no. no manchester, c ., monday, february 9. 1959 ... evening hearld...of at \ if manchester \"...

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\ V -. - - >-. AT«rage Daily Nft Praas Run ■ For ttic Week KHditig Febmary 1th, 1S59 - 12,882 ^ Member of the .Audit Bureau of Olrrnlatten, ■.'«r£j Manche$terA CAty of Village Charm The Weathit Foreeaat of C, 8. WeatiMr . . .. Hacardnoa drtvtnf waralatS Know becominf mixed with akiet, freeaina rain tonight. Low fa Me, Tneaday eleet ehang1ng,;t<B g k l a . dfirina day. High In dfc. - ? 7^‘ VOL. LXXVIIL NO. n o (FOURTEEN PAGES) MANCHESTER, Conn ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 (Claaairted Advertlrlng on Pago It) PRICE FIVE CBNTf Court Urged Hartford, Feb. 9 (A>)—A topfh*;;*/ supreme Court of Errors Democratic legislator laid the Sr's Dulles Million Mark West Plan By NORMAN tVALKER Washington. Feb. 9 (/P)^— Unemployment is climbing hack clo.se to the five million mark, economi.sta reported to- an(l a Superior CoOrt «* *t pres ent, with the addition of a family caiH a fiiriirp a n - ’ court functioning aa a diviaion of da>. l he.\ .said a tiguie aj the Superior'Court. | proacliing that mark may he ^ In additton to the two bills in-,shown in the government's corporaUng court reform proposals i coi,„t„ due out tomor-, outlined by Gov. Abraham Ribi- If Reds Block Berlin Road administration plan for re- vamping the state’s courts before the judiciary commit- tee and urged “top priority" for it. Republican leaders countered! were on the committee's agenda, this with a demand for an im- ; ),ill. .sponsm ed by the Leg- harried consideration of a matter | Committee of the State they called one of the most rom- g„,. i., similar in essentials plfx the Leg^islature must consider. admini.«»tiation measure but , . * \ ,i « Senate Majority leader Arthur probate court.*^ in the exceeded since last Apnl when the H. Healey, key apokesman for the reorganization plan. Jot^e.ss count was 120,000. ^ Democratic administration, urged Wallace Baines rR-Biistoli the committee to act favorably on introduced the measure, was the court reform proposals at any b„ckers at the early date. ., hearing. He said the Bar bill wa.s But he left the door open for complete and comprehensive, modification of the messure s Another hill, rai.sed in commit- ’Tili?'' tee last week, would establish a ••The administration b 11s outline municipal court division of the ....... ••a ,o„..o.ch he , ssi^ of Common Plea^. T con, .»r« o.h.r coon mc.oc. winter months beisuse of the weather's effect on construction, farm and otlier outdoor activities The five miiliou mark has not been Bui in recent months Joh Idle- ness has been running a little ahead of corresponding months Brandt Bids West Defy Red Threat ^^■a.‘; h i n g l o n . Ffb. 9 t/P)— year ago. In December the total West Reilill’s Mayor Willx' a suggested approach.' “and undoubtedly there other suggestions as to minor as- pects of reorganization. “How these details are solved is not important. Reorganization of the minor court system is the basic objective, and that's what we want to accomplish." Healey spoke at a crowded uviblic hearing in the Hall of the House attended by more than 300 persons. The two administration bills, both aponsored by Healey, would '•limi- nate 1** trial Justice and munici- pal courts and replace them with a division of a reconstituted, .stale- msintained Common Pleas Court The higher court system would Toronto Union In Full Revolt Against Hoffa was 4,10S.00n or 734,000 more than the 3.374.000 in December 19.’57. .lump Melt Os'er >lillions Tile figure for .lanuary 19.38 was 4 .494,000, a jump of well over a The bill represents the proposals million from December, of the Legislature's Interim Com- If the .lanuary 19.39 idle total in- (rontiniiert on Page Seven) (Contlnned on Page Thirteen) Reuther, C. of C. Hit U.S. Economic Aims P,)-anfit .said today lii.s city | would lip ''.«(|ueP7,pd like a lemon" b.v tlie Rii.asians should the West accept the Soviet ultimatum and witli- di’aw it.s troops. Brandi and hi.s wife Apre In- lerviewed on . television program I N'B('-Toda\'I while they liad breakfast in West fieiinan Am- bassador Wilhelm . Grewe s resi- dence The We.st Be,idin mayor rellcr- ated hiS opinion that evenluallVi a lasting se'.lleir.ent could he worked out between East and West should lhi‘ two parties find a rmais" of •'common inlere.st." Studies Kennan Theory Brandt said he is studying with great interesi a lheor>- pul forth bv the former P S. ,\mbas,sador nigNr..'‘f,eP'* Rejects Substituting East Reds for Soviet Wnshinglon, Fch. 9 i.'Pi—Secretary of State Dulles said to- day the wcstoin .'Mlifs have agreed Renerally on procedures to follow if Russia invokes “phy.sical means" to block access to Beilin. W the same tune he renewed the West's offer to talk ahoiil a genei'al selllemenl. "We aie willing to talk with the Soviets in a sincere ef- fort III reach agreements,” he said. Dulles relurnefl to Washington at 8 a.m., aboard a U.S. .Air l''orce plane from talks at l.ondon. Paris and Bonn. The Secrelar.v said he was reporting promptly to President l•;isenh(lwel . In a prepared statement Dnile.s told newsmen his talks ahroad "reconfirmed the unity and firmness of our position." Ddlm luldcd: f ' ■\\> (1ft accept an\‘ Aiibati- i tntion« of East Germans for the. Soviet ITnion in ita reapnnaibiliUea | Inward Berlin and il-'i oblipationa ■ to ua. and Weal fo.ce.*^ mighl eaae the Waihinglon Feb. 9 Ah -WBltei\‘' Reulher said wa arc probablv , I Reuther told Congress today that sUll producing « little more Ihanj different governmental policie'* j twice as much goods snd service Ft'tfsia George Kenuan. that a' could have pu.slied the ""''hn's ^ as the .Sovoet t mom limited withdrawal of both Ka.sl | production more than $t00 billion Cites Soviet (Inins higher in the pa.st six years. "I can't identify m.v.self with i .......... / ............... ........ .. ■'.'1"“'’; i the details. " Rrandt said. "I feel that a reth.nking of p.uropean polity would be nere.viary." Brandt said the more than two million Berliners are determined to a gist any ii.coi'i/oiation of their ^-Inlo the Soviet orbit. volume, and from "But economic giowtii m the .So problem "This production that we have,viel fninn is advancing four or > now forever lost could well have , five times as fast as our lagging ' .spelled the difference between an' economy has grown in unchallenged continuation o f year.s, " he said. "If both economies United Slates woilrl leadership 1 continue simply ty* g r o w at the and the threatened, unea.sy posi-isame pace as the.v' have done re- Tbronto, Feb. 9 i/Fi—A fullscale jp which we find ourseives to- spectively since 19.30. it will be a revolt against the authority of j day •• j,* said. jmei e 17 or iS years until Soviet Teamsters president James Hoffa! Reulher, head of the TJnlleil pioduclion cni match and surpass erupted yesterday at a meeting of I Auto Workers and an AFL-CIO jours in volume, and from that, Toronto Local 938. I vice president, outlined an exten-1 point forward at is they who will The angry, shouting members j .,jve program of government I threaten to take a suspended their local president and activities he said would assure full lead." voted to clean house. employment and economic growth ' Reuther railed on the govern- His testimony was prepared for nienl to work toward increaseri'j. Mrs. Brandt aaid the women oi ij". '■M,y sona..'VvUl grow i.p in a isBUnitpst. city.' which will be the imand'ing i r e u n i t e d Germany," Brandt said. -Not Frightened Secretary of State Dulles reads a statement to newsmen today at Washington's National Alrporl as he returns from a flying trip to the Capitols of England. Frame and West GenuHiiy where he . Branni aaio cne «nmen O^^ met Allied leaders cm plana (Of. Berlin. (AP Pbptofax), the Senate-House, Economic Com- consumer buying power, extengjon ; \\ eat Berlin ai« not fngnieneo at ____________ i, ------------------ , m i . ---------- ---------- eompisints of collusion between the I bnittw studying general economic of the Fair 'Labor •''t*brta>'d^t all by S o v ^ union eSeeutive ^ " < 3 . Cause of Inflation tors In the nego ' have I Before the same group the U.S contract last year. e I Commerce contended to at least Jl .2.3. and a been acrueationa of irregularitiea | __________ . ___.... i __________ ... . fat thf retification vote. The 450 Teamsters crowded in- to their downtown hall to take up ^ __ coverage to millions of workefi in "We have gone through so many trade and services. raisingfWhe dilBcullies bei'orc. they are not present an hour minimullv\«Si^e., afraid pow" she said. i onc^ftedl Brandt mrets today with State that government policies are the ' program of federal aid lb depress- Denartmenl officials, tno raiincaiion voie. I greate.st single cause of inflation, ed areas. The visiting mayor also lunched The 3-year contract, covering •" i e x c e e d i n g acts of both buslnes.s T)ie Ghamber of Commerce with the Senate Foreign Relations 000 emplOyea of 65 eompan es n l labor in that reaped. urged a different approach. committee. eaalerfi Ontario, provided a -l- Speaking for the AFL-CIO, The Chamber said possible in- Brandt, who arrived Saturday for rent-an-houf increase. Critics Reuther .said "oiir problems flow flalionary effects of private mar- a round of official talks, spoke yes- tend the rise was too .small for tha f,Qp, a lack of vision, and deter- kel power, whether of business or terday to ameeting of the ocsl length of the agreement. niination a fajbire to appreciate labor, are insignificant, when coni- chapter oi the Socialist Psit>- Because of the locals Internal g-jowth po.ssibilifies of the pared to the inflation generated by dissension. Hoffa had in.structed. American economy, an ab.sence of government spending, taxing snd the Teamsters' Canadian director | determiiyation to translate lho.«e debt nolic es I, M. “Casey” Dodds to take per- ^ po.ssibiRties into reality. " 'Views of the Chamber were pre- aonal charge. Reulher said the Communists sented by its assistant director of Hoffa also took an inquiry into are. rapidly closing the gap be- economic research Waller Fack- tha collusion charges and demands , lw,4en us in terms of general ecu- |er. to the Senate-House Economic for the resignation of local presi- pomic slienglh, although we are Committee. dent Kenneth McDougall out of the still ahead. ^ Both the Chamber and the Na- faands of the Teatnsters Joint "The failure of the United tional As.sociation of .Manufactur- conlrols ' economy in recent years to ers called for federal tax levamp- I gi'.iw as it can and should is one of jpg. our major sources of weakness, " Fackler said in his prepared tes- Reuther said. "It has weakened us timony the present lax system not only in terms of physical penalizes success, discourages ini- atrenglh, but in the struggle for ative and restricts investment. men's minds, and hearts, and loy- ______ allies. " . I FAA Adds to Curbs On Electra Landings "We are resolved thal our po- sition in and access to. West Ber- lin shall be ireserved "We are In general agreement as to the procedures we shall fol- low if physical means are in- voked to intertere with our nghls In this respect." Dulles did not elaborate on his stalemenl He gave no hint of what proeed'ucs the western Al- lies have decided lo follow If Ri ssia trie* physically lo block the routes to Berlin, isolated 110 miles Inside .''.ast German.y. Dulles said lenders of the Allied nalion.a will .leep in close contact ! on the Ctenuan siluatioii. "Their foreign ministers con- teiuplale meetings ns may be ap- piopnale." he said. "Officers at other levels will be In consultation on specific questions." Rncourageri h.V I’nlty Dulles said he leturns from his S-dav trip "encouraged by the unity, understanding and resohi- lion in the three countries I visit- ed" Dulles said of his trip; "W’e have had a useful exchange of views primarily on the serious situation created bv Soviet threats and repudiations concerning Ber- lin . . Police Pushing Quiz of Father On Son’s Death Bridgeport. Keb. 9 l/T)—Prflc# today intenaiflod their inquiry into the slaying of a 4-year-old Bridge - port boy. The boy's father is being held on a coroner's warrant. Louis Kish, 41, Bridgeport, the boy's natural father, has denied lepeflledly any connection tvlth the slaying. Police o r i g i n a l l y charged him with breach of the peace and set bond at $50,000. Fallen lea/es, broken branches snd a small mound of dirt under wl.irh the body of flaxen haired Albert Rotzal had been stuffed, tsaiked the burial spot In nearby Trombuli. He found there Seturday. His face and neck were badly beaten. Coroner Edgar Krentaman aald the child (Vied of a ruptured stom- ach hut had n ^ been sexually a.saauUed. He has ordered an Ini quest. Albert was last seen 2* hours In a Bridgeport department ^ore, some 10 mile* from where he wAs found. He was there with his fos- Council No. 52. which Hsmilton and Toronto. •The'uproar started when Gor- don Newman, s member of the ; Contract Bargaining Committee, | presented a motion to put the lo- cal Into trusteeship, lihe Teamster i locals at Hamilton and Windsor. Tnisteeship is a device em- ployed by union headquarters to ; strip locals of their autonomy j ■when it is felt they have become Incapable of governing themselves. Some memWrs shouted condem- j nation of the proposal. Others veiled at Dodds: "Go bark to Windsor and itay there." Others •aid that once a union lost control of Its affairs, it never regained the driver's seat. The W’indsor local )taa been in trusteeship shout 14 yesrs, Hamilton fornix years. V After the members simmered (Contlnned on Page Nine) (Cont)nued on Page Tliirfeen) Greece, Turkey Near Pact on Cyj 3rus I s s u e New Vmk. Kell. 9 .-l‘i The Fed-.. 'I'he F,\ .3 order forbids s pilot In eial .\vialiou Ageni v today im-, land an Elei Ira when the cloud nf Gpi many. Wp exchanged views posed nationwide rest rii tions on i ceiling over an airport is less than nn the prospects for a foreign min- bad weather laiiding.s by Fleet raj 1.000 feel, and when daytime for- isters meeting with the Soviet turboprop pas.seuger planes follow-j ward visibility is less than a mile. Union at which all aspects of the mg the de.rth of fi,3 per.soii.s in an The visibility at night must be at German pioblem can bp disrussed, Ftlectra crash last Tuesdav. 'leasi two mile.s. not only Berlin and a peace treaty. ! I’reviou.slv the minimums were as the Soviets propose, hut 'Iso re- 400 feel ami a mile vi.slhililv day or unification and Fiirnpcan security, night. At the lime nf the ciash the a* the western powers have pro- ceiling wa.s 400 feet and visibililv posed. two miles During hos trip abroad. Dulles Uniter the new restriction, the talked lo the heads of government filane niii.sl continue in a "holding ond foreign niinisl^rs ^of ^Britain^ . ... . , „ i mother. Mi's. Henrv E. Rotzal, We diNcusaed the whole problem , \ W'elfare ofllcjala said Albert had little family life In his four years. He had been highly nervous, un- (Contlniied on Page Thirteen) The Small World-1 Casual Word Starts Fantastic Adventure Gen. Donovan By ROSEM.\RY MUmE rii - mas present and a ca.siial remark j each other for a minute and then after dinner. I could acarcel.v know we all began to talk at once, then that this would touch off a: R eventually led to my taking fantastic adventure in which D an air and open ocean voyage of ~ « T V A I would apend 24 days alone with! nearly 3.000 miles equipped with i I W W I ll1*^f*t'Oe ' 13iree men in a nightmare voyage; little more than a comb and a lip- V F L-7 ■*-'-*■* • I gpross the Atlantic by balloon and' stick. And. though I waa a •woman, ! open boat. we became such a partnership that I That this would happen never I could strip lo change within a Zurich, Hwilznrland. k'eb. 9 Pj Greece and Turkey weie re- ported near agreement today on a draft constitution for an independ- ent CN'prus with the Turkiah mi- nor! t.v to ha\'e a I'eto over mat- tera of foteign relations, defense and internal security. The tentative charter would give the North Atlantic Treaty Organ-, ization control of military basea on the British Crown Colony is- land in the eastern Mediterranean But it has not yet been agreed j whether Greek or Turkish troops will replace those parl.s of the Britisli garrisons to be withdrawn The question of the ! may be left for further discus- sions when Prime Ministers (’on Operated hy .\meiiran .yirline.^. the plane clashed into the K.isl River here just liefore mhlmght while approaching LaGiiaidia Field on insi rumeni s. Fight nf the 73 persons ahnard sur\i\'ed. A spokesman for the go\-em- menl agem y said the re.yt net ions will be in effect "while th" mvcsli- galioM IS going on as to Ihi' i au.se of the ai-cifieul. The rest net ions are temporary, voluntary on the part of the Airlines, and the Air- lines have accepted the re.st rietinns so that the order is in force fiow." (Continued on Page Seven) NeMs Tidbits Culled Ironi .\l’ Wires New Haven Railroad notities In- lerstale Gommen-e (’r>minis.*Jinn il garrisons plans lo dl<irontlnue 20 loral | mi«- aengpr tralna oporatin;: hexween . .... , . . 914MIO r.i.s-.s .........................- ...................... Provideni'p. FV I, and Boaton. ' ,, , , a .V, r-u t ’*P *"3o RtgrUine Karamanlis of Greece and March fi . . Ihdish roiirt'sentences It really started with a Christ- , gantic proportions. M e looked at nieet,,,^ n<-v. Marian Pirozyn.ski lo later with British Prime Minister two \eAr» In jail on charge.*? of vio- Maumillan. Inting censoi sliip, brii)ing offii'ials As far as constructional ar- and black luarlvct deHlings rangement.s are concerned. Britain a . Oslx^rne Mayer, 75. of Xian- reportedly has informed Greece tic, retired commercial artist and and Turkey it will accept any sohi- nature paiuler wliose uork was lion they agree on. The confereea exhibited nationally, dlea in hospl- here are keeping L^ondon closely tal at New l^oulon . . British informed of the progress of the Archeologist r>r. Ooffrey Bihby i tells news confeien* e that he he- Karamanlis and Mendeiea met ] lieves Bahrein in Peiaian (iulf may privately today while Foreign Min- patlern" above an airpml until weather impiove.s, or il is .^ent el.sewhejp to land. An American Airline spokesman .said ‘ We te happy to cooperate" will) the order, even though it may force cancellation of some Elecdra flight .s "It may pul a crimp in our New Yorkd^icago Eleclra schedules.’ the spokesman .said. "At Ihi.s time j of the year, some ! mal conditions ........................... -- . . . ; canceled " »ng toward a spring foreign minus* In such CR.SP.S. he said, olher-lyps tars' mseting with Russia, planp.s will hs substituted when , Dulles left Bonn yesterday '''3" available. He said the special visi- a hint that some slight concilia- bililv requirements set for the tory move toward the Russians France and West Germany and with Secretary General Paul Henri Spaak of the Atlantic Pact iNATOi. Eisenhower returned last night from a Georgia quail hunting holi- day and was met at the airport by Undersecretary of State G Doug- las Dillon, who presumably gave him an initial report on Dulles' mission.' v In advance of Dulles’ arrival of- Bulletins from the AP Wires , - ....... flights that ! finals said they were sure he had could operate under normal mini- laid the groundwork for a speed- | ' be up m Allied policy planning look-I will have lo requirements (Continued on Pngs Seven) (Continue on Page Seven) occurred to me that night in our small flat in Westminster, in Lon- few feet of the others without feeling any reticence or without don. with its models of ships pla- them even noticing, cidly sailing on the mantel and big . yet de.spite ail of this T found, fish, mouths perman'fenlly agape.l^^', the end, of what will always Diploma^ Dies Washington. Feb. 9 Maj. (Sen. William J. (Wild Bill) Dono- van. who directed the govern- ment’s daring intelligence opera-'on the walls, as my husband Uolin | , ,|,,ain the outstanding adventure tions during W,orid War IT, died! and 1 chatted with A r n o l d of my ijfe, that Golin and I were "Bushy ” Eiloarl in the offhand ' even closei than when we married way you do with a close friend. ' four years ago, for during all our It was a typical earl.v January ordeal my greatest comfort was London night: dampish with a bit when his arms were about me. of a nip in the air. I had given , But to go back to that Jamiar.v Colin a book on the histor.v of bal- evening in 1957. We'could feel the looning for a Christmas present j exeltement cf the idea growing, and We three had been examining so before we broke up that night I it while idly speculating on what made a little list of the people we it would be like to travel in thia would have Iq talk to and the I research we would have to do be- inler- i fore the project got underway ser- Lelter from Personal Friend Ex-Prober Says Hagerty Intervened in FCC Case RES4 ( E TRV F.\T.AL Middletown, R. I.. Feb. 9 (2IV- Navy Umdr. Richard N'. N'Ues, 41, died today aa he apparently tried to rescue his wife and four children tvhn already had made their way to safety from a fire which destroyed their historic old home on Forest Ave. Niles’ body was found in the kitchen by firemen. They rushed him to the Newport Naval Hospital »\here he was pronounced dead of asph.vxiatinn. ^ tTXlRIDA r . ENROLLB'^.NEOBO Gainesville, Fla., Feb. » (A3— The University of Florida en- rolled Its second Negro today. .Mrs. Daphne Duval, S3, teacher at Lincoln High School In Gains- ville, enrolled for a graduate course in education. She enrolled by mall as do all students who work hy day and who must at- tend school at night. (Oontlniied on Page Seven) yesterday. He<5 «:aa 76. Death of the former director of the Office of Strategic Services Was attributed to a heart ailment. He had been in M’alter Reed Army Hospital here for some lime. Donovan won the Medal of Hon- or' for leading the famed "Fight- ing 69th" Regiment of the Rain- bow Division in M'orld War I. His fighting prowess became a legend manner, of the war. .Colin waa particulaily Indonesia Buvs Guns have been the legendary (iardeii of Eden. . . Miami ’’olice lepoiT tlieft IKE OFFERS SCHOOL AH) M’ashington, Feb. 9 ift The Eisenhower administration today proposed a .t-year program of emergency federal aid to puMlo. srhools and A college construo of WOO.OOO In diamonds, emeralds ff,an who ignited la.st year s vvashineton Feb 9 <2Pi The* York and a series of decisions by; tion program designed to provide. * dra- the Federal Communications Com- about $5 billion worth of facUl'f; His nickname of ."Wild BHl" . esled since in 1952 he and Pal El* i iou.siv. stemmed from the exacting meth- lam had sailed in the 19-fool sloop . From that moment on. we never ods he used in training his men j Sopranino from Britain, to the . wavered in our determination to and the aggressive example of ■" spirit and vigor he set for them. The OSS operations Donovan headed during World War II were and 'Other jewelry from hotel suite rnatic Sherman Adams rase now mission iFCCi. - j of vacationing auto rental mag- wants Congress to investigate Hagerty said the F(X. had rnaoe j nale I>eon C. Greeneliaum, his wife while House press secretary its deri.sion before he requested and bei aisler. James C Hagerty. some information about it. j Ma.saachusell.s .Supreme ('oiirl or. Bernard Schwartz, a former But Schwartz said. "The facts j P ¥ T C ' 3” ’* ' ’ eight men House investigator, called for the J q ghov that three months after j ri*Om. U s O s ! “‘‘■■ving life sentences for $1,219.- p,oi„, vesterday after aci iising Mr. Hagerty intervened the FCC I (KKl B r i n k ' s r o b b e ry . . . . Drive to Hagerty of stcipplng into a tele- ,e'.erse its original decision." ----- organize the trades into a tigliter v,j,,„n case for political rea.sona. iTie case, as outlined by Hag- Jakarta. Indone.sia. Feb. 9 (.43 —| unit to maintain building jobs call Hagertv immediately denied Uiis. I ertv s documents, followed this The ((nite-i States is selling In-^ for today at 61st annual conven- ".Mr Schwartz was either misinT ^ sei^uence: donesia enough tight weapons and tion in Hartford of Connecticut formed or waa deliberately lying,’’, March 1 1957,' William J. vehicles to equip 20 new battalions. Btate Building and Corns!ruction Hagertv said ' Bmhler a Republicah and research or about 14.000 troops. It is the Trades Council, AFL-CIO. Schwartz, who is a New York o„ng,iitanl to the Speaker of NeW first major sale of American mill-j Mace mjssile. highly mobile, al- University law professor, makesj state As.sembly. wrote tary equipment to the 1-sIaAd re-'most jam|-pioof i and callable of j,ig charge against Hagerty in a Haceit v ' nroteating an ' FCC de- cajiable of hjg charge against Hagerty in a Hagertv nroteating public in several .years. ; skirting 'radai . going to U.S. foi lhcoming book. "The Professor change station WRGB West Indies. He recalled how on ' make the trip, though It wa.s foi - j The (ipa' a'"" includes one Navy, troops in (Termany this spring to gnd the Commissions.” * Parts of , ^ high frequency one particular day, when the seas ' tiinale thal we could not foresee : ship type not di.srlosed and oth-. replace the Matador. . . . (Tharles the book were released Saturday.: ,yHFi station to an ultra high were heavy and both he and Pal that it would take 22 months of ] er .Navy and Air Force itenvs. . | Matthews, 11. who ran away from Hagerty replied b.v making foiii'i^ station tUHF). • were thoroughiy soaked from a ! hard work and use up ail oiir funds i U..S. ' '.Ambassador Howard P .' San Francisco home after being ictlcrs public. [ ' . , ., . ' -tock- drlving rain, thev had conceived a before we would start across the i Jones informed Foteign Minister; spanked, found dead, of a.sphyxia- Last vear, the House T.egiala- , fanta.sy of raising themselves in; Atlantic in our 46-foot ballodn, j Subandrio last night that Presi-‘ «on .veaterday in an abandoned live Oversight-subcommittee (jent Eisenhower had approved the | buil.ding a block from his home. ; moved Schwartz as chief counsel. ; larneo world4t')de in scope. The organiza- tion conducted Important research •t home and daring exploits •broad, many . of them behind •naroy lines. The shadowy arm also fostered Jlilidjitance movements and made possible the escape of some' 6,000 membars of the armed forces who had Ijeeir ahot down or trapped he*- hlnd enemy Unas in various the- . . iis-jt!,'-''' -------^ V . » (OaatfBiMd M Paco Two) the air and drifting over the same , "The Small World."' in anything but is con- with the su(;cesa of the constant. "The South Atlantic has the tre- mendous attraction of all those ficial reports .said It w course, secure froi)t the .roll of the ocea'n. Idea Builds up | lovelv'^ trade winds blowing from Bushy ; waa the one who proved; 12 to 20 miles an heur in one di-1 worth about $10 million to be the catalystie agenL He i rection so it would be a natural! iThe sale was taken aa an^indi- arched his eyebrows at CoUn’s j for ballooning^.” Colin pointed out. j cation',that the United State? has remark and said: •' * . And 1 mentally added to i faith that President .Sukarno’s gov- 'myself to end up In^, the warmth of the xplori’n g 's o m e 'o r h i s ’ ac^^^^^^ ‘‘ ’'’-'i.Jtf.S size of the shipment, btit unof- lakrii over from 8,000 big I’akis-' sations and using files he had a.s-1 some consioera sale. Jones did not announce the 1 About nine million acres of land j But, -■’.Surely some chaps must have tried going aoroes the Atlantic by balloon. Or have they?" There are timea you^can almost how lovely it would be ernment will remain Independertt of " ' ‘ ' -■ the Soviet bloc as well u of the (Ooatipued oa Page lliree) ' -\ Il Ul|4»l“ ITS gIVlil »|»VV4» ■'•K BnLlUnn OflU USIllI^ UlCO sin? naavs *A ft«A ('3lSl3 .•ould be.tani land oivnera under country’s ; sembled, it launched investigations shbuld be given to ine li^i. iMt .Sew land measures and will be dis-1 that led to the resignations of i such a (diange w » le a w ^ trlbuted and sold. . . . David Pace, i Adams, who waa Presidefit Eisen- : f^lies without 23, of Toronto, young parachutist,, bower’s chief assistant, and ■ Rich- j UHF can not roach jumps from plane and plunges I ard A. Mack, a federal, communl-. put mwy others to the W 3.500 feet , to death in Paris, Oht.,1 cations, commissioner. \ I conywaion «my»»>g .““r apparently witholit trying to pwil 1 The accusation, againrt Hagerty j Dmfalw wri»ie- Ih '/ (CkmtlnuMl aa ^ ig a TfaUlaMi) either ripcord of/hia two para- involves a television station in the I chutes. / 'Albany-Bchenectady area of New ' l', r \ ■A M y, y (OMthrapd Ml fsg « Six) lies. The cost for the programa was estimated at around SS^i billion over the next S3 yeara, ^ - -1 CRO.M.V ON CMS BOARD 5,’. Hartford, Feb. 9 i43—Former . .Mayor .loseph V. Cronin may bei- eome the first representative., from organirrd la^r on the board of CKfS (Connectioilk Medical Serrice), which .pajwU'. doctors' bills for over 1 people in the state. It w u tfa>s ported that 43MS officiate h aie:. asked Cronin to cottaider servlfag:^^,^” J aa a director on the board of Hmi ’ ' ' ' medieal sendee corporatl4m.^*i,i>, ---------• -.4 ■■'Srt''- HOFFA AIDE JAILED New York, JFeb. g (43r—Befav jamin Franklin ColUns, Detrpljl imioo offfidal aiid close aitsae|«ffa( of Teamsters President JMnes R. Hoffa, waa sentenced today by l'.S.'3 Dtetrld^ Judge John,’':'*!. Casitin to tliree years traprtoons.^ . inent for.p«rjiuys,Xkfa <»•• de> rvefbped from a grsoul j i ^ invest ^'-tigatiou of vrlrotapplng a#d raoketeerfaif;: In Locni M of the intemstloBsJ Brotherhood of Tenmaters. O ^ n s, *8. te •dgl'WJi tafy-triMisnrsv o f w o tewt, fn Is pcMddMpH 4# O y , W .'j* .; . wd! aalwi8l«r r ' — '3 V :r I (•. 1 '

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Page 1: NO. no MANCHESTER, C ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 ... Evening Hearld...of at \ If Manchester \" ‘" • * * « • • • • • ***** ***** MANCHESTER if / '. .Manchester, 9

■ \V

■-. - - >-.

A T « r a g e D a i l y N f t P r a a s R u n ■ F o r t tic W eek KHditig

F e b m a r y 1 th , 1S59

- 12,882 M em ber of t h e .Audit

B u re au o f O lr rn la t ten ,

■ .'«r£j

Manche$ter— A CAty o f Village Charm

T h e W e a t h i tForeeaat of C, 8. WeatiMr . . ..

H acardnoa d r t v tn f w a r a l a tS Know b eco m in f m ixed w i th akie t, f reea ina ra in ton igh t . Low fa M e,Tneaday eleet ehang1ng,;t<B gk la . dfirina day. H igh In dfc.

- ? 7^‘

V O L . L X X V I I L NO. n o ( F O U R T E E N P A G E S ) MANCHESTER, Co n n ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 (Claaairted Advertlrlng on Pago It) P R I C E F I V E C B N T f

CourtUrged

Hartford, Feb. 9 (A>)—A topfh*;;*/ su p re m e C o u r t of E r ro rs Democratic legislator laid the

Sr's DullesM illion Mark

West PlanB y N O R M A N tV A L K E R

Washington. Feb. 9 (/P) — Unemployment is climbing hack clo.se to the five million mark, economi.sta reported to-an(l a Superio r CoOrt «* * t pres

en t, w i th the addit ion of a fam ily caiH a f i ir i i rp a n - ’c o u r t func tion ing aa a diviaion of d a > . l he.\ .said a t i g u i e a j the S u p e r io r 'C o u r t . | p r o a c l i i n g t h a t m a r k m a y he ^

In additton to the two bills i n - , s h o w n in t h e g o v e r n m e n t ' s co rporaU ng cour t re fo rm proposa ls i c o i , „ t „ d u e o u t t o m o r - ,outlined by Gov. A b ra h a m Ribi-

If Reds Block Berlin Roadadministration plan for re­vamping the state’s courts before the judiciary commit­tee and urged “top priority" for it.

R epub lican leaders countered! were on the co m m ittee 's agenda , th is with a dem an d for an im- ; ),ill. .sponsm ed by the Leg-h a r r i e d consideration of a m a t te r | C om m it tee of the S ta tethey cal led one of the most rom - g„ , . i., s im ila r in essentia lsp l fx the Leg^islature m ust consider. admini.«»tiation m easu re bu t , . * • \ , i «

Senate M a jor ity l e a d e r Arthur p roba te court.*^ in the exceeded since last Apn l when theH. Healey, key apokesman for the reo rg an iza t io n plan. Jot^e.ss count w a s 120,000. ^D em ocra t ic adm in is t ra t ion , urged W allace B a in e s rR -B iis to l ithe com m ittee to ac t favorably on in troduced the m easure , wasthe cour t reform proposals a t any b „ ck e rs a t thee a r ly date. ., hear ing . He said the B a r bill wa.s

But he left the door open for comple te and comprehensive,m odification of the m es su re s A n o th e r hill, rai.sed in commit-

’Tili?'' tee las t week, would establish a••The adm in is t ra t ion b 11s outline municipal court divis ion of the . . . . . . . • • a ,o „ . .o .c h he , s s i ^ of Common P le a^ .

Tc o n , . » r « o . h . r c o o n m c . o c .

w in te r m on ths b e is u se of the w e a th e r 's effect on construction , fa rm and otlier outdoor act iv it ies The five miiliou m ark has not been

Bui in recent m on ths Joh Idle­ness has been running a l ittle ahead of corresponding m on ths

Brandt Bids West Defy Red Threat

^^■a.‘; h i n g l o n . F f b . 9 t /P )— y e a r ago. In Decem ber the tota l W e s t R e i l i l l ’s M a y o r Willx '

a suggested approach. '“ and undoubtedly there o th e r suggestions as to m inor a s ­p e c ts of reorganization.

“ How these de ta i ls a re solved is not im portan t. Reorganizat ion of the m in o r court system is the basic objective, and th a t ' s what w e w a n t to accom plish ."

Healey spoke at a c rowded uviblic h e a r in g in the Hall of the House a t ten d ed by m ore than 300 persons.

The two adm in is tra t ion bills, both aponsored by Healey, would '•limi- n a te 1** trial Justice and m un ic i­pa l cour ts and rep lace them with a divis ion of a reconstitu ted , .stale- m sin ta in ed Com m on P le a s C o u r t

The h ig h er co u r t sys tem would

Toronto Union In Full Revolt Against Hoffa

was 4,10S.00n or 734,000 more than the 3.374.000 in Decem ber 19.’57.

. lump Melt Os'er >lillions Tile f igure for . lanuary 19.38 was

4 .494,000, a ju m p of well over aThe bill r ep re sen ts the proposals million from December,

of the L eg is la tu re 's In te r im Com- I f the . lanuary 19.39 idle to ta l in-

(ron tin i ier t on Page Seven) (Contlnned on P a g e T h ir teen )

Reuther, C. of C. Hit U.S. Economic Aims

P,)-anfit .said t o d a y lii.s c i t y | w o u l d lip ' '.«(|ueP7,pd l ik e a l e m o n " b.v t l i e R i i .a s ia n s s h o u l d t h e W e s t a c c e p t t h e S o v i e t u l t i m a t u m a n d w i t l i - d i ’a w it.s t r o o p s .

B randi and hi.s wife Apre In- lerviewed on . television p ro g ram I N'B('-Toda\'I while they liad b reakfas t in West f ie i inan A m ­b assador W ilhelm . Grewe s resi­dence

T he We.st Be,idin m ayor r e l l c r ­a ted hiS opinion th a t evenluallVi a lasting se'.l leir.ent could he w orked out between East and West should lhi‘ two par ties find a rmais" of • 'common inlere.st."

Studies Kennan TheoryB randt said he is s tudy ing with

g re a t interesi a lheor>- pul forth bv the fo rm er P S. , \mbas,sador

nigNr..'‘f,eP'*

Rejects Substituting East Reds for Soviet

W nshinglon, Fch. 9 i.'Pi—Secretary of State Dulles said to­day the wcstoin .'Mlifs have agreed Renerally on procedures to follow if Russia invokes “phy.sical means" to block access to Beilin.

W the same tune he renewed the West's offer to talk ahoiil a genei'al selllemenl.

"We aie willing to talk with the Soviets in a sincere ef­fort III reach agreements,” he said.

Dulles relurnefl to Washington at 8 a.m., aboard a U.S. .Air l''orce plane from talks at l.ondon. Paris and Bonn.

The Secrelar.v said he was reporting promptly to Presidentl • ; i senh( lw e l .

In a prepared statement Dnile.s told newsmen his talks ahroad "reconfirmed the unity and firmness of our position."

D d l m luldcd: f '■\\> (1ft accept a n \ ‘ Aiibati- i

tntion« of East G erm ans for th e .Soviet ITnion in ita reapnnaibiliUea |Inward Berlin and il-'i oblipationa ■ to ua.

and Weal fo.ce.* m igh l eaae the

W a ih in g lo n Feb. 9 Ah -W Bltei\‘ ' R eu lh e r said wa arc probablv ,I R eu th e r told Congress today t h a t sUll producing « l it t le m ore Ih a n j different go v e rn m en ta l policie'* j twice as much goods snd s e r v i c e Ft'tfsia George Kenuan. th a t a ' could have pu.slied the " " ' ' h n ' s as the .Sovoet t mom limited w ithd raw al of both Ka.sl |p roduction more th an $t00 billion Cites Soviet (Ininsh igher in the pa.st six years.

"I can 't identify m.v.self withi .......... / ............... ........ .. ■'.'1"“ '’; i the details . " R rand t said. "I feel

t h a t a re th .n k in g of p.uropean po lity would be nere.viary."

B randt said the more th an two million Berliners a re de te rm ined to

agist any ii.coi 'i/oiation of their ^ - I n l o the Soviet orbit.

volume, and from

"But economic g iow tii m the .So problem"This production th a t we h a v e , v i e l f n i n n is adv an c in g fou r or >’

now forever lost could well have , five t imes as fa s t as o u r lagging ' .spelled the difference between a n ' economy has g row n in

unchallenged con tinua tion o f year.s, " he said. " I f both economies United S l a te s woilrl leadership 1 continue sim ply ty* grow a t the and the th rea tened , unea.sy p o s i - i s a m e pace as the.v' have done re-

Tbron to , Feb . 9 i/Fi— A fullscale jp which we find ourseives to- spectively since 19.30. i t will be arev o l t a g a in s t the a u th o r i ty of j day •• j,* said. jm e i e 17 or iS yea rs until SovietT e a m s te r s p re s id en t J a m e s H offa ! R eu lher , head of the TJnlleil p ioduclion c n i m atch and su rp ass erupted y e s te rd a y a t a m eeting of I Au to W o rk e rs and an A FL-C IO jo u r s in volume, and from th a t ,T o ro n to Local 938. I vice president , outlined an exten-1 point fo rw ard at is they who will

T h e angry , shou t ing m em b ers j .,jve p ro g ram of g o v e rn m en t I t h re a te n to tak e asuspended the ir local p re s id en t and ac t iv i t ies he said would a ssu re full lead."vo ted to clean house. em ploym en t and economic g ro w th ' R eu th e r ra iled on the govern-

His tes t im ony w as p repared for nienl to w ork tow ard increaseri 'j . Mrs. B ra n d t aaid the women oi

i j " .

'■M,y sona..'VvUl g row i.p in a isBUnitpst. city.' which will be the

imand'ing i r e u n i t e d G erm any ," B ra n d t said.

-Not F r igh tenedS e c re ta ry of S ta te Dulles reads a s ta te m e n t to newsmen today at W ash in g to n 's Nationa l Alrporl as he r e t u r n s f r o m a flying tr ip to the Capi tol s of England. F r a m e and West GenuHiiy where he

. B ra n n i aaio cne « n m en O m et Allied leaders cm plana (Of. Berlin. (A P P b p to fa x ) , the Senate-House, Economic Com- consum er buying power, extengjon ; \ \ eat Berlin a i« no t fn g n ie n e o a t ____________ i, ------------------ ,mi .---------- ----------

eo m p is in ts o f collusion betw een th e I bnittw s tu d y in g g enera l economic of the F a i r 'Labor • ' ' t * b r t a > ' d ^ t all by S o v ^

union eSeeutive ^ " < 3 . Ca us e of Inflat ionto r s In the nego ' have I Before the sa m e group the U.Sc o n tra c t l a s t year. e I C om m erce con tended to at least J l .2.3. and ab e en acru ea t io n a of i r reg u la r i t ie a | __________ . ___. . . . i __________... .fat t h f re t i f ica t io n vote.

T h e 450 T e a m s te r s crowded in­to th e i r downtown hall to t ak e up ^ __

coverage to millions of w o r k e f i in "We have gone th ro u g h so many t rade and services. ra is ingfW he dilBcullies bei'orc. they a re not p re sen t an hour minimullv\«Si^e., a f ra id pow " she said. i

o n c ^ f ted l B ra n d t m re t s today with S ta tet h a t g o v e rn m e n t policies a re the ' p ro g ra m of federa l aid lb depress- D e n a r tm e n l officials,

tn o r a i i n c a i io n voie. I greate.st single cause of inflation, ed areas. The visiting m ay o r also lunchedT h e 3 -y ear c o n trac t , covering •" i exceeding ac ts of bo th buslnes.s T)ie G ham ber of Com m erce with the Senate Fore ign Relations

000 emplOyea of 65 eom pan es n l labor in th a t r e a p e d . urged a d if fe ren t approach . com m ittee .eaalerfi Ontario , provided a - l - S peak ing for the AFL-CIO, The C ham b er said possible in- Brandt, w h o a r r iv e d S a tu rday for r e n t - a n -h o u f increase. Cri t ics R eu th e r .said "oiir problems flow f la l io n ary e ffec ts of p r iv a te m ar- a round of official talks , spoke yes-t en d the rise w as too .small for tha f,Qp, a lack of vision, and d e te r - ke l power, w h e th e r of business or te rd a y to a m eeting of the ocsllen g th of the ag reem en t . niination a fa jbire to a p p rec ia te labor, a re insignificant, when coni- c h ap te r oi the Socialist P s i t> -

Because of the l o c a l s In ternal g-jowth po.ssibilifies of the pared to the infla t ion g e n e ra te d bydissension. Hoffa had in .s truc ted . A m erican economy, an ab.sence of g o v e rn m en t spending, tax in g snd th e T ea m s te rs ' C anad ian d irec to r | determiiyation to t r a n s la te lho.«e debt nolic esI, M. “C asey ” Dodds to ta k e per- po.ssibiRties into real i ty . " 'Views of the C h am b er w ere pre-aonal charge . R eu lh e r said the C o m m u n is ts sented by its a s s is tan t d i rec to r of

H o ffa also took an inquiry in to a r e . rapid ly closing the gap be- economic research W al le r Fack -th a collusion c h arg es and dem ands , lw,4en us in te rm s of genera l ecu- |er. to the Sena te -H ouse Economicf o r t h e res igna t ion of local presi- pomic s l i e n g lh , a l th o u g h we are Com mittee .d e n t K e n n e t h M c D o u g a l l out of the st il l ahead. Both the C ham ber and the N a-faands of the T ea tn s te r s Jo in t "The fa ilure of the U ni ted tional As.sociation of .Manufactur-

conlro ls ' economy in recen t y e a rs to e rs called for federa l tax l ev am p -I gi'.iw as it can and should is one of jpg. our m a jo r sources of weakness , " F a c k le r said in his p repared tes- R e u th e r said. " I t h a s w eakened us t imony the present lax sys temnot only in te rm s of physical penalizes success, d iscourages ini-a treng lh , but in the s t ru g g le for a tive and re s t r ic t s inves tm ent.m en 's minds, and hear ts , and loy- ______allies. " . I

FAA Adds to Curbs On Electra Landings

"We are resolved thal our po­sition in and access to. West B e r­lin shall be ireserved

"W e are In general agreement as to the procedures we shall fol­low if physical m eans a re in­voked to in te r te re with our n g h l s In this respect."

Dulles did not e labora te on his s ta lem en l He gave no hint of what p ro eed 'u c s the western Al­lies have decided lo follow If Ri ssia trie* physically lo block the routes to Berlin, isolated 110 miles Inside .''.ast German.y.

Dulles said lenders of the Allied nalion.a will .leep in close con tact

! on the Ctenuan siluatioii ."T h e i r foreign m in is te rs con-

teiuplale meetings ns m ay be ap- p io p n a le ." he said. "Officers at other levels will be In consultation on specific quest ions ."

Rncourageri h.V I ’nltyDulles said he le tu rn s from his

S-dav tr ip "encouraged by the unity, unders tand ing and resohi- lion in the th ree countr ies I visit­e d "

Dulles said of his t r ip ;"W’e have had a useful exchange

of views p r im ar i ly on the serious situation c rea ted bv Soviet th rea ts and repudiations concerning B e r ­lin . .

Police Pushing Quiz of Father On Son’s Death

B ridgeport . Keb. 9 l/T)—Prflc# today intenaiflod th e i r in q u iry in to the s lay ing of a 4-year-o ld B r idge­port boy. The boy's fa th e r is be ing held on a coroner 's w a r ra n t .

Louis Kish, 41, B ridgeport , th e boy's n a tu ra l fa th e r , has denied lepeflledly a n y connection tvlth the slaying. Police o r i g i n a l l y charged him with b reach of the peace and se t bond a t $50,000.

Fallen lea /es , broken b ran ch es snd a small m ound of d i r t u n d e r wl.irh the body of flaxen ha ired Albert Rotzal had been stuffed, t s a ik e d the burial s p o t In n e a rb y Trom buli . H e w « found th e re S e tu rd ay . His face a n d neck w ere badly beaten.

C o ro n e r E d g a r K re n ta m a n aald the child (Vied of a r u p tu r e d s to m ­ach h u t had n ^ been sexua lly a.saauUed. He h as o rd e red a n Ini quest.

Albert was las t seen 2* ho u rs In a B r id g ep o r t d e p a r tm e n t ^ o r e , some 10 mile* f rom w h ere he wAs found. He w as there w i th his fos-

Council No. 52. which H s m i l to n and Toronto.

•T h e 'u p ro a r s t a r te d when G or­don N ew m an , s m em ber of the ; C o n t rac t B a rg a in in g Com mittee , | p re sen ted a motion to p u t the lo­cal Into trusteeship , lihe T e a m s te r i locals a t H am il ton and W indsor.

T n is te e sh ip is a device e m ­ployed by union h e ad q u a r te r s to ; s t r ip locals of the ir a u to n o m y j ■when it is felt they have become Incapable of govern ing themselves.

Som e m e m W rs shouted condem- j n a t io n of the proposal. O thers veiled a t Dodds: "Go b a rk to W in d s o r and i t a y there ." O thers •aid t h a t once a union lost contro l of I t s affairs, it never regained the d r iv e r 's seat. The W’indsor local )taa been in t rus tee sh ip sh o u t 14 y e s rs , H am il ton f o r n i x years .

V A f te r the m em b ers s im m ered

(Contlnned on P a g e Nine)

(Cont)nued on Page Tliirfeen)

Greece, Turkey Near Pact on Cyj3rus I s sue

New Vmk. K ell. 9 .-l‘i The Fed-.. 'I'he F ,\ .3 o rder forbids s pilot In e ia l . \v ia l iou Ageni v today i m - , land an Elei Ira when the cloud nf Gpi many. Wp exchanged views posed nationwide rest rii t ions on i ceiling over an a irpo rt is less than nn the prospects for a foreign min- bad w ea th e r laiiding.s by Fleet ra j 1.000 feel, and when day tim e for- isters m eeting with the Soviet tu rboprop pas.seuger planes fol low-j w ard visibil ity is less t han a mile. Union at which all aspects of the mg the de.rth of fi,3 per.soii.s in an The visibil ity at night must be at G e rm an pioblem can bp disrussed , Ftlectra c rash las t Tuesdav. 'leasi two mile.s. not only Berlin and a peace treaty.

! I’reviou.slv the m in im um s were as the Soviets propose, hut 'Iso re- 400 feel ami a mile vi.slhililv d ay or unification and Fiirnpcan security, night. A t the lime nf the c ia sh the a* the w estern powers have pro­ceiling wa.s 400 feet and visibililv posed.two miles During hos trip abroad. Dulles

Uniter the new res tr ic tion , the talked lo the heads of government filane niii.sl continue in a "holding ond foreign niinisl^rs ^of ^Britain^

. . . . . , „ i mother. Mi's. Henrv E. Rotzal,We diNcusaed the whole problem ,

\ W'elfare ofllcjala said A lb e r t had li t t le family life In h is fo u r years. He had been h ighly nervous, un-

(Contlniied on Page T h ir teen )

The Small World-1

Casual Word Starts F antastic Adventure

Gen. Donovan

By R O S E M .\R Y M U m Erii -

m as p re sen t and a ca.siial r e m a rk j each o th e r for a m in u te and then a f t e r dinner. I could acarcel.v know we all began to ta lk at once, then t h a t th is would touch off a: R even tual ly led to my tak in g fa n ta s t i c a d v en tu re in which D an a ir and open ocean voyage of

~ « T V A I would apend 24 d ays alone with! near ly 3.000 miles equipped w ithi I W W I l l 1 * ^ f * t ' O e ' 13iree m en in a n ig h tm a re voyage; l it t le more th an a comb and a lip-V F L-7 ■*-'-*■* • I gpross the A tlan t ic by balloon a n d ' st ick. And. th o u g h I waa a •woman,

! open boat. we became such a p a r tn e r sh ip t h a tI T h a t th is would happen never I could s t r ip lo change w ith in a

Zurich, Hwilznrland. k'eb. 9 Pj Greece and T u rk ey w eie re ­

ported n e a r agreem ent today on a d ra f t const i tu t ion for an independ­en t CN'prus w ith the T urk iah m i­nor! t.v to ha\ 'e a I'eto over m at- te ra of fo te ign re la tions, defense and in te rna l security .

The te n ta t iv e c h a r t e r would give the N o r th A tlan t ic T r e a ty O r g a n - , iza t ion con tro l of m il i ta ry basea on the Bri t ish Crown Colony is­land in the e a s te rn M ed i te r ran ean B u t it h a s not ye t been agreed

j w h e th e r Greek or T u rk ish troops will replace those parl.s of the Britisli g a r r i so n s to be w i th d raw n

The quest ion of the ! may be left for f u r th e r d iscus­

sions when P r im e M in is ters ( ’on

O p era ted hy . \m e i i r a n .yirline.^. the plane c la sh ed into the K.isl River here jus t liefore mhlm ght while approach ing LaGiiaidia Field on insi rum eni s. F igh t nf the 73 persons ahnard sur \ i \ 'ed .

A spokesm an for the go\-em- menl agem y said the re.yt ne t ions will be in effect "while th" mvcsli- galioM IS going on as to Ihi' i au.se of the ai-cifieul. The rest ne t ions a re tem p o ra ry , v o lun ta ry on the p a r t of the Airlines, and the A i r ­lines have accepted the re.st r ietinns so t ha t the o rder is in force fiow."

(Continued on P a g e Seven)

NeM s TidbitsCulled Ironi .\l’ Wires

New Haven Railroad notit ies In- l e r s ta le Gommen-e ( ’r>minis.*Jinn il

g a r r i so n s p lans lo dl<irontlnue 20 loral |mi«- aengpr t ra lna oporatin;: hexween

. . .. . , . . 914MIO r.i.s-.s .........................- ......................Provideni'p. FV I , and Boaton. ', , „ , , a .V, r-u t ’*P *"3o RtgrUine K a ram a n l is of Greece and March fi . . Ihdish ro i i r t 's e n ten c esI t real ly s t a r te d w ith a C hris t- , g an t ic proport ions . M e looked a t n i e e t , , , ^ n<-v. M arian Pirozyn.ski lo

l a te r with B r i t ish P r im e M in is ter two \eAr» In ja i l on charge.*? of vio- Maumillan. Inting censoi sliip, brii)ing offii'ials

As f a r as cons truc t iona l a r- and black luarlvct deHlings rangement.s a re concerned. B r i ta in a . Oslx^rne Mayer, 75. of Xian- reported ly has informed Greece tic, r e t i red comm ercial a r t i s t and and T u rk e y it will accep t any sohi- n a tu r e p a iu le r wliose u o r k was l ion they agree on. The confereea exhibited na tiona lly , dlea in hospl- here a re keeping L^ondon closely ta l at New l^oulon . . B ri t ish in form ed of the p rogress of the Archeo log ist r>r. O o f f r e y Bihby

i tells news confeien* e th a t he he- K a ra m a n l i s and M endeiea m et ] lieves B ahre in in P e ia ian (iulf m ay

p r iv a te ly to d ay while F ore ign Min-

p a t l e rn " above an a i r pml until w ea th e r impiove.s, or il is .^ent el.sewhejp to land.

An Am erican Airline spokesm an .said ‘ We te happy to coopera te" will) the order, even though it may force cancellat ion of some Elecdra fl ight .s

"It m ay pul a c r im p in our New Y o r k d ^ i c a g o E lec lra sc h e d u le s . ’ the spokesm an .said. "A t Ihi.s t ime

j of the year, some

! mal conditions ........................... -- . . . •; canceled " »ng tow ard a sp r ing foreign minus*

In such CR.SP.S. he said, o lh e r - ly p s ta rs ' m se t in g w ith Russia , planp.s will hs subs t i tu ted when , Dulles left Bonn y es te rd ay ' ' ' 3 " available. He said the special visi- a hint t hat some s l igh t concilia- bili lv requ irem en ts set for the to ry move tow ard the Russ ians

F ran ce and West G e rm an y and with Sec re ta ry General Paul Henri Spaak of the Atlantic Pact iNATOi .

E isenhow er re tu rned last night from a Georgia quail hunting holi­day and was met at the a irport by U n d e r se c re ta ry of State G Doug­las Dillon, who p re sum ab ly gave him an initial report on Dulles ' mission.' v

In advance of Dulles’ a r r iv a l of-

Bulletinsfrom the AP Wires

, - ....... f l ights t h a t ! f i n a l s said they were sure he hadcould operate under norm al mini- laid the g roundw ork for a speed- |

' be up m Allied policy p lann ing look-Iwill have lo

requ irem en ts

(Continued on Pngs Seven) ( C o n t in u e on P age Seven)

o ccurred to me th a t n ig h t in our sm all f l a t in W es tm in s te r , in Lon-

few feet of th e o thers w i t h o u t feeling a n y re ticence o r w i thou t

don. w i th i ts models of ships pla- th em even noticing, cidly sa i l ing on the m an te l and big . y e t de.spite ail of th is T found, fish, m o u th s perman'fenlly agape.l^^', the end, of w ha t will a lw ays

Diploma^ DiesW ashing ton . Feb. 9 Maj.

(Sen. W illiam J . (Wild Bill) Dono­van. who direc ted the g o v e rn ­m e n t ’s d a r in g inte lligence o p e r a - 'o n the walls, a s m y husband Uolin | , , | , , a in the o u t s tan d in g a dven tu re t ions d u r in g W,orid W a r IT, d i e d ! and 1 c h a t t e d w i th A r n o l d of m y ijfe, t ha t Golin and I were

"B u sh y ” E ilo a r l in the o f fhand ' even closei t han when we m arr ied w ay you do w ith a close friend. ' four y ea rs ago, for d u r in g all our

I t w as a typica l earl.v J a n u a r y ordeal m y g r e a t e s t co m fo r t w a s London n ig h t : d am pish w ith a bit when his a rm s w ere ab o u t me. of a nip in the air . I had given , But to go back to t h a t Jamiar.v Colin a book on the histor.v of bal- evening in 1957. W e 'c o u ld feel the looning for a C h r is tm a s p re sen t j e x e l tem en t c f the idea growing, a n d We th ree had been ex am in in g so before we broke up t h a t n ig h t I it while idly sp ecu la t in g on w h a t m ade a l it t le list of th e people we it would be like to t r av e l in th ia would have Iq t a lk to and the

I resea rch we would h a v e to do be- in le r - i fore the p ro jec t g o t u n d e rw ay ser-

Lelter from Personal Friend

Ex-Prober Says Hagerty Intervened in FCC Case

RES4 ( E TRV F.\T.AL Middletown, R. I.. Feb. 9 (2IV-

N a v y Umdr. R ich a rd N'. N'Ues, 41, died today aa he a p p a re n t ly t r ied to rescue his wife a n d fou r children tvhn a lready had m ad e th e i r w a y to sa fe ty f ro m a f i re which destroyed th e i r h is to r ic old home on F o re s t Ave. Niles’ body w as found in the k i tch en by firemen. They rushed him to the N ew por t N aval H osp ita l »\here he w as p ronounced dead of asph.vxiatinn. ^

tTX lR ID A r . ENROLLB'^.NEOBO Gainesville, Fla., Feb. » (A3—

The University of F lo r ida en ­rolled Its second N eg ro today. .Mrs. D aphne Duval, S3, te a ch e r a t Lincoln H igh School In Gains- ville, enrolled fo r a g r a d u a te course in educa tion . She enrolled by m all a s do all s tu d e n ts who w o rk hy d ay and w ho m u s t a t ­tend school a t n ight.

(Oontlniied on P a g e Seven)

y es te rd ay . He<5«:aa 76.D e a th of th e fo rm er d irec to r of

t h e Office of S t ra te g ic Services Was a t t r ib u te d to a h e a r t a ilment.H e had been in M’a l t e r Reed A rm y H osp ita l he re fo r some lime.

Donovan won the Medal of H o n ­or ' f o r lead ing the fam ed " F ig h t ­in g 69 th" R eg im en t of the R a in ­b ow Division in M'orld W a r I. His f ig h t in g prow ess becam e a legend m an n e r , o f th e w ar . .Colin waa p a r t i cu la i ly

Indonesia Buvs Guns

have been the legendary (iardeii of Eden . . . Miami ’’olice lepoiT tlieft

IK E O F F E R S SCHOOL AH) M’ashington, Feb . 9 ift — The

E isenhow er adm in is t ra t ion today proposed a .t-year p ro g ra m of e m e rg en c y federal a id to puMlo. srhools and A college c o n s t ru o

of WOO.OOO In diamonds, em era lds ff,an who ignited la.st y e a r svvash ine ton Feb 9 <2Pi The* York and a series of decisions b y ; tion p ro g ram designed to p rov ide.

* ■ dra- the Federal C om m unicat ions Com- about $5 billion worth of facUl'f;

His n ick n am e of ."Wild BHl" . esled since in 1952 he a n d P a l El* i iou.siv. s t e m m e d f ro m the e x ac t in g m eth - lam had sailed in th e 19-fool sloop . F ro m t h a t m o m e n t on. we never ods he used in t r a in in g his men j Sopran ino from B r i t a in , to the . wavered in our de te rm in a t io n to a n d th e aggress ive exam ple of ■" sp i r i t and v igor he se t fo r them.

T h e OSS ope ra t io n s Donovan headed d u r in g W orld W a r II were

a n d 'O th er j ew elry from hotel suite rnatic S h e rm an A d am s ra se now mission i FCCi . - jof vaca t ion ing aut o ren ta l m ag - w a n ts Congress to inves t iga te H a g e r ty said the F(X. had rnaoe j n a le I>eon C. Greeneliaum, his wife w h i l e House p ress se c re ta ry its deri.sion before he requestedand bei ais ler. J a m es C H ag er ty . some in form ation ab o u t it. j

Ma.saachusell.s .Supreme ( 'o i ir l o r . B e rn ard Schw ar tz , a fo rm er B u t S c h w a r tz said. "The facts j P ¥ T C ' 3” ’* '’ e ight men House inves tiga tor , called for the J q ghov th a t th ree m on ths a f te r jri*Om. U s O s ! “‘‘■■ving life sen tences fo r $1,219.- p ,oi„ , v e s te rd a y a f t e r aci i ising Mr. H ag er ty intervened the FCC

I (KKl B r in k 's robbery . . . . Drive to H a g e r ty of stcipplng into a tele- ,e ' .e rse its original decision."----- ’ o rgan ize the t r a d e s into a t ig l i te r v,j,,„n case for polit ical rea.sona. iTie case, as outlined by Hag-

J a k a r t a . Indone.sia. Feb. 9 (.43 — | unit to m a in ta in building jobs call H a g e r tv im m edia te ly denied Uiis. I e r tv s documents, followed thisThe ((nite-i S ta te s is selling In-^ fo r to d ay a t 61st a n n u a l conven- ".Mr S c h w a r tz w a s e i the r misinT sei^uence:donesia enough t igh t w eapons and tion in H a r t fo rd of C onnecticu t formed or waa delibera te ly lying,’’ , M arch 1 1957,' W il l iam J.vehicles to equip 20 new ba tta l ions . B ta te Build ing and Corns!ruction H a g e r tv said ' Bmhler a Republicah and resea rchor about 14.000 troops . I t is the T rad e s Council, AFL-CIO . Schw ar tz , who is a N ew York o„ng,i itanl to the S p e a k e r of NeWfirs t m a jo r sale of A m erican mil l-j M ace mjssile . h igh ly mobile, al- U n iv e rs i ty law professor, m akes j s t a t e As.sembly. wro tet a r y equ ip m en t to the 1-sIaAd r e - ' m o s t jam |-p ioof i and callable of j,ig c h a rg e a g a in s t H a g e r ty in a H a ce i t v ' n ro tea t in g an ' FC C de-cajiable of hjg c h a rg e a g a in s t H a g e r ty in a H a g e r tv n ro tea t ingpublic in several .years. ; s k i r t in g 'radai . going to U.S. foi lh com ing book. "T he P ro fe sso r change s t a t io n W RGB

W es t Indies . He recalled how on ' m ak e the trip , th o u g h It wa.s foi - j The (ipa' a '" " includes one N a v y , t roops in (Termany th is sp r in g to gnd the C o m m iss io n s .” * P a r t s of , ^ h igh frequencyone p a r t i c u la r day, when th e seas ' t i ina le t h a l we could no t foresee : sh ip type not di.srlosed and o t h - . rep lace th e M a tad o r . . . . (Tharles the book w ere re leased S a tu rd a y . : , y H F i s t a t io n to an u l t r a h igh w ere heavy and bo th he and P a l t h a t it would ta k e 22 m o n th s of ] e r .Navy and A ir Fo rce itenvs. . | M a t th ew s , 11. who r a n a w a y f rom H a g e r ty replied b.v m a k in g foiii ' i^ s t a t io n t U H F ) . •were tho ro u g h iy soaked f rom a ! h a rd w o rk and use up ail oiir funds i U..S. ' ' .Ambassador H ow ard P . ' San F ra n c is c o hom e a f t e r be ing ic t lc r s public. [ „ ' . , ., . ' - tock-d r lv in g ra in, th ev had conceived a before we would s t a r t across the i Jo n es in formed F o te ig n M i n i s t e r ; spanked , found d e ad , of a .sphyxia- Last vear, th e House T.egiala- , fanta .sy of ra is in g them se lves i n ; A t lan t ic in o u r 46-foot ballodn, j Subandr io l a s t n ig h t t h a t P r e s i - ‘ « o n .veaterday in an aban d o n ed l ive O v e r s ig h t - su b c o m m i t te e

(jent E isenhow er h ad approved th e | buil.ding a block f rom his home. ; moved S c h w a r tz as chief counsel. ; la rneo

world4t')de in scope. T he o rg an iza ­t io n conducted Im p o r ta n t re sea rch • t hom e a n d d a r in g exploits •b ro a d , m a n y . of th e m behind •n a ro y lines.

T h e shadow y a r m also fo s te red Jlilidjitance m o v em e n ts and m ade

poss ib le th e escape o f som e ' 6,000 m em b a rs of th e a rm e d fo rces who h a d Ijeeir aho t dow n o r t r a p p e d he*- h ln d e n e m y Unas in v a r io u s the-

. . iis-jt!,'-''' -------^V. » (OaatfBiMd M P a c o T w o)

th e a i r a n d d r i f t in g over th e sam e , "T he Sm all World."'

in a n y th in g b u t is con- w ith the su(;cesa of the

c o n s t a n t . "T he So u th A tlan t ic h a s the t r e ­m endous a t t r a c t io n o f all those

ficial r e p o r t s .said I t w

course, secu re froi)t the .roll of th e ocea'n.

Id e a Builds up | lovelv'^ t r a d e w inds b low ing fromB ushy ; w a a th e one w ho p r o v e d ; 12 to 20 miles an h e u r in one d i - 1 w o r th a b o u t $10 mill ion

to be th e ca ta ly s t ie a g en L H e i rec t ion so i t would be a n a tu r a l ! iT h e sale w a s ta k e n aa an^indi- a rch ed h is eyebrow s a t CoUn’s j fo r ballooning^.” Colin po in ted out. j c a t i o n ' ,t h a t the U n i ted S ta te ? has r e m a r k a n d sa id : •' * ’ ‘ . A nd 1 m en ta l ly added — to i f a i th t h a t P re s id e n t .Sukarno’s gov-

'm yse lfto end u p In , the w a r m th of the

xplori’n g ' s o m e ' o r h i s ’ ac ^ ^ ‘‘ ’'’ - ' i . J t f . Ssize of the sh ipm en t , btit unof- l a k r i i over f rom 8,000 big I’a k i s - ' s a t io n s and us ing files he had a.s- 1 1° som e consioerasale. Jo n es did n o t announce the 1 A bout nine million a c re s o f land j But,

-■’.Surely some chaps must have tried going aoroes the Atlantic by balloon. Or have they?"

There are timea you^can almost

how lovely i t would be e r n m e n t will r e m a in Independertt of ’ " ' ‘ ' -■ the So v ie t bloc a s well u of the

(Ooatipued oa Page lliree)' ■ -\

I l U l | 4 » l “ ITS g I V l i l »|»VV4» ■' • K ■ B n L l U n n O f l U U S I l l I ^ U l C O sin? naavs “ — * A f t « A ('3lSl3.•ould b e . t a n i land oivnera un d e r c o u n t r y ’s ; sem bled, it launched inves t iga t ions shbuld be g iven to ine l i^ i . i M t

. Sew land m e a su re s a n d will be dis-1 t h a t led to th e re s ig n a t io n s of i such a (d iange w » l e a w t r lb u te d a n d sold. . . . David Pace , i A dam s, who waa Presidefit E i s e n - : f ^ l i e s w i th o u t23, of T oron to , y o u n g p a r a c h u t i s t , , b o w er’s chief a ss i s tan t , and ■ Rich- j U H F c an n o t roachju m p s f ro m plane and p lunges I a rd A. Mack, a federal, c o m m u n l - . p u t m w y o th e rs to the W3.500 feet , to d e a th in P a r i s , Oht.,1 cat ions, commissioner. \ I co nyw aion «my»»>g .“ “ ra p p a re n t ly w itho li t t r y in g t o pwil 1 T he accusa t ion , a g a in r t H a g e r ty j Dmfalw wri»ie-

I h ' /

(CkmtlnuMl a a ^ i g a TfaUlaMi)either ripcord of /hia two para- invo lves a television station in the Ichutes. / 'Albany-Bchenectady area of New ' l',

r\

■A

M y , y

(OM thrapd Ml fs g « Six)

lies. The cost for the programa was estimated at around SS ibillion over the nex t S3 yeara , - -1

CRO.M.V ON CMS BOARD 5,’.Hartford, Feb. 9 i43—Former .

.Mayor .loseph V. Cronin may bei- eome the first representative., from organirrd la ^ r on the board of CKfS (Connectioilk Medical Serrice), which .pajwU'. doctors' bills for over 1 people in the state. It w u tfa>s ported that 43MS officiate h a ie : . asked Cronin to cottaider servlfag:^^,^” J aa a director on the board of Hmi’ ' ' 'medieal sendee corporatl4m.^*i,i>,

---------• -.4 ■■'Srt''-■ HOFFA AIDE JAILED

New York, JFeb. g (43r—Befav jamin Franklin ColUns, Detrpljl imioo offfidal aiid close aitsae|«ffa( of Teamsters President JMnes R.Hoffa, waa sentenced today by l'.S.'3 Dtetrld^ Judge John,’':'*!.Casitin to tliree years traprtoons.^

. inent for.p«rjiuys,Xkfa <»•• de> rvefbped from a grsoul j i ^ invest '-tigatiou of vrlrotapplng a#d raoketeerfaif;: In Locni M of the intemstloBsJ Brotherhood o fTenmaters. O ^ n s , *8. te •dgl'WJitafy-triMisnrsv o f w o tewt, fn Is pcMddMpH 4# O y, W . 'j * .;

. wd! aa lw i8 l«r r ' — ■

' 3

V

:r I (•. 1 '

Page 2: NO. no MANCHESTER, C ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 ... Evening Hearld...of at \ If Manchester \" ‘" • * * « • • • • • ***** ***** MANCHESTER if / '. .Manchester, 9

PAiSB TWO

Just forThe Record

By PH IIJP TREGGOR Ever since man has had bathtubs in bathrooms he has

delighted in singing therein. This is because the hard sui- f i S tile amplifys his meager output into something quite s ^ d i d to his own ears. Even the mo.st dmiinutive span..\v will sound like Caruso ifi a particularly tine hathioonK____

compliment-'.ryNatural, compliment->ry acous-; Uc» are a necessary part of auc- ccsaful concert* or recordings. The finest instrument* and performers can be defeated by an acoustically bad situation. An excellent ex­ample of poor acoustics can he heard at the local high school. The otherwise nice, new auditorium i.s spoiled by the lack of proper sounding surface.^ for the stage.

Church organs offer another striking example of the importance of good acoustics. At St, Mark's Chapel on the campus of the Uni­versity of Connecticut, a tiny. 4-rank MoeUer pipe orga.T has a most pleasant sound because of

tnet quintet. One is a little suirri*" ed and much displeased by the rhythmic insecurity of the ensem­ble . . . . Mr. Samuer Mayes, cellist, in particular lushed every solo op­portunity.

Organ Music of S|>aln E. Pou'er Biggs 'Ctolunibln KI. fll61

That indefatigable traveler Mr. Biggs plays early Spanish organ music for u.s on old Spanish in­struments. Some of them were b.-rdlv in need of major restoration but were sufficiently functioning to enable one to hear the beauti­ful tonal concepts of early build­ers. ntR great trumpet stops are particularly striking to hear.

The album contains a nicely Il­lustrated pamphlet with a dis­course by .Mr Biggs about the sev­eral organs used, their constriic-

Aii Important

South Windsor

Fire Department Revamped;F. L. Magee Named President

■ M ] m ^

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1969 PAGE THREB^

a record mav carry when this mat­ter should be left entirely to thediscretion of the performing artists. , tlon and location

record for organ enthusiasts.Fantaalestucke-WaldHoenen.Robert Schunian.Frleslrieh Gul^. pianist.Ixindnn I.I. IS iI.

CODETTASymphony A'o. "i—BeHho\en. Berlin I’hllharmonie—Paul t'an

KemiM>n•Basic Item for Your Record | Epj,- S02B.

collection. ' A conservative, ahiio.st stodgyPerhaps it does not need saying i rendition

that any good record collection | pUuin Encores, must ( onlalii other than purely Badiira Skoda, pianist, symphomc vnrks. And here is an excellent disc for your piano de­partment.

This IS .Schumaii piano niusir of an early period, the Kantasv pieces

and of his later life, the w ood.se ertes written in hi.s 39th year Karly nr late. It is nhva,\'s lovely and always Schuman

Friedrich Culda pla\s them with sensilivitN'. never in the oft-heard, heavy handed, overly rich style.

Coneerto fur (larlnet, Mnr.art

Miineh

the enhancing effect of fine acous- of his middle twentiestic* in the building. On the o ther '...................hand the brand new Skinner Instru­ment of over forty ranks, recently Installed at Old Center Church in Springfield, is almost a total loss by comparison. The building is acoustically "dead," and the in- atrument is never able to shim­mer Or glow', let alone blaze in all the glory of which such an organ , Benny (iooduian Is capable, Boston Symphony. (

In the world of recording this, Rt ’A UM 207.3 same situation exists. Some discs One's first impression is that have a high resonance while others I Maestro I'.oodmaii left his good sound as though they were record- (-jai-met at home Maybe it s the Cd in the center of a sponge. Un-j leord-ng, mavhe it's the instrument

he does play . in an.v cii.se the liquid, floaiing qiialilv one has come to expet l from the "licorice stick" is sadly lacking for the most part.

Mr. Goodman's interpretation Is rather heavy for ideal Mozart play­ing and seems to have influenced Ml. Munch who allows the nrche.s- tra to whip along'in soineltiing of a frenzy most of the time.

The opposite side of the record contains the famous Mozart clar-

M'estmlnlsler XWN 18281.Lots of deliglUsomencss here. All

on the romantic aide.

65 Days Aloft Kii{liirance Mark

Las \'egas. Nev., Feb. 9 - -Don t anybody mention flying to Robert Tiinni and .lohn Cook for a while They've had enough - al­most 6,1 days aloft.

They landed their light plane

F. Lee Magee of Ellington Rd. has been elected president of the South Windsor Volimteer Fire Department, succeeding Kenneth Palmer.

Reorganization of the depart­ment into two companies and a redistribution of equipment oc­casioned by opening of the new fire house at Ellington and Beelze­bub Rds. have also been an­nounced.

Other officers elected to serve with Magee include: D a n ie l Spencer, vice president; Herbert Deffley, secretary; Milton Land, treasurer; commissioner for five years, Alee Blozie, and chaplain, the Rev. Ra', mond B. Yuskaus- Itas, assistant pastor of St. Fran­cis of Assisi Church.

Committee appointments In­clude; Social. Cyril Arno, chair­man, George Mullins, Arthur Snow, Allien Reiser and Harry Cohen; House, Raymond Hack, chairman, and Alan Barbrick; By- Laws, William Watrous, chairman, Kenneth Palmer and Kenneth Nich­ols, Sick. George fc nea, chairman, Richard P. Jones and Fred Tomel; Probation, Charles Enes, chair­man. Raymond Ellison and Daniel Spencer. Meniberahip and publicity committees will be appointed by the new president.

Jones lleclecterlRichard P. Jones was reappoint­

ed chief of the local department and Charles N. Enes assistant

Saturday afternoon, touching land i |,y Board of Fire Com

fortunately, the recording engineer frequently has much too much to sav about the degree of resonance

T h is W e e k at

B u rto n 's

for the first time since Dec. 4 when they look off in quest of a world's endurance flight record.

They got it, too. by nearly 15 days. Their official mark was 64 days. 22 hours and 'J1 minutes. The old record was .lO days and 18 minutes set last September by .Tim

! Heth and Bill Burkhart of liallaa. Their single engine plane was

missioners. The board also reap­pointed Raymond Hack as deputy chief, Raymond Ellison and Allan Barbrick a.a captains, and Fred Tomel a.s heiileiiant.

William Enes Sr. of Glaalon- i bury, a charter member and for- i mer captain of the South Wind­sor Volunteer Fire Departmefit

I ,

PRESCRIPTIONSFree Delivery

LIGGEH DRUGSHOPPING PARKADE

MODERN TV SERVICE

SERVING MANCHESTER and ROCKVILLE

Ml 3-8185A NTEN NAS REI’ .AIRED

and INSTALLED

laraHi ('olirt-Martial

Tel Aviv, l.sraci. Fell, 9 TP- An I.sr.Tpli rourt-mnrtial will try tho loader of a patrol whirh crossed into the Oazn Strip and killed an Arab won^an and <*hild.

A U.N. F/merg’oncy Force unit found the I.''.raell patrol in the Egyptian occupied territory last Wedne'^day and i-eported it had fired into an Arab villapo, killing

' a woman and her son and uoiind- intr anothej* woman.

; The F.X. Israeli-F k y p t 1 a n i Mixed Armistice CiTinmission cen- I snred Israel for the Incident. The Israeli Army continued to ma-in- tain that its pat?'ol was pursuing-

\ infiltrators wlio had altnokod it.Put it said, the patrol loader vi-

. olatoii i n s t r u c 1 i o n s when he I cro.saed the border. An Army I spo-kesr'an expressed larael’a re­gret “ if their wore any innocent ( iLsualtics m this inndent

RAYMOND T. SCHALLERBUILDER

NEW HOMES

ADDITIONS

REMODELING

REPAIRS

i-efncled each dav from’' ; " pickup - -

S t = - T h - t n "iz g^ ! I f f r : =hot meals In this manner. 1 buL has requested

Timm, a I-as Vegas hotel execu- ! be continued on the roll aslive, and Cook, an airline p|]ot. i '*■ P^Sular fitenian.said they actiialh* enjoyed living ; The old fire headquarters on El­more than tun months aloft. But i linglon Rd. will house Co. 1 andthey said they weren't anxious to -the town's new LaFrance 750-gal-trv again. Ion pumper. The department's

emergency truck and Red Cross boat will also be maintained there.

Co. 2 will be located in the new firehouse. The 1938 Maxim pumper with 1.000 gallon lank truck will be stationed at the new site. Both trucks are equipped with two way radio intercommunication systems.

Chief Jones and Drillmaster George Enes are currently con­ducting a 12-wcek training course for local volunteers.

Homemaker Contestant Muriel Magee, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. F. Lee Magee of Ellington Rd., has been announced as the Ell.sworth High candidate in the state Belly Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow competition, sponsor­ed by General Mills.

State winners will receive a $1,- 500 scholarship from General Mills, and an educational trip from April 4-10 with their school advisors to Wa.shington, D. C., William.sburg, Va , New York City and Minneap­olis. Schools from each state win-

I ner will each win a set of Encyclo­pedia Brittanica.

The girl judgeil best of the state winners will receive a $.5,000 schol­arship as All American Homemak­er of Tomorrow, Muriel received the highest mark in a written examination administered to grad­uating senior girls. This same ex­amination paper \yill be used in judging the stale (contest.

This year 349,150 girls from 12,

pudding; Wednesday soup and crackers, chopped ham sandwich, cake; Thursday baked meat loaf, mashed potatoes, buttered peas, cranberry sauce, rolls and butter, cookies; Friday, scrani'oled eggs, potato chips, carrots and peas, peanut butter and jam sandwich, fruit. Milk Is served with all lunches.

Manchester Evening H e r a ld Smith Windsor correspondent El­more (i. Burnham, telephone M it­chell 4-0674.

Gen. Donovan OSS Director, Diplomat, Dies

(Continued from Page '.me)

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260 .schools look'the test, a record number The winner of the na­tional contest will be announced April 10.

New Library HoursEffective Feb. 14. Sadd Memo­

rial Library will be open Saturday from 9:30 am. to 12 noon. After thus date the library will no longer be open Thursday afternoon. L i­brary hours besides Saturday morning are Monday and Thurs­day evenings from 6:,30 to 9.

Card Party |The Wednesday afternoon Club

fif south Windsor will sponsor a spring fashion show' and card party March 2 at the Wood Memo­rial Library at 8 pin.

Members will be modeling the latest! fashion., of Ethel Jacques of Pratt St. Hartford. There will be rtilany door prizes, table prizes and refreshments.

Mr... Robert Griffin and Mr.s. Maxwell Boice are co-chairmen. The entire proceeds will benefit the Public Health Nursing Assn, of South Windsor.

Lutheran Lenten Service ■‘Judas, The Apostle Turned

Traitor " will be the sermon topic pf the Rev. WaltjCr L. Abel Wednesday, at 7 p.m. at Our Savior Lutheran Church whose services are held in the Wapping Elementary School on Ayers Rd.

Gold crosses and a tract on the subject "Wearing A Cross" will be given to all those attending. The Lenten Family Services will be short and a nursery provided for small children to enable the en­tire family to attend.

Following the service, refresh­ments will be served by the Luth­eran Women's Lcagtie.

School Lunch Menu i The following is the menu for 1 the Pleasant Valley, Wapping and : Union Schools for the remainder i of the w e e k : Tomorrow, baked I corned beef hash, buttered spin­

ach, dilL pickle, Jam sandwich.

PARK ING*/t/>e rOA O

B U R N S I D EBURNSIDE AVI E HTFO

COLOR! CINEMASCOPE! Robert Taylor Cyd Charlie

“TARTY GIRL““6:S*-1D

B«b Hagn^r France Nayen"IN LOVE and W AR"

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Wed., ‘Tai, af Math Hasalaaai”

President Harry S. Truman In. 1946 decorated Donovan with the Oak Leaf Cluster to the Distin­guished Service Medal he received during World War I. President Eisenhower in 19.57 awarded Donovan the national Security Medal,

Donovan was defeated in 1932 when he ran as the Republican candidate for governor of New 5'oi k. The winner was Herbert H. Lehman.

A lawyer. Donovan served after I World \Var II on the War Crimes ! Prosecution staff that prepared evidence against the principal Nazi war criminals tried at Nuernberg.

In the field of diplomacy, Donovan once served as ambas­sador to Thailand.

A native of Buffalo. N. Y., Donovan was an outstanding quarterback while attending Co-

I lunibia University.Allen W, Dulles, director of the

Central Intelligence Agency, paid tribute to Donavan yesterday as "The father of Central Intelligence in the United States."

Army Secretary Wilber M. Bmcker said "The nation mourns one of Us great soldier-state^s- men. . . "

Donovan's wife, the former Ruth Ruinsey, along V ith a broth­er, the Rev. Vincent Donovan, a Dominican priest, were at his bed­side when he died. Surviving with his widow and brother are a son, David, of Berryville, Va., and five grandchildren.

Services will be In Arlington National Cemetery. The lime has

'not been set.

Women Slate Holy Service

Local church women will partlc- ipats In th# worahlp service at United Methodiet Church Friday In the observance of World Day of Prayer.

Mrs. Samuel Walker of the host church will preside at the buXnes* meeUng of the World Day o f Pray­er group.

Mr*. Kenneth Perrett, president of the Woman's Society for Chris­tian Service of the Methodist Church; Mr*. Bosworth, vice pfesl dent of the Ladles Benevolent So­ciety of Bolton Congregational Church, and Mrs. Fred C. M<Ar Sr., president of the Women of St. George’s Episcopal Church will present portions of the worship theme, ‘‘Lord, I Believe.”

Other local women who will lake part In the service are Mrs. Clif­ford Stephens, Mrs. Frank Ulm and Mrs. Richard Fowler. Mrs. Calvin Fish will be organist and Mrs. Har­vey K. Mousely, vocal aololst.

Luncheon, for which a dollar will be charged, will be served at 12:30 p.m. Reservations for the meal must be made by tomorrow 'with Mrs. Elmer Weden. The offering on World Day of Prayer goes to mission work.

Polio ReturnsA total of $643.97 has been real­

ized to date In the March of Dimes campaign. Mailing cards brought in $392.75; school contributions, $116.65: coin boxes, $35.28 and dance, $99.30.

Acknowledgments of donations have been made to Frank Ulm, Wilbur Nelson, W. E. Griffin, Law­rence Flarjp, Bolton Grange, Arvld Carlson, Daniel Po.st, Doris Skin­ner. Albert Skinner, Karl Nlckes, Rolland Meloche, .lease Jensen, Leslie Peters, Vincent Mickewicz, C. Wlsse, Joseph Tracy, Raymond Wogman, R. C. Olmsted, N. J. Preuss, Mrs. E. Silverstein. Charles Ubert, Richard F. Dimock, W il­liam J. Riley Jr., Mario Morra and C. G. Heusser.

To Pick Sil-eSt. George'a Episcopal Church

will hold a parish meeting after worship next Sunday in the Civil Defense shelter at the school. Pur­pose of the meeting will be se­lection of a site for a church build­ing.

Ht. Maurice Note*St. Maurice Council of Catholic

Women will meet tonight at 8 o’clock in the church hall. The Rev. Bernard L. McGurk will speak on Lent.

Father Flavian of the Holy Farri- ily Monastery in Farmington will be speaker at the Holy Name So­ciety dinner Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rosemount. All men of the parish are urged to attend.

Ashes will be blessed before the 8 a m. Maas on Ash Wednesday. They will be distributed after Mass and at 3:15 p.m. A t 7 :45 p.m. there will be rosary, benediction and distribution of ashes.

CYO will meet at 7 p.m. on Wednesday.

Gra-ss FireFiremen extinguished a grass

fire at the Charles Allison proper­ty on Rt. 6 at noon Saturday. There was no damage reported.

Public RecordsApplication for Marriage L i­

cense; Wilfred George Perry and Norma Margaret Leone, both of Andover.

o nDON’T TAKE A N Yl o s i n g f i n e s s e s

By Alfred SbelnwoldU.S. Master* Team OhsmiHoiiWhen I was six years old, my

father took me on his knee and ■aid: "You are now a big boy and going to school. Pay attenUon to your teacher, and don’t take any losing finesses.”

This Is sound advice for svery- body who has reached the of six as you can see from the fol­lowing hand.

West wins the first trldt with the king of spades, on which East plays the discouraging deuce. West next leads the queen of diamonds. What is your plan ?

If you didn't have a father a ad­vice to guide you, the club finesse might tempt you. But you would lose to the king of clubs and back would come a spade through your queen. The opponents w'ould take a club and three spades.

How Do You Know ?How do you know in advance

that the club finesse i.s sure to lose? A t the first and second tricks West has told you that he has the ace-king of spades and the queen-jack of diamonds. You know that West passed to begin with and never peeped during the entire auction. How can West have the king of clubs-?

With this knowledge and pap­py's advice you are ready to pro­ceed.

Win the second trick with the king of diamonds, lead a dia­mond to the ace and return the nine of diamonds from dummy. When East plays a low diamond (as he must), you discard a low club.

This strange trick gives West a diamond but robs East of a club trick. What can West do? He can­not profitably lead spades. About all he can do is lead a club.

You take dummy’s ace of clubs

W « t dealer North-South vnhwraUa

NORTH♦ 7 4 3V K 9 S♦ A 9 4♦ A Q J 6

WEST KAST♦ A K I 4 10 » 6 25 5 3 2 V 7♦ Q I 1 0 5 ^ t 7 t 2* 7 3 2 4|kK10 9 5

SOUTH♦ Q 8 5W A Q J 10 6 44 K 6

W«et North EeM 8a«lh Pass 1 ♦ Pass 1 VPass I N T Paae 3 WPass 4 V All Pas*

Opening lead — 4 K

and lead the queen of c lu b * through East. His only hope is to play the king of clubs (otherwise you would discard a spade) where­upon you ruff.

Now you draw three rounds of trumps, ending In the dummy, and cash the jack of clubs to discard a losing spade. This guarantees your game contract.

Daily QuestionAs dealer you hold; Sp>ades —

Q 8 5; Hearts — A Q J 10 6 4; Diamonds — K 6; Clubs — 8 4. What do you say?

Answer: Bid one heart. You have 12 points in high cards and a strong 6-card major suit, ample strength for an opening bid.

(Copyright 1959, General Fea­tures Corp.).

Cars Use More Plastic■ Detroit — The 1959-m8del auto­mobile uses a record average of 20 pounds of plastics apiece, about five pounds more than three years ago. Plastics men predict that the 1963 models will use 35 pounds.

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T [ I t V I S I 0 N

Manchester E v e n i n g Herald Bolton correspondent. Doris M. D’ltalla, telephone Mitchell S-S545.

Thai Dandies CurbedBangkok, Thailand, Feb. 9 (,45—

Thai authorities have clamped down on street-comer dandies who hang around Bangkok's theaters and coffee shops whistling at the passing girls.

Police, led personally by Pre­mier Sarit TTianarat, have round­ed up more than a hundred of the youths who affect duck-bill hair­cuts. permanent waves and loud shirts. They are blamed for nu­merous disturbances in r e c e n t months.

Two cabarets frequented by the delinquents have been shut down, and a midnight closing hour has been set for all night clubs.

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The Small World-1

Casual Word Starts F antastic Adventure

(Omittnned from Page OtM)

West Indies. So that very evening our route itself was determined.

Some SkepticalEach one of us was assigned

duties and the more research xve did the more feasible w.e found the scheme to he. More than that, we were all sailors (Colin and I met because he was a boating enthus­iast as well as a yacht architect and I had crewed for Bushy In many a small boat race before that! and the similarities between ballooning and sailing were most heartening.

But though we were enthused about the possibility of sailing 3,000 miles across the Atlantic by hall(X)n, others did not share our enthusiasm. Wrapped up in our own little world of thermals, bal­lasts and the other physics of bal­looning, we had quite forgotten that we were living in the brave new world of Space Travel, of ■Vanguards, Sputniks and moon shots.

What hurt most wasn't that we were considered old fashioned but that we were generally regarded as prime candidates for a psychia-

merely said that he was designing an auxiliary rescue craft to be! used with helicopters, which sounded logicsl enough. ]

Bushy, being the director of a company, coiiM spend more .of his \ time away from the job without i being questioned, or at least with ■ people more wary of questioning him openly.

It was mostly Bushy's money! that was being poured into the project, as Colin was devoting his \ full-time to the building of our ci'aft and I was still holding down my job in public relations In an advertising agency to make sure that we were able to pay the gas bill and the rent at the end of the month.

Need Pilot’s LicenseI shared an office with a girl

named Sonia Whitfield and as lime | went on I found my telephone calls becoming more and more cryptic. She natiiially became more curious. In the end I had to take her into my confidence. Her remark, as I recall, waa that it was all very interesting, "but better you than me."

In the midst of all our planning, we auddenly realized that none of us had ever been up in a balloon

With this came the lealization that in this age of officialdom with its countie.sa

I forms to fill out, we d never get off the ground unless one of ns was a

We looked at each as we thought

The Baby Has Been Named...

The members of "The Small World" expedition, Colin Mudle, Rosemary Mtidie, Timothy Biloart, and Arnold "Bushv " Eiloail. (Copyright, 19.59, ABC Expeditions, Ltd. Distributed by King Fea­tures Syndicate. All ngiils reserved). ______ _____

Seemingly not i at ing

' dimensions of Ibis, which wasI said, "("nlin's busy

with the boat and the balloon fgp( py while I ni still working so that ,iiere was a damped 11 feetwe ll have a little money coming i,y f, fgg( of living ami working

tor four I'pople. Even our , .tiny 2-romn flat waa aiiacious in

the : oonipari.son w1tli il. I'I'ime waa running out for Kusiiy

the I

trisfs emu li. Businessmen w.e wolud approacii to lend us a hand I would look at us reproachfully, as miiih as to say. "By balloon an nas the Atlanlic? And witlioul an en

" ‘"bu\ bv%rri^m‘’e\ve itad become j '--nsed pilot completely infected with balloon ifever, though strangely enough, .in . ; none of us had ever been up in a ■ ■ ■balloon before. The fever wa.s con­tagious. for though we w’ere mak-1 tng our plans in secret we had to |share them with some people. , ----- _ . ... _ ... •■’Pa'*’Among them wa.s Bushy's son Tim­othy. who is 2l and a chemical en­gineering student at Cambridge University. He became .so en-j thu.sed tliat be in.sisled that he must go on the voyage.

By this time we had decided on I the type of gondola- the car that is swung underneath the balloon we wanted and we knew that we could well use an additional crew member. So there we had the final ship’s complement. It eon.sisted of Bu.shy, age .51. a company di­rector of wiry build and a man of boundless eiythiisiasin and energy By acclamation we derided to make him. as the senior member of the parlv. the oommander of the balloon. Then there was my hus­band, Colin, age ,'52. Since he was the only true deep-sea sailor among us, he was to be the navi­gator and, because his profession wa.s that of yacht architect, he also was to design the balloon and the ear that rode below it which would serve as a boat if w-e | •were e\'cr foreeil down. Tim was to be our radio operator and take tlie meteorological readings with which ■we hoped to make the trip erientifically valuable. And I was to he the official photographer as well as in eliarge of the meals.The latter wasn't because I'm a born housewife I I deplore hou.se-

Thanies, what happened to it.

We did this because we had to have indications of whether the car-boat would survive the terrific Impart of dropping from a .10- degree angle into a violent sea, from an unknown height, at siieeria as bigli as 10 knots, (lur lives were later to depend on wlial we learned in these tesla For sliortly we were to ditch at sea during a violent storm.

Colin's desigli produced probably the most unlikely looking boat ever comeived. It re.semhied a giant

: (Igar box< \\ itli its lid off. wlien , rioaling in the water The over-all

to

didn't speciflrallv stale that you had to have the in.structor up in the balloon with .voii. So Bushy became Uie first do-it-yourself bal­loon pilot a.s well as the only li­censed one in the country!

Poor Tim Eiloart, nieanUme, was having difficulties of Jiis own.

He waa in his fourth year at Cambridge when "The Small

novicea in ballooning we only knew ita techniques in theory. The balloon had been designed in the. .shape of a sphere in order to hold the maximum amount of hydrogen gas.

That's where theory and prar- Uce parted company. We hadn't taken into account that when in­flated, the heavy netting. Car. and

World" drifted into his life. He de-1 ballast would pull the hag into a voted so much time to the nec-Ti-I ?»bape. That meant we actual-1sary studying for his radio opera- ! l.v could carry IN per cent less gas tor’s license - and later learning 1 than we had planned, ,meteorology - that he slackened i The news shook us What to do.up on his legulai’ ptudie.s. The rc-j vvere scheduled to leave for |Mull wa.s thal he was sent down - - Tenerife in the Canary Island.s in', I belle^■e ttie American teini is i .lust four daya for take-off. Since ‘•flunked out" and told he would wo uere low in fund.’*, we either

liome” f( r 24 day.s. were 1 r> I have to apply for ie-ins;atemont 7 feet. SIX inrlie.s. while in- the next teiin. Pity of -t all was

be a balloonist since you're only one with the time andmoney,"

The balloon in which we planned to float 3.000 1 iie.a across the At-; lantic Ocean was firmly tied to the ground with red tape for months. We couldn’t know as we waited impatiently that when this final tether was cut we would .soar off in all-too-brief glory to disas­ter.

To satisfy the demands of bu- reaucrai'v. Arnold “ Bushy” Kilo- art. our chosen balloon comman­der. had to qualify as a licensed pilot. Idke the rest of us. he had never been up in a balloon before.

His .son Timothy, who is studying at Cambridge I ’niversity to be a chemical engineer, had to become a licensed radio operator since our strange < raft would not have been allowed to undertake such j peril- ou.q voyage without proper com­munication equipment.

And finallv we found tl’ ft* we I would have to have a “ certificate of ail' wnithiness" for “ The Small

oui 46-foot .silver-and-black

in his efforts to borrow a balloon j so he could qualify for a license., In desperation he tinally hit upon j the idea of our con.sl met mg one in the living room of his apartment for- his instruction purposes. It wa.s named "Sylvia " after Sylvia King, a balloon ex)>crt of Bristol Cnix er- sity. who had interrupted her honeymoon to show us how one went about making a balloon,

Kl^k.v BiiHineHROur amateur balloon liad not

been designed for actual flight hut Bushv had no choice: he ('ould nnl\' hope tliat o\ir handiwork would hold together. Csing "Syh-ia ' was a risk.v business in anv e\irnt sin

that the radiO’< were among ti" first thuig.s we were lojicd lo tlirow oxerhoaid from the hallo; n w lum we ran into oiir fif.st violent Ihernial.

IMan l^akn Out(Jetting our ceitiftiate of air-

wort hines.*:. the thing we had; leaped mo>l. turned out to he the least difficult «if all, Jt wa.s .such a unique » raft. that the hureaucrat.« , harl nothing with whiih to com-' pare it. They did ask for one or two modiflcation.'s. The mo.sl ludi* |• rous of tl'iP.‘*e, i! seemed to u.s, i \sa.s Uiat theie had to he a sign iir j the tar 'Aarning "No Smoking"! liecau.se our hag was to he filled with h.vdrogen gas which \s in- flanimable. You see. none of us smoke.

; By now some of our plans had. ; , leaked out. 1 lunched with several

had to abaiulon the juoject. o?- go ahead with it.

Thcie really wa.sn t an.v neces- sit.v iif polling tire group \ ■e woulil gi» ahead, witlumt telling anybody of our miscah ulation. But It meant l.*» per cent le.ss chance of j successfull.N- crossing the Atlantic.

(Tom<»rrow: Wontward Ho!)iCopyrighl. inriq, A R( ’ Kxpeili-

tions lAd . Oistrihuted by King Kealure.'? Svndnate)

Br.van. Smith, «on of Mr. and Mr* Wayn* E Fliot Sr VVor- c.estor 'Rd , Vomon. He horn .Ian. 11 *l Msnrhealfr Mf- morlsl HospiUl Hi* matorn*! (rr«ndp*iTnt* *r* Mr. and Mr*. Benjamin H. amllh Sr.. Windaor, VI., and hi* palernal grand- , mother la Mr* Mahpl K. Flint. Windaor. VI He ha* a hiother, | Wayne E. Jr., 1.1; and a aialer, Bonnie I.ee. 11

• * * « ♦Amy Jane, daughter of Mr. and Mra William Supple, 119

Main St. She was horn Jan, 10 at Mancheater Mpmniial Hos­pital. Her maternal grandparent* are Mr and Mrs 9. .1.Zwlesele, SprinKfleld, Mass., and her paternal Risndpaienl* are Mr. and Mra. Frank H. .Supple, WIlniiiiKlon, Pel. She has a brother, Jeffrey, I ' j ; and a slater. Sherry, 2.

B 0 m * *Gene Brian, son of Mr. and Mrs. William A Zizka. MRii.sfield

Center. He waa born Feb. 2 al Manrhealer Memnnal Hnspllal. Hia maternal prandparenla are Mr. and Mra l.ouia Kiss Weal Wlllington, and hi* paternal Rramimolher Is Mrs Anaslazin Zizka. Storra. He has a brother, Wlllinm Pavid. 1. and a aister. Nancy Lvnn, 2. • • • • •

Ralph MUtnn, son of Mr. nnd Mrs Herbert M. Hoo\er, . 3 Overlook Dr. He was bmn P'eh ,3 el Mnnehes^er Memonel Hospi­tal. His malernsl grRiulparetits ere Mi eml Mrs living B Smith. Melrose, Mass., and his paternal grandparent.^ are Mr and Mrs. Lloyd N Hoover. Wilhraham, Mass. !4e has t\\n sislcrs.Deborah. 4. and Lucinda. 3

* * * * *OmiglRS .\llrn. son of Mr. and Mrs nusscll ^'erguso^. 126

Spruce St. He was bnin Feh 3 at Mam heater Memorial Hospi­tal. His maternal grandmother is Mrs O lia k'ergusf)!i. .M Foster St,., and his paternal grandpai'enis aie Mr and Mrs M>rnn A. Robbins, 19 Floionce St. He hn.s a hiother, Hsr?'>' Rus.se|l, 4

Dm id John. «<ui of Mr and .Mrs Philip I Ruddemeyei , .S317 Plymouth Rd . Baltimore, Md Hq was horn Feh. ft at the Hos­pital foi the Women of Maryland. Baltimore. Hia mateinal grandpaI’ents aie ,Mr ami Mr? Han\’ .1 Firatn, 00 Plymouth Lane, and his paternal grandmother is Mrs. .1. P> Muddenieyer, Balt imorc.

* * * * *Mara Janliia. daughter of Mi and Mrs. Agrits Rtekstins. 340

K. Centei' St She was horn .Ian. 3U at Hartford Hospital Her maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mis. F'’ndnrh Freimanis, .340 K. Center St,, and her paternal giandparents are Mr. and Mr«. Krl.ss Riek.stm.s, Latvia, She has a sister. Linda \’ern, I ’ j.

of my girl chinn.s, and nad lo e x -1 des»troyed theit was made of pur e pla. lic ’'^Iher , pinject. Kach irvariahlvthen w'oven material and therefore did not have a rip panel. ;

A rip panel i.s nece.‘?saiy to .s)nll out all the ga.s to colIap.se tlie canopy immediately when landing in a high wind where you stand the danger of being da.shed to deatli.Indeed, in one i^articular landing.Bushv was being slammed about .so

give its official blessings and per­mit Us lo take off.

It wasn’t easy for Bu.shy to be­come a balloon pilot. First. had no balloon we could use for the necessary qualifying flights. “ The Small Woild” was still under <’on-

keepingl but merelv because of the ! Lven if it had been...............I available, there was too much at

slake for us to risk using it before

AilualU-, Pm going with twoballoon and its special designed pacucuiHi so. you .sec, I .muldn t..car, before tlie government would Bushy wa.s tieng slamniedahoul.so

; hard before he could deflate thalj Nov. 23 we inflated Ihe bal­loon for the first time and ch'^ck- ed our equipment. Sime we were

home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huxle>' and their

id, ■ Bill you’re a woman! ” A.- if four y«)ung t hildren. The children the most remaikable thing was range between six years and nine that I wa.s a woman with three months oldmen rather tlian the voyage it.self j Firemen from three departjuents being the remarkable th.ng! I al-[could only confine the blaze. The way.'< lepiied: hou.se wa.s m a suburban aiea neat

way w'e parceled out the individual duties.

Oreani Takes ShapeKlnwdy hut surely our dream be­

gan to take shape. The turning point, perhaps, was when Colin and Bushy visited Bristol l^niversity where a great deal of research is being done on cosmic rays. There they were greeted as fellow ad­ventures and scientists rather than being regarded disdainfullv as a pair of erank.s with a wild idea. Ini particular. Prof C F. Powell con- ; sidered it a .sound project and ha<l some cogent sugge.«lions to make: about the construction of the bal-^ Inon. I

After that it seemed as if every­body wanted to help and we .soon! enlisted the hacking of the Air i Ministry Meteorological Office. | the P^esearch arul Development Fs- tablishment and The Institute of Na vigflt mn

"We had decided from the very beginning to keep our plans secret since we had the normal human desire of not wishing to be laughed at: nnd later we had reached the point at which ive believed w’e were an close to success that we did not want to ha\e it spoiled by having some one try to dissuade us.

But keeping secret such a proj­ect, which eventually involved hun­dreds of people, became more and more difficult as we progiesscd. We had all developed a "covet ’ story in case our friends became too inquisitive. But in P^ebruary of 19fi8 Colin, who had been work­ing two days n week as an artist, had to quit his job lo devote full­time to the construrtion of the balloon and the combination ear and boat that would swing be­neath it. which he had designed.

To his friends^who asked, he

I around’’ the law and said that il All T seem to get from the |

RANGE

We attempted to span the Atlantic.By this time we had firm *lip-

porteia in the lighter-than-air sec­tion of the Billish Ministry of .Sup­ply They volunteered lo supply a balloon, net, and car fo)- the licensing flights if Bushy would pay for Ihe gas. Rut then, apolog;etical- ly, Ihev called hack to tell us the Army had appropriated all their balloons

"I ve ,1ust never cotne 'ai e to face with any man in Ihe Army who t an tell ns whether we can have one of their balloons or not. " a discourajfed Bush told us. weeks laterArmy ate pieces of paper, and sometimes il lakes month.* to gel those. "

Prince Philip InterestedTirn. with the dauntless spirit of

youth, wrote a letter in the Duke of K.dinhurgh. Prince Philip, ask­ing "ran you help its extract a bal­loon from the Arm y""

To our immense surpiise and gratitude an aide at Buckingham Palace tang its up a few days later to say the Duke was keenly inter­ested in the project

But though he took our appeal lo the highest level of command, even Ihe Duke was not able to get a hal- ItKin from the Army. The ov tlook was indeed dim.

My husband, Colin, already had quit his job and was working full time on his designs for the balloon and the car that was to be slung beneath it. I well remember that first night when, like two smalt

; children, we triumphantly floated , his first scale model of our car- boat in the bathtub in out flat in

: Westininater. From there we pro­gressed to a half-size model with

' which we amazed Londoners who happened to see us chucking it off convenient b r i d g e * into the

ihe later termed it the loiigliest'' spot he was ever in. next lo our forced ditching at sea, !

I The wind was .so much higher ;than usual in England when the.

' "Syivia ’ was "tead.\'" that Bushy was forced to make two of his

I qualifying flights in Holland. He I had to tiave U fliglits. of a mini- 'I mum duration of two hours eai h. ;: to be eligible for a license. 5Ve simpl.\' could not afford the iiixiity ■ of waiting for proper Bnti.sh weather

Part way through Bushy* course, the .Ministry of ..\ir Biip- piy pointed nut that six flights had to be under in.struclion. That pro- diired a new difflriilty. Our searrn failed to turn up a single licensed civilian balloon pilot in England.

By this time, though, even staid eivil servants were caught up ir i our enthusiasm and tliey "read I

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Page 3: NO. no MANCHESTER, C ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 ... Evening Hearld...of at \ If Manchester \" ‘" • * * « • • • • • ***** ***** MANCHESTER if / '. .Manchester, 9

PAGB FOUR

K ifc im B B - V e r t w n :

S a c T ^ H eart P a rish P la n s |$80 ,000 C h u rch Fu n d D rive|

aiuiounoed for antbo held «t 7:30 p.m. Thursday.This week's servire will Include | communion. j

Vnion Conitreitotionsl Ctiurrli Supper meeting.' will be held on

Tuesdays during Lent. The first, beginning at 6:30 p.m. on Feb 17 will he followed by a disrusalon session .on the "Lord's Prayer " The Rev. John deSoiisa. minister of Men and Missiena of the Congre- gaUonal ronferenre, will lead the dlarussinn

Hn*|Ut]il NotesAdmitted .Satui-d.’iy . F. d w a r d

Shea. Peterson Rd. V e r n o n : Mrs Patricia Srhiillr 11.'i Pros­pect St : Oilliert Ames, rvickerel

I Rd . Vernonj ^.".rhargrd Salurdav 'Rrenda I Ann .May, IRl F Mam St Linda

Klr.ter, 4 Vernon Avc ; Mrs Rose Kiu-h. B Rpnire St : Mrs lymvood Crockett. SoiiUi Rd . Crystal LAke. Mrs Ro.se Millix, 27 Pleasant .St : Havid Plummer. 17 Linden .'51 . Mrs HViward Wil­liams, . 2 Prnsprrt .St .Mrs Stan­ley So.'ha an 1 daughter, .\bbott Rd , Kllington. FViward Charter, Fllinglon

Admitted veaterdav f 1 e o r g e

; m < m caldtal BuUdlat Tund ' campaign to Ananca construction ; o f a now pariah center and rectory ; for the Sacred Heart Parish, Ver-• Bon.; The campaign, under the dlrec- ‘ tion of J. J. Corcoran A Associ- , atas, la now in Ita organlaattonal• atage the Rev. Ralph KeUey, Pas- : tor. said yealerday. He announced• the appointment of Frederick J ; Foley as general chairman of the• drlva and John J. l«ohan as associ- ; Bto chairman. John A. Knksclun■ was chosen as aollcltstion chalr- I man.• In making the announcement ; yaaterday. Father Kelley stressed• &e rapid growth of the Catholic• population of the newly created■ Sacred Heart Parish and the : Inability of the 63 year old Sacred• Heart Church to providn adequate : faciUUes for all parish functions . He emphasised the "phenomenal 1 Increase " of children of school and• pre-school age In the parish and ratreased the need for proper facil-

lUes to provide for their religious instruction.

■' • -.y ■

' w'-

The *80,000 minimum goal of the j Mcrlan. 32 Windeniere AveViola Lugg. .17 Flr.i S! Charles Mnsltal, Depot Rd Broad Brook

nischargeri jesterdav Theodore Wanda. Depot SI . Broad Brook; Mrs Curtis Iassow, til (Jrand Ave ; Mrs .Mary MrS«ecney. Highland Ave., Broad Brook

Birlha ye.strrday A ,aoii lo .Mr. and Mrs Rirhard Boler, .30 Thomp­son St ; A son In .Mr and Mra Frederick Bilov\. llighlaml Ave

Births today daughter to.Mr and Mrs. ('liffor'l H' "ilei

Building Fund campaign Is alm» .l at making possible the start of construction in the late spring or early summer of the proposed *180,000 parish center.

The center will be erected on psodsh land located between the Wilbur Cross Parkway and Rt 30

- and will include a pariah hall with ~ a seating capacity of 67.r. a chapel ' for dally Mass, a library, seven

L^classrooms for religious tnstnir-- tion, and full kitchen facilities Tlie j IThBil viill be connected to the rec- ,“• torv bv the chapel, i . This" will form the first unit of .“ a proposed full psrish plant which j ~ will eventually Inrhide a n e w “ church, parochial school and con- r venL- Vernon Lenten Services- The Lenten services nl First ^Congregational Chiirrh of Vernon —will be held each Wednesday evo- tn ln g at 7;.30 o'clock, beginning- with Ash Wednesday, Feb II

“A Look At Our Church is the -doplc for the first Lenten servu-e ;

‘Z ’T h * t"'*' opera ^-tion of the. local church. Hie world "interest*, of the denomination, and

■the recent merger with the Fvan- ' rgellcal and Reformed churrhe.s |- The follownng two "■'■dne.sdav|; .||,'j,,y“ ^,^j.',',,„ ,p||profthebig- . evening services will be ronrerned , n-popper involving the • With the work of the denomination | p3,,„rj,y pachyderms a 82n mer-

■ rhandi.se rerlificale

In Y Youth Program

Police Chief and Mra. James Reardon follow the directions of ball v I o-cluiirman Paul Oagne while leading the grand marcli Rear­don later led the singing of "Aultl Lang Syne' following the 11 n'cl.pi k tna.sl. an Flks ritual Hial is held at all Elk.s funrtiona ol perprlua'tc tile memory of deceased Flk.s. (Herald Photo by Sat rrtn.s».

\>rnon and T»il ott^^Hp npuAk handled thrmiirh TTip Hprtild‘»

Bnrpnu. 7 W . Main St., tHf^phonp TR^mont

Hospital Notes

J u s t H o > v T a l l —

An Elephant Tale?|‘THow far can the tnith be "bent"

when a story Is told about white elepliant s "

A tall sinry contest now being condmted hv the local rhamher of Commerce w-ill give Connecticut re.sidents a chance to find out It

Tin foreign missions On March and 11. the service.' will be on home missions A sendee of prepa­ration. dedication and renewal will be held March 18. in preparatinu

-fo r Holv WeekI The Rev Rofinian D ('art pas

tor. said today the emphasis for the Lenten services i.a on mis.smn- ary work thi.s year What hap

“ pens each day In Europe Asia and ' Africa will greatly affect th- fu- - ture of each one of us " He e.on- ■;; tinned, "This church feelg it has

few tasks more important than an ' awareness of the rest of the world

and it.s ronrems and needsFilms and .slide.' will he shown

at most meetings lo help make the . study of missions clearer, he said.

During Holv Week, beginning March 23, half-hour services will be held Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday at 7:1, pm

-'hour will follow each service 1 program in the. Lenten schedule.

The conle.st. wliuli slarled to­day. Is being roiidurted hv llie Chamber in ronjiinclloii vvitli il.;i Washington's birthday sale.', pro- mollon Feb. 21 during which mcm- liers of the retail division will of fer "white elephant " arlirles for fanlasllrally low prices.

.Some of the items to he sold in- rliide an aulomohile for K cents.- a washing ijuuhinc for a cent. *20 sporl.s jackets for *5 and .so on.

Rules for the tall story ronlest are simple. Fir.st tell in 100 words or ie.'S the bigge.'t lie involving while elephants \nu can think of and then siihnut I he enlr\‘ o i en­tries to "Whit'c Elephant Sale." Chamber o f Commerre. 130 F. Cen­ter St , .Manchester. Conn Anyone

___ living in the Stale may enter. TheA social contest closes at midnight. Feb. 21

and the winner wilt be announced the following Monday

Patients Today. 18.3 AD.MITTKD SA HIRDAY .lames

.MiCarlliv. Doming SI . Wapping; '.nrrnll .Nelson 18 Ridge St.; Mrs.

Dorothy Strong C.raham Rd . Wapiiing: Ceorge C.ib.son 260 W. Center St . -Mrs. Clladys Fayle. 680 W .Middle TpkP . Mrs Hedwig Spilim.inn, .32 Deerfield Dr , .Arthur Beigii-n Ka.sl Hartford. I.oiiis earner I'armstead Dr RFD 1, Wapping Calvin Davison, 1.3 Hud- sen St Darvl Luginhiihl,, RFD 1. Roekville; Flir-aheth Zimmer, Fdl- Ingtnn Rd Wapping Th'lias .lamison. 3'i .Spruee ,St . ,Mrs. Alice Rogee,'.. RFD 2, Mancheater. Rob­ert Ziplfplder. Stafford Springs; niomas Phillips. .37 Spruce SI.

A D M I T T F D V FSTKRDA Y Cleiin Kovai iny, StafforrI Springs, Burcliiil -Ml ('.irthy 3‘ ,'ileoUville; Mr- .Alina Bate rnfl, South C.lns- tonhury; Mr.s Claia Slaler. Sla- Unn 30. -M iin St , S- uth Windsor: Che.'ler Melvin. 610 F Muldle Tpke ; Mrs Velma (lagne. Gilead; ,Mr.s.'.;isie Shea, .'li Valley St,. Mr.'. Anna Tv,ival. Fa.st Hartford; Chr’s- tine Cofliaier. 22 Tyler Circ-le Mi.sa Anna S-hi'a O.'.'l Mam „S1 ■ Mrs. Lueeir, ia Peralli

Therc.'a Roger 19 Clyde Rd Mary Deciantis. 202 Porter

I William Grafton. Newington ] Cecelia Burke. 36 Hammnnd St..1 Rockville; Frank Bieneman. RFD I 2. Roekville; Waid Dougan. 397 i N'eijisie Rd . Glastonbury; Mr.«! Kaiohre Novak. 3.3 Havnes St..

•Mrs. .loan Zizka flelrl Center; .Mrs, laus Kunaeh

i anrl d;iiiglitei' 190 .Summit SI.. Mrs Har.el La.skowski and son, W e.'t Rd . Fllington; .Mi s June Feigu.'on and son 126 Spruce SI Mr.s. Shirley Hoover snd son, .3.3 Overlook Dr.

' DISCI lARGI'D YKSTFRDAY Robert Wallaee, Thompsoiiville, Mrs .Madeline Cloi.gh. High .Man­or Park Rnck.'ille. Edward Wood. Piaintield; Cal'ip Da-.i-son, 43 Hud.son St.: A'.rs FJeannr p.axter. Beelzebub Rd., Wapping. Robert Hail, Ridgewood Tiail, Coventry; •lame.' .MrCarUiy. Deming St ,

600 Attraclcd To Elks Ball

KArl IWicheit, a lT-ye«r-old Man- cheaUr high achoql Mttior, la can- didata for governor on tna Nut­meg Party ticket in the 17th an­nual YMCA-TWCA Youth Govern­ment Program.

He was nominated yesterday as the youth program got underway with conventions of the Nutmeg and Charter Oak parties at thp YMCA In Hartford.

Relchelt, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Relchelt, moved to Puerto Rico in the fall, la pow liv­ing at 84 Finley St„ while complet­ing his senior year.

The Manchester student la run­ning against the Charter Oak Party's Alan K. Larson, also 17, a senior at Conard High School, in West Hartford.

The YMCA - YWCA program gives high school students from around the Slate a taste o f political activity by permitting them to form political parties, hold con­ventions, nominate candidates, run them In elections, and pass some laws.

F.lection* March 21Some 400 students from around

the Slate participated In the con­ventions of the two parties yester­day. The elections and Legislative sessions will lake place on March 21. at the State Capitol.

Relchelt, who was a representa­tive at the mock legislature last year, is pre.sident of the student council, a Nutmeg Boys State rep­resentative. a member of the Na­tional Honor Society, and a former president of Hi-Y. He ia also presi­dent of the Methodist Ydiith Fel­lowship and of the

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About 600 peisona danced to the music of Teddy Page at the Elks si.xth annual Valentine ('harily Ball Saliii day night in the Ai niory.

Gold, silver and led were the predominaUng colors in the deco-

and son. Mans-| rating scheme.The grand march was led by

■Manchester rohee (’ luef James Reardon, who is distnel riepulv, Conncetieiit East, in EIkdom. Grand .'-qiiue .Inlin MrGill and of­ficers of Mancliester IjOdge fol­lowed the flistriel deputy

■lolin (’ agiaucllo and Paul Gagne were ro-ehairmen of the hall.

' DINNER CHAIRMANi Hartford. Feh. 9 -.T- .lohn P Kelly. Demoeralie town rhainnan

j of Hartford, has been appointed I chairman of the Stale fiemoerntic I part.v's .Tefferson-Jark.son Day

and Improvement of State health, aafety and welfare laws, revision, of the present Slate Motor vehicle!I laws to provide more effective en-;| forcement and punishment of vio- ' lators, the abolition of compulsory 11 union memb<!rship as a require-; | ment for employment, and the de-1 velopmcnt of new sources of Stale . income, other than from an income ta.x.

The Charter Oak platform in- chides promoting better scholastic opportunities for youth and pub-1 licizing youth achievements and | activitie.a, advocacy of State rent controls, and Slate control over

Manchester I driver education. Both parties arc! Youth'Council of Churches backing improved highway and

Larson, whn represented West' school safely mea.siires. ,Hartford as a senator last year, is - - ja former delegate to Nutmeg Boys , w / ' I l 'State, and is currently president "f ■ I ' r i e S l W i l l ^ l l O W ' the Conard National Honor So- , , , i o i * Iciely and .sports editor of h.s H o l V E a i l C l h l lC I C Sschool's classbook. He is a member! ,of the CYO. I - . -

Other Candidates | Tlie Rev. Stanley Hastillo of St.Along with Rcichclt on the Nut- , Bridget's Church will show s'ides of

meg Party ticket will he William his Hip in 195,3 to the Holy Landat the meeting of St. Margaret's Circle, Daughters of Isabella, to-

al 6 o'clock at the

Menz, Newington, lieutenant gov­ernor: and Kay Lovallo. Torring- lon. secretar.v of Stale. Tlie Char­ter Oak camiidales opposing them morrow nighi will be Arthur F’ rigo, Torrington. •' ujKhls of Columbus Home running for lieutenant gov'erhor; ' F atlier Hastillo will naiiai and Cynthia Smith, Trumbull, ,,ec- 'he slides, depicting

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PRAnSIGN CO.For Signs

retary of slateWhen ill" Legislative session

gets underway, the Senate and House leaders for the Nulmeggcra will be Giis Halzis of Bridgeport and Reg Honychiircdi of Trumbull The Charier Oak Senate leader will be William Tnihart of Stamford, while J Winston Ivey of West

Father Hastillo will narrate while .the

life of Jesus from Infancy to his resurrection. Some of the plai es shown will he Bethleliem, Naza­reth, Capermim and Galilee

Tlua ia planned as the first in a aeries of programs to promote new membership in the organization. Any Catholic woman in Manchester Interested in learning more about the Daughteis of Isabe-fla is in” ited

Wapping; Birch St lir.ianlic : Kelly Rd

St. John's I>entcn Service* 1 Bruce Watkins, Willard Marvin 1 The season of Lent will begin on Greighton Shoor. members of -A sh — - ...............Wedne.sday. Feb 11. in St iJobn's Episcopal Church The Arst ! eaervMce will be the in s ni Holy -Communion. The Arsl of a .series “ of brief sermons on the siihierl «*‘Six Great Early Cliristians,' will

be given at that time , The mid-week services will he •. Inaugurated on Ash Wednesday

evening at 7'30 o'clock The Ven.. Maurice G. Foulkes, rector, and -Joseph Bclotti,, lay-leader, will ', preaent a dialogue sermon en- -titled "Something About Lent '■ I>uring the following eeks guest -preachers will occupy the pulpit.” On Sundays at 8 a m. a series of -brief meditations on the subject “ ’The Prayers of Christ," wnll he -delivered. The sermons at the fam- ;;_Uy services will be on "Six Fx- j.plajiations of Seven .Sacraments ' “ The sermons at the 11 a m. serv- “ ices will be on "Life In the Light “ of the Bible."

the executive committee of the re­tail division will he the Judges in the conies;. I

The lontesl 1.' only one of sev­eral ideas the Chamber has come up with to stimulate interest in Uie sales promotion Included will be a search for a hidden lo.v white ele­phant and a reenactment of Wash­ington's famous crossing of the Delaware

Card I’arly Hold By ( o»4iiiopolitaii8

Willimantir: Mrs Edith Welle.', RF'D. Wapping; Mra. Grace Sym- ingtOii. 28 Munrn St.: Miss Eliza­beth Hare, Kingsbury Rd . Rock- • illf; Mrs Virginia ChareUe. ,36

,,„in I "'hitney Rd.: Frank Seroert. Ber-i'UI s'^laiM SI . I hn, .Ml.;. Marv White. 113 OIroU

Mrs. I’hylli.s D.'fbeig! '2.'! Barry ' St ; Mias Eleanor Pallait. 130 W. Pd M'itthe'v ( 'ooke .34 Lvnes.s j f enlei S. , 3,is .loanne Kilgore, SI Noibcrt Kohlecl. 10 High St,, , Oak SI . South WimJ.sor; Michael Rockville; Mi. s Helen Kupchunos. ' Pedrazzini, 27 Pioneer Circle; Clark SI South Windsor; Mr.', j .'lark Anderson, 101 ( olnmhii.sJohn I'allcin 24 N. Kniificld St.:' St.; Mrs. Marianne A-ssclm and Mark Sandall, 114 Hoilisler St :: daughter. 116 .“ School .St , .Mrs. Wend.i' Gilis'ai. Wlllimanlic; Mrs, i .loscphine Bn.ichard and daugh- Emmeline Clark, 38 Pine St.; Mrs. ter, Warehouse Point.Esther Burgess, 17.3 Aver.'- St :Hedwig Palliardin. Long Hill Rd..Andover; Mrs. Mildred Brock. Kel­ly Rd.. Vernon; Mrs. Mary Law­rence. Vernon TraUj^^ibrf^!

b ir t h SATURDAY: A daugh­ter to Mr- and Mrs. Charles Sun- lava. 33 Cooper St.; a son to Mr. and .Mrs. Robert Fahle, Richard Rd . Vernon; a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Skinner, 47 Lake- view Dr , Cuvenl i y.

BIRTHS YESTERD.VY : A i ready lo hold a weinerdaughter to Mr. and Mrs. Stoner j aeasoningl It i an be eaten Smith 131 Love Lane: a snn to ice cream rone.Mr. ijufd Mrs. William Bassett, 11 ,Overm^^k Rd., Vernon; a son to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morneau,SoiiHi .yt , Coventry; a son to Mr. and Mr*. George Lawrence, Ver-

Harold Howard, 49 dinner.■loseph Donovan, Wil- The dinner will he hcM hole

■Mr.;, .leanotle Almada, i-"a'"' '! ' 1" Kelly s ap)inmtmcnl was Ve~non: Paulis Vilols, »nnounc-ed .Saturday hy .Slate

Chairman .John M Bnilev.

Hartford will provide the parly s attend, -Mrs. John Stevens is leadership in the House. ehaiiman of the membership com-

Platform* mitteeThe Nutmeg parly, whu h w on Mrs Foster WilliaVns is rhainnan

la.st year's eleition, i.s running on of the refreshment committee for [a. platform calling for expansion ' the meeting tomorrow night, ,

HOT DOG CONEOilton, Okla . Feh 9 Now-

eomes a hot dog roneH. C. Fogle, used car dealer,

says he has a bun mold designed to prevent hot dogs from dripping He says the. U.S. Patent Office in­formed him It has approved the mold for a patent.

The apparatus bakes the leak- proof bun, with one end open,

nd its like an

muI1 II

give your |4 f i

* playroom

den

nursery

kitchen

non Trailer Court. .. , ■ . ML. U L. ' BIRTHS TODAY; A son to Mr,A setback party will he he d by McClelland, 30

the Holy Name Society of the w ,„ j;,Chiirrh of the Assumption tonight 1 ‘ n,SCHARGED SATURDAY: at 8 1.1 in the church hall, I Charles David, 79 Niles Rd., Mrs.

•New business to be discus,sed all Jagielo. 3 Nel.son PI : Miss^ ----------------- the bu.sinc.s* meeting before the Dori.s Traver.s 2,3 Emerson St.;

The schedule for Holy Week and i playinp will include plan.s for Kala Goddard. 19 Cornell St.;^Easter at St. John's Church will Zbe announced later.“ Vernon Metlmdist I enten Service- An Ash Wednesday coninuinion “ •enice will be held at 7;30 p m

Wednesday at the Vemoa Meth-* odist Church. Services will be held -each Wednesday t h e r e a f t e r “ throughout the Lenten season- First Lutheran Churrh; The First Lutheran Church wall “ bold Ita Ash Wednesday service “ » t 7:30 p.m. with the Rev. David -G . Jaxhelifier, pastor preaching, on "*Tleverence."- Trtelty Lutheran Churrh* Mid-week Lenten services will

the i-omnuinion breakfast and for a family dinner. Any men of the parush washing lo serve on either of these committees may contact any officer of the society.

The setback games wilt be un­der the supervision of Joseph Frey and George Sullivan.

William Kibbe. RFD 1. Ellington; Ronald Smith. 36 Thomas Dr.; John Egan. 7.3 Jarvis Rd.; Mrs. Marl Giitlin, 164 Avery St; Mrs., Edith Diuharme, 1.30 .Maple St ; i Mr.s Adeline Peterson, 140 Pros­pect .‘-Jt . Rockville; William Zim- ' mermann, 97 Barry Rd.; Mrs.

a W eldw oodd-8" Roll

Corkboord Bulletin BoardCork laminated to 1-4" bordboard)

All you de it ju»t mount Corkboord on wall. You con dross It up with Bullotin Boord Melding.

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sizes18” X 24”

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For imoll purchosos you eon use our Continuous Charge Plon.

Vlfhen you open your account, state the amount of monthly poy- ment you wish to moke ond your total credit will be ten times that

‘ amount.

If you sot your monthly payment a t ............................. S 10Your initial purchosos may amount t o .........................$100Your crodit limit moy bo extended t o .........................$200

There will be o service charge of 1 % per month on the unpaid bol- onco With q minimum chorgo of 25c per month.

Step in at our modem showroom tomorrow. Wo open at 7:00 A.M., dose woekdoys at 5:00 P.M.*—Saturdays at noon.

/- /I

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' Y o u r G u a r a n t e e - ^ O u r 39 Y e a r s O f D e p e n d a b l e S e rv ic e ^

3S6 NORTH MAIN STREET TEL. MI 9-52S8

I ‘

A -'- ' A . .

J '

M A N C H K b 'lE K LV h N lN G H K K A LU , M ANv.M t.t) 1 titt, CO N N .. M O i\D AY, K bU ttU A H ^ VI, PAGE FI VK

Coventry

C h ristian C hn rches R ead y Lenten ^ ry ie e s W ednesday

The first in a series of mid-weekbhav« a business meeting at 8 p.m.

■ .

Brothers Saved From Drowning

Under Pond Ice

Lenten services will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Quandt Me­morial Hall on Mason St., Coven­try.

T.tare virill be a worship service and a dlscusalon on the theme “Ob- aervance of Lent." The Rev. Jame*R. MacArthur, pastor of the First Congregational Church, will be In charge.

The Rev. Mr. MacArthur and the Rev. C. Arthur Bradley, pastor of the Second Congregational Church are attending the two-day Minis­ters' Retreat at Senexet House in Woodstock. The session started to day and will continue this evening and tomorrow.

Special Lenten services will start Wednesday, Ash Wednesday, at St. Mary's Church and at St. Joseph's Church in Eaglevllle.

Ashes will be blessed prior to the 8 a.m. Mass at St. Mary's. Ashes will be distributed after the

At 7:30 p.m., there will be a Mass followed by distribution of ashes. There will also be Stations of the Cross followed by Benedic­tion of the Blessed Sacrament, to be held Friday at 7:30 p.m.

During Lent, the Rev. Thomas Farrell, professor at St. Thomas' Seminary In Bloomfield, will give a lecture course each Tuesday starting Feb. 17 after a 7:30 p.m. Mass and Lenten devotions.

Each Friday at 7:30 p.m. during Lent there will be Stations of the Cross followed by Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament.

Garden Club Luncheon Coventry Garden Club will meet

at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow for an herb luncheon at Caprilands Herb Farm on Silver 9t. Mrs. George Simmons will give a demonstration on pot pourri. The business meet­ing will Include a vote on changing the March 10 meeting to March 12

The club is making plans for rummage sale from 10 a.m. to p.m. Feb. 20 at the Nathan Hale Community Center. The building will be open the previous day dur­ing the same hours to receive con tributlons of clothing in good con dition or white elephant iterqs. Mrs. Walter S. Keller Is general chairman and may be contacted for details.

World Prayer Day The World Day of Prayer of

churches in the Southern Tolland County Group will be observed at the Bolton Methodist Church Fri day with local residents invited, Luncheon will be at 12:30 p.m with reservations to be made by tomorrow with Mrs. Clara M mondson of the Second Congrega tional Church Fragment Society, or Mrs. Thomas J. Moran or Mrs James R. MacArthur of the First Congregational Church Ladies' Assn. There will be baby sitters at the Bolton Church for those need Ing this service. The worship pro gram will be held at 2 p.m.

Gleaners’ Circle Meeting The Gleaners’ Circle of the Frag

ment Society will meet at 7:30 p.m tomorrow at Second Congrega tional Church Community House There will be a film on the foreign missions theme "South of the Clouds," of two girls in Lebanon one of which is a Christian, the other a Moslem.

Mrs. Robert Visny will lead the devotions of the program. The “ D" group with Mrs. C.' Arthur Bradley and Mrs. John Hutt as co-chairmen will be in charge of refreshments.

The group will discuss the fur­ther sale of the plates bearing the picture of the Second Congre­gational Church. About one quar­ter of the supply ordered in blue and brown have b'feen sold with net proceeds to go toward the further­ance of the church program. Those Interested in obtaining the plates may contact the parsonage for de­tails. /

The Fragment Society will have an all-day meeting starting at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at the Church Community House. Plans will be made for a dinner the group will prepare and serve at 7 p.m. Feb. 19 at a meeting of the Arti­ficial Breeder's Assn. here. At least 150 persons will be attend­ing.

Girl Scout Scrxlcc Girl Scout Troop 28 will have an

Investiture ceremony at 2:30 p.m. tomoirow at the Church Com­munity House under direction of Mrs. Raymond Morin, leader. Par­ents are Invited.

To receive tenderfoot pins and membership cards will be Betty Baker, Bonnie Borden. Charlefte Gill, Sandra Higgins, Christine Jaihatus, Patricia Morin. Robin Potter, Shelia Seibert, Ann Ther- reault arid Barbara 'White.

Susan Potter and Donna Hall, first class Scouts, will each receive a sash as a leadership at 'ard.

Mrs. Russell D. Potter will be In charge of refreshments ai d Mrs. Grant E. Toothaker, Jr. of the en­tertainment.

Brownie Troop 128 with leader, Mrs. Wilbert Garrison, will be among those attending.

The program will be highlighted when the girls receive their white rose crest and a white rose cor­sage from Mrs. Morin.

Young Mothers to Meet The Young Mothers Club will

tomorrow at the N a t h a n Hale Community Center. Hoetesaes will include Mrs. J. Paul Brennan, Mrs. Eiugene W. Conner and Mra. Eaisworth Qreenleaf.

Pack S7 Bouquet Cub Scout Pack 57 will have its

Blue and Gold Banquet at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 26 at the A m e r i c a n Legion home. Mrs. Charles Raisch will be igeneral supper chairman. TTie menu will Include t u r k e y , mashed potato, dressing, peas, cranberry sauce, salads, coffee, millt and cake. Committee mem bers will assist Mrs. Raisch with the program. A speaker will be in­cluded In the entertainment.

Top StudentMr. and Mra. Donald M. Wil­

liamson of South St. have re­ceived word from their son. Don­ald Williamson, that he was one of the top 10 in a class of 600 servicemen to graduate from the medical school at Fort San Hous­ton, Texas. He has qualified for advanced training in this field and

taking this course at Fort Stewart In Georgia.

Williamson attended Windham High School before enlisting in the service.

Social NoteMr. and Mrs. Edward Schul-

theiss an# two daughters, Lynn and Janet, spent the weekend in Philadelpliia, Pa.; visiting his fa­ther, George Schultheiss, and other relatives. They attended the wedding on Saturday of Miss Mary Walthors to Martin J. Mc­Laughlin Jr. at noon at St. Barnabas Church In that city and

reception In Lansbowne, Penn.Catholic Women to Meet

The Willlmantic District Coun­cil of Catholic Women vVlll meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at St. Jo­seph's Church' hall In Willimantic. Speaker will be Miss Mary C. Fitzgerald, an attorney from West Hartforl, on the topic "Leg­islation." Members of the local St. Mary’s St. Germaine Guild will attend.

CYO MeetingMeetings of St. Mary’s CYO

will I/e resumed at 7;30 p.m. to­morrow at the church hall under the direction of the Rev. Lawrence Leclair, assistant pastor of the church.

Starting Feb. 17 the group will attend the sl-ccial Lenten services in the church proper prior to re­ceiving their own instructions in the church hall.

American Legion Notes Members of the Auxiliary to the

Coventry American Legion are re­minded to bring three 'Valentines for a shower for veterans to the meeting at 8 p.m. today at the Legion home.

Cards will be presented to the unit's "adopted" veteran at the Rocky Hill Veterans Home and Hospital, a post member at the Middletown State Hospital, and a post member at the Norwich State Hospital.

The Legion post and auxiliary will have a joint dance at 9 p.m. Saturday at the Legion home. In­vited guests will be attending the program of which Mrs. Eugene W. Conner is general chairman.

The two groups have extended appreciation for gifts donated by local merchants to the recent March of Dimes benefit dance and entertainment. An additional donation of *5 was made by Louis Tuttle and *18 realized from a special project at the adTair. About *100 was realized from the pro­gram.

Hand Puppetry Class Mra. Arnold E. CarLson of Oak

Grove will teach hand puppetry at a Girl Scout District 5 workshop at 8 p.m. today at the Hebron Elementary School. She is local den mother of Brownie Troop 232.

All leaders and assistants and others interested in Scouting may attend. The new local .Senior Girl Scout Troop 217 'will take part in the study, program as well as about 12 adults from town.

Workshop instructors, in addi­tion to Mrs. Carlson, follow; Card­board loom, Mrs. Vika Lugas of Lebanon; singing, Mrs. J. T. Hoh- mann Jr. of Andover; metal tap­ping, Mrs. Bettes Jocobus of Columbia; and camp craft, Mrs. Lois Kelley and Mrs. Helen Don­ahue, both of Andover.

Events Tomorrow Girl Scout Troop 28 Investiture

ceremony, 2:30 p.m.. Church Com­munity House; Buttons and Bowls 4-H, 3 p.m., home of Mrs Harmon N. Cochrane, Intermediate Girl Scout Troop 233, after school, home of Mrs. Gerard Dubord; Brownie Troop 182, of 2:30 p.m..

>■ ' ■■■ ^ AT O ?

^ 'J,

Vf

TerryvllU, Feb. 9 — TwoTerryvllle brother* narrowly es- c » p ^ drowning In Clock Pond here yesterday.

One of the boys, David Poulin,8, drifted urconaclou* for some four minutes under ice before be­ing rescued.

It wasn’t until Dennis, 6, was pulled from the freezing water that his mother and neighbors learned about David'* plight, and readied him.

The boya .were taken to Water- bury Hoiipital where Dennis was released. Da rid was kept there overnight as a precautionary measure.

Fritz Poulin, father of the boya. said he regarded the rescue as amiracle.

Tlie boys took a short cut across the pond after skating. They fell through a spot on the pond.

Dennis held onto the ice and Bt'-eni(pted to hold David, but the older boy's clothes became sat­urated with water and pulled D-.vld under.

Cries from Dennis attraclcd the attention of his mother, Mrs. Fritz Poulin, and nearby neighbors, Her­bert Smith and Chester Trnjanskl. The three fell through the lee In an attempt to reach Dennis.

But, Trojanskl, who managed to get out of the water, threw a line to Mrs. Poulin. With the help of ths line, she pulled Dennis to the bank of the pond, only to learn that David was under the Ice.

Smith lmniedla,tely dove through the hole In the Ice and found David

at the bottom of the pond, about 12 feet deep.

David was carried to Trojanskl's nearby home where other neigh­bors, Mr. and Mrs. Ward Ferry, who had recently Completed a course in first aid, used their knowledge lo advantage.

By tho time Dr. Clifford Conklin of 'Thomaston arrived, David had regained consciousness. Conklin ordered both of the bojls removed to the Wsterbury Hospital.

P R E S C R IP T IO N SDAY OR NIGHT

BV EXPERTS

A R T H U R D R U O

South Windxor

Driver ( harfrecl111 I-Car Cra.sh

Charles K. Crorkett, 2,5, nf Whic- house Point, was arrested iinil | charged with (iiicratlng n niotnr vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs, as the result of a 1-c.ir accident on Buck- land Rd. at 11:4,5 pm Saturday.

Stale Pnllcc said Crorkett was driving east on Hiirklimd when his car went out of control, struck a telephone pole and lolleil over, landing on Us roof Crockett suf­fered a hump on tlic riglil aide of his head, police said today.

The Invcstlgallng officer was State Policeman Mario Pnliinibo of the Hartford hnrrnclis. No dale has been sot as yet for appearance In the South Windsor Town Court.

If worried by "Bledder Weekiieee" (Oet- tlnr Up Nlihti or Bed Wrttinff, too fre­quent. burnlne or ttchlnw urlnwtloni. Secondary Derkwche end Nrrvouineee, or Stront Bmelllnf, Cloudy Urine, due to common Kidney end Bledder Irrltwtloni, try CfYSTEX (or quick help. Swfe for youni end old. Aek druerUt for OYBTKX. See how feat you Improve.

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Four Receive Catholic Scouting AwardFour scouts from Troop 120, St. James’ Church, were presented with the Catholic Scouting Award, "Ad Altare Del Cross", yesterday at the Archdiocesan Boy Scout Rally in Waterhury. They are John Schuetz, left front, Richard Lombardo, right front, Robert Harrison, left rear, and Robert David-

right rear. (Herald Photo by Pinto).son.

Church Community House with Girl Scout Troop 28.

St. Mary's CYO, 7:30 p.m.,church hall; Boy Scout Troop 57, at 7 p.m.. South Coventry fire­house; Democratic Town Commit­tee. 8 p.m.. Booth-Dimock Memo­rial Library; Lions Club, 6:30 p.m.. Cove Restaurant; Small Claims Court. 7 p.m., office of Board of Selectmen; Young Mothers Club, 8 p.m., Nathan Hale Community Center; Nathan Hale Square Club, 7:30 p.m.. Masonic Hall. Merrow; Coventry Grammar School PTA executive committee, 8 p.m.,school: Booth-Dimock Memorial Library board of trustees, 8 p.m., reading room.

Manchester E v e n i n g Herald Coventry correspondent, Mrs. F. Pauline Little, telephone Pilgrim 2-6231.

Card Party Set For Church Hall

A Valentine card party was held by the Cosmopolitan Club at its meeting Friday afternoon at the Center Church. |

Preceding the card playing and j the businesa meeting, dessert and | coffee were served from tables i tastefully decorated with the V al-1 entine motif. Each member was ‘ given a gift In the form of a Val­entine.

The committee in charge of ar­rangements Included Mrs. Louis Marte, chairman, Mrs. Hooks Johnston, Mrs. Robert Russell, Mrs. Charles Wigren, Mrs. W. P. Gorman. Mrs, Ernest Bantly and Mrs. C. A. Bader.

peared In court Oct. 18, but his case was continued from day to day to allow him to secure coun­sel.

A charge of reckless driving, lodged against Richard A, Prior, 18, of 116 Keeney St., was dls-

I missed by Judge Karp for lack of sufficient evidence. Prior was ar­rested Jan. 27 aflcr he crashed In­to a utility pole on Keeney St. He was hospitalized for a .short lime as a result of the accident,

Richard Edgar, 56, of 261 Spnice St., was fined *5 for intoxication, and Harry Leister, of no certain addre.ss, was sentenced lo 30 days in jail on a charge of vagrancy.

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Job Placements Climbing Slowly

The number of persons placed in jobs by the local State employ­ment office during January was slightly higher than for a com­parable period a year ago.

This would seem to Indicate, ac­cording to Miss Hazel Anderson, office manager, that business con­ditions are on the upswing al­though on a gradual rather than a rapid climb.

A total of 725 applications for jobs were entered at the local of­fice last month as compared to 780 such requests in January, 1958. This year there were 2.609 names in the 30-day "active file" as com­pared to 2.570 last year.

Of the 725 applications, 114 per. sons were placed in jobs. Miss Anderson'said, while a year ago 101 secured positions through the local office that month.

Although there is only a slight difference in the figure com­parisons, Miss Anderson pointed out that many of this year’s ap­plicants were specifically seeking jobs in a 3-week survey which will be conducted in the area soon.

Discounting those seeking only the survey jobs, she said, the number of applicants for other positions would be considerably lower than the 725 figure.

Fifteen general aptitude tests, each taking three hours, were j given in the office during January j and 91 other special interviews 1 were conducted. Four proficiency' tests were also given and several employers in the area used the of­fice facilities for Interviewing pur­poses.,

There were 200 job openings In the local office this January as compared to 116 during a com­parable period a year ago. Miss i Anderson paid.

G)urt CasesFined *12 each in Town Court

this morning were Michael J. Ciroski, 17, of 44 Lyndale St., Jo­seph t. Klinkevich, 31, of 105 N. Elm St., and Harry M. Campbell, 33. of Lakeville, each charged with | passing a stop .sign.

Judge Jules A. Karp also sus­pended judgment in the CMe of j Ronald' J. Kowalski, 17, of 77 Birch St., who was charged with passing | In a no-passing zone.

Alden C. Aronson, 38, of 245 N. I Main St., was acquitted of a charge of. driving while under suspension i of license. Aronson initially ap-,

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Page 4: NO. no MANCHESTER, C ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 ... Evening Hearld...of at \ If Manchester \" ‘" • * * « • • • • • ***** ***** MANCHESTER if / '. .Manchester, 9

;

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD> MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1959PAGE SEVEM

PA«B8n MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN,, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1959

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PttkIMMd ttrtTfkBd UolMar*. Bntwwl af tli* ■I MuKtaatar. Cobb.. »*CSBM Mail MaU«r.tOBSCRIPTlUN RATES

_ Pajabla to AdraacaOaa Taar ......... ,.••...................*^5KRx Mootha................................ 77af l ir t* Mnaitha .................................. 3*}JOaa Moath .................. .Waakly ............. -jStinsta Copy ..................................... ”

MEMBER OFTHE ASSOCUTED PREfflTEa Aaaodattd Preaa la exclualTcIy atiWltd » th* uaa of rjiwWlratlon of all B * w a d}apati*M cradittd to It w Bot oUwralao cradllod . l*P"aod alao tba local new* publixhed here.Alt TtfhU of rtpubUcRtlon of PowiiaJ dUipAtcliot htrtin arg alto reserved.__

f\in »erric» client ol N. K. A. Serv-*'lS)wS>h«r* n»pr«a*BlBtlve*: Tb«Jullu* Mathtwa Special Ajtency — New York, Chlcaao Detroit a™ Boeton.MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS ______

Tb* Herald Prtmln* Company. li«.. asaumea- no nnandal reaponslbllltv for typocrapbical error* appaarin* In veftiiieinents and oth r readin* matter IB The MaBCbeater Erenln* Herald.DUplay adrertlaing cloelni hour*;

For Monday—1 p.m. Friday. f»r Tueiday—1 p m. Monday.For Wedneaday—1 p m Tjieaday.PV»r Tburaday—1 p.tn. Wedneaday.For rirtd«—1 p.m. Thuiaday.For SatuSlay—1 P m Friday.Claaidfled deadline; 10;30 ^ m. eacB day of publlcatioB except Saturday— • a m . ___

Monday, February »

Late— But Still GoodAdding up all the emotion* In a

eontrovenlal isaue and then di­viding them by two In an effort to And an acceptable middie ground la not always the beat way to come up with an effective law. But when the controversial lasue la civil righta, particularly In regard to ■chool Integration, that appeaap to ba the only way.

And that l%what President Ei­senhower haa done in the Civil Rights bill he haa sent to Congress. It goes farther than the tepid measure Introduced by Senate Ma­jority Leader Johnson. But it stops Short of the hot one proposed by Senator Douglas and other Senate liberals. For thst reason it Is being shot at by both sides. But for the same reason, It is the one bill that promises some progress in the field of dvll rights In the present Con grass.

For whereas the Johnson Bill would provide little. If any, sub­stantive progress, the Douglas bill, at least In Its present form, would probably not attract the support nseded for passage. The defeats the liberals suffered in their fight over the filibuster Indicate they don’t have the votes In the Senate for extreme measures.

But while the Administration bill, then, is commendably mod- srate. It has one Irremediable fail­ing, one shared by the Johnson and Douglas bills. It is four years late One cannot help but wohder what the course of desegregation in the South would have been like if sev­eral of the Administration bill's measures had been enacted soon after the Supreme Court an­nounced its decision In the school desegregation caae.

The declaration of support for that decision, for Instance, might have provided the Southern moder­ates with the moral support they were loo l^ g for from the Admin­istration. Ahd the provisions pro­viding Southern communities with financial assistance and technicalaid In effecting desegregation might have obviated the need for some' of the' more extreme meas­ures being advocated today by anti-segregationists.

These provisions, of course, are still useful today. But in view of what has happened in the last four years, they are no longer enough. So now the Administration bill would make obstruction of a Fed­eral court desegregation order a Federal offense. It would also pro­vide for the education of children o f military personnel w'hose schools have been closed to avoid integra­tion.

There are other provisions, too-- ona strengthening the govern­ment's hand in protecting voting lights, another extending the . life •f the Civil Rights Commission for two years and.a third giving stat­utory authority to the President’s Committee on Government Con­tracts, whose function It Is to ere ate equal Job opportunities in firms doing work for the government.

But missing from the bill is the one provision most keenly sought b y . Senator Douglas—one that would authorize the Attorney Gen­eral to initiate auits in behalf of Individuals who believe their civil righta, in regard to education or ether matters; are being violated but who for any raaaon are unable to bring a court action themselves.

The President, then, is tryibg to provide the leadership and encour­agement and assistance that haa for four years been denied South- ernan wlUing but unable to bring about desegregation in their com- nunitias. But at the same time, he

' ts trying to avoid the risk involved la laying too heavy a Federal hand on the Civil Righta issue.

-Tbla doee not mean the bill is foifig to ptac'te the Southerners who tsmain adamantly opposed to

•r to any other I tha ■duthem way o f life, I f f what thla way o f Ufa

i Bdi^Uiant Negro. But ■iaant to placate

them. It’s aim Is to get through Congreas andi If aucceseful In that, help achieve progreee In the field of civil rightsr

The General Motor* ProbeWhet has long been the Inevit­

able collision between General Mo­tors Corp., the largest single Indus­trial company In the world, and the antitrust division of the Depsrt- ment of Justice appears Imminent now, In the department’s decision to bring a grand Jury antitrust ac­tion against the company.

Officially, department officials say no definite conclusions about one or more antitrust suits have been reached. But after five years of investigation of the company by the antimisl division, the grand jury action in which a massive amount of Information about the co.npany's activities will he sought - could hardly he regarded as the forerunner of anything else.

The suit, when it comes, will rank in importance with any brought by the department in y-'ars, including those against d\i Pont, General Electric Oo„ and the motion picture producers. At the same time, it will further ron- found those who look for better treatment of big bu.slnes* by a Re­publican administration.

But more Importantly, It will bring to a decision the question of whether the enormo"j eompany, in any of lU activities, is actually, n-cnopolistle. restrains trade or in any other way violates the crimi­nal or civil provisions of the anti­trust laws. Indeed, the case may even lead to the creation of new law on the subject of where and when bigness in itself becomes det­rimental to the public good.

"Tie company, reputedly the big­gest automobile manufacturer in the world, haa controlled about 50 per cent of the new car market In thla country in recent years, a wholly owned subsidiary provides customers with car financing, and 1* hulks large In the manufacture of home appliances, buses and loco­motives.

Mere bigness Is not equated In the courts with monopoly. But the government invariably holds it up as one sign that monopoly is pres­ent. The defendant, on the other hand, contends that bigness merely permits more jfficieht and econom­ical operation, from which the con­sumer ultimately benefUs through the lower prices that are made pos­sible.

In the past. General Motors critics have held that one or more of its automobile divisions could be split off and still be big enough In themselves to operate with the ef­ficiency that size permits—an argument General Motors officials have dismissed out of hand. How­ever, one wonders. In the case of General Motors, with Its tremen­dous Influence In so many fields, just how big a company has to be before It is r - longer Interested In efficiency of operation so much as it is in holding, protecting, and ex­panding the vast economic power it has built for Itself. In other words. Is there a moment when the pursuit of efficiency becomes pursuit and defense of a position in which one giant can corner ef­ficiency for itself and deny the pos­sibility of it to others? The court cases likely to grow out of the im­pending grand jury Investigation may shed some light on this ques­tion of ultimate motivation, or re­sult.

h« obviously felt Inspired to step up ths impact of the throat, Just as our own John L. Lewis always be-

ma aapeeiaUy “beetle-browed” when he waa ordering a strike. The Soviet defense minister. In this instance, was described ss “heavy- paurched and with short-gray hair.” That had Its desired effect on us as we read It, making both the paunch and the hair seem somehow frightening and repul­sive. 10 that we could feel our- eelves beginning to hate Malinov­sky not only for what he said, hut for the gross kind of human being he must be. But as we were think l;ig what an evil and repulsive thing a paunch could be our hands fell frc-i the typewriter momen­tarily. and, rf-Mng comfortably on something, wondered how often American reporters covering a speech by an American official in elude a description of his waist line. But we suppose we must have our bloated Communists to match the bloated capitalists of Russia’s propoganda lore. Even at that, however. Malinovsky's paunch waa the first thing of Us kind that had stuck out in the routine American news for some time.

A Thought for TodaySpoDftftred by the Meoebeeter

Gonncil of Churche* *

Aron

‘One With Christ’and its beamse moon

So, that I be one with Thee, ■JTili la my prayer to Thee,

Lord,This is this beggar's plea.As words and their meaning are

linked.Serving one purpose each,Be Thou and I so knit, O Ixird, And through me breathe Thy

speech.0 be my soul a mirror clear, That I may aee Thee there;Dwell in my thought, my speech,

my life.Making them glad and fair.

Take Thou thla body, O my Christ. Dwell as its soul within;To be an instant separata1 count a deadly ain.

Narayan Vaman Tilak inThe Indian Mystic

Selected byThe Rev. Charles Reynolds

In 1704, Indians attacked Deer­field, Mass., killing 40 settlers and abducting 100.

DeMolay BaU Held SaturdayThe MvenUi etinual Iweetheart

Bell, eponeored by John MeUier Chapter, Order of DeMolay, waa held Saturday evening In the ball­room of the Maaonle Temple.

Large arrow-pierced hearta ar­ranged around the room harmon­ized with the numerous miniature cupida actiniae table centerpieces. Wall decorations of red and white etreamere were augmented arith similar streamera festooned from a large pillow heart at the ceiling center.

The grand march was led by Master Councilor Neal Ferris and Miss Carol Oliha. MlJs Gllha wore a powder-rose ballerina gown with pearl accessories.

Each young lady received a sterling silver necklace adth a teardrop crystal pendent, compli­ments of the dance committee.

Refreshments, constating of homemade cookies and punch, were served- by the Mothers Circle Of John Mather Chapter, during the intermleslon. The mother* serving were Mrs, Stewart Kennedy, Mrs. David Hastings. Mrs. Georag Jes- sop and Mrs. Malcolm Robertson.

Dancing to the music of Lou Gagnon’s orchestra continued until midnight.

Couples Attending Escorts and their ladles attend­

ing were Bob Cromwell and Carol Duchalne; Lee Trombly, Pat Bal­lard; Walter Gleaaon, Denlae Randolph; Martin Nevlns, Kathy Martin; Dave Brown, Sandy Carpenter; Jeff Allen, Laurie Os­born; Richard Durkee, Marjorie Dean, Allen Yale. Marjorie Mitch­ell; Randy Walmeley, Mar­guerite Fracchia; Fred Frazee, Carolyn RuR.sell; Jerry Finn, Donna Glorldla.

Ronald Fletcher. Sally Maloney; Steve Hummel, Judie Findlay; Kenneth Gray, Lynne Holmes; Ronald Hastings. Sandy Geilarow- ski; Francis Jessop, Evelyn Gray; Jim Meacham, Pat Freeman; Roderick Wright, Janet Reinohl; Henry Jessop, Margie Gudas; Rick Kennedy, Marilyn Rose; Donald Cordner. Yvonne Derfallle; George Mortlock, Bobbie Johns.

Don Schofield, Dolores York; John Krause. Judy Peck; Herbert Kingsbury, Donna Baraw; Ruas Mercer, Kathryn Platt; Bill Mid- dlebrook, Patti Schick; Charles Baraw, Janet Swanson; Robert Reynolds. Marge SmechetU; Larry Denette, Linda Frankenber- ger; Dave Roberts, Pamela Park­er; Carl Swanson, Tina Pesola.

William Auden, Marcia Potter- ton; John Nelligan, Lynn Ander­son; Jack Walra^h, Janet Di- Tarando; John Thieling, Carol Luclous; Ken Sadd, Penny Fair- bank.*; Harold Sanden, Arlyne Garrity; Jerry Wilson, Barbara

Baker: Blake Pitrea, IMaiui PouUb ; * Dmui Trumaa, Rota* mary OrUfin; Charlta Kramar, Brenda Biekmora; Gerald Laraia, Mara Andaraon; Bill .Wamar, Rosa Lovajoy.

Bob ScbuaU, Pat Howard; Barla Salwtta, Sandra S ^ a o n ; Lou Lamourax, Linda Htmaon; Tbomat Fracklaton, Sblrlty Barg- gran; Edward Moylea, Gwan Chad­wick; Malcolm Kobartaon. Carol LaChapella.

Arrangamanta' for tha danea ware handled by. a committaa of DeMolaya headed by Maatar Ooun- oilor Panda with aaaiatanea from Malcolm Robartaon, William W;ar-

Letter from Personal Friend

Ex-Prober Says tfagerty Intervened in FCC Case

nar, Robert Sehuets, Richard Kan- Dafa Haat-nedy, Kennath Gray,

Inga, Jim Royea, Scot Peter Adam.

Hurl and

Electric Shock Kills 3GaineevlUe, FU., Feb. 9 (P>—A

charge from w-7,200-volt power line killed three Univeraity of Flor­ida itudenti attempting to erect a television aerial yesterday nesur here.

The dead werb Robert L. Mel­rose, 25, of Orlando; hi» wife, Jamie'Ruth, 21; and John B. Rob­ertson, 25, Gainesville. Robertson’s wife, Gloria, was shocked and burned. Her condition wae reported critical at a hospital.

Melrose waa a graduate itudent In the college of arts and sciences and his wife was a Junior. Al­though Robertson had Just entered the university, his Incomplete stu­dent records Indicated he was an upper division student.

Officers reported the accident occurred when the aerial toppled over, striking the power line. Wit­nesses said the women were hold­ing guy wires while the men were raising the antenna on a roof.

,(Coo«lawd from P*g« Om )Ha -foUawed with * aimilar note

thrw daya later.-’'On March 6, H earty anawerad tha letters, say­ing . Tou do have a g o ^point I have paaaed your letter along to the tntereatqd people here and asked them for an answer . . . ”

The aeme day, Hagerty ae^t a note, m a r k e d “peraonal,” to George . C. McOonnaughey, then cbelrman of the PCC. It aaid:

•T received the attadied letter frora a peraonal friend of mine In Albany. I thought you would like to aee It. la there any way I can answer him?"

In a long letter March 18, Mc- Connaughey answered Hagerty. He explained the FCC had embarked on a policy of making television areas either all VHF or all UHF. Since moat of the stations In the Albany-Schenectedy area were UHF, the commission wanted WROB to change to UHF also.

Hagerty said there was no fur­ther correspondence In the case.

The FCC later changed Its pro­posal and, after a series of de­cisions. allowed WRGB to remain a IfHF station. It balanced the sit­uation, however, by adding a sec­ond VHF elation to the area.

Hagerty said Saturday that his activity in the caae waa routine.

1 When he receives such queries.

Hagerty said, he normally relays them to the agency Irfvolved.

In a lUtement from Albany, Embler said:

“ I wrote to Jim because he was somebody In Washington 1 hap­pened to know. He acknowledged receiving the letter and aaid he would pass It along to the FCC We have never discussed it again.’. But Schwartz said yesterday:' 'Tt has always been my strong conviction that any communication between membere of the White Houee and the Independent quasi- judicial agencies Is improper.

"The forwarding of a letter from a 'personal friend’ by a White House official would cerUlnly ap­pear to fall Into this category.”

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It is something of a compliment to American newe media that It ha.a been some time since we have noticed extreme inatance* in which news or piflurca were being obvi­ously rolorcci to fit the presumed requirement.* and allegiances o( the cold war.

When the cold war was at its worst, there were certain rules which were cpparenlly fixed. If a magazine cover featured Chinese soldiers, and they w-ere slovenly, and brutish in appearance, you knew it without reading tha cap­tion that they were the Commu­nists. If a similar group of Chinese soldiers had bright, clean, shining faces, they were Chlang Kai- shek's. This kind of prosecution of the cold war reached some sort of climax when, during the Suez (af­fair, a picture of a tank the wicked Russians had given Egypt's Nas­ser actually turned out to be a pic­ture of a Sherman tank we had given Nasser.

Of late, the strategies have been more moderate. One stock in trade Is that of th* difference between drab, forlorn, forbidding East Ber­lin, and the bright, gay, inviting Weat Berlin. Most people who have ever been to Berlin would tone that difference down at least a little. It may be that, in w-hat has always been the most drab city In all the world, one half is indeed more drab than the other.. We would accept that difference, and its propa- gfanda point, so long as we' were not Inylted to believe that any half of Beritn waa bright and gay.

One American newaman- in Mos­cow, for the New 'York Time's no lees, let himaelf go Just the other day, winning the cold war in a minor way. He waa reporting the speech in which Defense Minleter Malinoveky waa brandishing Rus­sian'- miaslles in our direction, wbiob waa omldoua in, Itself, when

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Dulles Says West Plan SetIf Reds Block Berlin Road

(Oontlinwd tram Bngn Om )Jf^y b« in the making, but only if Ruasin alao in In a conciliatory mood.

His Mries of talks last week, DuUes said at the Bonn airport,“will help to assure that we ahall ba united and Arm for our righU.That does not exclude being con­ciliatory, but it does exclude mere­ly malrihg concessions for which there la no counterpart.”

West German Chancellor Kon rad Adenauer, with whom Dulles met there, wa* pictured by a Ger­man epokeaman as opposed to giv­ing something away in the negoti­ations without getting anything In return.

Both German and American ■pokeamen also said the western powers are sUll far from agree­ment on a detailed policy on how to meet the Soviet challenge In Berlin. But they indicated that pregress waa made in the talks.

Meanwhile, Allied representa­tives here completed the drafting of a note to Russia proposing that a foreign ministers’ meeting be held to deal with a wide range of German issues.

The western foreign mini.sters may meet a couple more times be­fore assembling with the Russians.No date for such a full-scale meet­ing has been fixed, but early May has been suggested.

That would be well in advance of the May 27 date originally fixed by the Russians for turning over to East Germany their powers con­trolling Allied access to Berlin. Russia also has called for Allied abandonment of West Berlin.

Before he left for his European trip, Dulles told the House Foreign Affairs Committee he thinks the Russians will "keep the pressure on until the ■very last minute” in the Berlin situation. He called West Berlin a showca.se of the free world which he said unnerves the Communists.

But he said In reply to a ques- . tlon that the western Allies are in complete agreement "on the basic proposition of standing firm in Berlin and, if need be, risking a war rather than being taken out of Berlin.”

His testimony, made public dur­ing the weekend, also forecast a tougher Soviet line In the Cold War.

Dulles said he see.s no split widening between Riussia and Red China. He contended also this country has -lo way of pulling out of Quemoy and Matsu—target of Red Chinese shelling last sum­mer without losing the whole Far East to the free world.

In addition to preparing for a r eeting with Russia, these other problems seemed likely Ao get quick attention from Dulles and perhaps to figure in his meeting vrth Eisenhower:

1. Russia’s weekend denuncia­tion of a tape recording which the United States said shows that Ruseian fighter planes shot down an unarmed American military transport last Sept, 2. A tran­script of the recording was made public here last week. Saturday night the Soviet Radio denounced It as a fake and ”a sensational farce.”

The Soviet government reiterat­ed its claim that the plane was not attacked when it flew over Soviet territory near the Turkish border. This seemed to close the last possibility that Moscow would l-rovide any further information about the incident. The Slate De­partment said il was shocked that Russia would claim the transcript was a forgery and "still hopes that the Soviet governatent will reconsider its present inflexible *.'.itude in this case."

2. Reports of United States- British differences over how to meet a Communist blockade of West Berlin should that levelop in May cr June as a result of Soviet efforts to force the western powers to withdraw from the city.

British Ambassador Sir Harold Caccia was reported over the weekend to have expressed dis­pleasure to Deputy Undersecretary of State Robert Murphy last week and press reports that Britain was •tailing the preparation of coun­ter measures. British officials con­tend that there wa.s a lag in plan­ning but that it was the fault of the United State.*.

3. The possibility of an early breakdown of East-West negotia­tions at Geneva for a ban on nu­clear weapons tests enforced by a worldwide International Inspection •ystem. Moscow charged late last week that the United States atti­tude on various issues before the conference made agreements im­possible.*

U.S. authorities here said Rus- ■la was Insisting on a veto in con­trol of the Inspection system which would render it useless. Barring a

-^change In the Soviet attitude on this point, they said, the western Allies would never agree to pro­hibit testing.

Court Reform Speed Urged

(Continued train Page One)

S i r. t

4 Acres BumIn Brush Fire

Four acres of brush on the Ber- gren Dairy farm near Laurel Park, west of the Wilbur Cross Highway, burned yesterday. Firemen from Town Companies 1 and 2 answered a call about 11:15 a.m., and box glarm 7 sounded about 10 minutes later for the same blaze. Firemen fought for about an hour and a half before the blaze was put out.

Town firemen also put out a g;rass fire on Keeney St. Sunday afternoon.

Elsewhere in the Hartford area firemen were kept on the move yesterday with a break out of grass fires. .

A Hartford fire officer. Deputy Chief Thomas J. Shorten, said lack of moisture had ihade' the grass dry as. tinder.

“ That‘ grass is like dynamite, and with this kind of wind It,prac­tically explodes when fire touches lti*' h6 jULld. i

H lu«ord firemen .battled several •gtass fires during-the day, Includ- Dig a big one In the South Mea- dovys aeetlon near Wawarme 'Ave.

firs also, aeorched two acrea 6f gnunland in Bloomfield. ;

mittee on Judiciary and Govern mental B\mctions.

It proposes the creation of a new municipal court division of 25 to 35 full-time Judges, but retains the present Common Pleas Court. It docs not cover the Superior Court, family court or probate courts.

Sen. Abner W. Sibal (R-Nor- walk), Senatie minority leader, contended that many legislators and members of the general public had not had a chance yet to study the committee bill.

Sibal urged the committee to resist any attempt "to rush through this important field of legislation without careful consid­eration of all approaches."

Rep. A. Searle Pinney (R-Brook- fleld), House minority leader, took a similar stand. He said the minor­ity in the House has not yet taken any position on the subject of court reorganization.

"This is a result of the fact that we have not had sufficient time to lay out to the representatives all of the facts and background ma­terial necessary lo an Intelligent decision on this complex subject,” he,said.

Both Republican legislators not­ed that many members of the Legislature were serving f i r s t terms, and added, "To them this is a matter.of first impressions"

Under the administration plan, the new Court of Common Pleas would be divided into two divi­sions. Division A would continue to operate as the present Court of Common Pleas. Division B would replace the present minor courts (municipal and trial justice).

Barnes, backing the Bar meas­ure, aaid one weakness of the administration bill is that it does not do away with new trials on appeals from the minor courts to the Court of Common Pleas. He said this was a "terrific waste."

Barne-s said the administration measure called for new trials on appeals from Division B to Dl- rision A.

Among the non-legislators who .spoke at the hearing waa Charles W. Pettenglll, chairman of the Connecticut Citizens for Better Courts.

He said the question of court reform had been a principal issue in the last election and he urged action this session.

Opposition to court reform came froi.s Rep. Robert H. Barnes (D-Montville) -w ho said in a lengthy statement filed with the committee that the court reform bills were loaded In favor of the legal profession.”

The Montville Democrat object­ed to eliminating laymen from responsible positions in the courts.

The administration bills would set up a General Court that would administrate the Supreme Court, the Superior Court and the Com­mon Pleas Court. The-Chief Justice would be the administrative head of this general court.

Four-Y'ear Terms Division B of the common pleas

court would be composed of 40 judges, appointed equally from' each political party to 4-year terms. .

Divi.sion B would have juri.sdlc- tion of all civil matters u n d f J2,- 500 and all crimes where the pun­ishment is less than a $500 fine or one year in jail. Juries would be required ip civil cases where the claim exceeded $250.

Criminal cases would be tried without juries, but defendants would be entitled to a retrial be­fore a jury in Division A. Appeals on issues of law would be taken to a 3-judge panel of Division B,

Judges of Division B would be on circuit to hold hearings in any town where minor courts presently operate. Court personnel would be selected by the judges as now done in Superior Court.

Divi.sion B judges would be legal­ly trained and would get $14,000 a year. There would be 12 Division A judges (as in the present Com­mon Pleas Court) who would get $15,500.

Under the bar measure there would be one Common Plea* Court with at least 40 full-time, legally trained judges who would serve an 8-year term at $16,000. Its jurisdiction would be the same and the judges would also be on circuit.

The administration would re­place the present Juvenile Court with a Family Court as a division of the Superior Court. The Bar measure would create a new and separate Family Court.

There would be six to nine full­time, legally trained Judges aerv- ing 8-year terms at $18,500 under the administration bill. The court would hear, case* concerned with family matters, such as , marital affairs, adoptions and juvenile cases.

The Bar measure would have nine to 12 judges who would also be Jegally trained and serve an 8-year term on a full-time basis. They would get $15,500. Jurisdic­tion is the same as in the admin­istrative measure.

MRS. RAYMOND WILLIAM OUELLE'TTEFallot Photo

FAA Adds to Curbs On Electra LandingsFiscal Group

To Consider School BudgetThe Board of Directors’ fiscal

p o l i c i e s comr.’.lttee will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Muni­cipal Building to discuss the Board of Education’s budget in relation to that of the town.

C3iairmnn John Hutchin.son said today Board of Education Chair­man Clirlstle McCormick and Superintendent of Schools Arthur Illing will oe Invited to attend and bring other school administration officials.

The committee, which Is launch­ing a broad study aimed at mak­ing recommendations on town fl.scal policies, held its last ses­sion Dec. 31 'Vith General Man­ager Richard Martin, Collector of Revenue Paul Cervini, and Town Controller Elisha Freedman.

Discussion touched on estimates of jumps in the lax rate, short­term investing, sissessment pro­cedures, and other'fiscal matters. The committee felt town tepart- ments and agencies must hold a tight line on budget requests that must be submitted by Feb. 21.

Committee members. besides Hutchinson, are Directors Ted Cummings, Theodore Powell, and Ronald Jacobs. Mayor Eugene Kelly la ex-pfflcio chairman.

A meeting with the Board of Education was suggested in De­cember by Jacobs, who said then that the ed\ication budget will be the nub fit our (the Directors’ )

problem” in holding down the tax rate for the 1959-60 fiscal year, which begins July 1.

Other AlmsHutchinson said today the com­

mittee will hold future meetings about the departments of water and sewers, fire, police, and high­ways.

He haa said other matters the committee might look into Include:

1. The duties of thh.town treas­urer as listed in the charter.

2. The controller's administra­tive relationship to the general manager and town departments.

3. Bond Issue and amortization policies, and short-term Invest­ment of town funds.

Hutchinson has said also he In­tended to devote some study to the possibility of establishing a board of finance for the town.

(Contini.ed from Page One)

■^e Bar will would also create a separate PYobate Court manned by 12 Judges elected to 4-year terms at a yearly salary of $15,- 500. They would handle wills, es­tates, trusts, and other property matters.

'The administration bill does not touch on the Probate Courts. The Governor haa said he feels they are a constitutional question. The administration is baeSfing a pro­posed constitutional amendment to revamp the Probate Courts.

Nor does the administration call for- any change In the Superior Court, other than the creation of the family court division.

The Bar, however, would In­crease the iwmber of Judges from the present n to 30 (40 if needed). It would also restrict Us Jurisdic­tion in civil and criminal cases.

'Ilie administration court reform pkM> would iie effective Jan. 1, 196 . The Bar reorganization pro- giAm would go Into effect July 1,

■ - - j-,- •- > «

Poe Honored By State VFW

Pascal Poe III, Statewide win­ner in the Voice of Democracy oratorical contest last fall, was presented a plaque at the State­wide VFW conference held yester­day at the stats Capitol.

The contest was sponsored by the VFW in conjunction with other groups. Poe will compete against other Slate winners in the na­tional contest this month.

Eleotras is far above that normal­ly considered safe.

Howe\’er, he added, he under- .stood the higher minimum, waa lo be in effect only \;’hile instruments of the crashed plane are being examined, and if they arc found satisfactory, the restrictions will be removed.

American operates four, Electra planes.

Eastern Airlines, which operate* about 10 of them, said that Capl. John H. Halliburton, vice presi­dent in charge of operations, noti­fied all stations of the new restric­tions last night.

HU directive said it U "expected to he a temjxjrary restriction of not more' than three days.”

Eastern noted it has a precau­tionary regulation of its own in­volving new-type planes, allow­ing pilots d'.u-ing their first .50 hours of flyin*' Iher.i to land only when visibility is a half mile great­er and the ceiling 200 feet higher than required.

The Electra is manufactured by Lockheed Aircraft. During the past month it waa placed in serv­ice by American and Eastern Air­lines. Eleven other lines have the plane on order.

The Electra is powered by four Allison turbine engines. The en­gine is similar lo that used in some all-jet aircraft, but in the Electra the turbines drive propellers.

The FAA said the new restric­tions were drawn up in Washing­ton last night. Investigators mean­while were closely scrutinizing the Instrument panel of the plane which fell Into the East River.

The nose section and cockpit of the plane were recovered Saturday night. Civil Aeronautics Board ex­perts began studying the instru­ment panel yesterday.

A CAB bDokesman .said the whole cockpit, Including the pan­el, was in excellent .shape. He acid a clock on the panel wa.s still running wlien the front end of the airliner was pulled from the water.

The retrieved cockpit yielded tlie trapped oody of the veteran pilot, Capt. Alfred De Witt, 59, Decatur, MieJ).

Three more bodies were recov­ered yesterdav. They were identi­fied as Dr. Robert Emer.son, .56, Urbana, 111., research professor of Botany at the Univeraity of Il­linois; Benja...ln Weinstein. Great Neck, N.y., precident of the Judd Valve Co., Long Island City, Queens, and Robert David Wil- lemin, 33, La Grange, 111., a de­partment manager for the brok­erage firm of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner A Smith.

The hodiM of 82 victims are still missing.

MIsi. Sally Blazensky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Blazensky, 59 Clinton St., became the bride of Raymond William Ouellette, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph E. Ouellette, East Hart­ford. at l i o’clock Baturdyr morn­ing In St. James’ Church. The Rev. John P. Hannon performed the double ring ceremony. Church decorations were white pompona and gladioli.

Given In marriage by her father, the bride had as her maid of hon­or her sister. Miss Marie Blazen- sky. 59 Clinton St. Bridesmaids were Miss Marlon T. Ouellette, East Hartford, sister of the bride­groom, and Miss Doris S. Kyc, cousin of the bride. East Hartford.

Robert W. Ouellette, East Hart­ford, was best man for his broth-

and ushers were John W. Leonard, East Hartford, and Charles D. Morrison, Glastonbury.

The bride was attired in a’ floor- length gown of Chantilly lace over white satin, fashioned with fitted bodice with tapered sleeves and Queen Ann collar, and bouffant skirt. Her veil of imported F'rench Illusion fell from a full crown studded with pearls and rhine­stones. She carried a bouquet of roses and orange blossoms.

The maid of honor and brides­maids were attired in aimilar ballerina-length gowns of French blue organza, made willi narrow riffles and iKmffant skirls and

r while accessories. The maid of honor carried dark pink roses, and the bridesr.iaids, light pin« ro.sea.

Following ihe cererfiony a re­ception for 125 guests was held at the British American Club, wliich wa.s decorated with white atrenm- ci's and uclla and pompons amt gladioli.

'I'he briile's traveling costume, when leaving on a motor trip lo New Hampshire, wa.s a blue and green .silk sheath dress with beige and black accessories. After Mai'ch 1 Mr. and Mrs. Oielletle will be at home at 116 Woodlawn Circle, East Hartfoid.

Last month the bride was hon­ored with several ahowers. These Included a miscellaneous shower on Jan. 3 at -he home of Miss Kyc; a personal shower on Jan. l(i at the home of Mrs. Kenneth A. Hancock, East Haftford, and another miscellaneous shower giv­en by Mis* Marion Ouelletle and Mrs. Walter Wer.stington on Jan. 2" at the ho:ne of Miss Oullette.

After the wedding rehearsal Fri­day eienlng a bridal buffet was se' ved at the home of the bride’s parents.

Plans Started Board Action Reopens For Birthday Of Pipe Band

A committee of 50 Saturday night )>«gan making plans for the 46th anniversary celebration of the Manchester Pipe Band, familiarly known as the Kilties,

An organization morling waa held at the Washington Social Club. William Forbes, drummajor of the band, is the general chair­man.

The celebrstlon tentatively calls for a full day of activities some­time in May. There will be a pa-

OharlM F. FoyCharles F. Foy. 90, Hartford

died Saturday In Rockville.Prior to hla retirement, he waa

a college professor.He leaves a sister, Mr*. Annie

Gleason, with whom he made his home; and several nieces and nephew*.

Funeral services will be held to­morrow morning at 8:30 from the T. P. Holloran Funernl Home, 175 Center St., followed by a requiem Mass in St. James' Church at 9 o’clock. Burial will be in St. Mary's Cemetery, Windsor I»cks.

Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 tonight.

Police Pushing Quiz of Father On Son’s Death

(Continued from Page One)

radc, with many visiting bsnds. A dinner-dance in the Armory will climax the affair.

Committees were formed Satur­day. Herbert F. Stevenson is pro­gram committee chairman; Robert .1. Boyce, financial secretary; Harold A. Osgood, general com­mittee secretary; Daniel Hair, William DeHan and Gustave Pe­terson, band co-»hairmen; Jolm P. Wiet, Harold E. Turkinglon and Karl W. Yost, publlrlly co-chair­men; Hei'bei't Keefe. Joseph Lutz and Harold A, Turkinglon, dinner- dance co-ehairmen; William T. Ritchie, historian; James McVeigh, parade chairman.

Band President Burton Smith and Forbes outlined the past his­tory of the Killies and told about future plans. Other speaker* in­cluded Police Chief James Rear­don: Jame.s Wallace. Scolllsh clans of Hartford; Thomas Conn, master of Orange Hall Corp,; Fred Baker. British American Club; Charles Cawley, president of St. Patrick's Irish Pipe Band; Peter Mietzner of the "Spirit of ’76.”

Also, Lt. Clark of the Governor’s Foot Guard; Richard Henderson of the Times Travel Bureau; Bruce Watkins, Wiet, Hair, DeHan, McVeigh and Ritchie.

Falward P. MarUIeyEdward P. Markley, formerly of

Manchester, died Saturday at the Day-KImball Hospital, Putnam.

Prior to retiring several years ago, he was employed at the tffiandler- Evans Co,, Hartford,

He leaveji a son, Edward J. Marliley of Danielson; a ilniighter, Mrs. James V. Anderson of Man­chester; a brother, Waller Mark- ley of Rockville; a aiatcr, Mias Anna Markley of Rockville; sev­eral grandchildren, and two great­grandchildren.

Funeral aervlees will he held Wednesday morning at 8:30 at the T. P. Holloran Funeral Home, 175 Center St., followed by a requiem Mass in St. James' (ffiurch at 9 o'clock. Rurial will be in East Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home tomorrow from 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m.

Actloahy Town Director Francfii Mahon«y ha* resulted in an extra two weeki of pubtic ice ekating at Center Springs Pond.

Mahoney said today he hat rounded up the Board’e aupport lo pass a $400 tpprorlatlon that would allow Park Superintendent Horace Murphey to continue a pro­gram of supervised skating at the pond through Feb. 23. Evening skating will be Included, Murphev said, and Sunday closing times will be extended from 6 to 10 p.m.

Murphey reported skating has ended for the season at Charter .Onlr Park and the Center Springe I Annex as recent rains damaged the 1 ice.

Murphey had planned to discon­tinue all supervised skating yes­terday because of a lack of ds- partmental funds. ^

Mahoney, learning of Murphey 8 plans, rounded up Board aup)>ort of an additional appropriation— approximately $400. it will cover the costs of supervisors and pollcs- men. .Meanwhile. Murphey t o d a y pointed out that there haa been more skating this winter than ps^t seasons, wi’ h a total now of 33 days at the pond. In the past five years, the number of skating day* were, respectively, 20, 23, 22, 21 and 23, he said.

Fiiiierala

Norman K. WilsonThe funeral of Norman R. Wil­

son, Hebron, was held at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon at the W. P. Qulsh Funeral Home, with the Rev. Roy Hulcheoii, minister of the Wapping Community Church, officiating. Burial was in Nlpslc Cemetery, East Glastonbury.

happy. His father and mother had not been married, they said.

His father boarded him O'lit to strange families with unsatisfac­tory surroundings, officials said.

"The Rolzals brought him his first touch of security. The wel­fare agency said that since Albert moved into the Rotzal home four months ago he had become quite happy.

Kish haa been under questioning ever since the boy’s body was dis­covered by three hoys who had been ice sckaling in the area. Po­lice said an obvious attempt had been made to cover the body with leaves and branches.

When taken to the scene Kl.sh broke down and wept at the sight of his son.

The boy had been placed in the Rotzal home by the Woodfield Village, a welfare agency. Henry Rotzal is a telephone repairman.

Two Cleared Of Assaulting

North Ender

Howard E. Johnson Jr.A private funeral waa held this

afternoon for Howard E. Johnson Jr., 40, of Manchester and Meriden, who died Saturday following a lengthy illness.

The funeral was held at the Watklns-West Funeral Home, with Ihe Rev. Iviurence Vincent, a.ssod- ate minister of Center Congrega­tional Church, officiating. Burial was in East Cemetery.

Mr. Johnson wa.s born In Hart­ford, a son of Belle Dougan How ard and the late Howard Johnson Sr.

He leaves his mother, Mrs. Wil­liam Millington of Meriden, and three half sisters, Mrs. Llndell But­ler, Mrs. Dean Wilkinson and Mrs. Bruno Noviceili, all of Meriden.

Impact Nothing Like Aftermath

Town Won’t Levy Garbage Skip Fee

Town Garbage Coordinator Wal­ter Buckley reported today that 575 complaints of skipped collections were received last month from townspeople. .

Of this number, 237 resulted In mat coniesi inis monin. ‘ pickups within 24 hours, BuckleyApproximately 265 VFW post | ^

General Manager Richard Mar- tifi, who in December ordered the

Two cars took separate paths of destruction last night after col­liding at Oakland and N. School SLs. and left trail.s of smashed guard rails, rutted lawn. , and a broken tree.

One driver, John Kacmarezyk. 62. of 153 N. School St., rerea d a bump over his right eye.

The police gave this account of the accident:

Kacmarezyk drove from N. School St. into Oakland St. and hit the left rear of a car driven north on Oakland St. by Clarence G. Maron. 36. of Vernon.

The Impact made Maron'a car swerve and crash through the guard railing on the left of the road and careen down the embank­ment before coming to a slop.

Kacmarezyk’s vehicle, mean­while, went out of control and shot acro.ss Oakland St., climbed the lawn at number 139, turned south, knocked down a tree, jumped a stone wall, roared across the lawn at number 133 and came out on Oakland St. again.

The wall was damaged and a Japanese yew bush was broken by the plunging, vehicle, Police said.

Maron was apparently unin­jured, police said, but both cars were towed from the scene. The accident. Is still under Investiga­tion. i

William G. Hearn, 18. of 33 Windermere St., and .lames D. Meacham Jr., 17, of 152 Loomis St., charged with assault and bat­tery of a North End resident Dec.9, were acquitted in Town Court this morning by Deputy Judge Jules A. Karp.

Judge Karp said his decision was ba.sed on the fact that there waa no criminal intent in their actions which resulted in the fight.

The decision comes three weeks after the two youths were put on trial. At that time the Judge asked Prosecutor John R. Fitz­Gerald and Defense Counsel Jo­seph L. Steinberg to file briefs with him to clarify their positions in the case.

Judge Karp this morning said there was doubt that the affray constituted assault and battery, a criminal offense which requires intent on the part of the accused

The two youths were identified Dec. 9 as the two who beat Thomas Hackelt, 38, of 756 N. Main St. Hackett claimed during the trial the boys had discharged guns on his property and he had tried to prevent them,

Hearn and Meacham countered that Hackett had tried by force lo take their guns and they fought lo defend themselves and their properly.

Hearn and Meacham were also charged with discharging firearms within town limits but Judge Karp is still re.servlng decision on that count.

Atty. Steinberg said that Hack- ett's property where the fight oc- c\irred is leased by the state for hunting and shooting. The two youths admitted shooting at cans and targets with .22 caliber rifles the afternoon of the fight. Their hunting licenses had expired, they said.

Atty. Steinberg said that the boys had merely been target shooting, not hunting. In this case hunting licenses are not required, he said.

Judge Karp said he would study the law on the problem and mail his decision to Steinberg and the accused.

Mrs. Mary MaynardFuneral services for Mrs. Mary

Maynard, 76, 302 Main St., were held at 11 o'clock this morning at the Holmes Funeral Home.

Cremation will follow, and burial will be in the Flahkill R\iral Ceme­tery, Fishkill, N, Y.

Mrs. Maynard died at the Green Lawn Convalescent Home, Rock­ville, Saturday night after a short illness. She was born in Beacon, N. Y., April 11, 1882, and had lived here for 30 years. >

She leaves a son, Mahlon May­nard of Manchester; and several nieces and nephews.

Greece, Turkey Near Pact on Cyprus I s s u e

(Continued from Page One)

Istera- Evanghelos Averoff of Greece and Falln Ruitu Zorlu of Turkey continued their negotia­tions separately. The two premiers had nbt met since two sessions on the opening day of the conferenceFriday. .

The draft constitution, agreed on in principle between the two sides, would make the British col­ony an Independent republic. But it specifies that no part of the Is­land would ever become a part of Greece or Turkey.

There would be no separate par- llamenlary bodies for the Turkish minority of 100,000 and the Greek majority of 400,000, with a joint upper house In which each commu­nity would be represented propor­tionately.

The negotiators were reportsd moving toward agreement that matters concerning foreign affairs, defense or Internal security would have to )>e approved by both the Greek and Turkish communities.

Cyprus haa been wracked by strife—and NATO defenses In the eastern Mediterranean threatened -s ince November 1955 when Greek Cypriots stepped up a guer­rilla-terrorist campaign to join Cy­prus with Greece.

The Turkish speaking Islanders prefer BriHsh rule but demanded partition of Cyprus If the British got out. Both sides apparently have shifted their positions in fa­vor of an Independent Cyprus.

Ar|MUl MegayGraveside services for Arpad

Megay of Roslyn Heights, N. Y., were held at 3 o'clock this after­noon in Buckland Cemetery.

A former resident of Manches­ter, Mr. Megay was formerly em­ployed at the Norton Electric Co.

He leave.* a cousin, Miss Magda Neznik of Manchester.

Cemetery Budget Of $60,112 Asked

and auxiliary members from all parts of the State attended the conference. Those attending from the local post and auxiliary were Commander Jacob L.augza, Donald Maynard, Joseph Jelsov- aky, President Mrs.' Laura Ecabert, Past Department President Mrs. Florence Streeter, Department Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. Jane Fortin,' District President Mrs. Lucille Hirth, Mrs. UUian Linders and Mrs. Mary E. LeDuc.

The program yesterday was pre­sented by the Department of Con­necticut! officers and national rep­resentatives, and covered all phases of VB(W work. The prin­cipal epeoker was National Senior Vice Oimmander Lou Feldman of PeBnaylvonio.

town garbage collector to Improve hie service, said today that he ex­pects to take steps so that no charge will be levied against the collector for the January sklo*. Un­der the garbage contract, the town has the right to charge $1 per skipped collection, but I* not ob-. ligated to levy it, Martin said.

The manager added that the levy waa used Ih December and it other times in Order to “ put pressure on him (Uie collector) to do better.”

The collector Is Samuel Lom­bardo of Eaat Hartfolrd.

There were 340 complaints ' of ■kips 4n D#(;ember and 129 in No­vember, acc(»dlqg lo Buckley’s w - porte, • ’

Ambulance Sold By W. P. Quish

William P. Quish, operator of the Qulsli Ambulance Service, to­day annoqnced the sals of thla service to Ambulance SeYvlce of Manchester, Inc., a new f i r m, formed by Stewart Johnston, Rog­er Talbot, David Petke and Thomas Carpenter.

The business address o f the the new firm is 319 Main St.

Quish has operated the iwrvlce for more than 40 yeare.

The new operators said today that Ambulance Servira of Man­chester will continue tq »erve the needs of Manchratar hnd iurround- ing communi^es. Tel^hone , num­ber for the new service !■ 8-0850.

Swim Instructors l^ill Address PTAMiss Arlyne Garrity and Paul

Tierney from the Instructors of the Handicapped will be the speakers at the meeting of the Nathan Hale PTA tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in the school auditorium.

They will show colored slides to help illustrate the work being done with handicapped children.

Three male members of the ■PTA executive boayd, George

William Mullen and Edward an attempt to prove

___ ____ are better bakers, willquetion i f f their wares at the end of the meetlM. The proceeds will go to .the PTbk. •\ All membere arq asked to eign

the attendance sheets which will be placed o n . the piano.

RefreehmenU will be.«erv*d In the cafeteria.

A budget request of $60,112 for the upcoming fiscal year has been submitted to General Manager Richard Martin from the Town Cemetery Department.

The request is $13,505 greater than the amount of the deoart- menl's 1958-1959 budget, which was $48,607. The request submitted by Superintendent George Elliott asks $42,197 for salaries and wages, as against $40,432 in the current budget; and a jump from an esti­mated $6,097 in operating expenses for the current fiscal year to $17,- 195 for the next.

The hike in operating expenses reflects requests for new equip­ment, including a new dump truck lo replace one of 1948 vintage.

The salaries and wages jump re­flects wages held needed to pay for the expanding job of maintain­ing the East, West, Buckland, and Beth Sholom Cemeteries.

About TownRussell Leghorn, manager of the

local State unemployment compen­sation department at 806 Main St., announced today .that the claims taking office will be open regular hours on Thursday, Lincoln’s Birth­day,

Concert Today By BoatwrightCivic Music Assn, members to­

night will hear McHenry Boat­wright, Negro baritone, in the third of four CMA concerts at Manchester High Schoa .

The concert begins at 8:15.Boatwright appeared on Ed Sul­

livan's 'Toast of the Town” ss the outstanding vocal discovery of 1953. He has twice won the Mar­lon Anderson Award. He made his operatic debut as King Arkel In the New England Opera Theater production of "Pelleas and Mell- sande.”

Boatwright will sing, “ Sommi Dei,” Handel; "With Joy the Im­patient Husbandman,” Haydn; “Sc nel ben,” Stradella; A Porflria Vecchiarella," Stradella; "Col mio sangue comprerel,” Stradella; “Widmung," Robert Schumann; "Der Doppelganger,” Schubert; "Dcr Kuhne," Pfltzner; ‘’Erl tu che macchlavi," Verdi; three selections from "Don Quichotte at Dulcinee.” Ravel; ’ 'The Dodger,” Copland; "I Bought Me a Cat.” Copland; "There Is a Lady Sweet and Kind,” Dello Joio; ” I Hear an Army,” Barber; "Let Us Break Bread Together,” "He’s Got the Whole World in HU Hands," "Steal Away,” “You Can Tell the World.”

■PTA execi \Frost, Willli Adomy, in ^ a t men s

A meeting of thq Washington PTA Cub Scout spring fair com­mittee will be held tomorrow at 8 p m. at the home o f Mr. and Mr*. Paul W. White, 75 Pine St. Mem­bere interested in serving on any 6f the various committees ..ore in­vited to attend.• Mrs. Ann Strickland Pratt -of

Newington, formerly of Manches­ter, teacher of voice and . pUo%

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Hazardous Driving Conditions Tonight

Windsor Locks, Feb. 9 (A5—-The U.S. Weather Bureau at Bradley Field issued this sleet and freez­ing rain warning today for Con­necticut and the Springfield, Maas. , area:

Light snow this afternoon will mix with and change to sleet and freezing rain over southwestern Connecticut this evening and over the entire state and in the Springfield area during tonight.

Freezing rain and sleet will gradually change to rain during Tuesday. Temperatures 'WlU slowly rise today and Tuesday. Hazard­ous driving conditions will dsvel- op late this afternoon and eve­ning and continue through tonight.

MALAYA EUBCnONS SET Kuala Lumpur, Moiaya, Feb.

• (g>) _ FriiM Minister Abdnl Rahmoa today announced - hla resignation to lead his party’s >.mpaign in the Federation of Malayn’e first election at m Porlbunent ttaee IndependsMSh

REDS pUAU^. OVNiBOAT KTOW Toleyo, Feb. 19

Oblna todayi toonk Mmie—Hit. 'Si-SsaSigiiy

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“i j H tJ h b r s t u c v o f (TA.LVS PREHlSTORt' FINtSHEP.THE TIME MACHINE CREW IS ONCE MORE ON th e h ig h s e a s BOUNO THIS TIME FOR HOME, THEIR. 10,000 ,0 0 0 - YEAR-Ol-P MOONMAN s a f ely CAGED AND STOWEP BELOW PEDC

GETTING OXY DECLARED AN A N IM A L C0 CTAINLY SIM PLIFIED G ETTIN G I

HIM INTO TWE s t a t e s 1 DIDN'T IT?

YEAH , BLIT GETTING HIM INTO A CAGEW AS s o m e ­t h in g E LS E

AGAIN

• i .

a -9

r v E e x p e r i e n c e dEABTHOUAXES THAT ‘ W ER E TAME B Y

IPARISON

BY V. T. HAMLIN

PIUSCILLA’S POP IJY AL VERMEER

with MAJOR HOOPLb

THAt'S THE MAN,CH IEF/TH A T5OXFORD auici<-0O5H/-“ l^AFF- (< A FF .^ - .A Tl e a s t THAT’6WHAT HE CALLED HifA- SELF.TH E, gCiGAND,'

^ # ^ H E S 60T MORE A L IA S ES THAN A M AIL , AWN HAS C0RN5,M A 30R->-3O e

V SIMPSON, 9E T T £ K KNOVJN A 9 'S O F T 6 E L L * ' 6 IM PS0N , a l i a s A S N E R ffu R N StD E , A L IA S

r' g lL L GDNCH,ALIAS -*> SOT WH/ GO O N ? H E WORRS SO SMOOTH THAT IF YOO O P EN ED VOOR MOOTH TOYAWN HE'D PUT T H E SNATCH O ti

YOUR C a O e R lD G EV JO R H -/

DAILY CROSSWORD PU/ZLE

So They SoyA n t w * r t o P m i o u t P u n I *

. . ,.(?I&HT ~ .lT5-60fT

S E L L ' 1 H IM S ELF*!

CARNIVAL BY DICK TURNER

I BET I'M 1 ALM OST AS I

«STROM<3 . A S POP'

i r -

' “ ^ J U S T LOOK AT Tl-IE MUSCLE I’M DEVELOP-

IM C r

N O U S E L E T T I N G IT < 3 0 T O

w a s t e

J-1f m » X nr* !-«

LONG SAM BY AL CAPP and BOB LUBBERS

HOW CANYOOPERiWTL0N65 AMT0 MARRY A MAN 5«E'5 NEVER S E E N - O P IS EVER LIKELV

TDSEE7

AIAXE6 AS MUCH SENSE AS A\05TMARRIA6BS,AI>AM- AY THAT-SPUATT.'- AINT

sayin’m uch n'L A D M irr

WHY WONT HE LET LONSs a m S E E h im - t h e r e sd O T T O E E A R E A S O N r AFTER ALL, HE'S SEEN HER . 7 - WHY NOT-

A C R O SS1 — th« lig h t

fan ta itle S Don't -—

A m erica ih o rt 9 Dog and — -

Sgbt12 B « borne13 O peratic »olo14 Chem ica l

fu rn x15 N orth and

South —IT Headed 18 F ru its IS Decides31 Bondage23 W atch24 Dance step27 H it o r -----29 Peak32 Egg <lish 34 Fencing

positions 38 A m erican

patriot,P a u l---- -

37 State po sitive ly

38 --------------the ropes39 W eights of

Ind ia41 R iv e r in

Scotland42 Nothing44 Rod and — 46 Specia l duty ,49 Horse

conversation83 H igh card84 D isp lay86 Afternoon

87 F o r fear that88 F l y a lo ft *89 W orm80 Noun suffixes 61 F in ishep

SHORT RIBS

DOW NI Snare3 Hoarfrost3 Notion4 H ere of Battle

o f L a k e E r ie8 Membranous

pouch6 W ipes out7 M ark8 Endures9 Am assed10 Tow ard the

sheltered sideII Spreads,

as hay16 Chem ical

compound20 R ips22 F ly in g toys24 ------chops

2 So be it!30 S a i l the

28 Frighten30 Simple31 R oya l Ita lian

fam ily name3 3 ----- and

C la rk ,expedititlon

38 Agree

40W rite r, —— ■ Hem ingw ay

43 F in e cotton 45 R ent48 Sh ip 's officer47 C h ills48 Unclose50 Sacred image51 Happy52 H is a n d ----- -S S C o u rU (a h ,)

1 j S •) L 1 j 1 0 II

i T 11 |||

11

I I iJ k

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H h u, n 1it II

n 1) ■II

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l i » soW

SI

\L S'! Si

I ! SIy

SI \\ n

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r 5T 141___

It r 11 1

BY FRANK O’NEAL

T,M, >,(, U S Pit. OH. ie> t « t kl H«* iinnM, ><“ • 2~f

JUUn SAXON KEN BALD and JERRY BRONDFIELD“ I’m beginning to understand that beauty salon tech* nique. They make you appear younger by aging me!’’

__________

r -7

l . m i E SPORTS

30MIOR,COM.9ACKHEREV«THh W

sorrn

BY ROUSON

\

Spo,HTSii l T E «

BUZZ SAWYER BY ROY CRANET FIGURED IT "nilS WAY, ^

COMMANDER...IF YOU AND YOUR PLANELOAD OF OYNAmTE

WERE GOING TO BLOW UP, THERE WASN'T ANY USE IN MY GOING

------------, UP, TO O .

fUJI FOLLOWS THtl y otter in aLANDING THAT CueXS HIS teeth.

'JL

B. C.WHAT W E N E E D IS A

M O N E T A R Y E X C H A N & E S Y S T E M '.

S L IC H a M E D im OF EXCHANGE CO(JLC> A F F O R D U S A B U Y1M &

F t O W E R T O S A T I S F Y O U R V V I L P E S T D E S I R E S !

X f

BY JOHNNY HARThere 's Five C LAM «- & 6 T L o s r !

Me« Ye*k Heeeld Tnhwe l«K. J

MICKEY FINNirrrnrSpNlw.

-AND BOTH THE STOCK AND THE “GOO GOO BIRD STATUE WILL BE GIVEN TO YOU RIGHT HERE

BIIT-AH-ABOIIT ’SWELL.' BUT-AH-ABOUT THE STOCK .'WHAT IS THE AWtUKTA CORPORATION -A BIG FIRM LIKE-AH- UNITED STATES STEEL ?

LOOK.SHERIFF-YOU SAW WHAT ” I'VE GONE THROUGH TOPAY AND I'M EXHAUSTED.' COULDN’T THAT,

WAIT UNTIL THURSDAY ?

WHY, SURE,^ MR.MUDDLE -SURE.'

BY L ANK LEONARDWELL.I WANTTOTELlI CLANCY THE GOOD NEWS |

FIRST.' IT'LL ONLY

MtHMY MEEKLE

YOU KNOW, MEEKLE, I'VE BEEN THINKING ABOUT THAT CHRI6TMA6

PARTY WE HAD

BY DICK CAVALLl

YE6, EXCEPT THAT CHARLEY BOZEMAN NEVER

SHOWED UP. I CAN'T IMAGINE W HAT..?

l flOCKK H 0 C 6

DICKCMALU WELL .'WHAT HAPPENED TO YOU?/!

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1959

W DNV-4U0WDBo—isaoW000->1S90W EN B -H M O

Daily RadioEaetem Standtard TUm

w n o —loM WHAVr-«19 WPOP—1410

The touowtag program I le a are a u D D lle d by the radioIdea a re e u p ^ e d by the radio

m anagem ents and are aubject to change without ooUce.||8S—

WINF—Uanebeater Herald Newa 8:49—

WlNJr—Uuao lor Uic rtral Stun 4t04-

WHAT—Hound Ilpgw- ■ I.'-' n t-irt lueWKNB—Chuck Caron Wriv.-tv<i*-- lUmei WDRC—Arthur Johnson WPOP'—Connecticut Ballroom

4:88-WINF—Newa

4:10— .WIN^—Mustr wiui Joe Ulrand

4:18—WHAY—Hound Dog WCCC—Record. Review WKNB—Chuck Caron WTIU—Roe:WDRC—Arthur Johnaon WPOP-rConnoctlcul Ballroom

4:30—WHAY—Hound Dog WCOC—Record Review WKNB—Chuck Caron W l'lC—Rose lAlllel WDRC—Arthur Johnaon WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

4:48—WHAY-Hound Dog WCCC—Rccoi-d Review WKNB—Cluick Caron WTIC—Roaa Miller WDRC—Arthur Johnson WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

8:00—WHAY—FY-cd Swanson WCCC—Record Review WKNB—Chuck Caron WTIC—Newa WDRC—Newa Reporler WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

8:08—WINF—Newa

8:18—WHAY—Fred Swanson WCCC—Record Review WKNB—Open MUte WTIC—Ross Millci WDRC—Arthur Johnson WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

8:30—WHAY—Fred Swanson WTIC—Ross Millet WDRC—Arthur Johnson WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

8:46—WHAY—Fred Swanson WHAY—Plattci Partr WTIC—Rosa Millet WDRC—Arthur Johnaon WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

* v9h AY—F red Swanson WTIC—Newt WDRO—Newa Reporter WPOP—Newa

8:05—W INF-News

* ' w I n F -----Music for Evening8:18—WHAY—Fred Swanson

WTIC—Htncilv tjportt WDRC—Arthur Johnaon WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

6:30—WHAY—John Daly WTIC—Cote Olee Club WDRC—Arthur Johnson WPOP—Connecticut Ballroom

8:48—

w n c —NlghOtne W DRC-M uslc Througli the KIght W POP—Mika Lawlasa

18:W HAY—Music Alley WTIC—imemattonal Bandstand WDRC—Music Through the Night , W POP—Mika Lawless

t8;lS—W HAY—Music Alley V m c —international Bandstand WDHC—Music Through the Night WPOP—Mike Lawless

IO;!IO-W HAY—Music Alley WTIC—Behlpd the Pages WDRC—Music Through the Night WPOP—Mike Lawless

10:48-W HAY—Music Alley WTIC—UN Radio Review W DRC-M uslc Through the Night W POP—Mike Lawless

U :00-WHAY—Night Owl WTIC—News WDRO—Newe W POP—News

t i;l8 —W HAY-N lght Owl WTIC—Sports Final WDRC—Music Through the Night WPOP—Mike Lawless

II;S0-W IIAY—Night Owl WTIC—StarllKhl Serenade WDRC-Muslc Through the Night WPOP—Mike Lawless

I I :48WHAY—Night Owl WTIC-StarllghI Serenade WDRC-Muslc Through the Night WPOP—Mike I.awleas

IJ:S0—

Toronto Union In Full Revolt Against Hoffa

(Continued from Page One)

down, they voted to get up a com­mittee with broad powera and to hire a lawyer to help it along. The men agreed to convert 92,600 1n bonds, their remaining assets. In­to cash to pay him.

The members demanded tJvat McDougall be suspended. Dodds argued he could be suspended only by Hoffa. The members suspended him anyway and voted to* wire Hoffa the news.

WHAY—Fred Swanson W nc-Vn iree eiiai s.*tra WDRO—Lowell Thomas W PO P—Connecticut Ballroom

7:»»—WHAY—Fred- Swanson WTIC—Dick Bertel WDRC—Amos and Andy WPOP—Bob Scott Show

7:18—WHAY—Fred Swaneon WTIO—Dick Bertel WDRO—Amos and Andy WPOP—Bob Scott Show

■ :SWHAY—Fred Swanson WTIC—News 01 the World WDRO—Answer Please WPOP—Bob Scott Show

7:48— „ “WHAY—Fred Swanson w n o—Life In the World WDRO—F R Murrow WPOP—Bob Scott Show

S;00—WHAY—Music Alley WTIC—You Bet Your Life WDRC—World Tonight WPOP—Bob Scott Show

1:18—WHAY—Music Alley WTIC—You Bet Your Life WDRC-Muslc Through the Night WPOP—Bob Scott Show

1:30—WHAY—Music Alley WTIC—NlghtlinoWDRC—Muslo Through the Night WPOP^Bob Scott Show

1:48-WHAY—Music Alley WTIC—Nlghtllne ^WDRC-Muslc Through the WPOP—Bob Scott Show

8 :00—WHAY—Music Alley WTIC—NlghtllneWDRC-Muslc Through the Night WPOP—Mike Lawless

8:08—WINF—News

8:10—W INF—WINF Bandstand

8:18—WHAY—Music Alley WTIC—NlghtllneWDRC—Music Through the Mght WPOP—Mike Lawless

8:30-WHAY—Music Alley WTIC—NlghtllneWDRC—Mnstc Through the Night WPOP—Mike Lawless

Bov Scout Sunday Noted at Church |

In recognition of Boy Scout Sunday, 60 members of Pack 47, Troop 47 and Post 47 were hon­ored guests at the 11 o'clock service at South M e t h o d i s t Church yesterday. Boy Scouts as­sisted at both services.

The lay reader at 9 o'clock was Charles Perkins. Ushers were Robert Heines, James Larson, Malcolm Barlow and Joseph Scheibenpflug. A t 11 o'clock, the lay reader was David Cordner. Ushers were Edward Diehl, David Kelsey, John Maiorca, Lewis Barber, Charles Baraw, David Hastings and Ronald Wabrek

Institutional representative for Scouting at South Church la Doug­las Heissler. Pack 47 committee chairman is Ross Geiger. Troop 47 committee chairman is 'Woodrow Trotter, and Scou-tmaster Is Rob art 'Von Deck. Post 47 chairman is Norman Larson, €md Explorer ad visor is James Irvine.

A Couple of Good ScoutsTwo area Bov Scouts received God and Country medals from their church pastors during observ- liTce yesterday of C Scout Sunday. A t the left, U fe Scout All.n Yale Jr.. 17. Andover, r^elves his nfedal from the Rev. Willard Thomen, pastor of the Andover Congregational Church, while the Re^v.Theodore Chandler, pastor of the Bolton Congregational Church admires medal he pinned on shirt of Star Scout Robert Allison, 15, Bolton. (Herald Photos by S a te rn ls ) .________________________

Local Stocks

Night

Television Proerams On Page Two

GENERALTV SERVICE

92JS,Days M AC A CaU Mights Pins Parts

TEL. Ml 8-6482

ttuotatlons Fornlabed by Coburn 4k MlddlebrooR. Inc.

Bank StocksBid

Conn. Bank and TrustCo........................... 40

PMrst National Bank ofManchester ......... 37

Hartford Nations.Bank & Trust Co. 3714

Fire lnsuran<» CompaniesAetna Fire .............. 77HHartford F ir e ......... 195 205National ................ 116 122Phoenix .................. 78 81

Life and Indemnity Ins. Cos. Aetna Casualty . . . . 187Aetna Life ............. 239Conn. General ....... 325Htfd. Steam Boiler 115Travelers ................ 89 92

Public CtlUtlesConn. Light & Power 23 25Hartford Electric Lt. 67 69Hartford Ga.s Co. . . 44 —Southern New England

Telephone ............. 44 46Manufacturing Companies

Arrow, Hart, Heg. . . 6214 65'Associated Spring .. 19 >4 21',Bristol Brass ......... 11'4 13Collins ...................... 86 91Dunham Bush .... 9 10Em-Hart .................. 49 52Fafnir Bearing . . . . 90 lOOLanders, Frary, Clark 19 21N. B. Machine......... 29' i 31'North and Judd . . . . 26 29Russell M fg.............. 25'a 28'Stanley Works . . . . 42Va 45'Terry S team .......... 45 —Torrington ............... 28(4 30'4U.S. Envelope. QOm. . 22% 24'4U.S, Envelope, pfd. .. 12% J-4%Veeder Root ....... .. 49% 52%

Tha above quotations ar.e not to ba construed as aotual markets.

Lab Report Due In Mystery Death

New York, Feb, 9 (AO—A. lab­oratory report in preparation may shed some light on the mysterious death of Mrs. Bette Davis, 30- year-old cafe society figure.

The meiilcal examiner’s office said the report may be ready to- rjorrow.

Mrs. Davis was found slum'ped over the side of an empty bath­tub in her 940^-day suite in the fashionable Hotel Savoy Hilton Friday night.

An autopsy report said death was due to visceral (internal or­gans) congestion, but a chemical analysis of the vital organs was ordered to determine the precise caiuse.

Mrs. Davis, a pretty, blonde divorcee and former model, and Sinclair Robinson, w e a l t h y fi­nancier and lawyer, had talten out a marriage license Dec. 5 at Greenwich, Conn.

Justice of the Peace Tom C Golden of Greenwich was to per­form Uie ceremony. He said yes­terday that a friend of Robinson’s had told him last Thursday that Robinson's secretary said she had been instructed to call oft the wedding arrangements.

Police have refused to confirm reports that a letter from Rob­inson telling Mrs. Davis of the L;-oken engagement was found in the dead wximah’s suite.

Robinson, a bachelor, was re­ported to be at his home in Bev­erly Hills. Calif.

In Buffalo, Mo., Mrs. Davis mother, Mrs. Lulu Qulsenberry, made arrangements for funeral services there Thursday.

is omitted from the administra­tion’s program" and said that he believed it should be considered.

"The AFL-CIO's O v ll Rights Committee has performed valuable work In persuading some unions to abandon discriminatory c l a u s e s which had been written Into their constitutions," Bush said.

“However,” he added, " I am ad­vised that some unions still ex­clude Negroes from membership, and that others have established ‘Jim Crow' locals to segregate Ne­groes from white members.

WORKERS ACCEPT CONTRACTWaterbury, Feb. 9 (/P)—Chase

Brass and Copper Co. employes have voted unanimously to accept the company’s contract offer.

About 1,600 members of Local 1565, United Automobile Workers, voted to ratify the agreement yes­terday. The vote was unanimous, Hugh Wrenn, president of the lo­cal, said.

(Contract negotiations have been in progress six months. Terms of the contract were not disclosed.

Extended ForecastTemperatures for Connecticut

for the next five days will be near normal. The normal mean tem­perature for the Hartford area is 28 and ranges from a high of 37 to a low of 18.

Warmer Tuesday and Wednes­day becoming colder Thursday and then warmer again Friday.

Precipitation will total about one half inch occurring Tuesday and Wednesday and again about Fri­day.

STORE UNION FOR CONTRACTHartford, Feb. 9 (iP)—Connecti­

cut employes of First National Stores, Inc., voted approval of a new contract yesterday. The ac­tion occurred here at a meeting of Local 371 of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Food Store Em­ployes Union. The supermarket chain has about 2,500 employes In Connecticut. Wage scales were not disclosed.

2 Sisters SuffocatedBrookhaven, N. Y., Feb. 9 {/P>—

Two little sisters suffocated in a burning shack last night. They were the seventh and eighth fire victims in the past 10 days on eastern Long Island.

The girls, Shirley Ann Chisholm 3, and Jo Ann Chisholm, 16 months, were carried unconaclous from the shack by a neighbor. But efforts to revive them fallefl.

Police said they died of asphyx­iation or carbon monoxide poison ing.

Their 2-months-oId sister, Dar­lene, was taken to Brookhaven Hospital in critical condition.

Police said a kerosene cooking stove, used for heating, caused the fire.

The mother, Rosalie, 20, was visiting her landlord’s house about 50 feet away at the time of the blaze, Police said.

Bush Seeks Curb On Bias in Unions

C an ’ t S le e p ?

I N O W ! 1 0 0 ^ SAFE SLEEP*

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Washington, Feb. 9 (j'PI—Sen. Prescott Bush (R-Conn) says the question of racial and religious dis­crimination in labor unions should be considered along with other | Civil Rights legislation.

Bush said yesterday he wjll offer a bill to deal with the progrfim but has not yet decided what form the legislation should take.

A possible approach, Bush said in a statement, would be to require the Federal Civil Rights Commis­sion to look into the problem and make recommendations to Con­gress for any necessary legislation.

Bush said he would join in spon­soring six of ths bills included In the Civil Rights program submit­ted to Congress last week by President Eisenhower.

He observed,,however, that "the subjedt of racial or religrious dis- crlmlnalion In labor organizations

THE LUTZ JUNIOR MUSEUM

D eserves Your Support

Help give this worthwhile community project the funds it needs to maintain and oxpond its services.

Send Your Contribution toROUERT C . BARNES, Membership Chairman

281 HENRY ST.— MANCHESTER

MIDWINTER SPECIAL

Still Time to Get Tickets!

HAIRDRESSERS'

CARD PARTYtA PTA IN EASY

(p m t liy WtA >afY»a*. tna. T.M, Wat- 0-9. P*t Olf,

BY LESLIE TURNER

MR. ABERNATHY RALSTON JONES and FRANK RIDGEWAY

U X X .' MR. ABERNATHY'S NEW

STOCK JU S T W ENT UP 10 POINTS.'

I WDNDER W HERE HE S E T S H IS

T IP S '

HE SAYS IT'S A SECRET.

V BSilN PEEPl Z OVeSHBARP Hl» ,vPfSCRPTION' HE'5 CA fTA IN S M V !

' you SOUtOPEP V'^OU CMI 66 SURE H E’L L BNP U5JMusHiy PU M seP iV ^ i ^ . ^ t o m o r r o w -WTSr WHEN VOU 0VEKH6ARD THW 50WB O U y HAP

,TlfA CEO V Bt(»R . TO CALHOOMl

IN TIME TOSAVE U 5 IHUW \ m u.VOUR neHOMH 1 B 6 T 0 0 LM TEi P A LI PLAN 70 6lOtN U ’ ) W elK POM' THAT JO l^ A SCHOOL MTH / n TO N IO H Tl y "

U 5 M 5 IP e ! / ^

CAPTAM e a s y . EH r vau.1 TOMOfMOW WILL.

WB WAS AU SET AN' MARKIN' TUAEi M iv ik fl rr50NLV THREE HCUR5 TO PINBVHIU.5'CHOOL1,

FIRST, W a fiB TR lP OP THAT GUMSHOE SO HB WON'T SPOT US

a O U THRU CALHOON! ITLL BE EASY SINCE- WBKNOW HIS NAMBI

This annual Mid-\vinter Event is one to which Schultz custom'lrs always look forward— and these specials for 1E)59 will prove equally exciting as those offered in the past. Don’t wait— make an ap­pointment at your favorite Schultz Salon!

Nationally Adverfited

COLDWAVE

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNEAreWMNUTtSLATCR-

BY WILSON SCRUGGS.10D6K BERRV. VOU ^ U5T BE BARNEY.'where's

NANCY?

JEFF COBB BY PBTE HOFFMANAsa

SICK AND TROlfiLSD LT. SLATBR TELLS THE STORY OF PVT KALE'S COURT-MARTIAL TO REPORTER JEFF COBB..,..

...WE TURNTOA SMALL AMRTMENTON ALfMDON SIDE STREET...

5ID, THESE PEARLS ARE SIMPLY BEAUPFULL.BUT THEY LOOK SO

THEY ARE/..BUT NOTHING'S TOO

THEN..AH..WHY WON'T YOU TELL ME W HERE YOU ^ T H E M -Z

OH, 1 W ILL/... AND I'L L TELL YOU PLENTY MORE...AFTER-YOU

A N D -

FCX)D SALE1:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY II

DESSERT and COFFEE SERVED AT 1:30 Proceeds For Children's Services Of Manchester TICKETS AVAILABLE AT FOLLOWING SHOPS:

. ,1 . ,,.r ■V

F i i a i

SAVE

AnnW trsory

giftto

youl

INYOUR COUPONS / 9

with thisF R E E COUPONONE PINT PACKAGE OF CRESTMONT

ICC CRCAMG O O D F E B . 9 T H R O U G H F E B . 14, 1959

AT YOUR A&P SUPER MARKETS 701 MAIN ST., EAST HARTFORD 261 BROAD ST., MANCHESTER

116 EAST CENTER ST., MANCHESTER L IM IT O N E C O U P O N T O E A C H A D U L T

IHISCOUI-ON

WORTH 1 UON ONE POUND PKG WARWICK ASSORTED

CHOCOUTESG O O D F E B . 9 T H R O U G H F E B . 14, 1959

AT YOUR A&P SUPER MARKETS 701 MAIN ST., EAST HARTFORD 261 BROAD ST., MANCHESTER

116 EAST CENTER ST., MANCHESTER L IM IT O N E C O U P O N T O E A C H P U R C H A S I

iit 51 Jit ? f >il9888L

iv/f-V;

THIS COUPON A ,

WORTH 10* ' r rON O N E-8 OUNCE PACKAGE SUPER-RIGHT

LUNCHEON MEATGOOD FEB. 9 - FEB. 14 1959 AT YOUR A&P SUPER MARKETS 701 MAIN ST., EAST HARTFORD 261 BROAD ST., MANCHESTER

116 EAST CENTER ST., MANCHESTER L IM IT O N E C O U P O N T O lA C H P U R C H A S E

i , 1

THIS COUPON

WORTHO F F T H E R E G U L A R

P R IC EI PINT BOTTLE OF

Rubbing AlcoholGOOD FEB. 9 - FEB. 14 1959 AT YOUR A&P SUPER MARKETS 701 MAIN ST., EAST HARTFORD 261 BROAD ST., MANCHESTER

116 EAST CENTER ST., MANCHESTER L IM IT O N E C O U P O N T O E A C H P U R C H A S E

Page 6: NO. no MANCHESTER, C ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 ... Evening Hearld...of at \ If Manchester \" ‘" • * * « • • • • • ***** ***** MANCHESTER if / '. .Manchester, 9

M A N C H P iiS T E R E V E N I N G H E R A L D , M A N C H E S T E R , C O N N ., M O N D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 9 , 1 9 5 9 P A G E E t I l V E N

I

P A 6 1 1 V NMANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN.. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1969

uresWins $500| With 2,019Total Score

B y E A R L Y O S TIt was back to work today

for Maurice (Hippo) Correnti of Manchester, winner of the 29th annual I'.astern Duck Pin ■ Bowlinp Tournament l a s t weekend at the Lucky Strike ■alley! in W illiinan ti''. In the in- au ran re businesa him self. " i t li o ftire .' a t <T CoU a_e .st . ' o rren li p icked up Sf>00 for h is IS gam e to ta l of 2,019 w hich topped a re c ­ord field of 19" h o w le i! from along th . \ t la n t ir seaboard .

F o rm e r M anchester tow n ch am ­pion C orren ti h as been bowling ever since he w as a jjiinior at Mah- C hester H igh, 21 y ears ago. A fo r­m er all around a th le te - ba.seball. bask e tb a ll, soccer and tenn is, tk ir- re n tl Jfot off to a g re a t s ta r t in Uie T h read C ity f irin g T h u rsd ay night s\1Ui an e ig h t gam e to ta l of l.l.'i’i N cedtng a second block of 963 fo r , a neo’ record. C orren ti fell off from a 144.2 av erag e In 123 4 H o w e v e r , th is p lace w as still good e n o u g h m fin ish ahead of F ra n k Voytek of B rid g ep o rt who toppled 2 0 1 2 p in .s

148 S ta te Bow lers T here w ere 148 bow lers from

C onnecticut, 22 from M a . s . s a c h u - se tts , 12 from Rhode Island. 10 from M aryland and f i v e from W ashing ton , D.C

F ir in g s ta r te d T h u rsd a y n ight, w ith C o rren ti in the f irs t sh ift at 7 o’clock, and fin ished up la te last n igh t.

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O th er M an ch este r bow lers and th e ir to ta ls , ou t of the money, w e re Ed Kovia 1,873 and F red Mc- C u rry 1.800.

Embers Set New Mark In Downing Bridgeport

Leading all the wa.v and dominating both board.8, the Red Ember .tel a neVv Connecticut Basketball Assn, scoring record with a whopping 129-99 triumph over the outclassed Bridge­port Savoys yesterday afternoon at the Old Saybrook HighSchool gym . A ccord ing to E m b e r^ ---------------------------------------------------- —M a n a g e r 'C e o rg e M it^ e l l . th e c o n - L j 54tes t, spon.sored by th e Saybrook | d ifference betw eenA m erican Legion, a tt ra c te d * y ie i r a and B rid g ep o rt’s No. 2 , crow d of 2.50. „ , „ ! sco rer, W ally C am p who w ound up I

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Green Manor Wins To Retain Chances

With tall Irv Foster and backcourt standout Vinny Kohen supplying the vital points. Green Manor kept alive its playoff chances yesterday afternoon with a much-needed 7.5-71 win over favored Newington at the Verplanck School. The Far- _ _ ._ _ _ — ------------------------------ .m in e to n Vnlley !-<>agiie Irium ph

Bill Dellinger I Sights Olympic Medal in 1960

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Fred Glover Nears Lftiop Scoring Mark

Sitting behind his insurance agency desk this morning was a happy Maurice Correnti, winner of the coveted Fastcni Duck I’in Howling Tournainoiit. .Another reason )n smile— .$.500 in prize monev. (Herald Photo by I’into)

‘Old Hands’ in Lead For Tourney Berths

American Trackmen Too Soft—Herb Elliott

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l o a t f o r t h #f n u r i h l i m e i n 10 o u t i n g s a n d h a d a t h r e e - g a m e w i n n i n g s t r e a k c u t .Bhor l .

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, h e l d t o j u . ' i t w o t a l l i e . s i n t h e s e c ­o n d l i a i r . t h e 6 -4 K o . s t e r t o o k c o m ­m a n d . r a g i n g J 6 o f h i s t o t a l 2 0 j m i n l . ' . r ' o s t e r c o n \ e r t e d 14 o f h i s

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f o r a n 8 : 1 9 .9 c l o c k i n g m t h e T i l t h ; B o s t o n A . A . G n m e . s . H o r a c e I . A s h n e l p l t e r ha .s t h e l i s t e d i n d o o r : . s t a n d a i d o f 8 :.5 0 ,.'> h e p o s t e d i n

1954j T ’ l l e 2 4 - y e a r - o l d f o r m e r 1 ’ n i v e r -

s i t y o f O r e g o n n i i l e r h a s d e c i d e d I t h e l o n g e r d i s t a n c e s a r e f o r h i m I a t l e a s t i n t e r m s o f t h e O l y m - I p i c s .! " I ' m n o t g o i n g i n t h e 1 .5 0 0 1 m e t e r s i j u s l u n d e r a m i l e i h e - I c a u s e t h e r e a i e l o o m a n y g o o d ' r u n n e r s i n i t . " I l e l l i n g e t s a i d . " I

l i g i i r e I h a v e a b e t t e r c h a n c e , I t u s - I s i a n s a n d a l l . i n t h e 5 ,0 0 0 m e t e r . s . i A l l t h i s i s j u s t t r a i n i n g l o r t h e I .-..DOO ■■i n e l l l n g e r h a d a s k e d t o l ie I s w i t c h e d t o t h e t w o m i l e b e c a u s e I ' l g o t t i l e d o f r u n n i n g . s e . o n d t o I R o n D e l a n y . " 3 ’ h r e e w e e k a e a r l i e r

h e p h a s e d t h e b o b b i n g I r i s h m a n ' a c r o s s t h e f i n i s h i n t h e K n i g h t s o f i ( ' o l i i m b i L S M i l e h e r e 10 y a r d . s

b s e k .

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T he C leveland w i n g e r p i c k e d u p j h ' l f a r e s w i l l b e a r o u n d w h e n t t w .................................................t w o a s . s i s ta l a s t n i g h t I n a l o . s i n g U ’ " ’ " ’ " ' ^ ' ( r i l l e g i a t e a n d N a t i o n a l I , f I n d i a n a , l a s t y e a r s B i g T e n c a u s e t o r u n h l a c a r e e r p o i n t t o U l > T o i i n i a m e n t , . f o r m t h e i r | r h a m p i o n , r o . i t i n u r s t h " P l r o t c h

world record for running the mile, .aay.s American track­men are too .anft.

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to 701 on 293 goals and 408 asslsla . T h u rie r . now re tired , com piled 744 p o in ts In 13 seasons.

All o f G lover’s fine w ork cou ldn’t keep th e In jury-ridd led B aro n s from go ing down to th e ir f i f th s tr a ig h t d e fea t, a t the hands of th e P ro v idence Reds, 6-4. S a tu r ­d a y n ig h t th e y lo st to th e fast- s te p p in g R o ch este r A m ericans, 8-5.

T h e A m erk s tied Uit' second- p lace H ersh ey B ears 3-3 In o v e r­tim e la s t n ig h t fo r a reco rd of four v ic to r ie s a n d a tie In th e ir last .-wx g a m e a T he th re e p o in ts th ey p ick ­ed u p o v er th e wcek’end moved the A m e rk s w ith in seven p o in ts of Ihe th ird -p la ce B arons.

Herishey a lso p icked up th ree p o in ts , b e a tin g p ace -se ttin g B u ffa ­lo 2-0 S a tu rd a y n ig h t before ty ing R ochester. T he Bisona cam e back S im day an d downed th e Spring- field In d ian s 4-3. The Indiana beat Spring fie ld 4-3 in overtim e S a tu r ­day.

F o u r g oals in the final period, tw o of th em by Zellio Toppazzim . ca rried th e R eds to th e ir \nctory over C leveland.

H ersh ey took a 3-1 lead

l i n e u p s n e x t m o n t hN o t h i n g w r o n g w i t h t l i a t m m d

y o u . T h e ' " o l d h a n d s " g a v e l l i c f a n s a c o u p l e o f l o i i s i n g s h o w s l a s t s e a s o n a n d t h e y 11 p r o b a b l y d o i t a g a i n . I f a p r o v e n p i o d u c l i s the. m e a s u r e o f s u c c e s s , t h e p r o m o t e r s s e e m t o l i a v o i t m a d e

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; t h e f a r - f l u n g N C A A C h a m p i o n - . sh ips .

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I t h e S o t i t l i e a s t e r n f ' o n f e r e n c e , W e s t I V i r g i n i a f T o i i i t h e S o u t h e r n . K a n - ■ s a s S t a t e f r o m t h e B i g E i g h t , ’ C i n c i n n a t i f r o m t h e . M i s s o u r i V a l ­

i e v . D a r t i n n i i t h f r o i ’n t h e 1, ' v

i L S . r u n n e r s i c a n ' t d o i t . b e c a u s e t h e b o d y w a n t s t o s l o p . A n d i f t h e A m e r i c a n s w a n t t o r u n t h e y ' l l h a v e t o d e n v t h e m s e l v e s o f w h a t t h e b o d y w a n t s , l i k e r h o e o l a t e s , f o r i n ­s t a n c e . "

q i i e t . T h e E s g l e . s b a s e t h e i r a w a r d o n t h e a n n u a l A s a o e l a l e d P r e s s P o l l .

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l e t e s d o n ' t b e a r d o w n s o o n t h e R i i s

w e l l a s I h e m i l e . H e ' l l r u n t h r e e r a c e s I n a n a f t e r n o o n . N o w B o w ­d e n s h o u l d c o n c e n t r a t e o n l y o n h i s s p e e i a l t t ’ . t h e m i l e , a n d n m w h e n h e f e e l s l i k e r u n n i n g n o t w h e n t h e c o a c h t e l l s h i m t o , ' ’ E l l i o t t a d d e d .

r u n t h a t h a s c l o s e d t h e H o o s i e r a w i t h i n a h a l f g a m e o f f r o n t - r u n ­n i n g . M i c h i g a n S t a t e

A s f o r t h e N T T , gue.sse.s a r e t h a t p c r i i a p . s s e v e n o f t h e 1 2 - t e a m f i e l d w i l l he r e p e a t e r . ! i n c l u d i n g S t , B o n a v e n t i i r e , . N i a g a r a . S t .. l o l i n ' s . ,St. F r a n c i s i P a i . D a y - t o n , a n d B r a d l e y a n d S I . l o a e p l i I P a I , I f t h e y d o n ' t w i n t h e i r c o n ­f e r e n c e r a c e . " B r a d l e y c i i r r e n l l y j i s r u n n e r - u p t o C i n r u i n a l i In t h e !• M i s s o u r i V a l l e \ ' U o n f e r e n r e a n d i S t . . lo .s e p h .! he a - l . s t h e i n f o r m a l M i d d l e A I la t i l 1C g r o u p I l i a I ha.s d o n e s o w e l l i n p a s t t o u r n a m e n t s w i t h t e a m s l i k e l . g i S a l l e a n d T e m ­p l e

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“ T h e r e ' s t o o i n u r h e m p h a s i s o n , d a p e o f C h i u a g n . I n t e r n a l t n n a l ................................ ..................t e a m w i n n i n g i n A m e r i c a . " E l l U o t t O l y m p i c C o m m i t t e e p i e s i d e n t . a n d f o u r B u b - f o u r m i n u t e m i l e i s .s a id - " H e r e a n a t h l e t e i s t o l d t r a c k | J i m m y ( ^ o n z e l n i n n o f S t . I ^ u i s . i s a t e a m s p o r t a n d h e m u s t m o r e ! t w o - t i m e c o a c h o f t h e p r o f o o t b a l l

, o r l e a s s a c n f i c e h i m s e l f f o r t h e C h i c a g o C a r d i n a l s , w i l l b e c o - j g o o d o f t h e t e a m . ! s ^ a ^ k e r s o n t h e p r o g r a m

u n d e r n i n e m i n u t e s i n h i s f i r s t t w o - m i l e o n b o a r d s , D e l l i n g e r ! n e v e r t h e l e s s m a d e h i s r e c o r d l o o k 1 e f f o r t l e s s . i

D e l l i n g e r r a n f i f t h i n a f i e l d o f | s i x f o r t h e f i r s t m i l e , t h e n b e g a n j U ) j o g p a s t h i s t i r i n g o p p o n e n t s . | H e c a u g h t t h e l e a d e r . M a x T n i e x ■ n f S o u t h e r n C a l i f o r n i a . W i t h t h r e e ! a n d a h a l f l a p . ' t o g o a n d i n a ' f l u i d s t r i d e p u l l e d o f f t o a 3 0 y a r d a d v a n t a g e a t t h e f i n i s h . |

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a w a y J u d g i n g b y s e v e r a l p i e c e s n f m a l l w h i c h w e r e i n c l u d e i i i n t h e h e a v y a n i . l o a d . O n e p a c k a g e v i a B o s t o n w a a t h e R e d .Sox [n-es.s

F i g h t o n t e e v e e w a .s a g o o d o n e w i t h G a s o a r O r t e g a p o u n d i n g o u t ! a h a i r l i n e d e c i s i o n o v e r R u d e l l S t i l e h I m a n a g e r l t o v i e w p a r t o f , t h e p r o c e e d i n g s . j

,'aliirday ■3 ’ e m p e r a t u r e s l i i o p p e d w e l l b e ­

l o w f r e e z i n g d u r i n g t h e n i g h t a n d o n c e a g a i n i t w a .s m i g h t y c o l d t h i s R 111. b e f o r e t h e s u n c a m e u p . . . O n c e t h e e a r l y d e a d l i n e w a s m e t ( ' . e o r g e M i t c h e l l , h u s i n e s s m a n a g e r ' o f t h e R e d E m b e r s ' b a s k e t b a l l t e a m , s t o p p e d t o r e p o r t h e w o u l d t a k e hi.s t e a m t o O l d S a y b r o o k f o r a " h o m e " g a m e S u n d a y a g a i n s t B r i d g e p o r t . . . B i l l . S k o n e s k i ,f o r m e r l o e a l f o o t b a l l s t a r - a n d o n e e a g a i n a l o < a l r e . s l d e n t . k e p t a s c h e d u l e d a p p o i n t i i i e n t a I r i i i d - t i i o r i i i n g M o r e o n t h i s v i s i t a t a l a t e r d a t e . . . B o w l i n g w a .s t h e s i i b e c t o f a c o n v e r . s a t i o n w i t h B o b C l o u g h , m a n a g e r o f t h e B o w l i n g : G r e e n . . . M y f a m i l y J o i n e d m e a t n i g h t f o r a t r i p t o . S p r i n g f i e M l o r a n A m e r i c a n H o c k e y L e a g u e g a m e , a n o v e r t i m e t h r i l l e r . . S p r i n g - f i e l d d e f e a t i n g P i - o v i d e n e e . 4 - 3 I ^ - c a l s e r v i c e s t a t i o n o p e r a t o r T o m B r o w n , h i s w i f e a n d o n e o f t h e i r

ICtckrille Opens Aeiv (Wm Before 900 Hut looses to SmithI)ri\'inpf in for a la\up is U(K'k\ilk‘*s (lord(^n Plank (14) \ sULcession aiui IHlli in 1‘J j^anies lor R(K*k\illf*. Photo on

the tii'st period of Saturday nijfiU‘s openiiiK

l o r ( ’ n a r h ( J i l H u n t s c r a c k r i f l e - | j u o n w h o h a v e l o s i b u t o n c e i n e i K h l o u l i h R . ' \ \ ' < * d n c s t l a V t h e I n - | ( l i a n s n p p o s e B r l s l n l a t t h e H a r l - i f o l d A r n u i i y a n r l F ' n d a v e n g a g e .U ' l n d h a m a l t h e I o t a ! A r m o r s

A l o n g w i t h h i s e x p e n e m e d s l i o o t e r ’ .M. H u n t h a . ' b e e n p l e a . ' e d i ss ' i th t h e f i n e p e i f o r m n n e e s l u i n e d ' i n b y s o p h o m o i e . l o l u i M a l c h e t l . a n d j u n i o r ' I > o n M i I > a g e n . B o t h v o i m g s t e i s p l a y e d p a i a m o u n t i r i l e s i n l a s t F ' n r l a x s H - p o i n t i n u i n p h o v e r ' d e f e n d i n g S t a l e ( ’ l i a m p i o n H a m d e n . T h e . ' l i o n g d o u n s t a t e r s l i a d o u l f i h n t t h e I n d i a n . ' i n a ne a r l i e r m a t c h

e * •

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F A 'e n U i e m a g u o f a s p a n k i n g n e w g y m a n d t h e e n c o u r a g e m e n t o f a p n i l i s H M 1 r o u d e . ' t i m a t e d a l 9 0 0 c o u l d n ' t h e l p ( ’ o a c h J o h n O a n a - v a n ' s q u i n t e t s h a k e a l o s i n g s U e a U w h i c h h a . ' n o w l e a r h e d 17 a f l r rSA turrta\''a l o p - s i d e d 64 4 2 \ n s s l o

7-1 w o n a n d l o . ' l r e c o r d , b o a t M i d - d l e t r j w n i n a 3 . 3 0 m e e t r L t h R h i g h H( l i o o l p o o l .

J ' h e lo < a l . s b o a s t o n e o f N e w F k i g l a n d s f m e s t f r e e s t y l e r a i n j u n i o r H i l l y S t u c k , h o l d e r of the . ' ( h o o l i -ec o r d i n b o t h t h e 5 0 a n d U M L y a r d e v e n t s O t h e r s w h o h a v e c o n l M h u t p < i v a l u a b l e p o m l a t h i s w i n t e r a r e D a n n y D o r m e r . K u r t E i g : e n h r o d , C ' h u r k T o w l e , D o u g S t e v e n s . B r u c e M c L a i n and Co- ( ' a p t a i n J i m D a v i s .

N o t . t o be o v e r l o o k e d a r e a u c h o t h o r f i n e p e r f o r m e r s a s P e t e Z a g l i o , A r t N i e l s e n a n d W ayne I x i w d a m o n g o t h e r s . W i t h o n l y t h r e e < lue l m e e t . ' r e m a i n i n g ’ o n t h e i r 1 1 - i n e r t . ' c h e r l u l e . t h e s t i r - c e a s f u l I n d i a n s w i l l c o n c e n t r a t e o n i m p r o v i n g t h e i r i n d i v i d u a l per-

: f o r m a n c e . H i n p r e p a r a t i o n fo r the ' f o r t h c o m i n g S t a l e a n d N ew E l n g -

l a n d m e e t s .

j n

in (lie new Rockiillc’ Ilinli m aKain-^t Smith High of Storrs. Smi th spoiled the e\( 'n ing for the honip club and fans with a (>)-42 win. The defeat was the 17th in

the rifrht shows nocki i l le 's I )a\e Hurt (12) and . limmv -Mai'sh (11) hattliiiK Hank- Harh 1221 and Hill Harher (21 ) for a rehoiind under the Rockville hoop. .\ crowd of 9(1(1, lii}f(rest ever foi' a home game in Rockville, watched the action, (llei-ald Photos hv .Saternis)

bro ch u re fo r th e 1959 eeason ■with | lone w ere fro n t row o ccu p an ts fo r , fa c ts and figrures on all p lay e rs in- th e action .

Hawks Not Playing According To Script as Loop s Patsies

(a irrv LValiired 111 Pr<» Mai Sliow

Bad m an Bull C'virry will rc- fiirii lo .M anchester on W ednes­day n ig lit. fi'cli, 25 to heaitliiic th e pro w res tlin g Card at the h igh school gym . C urry , one­tim e H a rtfo rd |io lieem an. was a riot hero severa l m ontlis ago w Iren lie used pa rt of tlie ring s tep s to lieat .Armild S k aa lan d in to siihniissioii.

C u rry will be fe a tu red in Ihe second show to be p re sen ted hv tlie -M aneliesler Police D e p a rt­m en t. F ra n l. Tow nsend, file sin g in g g rap p le r. will form tlie opposition.

Two o th er tMiuls, liolli la g m atch es , will com ple te th e card . In one, Ihe m id g e ts will fake over w ith Irish .laekie and PeeWee Ja m e s tea m in g a g a in s t Cowboy B row n and M arl Shaez.

John B aron and Don I.ewin a re listed a g a in s t /o ld o and T okyo Joe.

T ick ets will lie on sa le next week. P roceeds will e n te r th e Police B enevolen t Fund .

Linda BellefleurA Helene De\~ *

Miss and Mrs. Bowling W innersftl'i P " I t 1) hrYT M

M a r t h f i np ir l iP t iF iA c

T " t a l s

r e m a i n i n g .W e e k ’ s S e h i H l t i l e

T onight 7 C i v i t a n v.s. S t. Mary'.s. 7:45 C o ire n ti’.s v.s. L a t­v ians, 8:30 Roto-Ki vs. W atkin*.

Tiie.sday 8:1.5 We.st a ides vs. C en te r Congca, 9 W oodhill vs, I<lb- e r ly M iiliial.

W ed n esd ay —« :15 ’Teachers vs. Second Congos, 9 E a s t Sides vs. Kaceys.-

T eacher# 3, W oodhill 0; L a tv ian s 2, W a tk in s 1; E a s t Sides 3, R oto- K l 0; C e n te r Congo# 3 , ,S t. M a ry ’s 0;. W es t ^ d e s 3, K aceya 0 ; CSbre re n tl 'a 3 iSeeond Congo* 0.

N ew "York, Feh. 9 i/pi -T h e Chi-'^ Ted L indsay, E d Li cag o B lack H aw ks sp p a ren tly a re n ’t re ad in g th e sc rip t th a t tabs th em a# th e N a tio n a l H ockey I.«ague '8 p a ts ies.

N o r a re th e D e tro it Red Wrings pa.’r in g too mvich a tte n tio n to the p a r t th a t saya th ey a re supposed to be rid in g w ilh th e leaders.

T he H aw k s hav e second p lace to th em se lv es to d ay a f te r a p a ir of w eekend w allop ings applied In the N ew Y ork R a n g ers and th e T o ro n ­to M aple L eafs. D e tro it ia m ired in th e ce lla r a f te r losing tw ice over th e w eekend.

T he H aw k s b e lted T o ro n to last n ig h t 7-2 a f te r g iv in g th e th ird - p lace R a n g e rs a 6-3 lick ing in S a t­u rd a y ’s n a tio n a lly telev ised gam e

Iz e n b e rg e r ' H artford P l a v e r sand T o d Sloan w ere th# keys to , 1 F> * IC h icag o ’s w eekend sm eess. t^ind- F 1 1 1 3 1 I x O l I l K lssay g o t A goal and five a ss is ts , i L itz en b e rg e r th ree g o a ls— all Ia g a in s t N ew Y ork S a tu r d a y —a n d ' th re e a ss is ts and S loan tw o goals ibr

L i m D R e l D f l e u r e n d h e r p H i t n e r H e l e n e D e y c a p l u r e d f i r s t p l a c e i n t h e f i r . ' t a n n u a l M i . ' S a n d M r s F ^ o ^ ^ l l n g T o u r n a m e n t . s p o n s o i e r L . h \ L i e R e c i e n l i o n D e p a i t m e n l a n d F:!i«n h e l d a t t h e Y I a s i S a t u i d a y , L i n d a S l x - t i b o ’A 1»h I « i j u u * s o f 8 0 - K H a n t i 8.5 f o r a 2 »i6 l i i p l * * . . M i s I V v h a d t» a n ie . ' o f 1 1 8 -8 2 a n d 108 f o r a 3 oH t r i p l e ' I ’ h e r f » m i ) . i u M t S i ' o r e s w l i i r h d e t e r ­m i n e d t h e w i n n e r s , w a s 5 7 4 .

( ' h e r v l B e e b e a n d h e r m o t h e r A l n e ^ c a m e i n s e c o n d u i t l i a < o m - h i n o d ' . s c tu e o f ,5 5 2 . F b a n ( ' r a n d a l l a n d h e r d a u u h l e r , . l a n e . I 'm s h e d a c lo . ' te I h i i d w i t h 5 5 1 . D a w n a n d L i l

M o l u i u p h > ' w e i e f t n i i t h w i t h 544 A n d S h a r o n J o c h i m . « e n a n d O a l T a f t f i n i s h e d f i f l h w i t h a 5 3 5 .

. S h a i o n . h K h i m s e n l e t l a l l g i r l s b o w l i n g w i t h a 104 . s i n g l e , w h i l e L i n d a R e l l e f l e m - h a d a 101 f o r s e c ­o n d h i g l i s i n g l e , b u t w o n h i g h t h r e e .’i l n n g w i l h a 2 6 6 . . J o y c e B a l - d y g a r o l l e f ! a 2 6 3 t r i p l e a s d i d . l a n e I - um I h T w . i i i L. ' ( ’' t a n d a l l . D a w n M o l i i m p h y h i t a 261 t r i p l e , ( ^ a r o l N o l a n p i n n e d a 9 2 . M a r g i e R o s e n a 8 8 a n d K a t h y C o l e m a n a n 8 6 .

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Top Mon<‘v Vi on Bv Skip Kearii.s

A fo rm er sem i-pro hasehall p itch er. Sk ippy KeariiH mu'*! rank as i>ne of the leading m oney w inners In the w eekly O ne-R ail Toiirnam entH a t th e Doiihle S tr ik e nlhy\*i. Only thin pant .Sunday K earns tu rn ed in a fine 22.3 trip le to pocket the $50 first prl/.e m oney. (Jolf- Ing s ta r S tan H tlinksi w as $30 ri<‘her a f te r p laring sei'ond w ilh a 214 to ta l.

T hree keg lers— Ar! Ikdl, Rill Sheekey and Howie H a m p ­to n — tied for th ird pla<*e w ith iden tleal 210 trip les and picked lip .$7 apiece. A nother e \e n l is planner! Sunday.

12*4 n.S B. A. I ) \K T LEA G I K

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F ' lo K l o l e r t o o k h i g h s i n g l e t \n<\a l . ' o h i g h t u p l e a s . ' h e l o l l e d ................g a m e s . o f 1 1 2 - 9 2 - a n d 1 2 0 f o r a 324

— ---------- t h r e e s t r i n g . A l i c e B e e b e h i t aN e w H a v e n , F e b . 9 -A*' T h e s e n - g o o d 1 2 0 g a m e w h i l e r o l l i n g a 321

C o n n e c t i c u t A A U D o u b l e s 1 t r i p l e . M a r y S i m m o n s h a d s f i r s t

R e d S o x . . G i a n t . ' . . . B r a v e s Y a n k e e . ' . . T i g e ? s . . . D o r l g e r s . . U ’ h i l e .Sox P i r a l e s . .

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One Possible Roadblock In Sale of Chisox Stock

’ ■ Chiragn. Fch. 9 (/Pi—Sale n f cfintrnlling i n l P i ' P S t , in the ('hicagn W'hitp Sox to Hill Vppck a))|>parpfl imminpnt. today with lull onp pos.xililp roadhiock. .Mrs. Domth.v Cnmiskey Rignpv, who control.’s .‘’..2.'L'i .sharps of stock, aunouncpd Satur­d a y l l i a l s h e w i l l s e l l l \ e i 54 p e l • ------------------------------------------- - -rpiil m le ies l to Veec k w bo iu'-’'o p l i n n t o i i u y b e f o r e t- 'eb. 18

l-lowevei Dorothj-'.S b ro lhet ( ’hui-k ('o ju iskey , ha.! tak e n coiu I action lo p rev en t hi.s si.!ler from .celling. .g

( 'h iiik ha.s a pe titio n in p io b ate c o iu t lo h a ll the .sale. .VIr.s. R igney saV.! the court c-annot slo p tier from selling lo Veeck He ha.s said he will exereise hi.! option

T h a i s how the s itu a tio n .stands today but a h e a rin g on Uhnek s p ro b a te court p e titio n is scheduled for Feb. 16. tw o days h e f o r r- V eeck 's option expires.

F in ley In te re s ted in the m ean lin ie . C harles k'ln-

lev head of an infiurance b ro k e r­age firm , has revealed he is in- te ie s te d in buying th e club. Fin- (i,„( (hpy 1p \- ha.s J500.000 in escrow for r o i , , ts to

l i o n . s a g a i n hi-^ s i s t e r a n d has b e e n s i n 1 e.s.sf i i l i n m o s t o f t h e m .

B o a r d ( u t t o F o u r H e w a s . s u c r e s . s fu l i n g e t t i n g t h e

i - ' . o a id n f D i i e c t o r s c u t f r o m f i v e l l . l o i n -.-.hi. h g a v e h i h i a n e q u a l M i n e 111 I l u h o p e r a t i o n s .

U ; i h f . i - e m e m b e r s o n t h e b o a r d r i o r o t l i . , -.1 h o a c c o r d i n g t o h e r n i o r in - T s . \ i l l . w a s l e f t .500 m o i e . s h a M s t h a n ( " b u c k a n d h a d c o n t r o l o f 111. h o a r d .

H o vcm-i . w i l l i f o u r board m em - a r l i h a d c o n t r o l o f tw o a n d

( ' I n n - k h a d a n e q u a l voire in t h e ( I ' l l . . N e v e i ' t l i o l e s s , U h n e k h as M e n a i l i n g a s r e | > i - e s e n t s t i v p of the I ' - i m i n . s i g n i n g p l a y e i ' s fo r th e I f ' . iO se a .so n .

V e e c k .! a t l o r n g j - s have s ta te d f e e l t h e y c a n g e t the i n s t a l l a f i f t h board

g iv ing h im con-

,180. (g o n e y s s l o c k b y h e b , 1 8 .( t o V e e c k h a s a n n o u n c e d h e

YiT<>Ih 1/» . . . .

. ™ 1 u a»„ ' g am e of 118 lo fin ish w ith a 316 cumnhsiiH an d b all C ham plon.ships Saturda.x Fi*:'‘ Kieier' .will have an a ll-H a rtfo rd c as t. | „ to u rn am en t wa.s the

Y e s te rd a y tw o H a r tfo rd team s f,p„( a tte n ifd in Hus line fo r the

by 17 p en alties. T o ro n to 's F ra n k M ahovlich w as sen t to th e p en alty box fp u r tim es.

M o n tre a l 's v ic to ry broke a five- g am e w in less s tre a k th a t ex tended b ack to Ja n . 25 w hen th e C an- ad iens b e a t th e W ings 7-3. M on­tre a l scored tw ice in th e f irs t

T h e W ings lo s t to league-lead in g period and a g a in in the (m iddi* M o n trea l 3-1 S u n d ay n ig h t and to . se.ssion a s a capacit.v crow d a t De- th e M aple L eafs 4-i on S a tu rd ay . | t r o i t ’s O lym pia Jeered the Red

a n d t w o a s s i s t s .T h r e e Q u i c k G o a l #

T h ree goals in th e las t five m in ­u tes of th e f i r s t period did the. Job , » i,a g a i i i i i t T o r o n t o i n a g a m e m a r k e d ; v i c t o r i o u s i n t h e . s e m i - f i i a l s , , e w l y o r g a n i z e d g i r l s b o w l i n g p a » n

. T _____ i n Y a l e ' s P a y n e W h i t n e y ( , v m - l e a g u e . A f i e l d o f 29

iv< i .ta ivT

T he B oston B ru in s look a p a ir ■|n w eekend p lay ,' b e a tin g M on­tre a l 3-2 S a tu rd a y an d th e R a n g ­e rs 4-1 la s t n ig h t. ;

T h e B lack H a jv k s have gone six g am es w ith o u t a loss, and have Won th e ir la s t th ree . T h ere a re a p a ir of 3-3 tie s In th e s tr in g , bo th

- with M o n treal, w hom th e y t r a i l by 10 points in the NHL race.

- ■ /.

W ings, w ho have won only fo u r of th e ir la s t 24.

B ronco H o rv a th scored the th ree -g o a l " H a t T ric k ” a g a in s t th e R an g ers , sco rin g once in each period. I t w a s h is f i r s t in th e N H L. Jo h n n y B u cy k and D oug M ohns each c o n tr ib u ted th re e a a s ls ts fo r th e B ru tn e. . J im B a r t le t t scored New York’s goaL

n a s i i i m . ! r o l l e d .J a c k G u n d e i - s e u a n d B o b I , u c a s . s i i n m n .l<.( . im m o . i t

b e a t th e W a te rb u ry team of H a r - • ’ ' ’ " I ' l ' » f t ..................old Zinno and Ja m e s Lyng 21-6 Totalsan d 21-7. T he de fen d in g cham - —plons. A r th u r L d n lieg n e and M a r t h a B o n h a m ,Archie- M arcus, d e fea ted B ridge- M a n - B o n h a m —porUs Ja m e s Dillon and Jo sep h ToiaiaS ah tilli 21-20 and 21-8. —

T he sin g les fin a ls w ill a lso be Kaihi HayoV .......p layed S a tu rd ay .

c o m b i n a l i o n . ! .......... ...

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l f»l .1 ’ 'antne- i V-w !*»# I>i ’t <’r*\vlri« .........

I ' c t .6 0 05 6 0 * ' ’ e p n i - c h a . s e a n d ha.« a n o p t i o n m e m b e r , t h e r e b y .‘>60 ' V h i c h w i l l e x p i r e A p r i l 1 8 . H o w - ( r „ i o f H i e c l i i l ) .5 2 0 eve-.' h i s o p t i o n w i l l he g o o d o n l y T l i i - o i i g h o u l t h e A m e r i c a n

i f V e e c k f a i l s t o b o y M r s , R i g - l , r a g i i . - , r e p i e . s e n t a l i v e s o f thev a r i o n . ! t e a m s I i a v e v o i c e d a p p r o v -

w i l l a l o f V e e r k a n d h i s . s y n d i c a t e ..■\ll h a v e p o i n t e d t o the tre m e n ­

d o u s j o b V e e c k d i d a s o w n e r o f t h e - C l e v e l a n d I n d i a n s a n d f e e l t h e . W h i l e .k-,x V. I l l p - o f i t I f h e s h o u l d

g a m . - . ' n t o l o f t h e t e a m .P a r k e ( a n o i l . v i c e p r e s i d e n t a n d

g e n r i e l m a n a g e r o f t h e K a n s a s ( r i t y . . \ l h l e t i - - R s a i d :

" V e e c l i m a d e g o o d W i t h A g t X ) d s l o c k ‘ C l e v e l a n d . H e is b u y ­

i n g a n o t h e r g o o d b a l l Club and w i t h a l i t t l e h e l p c o u l d go a .long w a v . " ' '

9 IH ,:i60 eveiciae hi.' option and according: (o the q iia lifica tio n s of his o ffe i. ho and his pvndicale have not giv-

5. -’.3 1 cri up hope of buying ou t Uomi.s-nt 1"3 TJl kov

176 179 197 .s.s: <*h;uk ha.' lo p ea led ly a sse rted th a t ho will not sell.

7b ■• TS 71 222 V e ed i's ag reem en t s tipu la te .!S2 11 '1* dll 27? th a t if he does not succeed in buy-

isii ITS Ifil 494 ing 80 per cen t of th e c lub 's slock \vitliin 30 day s.' th e price he ha.!

4f, 62 ►iO 177 offered Mrs. R igney. $2,700,000,1 D lol 93 3i'4 will be reduced by $175,000. If he

1X8 171 1X7 1.86 16.1 162 4X1

Pro BaskrihallS u m i a , ! ' ' # K e a u l t s

B oston ,136, C in c in n a ti 117. S y racu se 113, N ew Y o rk 104. M in n eap o lis 115, D e tro it 103. S t L o u is 100, P h ila d e lp h ia 93.

I

! D l » n . .I T o t a l * .................. .1i Kaih.v ColPinan ' M a ip iifritp Cole

Toiala’ ............

B&rbitra MoNeiU Anna McNeill ...*TolaU ..............

. l o 4 67 k l 252, . S3 l»i2 9S 2K9. 1»7 169 179 535

.. .>4 66 188. h>i 65 107 293

. 166 1.J9 173 478 ’

. . 46 47 1.38. . 64 82 94 240

. 110 129 U 9 398

77 54 86 2171 86 H4 106 276

. 163 1.38 186 493

. . . 77 . 74 78 236

. . . 93 .107 *6 396

. 170 i n 170 631

D.-.i.-ttiy Bal Tolals

( t a i - e l a n h K a f in s k l B a r h a r . S t e f f i r k

Mary Carl^r

S6 26.1 . M a i l . .11- Tw -* r (1>' XI 21.6 A n n - y w - r d (

i 86 166 167 6eX T o t a l s 172 147 466

7a Ihf i - t t in d a B - l l - f l n i r «(i 261 U » l - n » D e y .........

80 tillX2 inx »n

146 166 JSO 4S2 T n ia l . .

214 , l.ynn C h apm an 316 ; T . (T iapn iao >.

184 170 176 530 Tol«la

P e* # v Ami L u cas . M ary E llen I.ucaa

76 321 . P«i>la Rosen .. 83 263 ; Bhirley Vit lner ;

164 1(3 167 474 Totals

lOOl U arsla Rosen . 3 4 1 1 M i r i a m S n y d t r ;

doe.! not succeed In th re e y e a rs in ' gam in g contro l of the B oard of D iiec to rs . th e p rice is red u ced an add itional $200,000.■ V eeck’s sy n d ic a te includes H ank

G reenberg , fo rm e r b ig league s ta r and p a r t o w n er .w ilh Veeck of the C leveland In d ian s ; .Sidney Sala-

19S 1X1 131 671 'mon of S t . , L ou is an d a fo rm er -Q nil ow ner o f th e S t. Louis B row ns

M iw 94 281' w hen V eeck h a d In te re s ts in th a t— __ . _ 1 ------- Ic lub ; J e r r y H o ffb e rg e r, a B alti-156 164 173 492 Krevver; A n d rew an d C h arles

7g 301 - B a x te r , C leveland b ro th e rs , a n d a 33 3(M { g ro u p ,o f C hicagoans.

TeT T he f ig h t o v e r th e te a m b eg anIn 1966 w h e n M ri. G ra te Com ls- key , th e m o th e r o f D o ro th y and G huek, died- S ln e a , h e r d ea th

, 69 64116 1U6176 169

M 13«w m

i n IM IM 44S Total# m I W I t T 43^

It y Leagiir .Standings■ W . L , P e t.

D a r tm o u th ............ 7 0 v.oooP ’-.ncelon ..................... 7 1),. l.OOOP enn ‘4 ' S' .571H a rv a rd ............. S 4 .429Yhle ...............••,•••• 3 * N**®B row n 2 5C ornell .......................C o lu m b ia ....... .............

This week’s games Harvard at Dartiaoiith,Yal,e. Friday: Cornell -kt Colimibia at Princeton. Setl

9

C ornell a t P sto icetoh , Y d , . , . ^v-aa»a, US*)U. _____ D a rtm o u th . B ro w n a lC h a e k h a e taM B um er^ua e o u r t a c- P e n n a t C ohi td d a .

/ '/ ■/.

\ V..;

Page 7: NO. no MANCHESTER, C ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 ... Evening Hearld...of at \ If Manchester \" ‘" • * * « • • • • • ***** ***** MANCHESTER if / '. .Manchester, 9

J - * V . - /

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1969

ADVERTISINGCLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENl DEPT. HOURS

S:15 A 3I. to 4;:t0 P.M.________

COPY CLOSING TIME FOR CLASSIFIED ADVT.nONDAT tlm i FRIDAT 10:30 A.M.—SATURDAY 0 A.M.

PLEASE READ YOUR AD ____-Want Ad»’ ' Ukcn n<er thr Phonn n* « lon-

MBifnri mdvertl»*r akould read hln ad th* KillsT DAY IT and REPORT ERRORS in Hmi> for the next tnaer-

Mm,. Xha Hwald la reaponalble for only ONE Inrorrec* nr omitted for anv adverUaement and then only to the extent of a

«1Maka «ood” hiertlon. Errora which do not le»»en the 'alue of ttoadrertiieneiit will not he corrected by “ make jcoo<l Inaertlon.

louR cooperation” WIUL I 3 . 2 7 1 1BE APPRECIATED fT lI W A .# ■ ■

Business Services Offered 13 THERE OUGHTA BE A LAWELECTROLUX OWNERS- Prompt friendly aarvlca on . your Electro­lux (R) cleaner, Pick up anti de­livery. Call Electrolux authortaed aalea imti aervice. Ml 0-0348 or JA 3-0103! Pleaaa aak for Aucuetli.e Kamlenaki.

ATTENTION reeldenta! Homes, : commercial, Induetrlal. I>iaaatla- I fled with present rubbish eervice? 1 We Invite Inqulrlee. Full time I aervice MAM Rubbish Co., Ml i »-»757,

BY FAGALY and SHORTEN

Lost and Found Automobiles for Sale 4

ILAWN MOWERS aharpened and I repaired. All work jniaranteed.! Free pick-up and delivery lO*;?- ' off on ahsrpeninif until March : 1st. Bnmo Moske, MI 3-0771,RADIO-TV REPAIRS, any make—

cars, amplifiers. phonoKraphs and I changers. Over 47 years total ex- i perlence. 90 days guarantee on all i work. Potterton's. MI 9-4.M7. ||t v s e r v ic e , antenna service. |! Tel. MI 9-1486. Don't wonder, call ■

nonder.EVEREADY—Ashes, rubbish re­moval, Cellars and attics clesned. No job too big or small. Sundays i available, patTtage delivery, light i

S eims liwe vou INEVER CAiil

f INP QAL PALS WHEN

UHE A little female

COMPAViONSHiP

HAVein«UFDUHP ANVOttETDOOID ‘ fHE Movtsf wrm

VOUVET,. WISTERIA?.

, MOTONBf X WONDER. WHERE <_.' ALL Hide themselves,'THEV'Ol NCVf R AROUND,' y

■WEVi

B ut Just HAfPENTO HAVE A

HAHPSOME SlW IN TOW and

WATCH ’EM COME lpouT OF the

SROUNP-

ui.aaj»ftitu/.aau»wa«BsVs f * 0 HOOf WWTERlAfff Hl.WISSV.'• VOU BEEN VEEPiwa ^ r VWAIT UP.' JPiN ME 4VO'jRSELFfSELFfy f o r a

■ 50PA?.

Diamonds— Watchi Jewelrjr 48

LEONARD W. TOST, Jeweler, re­pair*, adjusu wetchee erperUy. Reaaoneble prices. Open daily. Thursday evenings. 129 Spruce Street. I® 9-4887,

Household Goods 51FLORENCE GAS combination range 3hk y « » « ^*1' ^R5-1515.

MAHOGANY drum table vith leather top. Duncan Phyfe. Excel­lent condition. 825. Call MI 4-0418.

Fuel and Feed 49-AWELL SEASONED hardwood, fire­place or furnace, $5 and 8W loads delivered. MI 8-2694.

HAY—830 a ton. delivered. Call Ml 3-6183.

m------------- irmifCTY NEED A CAR and" had your credit

r u u n w I turned down? Short on down pay-a wav lA save vour back and heart ■ menl? Had a repossession? Don't n n,-,a way to eave your , Douglas Motors, get i expreaaing. MI 9-08i4.

Parkway Service Lenler | ,t,p lowdown on the lowest down'^ , , , _ ! and smallest payments anywhere.Call MJ 9-CUS3 Not a small loan or finance com-

' pany plan. Douglas Motors, 333 Mam Street.

MAa(r £ ruapo221 S. JtPfSHSOS Mawsjxff 2,w:5,

For a spot on our automebc snow | removal eervlca

Tz-iom oi.',.v whit. Tov Fox OLDER CARS, mechanics spispe- r'ays

a good Kclcction. I.<iok behind our otfu r Douglas Motors. 3.33 Main.

'INTERNATIONAL pickup truck.very good condilion $195. Ford

i tractor, four speed transmission. LOST—Brown eippered key rsse. $75. PI 2-7211

Terrier. Answers to Spottv Ity of Oakland St. Call Ml 4-02.59

LOST—Black loose leaf notebook Vicinity Morlarty Bros. AD e-.IOlO. Rewsiril.

GEER ELECTTRONTCS. Electrical, radio and TV ■ installation and' service. For the best in service call Ml 9-0762.

REUPHOIJ5TERY, slip cove-s and , ,drapcrlea. Custom made. Free WATSON, PLUMBING arid heat estimates. Open evenings for .vour convenience. P A M TJpholstery

Heating and Plumbing 17 Help Wanted— Female .35

Shops, 207 North 9-6324. ■

Main St. MI

vicinitv Main St. and Purnell PI. MI 9-1108.

lost—PASS BOOK M 1.568 Sav Inga Department of the Connecti­cut Bank and Trust Company. | m,54 Manchester Office. Application made for payment.

1952 CHEVROLET station wagon tor sale or trade 108 West .Middle Tpke

PART-TIME painting, cleaning and janitorial work. Call MI 3-8670,

ELECTRICAL wdrk by Walt z^emanek assures your safety. Don't wait, call MI 9-8976 now. Be wise and modernise.CHEVROLET rluh coupe.

Good me. hanicHl condition. Solid a NTENNTS renaired anil In- mack. $99 No dow n P^vmeiU J TV^ AOT^NNTS « p m

MI ,3-8185.small weekly payment. See .lack Clancy. Eddie's Auto Service, .36' Oakland St.

SPECIAIzS' 19.52 V8 Ford, two-door sedan, radio and heater, two tone. $169. See .lack Clancy. Fddie's Auto Service. .367 Oakland SI.

Trailer-s 6-AMOBILEHOMES—Kosy, used (47 WEAVING of bums, moth 101. excellent condition. $4,300,$649 00 Jensen's Inc. (alwa>g re­liable! Rolling Hills, Route 44A,Mansfield, GArfleld 9-4479

Auto Driving School 7-A -

FOUND— Male, mongrel, white, light brown, part Terrier. Call Lee Fracchia, Dog Warden, Ml 3-5594. _______________________

FOUND — Mongrel, male, brindle colored Collie type dog. Call Lee Fracchia, Dog Warden. Ml 3-8594. ,

LOST—Beagle, black and brown |Vicinity Lockwood St. Named 'Rex. Call MI 9-6445. |

LOST—GREEN parakeet. Vicinity I Campfield Rd. Answers to Corky. |Cal! MI 9-0441.

AnnouncementsINCOME TAXES prepared ,.i your home or by appointment. Exper- lanced tax work. 24 nour ■ ♦r5dce.CaU MI 3-4723.

, f e d e r a l INCOME taxes pre­pared with your savings in mind.Reasonable rates. Call MI 9-6246.

INCOME TAX forms prepared by appointment in yt)Ur home or mine. Experienced, competent work at reasonable fee. Call MI 8-2666.

PersonalsJOIN THE MATES So you'll he able to get into your Easter suit For Information rail CH 6-9732, MI 9-87t)5. MI 3-5684

ELECTRIC SHAVERS, sales and Busine.ss Services Offered 1.1service. We carry cords, ru tting------— f-------------------------------------- ,heeds, cases and most part.s in : HILLS' TELPIVISIOTJ Service, j stock. Russell's Barber Shop, Available at all limea. Fhilco far- Spruce St. tory supervised service. Tel. Ml

- - ■■ ■!----------------------------------------------- ' 9-969S.VACUUM CLEANIStS repelred in ------- -— ------ --------- -— --------- —ray own boms shop. For^ year* LEAV'E YOUR rubbish worries to. . ...

Household ServicesOffered 13-A

DICK'S WEATHERSTRIP Com­pany, doors and windows, custom work, guaranteed. Call MI 9-1583 after « p.m.

Ing contractor. New Installations, alteration work and repair work. Ml 9-3808.

24 HOUR Immediate servic*. Re­modeling, repairing, new Installa­tions, electric sewer cleaning, drainpipes cleaned fast .-nd effi­ciently. Will R. Guy, MI 3-0677.

Moving—Trucking- Storage 20

MANCHESTER Package Delivery. Light trucking and package deliv­ery. Refrigerators, washers and stove moving specialty. Folding chairs for rent.^MI 9-0752.

AUSTIN A. CHAMBERS Co. Local moving, packing, storage. Low rates on long distance moves to 48 states, MI 3-5187.

CLERK TYPISTWith knowledge of shorthand

wanted for general office work.Apply

MANCHESTER MODES, INC. Pine Street

Manchester, Conn.PARTY DEMONSTRATORS need­ed. New 1959 line of over 600 new­est, smartest, most unique nation­ally advertised Items. Full or spare-time money-making oppor­tunities. Experience unnecessary. Call or write HOP Home "’arties, 45 Manor Circle, East Hartford, Conn. JA 8-6247.

Situations Wanted— Female

WILL CARE for child in my home for working mother. MI 4 1650.

Dogs— Birds— Pets 41

FIREPLACE wood—pick up t.unk- ful or le.S8. 78 Erie St., off Keeney St., MI 3-4415.

Garden—F arm—Dai ryProducts 50

GREEN MOUNTAIN potatoes, while they last. 50 lb. 81.10. Mil­ler, 1.50 Spencer St.

Household Goods 51SALE 1-3 OFF on wallpaper. Wall tijea 4c a tile. Kentile, from 7c each. Green Paint and Wallpaper at the Green.

WANTED-Good home for male rabbit.<i. Call MI 9-9905.

two

Painting—Papering 21holes

and torn clothing, hosiery runs, handbags repaired, ripper re­placement, umbrellas ’’epalred. men’s shirt collars reversed and replaced. Marlow's Little Mend­ing Shop.

MORTLOCK'S Manchester's lead­ing driving school. Three skilled, courteous Instructors. Class room Instructions for 1,5. 16, 17 year olds. Telephone Mr. Mortinck, Director of Driver Education. MI 9-7398.

LARSON'S Connecticut's first 11- censed driving school .rained.

' Certified and approved, is 'ow of- 1 fering claasrnom and *-ehtndI wheel instruction for lee .agers.

MI 9-6075.ATTENTION teenagers, new driver education i lasses starting : alur- day. Call Mr. Mirletlc. Manches­ter Driving Academy, Coventry. PI 2-7249,

SAVE 50% on laundering. Wet wash, damp or fluff dry. h'olded and wrapped free. .Manchester Laundromat, 860 Center Si.

TYPEWRITERS and office ma­chines repaired. Sales, service and rentals'. MI 9-3477.

BELMONT Rug Cleaning Com­pany—Foi those who care about their rugs—phone Ml 8-0012. Free pickup and delivery Free estimates given. We specialise in furniture and wall to wall carpet­ing __________ __________________

TV SERVICE — Potterton's, all makes. Highest quality guaranteed work and parts, over 4'7 year's ex- perience. Famous for service since 1931. Phone MI 9-4537 (or best service,

FI -AT FINISH Holland window shades, mad* to measure. All metal Venetian blinds st a new low price. Keys made while you wait. Marlow’s.

PAINTING AND paperhanging. Good clean workmanship a1 rea­sonable rates. 30 years In Man­chester. Raymond Flske. MI9-9237.

EXTERIOR and Interior painting. Ceilings reflnished. Papernanglng. Wallpaper books. Estlmalea given. Fully covered by Insurance. Call Edward R. Price, Ml 9-1008.

PAINTER and paperhanger, deco­rating, Good clean job, reasonable price. S. Yencha, MI 9-6914 after 5.

Courses and Classes 27ELECTRONICS - Radio-television. In two evenings per week we can teach you practical servieing.-You "I.earn-b‘y-Doing" at Connecti­cut's Oldest Electronic School. Also full-time day Technician training. Cla.sses start March 16th Call Hartford JAckson 5-340C, or write for full information. New England Technical Institute of Conn.. Inc., .56 Union Place, Hart­ford .3. Conn.

WOMEN SEW for profit. Easy ready-cut wrap around aprons home. Net profit 820.40 on dozen, spare-time ventur^. Write. Ac­curate ~York.

Mfgr’s, Freeport, New

WOMAN—85 an hour spare-time. Sensational new apparel party plan. We deliver, coUect. Free sample line. Beeline Fashions, Bensenville 162, Illinois.

WIRED HAIRED Terrier puppies, seven weeks, 85. MI 9-6767.

Articles For Sale 45USED LUMBER, building and plumbing supplies, furnaces, hot water heaters, windows and doors. Choman’s Housewrecking, at Stock PliBce. Open Saturday 8-4, daily 3:3\s, or call MI 9-2392.

Three piece mahogany bedroomset ........................................... 835

Three piece mahogany bedroomset ........................................ 8120

Nine piece mahogany diningroom set . . ................. 8125

Four sofas, 820 , 830 , 840, 850 each.Maple breakfast set ................. 820Nine piece dining room set . 830

WATKINS USED FURNITURE

EXCHANGE15 OAK STREET

Open Thursday Evenings Until 9

Closed Mondays

LAWSON DIVAN, two drawer ma­hogany service. In excellent condi­tion. Two 9x12 rug*. Call MI 9-1724.

KENMORE DUAL controlled elec­tric heater with fan. U.sed three times. 820. Call MI 9-9615.

CHAMBERS FURNITURE SALES

“ At The Green”Baby cribs, regular 829.50-849.60,

High chairs, carbeds, playp na and other baby neeessities, 26% dis­count for cash.

Clearance Sale-^p lamps. Croup of floor sample chairs, values up to 879, now 835, one of a ’'ini.

For many other values, visit sur store.

Hours10 a.m.-5 p.m. 7:*6-9;80 p.m.

Musical Instruments 53COME AND hear the Kinsman electronic organ. Big savings on demonstration models. DuBaldo Music Center, 186 West Middle Tpke MI 9-6205.

HAVE YOUR piano tuned elec­tronically, the only correct way. Ward Krause, MI 3-5336.

ALL PIANO and organ bargains. Baldwin arroaonio spinet, good rondition, 8495. Hammond chord organ, 8475, was 8985. Minshall electronic spinet organ excellent shape. 8360, was 8795. Birnbaum’s, 381 Main St., New Britain. Open daily, 9-9 p.m.. Sat. 'til 6.

ROUND AND Alit dry oak wood, cut fireplace, tumace at.d stove lengths, 810 per load, delivered. Call PI 2-7886.

Help Wanted— Male 36EARN $32.80 WEEKLY IN YOUR SPARE TIMEWE NEED RELIABLE

MEN AT ONCEIF

tacteiry experience. Au makes, low stei Mr

ratea. tree eatlifiatei, free pickup Miller JAand dallvery.

24904.

me: Cellars, attics I'eanedLight trucking of all Kinds, for homr.s, stolen and offices. Norm’s Trucking. Ml 3-8905,

i CONNIE’S TV and Radio Service. 4 available all hours Satisfaction

guaranteed Call Ml 91815

DOUG'S REFRIGERATION Serv­ice— Home refrigeration appliance aervice only. Ml .3-59,32.

(KOREAN VETERANS -Ovillans.I Don't lose your school eligibility i because you can't attend school.I You can now learn radio and TV

at home. Paid for completely by us every week for more ind more

You are over 21.You are bondable.You have a car.5*011 are presently employed.You can work 10-12 hours a week --days or evenings—in your spare time.

YOU CAN EARN 83.00 TO 86.00 AN HOUR

NO EXPERIENCE NEED'IDWe Train You To Run Your

Own Floor Waxing Route.WE GUARANTEE YOU

CUSTOMERS AND IMMEDIATE INCOME!

SNOW BLOWERS—Reo, Snowbird, and Toro. Push and self-propelled. Capitol Equipment, 38 Mair MI 3-7958.

tfSED TV set, new Motorolag for high trades. Don't wonder. Call Gonder, MI 9-1486.

SHINERS for ice fishing, whole­sale and retail. Camp Meeting Rd,. Bolton. MI 9-5685.

PRE-SEASON chain aaw special. Save up 30% on Clinton saws. New and used. Capitol Equipment Co., 38 Main St.. 50 3-7958

We furnish equipment, aunplies, training and CUSTOMERS lo that YOU CAN RUN YOUR OWN FLOOR WAXING ROUTE. We have THOUSANDS of people calling

the VA. TV kit and testing equip- of this economical floor waxing nient included Non-vets: Apply service.

MUST SELL-Maple double bed, 814. Small electric mixer, $6. chair, 85. Dressing table. $2, Tole tea cart, $6. Victorian love seat, 85, length fur coat. 810. Coffee table, 83. Radios. 81.. Records, drapes, books, clothing, household ' articles. Verv reasonable.Green Rd., MI 3-6825.

Building Materials 47

Automobiles 4or SaleBEFORE YOU «U Y s used car see Gorman JAotor Sales Buick Sales and,* Service. 285 Main MORTENSEN TV Specialized RCA Street. 1® 9-4571. Open evenings television, service. Ml 9-4641.

WANTEIJ — Clean used cars We I'lXIOR SANDINC a specially bUjL trade down or trade any- .skilled svorkmanship Call MI tttng. Douglas Motors. 33.3 Main 9-S919

IroRD. 1955 two-door. Clean stand-' FLOOR SANDING and ’■etimshlng. ard shift, V8. Good rubber new Specializing in old floors, 511paint. 5n S-1871 or 5TT 9-6995 9-57,50.

for same course' Free informa--------------------------------------------- ' lion. Write Radin-TV Training As-Building—Contracting 14 socialion. Dept MH, 57 Farming-

ton Ave , Hartford, Conn. Call AD 2-6400,ANY KIND of carpentry and cabi­

net work done. Honest and relia­ble workmanship. Call Roscoe Thompson, MI 3-1895 for esti­mates

ALTERATIONS to kitchens, bath­rooms attics, cellars, porches, or playroom. Plumbing, carpentry.

Private Instructions 28WILL TUTOR English, social .studies and reading improvemei t in niv heme. 5tl 3-1085.

For local Interview or appointment I —rail Hartford CH 9-5248 eolleet.

WFzEKLY SAVINGS LISTCanadian Framing 2x3 to

2x12 ................... $92.00 per M’Louver Doors - - - • From 89.50 each Pocket Door Frames . .$16,50 ea h 8d & 16d Common Nails

j $9.90 per keg.No. 1 24" Wood Shingles

FzVEN HONEST “ ABE LINCOLN” WOULD AGREE •

THIS IS AN“ ALL AMERICAN” BUY

3 COMPLETE ROOMS OF BRAND NEW

9*URNITURE JUST PAY MONTHLY!

1. 2 or 3 YEARS TO PAY MONTHLY PAYMENTS

$16.8.3All 100% guaranteed, some In original factory rrates. with orig­inal factory series numbers.

MODELSBLOND BEDROOM

LIVING ROOM SUITE 5 PC. DINETTE SET

AND ACCESSORIES WESTINGHOUSE REE'R EMERSON TELEVISION

WASHING 5IACHINE DE LUXE RANGE

Take your choice of any of these appliances in addition to bedroom, living room, dinette, ruga, lamps, tables, linoleums, dishes and other items.

EVER5*THING ONL5' $448

Price Includes Delivery. Set Up. Sei'vice. Guarantee Immediate De­

livery Or Free Storage Until Needed

Phone for appointment 152 SAMUEL ALBERT, Hartford CH

7-0358 any time up to 8 p.m.See It Day Or Night

If you have no means of trans­portation. I’ll send my auto for you. No obligation.

Wearing Apparel-e-;|^rs 57PROM FORMALS, exclusive .Cali­fornia make, size 14. Worn tvrtce. Very reasonable. For descriptidn caH'5n 3-08,55.

Wanted—To Buy 58 WANTED TO BUY~

Good used resRiabia furniture, also small upright and spinet pianos.

Watkins Used Furniture Exchange

15 Oak StreetWE BUY and sell antique and used furnittire, china, glass, silver, pic­ture frames, guns, attic contents, whole estates. Furniture refin­ished and repaired. Furintiire Re­pair Service and Sales, Talcott- ville. 511 .3-7449.

USED UPRIGHT piano. Good con­dition, Reasonable. MI 9-5808.

electrical and masonry. Aluminum DOES YOUR child have a reading siding. Garages, cottages out- ' di-sability" Private tutoring done.

Phone 511 ,3-4670.

Striking Detail

Bonds—Stoch.s Mortgairea 31" I

There's Mag ic In Lace!

r'-

828712-20

wmt TNI NSWMH-O-RAMA

A^zoaiwal.hDck to wear every- wlutta with charm. Note the young Unaa, the paxitty dO'UU.'

Bo. S3i7 is in'aises 12, 14, -16, 18, *>; tils . 14, 84 biijrt. yard* of 88-lneh.

Ttt'ardar, seiid'86c in coins to 8iti BuntetL llte Manchester Eve-

illt. l i a AVE. OF AMEB- ~ V O »t M, N. V. i ;l i« mafUng add 10c tor

same, address ,944AH9ibsr and size,

liUtaiiW IBf'ihe new Spring !fM'taus of our pat- MaatS Fashion,

I

buildings, room sdditions. Nuslde Engineering Compsnv, Inc., 34 Oak St., MI .3 1425, |

BTDWELL H05TE Improvement Co. Alterations, additions, ga- rage.s. Roofing and aiding experts.Aluminum clapboards a specialty.Unexcelled workmanship Ea.«y budget terms 5T1 9-6495 or TR 5-9109.

CARPENTERS, experienced in , building and contracting, altera- ) tions, additions, porches, e'c. Spe-i cializing in cottages, garages, aid- r k s t a URANT busine.ss for sale, mgs. Guaranteed workmanship.5tl 3-07.31 or AD 3-5978.

TOOL MAKERS AND

FIRST CLASS MACHINISTSFor work on close tolerance Air­

craft Precision Parts.HIGH HOURLY RATESIf you don't qualify for one of

these positions, please do not ap­ply.

MAL TOOL &CONSOLIDATE debts with a sec-' ENGINEERING COMPANYond mortgage loan at $22.25 per month for each $1,000 borrowed Dial CH 6-8897 and aak Frank Burke or 5Iis. Carter to explain. Connecticut 51ortgage Exchange, 15 Lewis St., Hartford.

291 ADAMS STREET

Business Opportunities 32

Main St. 51anchester. F'ull liquor license Rea.sonable terms, little ca.sh required. JA 7-1149.

Help Wanted—Female 35Roofing—Siding 16

------- :----------------------------------------- LEGAL SECRETARY. Write BoxRAY'S ROOFING CO., shingle and j Herald, stating experience, built-up roofs, gutter and conduc- -----

WANTED--Hawaiian guitar. fid­dler or accordion player. Call PI 2-8148.

$18.95 per sq. Disappearing Stairways

$2,3.95 each4x8 Utility Hardboaid, 6c sq. ft.

PANELINGPecky Cypress ......... $250. per 51’Driftwood .................... $225 per M’Knotty Pine ............... $140 per M'Cedar ........................... $125 per 51’

We will beat our competitors ad­vertised prices by at, least 5%,

NOBODY BUT NOBODY UNDERSELUS NATIONAL

NATIONAL LUMBER. INC.381 STATE STREET.

NORTH HAVEN, CONN. CHestmit 8-2147

A—1__ B—E—R—T—’S43-45 ALLYN ST. HARTFORD

OPEN NIGHTS TIL 8 P. 57. Sat. 6 p.m.

WANTED Coleman floor furnace. Call MI 9-3401.

Rooms Without Board 59

FURNISHED ROOM for rent st 106 Birch St. 5n 9-3884.

FRONT R0051 heated, hot water, parking, central. Lady or gentle­man. 59 Birch St,

HEATED R005i for one or two gentlemen. Free parking. 54 High St.

ACTUAL JOBS open in United States, South America, Europe. To $15,000. Write Employment In­formation Center. Room 474, 470 Stuart St., Boston 16,

] CARPENTER desires repair work.; all types of remodeling. Dial PI 2-7728. I

tor work: roof, chimney repairs. CLERK TYPIST, experienced for Ray Hagenow, 5T1 9-2214: Ray gcperal office work. Apply Box T,Jackson, .Ml 3-8325. Herald.

ROUTE $117 weekly. Hartford- 1 Manchester area. Increase it to $144. Car necessary. Full training. Man may begin on a parf-time basis. Fuller Brush Co. Tel, JA 8-7540 after 6:30 p.m, for inter­view.

TWO DRIVERS wanted for school bus. Hours 7:30-8:30 and 3-4. Call 5n .3.4814 after 6,

Special Discounts On

GAS FURNACESM HOI'R

SERVICE—MI 9-4749

Earl YanCamp

ALL KINDS of sterilized used fur­niture foi every room including upholstered furniture and rugs, all in good repair and finish. 40% off on new mattresses. Electric, gas. and combination ranges, space heaters. Some refrigerators with freezers. All sparkling clean appliances and furniture look likei new. Electric appliances tested before you buy, Conte in and com­pare, quality and prices. Open 9 to 8. LeBlaiic Furniture Hospital, 195 South St., Rockville,

THREE 1950 cabinet Magnavox with radio and record players. In good condition. Priced to sell 5(1 .3-1054.

ROOM WITH kitchen privileges. Babies accepted. Centrally locat­ed, Apply Mrs. Dorsey, 14 z’.rch St.

WELL HEATED room, one block from Main St. Separate entrance. Gentleman, parking. 511 3-4724.

FURNISHED ROOM, convenienUy located. One minute from 5lain St, Light housekeeping. Woman only, -Ml 9-79,59.

ROOFING, SIDING, painting. Car- HEAD OK .STftCK imports depart- pentry. Alterations and additions. ' ment, siihurhan department store. Ceilings. Workmanship euaran- Reply Box F. Herald.teed A, A. Dion, Inc. 299 4utum n------- ------------------------------------------St. 5n 3-4860. . TYPIST-CIzERK. Tolland Tpke.

area, no agency foe. $50. Foley Employment Agency. 44 State St,.COUGHLIN ROOFTNG Company.

Inc. Aluminum — ■ asbestosgalvanized or copper gutters and leaders. 511 3-7707.

siding, asphalt- 1 Hartford. Conn, roofing. Also aluminum,!

Capture the beauty of this 'fern and ^istle' design wi'th your cro- i Chet hook! This lovely 15-in’ch cen-, terpiece wdll add magic to the tabletop.

Pa'ttem No. 5713 has crochet di-1 rections; stitch illustrations; fin-i tahing instructions.

To order, send 25c in coins to | Apne C a b o t , The Manchester | Evening Herald,. 1150 AVE. 6 f AMERICAS, NEW YORK 36, N.Y. For first-claas mailing add lOc. Print Name, Address with zone and Pattern Number.

Have you a copy of our Needle­work Album ? It contains pretty deslgiu in crochet, knit, embrol-

RoofiiiK and Chlmnevs 16-AROOFING—Specialising in repav­ing roofs of all kinds. Aisr new roofs. Gutter work. Chimneys cleaned repaired, 26 years exper­ience. Free estimates. Cali How:,ley. Manchester. Ml S-5361

MANCHESTER WELDING SERVICEFURNACE and BOILERS

REPAIREDTel. 511 9-I65A—MI 9-8762

Help Wanted—Male or Female 37 ;

NEED MONEY? Interesting well | paying career. No canvassing or I collecting^, Car needed. Call MI ' 9-2609. _ !

Se e H s f o r . . . . CONCRETE CELLAR

FLOORS

NOW TAKING ORDERS KOR

AMESITE DRIVES“t ^ O / o tt ‘ if you place ■W /O ,voar order NOW,

Ml 3-7691 DrMAIO IROS.

PAINTING and PAPER HANGING

TELEPHON'EMl 9-3266

T

SEPTIC TANKSAzVD

PLUGGED SEW ERS Machine Cleaned

Septlo Tanks. Dry Wells, Sewer Lines Installed—-Cellar Water­proofing Done.

McKINNEY BROS.Sewerage Disposal Co.ISO-182 Pearl St.—511 8-5.308

B05VERS -SCHOOL .AREAGracious 7-room Colonial. 3 bed­rooms, paneled den l.sl floor, large living room, fireplace, spacious dining room, excellent landscaped lot with ample shade trees, preferred neighborhood. Evenings Mr. Boles, MI 9-9858.

WARREN E. HOWLANO Realtor

575 Main St.Manchester, Conn.- MI .3-1108

CLEAN, well heate.d room. Central location. Light housekeeping if desired. Parking. 14 Wad.TVorth St. MI .3-4921.

• SEPTIC TANKSCLEANED and INSTALLED

• SEWERS51.\<HINE CLEA.NED

• INSTALLATION SPECIALIST

Town and Country Drainage Co.

Ml 9-4143

FOR THE VERY BEST IN HOMES CALL

R. F. DIMOCK CO.SEE OUR CLASSIFIED ADS XXXX

Ml 9-6245BARBARA WUUDS RICHARD F. DIMOCK

MI 9-77U2 MI 9-600.3ROBERT W. AUNEW ROBERT D. MURDOCK

Ml 8-6878 Ml S-6472

and It can he your* If you act now!

Desirable new 4 or 5 bedroom home in one . of Manchester’a choice locations! You’l l ' appre­ciate the good materials, equip­ment, excellent work and de­tailing in this better home. We’ll assist you In arranging a mortgage. Bu.v direct, frorh the owner and SAVE! 1st home on left on Dale Rd. - in new exdlu- sive Rockledge home site .o ff Ifiddle Tpke. East. For ap­pointment call the \ ,

RICHARDSON CO.MI 9-7805 J Ml 8-MT4

MEET BOB OLIVERo r

CENTER MOTOR SALES481 MAIN STREET

Mancheater*t

,4.uthorized Dealer for

•B ER K ELEYup to 60 Miles Per Oalloa

• OOBBOMOBIL

Manchester's Newest Car* FINE SELECTION

o r CLEAN

USED CARS "

Rooms Wltboat Board 59PLJUtSANT hsated futnlshed room with priirate bath. Kitchen fa- cUitiea available. Call MI. 9-4578.

KURNIBHED ROOM, complete housekeeping faellities, near Cen­ter. Women only. Call 5H 8-5SS9.

Apartments—Flats-r TenemenjbB 63

SEVEN ROOM duplex, centrally located. 9-11 Ulley 8t. Open for Inspection Sat. and Sun. from S to 5 p.m.

PIJCASANT room in quiet home, next to bath, shower, parking. MI 9-0887.

b o o m .FOR rent, continuous hot water and abower. Private en­trance, parking. 101 Chestnut St.

REASONABLE .--- Large modem twin bedroom,, with private bath. Convenient location in residential area. Must b* seen. Ideal (or working couple or will rent sin­gle. References required. Phone MI 3-6913.

r o o m FOR RENT, gentleman only. Gall 37 Chestnut St.

BROOKFIELD ST. — Gentlemen. Pleasant master bedroom next to bath. TV, parking. 50 9-6801 after 5 p.m.

6H ROOMS FOR RENT. Call MI 3-2220.

TWO ROOM furnished apartment at 106 Birch St. 50 6-3884.

FIVE ROOMS for rent. 87 St. JA 7-2877.

Grove

34,4 ROOMS, refrigerator and stove, individual thermostat, lota of closet space. Available immedi­ately. In modem apartment build­ing. MI 3-5175 or 50 3-7997.

Houses for Sale 72

(X X )5IANCHE8TER — Six room Cape. Aluminum storms and screena, new hot water heater. Convenient to shopping schdols and buses. Nice yard. Priced to sell Immedia'ely at only $12,900. R. F. Dlmock Co., Realtors, 50 9-5245.

(XXI)FOUR BEDROOM older Colonial. Elxcellent condition. Two-car ga- ragi. St. James Parish, 817,300. R. F. Dimock Co., Rssltors. 50 9-5245.

Houses for Sale 72

(X X X X ll)MANCHBSTHA-New five room ranch, in nice location, mil base­ment, oil hot water heat, tireDlace, large tot. Built-in stove and oven. Owage. 821,500. R. F, Dimock Co., Realtors, 50 9-5245,

(XXII)

CLEAN C050'ORTABLE four room heated apartment, ''’entral location. First floor with stove, re­frigerator and garage. 8100. 50 3-4685.

r o o m s—Single or double. 87 and $8,'weekly, working people. 50 3-2822.

ROOM FOR RENT In private home. Board optional. Call 50 4-0236.

NEWLY DECORATED room In private home, shower, parking. 50 9-8354.

Business Locations for Rent 64

VACANT STORE—Will remodel for office or business. Parking and centrally located. MI 9-3627.

Houses for Rent 65

Boarders Wanted 59-A

r o o m AND BOARD, Working man, $20 weekly. 50 3-2822.

ROOM AND board in private home for working-man, on bus line. Home cooking. MI 3-4643.

Apartments— Flats— Tenements 63

VERNON — Three room apart­ment with garage, stove refrig­erator. References. 50 9-2887.

TTVO ROOM furnished apartment, 105 Birch St. CaU 50 9-5601 after 5 p.m.

FIVE PLEASANT rooms, conven­ient location. 91 Main St. Tel. 50 9-1077.

FOUR ROOM all year house (or rent with lake privilege. MI 3-4887.

Suburban for Rent 66ANDOVER-- Four room heated apartment. 880. Garage Included PI 2-6042,

NEW SIX room ranch, one block from Green. All large rooms, two baths, built-in stove and oven, fire­place Full basement, two-car ga­rage. Your choice of interior decoration. R. F. Dimock Co.. Real­tors. 5H 9-5245.

(XXIII)BOLTON -k- Six room split level, wooded lot. Three bedrooms, fire­place, excellent condition 818,800. R. F. Dimock Co., Realtors. MI 9-5245.

IN TOWN .

Family home of eight rooms In very good condition and in good location. Oarage. Garden space. St. James Parish. Price 816,000.

MADELINE SMITH, Realtor MI 9-1642

Wanted— Real Estate 77ARE YOU CONSIDERINO

8BLUNQ YOUR PROPERTY? We wUl appralto your property

free and without any obilgaUon. Wo also buy property for cash.

Member MuiUpit Msung STANLEY BRAY, Realtor

BRAE-BURN r IeALTY 5H 8-6378

EAST HARTFORD - 6 ', room ranch on bus line. Storms. Full cellar. $14,700. Tongren, Broker, Ml 3-6321.

(XXIV)NEW SIX room Colonial, 817,900. built-in dishwa-sher, I’ i baths, built-in stove and oven. Ct mplete- ly landscaped. Amesite ■'rive. R. F Dimock Co., Realtors, MI 9-5245.

(XXV)

ROCKVILLE, 24 Grove St. — Well heated 2 room furnished apart­ment. Inquire 1st floor Apartment 9.

NEW SIX room Cape, West Side, built-in range and oven, vestibule. Choice location. I^arge lot 316,200. R. F Dimock Co., Realtors, MI 9-52415.

(XXVI)

ROCKVILLE—Five rooms and sun- porch, two-family house electric stove and refrigerator, oil heat, garage. Adults only. Apply In per­son, 26 Oak St., Rockville.

BOLTON — New five room -•anch, fireplace, basement garage. Two acre wooded lot. $15,200. R. F. Dimock Co., Realtors. MI 9-.5245.

(XXVII)

ELLINGTON — Three bedroom ranch, new. Built-in range. $115. Leaise. MI 3-8609 after 5 p.m.

812,600 ATTRACTIVE 3 bedroom ranch ceramic bath, not water heat, basement picture window, 145’ frontage. Carlton W. Hutch- In*; MI 9-5132.

SELUNO YOUR hom*? For prompt, etdolam, counsuua sarv ice And ApprAlsing without obUgs- Uon, call S. A. Beeohlsr Realtor, Ml 8-6969 or Wesley R. Smith Ae- soclAtes. 50 9-8902. Member MulU- pie Listing Service.BUY — SELL — TRADE Want to sell your prob''rty?

Greenwood, Inc. will buy for alt cash. Or work out a trade. Quick action assured. Call and got our deal, no obligation.

GREENWOOD. INC.,Ml 3-1577

PAGE T H IR T B IIIi.............................

• ANXIOUS OWNER SAYSThis six room cape, 4 bedrooms,

large kitchen with dishwasher and disposal and conveniently located near Parkade and Waddell School with large, nicely landscaped lot. Must be sold. Offers accepted.SHFRWOOD A. REIXHTzKR,

REALTORMI 3-6969

WESLEY, R. SMITH As.sociate MI 9-8952

COVENTRY for 88.800.—Four room dwelling with attached garage, fireplace, artesian well large lot 100x150. Immediate occunsney. Call Alice Clampet, Realtor, for appointment. MI 9-4543,

ST JAMES’ PARISH— Three or four bedroom home with garage. Under $17,000. Send description and location to Box Y. Herald.

Jobless Totals Again Near 5 Million Mark

(Continued trom Page One)

Brandt Bide West Defy Red Threat

(ContliiMd from PAgs One)

Social Dsmocratlo Federation — a counterpart’ pt hta own Social Democratic party in Berlin.

Speaking of the East-Weet crisis over Berlin, he said the divided city “ ie a symptom and not the reason of this crisis.’ ’

Brandt said "We in Berlin have to (ace more difficulties, with a very limited possibility to influ­ence events.” He urged ’ estern unity in dealing with the Russians and said no durable solution can be based on capitulation.

The mayor declined to comment on what the West should do 1' the Soviet Union carries out Its threat to cut off West Berlin from v;est- em Germany this May and make It a "free city.”

Ho said what the Soviets call a "free city” Is "not only a city (reo from Americans, free from con­tact with the West, but a city free from freedom,”

Brandt said his divided city "would not give in—even If connec­tions (with the West) shovild be cut off coirtpletely. We will go on a.* long as We can and never acrept the inclUHion of West Berlin in tlic Soviet ruled territory. ”

Reuther, C. of C. Hit U.S. Economie\4 im8Ellington

School Health Panel Subject

(Omumsg ;r o « o w l

Wanted to Rent 68

f o u r r o o m tenement for Call MI 9-9043.

rent.

ONE ROOM apartment, heat, hot water. Apply Marlow’s, 867 MainSt. ___________ _________________

IVILL SHARE my four room apart­ment with another woman. All the comforts of home. Ml 9-3329.

HEATED four and three room apartments. Inquire 419 North Main St., or call MI 9-0576, 12-1 p.m. and after 5 p.m.

YOUNG COUPLE desire cummer cottage on local lake for April- June. Call MI 3-6562 after 6.

Business Property for Sale 70MAPLE STREET — Brick and cinder block building. Suitable for light manufacturing. 1200 square feet, glass front, ample parking space. Immediate occupancy. Goodchild Realty Co , Ml 3-7925 or BU 9-0939.

FOUR ROOM duplex and g. rage oil steam heat and hot water. Tel. MI 3-4751.

FOUR ROOM apartment in Coven­try. All modern conveniences, winterized, lake privileges.5H 3-0305 after 3:30.

Call

FOR RENT—Two room apartment with heat, private bath. MJ 3-5560.

MANCHESTER — Beautiful seven room Colonial. 24 foot living room, large kitchen, full din­ing room, nice den, 1'4 baths. One car garage, spacious screened porch. Amesite drive. Situated on a well landscaped on» acre plus lot. Priced to sell at $23,800, R. F. Dimock Co., Realtors. MI 9-5245.

(XXVIII)COVENTRY—New 6>4 room anch, three bedroom, living room, kitch­en and dining area. Built-In range and oven, fireplace and mantle. Basement garage, hot water heat. Situated on one acre lot. Close to schools, bus and shopping. 314,900. Minimum FHA financing R F Dimock Co., Realtors 5<1 9-5245.

Houses for Sale 72WEST SIDE—Attractive f've room home, enclosed breezeway. ga­rage, 813,900. assume 4>i% mortgage, small cash. Carlton W. Hutchins, 50 9-5132.

BOLTON CENTER—Attractive two bedroom, ranch, aluminum storms, cellars enclosed, breeze­way, garage. $13,900. Ml 9-5132. Carlton W, Hutchins.

SIX ROOM 5U 9-1145.

duplex for rent. Call

NEW EFF’ICIENCY apartment for rent with kitchen, living room, bedroom, tile bath. Furr shed; with stove, refrigerator and heat. i Storage space in basement. Park- ’ Ing—on bus line, near shopping center. For one or two only. $95 monthly. Can be seen at 189 West Middle Tpke., Apt. A Phone MI 3-7091.

4>j ROOM apartment. Will b e ! available Feb. 9. Call Ml 9-5253 between 8-5 p.m. W. G. Glenney | Co. 885 monthly.

FOUR R005I duplex, two bed-1 rooms, convenient location. Occu-

FOR SALE or lease beautiful year 'round three bedroom home. Bol­ton Lake. I 'i baths, living room, fireplace with raised hearth, ultra modern kitchen with built-'n oven and counter top range, garbage disposal etc. Utility laundry room, beautiful screened porch and sun deck overlooking Bolton *,ake. Completely landscaped. Call Ml 3-8271 9 to 5.

(XXIX)MANCHESTER ROAD, Glaston­bury - Large four room ranch, ceramic tile bath, fireplace, com­bination windows, fully plastered. Breezeway, patio, one-car garage. 100x200 landscaped lot. A clean home throughout. Asking $15,900. R. F. Dimock Co,, Realtors, MI 9-5245.

SPRING OCCUPANCY —Cheerful older home in lovely section of Manchester Four rooms, lava­tory, laundry room, sunporcli on first floor. Four bedrooms, bath on second floor. I>arge walk-ln closets. Barn with three car stalls and large storage loft. /Iso at tached workshop. Izocated on one acre of land. Priced to sell for under $20,000. Call owner MI 4 1056.

v e r n (5nFive room ranih. $17,900.Four room home—Good buy at

$8,500.GLASTONBURY

Extra large Cape In exclusive area, $42,000. i

LOTS FOR SALETwo building lots in Vernon,

$1,600.For further information and other

li.slingsTHE PHILBRICK AGENCY

361 MAIN ST.MI 9-8464

creases by anyrttlng like the mil­lion or so normally registered in that month, the total will he close to or over five million and well over the figtire for a year ago.

The figures indicate that while business has improved substantial­ly from its recession depths, the job picture still is gloomy.

This in Itself is not surprising. Emplo.vers normall.v don't increase their work force very fast in a re­covery period. They cauUoualy in crease working hours of workers already employed, working them even overtime hours at premium ratea rather than hire new work

Weekend Deaths

(XzXX)

MANCHESTER —Six room Cape (our bedroom, convenient Utili­ties, Tongren, Broker. Ml 3-6321. "Anything in Real Estate.”

FOR RENT Or Sale—Six roomranch, immediate occupancy, 1/3 mile off Route 6, 3',i miles from Bolton Notch. Call between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. BU 9-5720, ask 'or Mr. Micolettl.

, TWO FAJkllLIES 815,200, 4-4 duplex. Ml 0-7693. — — - -FOUR ROOM apartment. Heat and i hot water, parking. Just off Main | St., adults CH 3-7590 or inquire at 649 Main St.

NOTICE

separate furnaces. $15,900 6-6duplex two-car garage. Three family $18,000 4-4-4, good condi­tion, central location. Paul J. Correnti, Broker. 511 3-5363,

LAKE STREET — New six rootp Colonial with garage. Built by U. t R Built-in stove and oven. Large fireplace. Sun deck. I ’ i baths three bedrooms. Beautiful view. 818,700. R. F. Dimock Co,, Realtors. 5H 9-5245

(XXXI)VERNON—N.ew six room Colonial with attached garage. Built-in range and oven. Fireplace sun deck. I 'i baths, three bedrooms, high wooded lot. Brick front. '817,400 R. F. Dimock Co., Real­tors. 5il 9-5245,

VERNON—Ideal street 'or people who want quiet and safety for children. 5'-> room ranch, large living room with fii-eplacc, three good sized bedrooms. modern kitchen, nice dining area, full basement. Oil hot water heat, car­port with atorage space. Sensibly priced $15,900. Take time and see. Call Gaston Realty Co., MI 9-5731.

(XXXII)VERNON — New six room split level. High wooded lot. Cathedral ceiling with redwood beams. Built- in range and oven. IVi baths, large fireplace. Finished laundry room. Garage. Three bedroom* ‘ $17,990. R. F, Dimock Co., Realtors. MI 9-5245.

T.*

PUBLIC HEARINGS PROPOSED ADDITIONAL

APPROPRIATIONS BOARD OF DIRECTTORS

TOWN OF 5IANCHESTER, CONNECTICUT

Notice is hereby given that the Board of Directors. 'Town of 5Ian- chester, Connecticut, will hold Pub­lic Hearings in the Municipal Building Hearing Room, 41 Cen­ter Street, Manchester, Connecti­cut, Tuesday, February 17. 1D59, at 8:00 P.M. on proposed additional appropriations a ' follows:1. To the Water Department

Budget Administration and Engtoegring Account, by transfer from the Water Department Budget Ini-

z provements and Exten­sions Account, for the

Water Department's cost- for employee Accident andHealth Insurance............... $463.

>. To the Sewer Department Budget Administration and Ekigjneerlnj Account, by transfer ffom the Sewer Department Budget Im­provement and Ehetensions Account, for the Sewer Department’s cost for em­ployee Accident and HealthInsurance............................. 825Q

Francis J. Mahoney, Secretary- Board of Directors Manchester, Connecticut

Dated at Manchester^ Connecti­cut this fifth day of February, 1959

BOLTONNeed m 4rroom ranch? Fireplace, a l u m i n u m

I ’ atorm and screens, ror- port, artesian well. Pricedt o n l y $ ^ 2 , 8 0 0

R. F. Dimock Co. Ml f-5245

FOR .SALE by owner, tramsferred. Bargain, Below cost. Green co­lonial. excellent condition. Large lot, surrounded by over 100 Hem­lock shrubs. Double garage, I 'i baths, near best schools. For ap­pointment call 511 3-7757.

(XXXIII)

SOUTH WINDSOR-If you're look­ing for your dream house you'll be Interested in this. Available and just waiting for you. A six room Colonial housp with t 'i baths, breezeway and garage, large liv­ing room with fireplace, full basement. Oil hot water, brick veneer front, nice lot with view. 10% down, either conventional or FHA. Sensibly priced $19,400. Take time and see. Call Gaston Realtv Co., MI 9-5731.

An employef hiring a new work­er incurs obligations for social security, vacation payments, ten­ure rights, and so on. So he avoids taking on these obligations usually until a long-term need for an augmented work force is amply demonstrated.

Ilopluced by MachinesA number of economists f e e l

that some of the missing jobs may have disappeared forever — be­cause work formerly done by men now is being done by machines. But there are no figures to show the amount of this manpower dis­placement duo to automation.

That the unemployment situa­tion still is a serious one can be seen by some of the C e n s u s Bureau statistics. This past De­cember the seasonally adjusted ra­tio of unemployment to the whole work force was 6.1 per cent. A year earlier it was 5 per cent.

As of now about one out of every 17 able-bodied workers wanting a Job can’t find one. Sim­ilarly, one of eight single work­ers is unemployed. Among married workers the idle ratio is one out of 20.

Worker earnings, like prices, are at record levels. This means that those workers that have jobs are doing all right, many of them enjoying big chunks of extra-pre­mium pay. But that doesn’t apply to the workers unable to find steady job.*,

Public Records

'VERNON — New six room ranch with attached garage. B-Jilt-ln range and oven, fire)>lBre in living room and basement. Wooded l«£ nice location, $16,500. R. F. DimocK Co., Realtors. 5U 9-5245.

$14,900 RANCH, brick front, three bedrooms, fireplace, cellar, base­board heat, trees, near bus, stores, school. Carlton W. Hutch­ins. 5U 9-5132.

MANCHESTER Suburban — Five room (three bedroom) country homes about 7 miles from Man­chester with lots of privacy. Hot water heat, artesian well, chick­en coop, large barn, amesite drive. Approximately 6 acres of land. Asking $14,500. Call ti • ap­pointment to see. Alice Clampet, Realtor, Ml 9-4543,

COVENTRY—Attractive five room ranch. Large kitchen, three bed­rooms. nice living room, large lot. A comfortable home (or modest living. Priced at only 812,650. R, F. Dimock Co., Realtors. MI 9-5245.

MANCHESTER— Three bedroom ranch home with attached garage. Large L-shaped living rooni with fireplace. Hot water heat, atom windows and screens. All city utilities. Convenient location to shopping, bus and schools. Ask ing 815,200. Call (or appointment to see. Alice Clampet, Realtor. MI 9-4543?

MANCHESTER—8H room colonial, nice condition, new furnace, one car garage. Not in tract. Many extras, full prict 814,800. Beauti­ful two-family, excellent mdl- tion, 817,900. New ranches from 811,MO up. Don’t forget MlUen can (it all your needs like a "love. Call the Ellsworth Mitten Agency, Realtors. UI 3-6980 or 5U r 5524.

NOTICEThe Board of Tax Review. Bol­

ton, Conn., will be in .session at the Town Hall on the foUoWlng days;

February 7, Saturda.v,9:80 A.M. to 4 P.M.

February 11, Wedneeday, k.M. to 49:80 A.I PJM.

February t l , Saturday,9:80 A.M. to 4 P.**.C. T. Hathaway,. Chairman H. lit. Kennison ^ U 01(^0

(XXXIV)

MANCHESTER VICINITYLike new, (our room ranch.

Youngstown kitchen, ceramic bath, storm windows and doors, fire­place. basement garage, ' i acre lot. Stone retainer walla, well landscaped. 5% FHA. 10% VA to qualified buyer. Asking $12,500.

Large six room Cape, oreezeway and garSgc, plastered walls large kitchen, bay window int/ dining room, fireplace, I 'i baths, two large bedrooms up with walk-in closets. Storm window* and oors. Awnings. House just painted out­side. Separate washing drain, fully tiled basement floor. I-arge well landscaped lot. Immediate occu­pancy. Pull price only $14,900.

For information or Other Listings

LAWRENCE F. FIANO, Broljer

MI 9-5910

(XXXV)BOX MOUNTAIN RD.. Vernon — Spacious seven room ranch, large redVvood paneled lliing room, three bedrooms! den. and separate din­ing room. Kitchen, built-in range and oven, wall refrigerator. Two- car garage, l>,4 a4re lot. 828,600: R. F. Dimock Co., Realtors, 5tl 9-5245.

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. Good design. Good materials, excellent facilities. Six spacious rooms, full tile . bath, walk-out basement, shower, lavatory fireplace Gar­dens. large lot.' $21,500. H, B. Grady, Broker, MI 3-8009.

(XXXVI)TWO IN ONE package. A nice two- family and a separate four room home. This two-family is in very nice condition inside and out. Separate heating systems, copper plumbing. aluminum combina­tions. two-car garage, convenient location. An unusual nackage buy for 821.500. R, P. Dimock Co., Realtors, MI 9-5245.

DESIGNED FOR comfortable liv- ing. Housework Is made casv in this three bedroom ranch. Eco­nomical maintenance and heating. Near bus, shopping, school. 815,000. H. B. Grady, Broker, 5II 3-8009,

Warrantee. DeedsLeroy F. and Nancy J. Knofla

to Robert E. and Clco M. Karns, properly on Plymouth Lane.

U and R Construction Co., Inc., to Leo X. and Anastasio.s L. Va- lanos, property on Hawthorne St.

Anthony Investments Inc., to John F. Lovett Jr., and Ethel S. Lovett, property on Summit St.

William J. Maguire to Wesley R Smith, property on Oak St.

Quitclaim DeedThe Kay Petroleum Corp., to

Henry J. Michelak, property on Hartford Rd.

Bill of .HaleHarold R. Scovlllc, business

known a.s Manchester Sheet Metal Works, and equipment, to J. Ray­mond and Bernard M. F'ogarty.

Trade NameAnthony and Henry Bollicello.

doing busine.ss a.s "Butch and Tony’s Drive-In.” at 937 Center St.

Trade Name DissolutionHarold R. Scoville of 82 Crest-

wood Dr., no longer doing bu.siness a.s 5Ianchester Sheet 5Ietal Works at 14 High St.

Building PermitU and R Housing, erect house

on 5Iountaln Rd., $17,000.

T m'o Youths Admit Stealiiijjj Car Here

HOLL ST,—Two-family duplex, 5-5, three bedrooms. Two new hot water heaters. One vacancy. $13,500. Schwartz Real Estate, Realtors, AD 6-1241 or CH 2-2885.

(XXXVII)TWO-FAMILY — Excellent condi­tion, 5-5, choice location, 818,700. R. F. Dimock Co., Realtors, MI 9-5245 .

(XXXIX)MANCHESTER—All brick six room (iape in Smith Manchester. Built by Pontlcelli In 1951. Aluminum combinations,' large enclosed rear porch. Oarage and amesite drive. No basement, large lot. Very nice condition. 816,500. R. F. Pimo.ck Oo., Realtors, MI 9-6245.

(X X X X I)BOLTON—Two year , old four room ranch with carport. Large living room with fireplace. Aluminum combinations. $12,800. . R. F. Diaioek Oo., Raaltora. MI 9 J ^ .

MANCHESTER Value plus. six room Cape on bus line, all city utilities, nice condition. Goorl fi­nancing available. Full price $12,650. Call The Ellsworth Mitten Agency, Realtors, Mi 3-6930, MI 9-5524.

Lots for Sale 73NICE LEVEL lot on a hard road at Amston Lake. Near bathing beach. Will sell for cash or on time. MI 3-6263.

LOT, lOO’xSlO’ , >i mile from inter­section of Vernon and Phoenix Sts. on feast side of Lake St,, Vernon. Make a bid. Charles Corbin, 1.304 South Forest Drive. Ocala, Fla.

Suburban for Sale 75BE THE first owners to live in this

Ranch, on a knoll. Three bed rooms, tiled' kitchen and bath, Anderson windows, 2-car garage. About % acres, trees. Seven miles from ' Manchester. , Walton W. Grant Agency, jRakltbr. MI 8-U8S.

Two Massachusetts teenagers, arre.sted yesterday in Springfield and charged with auto theft in that city, last night admitted theft of ar. unregistered car in Manchester three nights ago.

The two youths. George T. Reno, 16, of Westfield, and William Sweetnam, 16, of Springfield, ad­mitted stealing a car from Howard Beaupre's -service station at 270 W. Middle Tpke. Friday night, po- ' lice said.

Capt. Walter Cassells Sr. said the youths were caught by Spring- field police after a bulletin describ­ing the stolen car had been broad­cast to surrounding areas.

Charges against the youths In Springfield stemmed from the earlier theft of a car there, Capt. Cassells said. That car was found abandoned on Chambers St. in Manchester the same night the youths stole the auto from Beau- 'pre’s statiop. .

The teenagers were sighted in the Manchester vehicle while driv­ing through Westfielfi, Capt. Cas­sells said. The chase ended when the boys jumped from the car and fled into nearby - woods. One waa cailght. Capt. Cassells said, and later implicated the other.

No charges hav* aa yet been filed against the youths by local authorities.

By TIIFz A.SSOCIATF.D PRESSliVashington- Maj. Gen. William

.1. (Wild Bill) Donovan. 78, Law­yer, soldier and diplomat and di­rector of the Office of Strategic Services in World War II. died Sunday. Donovan, a Medal of Hon­or winner In World 'War I. had been ho.spitallzedtalnce Iasi April when he suffered a cerebral hem­orrhage. He waa born In Buffalo,N. Y.

Thomasvllle, Ga. —Col. Lloyd C. Griscom, 86, newspaper owner- publl.sher and retired diplomat, died Sunday. He bought the Tal­lahassee, Fla., Democrat 30 years ago was board chairman of the company which published the newspaper. He had served as am­bassador to Italy and Japan and minister to Brazil. He was born In Riverton, N. J.

New York — Meyer Berger, 60. Pulitzer prize-winning reporter and a legend among newspapermen, died Sunday. He was a columnist for the New York Times and a member of the paper’s staff since 1928. Berger, who was born in New York, suffered a stroke Wednesday.

Washington--Alton H. Keller, 46, chief of the Exchange and Gift Division of the Library of Con­gress, died Sunday after a long illness. Keller, who was born in Lexington. Mo., had been with the Library of Congress since 1933.

London—John Wlldbcrg, 55, American play producer who was associated with^the original U.S. production of ^ o r g y and Bess,” died Thursday of a heart attack, it was announced Sunday night. He was born In New York and since 1946 has divided his time be­tween Britain and the United States.

Orlando, Fla.—Brig. Gen. James B. Newmanr 6'2, rctirod Air F’orce officer who helped plan the Air Force Academy, died Saturday of a heart attack. He was born in Tal­ladega, Ala,

Dayton, Ohio Leroy D. Sauer, 64, internationally known artist and former president of Civitan International, died Friday.

Asheville. N.C.- Mrs. Margaret Harrison Bunnellc, wife of Robert E. Bunnello. publisher of the Ash- ville Citizen-Times, died Saturday after an illness of several months. Bunnelle was a former general executive with the Associated Press in New York and during World War II served as chief of the AP’s European operations. Mrs. Bunnelle was born in Asheville.

D.-llas, Tex.- Lt. Col. John E. Lester, 50. retired ordnance of­ficer (or the Red River Arensal at Texarkana, Tex., died Sunday after a long illness. He was born in Hot Springs, Ark.

Winter Park, Fla. - Mrs. Della Drew King, 75, wife of Frank O. King, creator of the comic strip "Gasoline Alley, " died Saturday. She was born in St. Paul, Minn.

Akron, Ohio - Albert G. Saal- fleld, 72, publisher of children’s books, died Saturda.v. IJis fir,in pub­lished more than 50 million books about Shirley Temple, the former child movie star. He was born in Brooklyn.

Cleveland -Dr. James L. P'ar- agiier, 69. one -of. J.hc developers of the SMA (synthetic _milk adapted) feeding formula for Ba­bies, died Friday of a heart a ' ment. He was physician for years until his retirement five years ago.

Baltimore Dennard J. Bailey. 49, who once '.vas listed among the top 10 aerial gunners of the Pa­cific Theater in World War II. collapsed and died Saturday in a roqming house. The owmer said Bailey had hqld part-time jobs as a car washer and porter.

Fort Worth, Tex.—William C. Reynolds, 76, grandfather 'of film star Debbie Reynolds, died Satur­day after a Ibng illness. He wa.s a retired postal clerk.

"What Health Servlcca for Our Schools?” will be the topic under discussion tonight at 8 o’clock at Center School,

A panel of distinguished educa­tors and residents of the Ellington School Role Study group will he led by Gordon Getchell. principal of Ellington High School.

Among the members of the panel will be Mrs. Helen T. Watson, con­sultant (or School Health Services of the State Doparlmeni of Educa­tion. Mrs. Watson, a registered nurse, has had long experience In this field, dating back to 1922.

Edward Charter, will be modera­tor at the meeting. He is active In Scouting, church and numerous civic programs.

Olher members will be: Mrs. Irene Dowd, a first grade teacher at Center School; Howard Becket, a parent; and Miss Helen I'.igan, Ellington school nurse.

Gctrhcll will lead a discussion Tlnirsday night which will set up I'ulcs for the proposed Ellington High School Community Scholar­ship program.

A set of by-laws will he dts- cupsed. Once the by-laws are ap­proved. Getchell will ask that com- mlUees be formed to get the com- munlly project underway. The new group will have Its own board of directors.

Host for the meeting will be the Fzllington PTA Council, who In­stituted the scholarship prograni.

PersonalsMr. and Mrs. Samuel Cor of Fin­

ney St. have returned from Florida.

Health CouncilThe Ellington Board of Educa­

tion haa Instructed its secretary to contact the Rockville Dental So­ciety and ask them to appoint a member of that group to serve on the Ellington Health Council.

The next Council meeting will be devoted to a consideration of the school dental program. The council plans to meet the third Monday of each month at 8:30 p.m.

The next meeting will be held Feb. 16 at the Longview School Next year, conversational French will be taught to all seventh and eighth grade students, the School Board decided at the last meeting- Grade seven will have two periods a week and grade eight will have three.

Fourth year French will be add ed to the high school curriculum Izatin will still be offered starting In Grade 10 and Spanish in Grade 11 .

He also rooomm*iuii4 proachss to foderal-stato describing the present prog federal grants to statM aa fill. He suggested encoui«|re«Nnt of state and loehl govertimisite to proidde educational and ooounun- Ity facilities.

The NAM told the comtnltts# the nation has made on^ a bare beginning in recovei^ trom the recession a* far u em plo^snt Is concernsd. Production, it add> ed, has recovered all but a smsll part of the ground loetz ■ -

Dr. Ralph Robey. econom(e ad­viser to the NAM, said in prepar­ed testimony “ if we depend wholly on a gain in productivity to bring us out of a recession induced by excessive labor costs, what we will get Is a recovery in produotion without much gain In employ­ment.”

Robey added “ for full scale re­covery from such a situation what we need is some relief from th* continuous wag* and fringe, bene­fit tncreasea which have plunged us Into it.”

The NAM recommended Imme­diate consideration of a Imig-tonn tax program "which would sttmii- late the growth of the Monomy Instead of the growth of gorverh* ment spending.”

The Science of Living Thitufs, a Gradenew course, will be given to

10 student.* who are not planning to go to college.

The present general science course will be revised for Grad* 9. College preparatory students may take earth science, biology, .chem­istry and physics.

Science will be continued in all eight elementary- grades. The changes in foreign language and .science were staff suggestions and presented by Dr. Howard Mason, superintcnQqnt of schools.

The School Board voted to re­new leaching home economics and shop In grades 7 and 8. These courses were not taught this year because the Crystal Lake School larked facilities.

Indonesia Buys Guns from U.S.

(Oontinned from Pag* One)West In the Cold War. It Is cer­tain to boost already-rising Ameri­can prestige stlU further In In­donesia.

Premier DJuanda told nawamac the arms deal “ is th* beat proof of

greater U.B. conftdano* to the Indonesian government and of a better appreciation of our fogtogn policy.”

He said th* arms were sohadulad for early delivery, were eomtog with "no strings and are not mili­tary aid such as is given othercountries.”

DJuanda added that the tm s were being eold at a "apeetol pflM, cheaper than we are umd to pay­ing.” and would be paid for on a longterm basis, In or taSo-neman rupiahs.

The arms, raquaated by Indo­nesia last November,, are under­stood to be reconditioned maclito* guns, basookas, grsnadea, vabWas and other supplies. They aM for troops to be aotivatod as iwtaMa- ments or addition* for the |00,OP9- man army in its campaign against the last of the rebel* In Sumatra and East Indonesia.

The rebels began an insurrectlor against the central govempoBn last February. The gcvernmeit haa defeated moat targantoed 8« sistance, but unoffleial reMfto aa? there are some 4,0(>0 rebels still at large, many of thgm fighting to small bands.

The Indonealan government tried to buy arme from the United States early In 1068, but Washing­ton was cool to the idea then. In­donesian officen then arranged to buy arms from dome Oemmonlat countries.

The price and terma of th* arme sale, and of a small ship

Manchester Evening Herald El­lington correspondent Mrs. O. F. Bcrr telephone TRemont 5-9818.

C o v e n t r y

S.'SOO Highest Bid For North School

Tile old North School in Coven­try wa.* sold at suction Saturday to Alfred D. Heckler of Mile Hii] Rd.. Coventry for 8500.

Heckler, a builder, said he had no immediate plans for either the building, a 1-room frame structure or the land. He said he went to the auction Saturda.v but had had no intention of purchasing the proper­ty. He said there were about 30 people present at the sale and about 10 of them bid on the proper­ty-

The school, last used in the 1948-’49 school year for a class of 24 seventh graders, has been un­occupied for the past .several years.

For several years after It was sed as a school it was oc-

pled as a residence by George 'Vinson, a- town employe.

sale, and of « small shipment of weapons deliver^ last fall, are to be negotiated latar under an agree­ment made last A ugM , Indonesia then waa promised American arms for use In self-defense and Ifitornal security in accordance with th* U.N. charter.

The increased U.S. oonfldenoe to the Sukarno regime is said to have been brought about msinly by tho head of the army, Lt. Gan. Adbul Haris NasuUon, who last year , curbed the rebellion and then checked the disrupting Influenca of Indonesia’s powerful C immunlata. Since then the antl-Oommitnist Nasution has had a major 'T>loe to government affairs. . .

The announcement of the w le 1* almost certain to bring a proteet from the Netherlands, which ha* been battling Indonesia’s claim to Dutch-held west New Guinea.

For I )'■ 'last us( '•0 ffupled

About TownTemple Chapter, Order of the

Eastern Star, will Jiold ,ja 'Valen­tine card party Fridajrat 8 p.m. ir the Masonic Temple, under the chairmanship of Ernest Oox 27 View St., whleh ie open to the public. Prizes vrill be as'ard'ed.;

The Rev. Robert McGrath Of St. Benedict's Center, Hartford, will be guest speaker at the meeting of the Ladles of St. James tMs evening at 8:15 In St. ,^ame' f>chool hall.

The second meeting of the mod­ern hostess class of the Commu­nity y will be held tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. in the auditorium of th< Hartford Electric Llghf'Co., 146 Hartford Rd.

Bloodmobile Unit Coming Tuesday

Walk-in donors will have an opportunity to help the Manches­ter Red Cross meet “ its 150-pint blood quota tomorrow when the Bloodmobile visits the Elks Home from 12:45 to 5:30 p.m.

About 185 ptersons have sched­uled appoinlmehls to give blood, but experience indicates the local Red Cross will fail to meet the quota aa it has for the past seven months.

A t the last Bloodmobile visit more that 80 persons e re forced to cancel their appolntmenti or did not appear according to a Red Crosa spokesman.

The Red O om urged all tbohe who hav# made appolntmenta to keep them If at all poaalbls-

The Lucy Spencer group of the Second Congregational Women’a Fellowship win hold ft* raontUy meeting in the church parlor Wednesday at 2 p.m. Mlaa UUIar Powers and Mr*. J. M. Nidiola wfli be hostesses.

Court Fines Four For Auto DamageThree teenagers and the man

accused of supervising their de­struction of':.an automobile at 24 Walker St. Jan. 28 were fined a total of $50 in Town Court this morning.

Daniel B. Balkiis Jr., 17. Robert A Goryns, 18. Robert E. F. Hall Jr , 17! and Morrell N. Smith, 30. all of East Hartford, were charged' with tampering with an automo­bile and pleaded nolo contendere (no contest) when put to plea.

The three teenagers were fined $10 each and Smith $20. All had posted $.500 bonds at the time of their arrest. ’ .. Assistant Prosecutor John Lom­bardo said the four drove to Man­chester from East Hartford at night, and the three teenagers, at the instigation of Smith, Blaaned three tires and broke two windows, in a car belonging to Leonard Brpgg. brother of Smith's es­tranged wife who is living at the Walker S t address. -

The damage was reported to po­lice the following day byia friend of Bragg, Ronald LaFountaln.'

Police said at the time , that Smith, on past oceaslona, bad letthe air out of the tire# of a car, r- - - — , , bdongtog to or driven by hi* tvlfs { b o b ^ aliov teelgH at T "just to get even with her.’’ • acbooL

The Verplanck PTA win isee tomorrow night at 8 o’clock lli' th» school auditorium. After a brief meeting a variety show wlU b* pre­sented. Refrestenento will be • served In the cafeteria.

‘ Anderson . Shea Auxiliary wlU honor Its past presidents at akupe'; per tomorrow night at’6:80 at f ^ VFW Hom% A Valentin* tbems' will be used, and each member fe requested to'' bring a ValeniUM- . Any member who haa BOt;M*n - contacted may call blthsr.Inez Mahoney or Mrs. Laura pog. iMrt for'further lntonnatio& . .

The KSeirwy Rt 9TA wllj iduct e corobtoatton oard i

Page 8: NO. no MANCHESTER, C ., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1959 ... Evening Hearld...of at \ If Manchester \" ‘" • * * « • • • • • ***** ***** MANCHESTER if / '. .Manchester, 9

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PAGE FOURTEEN iMattrliPBtpr Euptttttg l^eralbMONDAY, PEBRUABY 9. 1999

About Town•m» M«nche«ter F«Ier«Uon of

DemoitfaUc Women nre fomiulal- h i plana for • fashion show and tea, Sunday, March 1, at the Knights of fcolunibus home, silss Buhara Coleman, IM Lydall St., Yidll serve as general chairman.

i f.w Graxina Maciuika of the local branch of Children’s Services will apeak at a meeting Wednesday ; at 9:30 a.nv in Center Church on ■ the work of the organiaation in' this area. Officers for the year 1959 will also be elected.

The Holy Ghost Mothers Circle will meet tomorrow night at 8 o ’clock at the home of Mrs .James Cott. 99 Columbus 91. Mrs Jo­seph Gen-aise will be the m-hnsl-; esa. I

The executive board of the Burk - , land PTA will meet tomorrow- night at 8 o’clock at the school

The Eliza Chapman .toy Circle nf the North Methodist Church will meet at 2 o ’clock \Vcdnc.«day sf temoon at the chun li.

The Women .« Home I^cague of the Salvation Army woU meei to­morrow afternoon at 2 o’clock rI the Citadel Ho.stcsses will he .Mr‘ Elizabeth Maxwell. Mrs Annie Young and Mr.s. Ida Obrien

ManchesterEC.G FARM

422 KEENF.T' ST.

tvill have fresh eggs daily. Medium 15c doz. l.,arge .o.'ic doz. Extra large 62c doz. Also fresh dres.sed fowl lb. 30c.

Tel. MI 9-9904

EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING

• ALL WORK GUARANTEED

• Work Done While U Walt• il'Ur GREEN STAMPS

c Orthopedic Specialist ]Hole's Shoe Repoir

Use Our Oak St. Entrance

The Holllater PTA will have a .buffet aupper tomorrow at 6:30 in j the school auditorium. Anyone not i attending the supper who wishes to mav attend the entertainment' which ’Will begin aboiK 7:30.

The Exchange Club svill hold its i bi-monthly -meeting tomorrow, night at 6:.’10 at the 3 J’s Restau-j rani. Mrs. John McElraevy, presi-' dent of the Manchester Associa-; tion for Help to Retarded Children, will speak on ‘’The Problem of Mental Retardation." j

Manchester Lodge of Ms.sonsj will meet tomorrow night at 7:.30' in the Mssonic Temple. After the business nieeling the Fellow-craft' degree will he conferi-ed. with Frank Kakeler president. Follow­ing the degree work there will be a

- social hour with refreshment*.

I The .Stanley dr.-le of the South , .Methodist Church will meet tomor­row night at 8 o’cloi'k at the home of .Mrs. Chester Ferns, 30 Gerard ■St.

The Roikville Emblem Club will hold its monthly meeting Wednes­day night at 8 o’clock at the Elks Home, Rockville The meeting wdll be preceded bv a potliick st fi n clock, with Mr.«. .losepli Josephiar and .Mrs Joseph Koslorek ss ro- chalrmcn Past president,*’ night will be ob.seivcd. with ail the chairs occupied by past presidents, | Mr.s John Murphy of 12 Lenox St. acting ss president.

The Arm\' and .Navy Auxiliary, will hold a public card party to­night at a o’clock at the clubhouse.

■Marine Pvl Gerald A. Calve, son of Mr. snd Mrs Albert Calve. 237 Oak St . graduated last Thursday from an intensive 4-week infantry training course at Camp Le.Ieiine. N C.

.Mai’\ B. Cheney Auxiliary, USWV, will hold a meetfng tonight at 7 o’clock in the State Armory. A social period will follow the meeting. President Gertrude Buch­anan and Pa-sl President Mrs. Gladys Ridolfi will be co-chairmen of the refreshment committee.

The newly organized Young People’s Group of St. John’s Po-

I liah National Catholic Church will j rheet at 7 o’clock tonight.

Hose Co. No. 1. Eighth District Fire Department, w’ill hold Its monthly meeting tonight at 8 o’clock at the firehouse.

Elverne N. Harmsen Jr , 17.: 104’ n Cliestniit St . left Jan. 27 for ! basic training in the U.S. Army at : Fort Dix, N.J.

Memorial Temple. Pythian Sis- I tei’s. will meet tomorrow night at 8 o’clock in Odd F'ellows Hall. Following the business meeting, re­freshments will he served

Open House Held At Parsonage of

South MethodistThe Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence F. i

Almond of South Methodist Church entertained several h u n d r e d ; pebple at, the parsonage yester-j day at a pre-Lenten open house, j The house was open for inspection, and this was the first general op- (lortunity the church family had had to inspect it since the arrival of the Almond family.

In aulditlon to Pastor and Mrs. Almond, guests were greeted at the door by chairman of the of­ficial board and Mrs. Martin Keiderling. and chairman of the board of trustees and Mrs. Wells K. Dennison. Assistant Lay Lead-

i ers Nelson Richmond and William Rood and their wives were in charge of the guest book. Guides were members of the parsonage committee: Mrs. Thomas J. Rog­ers, Mrs. Jay H. Rand, Mrs. Elmer

c ; Andwaon, Mrs. ChrlsUan Hen- j rlkaen. Mm . Philip Bedard. Mr*., Ruasell MacKendrick, and Mr*. W. Walker Briggs.

The hoepltallty committee in­cluded Mrs. Wadsworth McKinney, i Mrs. Frederick Towle, Mr*. George Trueman. Mrs. Christion Henrik-: sen, Mr*. Russell Roberts, Mr*. | Verner Nylin. Mrs. Mary Ward and Mr*. Charles Straight. I

The Miaae* June Cloutier. Carol - Cordner and Barbara Cook as- sisted in the kitchen. _ I

FALSE TEETHThat Loosen Need* Not ImbofToss

Msny sresrera o{ fslse teeth here •unered reel emberrenmant heceuse their plet* dropped, dipped or wob- bled at Jutt the wtont time. Do not lire In feer ol thli heppemnito you. ,Iu»t sprinkle a little rASTKlTH. the alkclinr inon-erldi powder, on your plate*. Hold false teeth more Ormly, [n they feel more cnmfortehie. Doe* not Hour Cheek* "platerndor’’ tden­ture breath I. Get FABTUCTH at any drug counter.

GLUE’SAuto Crashes

2 Poles Car In Wild Ride

Tlie first pole which the Miller car struck and broke in two was on Oakland St. just south of Lillian Dr. The scar on the right front portion of the hood is the result of that crash. The car met its match, however, when it hit the second pole on Deming St. (Photo by Bnrkamp),

THIS IS THE HOUR!

One man was li. spitalized and two Olliers airested last niuhl a l­ter an auto crash on Deming .'-t. which put sn end to a slam-hang ride throiigli Manciiester’s .N'ortli End and which began after a fight j St a Main St. gn.s station. |

T-'li e passei ;er.s were in Uie car,; police leportcd. hut driver Gene | Miner. 20, of VVarehou.se Point, wa.s ' the onlv one hurl I

Miller crashed into a utility pole and another car on Oakland St. he- ; fore demolishing his vehicle again.st

ja second pole on Deming St., po- * lice said. i

.Miller, who was admitted to Mancliester Memorial Ho.spital, | suffered facial abrasions. Hospital authorities Hus morning said hi.s

' condition is good. i' Passengers Kenneth A. F'clker, in. of the East Windsor Nike .Site, and Grady C. Horton. 22, of VVare-

[ house Point, were arrested after ! the cra.sli and charged ■ ith breach i of Hie peai e. the cliarges .stem- 1 ming from the fight at the ga.s , station.

Tlie other two pas.-iengera, hoys aged l2 and IS. were released in

: the ciistody nf their parents, po- ' lice said.

Police ga\e no explanation for the fight, wh.cli took place about

I fi o’clock at Brownic’.s Service I Station at Main SI. and Middle 1 T^ke.

Police said, however. Miller and

the .otliers were at the station for j a short time before the fight he- : gan. Felker and Horton became ! involved in a scuffle with the at- tendenl. police said, and all five jumped into Miller’s car and-drove i north on Main St.

According to police. Miller drove to Depot Sq.. turned right and continued north on Oakland St , A patrolman on duty at Depot | Sq. tried to stop the vehicle with- i out succe.s.s. j

Just .south of Lillian Dr., on Oakland Si., police said Miller j struck the first pole, snapped it | in two, bounced off and collided witti a car driven by Mrs. Eleanor , Mozzer, 37. of 1.36 Avery St., Miller conltnued ■ to Deming St.., lui-ned west and finally smashed into tlie second pole. The car was a tolrfl wreck.

■Mrs. Mozzer was not reported 1

injured. Her car was dented on the right rear fender.

Police said the case is still under Inve.stigalion.

AUTO BODY

★ WELDING 'k AUTO BODY and

FENDER REPAIRS A COMPLETE CAR

PAINTINGLA(.;4)FER and ENAMEL

TEL. .MI 9-5023

281 ADAM S ST.

A tr $u|Nr Markets in MaiKhasIsr

261 Bread St. 1 116 E. Center St.

OPEN WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and FRIDAY 'til 9 P. M.

Police ArrestsPolice a r r e s t e d Ronald W.

Smith Jr.. 17, of 16 Thomas Dr.. Saturday afternoon and charged him with reckless driving. Smith was involved in an auto crasli on Spring SI. Friday night but was not arrested at the time.

Smith and a passenger. Wil­liam F. Duncan. 17, of 65 Auluiiin St., were both hospitalized as a result of he rra.sh.

Smith’s court date Feb. 16.

THK OFFICE OF ])R. RAYMOND R.

MOZZER 983 MAIN ST.

M'lLL RE (’ LOSED FROM

FER. 9 TO FER. 23

SIGNSAll Kinds

ED’S SIGN CO.79 Charter Oak St. Phone Ml 3-8268

HAVE 3 0 i; HEARD ABOFT

OUR NEW PLAYING CARD

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A Twrninder that we're open until .5 P.M. on Monday*. Tuesday* •nd Fridays. On those days we offer a full 8 hours of uninter­rupted service, 9 to !i P..M. These hours are especially ron-venlent for saving or transacting other financial business on your way home from work, or while doing some late afternoon shop­ping. Thursdays, of course, (he hours are extended right straight through to 8 P.M. Manchester Saving* and Loan, 1007 Main Street, near .’Maple street. ".Manrhesler’s Oldest Financial In- atltution.'’

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they freeze • • • • and it costs them money

That worn out oil burner in their cellar not only breaks dtiw n every other week, but it eats oil like crazy. Do I hey know they can have a new Delco-Heat burner for what Ihey'll .save on fuel?

i Bantly will install a new Delco-Heat oil powered burner and guarantee it for a year aRainSt mechanical

! defects for a.s little a-s SIO per month. Fuel savings in ! .5 years will pay for the burner.I

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Le n te n Food Buf/tt}:Tomato Soup pX 4 39"

Oyster Stew S 2«Ss

White Tuna AAPFANCY 2

2 10OZ rm C CANS

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Pink Snlnion COLD STREAM can 53

Italian Dinner 39"

Chop Suey rllMCO -/ elo-bit aV in c e s e amer. processed a

sharp Cheddar AGED tangy lb 59"

Hot Cross Buns pimR OF 8 35*:

can 316 0Z MAC PKGS 0 " &

Average Daily Net Press Run‘ For the Week Endtng

February 1th, 1050

12,882Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation. Manche»t(>r— A City o f ilUage Charm

The WeatherFonsmet of P . 8. Weutlior « * n a «

Shewem. poiiallily thunderelinW- era, wind.y tonight, colder wwr daybreak. I>ovv near Od. Windy* colder Wedneoday. High near 04.

VOL. LXXVIII, NO. I l l (FOURTEEN PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY. FEBRUARY' 10. 19.59 (Claaairted Ariverttalng on Page 10) PRICE FIVE CENTS

Mob Bought c o r d PcTSODS Killccl,265HurtNumber Juke Boxes, By H onduras! ^

Rackets Probe ToldWaBhington, Feb. 10 (JP)—t

A former top executive of] W’urlitzer Corp. testified to- da.v he once .sold the bigjre.st order of juke boxe.s on record to Chicago gangster.s.

Milton Hammergren, former general aale* manager and vice preaident of the music instrument firm, said one of hla clients wa» the A1 Capone mob.ater, Jake "Greasy Thumb” Guzik.

Testifying before the Senate Rackets' Committee, Hammergren •aid that in all he sold, in the early 1940’a about 2.700 juke boxe.« to Chicago mobsters.

In re*pon«ev to a question by committee counsel Robert F. Ken­nedy, he estimated the annual take j from the juke boxes at about $21<* million a year.

Hammergren was the first wit­ness a* the committee kicked oft a scheduled month of hearings on charges that a giant combine of gangsters and labor union officials

wit­tered areSfl will h« called neases.

•'The current investigation,” he said, "will likelv be one of the most Important we have undertak­en with reference to the hoodlum effort to achieve legitimacy through association with unions and Ijjiainesa enterprise ‘

Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Feb. 10 (JP) — The government claimed today that the army was in control of all Hondura.a after routing a rebel force which seized the key city of Santa Barbara, near the Gua­temalan border.

Congress was expected to de­clare a state of siege s modified form of martial law - to strengthen the hand of President Rsmon Vil- leda Morales in quelling the re-

As Tornado St. LouisThe committee expects to ex­

amine for four weeks juke box and : volt, coin machine racketeering in such The Mexico City newspaper states as Ohio, Minnesota, Florida,' Diario de la Tarde said that a Pennsylvania, New York, Illinois, ■ clandestine Honduran radio sla- Indiana and Michigan, tion. Radio Liberacion. had called

McClellan described the major-

(Continiied on Page Five)

‘ L h y v ill Your TJfe’ Series in Herald

‘The Law in Y'ntir Life.’

has gained control of the coin m a-, ing in form ation about the lawto Herald readers will he pub-

on Hondurans to rise up in a gen­eral strike and predicted that rec- ular srmv troops would defect to the rebels.

Government officisls, however, claimed that the arni\ was re­maining loyal to Preaident Villeda Morales.

The Tegucigalpa newspaper FI r>ia said that Army Maj. Agresio P.odriguez, had be»n executed by a

series o f weekl.v articles bring- firins: '■q"'’ '’' "f<er trying to per-

chine industry.Arthur Kaplan., a committee

staff lawyer, outlining the antici­pated cour.se of the hearings, told the committee gangster.* have been able to bring political pres­sure.* to bear in some areas to help ! them prey on juke box and coin - machine operators. He did not ; name the aieas or the gangsters to whom he referred. ;

Kaplan testified many billions o f ' dollars a year income from juke | lx>x«s, amusement and gambi: g devices and vending machines had| been an attractive lure to the tin-! derworld. !

Committee Chairman John L. j McClellan (D-Ark) said under­world figures from widely scat-1

lished beginning Inniorrow.The articles, written in lay­

men's language, weie pre- pared with the cooperation ol numinpni the State Bar As.snciation.

Tomorrow's installment will he on marriage.

Watch for ‘ ’The T.aw in Your Life’’ each ^ ■eclnes( ay in The

Ruadp his troop.<» to join Ihp bpllion.

Eleven days Rg:o the same news­paper had predicted that a rebel invasion from Nicarag^na led by b former Honduran army colonel, Armando Vela.aquez Cerrato. wa.A

iMattrhrHlrrjH u rn iu ^ l^ rra lft

JanuaryHighest

Washington, Feb. 10 r;pi—ITnsm-f- c*mb«r ployment rose by 616.000 In Jan­uary to 4,724,000. It was the high- fst number idle in any January sine* before World War II.

Government statisticians said that from a.statistical standpoint, however, it was coniparabie to January 19.60, when the unemploy­ment figure was 4.699.000. They say there may be an error margin of perhaps 50,000 in such esti­mates.

In actual numbers, January'.* unemployment total was larger than in any January since 1941 when it was 7.410,000.

A seasonal decline in employ­ment is usual in January.

The number *'of Americans at work dropped by 1.267,000—from 63.973,000 in Decbir.ber to 62,706,- 000 In January.

The monthly JointTepoct of the Conluaerce and Labor Etepartmenta attributed the job decline to sea-

There have been increasing re­ports of rebel activity in tlii.s mountainous Central American country hut the ' government has been slow ta acknowledge armed opposition to the Villeda Morales regime.

The government conceded yes- terda.v that rebels had temporarily occupied .Santa Rarhara. about 150 miles northwest of the capital, hut said they were driven out and fled into the mountains.

El Dia said rebels also seized the town of Oentepeque. in the same region near the Guatemalan border, but were routed.

Government sources said the rebels attacking Santa Barbara were commanded by Dr. Armando Rodriguez Valle.

El 'Dia said that Rodriguez Valle and 130 of his men were captured. The newspaper said the attack on Ocotepque was led h.v Jose Luis Pinto and that,he had heen caught

rapteri a persistoiil decline since gjong with 250 of his men. la.,i summer” among the lonj ton)) iinemnioypd. ^

Homes, Apartments Crushed by Twister

St. Loiii.s. Fell. 10 (/T)—Withmit warning, a tornado struck a flraflly hlmv at Hip hoai’t of St. Louis in the pre-da’wn hourstoday. 1 • J er.N'inotpon wpi’p known deatl. Another 265 were injured, 55.sei’iou.al.t.

The City Morgup and Civil Dofpnsp officials reported that 19 hodios had liocn ipceivpd at the morgne and hnth of the city ho.sitital.<, whci’c Hip injured wore treated, said all of Hicii’ doml hnti heen sent io Hie morgue.

.Numerous per.sons wpip liap))e<l in home.s and apartments which crumpled tindci’ the .storm's blows.

The storm took Hie same path of thi.3 city's worst tor­nado which killed more than 100 in 1927.

.SeHnlu'is woiked thiuughmit ------ •the night, lurning over rubble infrsMlii resc\ie efrot la. I o I

At dawn. Ihev renewed then .E R J l l lC t U A F J. v l J O mellKidiciil Ituiit'fiu- the dead snd , -wmiT -sthe living caught m falling bricks, ' ^ 1 1 (i)nriete ami liinilier. Yr J.JI"1. Tr

The tiiriuido lilt at 2;12 am ,' ’■ T CS A111 LJ.S. Areas

Idle Totals Since 1950

and addtd “ this ' InUr-

Police and firemen aearching the debria for victim.* of this morning's tornado in St. Louis are partly framed bv the wreckage aa daylight broke over the niina today. <AP Photofnxi.

Ike Declares Dulles^ Illness Won’t Delay Talks with Reds

The factorv work week dropped ."bnnt'Tshby four-tenths of ' P'* " ‘hours in January. This Is S some­what smaller decline than usualfor the month. Average overtime _ , ,work was reduced fmm 2.6 hour* : communications made itin December to 2.3 hours in Janu- , difficult to assessJJie size of the arv.

men believed to be Honduran reb­els awaiting order* were ramped a mile awav.

As a result of tlie shorter work j week, factory worker average earnings declined by RS rents to $76.38 a week in January. Hourly earnings remained steady r.t $2.18.

Hours of work in manufacturing i industries were 12 hours per week higher in January 19.39

President Eisenhower limped the gun on the official report, and told a news ronference earlier that he believes there will be a pickup in employment as the year goes along,

Eisenhower challenged s reporl-

(Unntlniied on Page Five)

Father Booked On Chartje of Killing Son, 4

Washington, Feb. 10 t/P' Pro.*-- preparations. Onre his hernia op-’* he visited Londonidem Eisenhower predicted today! I* "'d ef ’. . , a, +11 I. h0)ver. s4icl,. Dulles will have morethat Secretary of State Dulled tn-j to think alnul U.S. policy

on such Issues as the future ofCern-any.

E'.aeniiower r.iR'ie the.' e points I'earing on hus ailing Secretary and the conduct of foreign affairs:

1, Di.lle.s is t'.ie rr man Eisenhower has

Paris ami Bonn, I produreti greater unity of purpose: and determination among t)ie. United .S’.ates, Britain. 9'rance and West Germany about dealing with Rus.sia on its threat to West Ber­lin. t

In .N’oveinher 19.36, Dulles eessfiillv went throiigli an inies-

st valuable | tinni rnneer nperat'on, ami last De- “•.en '.cuv.vn . rembii was Irealcfl for an in-

ness will 'ihiliisp no delay in west ern talks with the Soviets about German problems.

Eisenhower spoke at a news ronference just after Dulles liad entered Walter Reed .-Mniy lio.s- pital for a hernia operation. Tlie .Secietary expecis to he out of ai - lion for some week.s. Despite lus age of 70 and ills recent lu.sloiy of ilinc.s.s. official.* preilicl he will be back in harness. But western .\llies expi eased a degree id dus- mav over the illness at a c rucial |time. ! --ame tall: in which he spoke of a ' ,,,. ^^d C. Douglas Dillon.

In his news eonfei ence state- | ; o. .silile Eisenhower vi.sit to Rus- ment Eiaenliower piaised Dulles

:n the manage: leni of f .s, f.u- p.gn polic.v and I lie President iie- jieve.s evei y clear tliin'<ing person :n I’ne I'niled States will pra\' foi hi* earl.v recovery because .Amer­ica needs him.

2. Ri.senhnwer noted that in the

j flamed colon.F'or the new affliction Dulles ob­

tained a l'■avp of absence from I Eisenhowc'. leaving the conduct of I foreign polic.v to his two top a.s- ' .sociates at the State Department.

Undersecretarie.s Christian Her-

sonal factors such a.s release of e. - j remark the idle figure had tra Christmas season workers m | ,.|jmbed back to about five million stores and post offices, and further [ Eisenhower said it was about curtailment of outdoor work. i .too,000 les.s than that, or about 4 -

Some of these tem)’Orary work-i-oo.ooo. The actual figures in the era were not looking for further government report issued later put

9 Louiswas (barged with!

employment. Hence they were not counted a* among the unemployed.

.Slow Rate of Recovery The Ooriirerce-Ijibor report re­

flected governmental optimism by saying: "The recent stability in i both employment and unemploy- j ment, except for seasonal changes. | reflect* a'slow rate of job recov- p ery in the past ten months.

The number tineniployed for 15 weeks or longer was 1.400.000 in January. The report said this was I about the same number aa in De-

said they weie withdrawing their application for a writ of habeas

I corpus which was signed by a Sii-

Januaiy unemplovment at 4.724,- non, or 276.000 leas than •$ million.

The President said he does not accept as satiafactorv the nre.sent' ' It W „ p .~ r c « .r ,act eristic for economic recoveries to be spottv. But he said he be­lieves a pickup in emplovment is in sight.

Trariltfoiially unemployment In­creases and employment declines

as the most i-aluable man lie has , ever known in the. foreign afCair.s field.

He al.so made clear that lie re- sent.s tlie liar.sh critici.sni of Ameiican leader’.s and polic.s- whicli Soviet Premier Nikita Klmi.«h- chev (oupled In.at week to an in- '

, vitalion for Eisenhower himself ’lO visit Rus.sia.

Eisenliowet said he undei .-tanil.s Khrushchev is more concerned about having an informal heads nf

, government meeting than about I having a ses-sion of foreign min-I isters.

Kish was ordered held without j A summit conferencit, Eisenhow - bail. ei said, would require even more

In the writ, police and County tlr.'.e to prepare.1 Coroner Edgar W, Krentzr an had | In an\’ case the President ex- I teen asked to-show cause as to w hy I pects Dulle.s to be back oh the ; tliey wete, holduig K‘.»h und-t job in time to contribute to t’ae

c noo bond.

Bridgeport, Feb.Kish. 41. today the murder nf his 4-year-old son. Albert Rotzal He insisted he was innocent even while h-ing hooked in police headquarters.

Moments after the charge was placed against Kish, his lawyers

s:,a. Kht U-siKhev clcnoimced United Staic.s les'iers. He said he would liave In ha\e a-ninre per.+ua.sive

nf invjtaf.i'n than tliat if lie ■■ ere tn cniu I'Icr such a prnpnai- tinn s(*nnu.sh'.

3. Eisenhower helie\’es Dulle.s' latest, mi.ssinn tn Europe, on which

Probers Want U.S. Beds Bare Soviet Control

(Continued or Page Five)

Third Virginia Area Bows to Integration

Counsel for Kish ■ conferred with ! him in police headqiiai tei a after he wa.s bbnked on the milrder

' charge. Later he was removed to the Fairfield County Jail. I

The lawyers, Robert J. Te.sto and George W. Ganim said Kish

, still maintains he is innocent in the case.

A hearing on a habeas corpus I petition seeking freedom for Kish

NewsTidbitsCulled from AI’ Wires

Two jewel robberies adding up to a to,.al haul of nearly 11 mil­lion keep Miami, Fla., police busy

has been postponed indefinitely sfel^ing clues. The president of — - - the Connecticut Bar Assn. indi­

cates that getting, partial coiiitAlexandria, Va., Feb. 10 (JPi

Two Negro children entered a for-1 mer all-white elementary .school | here without excitement or incident today.

Tlie children, James Edward Lo­max. 8, and his .sister M.irgaret , Irene Lomax. 6, were acccnipanied I Into Theodore Ficklin School by | their mother, Mrs. Hazel Lomax. I

Two friend* of Mrs. Lomax)

.Seventeen police officers were on duty at the school but Ivad nothing to do but' tell reporters and photographers where they must station themselves.

Except for reporters, and lographera, there w e r e

A few persons watched considerable distance, in

crowds, from a silence.

The size of the police guard and

Superior Court. The lawyers filed the petition yesterday, saying that they had been refused permission to talk with Kish.. Now. counsel saiil. they have met with him and have no neeci to pre.*s for the writ. They had

pho- proposed to withdraw it. but Judge no Eitzg«rald .suggested that it re-

(Ckintiniied on Page Five)

the atmosphere in general con­trasted with that at Sti-atford Junior in Arlington la.*t week when the first Negro children were admitted to previouslv all-white classes in Virginia.

2 Persons Perish I I I Danburv Blaze

reorgamzation immediately might be preferable to fighting a long time to gel more extensive reor­ganization.. . Republicans snd Ueniocralfi joined hands in honor­ing William H. Brennan of Stam­ford. -longUnie Kalrueld Coimt.v Republican chairman who retired recently alter 16 years of service.

The Rev, Martin Luloer King, now in India, says he will-convene a special' institute next summer to a«la|>t Gandhlan techniques of nonviolence to the American Ne­gro's struggle foT equal status’ . . . Scores of jialicemen, flreivten and volunteers resiiiue the search for a 6-year-old Norm'al. 111., boy who failed to return home from liinder- gai.."n c'a“ts ycsfc ’dr’ ’.

The Connecticut Slate Health Department predicts 1959 will

Washington Feb. 10 i>pi Re­jecting arguments that it lelicd on false testimony.. the .Subversive Activities Uonttol Board has rei- ommended for the third time that the U.S. Communist party be re- qnued to register s.s a puppet of the Kremlin.

The hoard s report. Issued yes­terday. .specifically rejected a partv contention that an FBI in- | formant gave false testimon.v again.st Annie Lee Moss, a major, figure in a stormy 19.54 inquiry h.v | the late Sen. Joseph R. MeCar- ; thy (R-Wial. |

The Moss controversy was In- i jected by party lawyers after the | control board, for the second time, | ruled in December 19.56. that the party shou'd he required to regis-j tei a* an organization controlled and dominated bv M.oscmv.

Appealing the rilling, part.v at-, torneys attacked the credibility of j Mary Stalcup Markward, for years an FBI informsnt within the party and now s housewife in suburban

Eisenhower opened his meeting with leporlers by volunteering a alatement about Dulles and ex­pressing the hope foi his early re­turn to dutv. He said he could not express his disappointment that Dulles had to go hack to the hos­pital. nor could he say how pleaseil he was that Dulles had fin recognized that he mu.s; take step in the inleie.st of hi.s health,

Dulles was walking slowly but smiling as he entered the Army medical center at 10:28 a.m. E.ST. He was met by Maj. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, the hospital comman­dant,

Heaton, a surgeon ■who will d.'i the operation, told newsmen he ex­pected it would be done either P'li- day or earlv next week. Ke said there was no rush since it is not an enietgency.

"Good morning ” Dulles said to H ealn. ’’this is getting to he familial- ground ”

Dulles met with Eisenhower last niglit In the Presidents living quarters on the second floor of the

f (?'ont1mi I on Page Five)

iCSTi. Kiisl it hit two suburbs, Brentuoud snd Creslwood In sotilhwesl .SI. Louis County, then nio\-ed norllieast into St. lamts,U took Its toll 111 an area bounded roughly hv Olive .Street. Grand Binileiaid .N’ ewstead and St. Louis Avenues This is a mile west of downtown !8t. Louis.

Torrential Rains ,kt, Louis wa.s lashed by tor­

rential rams for bouts before the tornado struck,

.Most of the victims had been in tied for lioiirs II delivered its hardest blows in s section of tene­ment hoii.ses occupied mostly by Negroes.

All hut three of 19 bodies takenlo Ihe city morgue were those of Negroes, Seven of the dead were children under the age of 11.

Five were Irom 4802 Delmar Blvd . wlieie 11 were trapped in a three story house which buckled and craved In. Four others were pulled from the wreckage at 3862 Page Bli’d

On all sides there was tragedy | and destruction. One father was | pulled from Hie rubble, hi* dead I son sllll hanging on his back. |

Donors and nurses worked as fast as they could. Both City Hns- pil.sl slid Homer G. Phillips Hos­pital were swamped with the in­jured. Thirteen weie dead upon ariual si City Hospital and four at Homer G. Phillips.

All police and fire equipment was rushed into the area. Streets were barriraded. Live broken electrical wires curled in the streets like snakes coiled to strike. Pois’er WHS cut off to the stricken

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSThe RI. (.lOiils tornado was the

most violent, of the wild weather which continued its rampage across broad areaa of the nation.

Heavy thunderstorms which fed rivers and streams posed another flood threat in Ohio. A state of emergenev was declared in Find­lay, Ohio, as the Blanchard River swelled to Its banka.

In Van Wert, Tiffin and Fre­mont. streams rose to flood stage. In Van Wert, Town Creek over­flowed It* hanks and aome douvn- town streets were reported flood­ed.

In Illinois, a tornado s)clpped through Ohlong early in the morn­ing, causing heavy damifge and In­juring a woman occupant of a house trailer. Roofa on several buildings were lorn off. Several other small twisters were report­ed in the southwestern Illinois area.

I The most miserable weather of the winter staggered nearl.v all

! part* of the country east of the i Rockies yesterday and today. This WHS the unsavory climatic offer-

'i(l’ontlniied on Page Seven)

(Continued on Page Seven)

Bulletinsfrom the AP Wires

1,340 Warned,illv /~v|* ■ "TV P . ' County High School on a de-this I It l^ar IJeieClS '"■Kfi’Ka****' Wednesday,1, ,< hool at Front

ORDERS SCHOOL REOPEN Harrisonburg. Va., Feb. 10 Iffl—

U.S. Judge John Paul today ordered the reopening of Warren County High School on a de-

Hartford, Fell in i.Ti Warn­ing.* were handed nut to 1.340 car (iriveis 111 the first three days of! the current Stale Police campaign | to get vehicles with defective- equipment off ( ’nnnerlicul high-1 ways, ('apt William A. Gruber of; the State Police Traffic Division said today.

The tally ahowed 385 warnings for defective headlights, 361 for defective tail lights. 126 for dofei - | live signal lights snd 4.33 for mis- rellaneoiis defects such as faulty horns, windshield wipers, rear view mirrors, mufflers and brakes.*

Captain Gruber said that the

1 (Continued on Page Five) ,

Royal in northern I'trginia—Die county's only high school— was the first tn he closed under the state'* now defunct massive re* nistnnre program when 22 Ne­groes were ordered admitted,

FALSE RADIO 81GNAL8 Washington, Feb. 10 l l—Preal-

dent Eisenhower voiced belief to- ilii.v that some American plane* ha\e been lured across Iron Curtain country borders by false radio signals. Klsenhower told a new* conference thal American pilots have strirt orders not to play a fox and hound game by flying along Soviet Imrder* In order lo gain Intelligence bifor- mallon.

Higher Auto Liability] Rates Start March 1

In that hearing, Mrs. Markward named an Annie Lee Moss ss a

t...-i:'LiOl\l. F'eh. 10 lA’ ' Aulo-.-i i.obile liability insurance rate* in Oonneetjeut will go up an av­erage of 12.9.per cent Maroh 1

A revised schedule was approved .vesterday hy State Insurance

N. Prerno. rejected a

schedule offered by insur^ce companies ■with rates averaging 19 per cent boosts.

Premo also placed, his approval on large hike* for drivers who have been lal'eled prone and placed

security, (j,e assigned risk classifica­tion.

Silver Spring, Md. 1 Commissioner AlfredIn January 1958 the U.S. Clr- He had previously

cuil Court of Appeals here sent the case back to the board with ifistnictions to let party lawyers see statements Mrs. Markward had' made to .the FBI and her testi­mony concerning Mrs. Moss at a Defen.sH Department hearing.

The highest regular rate in-1 crease is 20 P*r cent. The previou-s j — ----- — J V... [pg National

walked with her and the children from the Lomax home within aight of the school.-Only Mrs. Lomax was allowed lo enter’ the achool with the children.

Alexandria thus became the (ila.ssea in Virginia. j Daiibuiy. Feb. 10 i,Pi A pre-third Virginia community to ac-' Nearly 100 policemen, wearing ’ dawn fire, apparently erupting cepl Negro pupils, tinder court or- battle l\elmeta and carrying riot from a apace heater, killed t\v<> der, irilo previously all-white equipment, patrolled the Stratford , persons today a.s they slept. A school*. It was the first time arly grounds and vicinity. There were third was injured and seven other*Negro pupils had been admitted to no incidents. ' fj^d their home.

•the slate's elementary schools. lu Alexandria today the police Police identified the victims as prove epidemic year in this stale ................ ........................... r v mAt the same time the doors of were more relaxed and carried Benjamin Headv. 73. and Mra, for strep throat arid scarlet fever, Mds- Mbs* '

two other Alexandria schools were only .standard equipment .service Etta See'.ev Lockwood, 67.. . .The Bridgeport Bras.s, Co. is go- ^ .Negro, was suspended from her - gUvopened to even other Negro pupils, j revolvers and night sticks. Heady's hvothei. Sam 's on. ing to shift its ptumbiiig division pp„igg„„<,ode room. rrau

Previously 17 young Negroes in in all, seven grade school and aroused by neighbors. leaped 14 fnim Bridgeport to .Moultrie. Ga., protested that she wa.s aNorfolk and four in nearby Ailing-1 (wo high school pupils had been or- feel from a second story window according lo an announcement by j of mistajeen identification,ton had gon* to junior and .senior, dered admitted to' Alf-xandria of the apartment at 31 Patch St. Company President Austin . ly ; Charles E. Wilson, then secretary

i-sohool*. He wgs reported in fair condition & nder,. Actress Joan Davis isn't defense, said there vvaa certainBoth Afllngton and Alexandria; with superficial burn.*, smoke in- .going to prose'eute her ex-fiancee, derogatory information concern-

are Washington suburbs, and many; halatioif and a leg Injury. Harvey Stock Jr., for assault arid j,er prior’ io 1946 but ruledof their residents work in the na-; Mrs. Marv Beck arid her six chil- ba'ttery but she says there’s no thgf n didn't support a conclusion tion* capital. dren were driven from an adjoin- reconelltatton, ....H a rry Arons of that she was subversive ojr dis-

The Alexandria integration went I ing apartment Into' sleet and Nevvark. N. J., who just completed loyal.-into effect as a fourth Virginia freezing' rain. Robert Beck, 18, teaching a course in hypnosis for Mrs. Moss subsequently was put.aten. wM ^ut under court preit^'fav© the alarm. j medical men at Southern Method-. back on the government payrollsure. In Harrisonburg, U.S. DJs- Young Beck said he smelled.lst University, say* the technique and was assigned.!* a.clerk In the

— -------- [ '.J------- . I of hypnosis can be used as a He de* I --------- -(OeatlMMd M Pag* lliree) (Centtaaed ea Page TMrtMO) lector. (CoaManed ea Pago Five)

Assigned risk drivers came im-j der hikes ranging between 35 and ] 150 per cent. Hie original rate , proposed for them was much low-1 er, with a range of 15 to 25 per - cent. i

Premo, in a letter lo William; Leslie Jr., manager of the Under-1 w iters Bureau, said the revised . rates "are in line with our think­ing, and are not discriminatory i nor exceasive, when your reported loss ratios are carefully consider- ied.” I

He also praised the new assign- j ed risk rates. • !

The percentages of increases tn i bodily injury and property dam-1 age Insurance ratM a p p r o v e d

TE.MPERATUBE TOO IA)W Newport. R.I., Feb. 10 UPt—

Mr*. Rose RIondell, 63. has sur­vived at least five da.vs In an un­heated apartment wttliout food or water. Her Oondition. how­ever. today was dastribed aa critical with her body tempera- tiizo so low medical thermomet­er* cannot record it, A doctiw'at Newport Hospital said thermomf eter* go onlv as far as 94 d»- degrees - - 4.6 deirrees below nor­mal.

TRAWLER IN DISTRESS Halitax, N.Sh Feb. . 10 (P)-i-t

Rescue ships and plane* hoped for a break In the fog off New­foundland's aoutheeat coast to­day so they could search tor the i89-ton trawler Blue Wave and her cretv of 17. The Trawler’a Hkipper, Capt. Gharlea Walter, t radioed for help yesterday. He. said hlH vessel waa In danger o f capslz.ing 60 miles southwest •( Cape SI, Marys.

high schools.The Negro children entered

Ficklin a* white pupils were arriv­ing for today's clas.se*. '

The only excitement an.y of the white pupils displa.vM was an ex­pressed hope they might get' their pictures in the papers. As a bat­tery , of''photographers were snap- pini)' • away, the Lomax- children marched Into the school.

Undenvriters, i yesterday, including the figures was a 34.7 per cent hike. ] (bracketed) rejected l)y the m-

Those paying the greate.st liar i suraneg commissioner last month Lilitv in-surance increase. 20 per j follows: cent, instead of a proposed 291 k- ' Haven 12.7 (16.8): Waterbury 11.7per cent rise, will lie passenger car owner* in Fairfield County and the insurance district' of suh- v rban Waterbury, which includes Naugatuck and Middlebury among

'‘ other*.The original hike proposed for

Hartford was 34.7 per cw t. But instead their Hite liika March 1 will b« I t .l por cent.

(16.7): New ■ Britain 5.3 (9.2): Bridgeport 13.1 tl6.7): suburban Hartford 15,6 (18.7); HartfordCounty remsiitder 7.8 (9.4); New Haven County remainder 9.5 d i . l ) ; Norwalk and Westport 10.9 (,16;20),: Torrington, NetvLondon ahi4 Norwich 9. f ( l l .S ) ; re­mainder o f oUte aero (1.7).

STATE .AUU)IAN SnSSIN G j, Seioul, Feb. 10 VFh-nm VM, •

.Air Force said today tim e c k w >t men are mlastng from a twin Jed reconnaissance bonfber .wh^lf^ crashed In mud ftal* aoar san Air -Sano. others xvere injum^i I * out of theQlght from Ynfeota # “ ■ pan to Kunsaa. The i . were Capt Allan K ^om peom Conn,, lat *W. Glaadon, M Oktt4 lat 14. < ell Jfr., *4, Manartt'

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