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^ Member of the Audit Rareftu of Clrculfttlonft Mnnrhp%ter— A City df CillafiP Charm VOL. LXL, NO. .12 (Claaaifled Advertlaing On Page 1!) MANCHESTER. CONN.. THI RSDAV. NON EMBER fi. 1941 (FOIRTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS Wheeler Resumes Attack on Arming American Vessels Tells Democratir Sup- JuntD S porters of I,epislation M Naxis Making Three-Prongeil Drive in Crimea To Revise Lax* They Will F are Elerlorale as Willkie Ca ml ill ales Raekeil hy ('.oinniiinists U'aahington. .Nov. 6.—t/P) — S p n a f 0 r WhcHer (1)., Mont.t. a.'^sertPfl to Demo cratic supiiortors of adminis- tration legislation to revise the nelitralit)' act toda>' that when they faced the electo- rate again, tliey would i>e “ Willkie candidiites. suiiport-j *(| bv the. ( 'nmmiiniata " Hoauming I hia attack on a niea.surc permit- ting American rnercliant .ship* to carrv arms anl aaii into the com- bat zone*. Wheeler aalit In the .Sen.ite that Weniltll I. Willkie, the 1S40 Re|iiibllcaii nominee, anl Secretary of the Navy Knox, al-' ao * R«‘pilblican. would .iiipport them in their next campaign if ; they voted for the hill, a* Demo -1 cratic leader* .*aid a majority of them would. ' ' tl'heeler acrii.-eii Willkie. "M'all atreet hanker*" and ('iirnir.um.st.*, of "trying to take thi* countiv in- to u.ar. • Few .senuior* IJitenIng "You are going to he Willkie candidate*." Wheeler shouted to the few senator* listening at the time. "I hope he goes into the states of every one of you Demo- crats after you vote for thi? hill "I hn;>e that the f'omniunist* support you. I want to aee you ex- plain that tn your people ' The Montana senator said that the administration h.od been able to obtain endor.aement of its for- eign policies "from a few farm leader* ' from some banker* from some labor leader* and from many Communist organization* "But they can't take the mrdh- ers of this country along.' he thundered. "They can't reach into the homes with political job* and take the fathers of thi* country " Content to IJaten Calm and confident, the sena- tors who favor ahayp revision of the neutrality act were content tu listen to another's day debate to- day. assuring each other mean- while that they had the votes nec- easary for pas.sage hy tomorrow- night. Kven one of the anti-reviaionists, .Senator Van N'uys iD. Ind l. con- ceded that the chamber would ap- ' prove the pending measure which would authorize the arming of American merchantmen and al.ao permit them to .sail to belligerent ports. Van Niiys said he expected only about 40 of the Senate's 96 votes to he cast against the_ bill. Can Be Held ^oiver Down \ Mouiton .Spcg Rvoiton For Rrlipvinfc In fin- tion Can B p H p I(I In \arrou'pr Ronnth. (’hi«ago. Nov. 6 Harold G, Mniillon, pre-Ridenl of the I Brooklngn Institution. V\'ashington. ! I said today ’there is still .reason ' ' for believing that the present in- flation movement (an t»e held with- ! m iinn’h narrower hounds than ws . ir the rase during World War 1." j In an addre.ss* firepared for de- livery to th^ eighth annual eon- \-ention of the Ameri'^-an Kmaner (.'onfe-renee, Moulton said the rur- rent steady rlsr in' prices had no compensating advantage-^ from the Standpoint of the national ef onnmv a.s^ a whole , Shifts ln<‘<4fne«i of Groups TMinng the war period, he .«<aid. "It re.Kiilts in pr(<found shifts (Continued On Tage Right) Bark to Jobs Effort (xains Favor Today rlilcr* at I>o* .AiiferlcMi .Arccjil PropoMal: Kail- roailh (loiiliiiiie to Fart* .Strike Threat. B> Th* .A.HNOclated Press i ,A back-lo-wf>rk movement gain- ei. momentum tfoday amopg *trik- ir.j, weal coast weldc>-», but the na- tion a shipper* and traveler* con- tinued to lace the threat of a pos- sible countrywide railroad strike. , Welders at Lzis Angeles accept- ed an OPM proposal that they, go back to their jobs pending a con- ference on their grievances, but their fellow craftsmen in the , ‘teattle area remained out. The welders want a charter , from the AKL for a separate : union, t'gder present eonditions, ; they say. they must pay dues to several unlOn.s in order to ply I their trade. The welders elaim , their walkout affected some 20,000 German Land Forces Left for Defensive; Reach Crimea Coast The German drive Info Crimeashas developed, acer,rdlng to Berlin into three, spearheads: The attaik on Seva.stopol. a jiush across the Yalla moiiqtains to the'Black Sea and another thrust to the coast at Feodosiya i hlark arrowsi. Ultimate aim lahadea arrowi is the .apture of isolated K'-n h and crossing of the strait ther* into the KrasncKlar oil fields and the Uaiuasus beyond. Czcrinano, Hiimaniaiib Allaiii r <»n Broad Froiil: Slial- turffl KlJ>*^ian Korrp** III Rflrral: S|irriilalF On Drive Between Sea Of A/.fiv and (iat-pian: .3 Iroopshipt* .Sunk. Ships May Sail Alone To Foil Sub Attacks M. nare .,f Rai.l. Rako. SmUsh Speeiilalioii of I iirn- alioiit in Slralefcy a- \{ \azi SllillS; .\iiMwer lo ^ olf Pack. * Lose 8 Planes Hints Japan Mav Attack Burma Road Organ of Tokyo Ftireign tMTire P'orera^ls Over- land Expedition to (ail r.hina .Supply Route. Tokyo. Nov 6 .C- The ,Ia[ian Times and Advertiser organ of t h>- Fiireign Offue, hinted strongly to- night that .Ii.[)an'a next niilitar. move might he an overland expedi- lion to cut off the Burma road and . fnrre the United .utatea In stem it.' flow of supplies to China Cutting the Burma route, it as- - .sertod might force AmCiua to aliandon what is tantamount to iiirert military ojierations againM-''^nicthods being explored was that I .lapan at the expense of the .\mer- - ' -----------..», i,- .. „..ia k« II an jieople. " The Times and Adverti?>er a.ii<l there ia always the iKia.-ihilitv even the (irohalulity of a diieet man h on the Hurrna roau and even hinted by whrft the route at- taik might be made via French Indo-Uhina .nf*w .inder Japanese domination ■ Fdll<i|1al Strr»»r<* Strength In arc editorial stres.sing the .slieiygth of Japan's "central posi- tiojV' in the Oriental trouble zone. jdJe p.aper said ':this country Is able iq move in a number of directions, which requires its potential enemies , to be prepared at many places dis- tributing and decentralizing then strength.' ' This hint was dropped as the ni'i'lin. .Nfiv. 6.— (A^i— t'lfr- man and Riirhanian trnnii-i have reached the .southern coast of the Crimea on a iiroad front heiween 'I'alta and I'eodosiya and .shattered Ku-sia'n forie.s are in retreat on the whole Crimean front, the (ierman high command toda’,. Axis gams th^^rr* ar.'i on Ru-ssian mainland >lir- r»’fi .ffpoi ulslion m G#‘ rrnan q lar- ters T.f a mighty dnvr* brtw(-f>n A7-OV and 'hr Caspian galc'Aav to th#» ital . ‘‘O ir('f‘s Wa.sli injfton. Not. 6.— ’/I’. —The menace of Ccrmati .siiliniai ine rauia in tiie North Atlantic rai.sed .speculation in .Naval circles today that a complete tuCnahout in strate- gy, suliordinating the use of convoys, might prove the evejirual answer to the U-,boat wolf p.T One of (serniaii \ .Seen Ahluzr: (!onti- neiital ('.lianiicl Tarpi'ls: MiiiPM Pori** Sown. .central theory k teihniqiie. The in the varimis rr.a; a siilimanne attai ka would he lendered largely ineffective if arm- ed merchantmen traveled singly in.slead of being hum he<l jn con- VOVS Two Freah l>e\eliipinenis The rllaeii.s.sions accompanied two fresh development.* in the BatUe of the Atlantic the an- nouncement that 17 American civilian technicians had been loat cn route to Kngland, and the dis- cloaure that I'-hoats have been operating clo,«e to Newfoundland. Tlie latest American casualties were men who had enlisted in the British Civilian Technical Corps for non-combatant duty abroad; was made public last ’rh»*ir ioRP ___ __ night bv the British I're.sa .service United .States now is giving Britain on behalf of the Royal Air Force would make possible an intenaifi- Japanese pre.ss appraised the trip j„i..„-tion hAre cation of the British Navv a him k- of Saburo Kurusii to the United * . . ^ ,'. A personal poll by another foe of the meaaur;. who withheld hia , htd the OPM eatimatM the name. Indicated a .^2-to-44 victory at not more than .-i.OOO. for revision If all senators voted. (lets (tool KeeepUon (Contlnoed On Page Four) ••Still Enough to Bent BiH" I . The^recommendation of Pcesl- On the other han.l. Senator iv.- 11*'"'., Follette I Prof., Wta.i .said that I "'"gc In- -there still are enough iinrommit- creases for railroad workers wss ______ 1received coolly by management I and union employefl alike. Spo)ce*- ; men for the carriers expressed idia- [ appointment with the board's hnd- ing/i. Leaders of.the five operating I brotherhood* which repre.aent 3.'i0,- 000 men said they could not ' recommend acceptance of the ^ terms by their members. There ! was no Immediate comment from .St.'ite* aa Japan's final diplomatic effort to improve Pacific lelatlon.* : by removing a deadlock In lonfer- encea at Washington. "There is every hope that force wnll not be neceaaarv, " The Time* and Advertiser .said, adding: "But Japan is prepared for any eventu- alities " To Be laiai Opportunity Of Kiinisu's. trip to the United States The Times and Advertiser said "this ia the last opportunity (Continued On Page Two) Row in Senate Croup Hearin" James Sinking Toll Is Raised The Rhip which carrievi th»* tech- ade against Axi.t and Vichv French nician.H “ im presumed to have heen «unk,*’ the British said, and ’ tele- gramB have been sent to the. next of kin " The name of the ship and the approximate date of the Rinkinp were not disclosed. 141 I*oat In Thre* Months A/lded to other recent casual lies in the armed, services and merchant marine, the new losses increased to 141 the known toll of American lives in the last three months. Kxponents of lh<f single-vessel strategy to outsmart U-boat packs said that iLs logical application called for a minimum use of con- th** ■if .s (■'.!. I^ningrad .\tteriipt SriiMsh^-d Kx‘ ept f'-r the ( ’rimean front and a re[K>rt that another K i.'-- .'»ian att« rni>t lo break through the I>*mngrad siege ring ha*l been snvi.*5he(i. the war bullet.n frorn Adolf Hillers hradquarterx cen- tered on air hlow.s, A.« German ground for* es broke Russian resistance in the moun- tains east (*f *SevRttopnl. the Red fleet s be.'it remaining Bla( k S» a base, the communique- said, Ger - man planes sank, three lioopshijis totaling 1.3,'nXi tons and damaged four other merchantineh in '.cat- ers around the Grimea and off the north coast of the Black Sea Leningrad, it said, was pounded both b\'a;r and b> heavy batter- ies which were credited w ith s< r»r- ing blows on two warships and a frtighler in the Gulf of Finland. .M o«4‘o\ v Raided .Again Mos< (»w again was raided Ja.st night and a new mght alla( k w a.« made on Gorki. 2.V) miles east the Russian capital, where mu tions factone** and public utihtv plants were damaged anew, the communique said I*atest advices from th< Crimea said a German spearhead had slryck through the fccrmidable Yaila mountains to the Black Sea. splitting Russian forces into three parts, and that another arm of the German forces was pounding be- yond the battered city of Feodosi- shipping . ya only miles from Ken h. Likewise, he saul. Britain hen* e- third Germany Army appar- forth abould be able to operate ^^tlv was pushing beyond the cap- more actively in the Pacific ocean, tured Simfer I>)ndon, N'tv. 6 V Srna.Hhing at German shipping last night on a broad sea front, the R A F was reported officially to have bombed several ships In a welT-defended convoy (»ff the Frisian islands and one was seen ablar.e The raids cost the British eieht planes ac- vording In the Air Ministry. Aircraft of the (oastal command also attacked German shipping off Ihr Dutch mainland The British losses were evenly divided between the bomber and coastal com- ma nd.s * TTie t.peralions were rarrled ir.- to the continental channel port.«. the Air Ministry said, and mines were sown by low-flying planes Oan lntensif> Blockade An authoritative soiwco declar- ed l<Klay that the naval aid the Urges Sfjund World Order With Peace RoofPipU Snyx Anipr- iron Ppoplp linvp Mnilp I niiniitpfl (.ton- mil nirnt on Frpptiom. Washington Nev ft A*- Pie.iu. 'lent I-toscvell dec Ihred tcMiay that (he Anieiican people hau made "an unlimited <.f)mmitment that there . ‘<hall be a free world, and <ailed (/r. all free nations to plan for a S(jun(i , ‘iocial aivJ e< onorr.u world or«ier after the war The <nief executive a..8o a.^.sail- eii a ‘ mi.'iguitled ' fe'A -both in- lust rialists and leaders of labor for placing personal advantage above the welfare of the t'mted Slates and for delaying defen.-c fiutpiit by i.s.ng their 'e« onomic pow er" to for' e a; e[itan( e i.f their (Continued On Page Two) Stalin Wants Second Front To Beat Na^is Dr<*larc*. .V^i^iMtanre of Britain, .\merira of (*reat Importance and (*roH in^ (.onliniially. ,\ir Force Withdrawing ^ Most of Blanet* from M oMcov* and Northern Frcml; .\rtion Taken A«. Indiration Hope (If (Capturing Either Capital or" Eeningrad f.ivrn Ip hy Nazis. Lonilon. No\'. 6.— (iP) — In- forrru'fl .source.* .said t(xlsy that tiip (ierman Air Force wa.s withdrawing most of ita [ilaiie.s from the Moscow and northern fronl.s. leaving the lanri forces to carry on a “ de- fensive" winter campaign. The reported withdrawal of German air .strenRlh coupled wiltl Br:tif,h and P.uaaian report* .that the latest German offeniiv# again..-t Moacow had been atopped wa.s taken a* an indication that the Germans' had (fiven up hop* of ' apturinp either Moacow or Leningrad thia winter (iernian Oefense* Pierced The Tass coi reaj>ondent on the .Moscow front rep<irted today that the (Jerman defenses there had been pierced and that the Ger- mans had retreated at several {siints with heavy losses. This di-spati h of the Russian of- filial news apency, followed re- porLs of a German retreat in a corpse-.sfrewn zone of the Doneta ba.sin. (J)|i another Import front the Briti.-h said the Russian* might be able to hold .Seva.*topol indefinite- ly apairat the German invasion of the (I'nmea. Before 'Moscow, the Taa* corre- spondent wrote. Rusaiaa troopa. supported by atronp artillery fire and trench mortars, attacked in ,No\' t the districts of ' .S ' and "M ' Tues- Russia. momlnp and by the end of the war i/f ^beralion aione day had .seized ".several inhabited mur. '/nd her alliea, 1* points ’ and had cut railway lines I Joininp station* "R" and i Push Bark Enemy I The followinp morninp. the Rua- •siana captured "S. " according to thi* dispatch, w'hile other units op- erating in the same neighborho^ "pu.shed back the enemy. succeaS- I f ullv inflicted heavy lo*.*e* on Ger- Commenting on the British Navy’s seizure of five Vichy mer- chantmen off the east coast of South Africa last .Sunday, this in- formant said that .In future the British would he "more diligent and cast our net more widely’ in enforcement of the sea blockade Vichy haa- protesto<l—»«4aur« of thia convoy, which it (wiid was car- rying foodatuffa and repatrioting French soldiers from Madspa.scar and the .Orient Smith Rliintiv ‘Mind Made .Sratiiig of the 14 non-operating unions ; 900,000 members with Washington. Nov. 6. '/P. ator Smith iD.. S. C.) precipitated a controversy in the" Senate Elec- tions Committee today by bluntly announcing that he had his "mind made up" on the question of seat- ing Senator Langer (R.. N. D.), whose fitness to hold office has been challenged by a group Of North Dakota petitioners. ‘Tve got no questions to ask." Smith blurted, when (Chairman Hatch (D . N. M.) .offered to per- mit him to interrogate a witness who wa* testifying before the com- mittee. "My mind is made up. ” ex- claimed the South Carolinian. 'T ve seen so much of thl$ in my 33 years of experience I know Just which way the wind ia blowing." Senator Lucas (D.. ni.) inter- jected that he for one did not have his mind made up and believed that the lasue before the commit- fee waa "one of the moet, impor- tant iaauea with which I have ever been confronted. Sees Position Unfair ' "I don't think tt'a fair to the committee, fair to the country or fair to any one else." Lucas con- tinued. “for a member of this com- mittee to jnake a statement that hia mind la made up before the evidence la heard." , Attorneys for petitioners oppos- ing the seating of Langer is a K«- publican senator from North .Da- ' kota Bought to conclude testimony today In support of their charges of moral turpitude. Frgncls Murphy, counsel for the former governor, indicated thgt Laager 'would be called before the voya, the routing of ship* over « . n • • i wide variety of constantly chang- .xflZIt (,/flint Uriltxh ing Sea lanes and giving them . ^ * * PlnnPK guns to fight attackers. 1 I rianpx That, it was .said, would free a Berlin. Nov. 6. ,P- The Briti.sh * -------- 'large number of naval vessels tolR'>yaI Air Force lost II plane* O llP 3 l» il 4<l(lp(l to I ial patrol the areas north and south- yesterday and last night in opers- 4fllP .Man .'Vtnien to List , ^ .earch tlon. over the English channel re- in CorrPCtions P u l> -'o f submarines plying between Eii-1 K'o" and coastal areas of the , .Iropean bases and their Atlantic North Sea, Informed Germans said , , II , llAllPtI nv I*a\X 1 Otiav, hunting grounds today. I lTTece****rv to^^nflrt^ ^l^e“w a « " - * ' if. in addition, the U. S Navy, Four were reported to have been ‘trn-I Increase demands. ^ / i Washington, Nov. « - The : inrreai^ iU effecUve^timl «nge | *nd Under the national railway act, ■ Department published sev- ! en corrections in it* list of men re- ported lost on the torpedoed de- stro.ver Reuben James fatsing from 97 to 98 today the total of deaths in the'sinking of that ves- sel the night of Oct. 30-31, A* a result of rechcck of the tured Siniferopol. Crimean capital only about 10 miles from Sevasto- pot. but there were no'apecifir re- port* of progresr from any of theSF .fronts At the same tiqie. ob.s. rvera here pondered the .significance of an official German report that Italian troop* had taken a "large city " in (Continued On Page Four) Japs Protest Ship Sinkiii" Men ^ . ; Frencl SavM I I 18 j Union leaders arranged a con- I T * ference today to plan their next jp tin I which poaalbly might be to I^ll^pr. i a etrjke date. Mali ballota (Continued On Page Two) Four Men Die beyond Icelandic water* bv devel- ■seven in night flights. | oping bases on the British Lslea. j The sources emphasized that no, the Germans might find their bombing raids had been made on North Atlantic raids much less German cities in the period profitable. fleven Bomber* Downed The convoy system, naval men | ’*1'* hlffh command, in its regii- say. was. developed to a high ; fially communique, repeated Jjl p i j list df'those originally reported on board, the Navy announced the names of seven enlisted men who previously had riot been reported. Half Dozen Other Per- th,y ,ti i»d b—n i«it .on. T-aken to Ho.pi- tal; FirPiriPn Sflve 12. and also eliminated one name from the <h*t of the saved. Of those erroneously reported on point- of perfection in 1917 and ^ 1918. Us successful operation.' then as now, depended on the sub- ; marine's great risk in attacking a group of ships protected by de-1 on the destroyer and declared that stroyers. No Lunger Take Risk* The record of the U. S. Atlantic , fieet' »o far in the present war, * Alexandria. Va„ Nov. 6--iiP)— Four men were burned to death early toda'y in a fire wb^ch swept the four-story Montlcello hotel on the city's historic King street. The dead, identified tentatively from their hotel regiatrationa, were: R. Niskl, chauffeur, 338 East 116th street, New York city. D. L. Howland, Southern Rail- road repairman, permanent resi- dent of the hotel. J... J. Quinn. 72 South Goodwin atreet, Kingston. Pa. Howard Tabb, Holdenvillt. Okla. Smoke .\fferts Otlier* A half dozen other peraona were taken to a boepltal for treatment for cuts, bums and the effect of ■moke. Pint reports Indicated that none was Injured serioualy. Firemen reac'jed 12 persons flbia the ffxmiag 'structure, tad 20 others flpd to the streets ia might sttirc. . Orlgia of the fire was not de-. (Contlnoesl On Page Four) (Continued On Pnge Two) Treasury Balance --- ----- Washington. Nov. 6 The position of the Treasury Nov 4 : Receipts, *52.183,9,13.92: expen- ditures; 159.475.047.18: net balance. $2,527,178,325.02; Customs receipts for month. $3,828,111 58 Charge Eomm iif Steamer To -Mine from Soviet Territorial VTaters. Kulletin! Tokyo, Nov. 8—■/!•>-—The Ja- panese stenmer Kehl Mam sank last night In the Sea of Japan—« loss nttrlhiited In n prompt offlclnl protest to n drifting Riisnian mine — and late, today 143 paHnehgrrs and crewmen »tlll were un- accounted for. Domei, Japan- e*e news agency *ald this eve- ning that rcM-uer* had picked up 247 person* from the blast- ed ship, including 10 *eriou*i.> injured. They -had with them 17 bodies. London, lighting '■ •igsinst Gcrniiui;. "Af'd her allies, i* handicapped )>v /aik erf a second European fionj-f but "the assist- an< e given by Great Britain and' the United States is of great im- portance and growing continually. ' Premier Joseph . ‘iialin declared to- day in an address over the Moscow I radio. •i -In Biun, ."'w ilzerland. listener* lieard .'^talin .say lack ol a second j front in Europe was one cause of lemporars retreat of the .-soviet Arrnie.s and, in an apiiarenl apjieal to Britain, "appearance of a sec- ond from would greatly facilitate uur ta.sk." (iernuut lamees 4JM)0.u<)0 German losses .since the invasion j of Rii.ssia last June 22 have reach- t ed 4.500.000 men. dead. woiin-led an-l captured, .Stalin said.--and "if the German* want a war ot de- struction, thev will rerlainlv get It '■ Spcakin" on the eve of the 24th anniversary of the Bolshevik , revolution. Stalin said slaughter ; ami plunder were the Hitler policy, and therefore "the policy of tlie Red -Army is to destroy the Ger - man.* to the very last man ' rench Feared Kevolutlnn ntioning in passing that the rench government had sold out to Hitler for fear of a revolution, .•-^talin said, "only the Hitlerite madmen can think they can build a new order under the present condi- tion in Europe. "The new order is ready to col- lap.se at any moment and bury H.t- ler in it* ruins. ' Stalin said iSonei losses -ver* (Continued On Page Four) Flashes ! (I-ete Bulletins ot (be UP) Wire) (Continued -On Page Two) Litvilioff Will Be Red Em ov * ClioMpil an SiicrptsMor of Oiimaiibky for ^ ash- in g t o n .4mba9«a(ior. Blast at Chemlral Plant South Charleston. W. V»-, Nov. 6.— ,P— Fire Chief James Bairett of South Charleston declared to- day that none of the men in a three-stofy gas distillatioa plaat at The Cerblde and CarbOh Chem- icals Corporation could have aur- vHrd a blast which wras followed by a stubborn Are. Barrett aaM he did not know the number of men working there hut unofficial eeft- niale* placed the .figure at ■ 18, Two bodies were recovered and four badly Injured men were tak- en to hospital*. Neither of the bodies was identified immedlatei.v. Onis a portion of one waa taken to a South Charleston funeral home. ~ Four H!pr* Augusta, (ia.. Nov. 8— J>)—Four .\rm> tlier* in a plane ol the S7lll Roniitardment Squadron were Idlb eu when their ship craahod and burned at the .Arm) air field hero todav. The dead: First Ueut. Jack If. Butler, 24, of HpokhM, Waak« pilot; Second Lieut. Harold E, 4o^ son. 25. Qt Salem, Ore.. co-pUad; Staff .Sergt. Harold E. Qrowu, $4. of Dowhsville, Wia., enginoer; Private Earl U VAIIburn. If, of • >\ alsenliurg. Colo. board, six had been listed as lost and one Vlnrenl C. I-ane —as saved. Total Not Changed The changes substituted seven men not previously reported on board for seven men who had tiecn erroneoualy reported ao that the total of the ship's con^iany, 142 Officers and men, waa not changed. The increase in the number of dead, however, raiaed to 123 the members of the Army and Navj- w-hose livea thus far have been re- ported lost by belligerent action or accident tn the BatUs of the At- lantic. The' Navy said that these seven whose presence on the ship had "not been previously reported were: Kenneth Cecil Neely, aeamsn, second class, (2unard,u Fayette county. 'W. Va. Lewis Aubrey Turner, signal Aan. third eUaa. Atlda*. Ark. Anthony Gedmtaus •tankua. THE MANCHESTER HERALD I Can'l Explain To You, .My Dear, My Personal Want Ad Makes It Clear If yea’re to* hnakfnl to aay It In person, why hot run an ad In the "PeraonaT* section of The Herald Cissolfieds? Lots of people use this eohnaa to ecioumiiileate with others, ahd of eourae the rest of the rtaasikod a • eT I o n la always rrammed srlth other Mads of Want- Ads. They eoat Just a few eenls mad they're reall.v HleetIveJ Try uaing the ClaaMfied Ads, Cal $121. ' Tokyo, N o\4* 8— -J*-— The For- ______ eign Office announced today It had . j lodged- a protest with Soviet Rua- ; Washington. Nov. 8 ; sia over the sinking last night of Maxim M. Litvinoff. an okl-time the Japanese steamer Kebi Marm advocate of Soviet collaboration charging its loss to a mine whlcn ; ... .. . . had drifted from Soviet territorial i ‘ he western. dem.H-racies. will waters. - become Russian ambassador to the A prompt reply was demanded. United SUtea at an early date. Do'mei at the same time said there were 17 dead and 10 serious- ly' irijured among the first 264 per- sona picked up by . rescue vess<U which speeded to the scene of the sinking in the Sea of Japan off the r Authoritative sources said to- day that Lltvifioff. former peoples' commissar for foreign affairs, had been chosen to succeed (Constantine Oiimanskyi who is now in Russia. Litvmoff. when foreign minister, Saiv Fatal Shot . Middletown. Nov. 8,— A state's witness testified today ahh saw .Abbot F. Qalemaw, nil irtal *• a first degree murder charge, if- tallv shoot hi* wife, the mother of to children laet Joae. Mrs. Palmer, at whom homo Mra. Colefnan. 50, was eaployed as a domestic, described 4he aad quoted tbs vtctlns aa lag to her “get eat of the hooMaRiz: he'll klU .vou." Mrs. Pah the laet o'f ftvre atato beard la Superior roort; tho resting It* emae at 1$:M ter whiek a Korean coast. i personally negrxiated with Preal-: Domei earlier had reported that' dent Roosevelt at Washington , all 342 passengers anjl most of ths 85*crew .member* aboard the 4.5'22-ton steamer had been rescu- ed. Slaks Within $0 Mlnuten The Kebt Maru went down with- i n ^ minutes after the blast, which occurred about miles at sea on her journey from SMakln. Korea, to Tsuruga, western Japanese port. The Iriiieign Office requested United States recognition of Rus- j ■ia in 1933. after a lapse In diplo- matic relations of about 16 years. Bince 1939, however, be baa been in the background of Soviet politics due to his opposition to collabora- tion with Germany. Betddes Oumanaky there been only one other Soviet ambaa- aadpr to Washington. Alexander A. Trdyanovaky, w-ho took over the Marketa At A Glaaen New York, Ner. Stocks—HMTy; Forelga Earhaagn — Ni geoerally aaihapgad Cntten Qaie<; pstw *MhK New Orieaoa aag---- * ■- Sugar—Doll: i wnrM eaatraeta.

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    Member of the Audit Rareftu of Clrculfttlonft

    Mnnrhp%ter— A City df CillafiP Charm

    VOL. LXL, NO. .12 (Claaaifled Advertlaing On Page 1!) MANCHESTER. CONN.. THI RSDAV. NON EMBER fi. 1941(FOIRTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS

    Wheeler Resumes Attack on Arming

    American VesselsTells Democratir Sup- J u n t D S

    porters of I,epislation M

    Naxis M aking Three-Prongeil Drive in Crimea

    To Revise Lax* They W ill F are E lerlorale as W illk ie C a m l ill a l e s Raekeil hy ('.oinniiinists

    U'aahington. .Nov. 6 .— t/P) — S p n a f 0 r W hcH er (1)., M ont.t. a.'^sertPfl to Dem o cratic supiiortors of adm inistration legislation to revise the ne litra lit)' act toda>' that when they faced the electorate again , tliey would i>e “ W illk ie candidiites. suiiport-j *(| bv the. ( 'nmmiiniata " Hoauming I hia attack on a niea.surc permitting American rnercliant .ship* to carrv arms anl aaii into the combat zone*. Wheeler aalit In the .Sen.ite that Weniltll I. Willkie, the 1S40 Re|iiibllcaii nominee, anl Secretary of the Navy Knox, a l - ' ao * R«‘pilblican. would .iiipport them in their next campaign if ; they voted for the hill, a* Demo - 1 cratic leader* .*aid a majority of them would. ' '

    tl'heeler acrii.-eii Willkie. "M'all atreet hanker*" and ('iirnir.um.st.*, of "trying to take thi* countiv into u.ar.

    • Fe w .se n u io r* I J i t e n In g"You are going to he Willkie

    candidate*." Wheeler shouted to the few senator* listening at the time. " I hope he goes into the states of every one of you Democrats after you vote for thi? hill

    "I hn;>e that the f'omniunist* support you. I want to aee you explain that tn your people '

    The Montana senator said that the administration h.od been able to obtain endor.aement of its foreign policies "from a few farm leader* ' from some banker* from some labor leader* and from many Communist organization*

    "But they can't take the mrdh- ers of this country along.' he thundered. "They can't reach into the homes with political job* and take the fathers of thi* country "

    Content to IJaten Calm and confident, the sena

    tors who favor ahayp revision of the neutrality act were content tu listen to another's day debate today. assuring each other meanwhile that they had the votes nec- easary for pas.sage hy tomorrow- night.

    Kven one of the anti-reviaionists, .Senator Van N'uys iD . Ind l. conceded that the chamber would ap-

    ' prove the pending measure which would authorize the arming of American merchantmen and al.ao permit them to .sail to belligerent ports. Van Niiys said he expected only about 40 of the Senate's 96 votes to he cast against the_ bill.

    Can Be Held ^oiver Down

    \Mouiton .Spcg Rvoiton

    For Rrlipvinfc In fin- tion Can Bp H pI(I In \arrou'pr Ronnth.

    ( ’hi«ago. Nov. 6 HaroldG, Mniillon, pre-Ridenl of the

    I Brooklngn Institution. V\'ashington. !I said today ’there is still .reason '' for believing that the present inflation movement (an t»e held with-

    ! m iinn’h narrower hounds than w s .ir the rase during World War 1." j

    In an addre.ss* firepared for delivery to th^ eighth annual eon- \-ention of the Ameri'^-an Kmaner (.'onfe-renee, Moulton said the rur- rent steady rlsr in' prices had no compensating advantage-^ from the Standpoint of the national ef onnmv a.ŝ a whole ,

    Shifts lner a.ii Blockade An authoritative soiwco declar

    ed lyaI Air Force lost II plane*

    O l lP 3 l » i l 4 < l(lp (l t o I ia l patrol the areas north and south- yesterday and last night in opers- 4 f l lP .M an .'V tn ien t o L is t , ^ .earch tlon. over the English channel rein C o r r P C t io n s P u l> - 'o f submarines plying between Eii-1 K'o" and coastal areas of the

    , .Iropean bases and their Atlantic North Sea, Informed Germans said , , II , llA llP tI n v I*a\X 1 O t ia v , hunting grounds today.

    I lTTece****rv to^^nflrt^ ^l^e“ w a « " - * ' if. in addition, the U. S Navy, Four were reported to have been•‘trn-I Increase demands. ̂ / i Washington, Nov. « - The : in rrea i^ iU effecUve^tim l «n g e | *nd

    Under the national railway act, ■ Department published sev-! en corrections in it* list of men reported lost on the torpedoed de- stro.ver Reuben James fatsing from 97 to 98 today the total of deaths in the'sinking of that vessel the night of Oct. 30-31,

    A* a result of rechcck of the

    tured Siniferopol. Crimean capital only about 10 miles from Sevasto- pot. but there were no'apecifir report* of progresr from any of theSF .fronts

    At the same tiqie. ob.s. rvera here pondered the .significance of an official German report that Italian troop* had taken a "large city " in

    (Continued On Page Four)

    Japs ProtestShip Sinkiii" Men

    ^ . ; Frencl

    SavM I I 18 j Union leaders arranged a con-IT * ference today to plan their nextjp t in I which poaalbly might be toI ^ l l ^ p r . i a etrjke date. Mali ballota

    (Continued On Page Two)

    Four Men Die

    beyond Icelandic water* bv devel- ■ seven in night flights. |oping bases on the British Lslea. j The sources emphasized that no, the Germans might find their bombing raids had been made on North Atlantic raids much less German cities in the period profitable. fleven Bomber* Downed

    The convoy system, naval men | ’*1'* hlffh command, in its regii-say. was. developed to a high ; fially communique, repeated

    J j l p i j list df'those originally reported onboard, the Navy announced the names of seven enlisted men who previously had riot been reported.

    H a l f D o z e n O t h e r P e r - th,y ,ti i »d b—n i«it

    . o n . T - a k e n t o H o . p i -t a l ; F ir P ir iP n S f lv e 1 2 . and also eliminated one

    name from the

  • Charles Maag ReachesHis 3 Score 10 Today

    Charles Maag, of Avery street, i v/cather obsenatlons and proph-6outh Windsor, well known truck gardener and who Is known to many residents of this section as an amateur weather prophet, is observing his 70th birthday today. No special opser\’ance is planned b> the South Windsor far;nier."

    Mr. Maag was born in Baden. Germany, on Nov. 6, 1871 andcame to the United States in 1887 at the age of 16 and worked for eight years in the \dclnlty of New York principally as a farmer.

    He came to Connecticut some 4,'i years ago and lived In several towns In the southern part of the state, coming to South Wind.'or 29 years ago

    Mr. Magg married MLs.s Ho.se Ouerter of Albany. N. Y.. .38 years ago but the Avery street couple have no children.

    Reputation On Weather Each spring and fall many farm

    ers go to Mr. .Maag for hi.s ohser- sa'atlons regarding the weather for

    he period to ensue. He has made Considerable reputation for hi.s

    h .m i g .m n :193 .Y P l y m o u t h

    1 D o o r S e d a nSrECIAI. TOOAV!

    $100Solimene & Flagg, !nc.

    8S4 Center St. .Manehester

    esie.s. Currently. Mr. Maag believes that we are in for a cold winter

    ' with little snow.Asked how he defines the weath

    er ahead he said it was revealed to him through many smirccs of nature, the animals and from observations I'aek over a range of

    ■ years.At 7. Mr! Maag still drives his

    own car. a 192.h Moilel T Ford car. He bought the first Model T, 1925 cai that came into Manchester and has rnn.si.stentlv refused to f hange t»ver to a new car of .se- Icctlve transmission.. He bought

    , tte Ford on Pept. 7. 1925 and has , ilriven.it over lOU.OOO mflea Just in I short trips to nearby towns.I ( hiinged Body

    .Pevc'ral years ago. when .Mr.,, .Maag needed a small truck to I transport his farm produce to I market inM am hester. he had the I rear part of the roadster removed I and a truck body put on.I Tlic car has'ron.slstcnlly paasod Inspection at the inspection lane

    I here, luit his year, for the first I lime, .Mr Maag is having diffi- cuUv in procuring tires and other equipment for the i-ar, having to

    ! onier hi.» tires in advance, i For many years Mr Maag had ; ten acres o f his 30-acre farm on ; .Avery street under eultlvatton, but ' bis wife's poor health caused him ; to reduce the number of acfe.s nn- : .li-r cultivation.i Mr. Maag state.s that he Is still i In good health and actively Inter- 'e.sted in domestic and'natlonal af- 1 fairs.

    O P E N 2 i H O U R S

    Cn 100 Gallon l' a t a I I t e flangr on . Kalinn.Furl OH. 7.2c pillon.

    1)1 A u 8 = » 0 0

    MORIARTY BROS. 813 CE.N'rEll AT BROAD ST.

    Taper Plan’Comes First

    P o « l - W a r R e a d j u s t m e n t S t u d y P r o g r a m t o R e R e a d y b y J a n . 1 .

    Hartford, Nov. 6 -(.ei—Charles E. Rolfe, chairman of the State Development Commission, said today that he expected Governor Hurley's post-war ' readjtistmcnt study pre)gram to be ready for functioning by the first of next year.

    It will take about a month before the eommi.s.sinn can appoint a study committee ,-is proposed by. the governor. Mr. Holfe .s.Aid, for, before that step can be t.iken. a 'paper plan" now In prep.aration ,must be mapped out. I provuled by government appropri-

    Governor Hurlev recentlv an- | ation through .National Red Cross, nounced that he ' had asked Mr. I The Manchester Chapter has pro- Rolfe to create a small committee i vided the amall Items such as of outstanding men in the fields of ' thread, buttons, snaps, pins, hooks, laV or, inilu.dry .and finance. Its task would be to ssevelt added;

    "The American v.orker has no I illusions aboi t the fate that await.s liini and his fice I'abor orgaiiiza-

    I tinns if Hitior stioiild win. He i knows th It his own liberty and the

    very safety of Ihc people r»f the 1 United .Stales cannot he assured in a World which, is thre’e-fourih-i

    I .slave and one-fourth free. He kno'.v.s that_we must furnish arms to Britain.|■■Russia ami China and that we must do it now -today."

    The president said the place of the whole western heml.s]iherc1n a 'German scheme for worlcl domlna- tldii'rtad been marked orl the Nazi timetable, and the choke .America h.'cl to make was hct'.veen realism "in terms of three shifts a day " to produce necessary defense ma- teriahs and the attitude of the "blind and the deluded" who think that business can be done with Hitler and that American arnianieiit HUput.ls satisfactory.

    "The sooner the veteran organizations realize that, tills country fares a national emergonc.v and gil, out of the rut and behind the efforUs to prepare for any eventuality, the belter for Mane heater and the rest of the nation will be."

    That was the keynote of the after dinrfer speech made to the members and giie.sts of David McCann (Tiapter, Disabled War Veterans at the Hotel Sheriden, by Postmaster Thomas Qulsh, last evening. The speaker warned that the same thing that happened In Ir.w countries, apathy triwnrds the cri.sla before war broke out and the general confusion that resulted when it became apparent that the German Army was coming tl.rough, might happen here.

    Few Realize Danger"To offset this." he said. "Amer

    ica must realize that it Is time to use eyer>’ effort to circumvent (his very think. Veteran organizations apparently do not realize what the country rcallv faces today." During the time Postmaster Qulsh was talking he had the attention of the veterans snd their friends. He toM of the conditions that followed everx' war this country has ever participated In and the general let down which took place Immedl- .'itcly aftciw.'ards.

    Preparing For Next War"\Vc have been and .still arc,"

    .sai-l the .speaker, "looking from he- 1 hin>l the eight hall, so to apeak. AA'e believed that the last great war \va.s a war to end all wars and onlv to awaken and find that wh'le we believed this, the other coiin-

    ' tr!fs. not BO democratic, were pre- . p.irlng for the next war. But " he concluded, "wake up now and do everx'thlng possible to keep oTir mode of living Instead of living iin-

    I der the heel of a dictator " i Captain David McCollum, of (A nipany H. State (duard. spoke

    I briefly as did Lieutenant Archie i Kilpatrick and each stressed the ; uiitiortance of the veteran groups t ■ get .-lolidiv behind the countrv and its efforts to prepare for this

    I emergency.I Forget-Me-Nnf Drive,

    The annual Forget-Me-Not drive j o.‘ the local chapter got underway today hut It w-as officially started

    j at the pheasant dinner of the |vi n maftiofi: (hiinge with money he had stolen from the en.̂ h rr̂ ’ l.«;tpr. Wa.s wlilely. »ou,"ht today liy Willimantic and state polire,

    s'^mokin." a l ipar. the man cikiIv walked into the Main street .station ahortly after 6 p.m. yestcnlay, showed the iittenilant. Krnest Trerublay. 27. the butt of a piElol j'lolnidinR fron> the hip pocket of h s dilnj^aree.q, and demamled all the money in the cash register- $73

    He failet!. however, to .search Tremblay's pix'kets where the attendant waa carnuns an additional $8.*> of Jhe station 5 receipts

    iirned Fllni Tu SilenceTremblay told police that a car

    drove in for ^»aso!lne while he was emptying the cash*register nt the bandit’s demand, and the latter, warning him to aav nothing. stod From Pagr One)

    ron:it.aiitln Pmct.anln. Rns.' l̂aix - W bas-alor In T ikvo, to call this afternoon anil It was umlcrstood 4hr government then lodged its /protest

    Jt was’ rccallod that on S.8pt. 18 the Japanese government 'fileil a protest in .Moscow agalfisl floating mines In the pca ^of Japan '.vhich It s.aid li.jd sunk one fishing vess"l (uid ilamaged another, causing a number of de^h.s.

    As eailv as Fepl. /IS the govem- nient had announced it had picked up u number of n;iiies in Japanese water, or on the high ^oas which Japani'se officials a.-serted were Ru.ssi.an.

    Swept I»ose by Siori.̂ UiIt-was siiggc.ited that most of

    the.se mine i were swept from Vladivostok harbor by storms since the R is-ians had broadcast alarms in July about the 'langer of floating nmies in the .sea of •lapan

    Dorael said the .lapancse gov- efninent time and again had asked the Russlan.s to take precautions hut a Cabinet Information Board anno ini einrnt said the Soviets failed to t.ake any preventive measure.s.

    mMiwmNOW P I..v y i n g :

    Mi88 Irene Bums Is Given Shower

    •Ml** Irene Burn* of Keeney street was honored with * mUcel- laneou* shower Iwt night at the home of Mrs. Wllroer Keeney of Keeney street, who w*s assisted by Mrs. Edith BuckUnd. Mrs. Clinton Keeney and Mrs. Howard Keeney. Fifty relative* and friend* from Hartford, Bristol, -CSoventry and this town attended.

    The Keeney home waa tastefully decorated in pink and blue with white wedding bells. A mf lime. l;i(k of nialeria! * In try- mg to ge f* their publications to press each week, banded together following the state t»'achers convention in lD3rj to form The fV»n- nertirut Srholastiu Press A.ssorla- tion.

    Adopting the slofpin. "the pub- lii ation 'S Iĥ ' hallmark of the doing srhi'M')!.” the group elofted Dorothy Letitla Shaplefgh of the Nathan Hale .Junior High schor)| New Britain, prriselent and heM

    NaKhville. Tenn., Nov. 6.— DP/— A voluntary viait to an a« eident victim’s bedside is me.re r onvirt* Ing than a fine for a youthful traffic violator, says 2H-year-olil Crty Judge Joys and girl.s betwt fii lb and 18 to vdb- it the ojty iioHpital to see the • ondition of traffic victims. 'Id.iH visit replaee.s a fine and th» judgi- HMid h*- indu-ves the n.eU.'xl is briiiging results.

    • (jf tho.se 'Alio have visited the h ispital, not one has laied mv court on second of- fi-riM- "

    rile boys and girls who enin thru own money, however, ail subject to fines, be-

    the judge aaid, they know the value, of a dollar and I'lslng several of them hurt.s.

    Fanr.c‘1' (netting More for Eggs

    \ . & P . S to r o k R e p o r t 2 3 l* e r O u t liHTPaHP III S a le s o f E }if;s .

    In a report on price spread.s. Sc

    Boston Nov 6 reduction of fout 81 000 (dpt doien in 1936 to over 104,000 000 dozen last year The company's purchases this year totaled approximately 77,0f>0,000

    F âclftr Tea dozen between January 1 and .Sep- ‘ lenit>er 1 " «•

    Producers HelpHe added that prorJucers in many

    parts of the country' are doing their part to facilitate distribution of i ggs by paying greater attention tn feeding.“housing and better rare nf flocks g€-nerally, thus providing more dependable Source. ̂ />f .supply tor distributors equipped tr> handle vrilume oils economically.

    Slogaii Prove.8 To Be Bust

    W id e l y P i i h i i r i z e d .S ym - h o l , O - H -I - O , T u r n s O u t t o B e F l o p .

    Washington. N6v 6 ,v widely publicized O-H-I-O- slogan .spelled out an all-states bu.ut in the fa.st exparuiing I*. S Army.

    O-H-I-T), you recall, was the symbol that bored s/*ldiers we:e ief)ort'-d rhalkin-, stealthily last

    on buildlng.s, trucks and'.rr, rr.er ter.t.®

    from the barrar ks said lirkly tfiHt the letters ,Mt«)od 'T»ver the hill in f>ctober " An«i "over the Hill" in = any man's Army mesn.'J. at best, going ab.sent v/p.h- (.;t leave, and at worst plain d^- ' r t loriTJi‘ * four lett'T.H Were supposed to

    !'«-rve nol.H.e that the men v.'ho 'halkefl them up in len led to go b''Uie in u c t o b e r r*-gardles.s of

    --------- -. hnt Cnngres.s. did about extendingLondon .Nov. 6 (P--■ Inforrr.»'d ihi-ir 12 montha service. Actually

    aourcr.x .said today \5 Averell /,nl\' the first mohilized (jroupa ofHarriman would return to I/on/lon j .N-atirmal (Juar'l.'smei: rounded out early next week to re.aume hi.s du- liheir year in Octoher. hut it 'was a.s

    O-H-I-O proved a flop. Officeni who inaj'he were a little worried in August are saying now that they never look the threat serlouMy. They add that grumbling come* naturally to soldiers, and point tnit that Napoleon once worried audU bly because his old guard uoac* •ountahly quit growing and com* plaining.

    Dei^crtion record* are kept at th* ̂ various dJvl.slonal headquarters but (he War Department said tha

    I October rate apparently was a* low a.s In ■ îrevtous months. If th* rate had risen abruptly, the department certainly would know about it. a .spoke.sman added.

    The morale of new citizen aol- dJers apparently waa most disturbed during debate of the draft ^ * ten.aion legislation, but active woH* in maneuvers and greater famlllar- .ty with Army routine since then

    for I are believed to have Instilled a new firide among the majority of sol- iliers

    Expect llarriiiKiii J'o Kc8iiiiie

    ( A)ward Fined 1 />00 Pounds

    C o ii^ ir t u i l o f V i o l a t i n g R r itu in 'H S e c u r i t i e s R e g i i la t io i iH .

    1 serve France m even more filrect 111 r c i r n i I J l O r C 'S i fasluon by parlicipHling In this

    iTusacle In w’hich Germany ha> taken leadership.

    Keeping BnUhe\lk Peril ,\wmy ".Meriting the appreciation ol

    the world." he said, "you thereby also contribute to .saving the. hope at a rectuicilcd Europe in keejiing the Bol.Mhevik peril-away from u.s,

    "It is your country you thereby arc piote< ting " '

    The message was .sent to Major , I.A Bonne. coinmamUng the unit, m rej»ly to a message of allegi- i

    Storrs. Nov. 6 Wide variation in tho time it taUe.s a dairy farmer to do the daily t hore.s arrjund his bam IS one of the reason.n for variations in proflit from dairy tarming, say.s the University of Connecticut Kxten.sinn Service. A Vermont study report.s’ that soim- farmers in the (^amplain Valley .spend as iltUe as 4*'̂ ) hours per cow per year, others as m’lrh a.s 3%D hours per cow per year. W. J. Hansen,’ Storrs economist, believes the same situation prevails m Cnnnec- llcut. Co.w« out on pa.sture take less lime to feed ancl c lean, so a long pasture sn is important in reducing the time for rhoro.s. Mr. Hansen point.s out A milking machine savc.s from 20 to 38 hours per cow per year, according to th- Vermont figures. According to ii New ^iampshire ctmly a milking machine sa\~us 17 hours per cc>\n j>er year. A well-arranged bam has convenient gram storage -space and short, direct methor Muri'ui f ' ?heri'lan of New Haven High .schfZ'l ronven“ on chairman.

    hannels.Eliminate Costs

    ’Through elimination of unnecessary handling operations and costa, it is possible for producers in 40 | .states to rec eive 72 cents of the re- ; tail dollar for the high quality eggs moved into consumption through \. Sr P , compared to the naitonal average share of 63 rents for all grades moved through all trade |

    If hannels." Mr I3yrnes .said j An even higher .share of the con-

    , , ̂ .TO *.. . r-. Isuiiier's dollar goes to ruirthea.stIon Nov > < V 'Noel C o w p r o d u c e r s marketing through

    ard. the British pla>'wright. was the Sr P . because the favoratile *f»nvifted todav •'•n two charges of location of- these producers with vKilatiiig ■ sef iinticA regulations î ^P r̂d large eastern mar-and wa.s fined a total of £1.600 ! added

    prf>duce marketed through all trade I ties as I'nited State.s supervi.sfir of ' |̂ rx)d a month as any for the ratch-Ihe lend-lease program

    The.se sources said he wouM come via clipper plane to Lisbon an»i probably would bring an outline of F*resifJent Ftoosevelt'.** idea.'; fr.r ai'ling Kussia in coordination with Bnti.sh efforts

    Carole I.Andia C'o||apsa-s

    * phra.seF'or some reason or another.

    HolH'wcK'd Nov 6 - /P' Art- res.s f'arr.le I.,andis collapsed f>n a motion picture set yesterday, her studio f'-pfrlefl, and wa.s taken home with a high fever. Her physician diagnosed her ailment a.s influenza.

    f ;0 - ( O FOR CH.APPKD H.ANDS— f ;0 - ( O

    Purae-alze fubr only 10c. (.rcasrlcaa, atalnleaa. I.cavca vour skin soft and smooth. Ask wiur dniKi^Ht for GO-FO for quirk relief from minor skin Irritations.

    S o o th es the Skin /

    Iodine is obtained by proceaolnF seaweek. kelp or Chill saltpetre.

    BM KACH^,LEG PAINS MAY BE DANGER SIGN

    O f T ired K idneysIf harkRche and leg p«iiM srf msUng Toarr.isFral’b, don't just contnUin »nd doBOthlac

    shout them. Nature M w^niiocyou thjM >-cur kHnej-B need Rttentiom 1 he kidneya ere Nature'ecnief wayoltsUnc Britia and pezuoDoge wmete out of l-i -A. 'Ihcy htlp moat |»*ople peee 3i pintemdiy.

    ' If the 16 milee of kidney tubes sad Alien rlf-n't work well, poief/^oue waeU lOBtUr etaye in the hi r'Ad.l bcee mey etBft neyffwfi îrkRT-hee, rbeuffii/ie peina, legpRioe« loan ca riep Br>d energy, getting up nigbte, ewellillf* pufYiriT-Re under the keRdacbee aad ^ tt i - nf«5. f re

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    y0||||P w .

    Friday.

    London, Nov. 6— i/C) —Twenty- nine ahtps brought American Red CroB* relief .suppUe* to Great Brh>- tain In October without the.loss of * single shipment In the Battle of the Atlantic, the American Red Croa* Committee ia Great Britain announced today.

    The veaaela brought in (1,375,559 worth of Bupptlea, it waa stated, or (654.472 le** than ia Saptember.

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    PAG1! FOURMA-N'CHESTER EVENMNG HERALD; MANCHESTER, CONN. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 1941

    Grefiter Hartford Plan Finds No Favor Here

    Alert Youth Nabs Thieves

    About Town

    t*ropo8al to Manchester demned by Residents And Officials Alike.

    ig*”*̂Con* Hobby ShowIs Revealing

    I

    A proposal to cpnaolldate H artford and air lurroundlng towni In- ! eluding Manchester Into one large 'greater Hartford” municipality was unanimously condemned here today by town officials and residents alike as "Just another attempt to bet suburbanites to support the big town” . |

    Noting th.it "we already arc y7 gouged every year to pay Hart

    ford charity through its community chest when Hartford's own residents and businesses ought to bear that burden” , those remarking on the proposal today came out fla tly against any attempt to merge Manchester's identity with any "Hartford grab bag".

    Controversy here was occasioned by a radio talk last night originating in Hartford and delivered by Edward . N. Allen. Hartford merchant. Allen noted that even Manchester .should be Included in greater Hartford as its economic life is so dependent on Hartford and East Hartford.

    ('mbble Whole State Calling the "b ig city" idea an

    "octapus civic setup," local people were wondering why, if Hartford gobbles up East Hartford, and then, because local people work In- East Hartford, continues on to swallow' Manchester, if "eventually all of Connecticut wouldn't Just become greater Hartford."

    Town Clerk Samuel .1 Turking- ton, commenting on the proposal scored the Inefficiency and "downright incompetency" of Hartford's departments, and suggested that if Hartford is looking fur easy tax money from the surrounding towns, it might first set its own house in order and eliminate some of the notorious waste in Hartford departmental offices.

    More Than Hartford "M y office is handling more

    property conveyances, on the average. than Hartford, and we handle all vital statistics in this of-

    - flee," Turklngton said"In spite of natural larger

    issuance of dog licenses, hunting licenses and the filing of bills of sale," Turkington siikI, lie "couldn t understand whv Hartford needs so many clerks in iU town clerk's o ffice."

    Why .loin Hartford ^Town Treasurer George H. Wad

    dell, remarking on tlie proposal was equ.a'.lv veheniertt. He noted that the demand for a greater Harford was evidently the result of Hartford governmental Inefficiency. Othe- commentators wondered why an'exceptionally well operated town like Manchester should yield Its government functions to Hartford.

    Thc.se were of the opinion that If |

    Unusually Fine Collections of Local Persons on Exhibit.

    South Windsor Young | M a n ’ s Observations | Put Police on Trail.John;iy Kavlnaki'a car went dead

    al: of a sudden while he was going to his work at the Pratt Whitney plant in East Hartford. Kav- Inski, a South Windsor young man, then went looking for a bat-

    ! tery, found one and al the same time started the State Police, East

    , Hartfor.d and the Hartford Police A Hcr.ild reporter dropped In al , departments on a county wide

    Center church this afternoon for a , search for stolen goods and filling"once-over " at the Hobby show of ' station bandits

    , , . . . , William W hites combined ga-Groijp and found it one of th ̂ station on Klling-most prclentioiis pf the kind ever] uin road Wapping was broken Into staged in town. .So many and I last Friday evening and merchan-varied are the exhihit.a, it is necessary to use the Fedoiallon roonl.the Robbins room and the .under garten. The latter room Is well lighted and lends Itself admirably to this use. Even the halls and the corridor are adorned with handsome quilts. Glancing at the labe's, on ' bore the inscription, "Made by Belty Felton In 173!l " It was pieced in white and pink in a handsome pattern, and was the property of the great, great grandmother of Mrs. Russell Pitkin. Mrs. Pitkin has several Interesting exhibits of needlepoint upholstery on old-time fiirnilure. .Mrs. L. H. Keen shows antique chairs, the needlepoint design on a blue background.

    Extensive Diapluys There is an extensive display nt

    needlework of all kinds. table spreads, bcd.spreada, samplers, pic. tiires worked in wools, and hook< d rugs. Mrs. Paul Agard shows a hcndsonie In 'ge rug. and Mrs. P. F. Hannon. tv.o amaller ones. Mra. M.annon has aeveral pieces of beautiful renansanre work, so iniirh in vogue forty years ago. Mrs. Ernest fii'ngston IS displ.sying an unusually handsome quilt in the popular popcorn design, in a square pattern, the raised design thrown Into relief by a filet background.

    John C. Hood's hobby la to fashion mosalc-Iike articles In varicolored wood.a. one of them haa 2500 jflecea, all cut With a pen knife and put together In conventional design. Mr. Hooil shows several Interesting British curios.

    Collection of Bottles In the kindergarten room the

    reporter stopped for a word or two with Frederick Hill who is showing his Unusual collection of bottles. Mr. Hill only began collecting In 1036 and now haa 2,578! In the largest bottle o f-a ll, .Mr. Hill haa arranged a revolving rack, and this in turn la filled with 77 small bottloa of every description. Other bottlea are filled with little outdoor scenes Bottles in this collecllo. are from every country in the world, one In the shaiie of a white hear is from Russia, another vase-like affair from Japan. One bottle is siip[iosed to have been made In the fiffli cen-

    inotlier bear.s the date of another unique medicineany Joining la to be done, the i n - a n o t n e r unique hiodicinc

    solvent .and Inefficient governments I bottle may be tipped so that the Iof other towns might take minor ; "' ' H f'll with a .spoonful of roles In a setup of a "greater M an -I‘ be medicine and may be carried

    .. ■ In the nocketcheater."Waddell aald. "it .seems strange

    that a city with the re.sourccs of Hartford has to go outside Its lim its for adilltlonal revenue" He suggested that the legi.-laUire should empower nuinicipalille.s to levy taxes for more than Inimisli-

    In the pocketBells And Chins

    The Agard family also collects bells of odd si'zes and uses, and Ijjis Agard haa nn enchanting collection of nimuitiire animals and birds In glass ami china Mrs Myrtle Alltin's rollei'tion of pen-

    ateiy plannc.l expenditures to en- attra< l.s and will be” I lound in the Fi derationable the towns uiru tiliea to set up

    funds against hard tiniea.Representatives of the town of

    Eaist Hartford, Farmington, and Windsor pleaded for tlme In^whlch to study the proposal and proliable results of the plan before eom- nenting

    I'rged by .Mien‘ Amalgamation was urged by Kdward N. Allen, president of Bsgc -Allen A Co , speaking Wednesday night In the "airing all oplnlqns" broadca.st over station W n C , for economy and efficleiic.v

    roomNearby are two tables filled with varied antiques from the large colleetloii of .Mrs. John Picklea. Mra. I’ iekles alao collects souvenir spoons and hAs a large collection. Interesting to the women is part of the wedding troii.sseau of an aiicester, all elaborately trimmed

    ' with hftnd embnildered eyelets. ] One of a 'collection of 16 clocks, was made by hntiil for a wedding

    I present m the f.miily, and it ac- ; tiially nins! Old English china in I the same exhibit is embellished with scenes In the United Sta.tes, the pieUiref sent hn to the manu-Of government.

    " I t la silly to talk about con- faclurers in jEn'gland.'Al.so m the Federation room la

    a dLsplay of early American gla.sa■olidating the towns of Greater H artford because West Hartford would never vote for It." said

    . Bamiiel Ludlow, Jr , former pre.sl- dent. W est Hartford Taxpayers' AMOciation.

    " I agree with Mr. ^ lle n 100 per cant,” said George R, Imhoden, Bloomfield town - manager, noting, however, that the plan “would be

    •plendid thing from a good gov- •Hinient and economical stand- point." If the new municipality were to be "governed by men trotned for the Job."

    •Vgainst I’ lanA lfred W. Hanmer, Welhers-

    JBald'a first selectman, declared he thought the metropolitan district

    and tinware by Mrs. Ronald Wad.s- worth. Mrs. Anna.Kellura. Mrs. Frank Croeker, Mrs. Charles Bond and Mrs. Bertha Keeney all collect buttons and they are displayed In both the Federation and kindergarten rooms. Mrs. Ethel Davis shows hunilreds of pitchers, from a tiny one less than an Inch to the- modern water pitcher of the day. There are several collections of dainty perfiime bottles, pepper and salt shakeM, sugar and creamers, interesting old, books, maps and sheet-music. Mrs. Byron Boyd and Mra. Elsie Klotzer Fritz showed bo.sutiful specimens of fans.

    The Vetrano fam ily have several•“covered all that Is necessary. 1.don't 'think that we, the oldest; airplane and ship models, and _ town in the state, would want to collection of photographs enlarg-lose our identity."

    Donald H. Potter, first .selectman o f Glastonbury, said he thought "real governmental economies can be effected by . proper eonaoUdation" but said He does not believe it la something "that can be done tomorrow."

    Hospital NotesDeath: Yesterday, Miss Emily

    Pitkin. TalcottvUle.Diacbargad yeaterday: Mra.

    Balmer Werdelin and infant son, J.7 Dlvialon street; Mrs. Peter Hsu. gan and infant son, Esst Hartford,

    Admitted today: David Gebeau, tn Middla Turnpike E^t.^ Discharged today: William Mc- ItobHA 39 HoU street; Mrs. Fred* ertek Lsuuritsen and Infant daugh* far, S5 Duraat streat

    Public ReemrdsQattdalaB

    la a quitclaim daad racordad at " I offlea oC tha town c le fk eartaia

    rastiictloaa on tha- Adallna ' fSiaaft paepaity k t Mala, 8t-

    a i 'f l ira a r a tre it i ars lift

    ed from snapshots, the work of Harry Straw Jr., and Mias Elizabeth Norton attracts many interested in photography.

    The display of dolls is easily the moat extensive ever shown here, and comprises the collections o f Mias Helena Booth, - who collects foreign dolls, Mrs. Herbert House and others. Mr. House's stamp display is here also and EUmer Weden's coins.

    During the afternoon Mlm Elda Matchulat who is instructor In arts and cra fu at Mitchell House. Hartford, gave a demonstration o f chip wood carving. On exhibit was a tabouret which took 800 hours to complete. Interesting envelope holders, book-ends and other ob- Jecta in csrx'ed wood were shown. MUs Matchulat la a graduate o f the Hartford A rt school, and the settlement work is uhder tha Hartford Community cheiL Sba wUl be present again thls tevenlng at the show. 1.

    Home made candy foun^a ready aala and everyone . attending was regaled with fruit punch aî d home mads oooUea.

    di.se valued iit $500 was taken. This l.s not so much news value as robberies of all .sorts, Including biirglary. holdups and just plain petty stealing are almost a commonplace items In every day's news. But a broken car radio aerial led to the downfall of a gang that apparently has been stripping garages and filling stations in a radius of twenty miles around Manchester. The main purposes of the combined police departments Is now to find the "fences" or receivers of stolen goods.

    Dickering For PurchaseBefore the robbery Kavinski had

    been dickering with White fnr the piircha.se of the car radio. Last Frid.iy they aln;ost reached an agreement hut Kavin.skt decided to ' sleep on the proposition. When he went back Saturday morning he had decided to take the radio but someone el.se had t.iken it during, the night and without paying a penny down In fact White's ca- rage was stripped of liatteries, high prireii coils, tnes. sparkplugs and unbroken cartons of cigerettes

    Leaving the station Kavinski started for work and on the w a y to the shop his car went dead in East Hartford. He went Intn a comlilncd filling station and garage seeking help. While repairs were being made to his ear. he was contacted hy a person in the garage for the purvha.se of a car radio, Kavinski, who a short time before had wanted to buy one at White's place of business, wa.s offered the same radio, which the day before had been a part of White's stock in trade.

    He never let on that he recognized the radio hut kept on dickering ' until he got the price down to ten dollars. He told the seller that he could not make the piircha.se right then but would be hack. He came' back later and how.

    Tells F o licWhen he started liia i-ar he

    swung around towards Wapping to tell White of his dl.scnvery On the way bark he passed a State Police car so swinging around he overtook the car and told the o/ficer uhat he suspected He was told to go to work and if needed

    he called and that the lice woui-l t ike la ie of

    the matter. That started developments which within thirty hours after the robbery placed two men in the Hartford County Jail awaiting trial.

    As the suspected place came under the Jiirisiticiioii of the Fast

    I Hartford Pollee department the I usual courtesy was extended by I the State i ‘o.l-,e depat tm.-iit The first thing they did was to get Kavinski out ol work and Instructed him to buy the radio. He did and was supposed to make the last payment ye.sterday. R.alph Stone, of Wapping, nn attendant at the aUitlon, hail described to the State Police some perullar markmg.s on the antenna of the radio, claiming that It had been defective and that they hid tried to repair it. Two marks In particular were identified by both Stone and White. That started the police on tli ■ right trail as stolen merhnndise hail liecn positively connected with the place

    Was Bold BreakThe break was made within

    thirty feet of White's house which IS clo.se by the garage. A small half circle of glass hsd been knocked out clean, entrance made by for - Ing'iip the window and the car, in which the loot was taken away was parked on the norihe.aSt side of the lilli.ig station office, it is expected that more developments will result within the next few days. From all aectiona of Hartford service stations have been held up and robbed.

    Shortly after the police had rounded u p 'part of the gang in East Hartford, two Negro men who were said by police to have broken Into the place, were on their way to New York In a cream colored LaSalle car. Within thirty-five minutes after the description of the car was radioed by the State Police the 'men were taken into custody. Meanwhile. White must await the next term o f the Hartford County Superior Court before he gets hia merchandise back.

    Chapman Court. Order of Am aranth. will hold a business meeting Friday evening in the MAsonic Temple. A rehearsal for the officers will follow. In preparation fnr the official visitation of the grand royal matron. Saturday evening. November 8, Chapman Court will observe visiting matrons and patrons’ night, with a supper at 6 30 in the banquet hall In charge of Mrs. Annesley Trotter and her committee.

    John I^oblnson. Sr., of 79 Spruce street, who was removed to the I Memorial hospital Monday, Is get- ' ting along as well as can be ex- I pected. For the present, however, j

    j only the members of the immedi- ' j ate family may visit him.

    The Teachiers' training class which meets at the Second Congregational church every other Thursday, will have a session tonight at eight o'clock for teachers and workers. In the church school.

    State W elfare Commissioner Robci]l J. Smith, is in Boston today attending a meeting of the New England State Welfare commissioners at the office of the director of the defense, health and welfare services. The meeting Is for the purpose of organizing on the basis of state and local levels a program under the various state welfare heads.

    The automobile Inspection lane on Leonard street which opened yesterday did a nishing business. The lane is open dally from 8 a. m. until ,5 p. m. except Sundays and legal holidays. It, will be closed next Tuesday. Armistice Day.

    The annual meeting of the Manchester City club will be held nt the club rooms tonight at nine o’clock. Following the business session a supper will be served with Chef Osano entering.

    Defense Group Calls Meeting

    said Russian troops "fought theenemy on all front's " yesterday and ground gunners and fighter planes destroyed 27 German aircraft nearMoscow.

    "In fighting from Nov. 2 to 4 'D' area." a communique reported, "Red Arm y units and aircraft operating on the western (central)^lembcrs Asked to Gath

    er at ^(unicipal B u i l d - dertruyed 07 German tanksing Tomorrow.

    An Important meeting o f the Manchester Defense Council is scheduled to be held n t . 8 o’cktek tomorrow night in the council room of the Municipal building. All, council members are asked to attend as plans will be submitted by the A ir Raid Precautions Committee for the starting of an anti- bombardment school In this town.

    Plans have been In the making for the past several weeks in connection with Manchester's prepar- edne.ss arrangements, and at the present those who have worked on the problem feel that nn excellent program has been set up which deserves the support of the residents.

    A fte r details have been approved tonight, full public announcement of them will be made and applications for the air raid school will be accepted.

    Jay Rand is head of the school committee and Mrs. Thomas Martin is In charge of the personnel. The Herald next week will print school course- application forms which should be filled out and submitted In order that Interested persons may attend the course. This means is taken as the numbers who can be trained are lim ited by the size of accommodations for their instruction.

    184 trucks with Infantry and military supplies. 18 guns, seven fuel tank cars and about one battalion I about 600 men) of enemy infantry."

    A ir units Slone were said to have destroyed or damaged 80 tanks, 350 trucks, 15 fuel tank cars and a score of guns and about one regiment of German Infantry Tuesday.

    )The British radio said Germans attacking important Russian com- niimiontion centers on the Leningrad front w e ft stopped and driven back by Soviet counter-attacks after heavy fighting among half-dozen lakes and swamps).

    Iiisiiraiice M en, Honor Cooke

    1\, y. SlocksAdams Exp Air Rediic . ,Uaska Jim . Alleghany Allied (.'hem

    Variety Of Ftoira'^-'V.

    It la aal(I that uia thenbal M t 0f Polk county, N. C., haa greaUr tariaty.. of plant, life than any M mt aecUoa ia tha United BUtca.

    IJlIay Sail Alone To FpilJJ-Boats

    (ContinDed from Page One)

    however, la generally taken h<

    no longer take such gVeat risks.Guided by highly aensitii

    sound detection equipment ar

    fage veasela by daylight.“nie 17 Americana who, along

    with two Canadians, were reported lost by the B ritl^ presumably were skilled radio men. techws «*na. or mechanlca. Britain' has been seeking/ to enlist several thousand such apeclaltsts here to help in tha manufacture, malntcn- •ifce and repair of Important equipment used by the British armed forc^.

    Am Gan ......................... . 77 ',Am Homo I T f x ! ............. . . . 4 4Am Had .-̂ t H ............... . . . 5Am Smelt ..................... .. 37 ',Am T A T ..................... ...150Am Tub B ..................... . . . 571.Am Wat \V kf* ............... . . . 2 ^Anaconda ............... . . . V 26 \Armour III ..................... . . . 4 '.Atchison ....................... . . .. 274.Aviation fo rp ............... . . . 3'».li^ldwin ( 't ................... . . . 14w a n .............................. . . . 3''.Rendix ....................... . 371,Hcth StI ......................... . . . 61Beth Sll 7 I 'f ................. . .120",Borden ......................... . . . 20-'.Gan Pac ......................... . . . 4 ’ -.( ’a.se (J I 1 ................ . . . . 77'.(V rro De F ..................... . . 30< 'hes A Oh ..................... . . . 35 ',1 ’hrysler ..................... • . 56 \Coca - ('o!a ................... . . . 93Gol Gas A Hi ................. , . . 1"h('oml Inv Tr ................. . . . 27clvveen hO Hint ho per «f l i t of rafiaclty on de- fenHe work W'itiiout a .•tingle diret t e almo.sl i-ntirely eliminated s.

    No Priority Trouble •As a re.sult, the company today

    Is roaring along without the priority Irrmbles now afflli-ting companies which clung to civilian lines It is doing a large volume of work for Sperry. National Acme. Pratt A Whitney Tool and others

    Demand for cigar, cigarette and bakery machinery, the comfianv. hopes, will pile up sufficiently to help cushion any f>oslwnr IetFinance; t'arl Shoup. a.ssociate prtyfessor of economics at Columbia t'nlversUy, has puhlisheci atudy entitled “ Federal Finances

    . In the Coming Decade “He experts total Federal ex

    penditures to reach a peak of 29 billion dollars Iq 1943 and to aver-

    . age 13 billion to 17 billion dollars annually from 1946 to 19M. . His study aasumea

    1. The Briti.sh win In 1943 or 1944.

    2. The United Statens sends ex|>editlonary force.

    3. Prices rise only moderately in the next few years, then gradually decline.

    A ll of w'hich recalls the old saying. " I f w'iahes were horses, then beggars would ride.”

    Overnight News O f Connecticut

    By Associated Press

    Walcrbury The advisaidlity of opening negotiations with mahu- fai turers for the payment of a ('hn.stmuM itonu.s l»> employes will ia* di.sf us.scd iiere Sunday at a ‘Meeting of officers ami .shdp slew- irds from (MO unkms in ( ’onnercaI 231. Mine. Mill and Smelter W fiikers Union, announced la.st night.

    Memlen No opjK».mfion to the renominntion of Mayor F'ranciH ft Danaher. Kepublitan, developcsl when petitions were filed last night for munlclfml offices in the Dec 2 election The mayor, son of the state labor cornmnssutner anil brother of Connecticut's junior Senator, will be oppK)king ahead aK>ng the highway Mr Motorist will travel, this is what he foresaw:

    \MM Take M ore Butane Increased protliictlon of a\ia-

    tlon gasoline will take more butane the stuff that makes gasoline more volatile, helping quick- starting of motors. The need for butane, he said. Is likelv to push so-called bottled gas distributors to replace butane with propane, affecting hoiLseholds using the tanker! gas for heating and rw)k- ing

    AxdHtion gasoline -will take more tetraethyl lead I>ead Ls already scarce And Army equipment requires premium grade gasrtline When the military needs are met there will not be enough left tf> keep up the o< lane ratings of motor fuels sold to the motorist Sr, his motor will knock on grades he u.sed to skim over wfth engine purring.

    Pepn.syl vania lubrt'cating oil marketers. D f Frev forera.st. may have a hard time maintaining their autr»mobile trade. Aviation will take beavv hauls on supplies

    May ( ’hange «^|»erlflrallons " I would not he surprt.sed to see

    1 considerable chang»»s in lubricating I oi .soeriftgation.s " be ventured "at i \c'\s\ fo r the d'iratinn_of the em- ' ergenev.i R/ffore we get much further I along It., probably will be found ' tbiit lubncating oils will have to I la.st longer than *hev' did a vear 'a g o .Serious recon.sideration of the I 1 000-mile lubricating program I mav be f’.esirable "

    It will be the job of the marketer ^if oil products to explain the.se

    i an* many other prf»blems to hi.s I r iistomer.s T)r Frey told the mar- I ket ‘ng .session

    PhlladelpJu*. Nov. 6 . — OP) —**thf:ough rurvf«l pla.sUr. acHl d n tf t t>r»ar(U a re not a . thor-izr. l to i n s l i t o l - -,n Ui..ir o 'a n a r^al r.-.,lu.W a n k f l rci lavt if ica t iou o f sl -nk- rs Jt' S' rjf JoUh ;it th[. !rav rarliii '.^aves .MMiougi. ^he rnonkevs may look like a person hearing a tl'ill .speerhVir a sour no’ e they a-t .ally are rereivir.g a ver-y .“light el»>( tn. al stimulation.

    Kl.ving IV»at VanI'vhes

    Vutoria R ( ’ , Nov 6- K ’nnad- i.an Press I • A P»oyal ( ’anadlan Air horye flying b as a grievou.s fault The;r reaction is the same

    'T o Have lnsii|»erahle Task"Traffu: l.s getting out of rnrir

    tr-ol, if. indeucl, it :.H ru»t alreaflV •‘*u No expel :er,« 4'cl i.ifu ial will f their c,ff»-nses again.st !' public safety warrants, pcJice au- j ilhontu'S are going to have an in-i sijperable ta.sk endeavoring to I

    ' keep the traffic flow ordt.rly and | movmg saf*‘ly

    Besides Ignoring signals ^and I j .signs. (Jreen said "tc»c, Inig** a p»T- j 1 cent.tge of c)peralc-rs « ithc r \:u k or do not pra* t.« c- selec tion of a speed whic h. enables them to c cmtrol j

    1 Iheir vehic les .1, an • rn« rger.ey | which may be of the.r own making

    . c.r r reateci by ‘ *the? opc-rators"

    Kost r < hildren

    More than ‘JU.OOO chiUiren in Knglan't are b-ung brought uf' by 13 ,n.-iib]e for Important actions. StirL'eons who have to operate on human brain.s want all poaatble in*, formation as to the location o f control center.**, so as to avoid un- ne. 4‘s.sary damage.

    The raclio.s apparently are addr i4ig tc) the information about thR so-( allecj motem centers. This Ifl UlR •tn aw in humans it is near the top ■ d t ‘ .c he id wliich controls move- m*‘n’ ;-i like reaching for a drink,

    i The i;iclic>H indicate that the motor ' c r.tci rr.ny have some control* p f hra:. h»-s in other parts of a brain.

    Stir Up Your I Lazy Uver UHe

    To Ilrip Relieve ContUpatiootI f liver bile doesn't flow freely event ̂ Into your mteetlnee—consttpetloo lu heedechM, mental dullnees a ball aiu'c reeling often result. 8o take Dr* Edwtrds* Olive TebleU to Insure gentUt yet thoTouffh. bowel movements. OUva TftbleU are simply iDonder/ul to stir Up your liver bile secretion and tone tm muscular intestinal action. lS4.304.fl04*

    To Relieve Misery i m t Y O R H

    EXCURSION THIS SUNDAYLv. Windsor 1:30 A.M. Lv. Hartford 8:45 A.M. Due Hew York (G.C.T.) 11:25 A M. Returning Lv. Hew York (G.C.T.) 8:40 P.M. ________

    Cl'i'dc'en 5 end under 12 helf fare. Ticketi itfictly limited to cspaclty ol Soecisi Coech Treint— Purchete in edvence.

    I (Kown doei no! incljde fadarat Tai

    RoundTrip

    Fere

    THE N E W H A V E N r r

    A C H IN G -ST IFF-SO R E

    I MUSCLESI For Qwififc Relief—Rub On

    w HUSTeroIFLook into the Inst MUê

    F IR S T

    To Attend Parley On Defense Work

    Hartford, Nov. 6. — (4*1 — Mrs. Ralph C. Lasbury. Jr., dirMtor of the Women’s Division of the State Defense Council, leaves Hartford today for Washlnfcton where she v/ill fonfe." with otHciala on women's defense activftiea.

    She will attend on Saturday a conference with Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and the presidents of 67 women's national orfranizationa and repreaentatlvea of women's sc.

    . tivitles in state defense SKencies. The meeting was called by the Office of Civilian Defense to coordinate women's activities in the program.

    Mrs. Laabury will spend Friday at the national headquarters of the American Red Cross where she will discuss with officials plans for the orffOnlzation of the recently announced Connecticut Women's Motor Corps. She alao plans to confer with Mrs. Eloiae Davison who is in charge of women's activities at the Office of Civilian Defense;

    She'sworking harder than aD IT C H

    D IG G E R !

    Seeks iM Tg tt Wheelbamm-

    ^nola. Pa., Nov. 6—(^ — Frank W. Jacobs, with an eye on the next election, today acoutdd around for a larger wbfclbarrow. He .conveyed two woioaeii'suppoeters to Uta

    4,.nails la. hia-two paaMtiffar )ob on.■ ' r.te- ■ ■

    IT'S a srientifir fact that a woman who uses her eyes under poor lighting conditions for prolonged periods of time is working harder than a ditch-digger. The

    result of it is frequently eyestrain, which in turn can lead

    to headaches, fatigue, and even nervous indigestion.

    That's why it's so important to have light that's safe for

    seeing. Why not stop in at your nearest dealers, or our

    office now and look over the modem lighting device. See

    the I. E. S. lamps, scientifically designed to protect eyes.

    Don't risk eyestrain for yourself or your family. Find

    out about safe lighting today!

    The Manchester Electric Divisionfvm ca ta tm o a a jtfo w m a m eA x i

    MAYBB it’ s a little hard to picture this trim Buick as it 44-ill look on that unknown day when you come to turn it in.

    There may be scars in its fenders, and use-stains on its upholstery- hut the thin^ that matters is i t ’ll still be going great guns.

    You can count on that husky valve- in-head straiftht-ei^ht to be tickin{( off the miles with the satisfying extra efficiency it.now boasts.

    Y’̂ ou can rely on Compound Car- buretiont to hold your gas-costs down, squeezing every last power- packed mileoutuf thefuelyoubum.

    There won’t be any loss o f easy comfort in those all-coil springs, or any need for care to keep them gentle.

    As for the drive—well, there's just nothing to go wrong with a simple steel shaft encased in a-stout torque tube!

    tAvuUble At tHgkt extrm cost on . Buick Special models, stAncUrti on a11 other SerseA.'

    Tires? Y'ou may be through the second or third set before you’re fin ished 4vith^any car you buy now —but those Buick broad- rim wheels w ill see to it you get the top mileage each can give.

    ■U IC K RUILDS FO R D I P I N S I

    Ome mmtgmmmmliRmiidlmg Prmtt A

    As for such things as con necting rods and bearings—Buick rods are extra strong, while tests show that our oil-cushioned hearings last tw ice as long as others under the same load and service.

    So go right ahead!- Buy this Buick on its last mile instead of its first. That’s the smart way to buy these times. . ■ :

    O f this you can be sure: N o other car’s going to offer greater surety of

    OHMUMW

    long, pleasurable, dependab le service — so if you can get a Buick now, better grab it!

    No etfier cor haaAU THIS FOR YOU IN 'FORTY>TWOFIUSAU ntAIOHT-IIOHT VAlVt - IN - MAD IN(MN1 A COMPOUND CARtUUTION (tlonJwJ on mot modvis) * OIL-Ct»HIONIO CRANKSMAn PINS AND JOUtNAlS * HUaW-Un CONNiCT. INO RODS * SnPON PAIKMO SRAKl * MOAD- IIM WHtnS * PUUT AOJUnAKI miBMe POST * ROOT RT NSHIR * WlATMRWAROm VINTI-HiATIR (ttafidard on liMim rndnli. •ccMtery en ether Serieei

    s m ffi BUY BUKKGORMAN MOTOR S

    285 MAIN STREPT -IWMN MTTM AUTOkoMilS AM iUMT

  • . ir- «

    MANCHESTER E\"ENTM3 HERALD. MANCHESTER. CONN. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 0. 1041

    HUnrlfratrrlEofttittg XrraUi

    . P U B U S H f c I O B T T H B t f S R A L D P R I S T I K O C O ^ I K C

    II Bitacll tftraat M a n c h a a t t r . C o n n .

    T H O M A S P E R 0 U 8 0 H O a n a r a l U a n a v r r

    r o u n d e d O c t o b t r I . 1 1 1 1

    P u b l i s h e d E v e r y B v s n i n g E x c e p t S u n d a y s a n d H o l t d a y a E n t e r e d a t t h e P o s t O f f i c e a t M a n c h e s t e r . C o n n . , a s S e c o n d C l a s s M a i ) M a t t e r .

    S U B S C R I P T I O N R A T E SO a i i T e a r b y M a l l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . H . O OP e r M o n t h b y M a i l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I - f OS i n g l e C o p y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t . u lO e i t v e r e d O n e T e a r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 9 . 0 0

    M E M B E R O Ft h e a s s o c i a t e d p r e s s

    T h e A a s o c i s t c d P r c e s I s e x c l u s i v e ’ l y e n t i t l e d t o t h e u s e o r r e p u b l l c a * t i o n o f a l l n e w s d i e p a t c h e a c r e d i t e d t o I t o r n o t o t h e r w i s e c r e d i t e d i n i h i s ’ p a p e r a n d a l s o t h e l o c a l n e w s p u b l i s h e d h e r e i n .r A l l r i g h t ! o f r e p u b l l c a t l o n o f

    e c t a l d i s p a t c h e e h e r e i n a r e a l e o e s e r v e d

    taken ita th inking th a t th is na' tion ha^ any choice of turning back. fTba adm lntatration i i p et- hapa ahually m istaken when

    LaltIt

    th in k s I th a t our decision to go can be made to op erate on

    portable instalm ent b a s is

    W a t between us and H itler is as

    ahead |caa coip|roi

    pier, more .prosperous all around.

    C hristm as

    The CaucuH LiataA s it developed a t the m eeting

    of local election offic ia ls with S e cre ta ry o f S ta te Chase Going

    is no l(\gal b arrier to the proce.ssreal slid Inevitable a s H itler's im- j Woodhouae the o th er night, there alterajble purpose and expanding attaclji can m ake it. L et's have this liatlon, from the ad m inistration (jlown to the m ost average citixeh, m ake a clear admission of thljs and then get about winning.Instead of debating, the war.

    He| Prayed With Gandhi

    cau cus ll.sts combined w ith the present census of voters in M anchester.

    It is u nfoftu nate. however, that some of the enum eratora have g iv en voters the Im pression th at reg istratio n on one p arty list or an other is a required form ality .

    Lord H alifax , the man who got _ . . . . . ̂ .• 1 " I There is nothing compul.sorv aboutalong with Gandhi by spending'

    K u t i • e r % l e e c l i e n t o f N . E . A . S e r v i c e I n c .

    F u b l i e h e r e ^ K e p r e e e n t x t t v e e . T h o J u l t u i M e i h e w t S p e c t e l A g e n c y ^ N e w Y o r k . C h i c a g o . D e t r o i t a n d B o e t o n .

    M E M B E R A U D I T C l R r i l L A T l O N S .

    B U R E A U o r

    T h e H e r a l d P r i n t i n g C o m p a n y , t n ^ . a a e u m e e n o f i n a n c i a l r e a p o n e i - b l l l t y f o r t y p o g r a p h i c a l e r r o r s a p p e a r i n g i n a d v e r r i e e m e n t e i n t h e M e n c h e e t e r E v e n i n g H e r a l d .

    Thurs

    serious and concerned. They hau I dre-s-sed the -l.'onnecticut Council never prayed w ith Gandhi. i of Adult Education In New Haven

    -------- ------------------- I a few days ago."W e teu ch ers," said P rofessor

    Shepard , "have been peddlers of Inforniatinii, hut Idirnt In the world of Ideas . . . .

    ".Anw^lca has the m ost e x pensive 'education In the world and the least e fficien t."

    T hat, of course, is a ch arge too extrem e to be com pletely true.

    \\hv You Should Shop EarlyThe old admonition to "Ik i Your '

    C?hristmas Shopping E a rly " tak es , on added force thl.s year, and wise M anchester people will begin Im mediately.

    One reason - not the m ost Im portant— is th at th is y ear Is going to see the fu llest pocketbooics In many a year. M any long fe lt needs are goin^ to be m et; many a long-repressed desire to share in the giving as well as the rece lv H ^ Jv ,".n .i ^ “ W fll convention th at " I he

    W arin g wildly, he rushedd. we w-gre glRi in d cstn ii lion. | enough to be given easily a t home ™

    and wc had a -sl.Kk attitu d e ot and is often productive of f f o o d V r n w A '’^nlv S e ". ynicism to turn tow ard e v e r y - ; results. sh o p " And so thev werething. We were m erely p art ol i In addition to these purely local Roth T ex as and the Im aginarv a generation a generation .singu- mea.sures a ffectin g the .scalp alone, ; equipment come In for a little larly imeq,upped to m eet a sudden | it will be found that general exer- i ribbing In the y am about the regi- silu allon m which g rea t world ] cises w ill Improve the health of | m eet th a t had beat Its way for cu rren ts were to reestablish the the hair sim ply because exercise I seven days through the bone drv v ibrant rea lity of the various I .'tlrs up a b e tte r blocal circu lation j prohibition counties In the Sabine codes and phdosophies of life. And and this activ e circu lation rushes | river .sector. During a rest period p art of this generation, today. Ju st to the scalp along with the other or a forced m arch, a sergeant saw goes on. believing in nothing, ju s t p a r t* of the body. 'o n e of hla men paw ing the a ir with

    Rem em ber, each hair root must 1 one foot and gesturing endle.sslv he bathed In blood to grow prop- i with a crooked elbow "W h at goes erly. I t Is n early alw ays tru e th at I on h e r e ' " bellowed the sergeant, to g et a t the root of your hair The p rivate wailed. "Sh u ck s, trouble you m ust begin w ith the •'^arge. I'm Just having a few Im ag- roots of your hair. , inary beers. A fter seven days In

    If your hair Is falling out. th is ''o iin trv . it don't take muchindicates th a t the blood has not i been properly nourished or th a t '

    itrcuiatlor

    end of the C hristm as spirit Is go- ! mg to be ftilfllled. There are go- j ing to be more C hristm as shop- : pers than ever; they are going to j spend more money than ever, and

    buy more things than ever. In

    Our sidmlars In p o litka seem to pace orJ? another most o f the tim e, and for answ er to Profeasor Shepard s', extrem ity one has only to turn to P resident Js m e s L. M cConsughy of W esleyan U niversity , who was up in M aine, alm ost

    as It was taughtIt Is against this brand of

    negatixe evnlcNiii In our eduea- tlon th at P rofessor Shepard Is leading his revolt, his rrusade for a new era and a new fashion o f positixe belief to follow and cure the soulless sophlstleatlon of the c jn le a l decade.

    Indirectly , although hia topic Is education, he may do the field of politics a g rea t service. D em ocracy was one of the th in g s In which the cynical decade did not consldef it necessary to believe. Rcspcmsi- billty for participaticm In dem ocracy w as another. T h a t Is one reason why there has been a grow ing tendency to leave dem ocracy In the hands of the professional p illtic la n s , one reason why our "b est m inds" have so often held them selves cynically a lo ft from public life.

    irr.aTlnatlon W henever arm y pav Is

    I Honed, vou are certa in tomen-hear

    .\nierican school has its fau lts and I its c r it ic s but nothing th a t free I American.s have ever devised. Invented or eatsblished has a.s good a record of accom iilishinent ' ■

    B u t w hat Profc.-.sor Shepard was try in g to get 'W'cr w ith his

    H E A L T H A N D D I E T

    A D V I C E

    Furnished b ; tbe .McCoy Henitb Servloa

    \ddreas oonimunlcatlons to The Uemld, Attention McCoy

    Uraltb Service

    the cltc iila tlo n to the scalp Is de- / . ' " " " " a m to nearfective. In p rac tica lly every rase. | ® ^ " t the Ashebo^,^ N C.. ra feUtese ca u ses can be corrected ' in aiWlHon to dishingFurth erm ore, as you begin to feed .TV "i*'®**® "/id Fren ch fries waa the hair by feeding the blood- n i c n t O i i t - i ‘ ~ ~

    p u t N f x I Y r a r . P | j j

    On CliiireliesC hicago, Nov. f) ,V, The oM gray m are a in 't what she ii.sta l,e in fa c tj ahc'.s a lot more Im poitant, and it's possible she'll become in creasing ly so.

    Down on the farm they are view ing the horse with heightened nji- preclation ns rofirern iiioiiril.s over the output of farm eijuipment next year. W hile the Indo.stiy'.s quota for 1942 has not been dei i,|c(l o f ficially yet inform al c (iiivei satnm s Huggc.st a shar p i ui tailiMcTii is possible.

    W ork on a broad alloi atioo schem e for farm rnai hinery is under way in W a.shlngton and indu.s- try rep resen tativ es are rrmferring V llh t jff lc e ol Prodiii lion M a n a g e m ent m em bers on variou.s proposals.

    MIekard's l(olir#» barra^kii. 'Aak fa ta lly in-

    •*arly . t '" la y he ' wa.«<t r ; j (k by un uutornoljilf* an l̂

    latur n jh ov»t )»y aruithpr r'aj*'Mif ')nv*T of th*‘ f a r w)tiuh

    h it'H ill, \vhos«* rlcjith ( ume on thp.* vf his ttate p o ln .’ HI U jrhar 'i Fitz^^'raUj. ■Zt. (if Albany, N. V H

  • I'i

    I

    ;

    I*AUE isxuxi> MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MANCHESTER, CONN. THURSDAV, NOVEMBER 6, 1941

    DaUy Radio ProgramsE M t e m S t a n a r t T im e

    Pictures Miles ApartCombined by Television

    Nov 6 —W — T e l e - - 8 :ir> M B S : C B S ; 9 :0 0 NBC-Bluo: 10:00 M B S : 10:15 C B S ; 1J::10 M B S : r.':0(' N B C C B S .

    T a lks N BC -Blue 7:.10 Son. Hiram .Inhn.son on “Poace Or W a r : " NBC-Bliio 9:1.5 America 's Town Moi tinn ".Mii.st \Vc F iRhl .Japan? " four sprakt rs: C B S 10:15 W. Avoroll H a r n m a n from In-

    New Yorkvision ha* a new technical t r i c k — and a pretty good one. I t is the Uki(ig of Images from two ca m eras miles apart and combining two pictures into a composite whole.

    The s tu n t— actually a real a c complishment— was given its f irst ui in .antrv on the air over N BC 's station dianapohs: NB( -Blue 10 ,30 Sens, in te lecast ing election returns a t Claude Pepper and H M^ Kilgore the same time that a wrestling on N eutrality Kepeal. NBC-Hed m a l c h w a s being shown.

    The election returns cam e from the Radio City studios, white f ig ures on a black background, and were allotted the top half of the picture. Below the w restlers could be seen without visual In ter ference as they performed -from a B rooklyn arena.

    Unlike the tr ick photography of the movies, where plenty of care and time can be taken to get re sults; the double television is a matter of splitting seconds into millionths, for the output of the two cam eras must be synchronized exact ly at the transm itter, or no go.

    The studio cam era w as connected to the t ran sm itte r by cable, while the wrestling signals came in via radio wave.

    T h e A tlan tic ocean will separate the answering board in Clifton Fa d im a n 's Inform ation Plea.«e for the night of Nov. 14. Two m em bers will be in New 5'ork and two In London.

    A two-way shortwave circuit will m ake such a Q. A. period possible. It has been used in similar b road casts heretofore, but not to link up a half-way-round the world quiz show.

    In London will he Leslie Howard and Jo h n Gunther, with the regulars, Jo h n K ieran and K P. Adams. In New Y ork

    Topies Tonight, the M B S ; 7 :1 5 N BC -Red ;

    war 7:00 7:30 M B S ;

    11:15 Floyd Odium on "Mobilizing Sm all Industry

    NBC-Red H F a n n y B r ic e ; 8;.30 Henry Aldrich; 9 B in g Crosby Hour: 10 Vallee and B arry m o re ; 10:00 F ra n k Fay.

    C B S 7 :30 Miiudie's Diary : 8 Death Valley D ays : 8 :3 0 Duffy's T avern , 9 M ajor Bowes am ateurs.

    N BC -Blue 7r,'i0 In term ezzo ; 8 .March of T im e; 8 ;30 V arie ty from Camp Kiipx.

    M B S H .Morton Gould concert ; 9 :30 America Preferred, new tim e; 10.15 Sam m y Kaye orchestra .

    What to exp ■( t Fr iday : the war Morning: K:00 .NBC C B S ; 8 :15

    .NB('-Fted. 8;.55 N B C -Blu e ; 9 :00 C B S : 10:00 .MBS, 10:15 .NBC-Blue: 11:00 .MBS: 1 2 :00 .MBS

    ̂ Afternoon: 1:4.5 N B C : 2 :00 I M BS: 3;.55 C B S ; 1:15 C B S .MRS; .1 .5 5 .NBC-Blue, fio ii .MBS: 6 :25

    .N.BC-Red; 6 .4 5 C B S .NBC-Blue..NBC-P.ed 12-noon Words and

    .Music 2 p m. Light of the World; 5 :45 Hep. H Knutson on "Neu- tralitv Repeal Means W a r " C B S

    12 noon K a te S m ith : 3 :15 E a s t p m new series, Americana map the skies; 4 :3 0 Lanilt Trio, NBC- Blue 10:15 a m P resco tt P re sents: 12:30 p. m Farm and Home Hour, 2 music apprei lation .MBS

    2 :30 Philadelphia orchestra : 5 :15 S h a t te r P a rk e r c i r c u s . . Short W aves 1IAT4 Biid.apest 7 :30 Week in Hungary, G.SC* GSD lyOiidon 8 :30 B rita in Sp eaks ; TG- WA Gii.ateniala 10 Railio theater, 2RO Rome 10:30 News

    Little Again Heads Grange

    Re-Electeil for Thinl Consecutive Term ; To Hold Masfjiierade.Stan ch ester Grange, No. 31, P. of

    H . a t its meeting last night in the •Masonic Temple reelected Wilbur T. L i t t le as m aster of the Giancr'' for the third consecutive term A iocal dairyman and owner of Sh am rock Farm , Mr. L it t le is a c tive in various sportOrganizatuiiis, and also holds the office of g atekeeper in F a s t Central Pomona Grange.

    Cither officers elected last night follow:

    Overseer. Raymond Thom as;

    Temple Beth Sholom News

    Friday, Nov. 7— E vening services a t 8 p. m. Book review: "T h e Keya of the Kingdom." by A. J . Cronin.

    Satwrday. Nov. 8 —Children .services a t 10 a. m. Readers : Connie Kllis and Lee Freedman.

    Tuesday, Nov. 11 — Red Cross Circle at 1 p, m. Hebrew adult ela.s.s a t 3 p , ,m

    Wednesdat ', Nov. 12 Social meeting of the Brotherhood a t 8 p. m.

    Holton CenterMrs. R. K. Jon ea 8908,* Manchester

    Wilbur T. I J t t Io

    w t r iR / '' Kilocycles 13«0

    ThuriKlas, Nov.P . M .

    3 :3 0 —Guiding Light 3 : t b — Vie and .Sade 4 :0 0 - B a c k s ta g e Wife 4:1.5— Ste l la Dallas 4 :3 0 — Lmenzo .bines 4 :45— Young Widder Brown 8 ;0 0 — W hen a Girl Marriea.8 :1 5 — Portia Faces Life.8 :3 0 — We. The Abbotts 8:48— Vagabonds.8 :5 5 — "S ta n d By A m e r le a "6 :0 0 — News ami Weather.8 :1 8 — S tr ic t ly Sports8 :3 0 — Professor Andre Schenker.8 :4 5 — Lowell Thomas.7 :00— Fred W aring's Orchestra , 7 :1 5 — News of the World.

    ■ 7 :3 0 — Quiz of Two O tie s .8 :0 0 — Maxwell House Time.8 :3 0 — The Aldrich Family.,9 :0 0 — K r a f t Music Hall.

    1 0 :0 0 — Rudy Vallee Program 10 :30— F ra n k Fay. Comedian 1 1 :0 0 —News and W eather 11:15— Dance Music 11:30— Jo e and Mabel 12 :00— W ar News.12:05— Reflections in Rhythm.* 12 :30— Freddie Ebner's Orchestra.

    Tomorrow'a ProgramA. M

    6:00— Reveille and Agrieultiiriil Newa.

    6 :2 5 — News ' .—6 : 3 0 —Sunrise .Speelal6 :5 4 — Newst : 0 0 — Morning W.itch8 : 0 0 —News. Weather8 :1 5 — European News Roundup8 :3 0 — Radio Bazaar8:50— W T lC 's Program Farads9 :0 0 — Playhouse9 : 1 5 — Food Newa.9 :3 0 — News Reporters 9 :4 0 — As The. Twig la Bent.

    1 0 :0 0 — Beaa Johnson 1 0 :1 5 — Bachedor's Children 1 0 : 3 0 — Help Mate .1 0 :4 5 — Road of Life 1 1 :0 0 — M ary Marlin.1 1 :1 5 — Pepper Young's Family. 1 1 :3 0 — "T h e Sto ry of Bud B a r t o n " .11 :45— David Harum 1 3 :0 0 noon—Gene and Glenn P . M.1 2 :10— Luncheonaires!1 2 :3 0 — T h e W eather Man.1 2 :3 5 — Day Dreams 1 2 : 4 5 - -Singin' Sam

    1 :0 Ot—N ews, W eather 1 :15— T h e Litt le Show.1 :3 0 — M arjo rie Mills. "2 :0 0 — Your Neiglibor.3 :1 5 — Medley Tlmic 3 :3 0 — Concert Matinee.3 :0 0 — A gain st the Storm.3 :1 5 — M a Perkins.

    Thursday. Nov. 6P .M.3 30 Renfro Valley Folks

    News.W ar Conune.nlHry .-\d l.lner Marv .M iflinThe'i '.oldl.ergs

    T i l . ' u 'Neill 's Ben Bei ole .New s, Wi ll! her He'dd.i Ho[iper.s Hollywood Frazier llutil .News \Vm I, .'sillier .N'e'.is The World Today.Amos 'll', .\nd>'L in iiy Ro.s.s .Maiiilies Diarv

    ley Days. iilTy's Tavern

    F.Itiier f iav is .News.Mamr itowes’ Hour.I Ileiin .Miller'rf'Orchestra

    niioiinced..\rt .Jai'Fi'tl H Or. hestra. Es.so Reporter .News and

    Wi-nlherII (15 S l 'o i ts Roimdii[>.II 10 .- Guy Ixm bardo 's O n heslra11 ;,TII V i ' ig lin .Monroes Onhe.s-

    tra12 00 Luilon Wtdls. News12 0.5 Harry .lames' Orchestra. 12:30 _J4ob Che.stera On hestra

    ^ I 'o n i o r r m i 's Progniii i

    Mu;;ir,

    lecturer, .Mrs W. T L itt le ; s tew ard. F ra n k ,N'ev. to n : a.s.sistarit siew.aid. Kdi ard La Chance; i hap- 1am, .Mrs. Iv.i Ingraham : treasurer. .Mrs .Mlnni.' S tro m ; secretary . .Mr.s I lea lt ice .Mamiing, gatekeeper. .Mrs. I'Mw.aid L iC lia n te : Ceres..Mis.s E sther .Anderson: Pomona. .Mrs. F r i n k .Newton; Flora. .Mrs B eafr iee Fos ter : lady a.ssistani .steward. .Mrs. ll.a. rv White

    J a m e s Scott was elected a m em ber of the e x e c ' i ln e comm ittee for three years . The above officers will be inst.alle.l earlv ui .laniinry.

    Plans were .al.so made a t last night's-, meeting for a m.xsqiierade party at Coventry lake Friday evening. Members of the (Jr.ange and; their invited gilesls are asked to* meet Tn fiont of the .M.as.inic T^'ii- ple 111 seven o'l loi k Friday, from |

    Philip Hiitehinson of F o r t B ragg . North Carolina, la en jo y ing a furlough a t the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Hutchinson.

    .Mrs. E. 3 . Haley, Mrs,. F red Baker , and J a m e s F le tc h e r were recent visitors in New Y o rk City. Mrs. B a k e r celebrated her b ir th day by tak in g the trip.

    Mrs J a m e s Rogers is visiting a t the home of her parents in E a s t Longnieadow, .Mass.

    The farewell luncheon served by the Center Red Cross Group in honor of .Mrs. A. Kline and the mothers of sons in the U. S. ser vice was attended by about thirty. The surplus food was sold, and tlie proceeds donated to the Red Cross. This will help to purchase incidentals

    Milton Reader is a patient a t the M an rh ester .Memorial hospital. His rondition has improved.

    Mrs. Carrie Austin, Mrs. Fred Austin of .Marlboro, and Mrs. KiT- bie Carpenter of E a s t Hampton were recent guests of Mrs. R. K. Jones.

    .Mr and Mrs Kinsley Carpenter, and daughter, Linda I.ee are v is i t ing at the home of her parent^ Mr. and .Mrs. Mvron Lee.

    Made Officer In Air Corps

    Wasco E. Giidjiinis Is Given Commission at Turner Field, Georgia.Aviation Cadet Wa.seo E. Giid-

    jiints, age 26, graduate of the Class of S E -41-H , son of .Mr. and Mrs. Jo h n Gudjunis, of 106 Rus.sell street, Manche.ster, was comm issioned a Second Lieutenant in the Army Air Corps on October 31. at Turner Field, Albany. Georgia. Lieutenant Colonel Joh n B. Pat- riek, rommanding.

    Turner Field is an .-Advanced

    RockvilleLewi* H. UuipnHui

    96, Recirvllle

    Aides Named By Selectmen

    Town Officials o f Vernon IMake Their Ap- poiiitments for Year.Rockville, Nov. 6 I Special I

    The selectm en of the Town of Vernon, E rn es t A. Schindler, Ker-

    Training School of the Southea.st ^ E ll io tt and Christopher K.Air Corps T ra in in g Center, Major General W a lte r R . Weaver, com-

    Boy Scout News.] Wat.son BeArh, president of

    the ( 'b a r te r ('ouncil, BoySi'.iiit.s of ‘America, is.sur«l an rm ergency appea) Weflnesday to all qu^lfted men m g re a te r Hart-*

    «nd siirpounding towns to t)e-f>>r(i,‘ liflie art ive in Sco\jtinc.

    ■ The pro.sent emergency of the n.itjon, a.s a whole.” sanl .\lr Mcarh. "h a s created grave local

    , . , I prniilrm.s in the l ank.s of our lead-wtiiriT p.;uit tii.'ns|...,tat,..;,--will he ,h,M,.„uncil Many have been' ̂ ' dtafted nnd»*r the Selective SOrv-

    M'S. Dons .SwMlIo'w IS g r n . 'n . l| „ , ,.■ .aum:ui ..f ,.riap^.;me,it.s, Mrs .available because of in- reased ,n I arl llildiiig wiU see, to tlie n I re.sliiiic IIIs . .Wilia.r T. I iltl

    Jone.s, today aniiouneed their appointm ents for a one year term ending October 28, 1942 as follows:

    Old Age Assi.stance T a x E n u m erators : H erbert L, Schenier,ch airm an: Casimir M. Kanski.' ( 'anv ; Karl Baer, Canv.: Malcolm Alley, Canv.: Town Coiin.sel, H arry H. Lugg; Supt of AlmshfKlse. Fd- ward G. Harding: jaurtor. Joh n B u m s ; Dog W a r d e ^ Jo h n B o u cher; Tree Wardprf, F ra n k Chapman: Agent, Elmwood cemetery. Charles O. Ddcft.

    A ttorney H arry H Lugg sue- ceeds A ttorney B. J Aekernian who bks been town roiinsel for .several years . t

    H n i w c y Re|>ort'^ W i l l i a m V .^ p id la k has issue ,1 the followirtgdhTianrial report of the Legion Hallowe'en party : ca.'h dnnation.s. St 1)2.50,

    F.xpense.s, apples S15.75: doughnuts, 521 1)0; eider. $7.50; piqi- com. $21 08; hnlloon.s, hags, eiips.

    |, .$12.92: prizes. $19 25; loud speaker, $5 00, making a total of $102,50.

    In addition to the rash dona- , , — It ions, there were several mer-

    mandiirk- B i-’ situated three ̂ ..^andise prizes donated, miles e a s t of the citv of Albanv. ‘ _ , . .ipi:' T his Advanced Training I

    ^ i hcol l.s one of the nio.st recentlv ' The Tolland fire department activated under the Army Air ('orps expan.ston program. an«i as

    I such, play® a m a jo r part in the production of navigators and pi- L it.s for defense.

    ] The graduation exeruse.s were 1 openetl with the Invocation being ’ given by (diaplaln Palmer P

    Pierce. The Oath of Office wa.s administered by ( 'apta in William S Co(xk, Post Adjutant

    The commanding officer ot Turner Field. Lieutenant ('olonel .John B. Patr ick , made the introductory remark.s and pre.‘*ented M ajor General W a lter R. Weaver

    j t'l the newjy commissiune a ’ trofip.^, .sutvi's Sfout.s in 117tro()[i.s, 72r) (hib.s rn-2S pack.s m the

    town.s which are admini.ster#-. through n ni.strict admini.Ntrn-tilULS

    (,)pp"rlunitiej>4 exist, according t " •Mr. Reai-h. n.s direct leaders such as scnutma.sters. a-sst.stant .scout- ma.^^ters, c iihma.Mters; senior scout lt'atierThe W. .S. C. .S. of the Vemfm

    Methodist churrh will serve a harvest supper at the church this evening with the first table being at six 'o'clack.

    Recital TonightRaymond Kiinlcki! Rfxrkville's

    talented young violinist will give a recital at the .Sykes Auditorium this evening at 8:15 o'clock. He will be assisted by Rocco D'Esopo. baritone of Hartford and one half of the proceeds will go to the USO.

    Both of these young men are

    Troop 49—Exchange Club'The meeting started at seven

    o'clock and ended at 8:55. Mr. Tanner of Troop 98 was the guest this weekly session, and he gave many interesting points regarding the Scouting program.

    A short recreation period was held following Mr. 'Tanner's in- slrucUon, after which a period on Scouting requirements was held. During this time, the work being done by the other troops in town was discussed and next Monday night, it la planned to visit Troop 13

    At the present time, the troop has three boy* who have aucceas- fuUy passed their tenderfoot teats; John Donovan. Fred Clapp and Bob McKinney. It also has two second class scouts. Ted Ducy and Dick Hyde and one Star Scout, Joe Thompson.

    This Is a new troop tn town, and if any local boy wishes to Join, he Is tnrtted to come to the Hollister Street School any Monday evening at seven o'clock.

    11«am.in, second class, 6 9 .P r o v i - ! clom p street . Won-eater, Mass.

    Charles Cheater Hayrs, seaman, second class, 791 Amherst street . Akron. Ohio.

    H erbert Ralph Burrell , .seaman, serond class. 1291 W est |C6th street, Cleveland. Ohio. *

    Will iam Harding Ne\s,ton. yeoman. third class, 801 stri-ot, S W . Roanoke, Va.

    Gerald Edward Mills, seaman, .sec ond cla.ss. 4427 Sixteenth street. Detroit.

    Next of Kin .AdvisedTheir next of kin have been ad

    vised of their death by the Navy.The seven men or iginally re

    ported on board the vessel hut located el.sewhere by a check of the original list were named by the Navy aa:

    Peter Anderson, water tender, first class. RFD No. 1, Box B-3. Sumner, Wash., now on duty at the receiving ship, Boston.

    Frederick Arthur Bishop, torpedoman. third class, 451 Broadway, Bayonne. N. J.. now on duty at Naval Operating Base, Norfolk, Va.

    Jack Austin Campbell, fireman first class, 412 Befiemead street. Greensboro. N. C., now on duty at the receiving ship at Philadelphia.

    Vernon Everett Howell, fireman first class, RFD No. 2, Thomvllle, Ohio, now on duty s t the receiving ahip a t Philadelphia.

    ■Vincent C. Lane, radioman, third clasa, 3 Barcelow street. Port Jarvis, N. Y., now on duty St the Naval Operating Bass at Norfolk, Va.

    Hirman Morgan. machinist's mate first class, 432 North Front street. Hamilton, Ohio, on duty at the receiving ship at Boston.

    Marvin J . Wilson, shlpfitter third class, Gassawsy, W. Va., aboard the U. S. S. Denebola.

    Note to Scribes: This a-eekly column on local Boy Scoiit activities will appear In The Herald regularly. I t . is requested that all troop wHte-ups be addressed to the Boy Scout Editor at The Herald and reach this office by Thursday morning of each week.

    A p ^ n tm ext Approved

    ■ Chungking, Chins. Nov. 9—fvpj— The Canadian govehunent it. was announced here today, has ajv

    M akes E n e m y of Dog

    Denver—(JP)— Mrs. Margaret Simon Investigated scratching noises on her front door screen and found a young eagle, exhausted from a long flight. She took it inside and rigged up a broom handle perch on the back porch—which was all right with Mickey, the wire-haired terrier. That is until the eaglet ate 'up a plate of hamburger set out for Mickey. The bird department at the city xoo has a new eagle.

    winners o f the Auerbach schhlur- shlp a t the Hartford School of Mu- .ar now, and they were totally unhappy in their concept. "

    Two Are Held In Slashing

    H aiifonl Soldier, HomeJ On Fiirloii^li, Victim' O f .\ltack.Hattforcl, Nov. G -(/Ty Mnnue!'

    Hormnn, 25, home on furlough from I*'ort DevenH, Mass.. \va®‘ s lash t 'd in a lMm*hrj)oni here early thus morning. An emergency op*, eralion wa.s performed at Hart-ford hospital to s.ive the .soldier's Itfe and later tod.'iy his condition wa .4 doscrilH'd as. fair.

    Two men were nrrestetl as hi.s alleged ass.iHnnts. One (d* them, ( ’lyile Lowing. 20, Is charged with assault with intent to kill, ( ' la r - ence Svilor, 2S. is charged with aggravated assault.

    SlushiMl on ICIght S ideA^Toitling to the refiort of De

    tective .Sergt. Joh n 'I'. Langri.sh, Herman and Lillie Mae ( leer were eating at the lnn» hroorn when the fight occurreti. Tiie ppllce report said that witru*s.ses saw lo w in g and Sydor go over to Hermixn's t a ble. Hunches wore thrown and then Herman was slashetl on the right side near the second nb . the knife making a deep wound, a c cording to t,hr police statement.

    Ix>\n H ichla t ; ' ! s t re e t . FntMidS’' and relative.s f m m H a r t fo r d . M an - « he.ster and ( 'n v e n t r v a tten d ed

    T h e brule-ele4 t iinwiappe'd her g i f t s m the liv.ng rr)Om under a b e a u t i fu lly det ora ted u m b re l la , with t h e - g i f t s alta< bed tn it R e- freshmr Max (.'utler of ( 'h icago, who oiiginaled the letdmique, rejiort^'d It bad a iiduo promuincod effect on ' •■rtam resistant form s of ( aiicer .(f tlie mouth, pharynx and larynx t ban uH'lbods in use

    KixJiu'ed III Si/4* Rapidly He disverere of a cancer is the rno. 1 le.sifltar.t to treatm en t, but b‘ the wiitilr Hr**a is expo.S(*d enough to destroy the c^ire, there l.« a dan-

    r,f damaging healthy lissuV at ttie oulur edge of the cancer.

    I»r ( 'o th r emphajYizcd the tei tj- MHjue cfjuM not be rcgardcui as per- fei t yet, and that further use by

    j other physicians would be ne* es- i.sarv tt b in Cur- ritui k .Sound. N f

    British Troopships Reach Singapore

    fi—Slngapore, Nov.

    Priorities Hit •Juke Boxes!

    Defense O ffic ia l Plan To Trim Prodiietion: ' May Make Komhs.Wa.shiMgton, Nov 6 . T. The ̂

    $ 2n,000.000-a-year ju k e hox Indu."- i try ha'l front-row elbow room re- I ."Pived today nt the priorltlea wall- ! i rg wall. I

    .Mamifart'irerB of the rlrkel-in- Ihe-Blol music machines may be able to pa.B." up the reservation, however, if they can s-wltch over In Incendiary bomha

    Defense offir lals haven't de'-ld ed vet exactly w-hat tliey'i: dn a.boiit tr imming ju k e hox prodiir- tion, but they expert t-o do plent',- and most of It will hurt.

    C r if lrs l .Materials l'««d E x p ert* In the 0 P M a Office of

    (.'ivlll.an Supply estimated that the indii.'try last year used about 8.- 90n tons of crit ical materials vitally needed in munition." manu- fai ture Alioiit 5.000 tons of it wa.s "feel, aii'l till' r(*st < opfiei-, rotiber lead, zinc and other rnetals

    To obtain piu h crit ical material." now-, the ImliiPtry first m'lpt ob- -tain priorllicp rat ings and offi- I lala mdicaUitl clearly that the ihani es along that line were about aa oplimi.atlr a." those of a j' lke box ( ;.»t other t ryi fig to get his nickel back

    F a r I>OHn Priorit ies List3'be j'.jke box. they cnnfideil. is

    fur 'Inwn the priorities li«'. if no'

    at the end of it, aa a non-es.aentlal 1 ivlllan product.

    In line with its effort* to prevent civilian industry from being forced out of hii.slnea* by materials -hortages. . OI'M is studying the possibility that the m anufacturers (nay be able lo < onvert their equipment to the m anufacture of Incendiary bombs, signal corps eq'ilpment, bomb-sights, nr other (itdilanre materia ls

    F'or the immediate future, how- I'ver, the iiid-iptry. which employs about 7 'KKi, face." the necessity of 'ising a muirit'ide of substitute materia ls lo keep operating.

    OPM s plans for the j ' lke s are farther advanced than those for pintcall mac hine." and the other coin-operated machines, b'lt the materials axe has been sharpened for them as well

    Japaiuvse Liner Leaves Honolulu

    Honolulu, Nov, 8— i e >—The liner Taiyo Maru sailed for Ja p a n last night carrying 456 Japane.se passenger." re t ’irnlng lo their hnme- lancl

    The departure was delayed by the large amount of baggage to be inspeited by customs officials.

    J u s t before .sailing time, a score of t'oa.st Guardsmen boarded the ahip and remained there while the Taiyo pa.Hsed through the channel to the open sea.

    The Taiyo .Maru arrived at llcinoliilu from Ja p a n Nov. 1 with 340 passengers returning to the I'nited Sta tes , most of them sec- 'cnci-generation Jap an ese of Amer- II an bii til

    V

    r r i c s s a n d s p a d A c a tio n s to c h a n g s w ith o u t n o tic»

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    an entirely new kind of ebb and flow of power, the revolution started by Dodge a decade ago reaches its successful climax.

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    I troopship convoy from the United Kingdom arrived today In Slngo-

    I pore, bringing reinforcement* — , sev-ral thousands strong:— for I Britain's Far Eastern command.

    The arrivals Inchidod niimeroua mi-n for the Royal Air Force, In-

    ; fantry. anti-aircraft and search- i light units, and reinforcemen