T:

    IW IdB Y tU l lD I M

    Aeleep In Jesus, at nesceful rest. Gone but not foraotten,

    aieters, Mr*. Msry Klmmermsn. Mrs. Uiistsve Rehsller,

    Brothers, Clias,. . Leo, Csmille I.,echst.

    STOmiCHSQISlIIIIEtarhm n u t * Is “wssk ■nde MeSi nethlsa he 4dMaweea*laM*eesdl ■ewlin' awb taalet■Mb VhsaSa Si a* a »t.IN tad m - * m MtnSOUPlETtwJSl

    P R E S C R I P T I O N S C a M F o r^ an d D elivered

    P r o B ^ l j r l T H E

    C E N T E R PH A R M A C Y r a O N B t 4S5S.SS5S o r 3856

    An appeal want out from the general committee planning the^ Prealdent’a* Birthday Ball for. the National Foundation for Infantile Paralyala last night to the cltl- aene of Manchester to lend fuU support to the March of Dimes campaign that the local organlrA- tlon might rcnllM ^ t least' $.">00 from this source to support the flight for Infantile paralysis In sta te and nation.

    Mra. Mae Holden, chairman of tha March of Dimes division of the local organUatlon planning the anniversary Ball at the atate a rmory on Feb. 8. announced last night tha t by Saturday 200 con- talnars for dimes will he placed In schools, stores and local Industrial plants for coin collections. The chairman reported that already lo. cal store managers, school officials and plant manager* had assured her of their full support In this benefit drive.

    Chief Caher Named Floor chairman. W. Henry Weir

    reported that he had appointed IMwanl 3. Murphy, local druggist, as chief usher for tha Presldenfa Birthday BalL Mr. Murphy will name hla corps of ushers.

    Kdwin Adams, chairman of tickets, reported th a t 1,500 tickets had been printed for ' the ball and are how In the hands of committee members.

    Orchestra Secured Mra. Calls Wandt. chairman of

    music, reported that aha had con tacted Tiny Quinn’s “Command ara” orchestra of Hartford and the salecUon of this fine 10-plece orchestra was approved by tha gen- sral comnilttss and tha contract will ba signed this week. The or-

    and a t least one of them privately ----------- - . . ----- _h a . threatened to rebel M A l« t 1

    been a t odds.Repreaentativa Downs .(D.,

    Conn.), had applied to r Rivera and Harbors, but no New England

    the part:^ leadership.One reason for the disappoint

    ment In asaighmenU being more hitter for the Connecticut mem- bera was the success bf Massachusetts Damocratlc repreaanUr Uvea In landing tha major aasiga- m enu they aought However, the congrsaaman apa unab le^^ap-peSI from the aaslgnmenU they have been approved by ■ DeroocraUo caucua.

    Also dlaappolntad waa Rapra- aantatlva Fogarty (D., R. I.), former prealdwjt of a Providence, R. I., bricklayers union, because DemocraU failed to add a member from New England to the Labor Committee.

    KSvo Penney I vanlana Named. Both ha and RepreaenUtlve

    Fltagerald (D., Conn.) had aought a place on the Labor Committee. but Instead two Pennsylvanians wers namsd to th a t com- mittes.

    RspreaanUUva Kopplsmann (D., Conn.), who aought IntsraU te Commerce, landed on banking and

    i this body; Maclora (D., Conn.), wanted Baijikliig and Currency and Wound up bn the D istrict of Columbia Committee.

    .. Oet Good AsalgiuneBtaOn th f other hand. RapreasDU-

    tlva Flaherty (D„ Maas.), aarvlng hla third U m . bbtalnad a place on Naval affairs, and RepreaentaUve Eliot (D„ Maaa.). a f in t termer, w as given tha Important Judiciary Oommlttae assignment for New England.

    RepresentaUva Healey (D., Maas.), went from Judiciary, to Ways and Means to succeed Majority Leader McCormack (D.t M esa). As a Democratic member of the cofnmittee it la Healcy'i Job to aid in selecUng committee aa- atgnmenU for new members. The disgruntled ConnecUcut represen- taUves have pointed odt tha t four of them mlased ths InauguraUon of Oov. Robert A. Hufley In order to support Healey
    many colds from developing.

    Abo UK VA-’n ia N O L t e airiftleUef from the sadbeating smMneK and oongeetkai of a head .told.

    Thoroughly maMage throat, M)I 1 ION M I ̂ «.l VKANII tH12 MONTHS IN W R IT IN G4 9 ts tl e n u i

    F U E L P U M F SBCBt’It.T A O. BQOAl, TO BBW Wat Forda, Charralal. FlraMHith.

    aal taal’eaiaa-.^ u a , [MMala. atna aaw partf ' aalaaO aeaal la

    AMONG LEADING LDW-PRICE CARSWMli Trade-In

    4.49 4.96 4.96 4.98iJg slg iJg iM 6jltaM 6J6sU

    6.80 6J6 5.86 6.96f J t s n iJMillg feMsU

    6a4S 6a90 6.95

    FAN RELTS!SS r-Kiir**rit all care aa# awa* ntrlsaralara AT LOW rM CB* ^

    tor Chevrabt■M ta *»

    h inside BODY LIQiGTH!..in 8PEmBASE!..in total SEATING Wn)TH!..in total DOOR WIDTH! ..in KNEE-an̂LEGROOMUto FRONTmT HEADR00M!..in MGNESS OF WlNDSHlEUll

    TM *m * " "O R A IIS S

    mtASuniMOsTieK’i

    ITTHI ■ICfMSTcKyoacBMMay can bayl Talk U lO OK SMB with tba ‘TOAgOMNO g n a C ’- . •fid prove K yonaeif that ibe ‘41 fOBD ovf Ki n iK M whole low-price lo tto aaeriy averr BaJoe stofiemtonl Here's me MG lowprica qsslity car— itoKvrtodMieldwcaKvdodow.frmrociftofoor! >

    Test the B im . tool ABBM iht whobcaoatry’e ^itt»wg sbovd A BlDC toads posaihb by. fora’s now "MOW-MOnON SPUNG6”—pku h rg tf Shock Abaocbacs. now Stabiliser, sad aoCnr c m -

    fK rOBD

    ‘rhriUwdMSlGMIW IOUygaewfeaMrGgr- AVAirt TMH to the fnah, Kssaba M tovnr of toe ahole esrl. . - Yes, we peoebe yod/wF bto totflb arhes yov drive this grsM '4 1 FOKDt—its HG- HM$l-inR10Si—bsmiOBMANCB—ili fTVUI

    WeNe apt dM ck voa’lt waad VdSa gM s ■’dear y ra ll Itoel Briag to row aid car todqr, . . d b r ^ t n d e l

    K MSE-nV mNl h r tb kwt Ded k tan M* Tn t Ucd M Dsdir

    ,1 N ifO IO H A 8

    BHIGEST BODIES!THi POKO HAS

    UNGEST INTERIORS!... THE fO«D HAS

    GREATESrr̂ Wlimi! IMST^fiEN^M KMD HAS

    MOST':!?lHaiOOM!THE rORO HAS

    MOST KNEEROOM!f.

    IH i fO*D HAS

    WIDESr«Zi:i.000RS!JHE fOED HAS

    BIGGEST awoSmdwwi

    \D ism iB urotis

    snmHBmm,xJ^H M dm liedsiyeaA^m . gBBiBBtoa ths

    I BBttsry wH rend*be kayoad tha g----------

    ̂Thay sro M M to osaaod 1

    greatly to tha Mh af tha I

    sm S’ .-S:gJ^A ljrtth

    ^M S K A T O R S

    wrpiU H ^*Kum £ss<A I kC O H O L f

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    Maditifically BaktoH aad ggfirsataod gar- faet sad aqasl lano* to garfannukee.

    FOBD “A"

    8.48CHST̂ , roan ▼4

    8.192.96>AB s*l«as ladaOs

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    i g M Q t n t f . H dM lfr* dF***d riM .h*w *

    • I C V A U I I l

    BCA VIOTOB 4$Z-E A torgo. eotorfat dial aad ebsnntat asMaat of light aaiv hagsay vearer. Flrfi BDA VIetoF rrefecred-lygo Tabre; flabetire Sfigeehotaredyaa Cftvatt: AaKrtean reeagtba. glae aaa roHea Baadi 4* Boetre-Dyaaado ggaskw, o ffld M Aatanaa sttsehad Uwgreaad eanaee(M*(

    AC-J>C Og-

    V A Y M U m fM S O ta U fu ic A

    ■agteh TpA fItodW. back saver ta restca.

    f Kstlea. A ■at grlea $lA7t.

    Fsart

    D ILL O N S A L E S a n d ^ S E aY lC E ___;188 C E N T B H S r m O T K A H C H B S T E R

    rt Cm Sj i iltb el M res«u*sflr SK

  • lIANCHEStEB BVENING HERALD, BiANCHESTER, CONNv, THURSDAY, JANUARY 28,1841

    rtFetiqrOn Hurley’# Plan

    fW A ii^ r l Site II rrMt

    Piiaral gvnfnaamX for t6 T **"•t n ft yoftr ftftd win too uoM, Uto b « . tlir

    «7tli Pannilt group.H m Mvoraor, who told nowo*

    ttet tlM otsto WftC to bogln BOfoUftUooi for

    I MtiMl touiofrow.mid In hta ipe*

    Obituary

    D ea th t

    1 oood Bot P Hand PKktd ^ iO n» 4 ^ IE? ^

    R IC H M O N D 3 - 2 5 cHAS OUR FAMOUS MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE

    R IC H M O N D 2A REALLY RIG TOMATO VALUE

    Q U A L IT Y

    t Choice of All Flavors • Price for contents only

    28 oz cans

    BUY A DOZEN AT THIS PRICE

    28 ozcans^

    19 OZ cans

    MILUBRQOK ClUR

    SODAS4 2 9 '

    BREADi2 ‘-!i~“ 1 5 '

    kJm t

    FINASTFRESH BAKED WHITE LONG LOAF - RICH IN MILK SOLIDS

    I FINA#T BARTLEn

    PEARSP6t;ked in Luscious

    Heavy Syrup cans

    1 FINAST. . FANCY 1 FANCY HAWAIIAN1 FRU IT S A L A D j P IN E A P P L E1 5 DIFFERENT FRUITS 30 ox 6% 6# 1 EXPERTLY BLENDED ■ .TOGETHER — 1 FINAST 2 ’̂ ~27c1 2 2 7 c

    1 CRUSHED OR SUCED

    1 FINAST 2 ^ 35c A >

    . 'I

    l i e 3 4̂%ROLUO IF DESIRED

    FINASTWHOLE GREEN

    or WAXF IN A S T-F A N a

    aUFORNIA; ^

    FINAST - FANa MAINE GROWN

    STRING BEANS SPINACH SQUASH PUMPKIN SAUERKRAUT LIMA BEANS ASPARAGUS TIPS 'L"

    FINAST

    FiNASt

    FINAST • fancy SMAU GREEN

    2 ‘i? 2.7e2 ^ 2 5 c3 2Sc2 17c2 ^ 15c2 ^ 2 Sc

    23cASPARAGUS 23cSLICED BEETS ; 3 » “29cMIXED VEGUABLES 3 29cPEAS and CARROTS 2 'L" 25c

    R-C CHERRIES ORANGE JUICE aORlOA DOLE’S pineapple juiceGRAKFRLIIT.PRUNE PLUMS TOM ATO JUICE . FINASTSUCCOTASH CLAPP’S DICED CARROTS FINAST APRICOTS f**vwMouR^C FRUIT SALAD ★

    FINAST GOLDEN BANTAM

    STRAINED BABY POODS FRUITS ar VEGETABLES

    2 !̂ 45c I2 ̂25c 12 19c 13 ̂25c 12 25c 12 'r 15c 1if]2’̂ 23c 13’i’'20c I3 ̂7 25c 1"Jr 17 c 1

    lb

    lb

    lb

    30 e>

    BROOKSIDE - Large

    EGGS EVERY EGG GUARANTEEDi STRICTLY FRESH NATIVE - GRADE A

    » ^ , * 5 9 cm e 11% VLU n u m u itA Dr L W U R ’FASTBY

    FLOUR ”**̂fa£uiy^ ^ ‘ 63cPILLSBURY’S BEST FLOUa ni* 91c GOLD MEDAL noua- MARVO jS s ir37c iM4c

    TWm « tx put m torn of am CaawaJ Food VaUm. There ore mamy, mmmy mere. Viait yam mataarn ê ere today.

    ^̂ MellofU'Fresh”. COFFEESRICHMOND 2 25cJOHNALDIN PAvomnKYBO LUXUBY COFFEE 2 i!;!33cCOPLEY •nw iowreiea 19c

    BeJeery Suggestions DoSLICED ROLLS POTATO BREAD AafflUv, ^"lOc RAISIN b r ea d 8c

    , IF DESIIKD

    i-AMB FORES2 ? ie 8-81-8average

    SHOULDERSy O lE » EITOM END ■ ONt HBCE

    HAlWS smokedMLDLY cured CORNED BEEF

    lean ends -2 9 'MW

  • I r r a t t> 1 TM*- -

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    ŜtehllakaA Bv«ry HCMVtBotMATA HAMrAS, At

    M T^RM ^fTkA At MAMSAAtAf. g U r y s J S S s q.AA MAn MAMg.' SUnCHirTTOM MATHS

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    T B S ASSOCIATEDTfcA AAAAAlAtAS RrAAA lA A«a1a^ -

    |A AAtltlA« «A IkA AAAOAA Af All l*AWA SlAPAtAhAA tA U At AAI AtkAtWlAA AtASIIAS JA th it AAAAt aaS a Iaa «Aa Iota! aaw a • a AIMAaS AataIH. ,

    A ll TiAhW Af lAAAAIIOAtlAA ^ •m Ia I 4 lAAA«rhAA hAtAlA AtA a IAA

    Af K.

    at thA oW SuprtBiA Court, who to his V iv IMS AralCW w « r H M )o ^ oplBlotis HItsIMsUiic sots of 0 rs discussed were:Francis Biddle, soUcltor gener

    al 'Thurman Arnold, assistant attorney general; Senator Barkley; Charles Fahy, assistant solicitor general: Sehator Wagner (D-

    • SERIAL STORY

    GONSCRIPBY BETTY WALLA<

    Boston, Jan. 33—(/R—AUsnlsts dslved today Into the history of Mrs. Ruth Stsadmsn, 3S, a Harvard Unlvsrslty sscretery, hsld on a suspicion of -murder charge In connection with the sleeping tablet death of Robert Emery, 36, Natick real estate man.

    Two repairmen found Emery 1. tog dead on the floor of' Mrq. Steadman’s Boston apartn^t Tuesday, a rope around his neck. Mrs. Steadman, estranged ̂ f e of a PltUburgh, Fa., insurance men and mother of a lOTinonths-old baby, was lying uncpfisclous on a bed nearby.

    Put Tahlete la Milk Police CapL John McCarthy

    quoted her as saying lates that she placed sleeping tsblets In milk that he drank, then tied a rope aCound his neck and drank some of the mixture herself in an attempted solilUon of her despair that they couldn’t marry.

    Her father, Francis J. Stan- wood, Needham town official, yesterday engaged Attorney Edward Flynn to represent her, and Flynn retained Dr. Abraham Myerson and Dr. Leo Alexander, prominent psychlatriste, to examine her mentality.

    Mrs. Steadman meanwhile was transferred from City hospital to the Boston Psychopathic hospital for a 30-day observation period.

    girl threatens OOEBI

    TsatoiffaFi Martha ffwllea spend weehSMda la e a a ^ gives «p the apartnaeat to msty^oamns. She meets Sasaaae Decksf aad tha

    M BUI ef the try Clah dWaas. Martha teal-

    lass that B ^ mlght beUave even the most ■dllwinai gossip. She da- tnnnlairs n tall Paol to stop S«»- aaaa. AMtolegram sommoas her to hsr Mtttar'a Helea to in. Martha ansK coma at oaea.

    Ethics Or F ccr?-

    I f a^bill to hs offered to the OonnscUcut General Assembly should become a law you may aUll walk Into a drug store and ask the experienced looking pharmacist wheUisr hs thinks camphorated oU or ooe of the newer snalgeatca is better for a crick In tbs neck; but If he tells you, and ths law finds out shout It, -hs can bs put to tha opop- Druggists will have- to become bootleggers of such simple advice as that, making sure that there Is no witness to ths eonvsraatlon, or run the risk of eonVibtlon as law braskers.

    And If a doctor writes you a prescription for athlete’s foot, and It helps you, and you dare tall soota fellow golfer about It to the locker room and suggest that ha go get himself some of the stuff tor hla oam case of the affliction, (podnese knowa what they can’t do to you- If the law passer.

    It ’s supposed to have something to do with ethics, this proposed bill. Also there goes slang It some Pharisaical twaddle about Its being equally for the protccU->n of tha public health.

    Wo have one physician friend of vary high standing who said to us not long ago: “Ths medical profession Is riding tor a fall, 'it has too many men to It who are. more Interested to making fortunes than to doing thslr Job̂ It Is they who are hastening the day of soclsUscd medlctna.**

    Of course we wouldn’t know shout that.. But when we ace bUla going Into the Legislature which, so barefacedly as this one, are calculated to eompel ths unfortunate public to run t^ ths doctors’ -offices—or else UiHcharity cltolc — tor prnfesslnnsl Hvlos before they can take a doee of salts or put a dab of lodtos on a cut finger, we are Inclined to think our medical

    Man About Manhattan

    By George Tucker.

    New Tork^If P. O. W ode ho use Is svsr up against It for a title tor one of hie books I wilT recommend one to him. It la a line that appeared on page six of the Sunday book section of the New York ’Times, and It said, simply, “IVods- houat As Usual.’’

    This was the heading the editor had placed over the Times' own review of Mr. Wodehouse’s newest novel, "Quick Service," written while under the "protective cuetody" of NssI concentration camp officials, and Just publlahsd. Ths Una auggasted that hers was tha aams Wodshouae everyone has always knowa and If this bo so, than there Is fine precedent for appropriating ths line for some future book.

    1 have to mind a similar experi- snee by a colleague of his—Mr. W. Somsrast Msugharo, whose moat recent volume of short stories was brought out some montha ago by Doubledsy, Doran and CU.

    from getting his head beAten oflt.—If hs has them?

    Perhaps, after alL he hasn't g->t them. Psrhspa thoas nightly v>sl- tetioas of ths RAF to Germany have datw something more than to hM "three smaU houses and a boe- |Rtar-as the Nasis would have tbs world believe. Perhaps Hitter’s war production 1a somewhat teas • overwh aiming than has been

    believed. Perbspe be. Uke Britain and the United

    a "bottleneck'

    rightBy the way, why not ihave a law

    passed prohlMUng a Boy Scout from administering first aid? There's a thought tor you.

    W atcr-S«wer Rates

    "When my last volume of short storiss was published,’’ Mr. Maugham recalled to a foreword to the book, "The Times. (London 1 ̂bead ̂ad their review with the title The Mixture As Before.’ This of couree was meant to a depreciatory sense, but I did not taka It as such sad so 1 have mads so bold AS tit use It tor ths collection arhirh I Sin now Inviting ths public to read. A fter perusing tha art of fiction for over forty years 1 have a notion that' I know a good deu more'about'lt than moat people. In that Iqpg per1on- derment that he had even been so fooUsh as to believe all he was t(dd. Ho found himsslf bucking tha union at every turn. This demand, that demand—there are al- waya two aklss to every question, a **«i«g sveryono should remember.

    le^o

    Anat Martha Takee Over CHAPTER VI

    The hour and a half on the train, after hurried packing and a quick dash downtown in the cab, was like a nightmare t6 Martha Marshall. The rumbling wheels seemed to be saytog, over and over, the words Eugene had used in his wire. "Helen critically 111. Helen critically 111. Helen critically Ul.”

    The sick shock, the sudden all- conaiuning fear for her sister, drove everything else out of Martha’s mind. Helen had never been strong, but she stood up to life and battled so valiantly! There was Eugene, and his little garage that seldom made money. There were the three small children, the oldest only 7. Helen did her own housework, her own washing, her own Ironing. And now, she was in the hospital.

    All those letters Helen had written later—those letters asking her to come and stay with them while Bill was in the Army—had they been Helen’s Indirect, hesitant way of telling her that she needed help? Help for which Eugene was unable to pay?

    A mounting panic shook her as the train neared Bi

    I have, admittedly, no technical knowledges of the wbys and wherefores of Labor v#. Capital, of Unions m the Uaions. I am msrely prassatlbg ths view of one pereon; and there must be many othcrs wbo feel the same way. And I am hoping to provoke an Open Forum argument—ky. workers, bouaewives and all oth-'' era, who have tboughU and qpto- lotis of their own.

    tibarty—yee; la that we are stUl a “free” country. But liberty —no: la couatleas small waya, of which the above-mentioned in the field of labor Is one. In this matter, as to all others affsctlng our prmsnt and future Uvee, It Is up to us—to you and ms and all our neighbors—John Q. Public, la fact —It Is up to us to waks up and argus thsss points which arlss agate aad a g ^

    U Is our country, our homqs, our very selves, that are bsteg threateaed. bseausc we just go qa from day to day, lultod by our ssMs of falsa ascurity — that svarythteg will corns out alright, sa why bother?** If we don’t cowm to pretty soon, soom day there wlU be nothing left for us to bother sbout*

    Forget the war. the debt. etc., for A white. And think tor a few mteatas' about soma oC thsss things that hit right doss bo qw own hosBos aad Itvea. Thaaqthtecs we can do somsthteg about; U wa

    wU; If ooly eoteHh rt ua^wfll

    Unfit tor MlllUry Service

    Those of our young men who have been called In the draftxand wbo paaa the medical officer 'MU soon enter upon a year of rigoroim training which will Increase their resistance against disease and in- fecUona of all kind, and many are eager to go Into camp for tha physical good they know this period of training will give them. On the other hand, those who are rejected may for the first time to their Uvea realixe that their plwsi cal health is such that Uncle Sam I la obliged te refuse their servlcea.I The result is two-fold, for the Individual loses the opportunity to build his weaksned body, and our country loses the services of one who perhaps is eager to do his psrt to making our young men and our coun^ strong against attacks of disease, and perhaps of some enemy.

    After rejection. It Is very necessary that the individual secure full details of hts physical condition and set about coersettog the defects, which should restore him to normal health and ensure a natural span of life free from sickness. Apart from certain conditions which caused rejection, such as congenital, deformities, blindness, and so on, theto Is no reason why the reject should not diligently apply himself to tho goal of attaining p e i^ t health, and 1 am going to give^aome general rules today, which, Ilf piit into practice-wUl aid toward that end considerably. Of course In some cases special treatment may be neesasary for a certain condition in addiUon to my Mggestions to this column.

    The two most Important factors to the body machine ’are diet and drainage. In other words what you put Into your body as fuel sn

  • r ' " ' • ■' ■ ■ ■■ -1IAN1.H1M T15K « V B » U « 0 H B H A L D . M A N C B B S t » C O N K . T H T O g D A Y , lA y U A K Y » ■ 1M 1

    Plant’t Cod One Skibmteinc a Motith

    ■' ‘ ■ ' ■ i ' ' - : : ■ -" ^ ': f ' , . ' ' '■ ■ ■■

    ' w

    A v i l i t i o i il ^ i i t e d S lo t e * M tddng O n e S e t o f P l ^

    I m p o r t a n t I n r o a d * i n G e r m a n C o m p e t i t i o n I n S o u t h A m e r i c a .

    S e r r e * W h ole T ow nty,

    TMrtt

    ' r o m M a n c h e s t e r ’ s N e i g h b < j » r 8

    • m*> N«tet Tk* r a l M matter af uYatom S i M t g r tfce nji- . mtr fcrtp.af ***•

    RimtUa •«* ♦"tmmmm. «OOip«*tJt«r«, D-n-O* nM oiB. svtattMi •*a*»cta*e* P r « ^Om fottowim* •lory, Uie • » - «■* of • •*tk M tin y *pp«»r« In Tinfn w M tomorrnw.)• » •

    Bt Drttm rrnnrt*Jtamdkittrt Prvna Avtatlon ESItor.

    MIUBti n * - J n n .'33—w ith th* i m a k approvnl nnd encoumje-1 BMnt of the Poet Office and Stale j Qi^partmenta and of the Army ^ Mavy. United SUtea avlaUonln^naata_airline and aircraft■eenufacturera—are heard a t their M d e work In LaUn America m M effort to re ta in ground loet to m iropean eompetitcra.

    ''̂ 3' f ^ n t r s c t B a r S tb e n a f t o i / ^ u g h a aupplemental • aa a

    •m edt about 300 Germans,. bed dboe tbe herd pioneering rk, were assured continuance of

    employment.In 1*38. fhe Colombian Legisla

    tu re adopted a law under whirh an domestic airlines were to bg erid todav th a t neither k j^ r t ty to consolidate agenriea y tkm aliaed by. m i. T ^ G e m u ^ r^ tr lk ^ dor lockouts would e tto de- Congremtonal leadera were said to

    *f ^ l / e S t o ^ u r t l o n • ! the raphBy « - Umye .advised

    Enfield. Gli Manchester,'"^■V ^srkuS*M ^i^*t and «■»• 1

    are the greeteet th reat to American bualneea In Latin Amartca.

    He under-etated tha eaae. France’a Cordon

    GermeniTa eeetem Hank amated the countries cbm-

    convinced that

    Marl-Wlnd-

    lartford,

    Washington. Jan. 38. — Of) — .. .President Roosevelt. authoriUtlve of I aources eald today, has decided to

    ______ _ ;y askhig - ^ongrese to renewee Uvey are cohvlried tha t 1 hU expired govem i^n tai reorgan-

    the United SUtos can beSt It up J**!*®" Bri^?n*’uwith trade for the hemlaphere e lend-lease bill to aid Britain Is•conomle good and with anna for a c t ^ the hemisphere's military security.

    Electric Bdat Speeding Work 41 Submarines

    gram.The three Graces and the Secre

    tary WUl be Installed a t the Friday meeting of the Grange.

    M aster Joseph Mack wUl give a report of the siaslons of the Oon- necUcut State Grange, which he attended last week.

    March of Diroea George Shedd. of Bolton Notch,

    who headi the March of Dimes In Bolton reports th a t so far. nearly a ton of papers and magaalne^ have been collected. These wUl be sold and the proceeds added to the March of Dimes. Pupils In the various schools are also taking an interested part In pwaUlng the amount th a t Bolton will turn In on Feb. 1. Containers for dimes are located In the schools, filling star tlona and restaurants In town. If you have papers or magazines, caU George Shedd and he wUl call fpr them.

    Belton Brlefa ^Ed Brockman U confined to hi*

    home on South Road following a relapse of a cold he suffered some time ago. Hla condition Is serious.

    Charlotte Mack la confined to her home a t Bolton Center with a cold- OUve Sitonson of Brandy s tre e t Is ipuch Improved after suffering from a cold th a t kept her in bed last week.

    I t Kneeland Jones, Jr., has returned from W aahln^on. D. C.. where he drove Mr. and Mrs. Keith of Manchester. ^

    Tbe group a t the Listening Poet In Bolton on Wednesday evening included: Maxwell Hutchinson,. Joseph Mack, Oyde M enball. Keeney Hutchinson. George Shedd and Chesterfield Plrie. Nd planes ■were reported. ' •

    “Samuel R. Woodward la confined Hfll

    Springs, which occurred Monday a t hU home In. Springfield. Born In StaffordvUle November 26.

    (H artnett) Sullivan he Hved his early life In Stafford, leaidng here later, he had slnCe made hla home In Springfield where he waa engaged In masonry contracting. He leaves three daughters arid one son In Springfield and a brother John E. Sullivan o^ West Stafford.

    A t the annual meeting of the Grace Episcopal parish the following were elected: senior w arden, Anders Jacobsen; Junior w arden, Alvin Smith, treasurer, Rlchr ard Fisk* clerk. Miss Esther E m erson; members of Charles Jacobson, W i l l i a m Schmidt, Roland Slmpeort, M r^ Myra Mix, Louis M elb^rne, sA le la and M «. Florence Williams. Anders Jacobsen and Alvin Smith were elected delegatee to attend the Dloceaan convention a t KarUord In May.

    AndoverMre. Maxwell HutchtnsM

    157-4. WlUlmantle

    Diecides to DelayReorsanizinff a vast industrial plant of Steel

    P 6 7 brick U rapidly taking form

    j

    Groton, welderia t night as Electric Boat Company strives to .turn out 41 tub- m a ^ e s In record time for tbe j^U ted States N avy.»

    Tg„ 33.—(P)—Tbe ̂ radius around Groton and New '- 9:18—Food N«wik 9:80—A1 Psrry*s HawSlUas. • ;40_ F o o d s In seahon.-

    1 9:48—The Citadel. \110:00—This Small TowA

    10:16—Knights of the Road. 10:80—Ellen Randolph.10:48—Tha Guiding Light- 11:00—Tbe Maa I IteM ed. 1 1 :18—Against the Storm. 11:80—The Road pf Life.11:48—David H ^ m .12:00 nooB—Yoilr T rea t P. M. / .

    13:16—OsBO^and Glenn.12:80—The W eather Man.12:38—Dky Dreams, 13:4^ ^ y t o m of the Day.

    lews Weather.U tU e Show.

    . )rie MlUa ’our Neighbor, tedley 'nm e.

    iceit Matinee.Marlin:

    'kina.)pper Young’s Fan

    'tc and Bade.

    Worried Boy Drowns Seif

    W a p N e r v e s G e t B e s t o f 1 6 - Y e a r - O l d B r i U s h M e s s b o y o n F r e i g h t e r .

    New York, Jan. .23.—UP) — War n e n ^ got the best of a 18-year- old Brttlqh meaaboy on the Barber Line freighter Troja today.

    For days Capt. WUItam>Qutto- romsen said. Wilfred Wllkerson had refused to. eat. At night he couldn't eleep dnd paced the deck of the veaael a t a Brooklyn dock.

    Hla one thought waa of hla parents and relatives back In Sower- by Bridge, Hull, England.

    "Have they been klUad? Have

    Threatening Rock Falls 'After Thousand Years

    Farmington, N. M , Jan. 38.—♦vatloii In the secUon. eaW le Interested In the Membera of ^ I T

    Mile o’ Dimes may leave their con- minded^ to send t h ^ m o n ^ y tributions a t the Community store Pp^to before toe m r o t in g ^ or a t the Poet Office. Banka have Fourth (Ustrirt which U kra p u ^ been placed In these two locations I on Sunday, February 2, a t Som-^ ^ I to ^ ja m T s m lto haa aecured a A t toe concluslOTp o tio n In Hartford a t an inaur- neas program last w aning ro»

    uSnna HutchlMon.

    O n h U k h m a H o l l y G n m r

    I I t «•

    project taken.over for Bolton ^y otoiS to n Orange dlrectqnhlp, R M e r^ itto lr B.

    Buici S U F K R ’S td o H t SllSSm *

    toe leadership of Keeney Hutchinson. past master.

    Mias Patricia Soutowick will leave toe University of Connecticut on B a t u ^ y to qiend a two weeks'

    SmaU and other WUUmantic offl- cera vrtU to to charge of the r l ^ - isUc work during the m eetog. There will b e n a u p p e r -a e n ^ K -

    toe busineas

    ■/

    Son Wins Point - In Estate Fight

    vated toe upper rooms of the Community haU. These men plan to tvork again next Sunday a t 9 a, m. and wUl to glad to have toe help of all men to town. , „ ^ _

    The Wllltog Woelwra 4-H Club will hold toelr next meeting F riday afternoon a t 8:80 a t toe borne of toelr leader. Mrs. Walden V. Colltoa. ^ .

    E ast Central Pomona Orange No. 8, wUl meet Wednesday evening, February 5, t o , Ellington Town hall. The sta te m aster and hU etaff witt tostaU the officers.

    Fairfield, Jan. 28.——J rom me If 1 had bean In dm Qraimes. TR t t a * Ptotteeltha c a r enbsgt way gSJBB* ad ak jo ew tm o f Now .

    too Oregon ‘ a n m e lu i hod ■*"* n sa n r ■ m a . m i^ - f m m i« a a .

    But every now and theiL along eoines s le tte r tfiat ao per£ecdy>Dorlray8 the wey Buidc ow ners foci about d ie tr osra that we haven’t the h ea rt to k eep it from you.

    H e re , for exam ple, w e quote from M r. A m brose Brow nell, English holly grower o l M flwaukie, O re .

    ' • * , . . W hen I d rove that *41 SUPBR o«t o f F l in t . . . and started a cirele trip h o m e . . . I jo tted dow n e a d i gas purehesc end mileage to so rt o^ figure m y expenses . . .

    * * I tw s 8 n 't lo n g b c f ix e l io t8 u t- pioioas o f Bomethoig w ropg . . . ^T h e ga t gauge need le just didn’t ^ go dow n fost enoogb . . .

    was foe sam e story. T h e Buiok worm ed foroogh miles b f d ty tnfflo ; . . m ade num berless stops to inquire dircetions, purred along in heat foat m ade m y feetfee l lik e tw o f r ie d egga, b re e z e d o v e r foe Rocldes s t 9,000 e levation . . . and finally iiiirly stole home th roufo ths sinuona Columbia Gorge. |

    .'V**StattstieaP O f course: 3,200 miles; 165 gallon*. . . Ethyl gm ; 19.51 miles pe r gallon; ^ expense—l*/me# p e r m ile; total put-of* pocket expense—l “ /»ee^ p e r mile.

    * - R o y . I *»«*

  • •MANCHESTER EVENING k B R A U J. M ANCH ESTEk, W N N . TH U RSD AY, JA N P A B T 2 ». 1»41

    ^ N e w D e b a t in g j New Sewing Teacher

    D o n e i n C C I L i

    TliIJRSD AY, j A iW A R Y 28

    Father Time Re

    St. Johns Trip Mgriartys in RecT ra d e E a d ly B eaU E to t H a rtfor d

    Award Winners for Gradnaj^gi C3aj»

    ^ e s

    Sdence, Frtmch, Gym!€1 a s s e t Presented;|Gass NoUblea Seen.Th* dam HUtory prmanted at

    tha d a ii NJfht a*arc»am « the 41A claae returned to the paat la order to recount the evente which had befallen the claae In im four year eojoum at ** ” f - tain opened to reveal the Clam Hlatory Oommlttee bemoaning the fact that they. Y ?/*,

    I Jane Irwin. Mike Olnolfl. and J «^f . ^ v Mroaek with Bather Benaon a» the

    teacher, had been elected to bring back the paat in any way poealble.

    While In the middle o< deep con- centraUon the comnlltte waa aUrt- led to am Father Time come walk- Ing wearily down the main aiaie.ReaUaing that there

    t W f nodal for hla eaV-, Father.- Time to toe . a ^ e mathemaUca and aclence.

    ^.iere they begin to bribe 1 ^ wiin i ^ American L«jponattention and comfort In Award for line cltlaenaWp

    raid the high achool "children iher Time granted them the

    of going back to toe paat brlngW back paat evenU for them.^'Whlle cogitating. llatanod t ^ quartet compoaed of Doris StoneSJuUa Oleaaon. Art DuPont and J«m Mromk who W the audience lir^nglng Schoolbaya. ^

    The Brat acene to*t/nm e pre- aentad for toe clam wa^q gllmpm

    Past

    ,S . T e a m Is S e c o n d J n p r e p iK ^ S e r ie s

    itc s S a m r d s y .\ •

    t̂eat In wMch thecoii>aU t-n«g his beard In bln band.■ ----- ■ '41A.

    With two C. Ĉ I. L. games play ed over the paft week-end the re- suits have changed and our own Clarkmen hara now taken over th* undisputed/poeseaalon of the second place/spot with West Hartford, Middletown and Meriden Btandlna; In that order. Present standings are:

    / Won Lost Pet.author of ''Ebcpresalve Hands aa an'i^ld to Speech.”

    Phyllta and \^oward Custer,..... Daniel

    Nations)

    rego- game

    and this seems tlta main reason for the hard foughr win. Last year’s game against the Tlnrs Waa won by one point as'.Al Vlncek eank the winning adqra to give Manchester the game, by. toe ■core of 25-24. Manchester wqa outscored In hoops but a alight edge in fouls converted toe game into Mancheateria fourth win.

    Weat Hartford Friday Hall high provides toe compe

    tition for the Clarkemen tola Friday In the second meetiim o f ' toe two schoota tola season. 'The Hall

    neyed to New Haven and wera thoroughly beaten by toe Hill- house team with a ecore of 44-19.

    The M. H. S. one-twenty yard relay team was beaten by HlU- house who turned in toe time of 1:17.4. A1 Turklngton, Roy Turk- ington and Bob Turklngton were the svrimmera for Mancheeter. In the two-twenty free style Gordon Wilson placed eecond and Mul-

    firing; Oert Gardner — Hlatory book aa a aouvenler from MJ1J3.; Mike Oenolfi—Campbell's soup, to remind him of toe times when he and Mra. Campbell would not consent to a tie; Julia Gleason— honey, to remind her of Jim; Har̂ riet Glenney—passes to admit her to all of her ctaasea; Etaole Graham—gasoline, ao she can foUow toe basketball team; Ed Gry*t^-r

    Two of Manchester’s foremat runners; namely Joe McCluakey and Fran Leary, appeared in the Metropolitan track meet laat Saturday night and both came out with formidable, places.. . . Veteran Joe McCluikey ran In toe three-mUe event and stacked another win and a new record under hla . . . J a ’a time waa 14minutes, 34 seconds for the distance which cut off 23 seconds from toe record aet in 1938 by Bob Conkllng. Joq's performance waa so outstanding that he lapped toe entire opposition and won ĥe raa Just about as he pleased. . . Man-chester’a beat track star waa voted tha MUroae A.4A. award for .hla record breaking race at the Coll- _jum. . . ■ Mancheater’e other notable, Fran Leary, finished fourth in the 1000 and waa defeated by the rtl time stalwart Gene Venske In a record breaking performance.

    team looked very good in the fltat, f-hviiis ano • Tiowara uustcr. ■------ — ̂ i ■ w.,.—gams against toe danchui team- ^Ullam Daniels, h**®Pilnce then, toe Weat Harifford National clean; Allteam has played an In and rto1!l.TlSf15av!LSr̂ ‘̂̂ ^̂ ̂1 He” 1 Knowledge.

    ^ ^ u *!wlr*̂ tha**rivcr R««toer, married; Joe \pimInlco,^ t e » c k star; Ethel Donahita. radio

    lecturer on "How to W lnVjIua- w f’ll know better after toe game. L »«n a 'A1 Nordmark, one of toe OCIL’al nh«tf Rutu

    doon, toe other Manchester swim- bobby pins, to keep hla waves out mer, finished laat. The event waa j j , Dot Gutoris—pad, towon by Flanigan of HUlhouae In I j,̂ jp m h a secretarial work; toe time of 2:3Q.l. Ernie EaUeb necord, to help him

    In the forty-yard free atyta I appreciate hla music; BUI Jdhha- Simpaon of Manchester ptacMP^^g—maroon sauf, ao at gradua- second, with H. Tenney, of M. H. won't catch cold; DickS. In last pal tion. This event Kimball—fashion book,v to help won by Shehnan of HUlhouae to designing women’s clotbea;20.2. Novak of HUlhouae turned I Liman Kittle — wMte paint, to

    . iidewaUa of h a tiresAlice Kosinaki—Book ot

    ------ ------ , w Jg*. because ahe la a booknamely Bob Turklngton and worm; Ruth Kottke—pencU andSlmpaon, took second and third ^ ^ whUe working In Marlows places respactfuUy. . £ e can add her figures; Etalna

    -----to keep herIn the Krob ^ date book.top icorera com a here and should toe^Wlndto be the main offenrtve ^

    latrcite, namely A1 TurWngton andlJJJ^ straight; Doris*" [victor Btekq timied t a g s ^ ^ ^ ^ sntie

    The hundred yard stroke gave ptaca to two

    swimmers, Roy Turk-1 .and Coe for third and|

    __ rtpato your wtahabt you new dtaha; Doro-

    pta^^r 7or"the‘ ^ l S “ toa^:.‘ "ltor-1nMMia thu win to havs'a W*" YouraeU a Wife” ; BanJ GalU,mathematical/;hance of entering * -the tourney and much of Impor-. a : MUie Ginolfl, aaUor, Julia G l^ 1 fourth

    w lu'haM in toe balance son. crooner In murical comedy, through-out the League tuaota. iHaniet Glenney, office r^ a g er .,^I^urtiUght’B game agalnat the I Hlaile Graham, secretary at ^ __ ___New LondmivBuUceley team has ^ v e lera Insurance Oo.; | who *xpect«I *^j>cak toe ^ t a | nar^rv rtivmea’ to entertain folka;no effect upon the tourney hopa Grlnnon, owner of all toe gas ata- p«cord f a this cr^ t, but missed I rrlaa aimr bit book, she

    toe Red and White cagers as Uona in Cbnnecticut; E Wtq

    of too Red and White cagers _ ̂ _ .wButaeloy ta a ctaa B achort. Man- Gryxb. discover of a synthetic chMter nee^ to produce wins ov-lfood; Dorothy Guthrie, aecretary er HaU High, WUUmantic, and | at Travolera Ihauranoa 0>,BriatoL to achieve tourney rating I Jqn* Irwin, head of a achool for before it la endedi on February l£ glrla; Elrneat lalleb, taking ova It is very doubtful if Manchater Walt DUney'a work; BUI Johnston, can b a t undefated BriatoL The office boy; Dick KlmhalL writing Bell City team has won 12 ta a {the script f a laUeb's characters...

    UUtan Kittle, director at 4 school of music; Alice Kortndti. school teacher; Ruth. Kottke, offiM manaiger: Vera Krajewalti, work-

    „ , . n ling In BUI Rice’s circus; ElaineOil Display ip Kec Krob. attendant at Notre DaiMa J I gam a; Doris Machle, orgajnlaa of

    "lUduclng Guaranteed Incorporat- Model rooms have again been | c^ence M ^Uum._ Captain In Na- | The load of e ^ Ink. j

    The page labsrti

    covered front sod

    Doris Stratton—muffler to a car to UM on her car when It rtarta acting, up; Anna Thurner;—key,

    " BucesM to pave h a Walrtl—dancing book,

    the Ocmga aa rtia to famous f a the Double Ltady.

    tag Gum factory; ‘John MroMk.Managing editor of New York lim a : Violet Muldoon, owner of fiowa ahop; Mae Pratt, social

    ---- . . I *'®toer; Ehrelyn Priesa, eocisland cloth wera used f a woika* Harry Rhelnhom, Marine,and curtains. Some of the rooms gyj Rjee. owna of s thra ring had real waU m m , and circus; Gemma ROta, taking ovatwo amaU crochetad ruga. Anotba \,r^aeb ta Florida;-Enricoua* the front The g i^ atoo aew- od hankton Into the p ^ eta .

    Lucy Sarta made n elm 12 boy’s ablrt of wine woUen itaaUirlaL Ttato Involved a double yoke, a taDorod placket at neck a ^ cuffs. - . Tha Searing I dam baa atoo Just fintohad 24 pain of pnnttoB f a fitUe glrto. Thane am J W t lt o ^ - iah W ar RrttqT T ^ p d a Ouh arttb Ch

    I play 'ne prjummary as uau»»I toelr c o o t^ to ocheduled to start at 8:00 p. m. ̂ _TbonpaonvlUa, although baring la t six gam a against only tlWM wins, to not a team to be w m li^ tly . They are very capable apulling an upMt and Coach John Stalkowtkl haa warned ------- —hto play-era against being too confident of mrtdng it a rumaway game. The Saints will mtos toelr veterans of former years, Jadus aim Miller, but atm will premnt a faat-

    vetaran quintet In Po-h ^ ’?«r*taA“ Kuirolka’*'and’ toe { night and to have them .»>•«Krazys brothers. In remrve there | on tha PA’s open date, Feb. 2.

    ng duel between Captain aveck of Uancheater

    de andyJohn "Toekl’’ Foran of East H artf^ H lgh featured the second clash i^'tocM rivals at th*W at Side Rec Vaterday sftar- nooo aa the local Macbaala aaally turned back tha tovadera for thalr ninth aueaaslve victory without defeat In mhoolboy competition.The aoora waa 46-38 but Trade’s m vfin was far greater than th#

    ..flpiraa tadteat*.'The unstoppable loa l -scoring

    tal of 28 potato to boost hla, aa - aod'a total to ITS potato, only 15 l^n h« dDiDplltd duiifif entire campaign laat year In lead tag tbe trade potat-gottari. He’s stUI got aaven gam a left to edlpM hto fom er mark and should do mwithout difficulty. M at of Kat- 1 — # V I—*#.—ukavack’s aocnrlng caaM ta the first {G ftin s F l lt l l V ic to r y half is e a ch Harry Kltchlng'a rr. G |.v|. h v tt 4 4 ^ 1 power-packad array piled up a 28-9 advantage and then coasted | the rest of toe way.

    Foran proved mighty cheek hlnuelf as he aaok seven baaketa and cenvarted six out of eight frm trim f a 20 potata but ManrtMtter was neva ta danga. lading 8-4 at the quarter, 28-9 at tbe half and 41-17 at the thrm quarta mark. East Hartford made Ita best abowtag when Trade's Unaup was made up almost entirely of remrva In the last period.

    Trade to slated for a stiff teat at the Rec tomorrow, afternoon In op- paing the WUUmantic State Tmchera quintet. 'The Kltchtag- men whipped the Tjeachera by26-28 ta their firat mertlng but e x -,^ ___ _ . 3 • . . - , . k»

    The local rearva provided

    ■wui be Region, Zawada. Dublel, land Plep^ a brother to Milt 'Picpul, Notre Dame’s tort y a r ’a fatbaU aptaln. Young Piepul to in hto tlrrt year of ptoytng with toe Batata and hto atoe accounts to^ hto aagernea to play rough and tumble games.

    The local PA’a atrengthened toelr grip conalderaUy on the State ^ itoh League toad with their tort Sundays victory over Bristol ahd m wm be primed to take Um rest of tha teams on fheir schedule and retire the coveted trophy. Once‘the locale get started they hard to b a t

    A present Manager Ed Kovto to dickering for a game with tha Savitt Gem tarn,

  • H!,r \

    '*r'

    BTV’B w in r j B E R A i/n iiA||» 0 »** lead atwel- Mancbeater. Phone t lo L Open ending*. ..

    Aulooiobtle* FVir Sale 4

    1»40 NASH SBDAN, 1#3» aadaa, IM * Ka«b eedan, 1M7 Psekmid eedan. AU with and heatere. Meeaier Naa^ 10 HenJemon Road. Tel. 72.W.

    Garaces • S«cr|ce • S lo n u f 10

    FOR lUCNT— OARAOK at 64 Demlng etreet. For Information, tail « 1M ."

    lluNincne Semlcao Offeired .18

    BRIGHTEN HP YOUR HOME, painting, papering and ceiling re- nnlahlng at rcHaonabte prlcea. call «2M.

    ASHES, PAPERS removed weekly. Chambera Trucking. Phone « 2S0.

    Aaiowiwhila^. I*’” * Sale 4tjggm OUDSUOUtLR COUPE, IKW

    VMtIac eedan. 19S« Chevrolet Teem eedan, 1#3T Oodge

    OKk.mobtle eedan. Cole

    M «n 4 > li«id «r

    E w im in fi H e ra M ̂CW wUril AdaiertlneaiMito

    ekiwaa aia wurea Lw a line.leraSa. nembare and abbreatatlena

    '.■Bah eawm aa a ward and aomneaad nCidH aa »w« worda ainimBW anai > aaHia al tbraa Maaa _ ̂G mT eafaa ear da» f t tranaaaa*

    ICaak Caarka atlva Ua>a...| t eui > amtott^ eatflll ed

    , .........a«an» e*dTiiiiare for irraaalar Inaartlon#

    I abarwad at tha aaa tl.ma rata *«» rataa for' Inaa tarea avary

    ' adoartwtwg alvoa apoa iTaeuaot. la ordarod barori Hh* tend or day win ba ebaread enly.^^r

    "aeieal aumbar of timoa tba ad . obaralna al tba rata oaVni

    allowanda ar Mfanda aan oa aU tdina ada atoepod

    Moving— I TBrttlnf—Stoniice to

    AUSTIN CHAMBERS—local and Long Dtatance Movere Tal. 62*0. 68 Holllater etreet.

    I'Nlnllng— tfa ^ rin g 21

    iPOR A dETTEH 40H at reaaw- aMe winter price call 3*07.

    Rephlruig 28

    WANTED TO TUNE, wpalr and regulate your piano or player

    lo. Tel. Maacheater 6082.ylano

    llelp Wanted— KesiBle 88

    W ANTED-aiitL TO WAIT on Ubia. Call at 01 Chestnut etreet

    WANTED—CURLS TO work In laundry. Apply Curb Service Laundry, 54 Main etreet.

    HooMhoM U M ds » f Italy Admits British Now Hold Tobruk

    (OonUnned From Page One)

    bitter fighting" preceded the ocp cupation of the town by the Brit-lem „

    ••Only in the late afternoon, the ctJinmunlque eald. "did Au^ trnUan troops break through to the inhabited parte of the town where everything wae aflame.”

    Air Force Active In Battle The Italian Air Force waa re-

    Mwlcmlatlc Waterfall large alee 1 ported to have been acUve during

    888 W IU j b u y t h is OUTFtT IlM le Dresser, Bed, ’ Chest,

    Spriiig, Mattrieee, 2 PUlowa, 8 Pc. Boudoir Set: Stydio Couch, Platform Rocker, Occaalonal Chair, End Table. Table Lamp. Bridge Lamp, Coffee ITiWe, 2 Ruga, 1 Picture. GIVEN F R B B ^ Peu | Colonial Breakfast ekt> ■ _8132 WILL BUY THIS COTiTT

    Modem Walnut Dfeaaer, Bed, Cheet, Spring. Matfreae, 2 Pillowy

    Boudoir Lamps. Bed Light, * Pletiirca. 3 Pc. Ovemtuffed Living FUhm Suite. End Table. Coffee Table,.Bridge and TaWa Lamp, Smoker, 2 Picture*. GIVEN FREE — 8 Pc. Porcelain Enamel Break- faet Bet.8176 WILL BUY THIS OUTFIT

    reeaer. Bed and Cheat, BprlniL lattresa, 2 Plliowe, Bed Lamp, 2

    Boudoir Lamps. 2 Scatter Rugs, large Sofa, Oiib Chair, Lounge Chair. End Table, Coffee Table. Occaalonal Table, Table, Bridge and.Floor Ump*. »*13 Rug. Smoker. Mirror. Haegock.- Maga^ne

    tba battle, bombing British troop33tJ' --------concentrations. BrltlBh warplanes

    were acknowledged to have raided several unidentified objective In Libya, "causing some damage."

    On the Eaat African battjc front, the Italians said British at*

    _ tacks In the Cheru region hadRack. orVEN FREE—8 Pc. Tublar I repulaad with "considerableSteel Breakfast Set.

    Phone or write for a Free “Courtesy Auto.”’! No obligation.

    ALBERTS FURNITURE CO.‘HSftfuwf

    losses" to the attackers.Operations In the Oallabat cone

    on the Sudan-Erltrea border were said to have been limited to artil-

    ductive structure but tf prices officially were held down, there would not be “anyone starting new enter, prtaea or undertaking new produe- Uve aeUvlty." _

    Represent State SeenrltlesLa Btampa, In Its discussion of

    the poeslblllty of Issuing addition* al banknotea said they would “real- ly represent state securttlee which bear no interest. By fixing prices, the eUte In effect geU a loan from the holdefe of surplus money.

    Bonds of the government, the paper said, would be the '‘logical outlet” for the nddltlonal money and would bear an/lnterest rate lower than at p re^ t.

    The article sunimarlxed six effects of a "Fasi^t” inflation:

    1. Abundance of capital.2. Swelling bank deposits3. Great scarcity of goods for

    the public.4. Lack of impetus for addition

    al (non-essential) production.5. "Resenve and prudence in

    the reaction of the stock marksL6. A lowering of Interest rates.

    Sritish Aniiouncc Tobnik Captured

    I British Planes AgainFOR 8A LE -W E HAVE ONE slightly used « cubic foottlvnw%flce**69!S^^^ Montgomery I R a iA C o tm tia Ward, .4 1 Rome, Jan. 23. UP) —British

    AKANck w y n.™ j S 'S S “ S_ few 6 sheer washes Jieft, at i ^ not IdmUfled. the Italian high 129.98. Montgomery Ward. | reported today, “with-

    tfyxfh ft Al T!. BTtyPK^ I out cnualnjf damage.moatstreet.

    base in the_____ ______ , ifyegean sea, it said, but were drlv-

    OIL b u r n e r ro o m heaters, en off by anU-alrcraft fire wtth Save up to 827.00, and good used ) the loss of one plane.refrigerators, ranjev and Hoover vacuum cleaners. J. W. Hale.

    : the arth * v .“till fursiJp! aieeiar Haas smMsraie wtll ael be reapMielble

    Mete than one laeorreet ineer- 0t aajr earertleeiaent erSeree

    ■•ee tban ene time.Inaeverteai einteelea ef ta*.

    sebUaetlea et aavcrttsMg teetlAea ealr by caaeellbtieb efeafse meSe fer the eervtee

    saverUaemenu muM ceatprm ■ u copy aaetea* eafeweS by the baWtbh-

    reeervb the risht M may oopy eea-•eetee ar releet i

    ■hieetieasbla —O HOtmS—Oseetaes aae

    WANTKD7-TWO GIRLS as walt- ree'ses, also woman to wOrk In kitchen. Call 3982.

    WOMAN FOR COOKING, and housework. 4 to 7:80. Call 4085, 98 W.at Middle Tumplkt. Apt- 7.

    WANTBDr-QlRLS AND Young women to sew coven on base balls at our factory. Apply to Tober Baseball Manufacturing Oo.

    WANTED —GIRL FOR UOHT housework, stay nights. Inquire 420 Oaklend street, after * p. m.

    ee ha psMIeheS eeme «ay aiuat be eeeeWeS by U e'eleeb naba Satet.Save ) « te.

    T l i ip l iD t T m t Wnat A4stea o«er lae tete-

    __ ____ ___ rOLL FATMCKT «tsia at the bnelMse eftlee en er be- fMs IlM ^veatb 4ey tollowlag tbe •n t laamlon el «»eb ed oiher»»«e Ue CRAfTOB RATK Will be eelleet-

    reipeaelMUtp ter errere la l ads will ha aaeaaiad aad i*eey eaanei be saeraa*

    ia i t s C h M i l f UoRS

    a a a * • s • s a • s 1̂ s • a a e a s a t S s s * * * *

    s**saaayE*s*aa»9»s as 6 *•••••• • ••••aaaaa6aaaas»«aas

    BjifS •C TIIABIIS aaa*h«*s*h*9*«ol .etasaaaaoeaaaaaaIlM BBd raunl

    *eabeaa«aaa*a*«mebnaa

    Mae fer Sale.........las far Bschange .. ..

    Aeeeaeerlea—TIrea Repel rta«—PaleUai

    ____Seaeela .................nataa -Fhla by Track ..Aabaa—Fer Hire ■

    WtrYlnM (ItoyngB mi . IpSaisyelee—Bleyelae ....... tlg: . Whaled Antne—MMereyelea ... It

    • aad rrareaalaaal ewHric _ SerVieea Offered ..... 1>bM fferrim Offered ....U-A

    ctrectlaff IteeeaaaaaffffS

    . . Dtractê e 14faff—PlainMns—Rnerinff a..- ITtary-^Orcwaiahliiff ....... ]*

    .iTracklnff—ateraffe ., tS PnMte Faeaenffcr Serrlae .....tS-A fhhjTlbf reMClns ......... g

    •ft 14 tl 14

    .. . . . . .

    HalR W shlell— M sif 88

    Murhinfiry and Tool*

    (Cathhla has been atUcked numter of times by the British who have-reported It to be a. base for German •live bomben operat'

    I ing In the MMlterranean.)_ _ _ _ _ _ Thn.'Sfctttiin atUcke occurredWE HAVE IN STOCK new Case i „ t night;VC tracton, leveral used Farmall --------J S i S T y . ' K S i . r ' K . r S S S e W r e l A w r . InflicUd ̂mantle. , . AOn Greek Forces

    , Rome, Jan. 23— (/Ft —Severe loeeee were inflicted -on Greek forces during focal acUons in Albania, the Italian high command reported todhy, while ItaUan

    WearioR Apparffl— Far*RESIDENT OF FLORIDA wtUsell her teal fur coat, else 38, at ------a aacriflee,. good condition. Cajl I planes bomped Greek troops from6327.

    W ANTED-A 0R0I hsi manager of Jardlne, Mathaaon tc Oo. usd member of a family

    vUle it waa Impossible to. ascer- I prominent In British trad* tn tb* tain how tbay bad originated. I Orient for half a century. Hi*

    Loula Smiths well known here, firm is one of the largbst foreign hmd recently purchased the prop- concerns In China, with extensive erty and had Installed a new oil shipping, manufacturing and trkd- bumer in the furnace.' Most of the | uig interests.

    Waterbury—A lumber truck struck and Injured fatally Mary Louise Barll, five-year-old daughter of Patrolman and Mrs. Conrad A. Barit Deputy Coroner Miles F. McNtff, Jr., said the vehicle waa driven by Carl J. Zad- nik, 35, of fiouthln^on.

    Hartford—’The State Development Commission voted eontlnua- Uon of youth awards for boy* and girls doing exceptional work In 4-H Clubs’ vocational agricultural program.

    Hamden—John B. Savage, 79, of New liaven, connected with Tbe B. B. Savage and Company, wa* killed ^ an automobile while crossing Dlxwell avenue.

    Origin of Blaze StiU' a Mystery

    The origin of the blaze that destroyed the former John McKone jOTtyt Tyli^tyllto *DoiMCBmiW yeiftsraairino

    A man stopped at a smalt country hotel. Before he went to bed

    - B* gttV9"P i6~ a g iEWf w roar eat government securities. These could the* be taxed more or less

    the Brltlrti Air On the Long ’Dde; Josephine U w Foice held Unopposed control “ te D ^the air throughout the attavk. yard; N. H. Swanson. Silent Drum*

    Oppofiltlon ImjtmiiHnd* Whtnnie OUuit JoahtUUThe BritlMi fle;^ which stood Msurlneoffshore and poured tons of ex- uaraaret Armstrong, TreUwny plosives Into the t o ^ , llkew ^ ^ H^aumer, Jr.. How to Be an pras to have met no Naval opposl- D,vld Hall, Record

    Book; L. T. Hogben, Author *-

    Hoorm Flit Si«l9 72

    FOR SALE—FOUR family house, in good condition, modem. C?sU 238 Oak street, first floor.

    WRDted— R «r I Batat*

    WANTED — FOUR FAMILY liouae. In fair condition. Writs full particulars and price. Box A, Herald.

    painlessly, since the pubUc would have the Impression that It waa pa^hg the impost# more or I out of surplus cash.

    Not that Inflation—which some Fascist minds consider In itself a form of non-interest bearing loan —would be the only aolutlop pos-

    * * ^ e leadlbg article In the newa- La 8U

    ,oday:

    ItnIt

    Town AdvertisementB i i a ^ o f T r x R e v ie w

    Notice

    Invitation to Bid

    . • ••*••••*Lrra. Woea—Vf h»cl*a Pm Htt •jmI SaasU**

    -Phhaltrr—Par #•!■—WWrrhewew

    AMKI'S ................. 15.ts •••■•**«•,w»tcMe—Jewelry

    _jr*l apsHsora* IU * f. : **-----Ml* P—

  • :'-V« ’ •fOURTBfIl \’ 4Umrl|»«tnr guftring Itoratt

    IHUBSDAT.lAXTUABTtS. 1141

    ■• .>

    mt Townb̂adk « ( fc4M«} com- , wWiriri*** w tww to-

    * o M t , rmlti « d vMPĵ ■ a i w*n M nm». f w I InctueM te UN conatruMOt

    -baattaalty «xMt> in MmehM* - ft r ^ h e faroUwant «*

    «oaUa tor Un cominjf OOC - tNrtnd. 0«N at the flmart

    ■NT MMom la appronditnir. [ vovUm fifid o r e ft

    «»•nniiroon can bit obtalaad at » ««lfa rr ortl