Weather Report
Fair and
slightly
wanner this
afternoon.
Tomorrow
increasing
cioudine&s and mild with showers. The Ciimlierliinii News
3 County Coal Mines
Are Closed By Krug
(See Page 28>
WRECK
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Truman Backs Krug In Coal Row
518 “ Unsafe”
Mines Closed
By Secretary
Lewis Demands Firing
Of Cabinet Officer
WASHINGTON, April S (/Pi—Sec
retary* of the Interior Krug shut
down 518 “ danperous"soft coal mines
tocay just as J ohn L. Lewis renewed
a scorching attack upon him as a
“ acheming designing p o l i t i c i an
faithless to his trust.’*
Declaring that Krug should have
acted before 111 miners were killed
in the O ntralia, HI., mine blast,
Lew
roared out a demand for the
Secretary’s ouster.
"This is Krug's deathbed confes-
a: n * Lewis said, “ and oh God,
what a grotesque, monstrous m is
take he is in the position he oc
cupies.’*
But President Truman made it
emphatically clear that he has not
even considered removing the Cab
inet officer. The President declined
Presid ent Co nsid ers
Intervening To Hea d
Off Telep ho ne Tieup
Chief Executive Invest ¡gales To Determine
Whether He Has Power To Seize Industry
WASHINGTON,
April
3 (¿ P) — of any law which gives them the
L
Miners Stand For One
Second "In Contempt'
Of Krug And Truman
LOGAN. W Va , April 3 (/P)
—President William Blizzard,
of United Mine Workers Dis
trict
17, at
the
start of a
meeting
of
Logan
Miners,
called on them today to “ stand
for one second in contempt of
(Secretary) Krug and Presi
dent Truman **
The call followed one min
ute of silence for the victims
of the Central!*» 111., mine
disaster.
“ W ere working under an
injunction.**
said
Blizzard,
"not an injunction by the coal
operators but by the govern
ment
for which
our
boys
fought on every battlefield in
the Pacific and in Europe.”
PHONE TALK FICURES-, , . . ,
w„.
ren (right), chief United States conciliator, talks as J oseph A. Beim e
(center), president of the National Federation of Telephone Workers,
and J ohn Moran (left), president of the American Union of Tele
phone Workers, listen after a 2V» hour conference in Washington.
Beirne said “ the way things look now,” a nationwide telephone strike
will begin as scheduled April 7.
a* his news conference to comment
on Lewis' accusations, saying Krug
himself will answer them. Then in
reply to another question, Mr. Tru
man said he certainly had not given
any thought to removing Krug—
that the Secretary is an efficient
public official.
Krug ordered the 518 m ines—em-
p", ying 40 000 miners and producing
35 000 tons a day—to remain closed
a! ter the six -day ‘'mourning” shut-
c wn which Lewis ordered comes to
an end Sunday midnight. They will
b e reo p en ed
only when certified safe.
Three Maryland Mines Cloved
The 518 mines which Krug closed
pr ¡uce 616.000 tons of bituminous
coal a day and employ 102.699 men.
according to William J. Dougherty,
spokesman for the Solid Fuels Ad
ministration.
« Dougherty
at
first
estimated the output at 350,000 tons
a cay and the employment at 40 000
b t changed his figures after further
•tudy ).
The Coal Mines Administration
te? (Httveiy placed them as follows:
Pennsylvania
153, Kentucky 81,
IlUnoi.*- 49. Ohio 43. West Virginia
40 Alabama 32. Virginia 29, Arkan
sas and Indiana 19 each, Colorado
16. Ok.ahoma nine, Iowa six , Utah
four Mar*-land three, Kansas, Now
Mex ico, Tennessee and Washington
two each, Montana ore,
This adds to 512 The mines were
listed by companies and the loca
tio n o f the other six was not ascer
tained immediately.
I n t e r i o r Department officials
privately ex pressed the view that
the miners will be entitled to Plate
unemployment benefits during their
Idleness.
Krug acted while Lewis was be
fore a House Labor Subcommittee
accusing Krug of “ lying” when he
signed the Krug-I*ewls agreement
last May to set up a federal safety
code
Dei ending his order for the
’•mourning” shutdown. Lewis said it
was necessary to “ attract attention”
—to get Congress and Krug to act.
(Co ntinued o n Pa g e a . Co l. 4 )
Sena te Gro up Ap p ro ves
Greek -Turk Aid Pro g ra m
Marshall (alls
For Compromise
On Reparations
Molotov Says Bevin
Defends Dictators
MOSCOW, April 4 (/P)— Secretary
Marshall urged the Council of For
eign Minister* tonight to adopt a
compromise proposal on German re
parations in an effort to smash the
deadlock on this key issue barring
four-power
agreement
on
Ger
many’s future.
The
meeting, lasting for more
than
four
hours,
was
enlivened
when Soviet Foreign Minister V.
M. Molotov accused British Foreign
Secretary Ernest Bevin of defend
ing dictators and what Molotov said
was the kind of democracy prevalent
In Greece.
Soviet or French stands blocked
all progress on German neg otia
tions. In the only Issue of the day
which saw the Rassians,
British
and Americans on one side, the
French impeded action by refusing
to agree on establishment of nation
wide
political
parties
and
trade
unions for Germany.
Marshall'* Proposal
Marshall told the ministers the
United States wfas willing to con
sider limited German reparations
from current production, provided
the Allies agree to leave in Ger
many a number of industrial plants
now earmarked lor capital repara
tions.
There was no indication that the
Russians would accept his proposal,
which was taken up briefly at the
secret session of the ministers on
Tuesday. Whether It would be made
a basis for future negotiations re
mained to be seen.
Bevin proposed that the American
plan for a four-power pact against
Germany
be
discussed
tomorrow,
but Molotov objected, saying agree
ment should be reached on the first
Items on the agenda before taking
up others.
Shortly before Marshall's proposal
on
reparation*.
Gen.
Lucius
D
Clay, American military governor
for Germany who has been advis
ing Marshall here, left by plane for
Berlin.
Clay C alls It—“ Deadlock”
(In
Berlin Clay
told
newsmen
(Co ntinued o n Pa g e a , Co l. 6)
Amendment Gives U .N .
Right To End Project
Body Of Secretary In Philippine
t Embassy Found; Virginian Held
WASHINGTON. April 3 </P) —
The Senate Foreign Relations Com
mittee ¡stamped 13 to 0 approval on
President
Truman’s
Greek
and
Turkish aid program today alter
tacking
0 11 an amendment giving
the United Nations restricted power
to halt the program.
It was the first big test of the
proposal to bolster the two Mediter
ranean
countries
against
Com
munism by granting them $400.-
000,000 worth of financial and lim it
ed military aid,
A ¿ senate vote may come nex t
week.
Meantime,
an
Associated
Press survey showed a majority of
the House Foreign Affairs Commit
tee also favors passage.
The State Department sent to
the Senate committee today a docu
ment saying that the aid program
' is not directed against any leg iti
mate interests of the Soviet Union.”
Reply To Lawmakers’ Questions
This document was in reply to
a series of 111 questions raised by
members of Congress.
It said that the larger portion of
the guerillas plaguing the Greek
government probably are not mem
bers of the Communist Party but
“ virtually all of their leaders are.”
The Senate committee approved a
modified version of an amendment
written by its chairman. Sen. Van-
denberg (R-M ich). This new ver
sion, worked out after consulation
with Undersecretary of State Dean
Acheson, reads:
"The
President
Is
directed
to
withdraw any or all aid authorized
herein under any of the following
circumstances:
“ (1) If requested by the govern
ments of Greece and Turkey, re
spectively, representing a majority
of the people of either such na
tion;
U. S. Waives Veto Right
*‘(2) If the President Is officially
notified by the United Nations that
the Security Council
finds
(with
respect to which finding the United
States waives the ex ercises of the
veto) or that the General Assembly
finds that action taken or assistance
furnished
by the United Nations
makes the continuance of such as
sistance unnecessary or undesirable;
“ (3) If the President find* that
any purposes of the act have been
substantially accomplished by the
action of any other intergovernmen
tal organizations or finds that the
purposes of the act are incapable
of satisfactory accomplishment.”
The original Vandenberg amend
ment gave the United Nations the
power to stop the program by a
7-ou t-of-ll
vote of
the Security
Council or a majority vote of the
General Assembly.
President Truman tonight consid
ered intervening to prevent a na
tionwide
telephone
strike
which
union leaders described as seemingly
“ inevitable.”
Mr. Truman told a news confer
ence he is investigating to determine
whether he has authority to seize
the industry.
Mr. Truman’s seizure powers und
er the Smith-Connally Labor Dis
putes Act ex pired last December 31.
However, some officials are studying
the Federal Communications Act, in
the belief that it may permit seizure.
Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach
said he may ask Attorney General
Clark for a ruling on the govern
m ent’s pow?ers.
Wouldn’t Strike Against U. S.
He informed newsmen, however,
he probably will wait until Saturday
before making such a request, be
cause ex perience has shown “ they
never start talking seriously until
the last 24 hours.”
J ohn J . Moran, chairman of the
National Federation of Telephone
Workers, told reporters that if the
government finds a legal basis for
seizure, and acts on it. the 287.000
NFTW members will stay on their
jobs.
Moran made this comment as he
emerged from a government-spon
sored negotiating session with the
American Telephone and Telegraph
Company«
long
distance
service
section.
All concerned conceded that the
negotiations are in a stalem ate and
J . A. Beirne. NFTW president, today
messaged top telephone company o f
ficials that “ the apparent lack of
collective bargaining” i n d i c at e s
“ that a strike is inevitable.”
If they (the government) seized
the telephone industry, and there's
a law against striking, we’ll obey the I Breeze
Point plant,
la w,” Moran said. “ But I don’t know 15.400 are employed.
power.
Emergency Service Planned
Moran, president of the American
Union
of T e l e p h o n e Workers,
NFTW’s affiliate representing 20,000
long-distance
workers,
said
t h e
"haste” with which the House Labor
Committee considered the Hartley
bill
indicated
official
belief
that
seizure powers are lacking.
The
bill
would
authorize
the
President
to
obtain
injunctions
against strikes in key communica
tions and transport industries.
Chairman Hartley (R -N J ), whose
House Labor Committee approved
the bill 16 to 3 yesterday, has aban
doned
any
hope
of
getting
it
through Congress before Monday’s
6 a. m. (local time) strike d ead lin e-
less than four days off.
Beirne said that in event of a
strike emergency telephone service
will be furnished by the unions to
police, fire departments, hospitals
“ and
other services vital to the
preservation of life and safety.”
C. And P. Prepare*
BALTIMORE. April 3 (A*) — Offi
cials of the Chesapeake and Poto
mac
Telephone
Company
today
were making plans to maintain an
emergency service on essential calls
if nearly 9,000 workers carry out
their plan to strike the Maryland
company nex t Monday.
Indications
today were that a
strike would:
1. Bring an immediate curtailment
of manually-operated telephone ex
changes. That represents about 60
per cent of the service in Baltimore
2. Sharply reduced maintenance
work on dial systems, with an inter
ruption of service in case of break
downs.
3. Stop telephone equipment m an
ufacturing at the Western Electric
where
about
ADVENTURE S END
Norman
Kinsbursky,
4. sleeps soundly in his own bed after an unescorted two-mile tramp
through Los Angeles following his disappearance from a friend’s
birthday party.
While his frantic parents and police sought him,
he showed up at home alone, having done what any good backwoods
man would have done. “ I followed the tracks,” he said. Street car
tracks, that is.
Lilientha l Wins Sena te
Test By 5 2 To 3 8 Ma rg in
+
-----
Recommittal Motion
Rejected By Chamber
Britain Lashes
At Russian Veto
In U.N. Council
Rep. Eaton Assails
Soviet In Capital
I.AKES SUCCESS, N. Y., April 3
(/P) — Britain declared today that
Soviet Russia “ strangled” the m a
jority will of the United Nations
Security
Council
by
vetoing
a
British
resolution
censuring
Al
bania in the Corfu Channel Mine
case.
Tills accusation touched off once
more a lively battle over the veto
right of the five great powers, and
the argument temporarily eclipsed
the Albanian-Brltish dispute.
Andrei A. Gromyko, Soviet Deputy
Foreign Minister, who has invoked
nine of the 10 vetoes Russia has
cast in the Security Council listened
calmly to Cadogan. Then he Joined
with Dr. Oscar Lange, of Poland,
in calling Cadogan “ out of order”
for throwing the veto issue into the
Albanian case.
IT. S. "Initiator No. 1” Of Veto
Gromyko said the United States
was "initiator No. 1” of the veto
and Britain was "No. 2.”
Russia’s use of the veto also was
criticized in Washington by Rep.
Eaton
(R -N J ), chairman of
the
House Foreign Affairs Committee,
who was an alternate United States
delegate
in
the
United
Nations
General
Assembly last
fall when
(Co ntinued o n Pa g e
a . Co l. 4)
Louisiana Milk
Strike Is Called
Off By Dairymen
New Orleans Will
Get Shipments Today
WASHINGTON,
April
3
OF) —
David E. Lilienthal, President Tru
m an’s choice for chairman of the
Atomic Energy Commission, scored
a major victory today when the
Senate refused, 52 to 38, to send his
nomination back to committee for
an FBI check.
This was widely interpreted as
meaning that the Senate will con
firm Lilienthal when a final vote
comes, perhaps nex t week.
Sens. Vandenberg (R-M ich) and,
Taft (R-Ohio), sometimes regarded
NEW ORLEANS, April 3.
OP)—
us the “ Big Two” among Senate Acting Sheriff J ohn Hoi stead, of
Republicans, split on the issue.
Tangipahoa Parish, said tonight he
Taft supported the recom m ittal! h^d
been officially
informed the
motion offered by hfs first term Louisiana milk strike has been call-
colleague. Sen. Brieker (R-Ohio).
; ed off and union dairyman will be-
Vandenberg, hardly an hour be- "in to^hip milk to New Orleans to-
fore the vote, appealed for rejection morrow.
of the motion and for quick con-
The sheriff’s announcement came
firmation of Lilienthal as a “ re- after an hour-long meeting of strik-
liable” man.
i ing dairymen, members of Amite.
The Semite had agreed in advance La., Local No. 16. Dairy Employes,
to recess until Monday if the Brieker Chauffeurs and Maintenance Km
Jap Reparations
Order Is Jammed
Through By U. S.
Four Members Of Far
East Agency Protest
WASHINGTON. April 3 f/P—'The apparently insurmountabVJ odds?
I
At the conclusion of the meeting,
•— •*
^
ou im .m u u s no.
United States jammed through an
Both sides said
the opposition
L. Russell, president of the
A m i t e ^ u* Chicago ar n
p. m. The
order for an immediate start, on nrohnhiv
innctnmH
<rroa*« ct local, said he had no statem ent to 1 an roan said the train was ccmpos-
motion lost.
Odds Against Lilienthal Foes
pToyes (AFL>.
Approx imately 200 persons attend-
The
breathing
spell
will
give 1
Lilienthal’« opponents an opportun- fV:o T
*
V
’. p r e s ! ! n t K 0
ity to decide whether to carry on
Louisiana Federation of Labor.
the fig ht nex t week in the face of
Statement To Be Issued
Tractor Falls
From Freight,
Derails Train
Cars Upset, Strike
Passenger Station
CHICAGO, Ap ril 3 VP)—At
• least two p erso n s were rep o rt
ed k illed an d ab o u t 10 0 in ju r
ed wh en th e Bu rlin g to n Rail
ro ad ’s
sp eed in g Twin
City
Zep h y r was d erailed to n ig h t
in su b u rb an Do wn er’s
Grove
b y a tracto r th at fell fro m
a
p assin g freig h t.
1 lie eastbound Zephyr passenger
train, which a railroad spokesman
said
ordinarily
p as s e s
through
Downer s Grove at 75-miles an hour,
is of modern, stainless-steel con
struction, and an observer said th#
structural strength of the cars ap
parently held down the number of
dead.
A reporter said that none of the
eight cars in the train was damaged
badly.
Nearby Hinsdale Sanitarium said
that “ between 30 and 40 injured
persons" had been brought there.
Copley Hospital at Aurora reported
one injured passenger had arrived
there.
Downer s Grove is located 21 miles
southwest of Chicago’s Loop, nine
miles from Naperville, also in Du
page County, where 45 persons died
last April 25 in the collision of two
other Burlington trains.
Car Strike* Station
Downer's Grove police said that
the first three or four cars of the
streamlined, stainless-steel train —
eastbound irom Minneapolis to Chi
cago—overturned and smashed in
to a passenger station after the
Zephyr struck an object that drop
ped
from
a
passing
westbound
freight train.
T. E. Pratt, transportation of
ficer for the Burlington, said the
Diesel
Zephyr
was derailed
by
"something" which fell on the track
from a
westbound
freight train
passing
on
an
adjoining
track.
Downer's Grove
police
also said
that the passenger train had struck
an
obstruction
which
apparently
dropped from a westbound freight.
Du Page County sheriff’s police
made the first estimate on the num
ber of injured and said all available
ambulances, doctor« and police had
been rushed to the scene.
ltcd C'rosH Mobilize«
The Chicago Red Cro ss said it
was mobilizing all its facilities.
Many of the injured were taken
to Hinsdale Sanitarium and Elm
hurst Hospital, and doctors from
Downers Grove and
several
sur
rounding towns were called to the
scene of the wreck.
Hinsdale Sanitarium said 18 In
jured had been brought there w ith
in an hour after the wreck and said
"more were on the way.”
Downer’s Grove police fix ed the
time of the wreck at 10:41 p. m.
Central Standard Time. The train
known as the Burlington’s No. 24
order for an immediate start on probably
mustered
its
greatest
reparations from J apan today in strength in today’s test,
the face of protests
from some
Voting to recommit were 31 Re-
other members of the 11-nation Far publicans
and
seven
Democrats,
Eastern Commission.
I while the victorious side included
A
diplomatic
official
said
the *8 Republicans and 34 Democrats,
action
taken to benefit China and
Tt was a bitter defeat for Sen.
other war-torn lands—drew protests McKellar (D -Tenn), who has been
from Russian, French, Tndiun and Fighting Lillet it lial at every oppor-
Australian
representatives
at
a tunlty for years. McKellar. in nn-
commlssion meeting.
|other last move, blocked an effort
It was the first time the United :*)V ^ n* Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) to
States has resorted to such drastic ^
a.frreemertt to vote on the
action. In doing so, it was said t o !I T
,
nomination at 5 p. m.
have been supported by New Zea-
n
v
land, Canada, China, the Nether
lands and the Philippines.
Great
Britain steered elear of the dispute. . *
, .
—
.......
The maneuver was accomplished
.rouJ
eca
n ^ years
Ht
a
commission
meeting
toduv a ...
urged
his
eoi
when the United States issued an
wltliout. further investigation.”
“ Interim directive” to Gen. Douglas'
declared that
logic, equity,
MacArthur, Supreme Allied Com-
^ ay and a
reKard for
mander for J apan, telling him to l,rgent public w elfare’ demand ap-
put the plan into effect immediately. I)roval °f President Truman’s choice
TT« H« r
* v. „ j ; I
at once.
He said atomic d cyclop-
local, said he had no statem ent to
make but that Glinn Hendry, fi
nancial
secretary,
would
Issue a
statem ent soon.
A union member, who asked that
his name not be used, told a news
man milk would move into New Or
leans from the Florida parishes to
morrow morning. He said non-strik
ing producers had agreed they would
not move their trucks until after
daylight, however.
The development came while Gov
ed of seven cars.
New Greek King Marches
Behind Brother’ s Coff'n
Monday
Vandenberg said the com mittee’s
ex amination of the nominee was
the most ex haustive and thorough
of service
confirmation
Under commission rules the direc
live is subject to later commission
review, but it cannot be changed
unless the United States as one of
the “ veto powers” agrees.
This development came to light
(Co ntinued o n Pa g e a . Co l. i)
Fireworks Plant Blasl
lakes ìwo Mote lives
ARLINGTON. V i. April 3 UV—i Sunday, the day she disappeared.
The
body of pretty W jnona Har-ifrom Dr. Fred erick Ha rris, p a sto r o f C LIN TO N
Mo Anril
3 op» —The
2i ‘: *
w e t ar y in the Philip- the Foundry
Church.
raging fire that ¿ wept throug h the
•" ’*
way found in a s c - *
Dr. Harria said the young woman Brown
fireworks
factory
leveling
<
led vpot near the Potomac River talked with
him “ at great leng th” ¡the one-story fram e building and
t
.aid u tew hours later police Thursday
concerning her feeling* burning
to denth
10 emnlovcr.
p "
• *' *:■*!••
Of Char- for a “ young man named Ted" who
‘ *
kntesviile,
was
brought here for ¡she « aid had been in the armed
questioning .
'services and “ come back a changed
Detective J . E Wood. Charlottes- man.”
vi.ie. and
Arlington police ernpha-1
When she returned at 1:15 Sun-
sized
that
no
cha rg es ha d
been day morning, Dr. Harris said, she
p.aced against Buck, who they said asked if it was too late for him to
hac
once
been engaged
to Miss talk with her.
She said she had
Harvey.
Arlington Detective Capt. j awakened from a terrible dream and
Hugh C J ones went to Charlottes- j had to talk to him.
viije for Buck.
Arlington police said the position
Coroner W C Welburn. who con- !of the body indicated it could have
ducted an autopsy, said the girl had ! dropped from a mound of earth
been dead two or three days an d 'near a culvert, on the George Wash-
there a*.* “ no evidence of foul play ington Parkway.
a - ^ 0it n0e
1
Mlsfi Harvey’s coat and hat were
H ie inquiry developed, police said, missing, but her other clothing and
wab(ht guidance;J ewelry, including a wrist watch and
last Thursday and
a \ 1:15 a m., on ¡strand of gold beads, were intact.
Strike O f Western Union
Em ployes Is Possibility
mrnt in the United States has been
“ stag nating too many months” be
cause of the uncertainty.
He told the Senate and the packed
galleries that Lilienthal is “ no part
of a Communist,” and has no sym
pathy for Communism or tolerance
for it.
Vandenberg Hits Atom Suggestion
Vandenberg criticized suggestions
—by Taft among others—that the
atomic energy control law be re
vised to turn control back to the
military.
“ In peace tim e you cannot drive
scientists into the laboratories with
bayonets,” he said.
Sen. Hirkenlooper told the Senate
tt\&l
Vhe
MoirAc
Committee
Vie
Five Killed In Crash
ATHENS, April 3 (/P)—Greeks who
lined (he curb* 10 to 15 deep got
their first glimpse of King Paul to
day since his accession as he march-
tam r win« - uuv. ,,(l unattended behind a gun carrier
J immie H. Davis was reported seek- 1>onrinK the flag-draped coffin of his
ing a solution to the 10-day-old brother, George II, from the royal
strike.
palace to the Athens Cathedral.
Ample
milk flowed into New Or-
1 ,ie new King was clad in th<§
(C o ntinued o n Pa g e a . Co l.
6)
uniform of a vice admiral and led
1 his six -year-old son, Crown Prince
Constant inc.
by
the
hand.
The
youngster, w e ar i n g gray flannel
AX A
r>I
i
it*
•
•
Ut Arm v Plane
In Virninia
r«-n>‘nder tr,™ m* father
R rrH M nw n
\ ta
,
i J®
p l,Ls e>es straight ahead. In
RiCHMOND. Va., April 3. (/P>— keeping with royal demeanor.
Two Aimy officers and three en-
The dead monarch will lie in state
listed men were killed today when! in the cathedral until Sunday when
their A-26 t w o - m o t o r e d plane funeral sevices will be held
crashed and ex ploded in a wooded
— —__________ _ _ L
section of Chesterfield County about -,
18 miles southwest of here. Rich- F flflP r R m aH r ac f
mond Army Air Base officials said
M IU Q U iO J l
to£ j? ht-
i
ANNAPOLIS. Md., April 3. OP—
The names of the victims were The Navy Academy choir of
no
withheld
pending
notification
of|vo4ces will broadcast a program of
nex t of kin. Army officials said the
plane was en route from Myrtle
Beach, S, C., to Washington, D. C
Easter songs over a National Broad
casting Company, network Sunday
•t 0:90 a m.
claimed two more lives today.
Mrs.
Morton
J ohnson, 5i, and
Mrs. Hazel Shepard, 28, died this
morning from burns, bringing to 12
the number dead from the blaze
that followed an ex plosion at the
plant about 2:30 p. ni. yesterday.
Train Strikes Poles
WILMINGTON, Del., April 3 OP)
—The P e n n s y l va nia’s fast New
Y o r k-Washington “ J udiciary” was
delayed an hour and 40 minutes to
day when it struck two telephone
poles protruding from a t r a i ler-
truck at a grade crossing six miles
south of here.
NEW YORK, Ap ril 3 (/P) — A|n strik e co u ld b e called an y time
rtaWo rwid e strik e o i !>0,00b W esten L ^T Way 3, Pay n e said .
.
—-
---------
------------- -
Union Telegraph Com pany worker*
A
union
policy committee will
^a<^ established that Lillen-i
outside o f the New York m e tr o -1 rema in in co ntinuo us sessio n here. tl,a I
ftn<* other comminsJ on nom inees /
WAHHINOTON
Anrit a
politan
area
loomed
as a
posst- the president said, and will decide !
"« hie and capable m en, morally f di . . .
lr,
bility today as the APL C o m m e r c i al when and if to poll the m em bership ■ « hove reproach,”
Telegraphers Union sent out notices on « strike.
Truman Says Red s In Go v ern men t
Are Men ace Bu t th in k s Natio n Sate
Payne « aid
the employes
were
.seeking a wage increase of 2ft cents
an hour and a 40-hour week, plus
health-welfare anti pension benefits
The company
has stated
that
present rates of pay for a ll emp lo yes
down-grading and unilateral wage I i311*
messengers average $1.08 an
cuts.”
hour.
Motor messengers get 88.7
vents an hour, and walking and
of Intent to call a walkout.
J esse A. Payne, the union presi
dent, asserted there had been a
"complete collapse of collective bar
g aining” and accused the company
of
effecting
“ wholesale
layoffs,
cuts.
The intent to strike notices were
sent
to
the
company.
President
Truman, the United States Labor
Department and the National Labor
Relations Board, the union head
said.
He ex plained that the telegraph
ers’ contract with Western Union
ex pired April 1 but was ex tended to
J uly. However, the contract had a
30-day cancellation clause so that.
bicycle messengers 65.4 cents, the
concern said.
About 50,000 workers are Involved
in the dispute, Payne said, with
40.000 belonging to the CTU and
10.000 others in the Telegraph Em
ployes Union
and
the Telegraph
Workers
Union,
both
AFL.
The
smaller
unions
have
participated
with the CTU in the negotiations,
which began March 10
,
above reproach.
T aft in his turn said Lilienthal
(C o ntinued o n Pa g e
a , Co l. j )
Truman Sees Beginning
Of Trend To Democrats
WASHINGTON, April 3. (/D—A
beaming President Truman today
interpreted the triumph of Demo
crat Martin Kennelly in the Chi
cago mayoral election as the be
ginning of a trend to the Democrat« .
In Jovial mood at his news con
ference, Mr. Truman observed that
Carroll Rcere, Republican National
Chairman, does not agree that the
result Indicates any trend. But the
President added that, Reece held a
different view of its importance be
fore the results were in.
ment posts are a menace In the eyes
of President Truman but thetr party
as a political force is not a danger
to the nation.
That
was the ex planation
the
President gave to his news confer
ence today of a letter he wrote
to George H. JKarle, 3d, on February
28 saying that “ people are very
much wrought up about the Com
munist bugaboo, but I am of the
opinion that the country is per
fectly safe so far as Communism
is concerned—we have too many
sane people.”
Earle, former diplomat and Penn
sylvania Governor, had commented
in Philadelphia that Mr. Truman’s
“ bugaboo”
characterization
“ as
tonishes me.” He made public a
reply to the President dated March
4, saying;
(/P) — I
“ When you refer to the Corn-
govern- ; munlst menace as a bugaboo. It i*
I be most frightening thing I have
ever heard
"I am so worried that I Intend
to bring tills mutter to the atten
tion of the leaders of our (Demo
cratic) party and of the majority
party and it their opinion coincides
with yours, the future of our coun
try is without hope.”
Mr. Truman, when asked about
the matter, gave this interpretation
of his views:
He Is not worried about the Com
munist Party taking over the gov
ernment because the country has
too much sense ever to go Com
munist
He
Is
against
a
person
whose loyalty is not to the govern
ment of the United States holding
a
government
Job.
He
consider*
these two points entirely different
things.
Weather Report
Fair and slightly warmer this
afternoon.
Tomorrow
Increasing
Cloudiness and mild with showers. The Cumberland News
3 County Coal Mines
Are Closed By Krug
(Sec Page 28)
vex.. 9— NO. 149
28 PAGES
CUM BERLAND/ MARYLAND,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4,
1947
FIVE CENTS
TWO DIE. IOO
RAIL WRECK
*
it
♦
it
it
*
it
it
*
it -it
it
it
*
it
it
*
Truman Backs Krug In Coal Row
518 Unsafe”
Mines Closed
By Secretary
Lewd Demands Firing
Of Cabinet Officer
WASHINGTON. April 3 iffy—Sec
retary of the Interior Krug shut
down 518 "dangerous"Aoft coal mines
today just as John L. Lewis renewed
rn scorching attack upon him aa a
"scheming designing p o l i t i c i a n
faithless to his trust.1*
Declaring that Krug should have
acted before 111 miners were killed
in the Centralia. 111., mine blast.
Lewis roared out a demand for the
Secretary’s ouster.
“This is Krug's deathbed confes
sion ” Lewis said, “and oh God,
what s grotesque, monstrous mis
take he is ic the position he oc
cupies. ”
But President Truman made it
emphatically clear that he has not
even considered removing the Cab
inet officer. The President declined
Millers Stand For One
Second "In Contempt'
Of KrngAnd Truman
LOGAN. W. Va., April 3 (>P>
—President William Billiard,
of United Mine Workers Dis
trict 17, at the start of a
meeting of Logan
Miners,
called on them today to “stand
for one second in contempt of
• Secretary» Krug and Presi
dent Truman.’*
The call followed one min
ute of silence for the victims
of the Centralia, HL, mine
disaster.
“We're working aulder Mi
injunction.’*
said
Blizzard,
' not an injunction by the coal
operators but by the govern
ment
far which
our boys
fought on every battlefield in
the Pacific and in Europe.”
at his news conference to comment
on Lewis' accusation*, saying Krug
himself will answer them. Then in
reply to another question, Mr. Tru
man said he certainly had not given
any thought to removing Krug—
that the Secretary is an efficient
public official.
Krug ordered the 518 mines—em
ploying 40.000 miners and producing
350 000 terns a day—to remain closed
after the six-day ''mourning” shut
down which Lewis ordered comes to
an end Sunday midnight. They will
be reopened only when certified safe.
Three Maryland Mine* Closed
The 518 mines which Krug closed
produce 616.000 tons of bituminous
coal a day and employ 102.699 men.
according to William J. Dougherty,
spokesman for the Solid Fuels Ad
ministration.
< Dougherty at first
estimated the output at 350.000 tons
a day and the employment at 40 OOO
but changed his figures after further
Study).
The Coal Mines Administration
tentatively placed them as follows:
Pennsylvania 153, Kentucky 81,
Illinois 49. Ohio 43. West Virginia
40 Alabama 32. Virginia 29, Arkan
sas and Indiana 19 each, Colorado
16. Oklahoma nine, Iowa six. Utah
four, M a ry la n d three. Kansas, New
Mexico. Tennessee and Washington
two each. Montana ore.
This adds to 512 Tile mines were
listed by companies and the loca
tion of the other six was not ascer
tained Immediately.
I n t e r i o r Department officials
privately expressed the view that
the miners will be entitled to state
unemployment benefits during their
Idleness
Krug acted while Lewis was be
fore a House Labor Subcommittee
accusing Krug of "lying" when he
signed the Krug-Lewis agreement
last May to set up a federal safety
code Defending his order for the
"mourning" shutdown. Lewis said it
was necessary to "attract attention”
—to get Congress and Krug to act.
(Continued on Page a, Cot. 4)
PHONE TALK FIGURES “
Edgar L. War
ren (right), chief United States conciliator, talks aa Joseph A. Beime
(center), president of the National Federation of Telephone Workers,
and John Moran (left), president of the American Union of Tele
phone Workers, listen after a SH hour conference in Washington.
Beime said "the way things look now,” a nationwide telephone strike
will begin as scheduled April 7.
Senate Group Approves
Greek-Turk Aid Program
Manhall (alls
For Compromise
On Reparations
Molotov Says Be?ii
Defends Dictators
MOSCOW, April 4 (AP)—Secretary
Marshall urged the Council of For
eign Ministers tonight to adopt a
compromise proposal on German re
parations in an effort to smash the
deadlock on this key issue barring
four-power
agreement
on
Ger
many’s future.
The meeting, lasting for more
than four hours, was enlivened
when Soviet Foreign Minister V.
M. Molotov accused British Foreign
Secretary Ernest Bevln of defend
ing dictators and what Molotov said
was the kind of democracy prevalent
in Greece.
Soviet or French stands blocked
all progress on German negotia
tions. In the only issue of the day
which saw the Russians, British
and Americans on one side, the
French impeded action by refusing
to agree on establishment of nation
wide political parties and trade
unions for Germany.
Marshall's Proposal
Marshall told the ministers the
United States was willing to con
sider limited German reparations
from current production, provided
the Allies agree to leave in Ger
many a number of industrial plants
now earmarked for capital repara
tions.
There was no indication that the
Russians would accept his proposal,
which was taken up briefly at the
secret session of the ministers on
Tuesday. Whether it would be made
a basis for future negotiations re
mained to be seen.
Bevln proiKtsed that the American
plan for a four-power pact against
Germany be discussed tomorrow,
but Molotov objected, saying agree
ment should be reached on the first
items on the agenda before taking
up others.
Shortly before Marshall's proposal
on
reparations, Gen. Lucius D.
Clay. American military governor
for Germany who has been advis
ing Marshall here, left by plane for
Berlin.
Clay Calk It—"Deadlock”
(In Berlin Clay told newsmen
(Continued on Page a, Col. 4)
Body Of Secretary In Philippine
t Embassy Found; Virginian Held
A R L IN G T O N . V a.. A p ril 3 CA*)—
The body of pretty Wynona Har
vey. 25. a secretary in the Philip
pine Embassy, wa* found in a se
clu d ed spot n ea r the Potomac River
to d a y a n d a few hours later police
said Theodore Buck. 26. of Char
iot irs Ville.
warn
brought here for
q u e stio n in g .
Detective J. E Wood. Charlottes
ville. and Arlington police empha
siz ed that no charges had been
p.aced agama Buck, who they said
hac once been engaged to Miss
Haney. Arlington Detective Capt.
Hugh C. Jones went to Charlottes
ville for Buck.
Coroner W C Wei burn, who con
ducted an autopsy, said the girl had
been dead two or three days and
there w*. ‘ no evidence of foul play
m v‘clr nee "
Hie inquiry- developed, police said.
Bhat Miss Harvey sought guidance
last Thursday and ai 1:15 a. rn., on
Sunday, the day she disappeared,
from Dr. Frederick Harris, pastor of
the Foundry Methodist Church.
Dr Harris said the young woman
talked with him “at great length"
Thursday concerning her feelings
for a "youn*: man named Ted” who
she said had been in the armed
services and "come back a changed
man."
When she returned at 1:15 Sun
day morning. Dr. Harris said, the
asked if it was too late for him to
talk with her. She said she had
awakened from a terrible dream and
had to talk to him.
Arlington police said the position
of the body indicated it could have
dropped from a mound of earth
j near a culvert on the George Wash
ington Parkway.
Miss Harvey's coat and hat were
missing, but her other clothing and
Jewelry, including a wrist watch and
1 strand of gold beads, were Intact*
Amendment Gives U.N.
Right To End Project
WASHINGTON, April 3 (ZP) —
The Senate Foreign Relations Com
mittee stamped 18 to 0 approval on
President
Truman’s
Greek
and
Turkish aid program today after
tacking on an amendment giving
the United Nations restricted power
to halt the program.
It was the first Mg test of the
proposal to bolster the two Mediter
ranean
countries
against
Com
munism by granting them $400,-
000,000 worth of financial and limit
ed military ald.
A Senate vote may come next
week.
Meantime,
an
Associated
Press survey showed a majority of
the House Foreign Affairs Commit
tee also favors passage.
The State Department sent to
the Senate committee today a docu
ment saying that the aid program
"la not directed against any legiti
mate interests of the Soviet Union.
Reply To Lawmakers* Questions
This document was in reply to
a series of 111 questions raised by-
members of Congress.
It said that the larger portion of
the guerillas plaguing the Greek
government probably are not mem
ben of the Communist Party but
“virtually all of their leaders are."
The Senate committee approved a
modified version of an amendment
written by its chairman. Sen. Van
denberg (R-Mich). This new ver
sion. worked out after commulation
with Undersecretary of State Dean
Acheson, reads:
"The President is directed to
withdraw any or all aid authorized
herein under any of the following
circumstances:
"(I) If requested by tile govern
ments of Greece and Turkey, re
spectively, representing a majority
of the people of either such na
tion;
U. 8. Waives Veto Right
**(2> If the President is officially
notified by the United Nations that
the Security Council finds (with
respect to which finding the United
States waives the exercises of tile
veto) or that the General Assembly
finds that action taken or assistance
furnished by the United Nations
makes the continuance of such as
sistance unnecessary or undesirable:
"(3) If the President finds that
any purposes of the act have bren
substantially accomplished by the
action of any other intergovernmen
tal organizations or finds that the
purposes of the act are incapable
of satisfactory accomplishment.”
The original Vandenberg amend
ment gave the United Nations the
power to stop the program by a
7-out-of-lI vote of the Security
Council or a majority vote of the
General Assembly.
President Considers
Intervening To Head
Off Telephone Tieup
Chief Executive Invest igaffes To Determine
Whether He Has Power To Seize Industry
WASHINGTON, April 3 (iP> —
President Truman tonight consid
ered intervening to prevent a na
tionwide
telephone
strike which
union leaders described as seemingly
“inevitable."
Mr. Truman told a news confer
ence he is investigating to determine
whether he has authority to seize
the industry.
Mr. Truman’s seizure powers und
er the Smith-Connally Labor Dis
putes Act expired last December 31.
However, some officials are studying
the Federal Communications Act, in
the belief that it may permit seizure.
Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach
said he may ask Attorney General
Clark for a ruling on the govern
ment's powers.
Wouldn’t Strike Against U. 8.
He informed newsmen, however.
he probably will wait until Saturday
before making such a request, be
cause experience has shown "they
never start talking seriously until
the last 24 hours.”
John J. Moran, chairman of the
National Federation of Telephone
Workers, told reporters that if the
government finds a legal basis for
seizure, and acts on it. the 287.000
NFTW members will stay on their
jobs.
Moran made this comment as he
emerged from a government-spon
sored negotiating session with the
American Telephone and Telegraph
Company's long distance service
section.
All concerned conceded that the
negotiations are in a stalemate, and
J. A. Beirne. NFTW president, today
messaged top telephone company of
ficials that “the apparent lack of
collective bargaining" i n d i e a t e s
"that a strike is inevitable ”
"If they (the government) seized
the telephone industry, and there’s
a law against striking, we’ll obey the
law." Moran said. "But I don’t know
of any law which gives them the
power."
Emergency Service Planned
Moran, president of the American
Union of T e l e p h o n e Workers,
NFTW’s affiliate representing 20.000
long-distance
workers, said
th e
‘ haste" with which the House Labor
Committee considered the Hartley
bill indicated official belief that
seizure powers are lacking.
The bill
would
authorize the
President
to
obtain
injunctions
against strikes in key communica
tions and transport industries.
Chairman Hartley (R-NJ), whose
House Labor Committee approved
the bill 16 to 3 yesterday, has aban
doned
any hope
of
getting it
through Congress before Monday’s
6 a. rn. (local time) strike deadline-
less than four days off.
Beirne said that in event of a
strike emergency telephone service
alii be furnished by the unions to
police, fire departments, hospitals
"and other services vital to the
preservation of life and safety.”
C. And P. Prepare*
BALTIMORE. April 3 oV)—Offi
cials of the Chesapeake and Poto
mac
Telephone
Company
today
were making plans to maintain an
emergency service on essential calls
if nearly 9,000 workers carry out
their plan to strike the Maryland
company next Monday.
Indications today were that a
strike would:
I. Bring an immediate curtailment
of manually-operated telephone ex
changes. That represents about 60
per cent of the service in Baltimore.
3. Sharply reduced maintenance
work on dial systems, with mn inter
ruption of service In case of break
downs.
3. Stop telephone equipment man
ufacturing at the Western Electric
Breeze Point plant, where about
5,400 are employed.
Fireworks Plant Blast
Takes Two More Lives
CLINTON, Mo., April 3 0F>—The
raging fire that swept through the
Brown fireworks factory, leveling
the one-story frame building and
burning
to
death
IO employes,
claimed two more lives today.
Mrs. Morton Johnson, 51, and
Mn. Hazel Shepard, 28. died this
morning from burns, bringing to 12
the number dead from the blaze
that followed an explosion at the
plant about 2:30 p. in. yesterday.
Britain Lashes
Al Russian Veto
In U.N. Council
Rep. Eaton Assails
Soviet In Capital
LAKES SUCCESS. N. Y„ April 3
i/P) — Britain declared today that
Soviet Russia "strangled" the ma
jority will of the United Nations
Security
Council
by
vetoing
a
British
resolution
censuring
Al
bania In the Corfu Channel Mine
case.
This accusation touched off once
more a lively battle over the veto
right of the five great powers, ami
the argument teini>orarlly eclipsed
the Albanian-Brltish dispute.
Andrei A. Gromyko. Soviet Deputy
Foreign Minister, who has invoked
nine of the IO vetoes Russia has
cast in the Security Council listened
calmly to Cadogan. Then he Joined
with Dr. Oscar Lange, of Poland.
In calling Cadogan "out of order”
for throwing the veto issue into tile
Albanian case.
IL S. "Initiator No. I” Of Veto
Gromyko said the United 8tates
was "initiator No. I" of the veto
and Britain was "No. 2."
Russia's use of the veto also was
criticized In Washington by Rep.
Eaton (R-NJ), chairman of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee,
wiio was an alternate United States
delegate in the United Nations
General Assembly last fall when
(Continued on Page a. Col. 4)
Jap Reparations
Order Is Jammed
Through By U. S.
Four Members Of Far
East Agency Protest
WASHINGTON, April 3 OF)—The
United States jammed through an
order for an immediate start on
reparations from Japan today in
the face of protests from some
other members of the Il-nation Far
Eastern Commission.
A diplomatic official said the
action—taken to benefit China and
other war-torn lands—drew protests
from Russian, French, Indian and
Australian
representatives
at
a
commission meeting.
It was the first time the United
States has resorted to such drastic
action. In doing so. it was said to
have been supported by New Zea
land, Canada, China, the Nether
lands and the Philippines. Great
Britain steered clear of the dispute.
The maneuver was accomplished
at a commission meeting today
when the United States issued an
"Interim directive" to Gen. Douglas
MacArthur, Supreme Allied Com
mander for Japan, telling him to
put the plan into effect immediately.
Under commission rules the direc
tive is subject to later commission
review, but it cannot be changed
unless the United States as one of
the "veto powers’* agrees.
Tills development came to light
(Continued on Page 2. Col. 1)
PT
•
ADVENTURE S END
Norman
K insbursky,
4, sleeps soundly in his own bed after an unescorted two-mile tramp
through Los Angeles following his disappearance from a friend’s
birthday party. While his frantic parents and police sought him,
he showed up at home alone, having done what any good backwoods
man would have done. "I followed the tracks," he said. Street car
tracks, that is.
Lilienthal Wins Senate
Test By 52 To 38 Margin
taoMmillil Modo*
Lo H ij,a H a M i|k~
Strike Is (ailed
Off By Dairymen
Un M e w WU
Get Shipments Today
tractor Falls
From Freight
Derails Train
(ars Upset, Strike
Passenger Station
CHICAGO, April 3 6«P>—At
least two persons were report
ed killed and about IOO injur
ed when the Burlington Rail
road’s speeding Twin City
Zephyr was derailed tonight
in suburban Downer's Grove
by a tractor that fell from a
passing freight.
Tile eastbound Zephyr passenger
| train, which a railroad spokesman
I said ordinarily p a s s e s through
(Downer s Grove at 75-miles an hour,
I is of modern, stainless-steel con
struction, and an observer said tha
I structural strength of the cars ap
parently held down the number of
I dead.
I
A reporter said that none of the
| eight cars In the train was damaged
badly.
Nearby Hinsdale Sanitarium said
that "between 30 and 40 injured
persona" had been brought there.
Copley Hospital at Aurora reported
one injured passenger had arrived
there.
Downer’s Grove Is located 21 miles
southwest of Chicago's Loop, nine
miles from Naperville, also in Du
page County, where 45 persons died
last April 25 in the collision of two
other Burlington trains.
Car Strikes Station
Downer's Grove police said that
the first three or four cars of tha
| streamlined, stabile.?*-steel train —
eastbound from Minneapolis to Chi
cago—overturned and smashed in
to a passenger stat tem after tha
Zephyr struck an object that drop
ped
from
a
passing
westbound
freight train.
T. E. Pratt, transportation of
ficer for the Burlington, said tha
Diesel
Zephyr was derailed by
"something" which fell on the track
from a
westbound
freight train
passing
on
an adjoining
track.
Downer's Grove police also said
that the passenger train had struck
an obstruction which apparently
dropped from a westbound freight.
Du Page County sheriff’s police
...
___
made the first estimate on the num-
NEW ORLEANS. April 3. (£*)— ber of injured and said all available
Acting Sheriff John Holstead. of ambulances, doctors and police had
Tangipahoa Parish, said tonight hejtw^n rushed to the scene
Red Crow Mobilize*
Rejected By Chamber
WASHINGTON, April 3 WPI —
David E. Lilienthal. President Tru
man’s choice for chairman of the
Atomic Energy Commission, scored
a major victory today when the
Senate refused, 52 to 38. to fiend his
nomination back to committee for
an FBI check.
This was widely interpreted as
meaning that the Senate will con
firm Lilienthal when a final vote
comes, perhaps next week.
Sens. Vandenberg (R-Mich> and
Taft <R-Ohio), sometimes regarded
as the “Big Two" among Senate
Republicans, spilt on the issue.
Taft supported the recommittal! bad been officially informed the
motion offered by his first term Louisiana milk strike has been call-
The Chicago Red Cross said
colleague. Sen. Bricker (R-Ohk>).
j*d off and union dairyman will be- was mobilizing all its facilities.
Vandenberg, hardly an hour be--"in to^hip milk to New Orleans to-*
Many of the injured were taken
fore the vote, appealed for rejection morrow.
to Hinsdale Sanitarium and Elm.
of the motion and for quick con-!
The sheriffs announcement came hurst Hospital, and doctors from
“re -? after an hour-long meeting of strik
ing dairymen, members of Amite.
La., Local No. 16. Dairy Employes.
Chauffeurs and Maintenance Em
ployes (AFL).
Approximately 200 persons attend
ed the meeting. Among them, was] "more were on the way.”
_...
. . . .
.
.
P. H. “Lige” Williams, president of*
Downer’s Grove police fixed the
Lilienthal ^ opponents an opportun- the L o g ja m Federation of L abor, time of the wreck at 10:41 p. rn.
y
decide whether to carry on
statement To Re Issued
j Central Standard Time. The train
the fight next week in the face of
tuw im nii i s ne issued
known as the Rnriimytnn « wa
va
a nnn rent Iv insurmnuntabn odds
I
conclusion of the meeting. *
.
f
Burlington s N o ^ 4
apparently insurmountable "dos.
i
RlLWll Dr« ident of the Amite WRS du** ^ Chicago at ll p. m. The
Both sides said the opposition y-
president or me Amite rRuroad
,h# traln _.a_ rnmrkru.
probably
mustered
Its
greatest lo™'' ™l(l
hnd no Batement to
£
can
COmDOa
strength in today s test.
| n' ak»'
that Ollnn Hendry . II-
n
Voting to recommit were 31 Re- J nmicial secretary, would issue a
publicans
and
seven
Democrats.1 batement soon,
while the victorious side included
A union member, who a^ked that
18 Republicans and 34 Democrats.
I bis name not be used, told a ncws-
It was a bitter defeat for Sen.!™ " mi,k wouId
lnU> Hew Or
leans from Hie Florida parish*”* to
morrow morning He said non-strik
ing producers had agreed they would
. _
not move their trucks until after t,u*ir drat glimpse of King Paul to
by Sen. Hic ken looper iR-Iowa) to I f li g h t, however.
‘
“
he m
a
r
r
h
*
get an agreement to vote on the
The development came while Gov J*
* hrtnd 11
Lilienthal nomination at 5 p. rn Jimmie H. Doris was reported seek-
^ -d ra p e d coffin of h a
Monday
ling a solution to the 10-day-old „r?fhrr; Mf01* ? II. hmm the royal
Vandenberg said the committee’s ’strike.
Ample milk flowed into New Or-
(Contmued on Page a. Col. 6)
flrmation of Lilienthal as a
liable" man.
The Senate had agreed in advance
to recess until Monday if the Bricker
motion lost.
Odds Against Lilienthal Foes
The breathing spell will give
it
Downers Grove and several sur
rounding towns were called to the
scene of the wreck.
Hinsdale Sanitarium said 18 in
jured had been brought there with
in an hour after the wreck and said
McKoUar (D-Trnnt. who has bern
fighting I.illrnthul st every oppor
tunity for years. McKellar. in an
other last move, blocked an effort
New Greek King Marches
Behind Brother's Coffin
ATHENS. April 3
Greeks who
lined the curb* IO to 15 deep got
Five Killed In Crash
Of Army Plane In Viroinia
Strike O f Western Union
Employes Is Possibility
Train Strikes Poles
WILMINGTON, Del., April 3. UP
—The P e n n s y l v a n i a ’s fast New
Y o r k-Washington "Judiciary” was
delayed an hour and 40 minutes to
day when it struck two telephone
pole* protruding from a trailer-
truck at a grade crossing six miles
south of here.
N E W Y O R K . A p ril 3 UP) — A
n a tio n w id e str ik e o f 50.000 W estern
Union Telegraph Company workers
outside of the New York metro
politan area loomed as a possi
bility today as the AFL Commercial
Telegraphers Union sen! out notices
of Intent to call a walkout.
Jesse A. Payne, the union presi
dent, asserted there had been a
"complete collapse of collective bar
gaining" and accused the company
of
effecting
“wholesale
layoffs,
down-grading and unilateral wage
cuts."
Tile intent to strike notices were
sent to the company. President
Truman, the United States Labor
Department and the National Labor
Relations Board, the union head
said.
He explained that the telegraph
ers’ contract with Western Union
expired April I but wa* extended to
July. However, the contract had a
30-day cancellation clause mo that
la strike could be called any time
i after May 3. Payne said.
A union policy committee will
'remain In continuous session here,
the president said, and will decide
when and if to poll the membership
on a strike.
Payne said Ute employes were
seeking a wage increase of 25 cents
an hour and a 40-hour week, plus
health-welfare and pension benefits.
The company has stated that
present rates of pay for all employes
but messengers average $108 sn
hour. Motor messengers get 88.7
cents an hour, and walking and
bicycle messengers 65.4 cents, the
concern said
About 50.000 workers are involved
in the dispute, Payne said, with
40.000 belonging to the CTO and
10.000 others In the Telegraph Em
ployes Union arni the Telegraph
Workers Union, both AFL.
The
smaller union* have participated
with the CTO in the negotiations,
which b eg an March IO
examination of the nominee was
Hie most exhaustive and thorough
he could recall in 19 years of service
and
he urged
his confirmation
"without further Investigation.”
He declared that "logic, equity,
fair play and a just regard for
urgent public welfare- demand ap-
RICh m OMD. Va. April I ...,
proval of President Truman a choice tv0 Armv 0(flcf„ and „ ,r„ en
at once. He said atomic develop
ment in the United States has been
“stagnating too many months" be
cause of the uncertainty.
He told the Senate and the packed
galleries that Lilienthal Is "no part
of a Communist." and has no sym
pathy for Communism or tolerance
for Ii.
Vandenberg Hits Atom Suggestion
Vandenberg criticized suggestions
—by Taft among others—that the
atomic energy control law be re
vised to turn control back to the
military.
"In lienee time you cannot drive
scientists into tile laboratories with
bayonets.” he said.
Sen. Htrkenlooper told the Senate
that the Atomic Committee he
heads had established that Lilien
thal and other commission nominees
are "able and capable men, morally
above reproach.”
Taft in his turn said Lilienthal
(Continued on Page s. Col. j J
Truman Sees Beginning
Of Trend To Democrats
WASHINGTON, April 3, (/JV^A
beaming President Truman today
Interpreted the triumph of Demo
crat Martin Kennelly in the Chi-
cngo mayoral election as the be
ginning of a trend to the Democrats.
In jovial mood at his news con
ference, Mr. Truman observed that
Carroll Reece, Republican National
Chairman, does not agree that the
result indicates any trend. But the
President added that Reece held a
different view of its importance be
fore the results were in.
palace to the Athens Cathedral.
The new King was clad in the
uniform of a vice admiral and led
his six-year-old son. Crown Prince
Constantine,
by
the hand
The
youngster, w e a r i n g gray flannel
shorts and a white shirt, received an
occasional reminder from hts father
to keep his eyes straight ahead, In
| keeping with royal demeanor.
The dead monarch will lie in state
lifted men were killed today when in the cathedral until Sunday, when
their A-26 t w o - m o t o r e d plane funeral sevlces will be held.
crashed and exploded in a wooded |
---------------------——.
section of Chesterfield County about
18 miles southwest of here. Rich- 1
mond Army Air Base officials said
tonight
,
ANNAPOLIS. Md. April 3. UP—
The names of the victims were The Navy Academy choir of li t
withheld
pending notification of'vo’ces will broadcast a program of
next of kin. Army officials said the Easter songs over a National Broad**
plane waa en route from Myrtle!casting Company, network Sunday
Beach. S. C.. to Washington. D. C I at 9:38 a rn.
Easier Broadcast
Truman Says Reds In Government
Are Menace But Thinks Nation Sate
WASHINGTON. April 3 (4*1 —
Individual Communists in govern
ment posts are a menace in the eyes
of President Truman but their party
as a political force is not a danger
to the nation.
That was the explanation Uie
President gave to his news confer
ence today of a letter he wrote
to Oeorge H. Earle, 3d. on February\
28 saying that “people are very
much wrought up about the Com
munist bugaboo, but I am of the
opinion that the country is per
fectly safe to far aa Communism
la concerned—we have too many
san# people.”
Earle, former diplomat and Penn
sylvania Governor, had commented
in Philadelphia that Mr. Truman’s
’bugaboo"
characterization
"as
tonishes m e” He made public a
reply to the President dated March]
4. saying:
J
“When you refer to the Com
munist menace as a bugaboo, it la
the most frightening thing I have
ever heard
"I iud so worried that I intend
to bring tins matter to the a tte n
tion of the leaders of our (Demo
cratic) party and of the majority
party and lf their opinion come it*.ca
with yours, the future of our coun
try to without hope ”
Mr. Truman, when asked about
the matter, gave this interpretation
of his views:
He to not worried about the Com
munist Party taking over the gov
ernment because the country hag
too much sense ever to go Com*
muni*t
He to against a person
whose loyalty is not to the g o v er n
ment o f the United States holding
a
g o v e r n m e n t
Job
H e
c o n sid e r s
th e se tw o p o in ts en tir e ly d iffe r e n t
things
k
T W O
TH E
C U M B E R L A N D
N E W S ,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D ,
FR ID A Y ,
A P R IL
4,
1<?47
170 Md. Council
Bills Approved
A N N A PO LIS, Md
Apirl 3 \JP) -
Maryland'«
Legislative
C o u n c i l
chalked up a good hat ting average
daring the 1947 General A^em bly
»hen It proposed 212 bills, of which
approximately 170 wore passed, Di
Horace Fiack disclosed today. Dr
F'.ack. director of the Department
of Legislative Reference, said the
council's
record
was
even
better
than that because some of Its bills
were incorporated In large part In
other measure* which won final ap
proval.
The
record
was
remarkable In
vie» of the fact that It was the
I egLslatlve Council's first trial in of
fering bills that were not considered
more or less "adm inistration meas
ures.*
The council was created under
Gov.
O C onor’s
administration
to
serve as a fact-finding body and
prepare
measures
for
legislative
action.
Before the advent of the Lane ad
ministration. members of the coun
cil. composed chiefly of leaders of
the m ajority party in the Legisla
ture. was considered an ‘‘adm inistra
tion'' group.
B u t In this cAsf. the council re
commendations for the first time
were made by a "lam e duck’’ coun
cil of w’hich many members did not
return to the 1947 Assembly.
Strike Brings Ruhr’s Big
Coal Industry To Halt
E S S E N , Germ any, April 3. (ÆV-
Crowds demonstrated in more than
a score of the Ruhr's cities and
towns today m support of 300.000
miners whose 24-hour strike over
tood shortages brought the areas'
giant coal industry almost to com
plete standstill.
B r i t i s h occupation authorities
made no attempt to intervene in the
mass protests over the food situa
tion, and reports from all sections
of the industrial valley indicated
there were no disorders.
In a number ol cities m i n e r s
Joined
in
the
demonstrations
in
which banners were carried bearing
slogans of protest directed at the
occupation authorities.
Jap Reparations
( Continued from Pag e i )
when the State Department released
a text of a statement given by Gen.
Frank
R.
McCoy,
United
States
member on the commission, at a
closed session today.
McCoy told the commission that
on February 13 the United States
government submitted the proposal,
to make a start on taking repara
tions. to the commission and advised
tt that the United States considered
the
plan an
“ urgent
first
move
In
getting
reparations
removals
started "
Maple Leafs Win
D E T R O IT . April 3. (/Pt—Making
their few shots count heavily, the
Toronto Mnple Leals moved w ith
in one victory of the Stanley Cup
finals tonight by whipping the De
troit Red W.ngs. 4 to 1. to take a
three-to-one edge in games in their
be ft-of-seven
series«
before
14,577
fans.
iwo More Jews Accused
Of Terrorism Doomed
JE R U S A L E M , April 3. (fP)— Twoj
more Jew’s accused of terrorism w’ere!
doomed today by a m ilitary court!
and the four others already under
sentence of death were quoted by
the underground organization Irgun
Zvai Leum i as defiantly renouncing
appeals for clemency in their be
half.
Meier Feinstein and David Azulai.
reputed Irgun members accused of
taking part in an armed attack on
the Jerusalem railway station last
October, took the sentence calmly.
Woman Collapses, Dies
At Bowie Race Track
B O W IE , Md., April 3. (/P>— Mrs.
Iva
McConnell
Swords,
57,
New
Castle. Pa., on her first visit to a
race track, collapsed and died to
day at the Bowie race track before
the first race.
Mrs. Swords fell at an entryway
to the track and was pronounced
dead a few minutes later at the
'rack infirm ary. Relatives said she
was visiting a son, Joseph, of W ash
ing, for the Easter holidays.
DEATHS
M R S. C A R O L IN E L E W IS
Mrs. Caroline Lewis, 81, widow of
Edmund
Lewis,
d i e d
yesterday
morning at 9 :30 o’clock at her home
in LaVale, alter an illness oi several
years.
She wa.s a native of West Brom-
ich,
Staffordshire,
E n g l a n d ,
a
daughter of the late Edward and
Caroline Harrison. Mrs. Lewis was a
member of Centre Street Methodist
Church.
Her husband and a daughter. E m
ma Lewis, were iatally injured in an
automobile accident a number of
years ago.
•
Surviving arc four daughters Mrs.
Charlotte
“ Lottie”
Welsch.
B a lti
more; Mrs. Elizabeth W ills and Mrs.
Ada Twigg, both of this* city, and
Mrs. Gladys Gibbs, at home; two
sons. W illiam , at home, and John,
six grandchildren and three great
grandchildren.
A funeral service will be conduct
ed Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock in
the Hater Funeral Home by Rev.
Ross Shaw, pastor of Park Place
Methodist Church. Interm ent will be
in Hillcrest Bu rial Park.
M R S. L E N A S W E IT Z E R
Mine Insp ection Showed
“No Imminent
C E N T R A L IA , 111., April 3 (A*) —
Secretary of the Interior Krug re
ported today that a federal inspec
tion made less than a week before
the Centralia coal mine explosion
in which 111 ditni M arch 25 allowed
"no imminent danger.”
Krug, Federal Coal
mines
Ad
ministrator,
submitted
what
lie
termed a “ preliminary report of the
disaster and • events leading to it"
to a United States Senate Subcom-
mittce which began a federal in
vestigation of the tragedy here to
day.
Krug's report was made m a let
ter to the subcommittee, which said
earlier today
it would
ask Krug
to appear before it in Washington.
The body said also it would allow
John L. Lewis, head of the A F L
United
M ine
Workers,
to appear
"if lie wants to.”
Trapped Men Phoned For Aid
Previous to K rug’s report, a com
pany superintendent who testified
before
the subcommittee revealed
phoned to the main shaft tor aid
immediately alter the explosion
Rex Enright Takes
Issue With Fester
C O L U M B IA , S C., April 3 .¿Ti —
Rex Enright, head football coach at
the University oi South Carolina,
said
tonight
that
criticisms
ofjters m the Soviet capital, he wa
southern colleges by Wesley Fesler.
basic Issues, winch he described a. hopeful ot eventual u n lfl ation
be-
i
*
t
“ clear cut.”
cause everyone wants it. >
<He said the conference was “ not
M arshall declared that his pro-
proving a failure, but also not prov- posal was based on the assumption
tug a success.” He declared
that.that the level of Oerman industry
while economic unity of Germ any ¡will he raised and that plan's now
would not be achieved by the mini«-¡set aside for export as reparation*
could be used to boost that level
¡for the first time that some of the
Mrs. Lena
Sweitzer, mother of workers trapped in the mine tele-
Clarence S. Sweitzer, about 83, 2231-----------------------------------
Glenn Street, died yesterday morning j
f
at the home of a daughter, M r s . i S | X
l l n f a t g
W illiam W ilhelm in Baltimore. The
rr
Fresh Fish
♦or Lenten Menus
Stacey's Mkt.
S i N. Centre St. Tel. 66
Undergoes Operation
B A L T IM O R E , April 3
</Pj — D r/
Harry W . M artin, noted Hollywood
urologist
and
husband
of
Movie
Columnist Louella O. Parsons, un
derwent an abdominal operation at
Johns Hopkins Hospital today and!
attending physician« pronounced it
a success.
Robinson Kayoes Wilson
A K R O N . O . April 3 W )— W elter
weight
Champion
R a y
(Sugar)
Robinson unleashed his heavy artil
lery tonight and belted out Fred
Wilson, of Baltimore, in the third
of a achedulcd non-title 10-rounder
at Akron Armory. Robinson weighed
153, W ilson 159.
Sweitzers were former residents of
Cumberland but left here 20 or more
years ago.
Surviving besides her son C la r
ence and Mrs. W ilhelm , are another
daughter, Mrs. Lee Daniels, B a lti
more Pike, and a son Charles H.
Sweitzer.
Baltim ore;
two
sisters.
Mrs. M artha Hasson. Baltim ore and
Mrs. Elizabeth Lauderback, B a lti
more; one brother, Charles Strott,
Baltimore, three grandchildren and
one great grandchild.
Funeral services w ill be held at
the home of Mrs. W ilhelm , in B a lti
more.
Monday
afternoon at 2:30
o’clock.
F E L IX Cm. M A N T IIE IY
Felix Gregory M antheiy. 56, 406H
Furnace Street, s B
and O. store
helper, died early yesterday m orn
ing in Allegany Hospital where he
was admitted Wednesday. He had
been 111 since Monday.
Born in Cumberland, he was a
son of Mrs. M ary M. H urf M a n
theiy. this city, and the late Joh n
M antheiy. He belonged to Cum ber
land Council,. No. 586, Knights of
Columbus;
Cumberland
Aerie
No.
245.
Fraternal
Order
of
Eagles;
Henry H art Post No. 1411, Veterans
of Foreign W ars; Disabled American
( Continued from Page i )
" I point out,” he said, "th at Se
cretary Krug is doing now
what
lie should have done ever smce the
safety code became effective. H e’s
starting to enforce his own code—
but after 111 men died at Centra -
lia.”
“ Now. on this particular day of
our Lord, Mr. Krug found 518 mines
not safe.
"M ay God in heaven forgive him
ior not finding those mines before,
and not closing them down before
those men died.”
Urges Miners' Return Monday
Questioned
by
Rep.
Nixon
<R-
Harry Nierman, assistant superin-» Ohio State coach, were “ ridiculous.” )
tendent of the Contraila Coal Com-1
" It looks like Fesler is already
pany, said concentrations ol carbon trying to establish an alibi for next
monoxide and absence ol
oxygen fall,” Enright said,
masks made rescue efforts impos-
The new Ohio State mentor said
sible at the time.
last
night
that
“ southern
school
The Beliate committee sought to agents"
were
constantly
covering
determine the cause of the blast I Ohio and Pennsylvania seeking to
in its questioning of witnesses as j recruit football players,
federal mine inspectors continued
Fesler said he would advise Ohio
an
underground
survey
of
the ¡boys not to be swayed by the lure
workings in other attempts to de- of
football
scholarships
because
termine the cause of the explosion. ! 'there isn't time to get an cduca-
An electrical flash or a rock or I tion’’ at such schools, that the schol-
other missile falling into an open j arshipa expire if a boy is hurt or
box of dynamite caps w ere. sug-j fails to make the grade, and that
gested as possible causes by two I “ there is not time for books, let
witnesses.
! alone social activities.”
Krug asserted in his report that
Enright
said
that
“ education
neither
the
prelim inary
or
the I comes first and football second with
final report ’ of inpectlons “ found us. W e insist on the boys keeping up
imminent danger which would have in their studies and the players’
called into play emergency proce- averages compare favorably with the
dure under the mine safety code." rest of the student body.”
Inspected March 1
7
-
2
0
-------------------
The
preliminary
report on
the I A i i i f ¡ a n a M ill#
first inspection made last November L U U lJlC filC f P I I I II
4 was followed by a final report
(C ontinu ed from Pag e i )
based on an inspection made M arch leans from other states, but non-
17-20 this year, Krug said.
striking dairymen of Louisiana have
Krug
said
the
final
inspection been withholding
their shipments
showed 55 items of non-compliance in the face of the violence which
with the
federal safety code, in- has marked the strike,
eluding
52
repeat
offenses,
and
Twenty-five men have been in
showed also that
progress reports dieted for stealing milk
and
re-
Complete Meals
From ..............
£
V>;
>;
»
.♦
11:30 .„,.1 2
p. m.
Featuring Steaks a n d Fried Chicken
0
Nicholson s Mapleside
f ’aücrn
1003 Oldtown Road
Phone 9 43
of the operating manager” on cor
rections of deficiencies "had been
misleading.”
Krug said he ‘‘did not have an
opportunity to consider remedial ac
tion
in
consequence
of
the
bad
showing because the disaster had
tarding the mails when Illinois Cen
tral Railroad trains were entered
at Amite, La., last week and thous
ands of gallons of milk removed.
The strike was started M arch 24
by locals of the AFL-affiliated Dairy
Employes. Chauffeurs and Mainten-
already occurred before the preli- ance Employes and the Internafcion-
m inary
or
final
report
was
re- aj Brotherhood of Teamsters.
The action followed an announce
ment of New Orleans distributors
tnat the price paid producers would
b<* cut from $5.75 per hundredweight
to $5.20.
Marshall Calls
ceived ”
He m aintained there had been no
violation of the Krug-Lewis agree
ment, as alleged by Lewis, and said
"the
Krug-Lewis
agreement
and
Calif.», Lewis said he would "here!the federal code requires the clos-
publicly state”
that
he
had
re- ing of mines only where the fed-
commended to the miners that they eral inspector or the union mine
end
their
current
stoppage
next safety committee
finds
the
exls-
Monday.
tence ot imminent danger.”
He said he believed they would
-------------------
» re T n o irW 'in uunc that" Three County Mines
Rum bling out a demand for "sur-
(C ontinu ed from Pane
28)
: ? asr ,.°.L , l " s Moodtetttog.” hr said sremrd to hr of the opinion that was
hringmB
out
and
developing
the U M W is opposed to Communism the mines ordered closed had been
...........
--■■■■—.......................
■. >
"but this butchery of coal m iners!picked
rather
suddenly
and
one
in the Krug slaughter houses does1 operator
ventured
the
opinion,
more
to make Communists
than “ Krug is on the spot and had to do
anything else in this country.”
something.
Looks
as if
someone
Krug, in issuing his order, made {Just went down the list and picked
»10 comment on Lewis’ accusations names at random "
( Continued from Page 1)
that "all hope has been given up”
or reaching a settlement on repara
tions at the Moscow meeting. He
described the reparations Issue as in
"deadlock.” but said the conference
Veterans, and the Brotheinooa
Qj. ••negjigence »• B u t Sen. Cordon!
It was indicated here last night
B. And 0. Bond Hearing
W A S H IN G T O N ,
April
3
i/P. —
Chairm an Tobev (R-NH» said today
the Senate Banking Committee will
open public hearings April 10 on an
$80,000,000 bond transaction between
the R F C and. the Baltim ore and
Ohk> Railroad.
Railw ay Clerks.
M r M antheiy was also a member
of
S S
Peter
and
Paul
Catholic
Church and the Holy Name Society
of the parish.
In addition to his mother, he Is
survived by his widow, Mrs. Clara
Free M antheiy; three brothers, Paul
and John M antheiy, this city, and
Gregory Mantheiy. Hagerstown, and
a sister Miss Clara Mantheiy, this
<R-Ore ),
chairm an
of
a
S e n a t e that, these three mines will remain
Public Lands Subcommittee which loosed until a federal inspection Is
opened an inquiry into the disaster niade, or until an order Is received,
at Centralia. 111., today, announced i rescindslng the
action.
Operators
that Krug will be calied to testify sai<L " wp havf no idea how long
when the investigation moves b a c k ¡this w ill take.”
to Washington.
Lewis was invited to give his views
to the House Labor Subcommittee
on
the
memorial
shutdown,
the
cj.y
Centralia disaster of last Tuesday.
The body is at the Hafer F u n e r a l and anything else he cared to say
Home
W ith radio chains broadcasting his
j testimony and a packed room list-
E R N E S T
H U T II R I T E S
ening tensely, he delivered
three
A
funeral
service for
Ernest proposals He asked that Congress:
Btephm Huth, 77, 36 Race
Street,
1. Adopt a resolution railing up-
College Baseball
Duke 2, Ohio U 0.
Charlotte Hornets (Tri-State) 12,
Davidson College 2.
Beautiful, Sheer
NYLON
STOCKINGS
pair
Debbie Shop
82
Baltimore
St.
Next
to
Rand s
Drug
Store
HABEEB’S
FLOWERS
HABEEB’S
EASTER
FLOWERS
CUT
FLOWERS
Rose»
....
Extra fancy
S i i
S K .0 0
Mixed Bouquet»
s i «"4 sr.
CORSAGES
• Orchid
..................
V .M .M
• Gardenia .......................... 15.04
% Rom's
.........
$5.90
POTTED PLANTS
Tu lip s
.......................
I2-S3-M
H y a r in t h s ............................. $2-S3
Jonquils ............
$1.50-$2.Q0
HABEEBS
26 N. M echanic St.
FLOWER
SHOP
Phone 2765
HABEEB’S
FI OWFRS
HABEEB'S
To Begin Prison Term
W A S H IN G T O N , A p n l 3
</Ph-U.
S. Arm y headquarters in Germ any
sent word today that W A C Captain
Kathleen Nash Durant will be start
ed back to this country “ at an early
date*’ to begin serving her five-year
sentence
for
theft
of
the
Hesse
crown jewels.
who died Tuesday in Allegany Hos
pital, w ill be conducted tomorrow
at 10:30 o’clock in St. M a ry’s Catho
lic Church. Bu rial w ill be in the
church cemetery. A pro-burial ma&s
will be held Monday at 9 a. m. in
St. M a ry ’s Church.
M A SO N IN F A N T D IE S
Sharon
Rebecca
Mason,
three-
day-old
daughter
of
W illiam
R.
and Norma Jean Ham ilton Mason,
948 M aryland Avenue, died Wed-
on
President
Trum an
to
remove
Krug—“ this modern Hercules with
the No. 12 shoe and the size 5 hat.”
2. Pass speedy legislation requiring
federal mine inspectors to close pits
they find violating federal safety
standards.
3. Return the $750,000
fine asses
sed against the United M ine W o rk
ers for contempt of court, to be
used as a trust for the widows
and orphans of the Centralia vic
tims and of the miners killed in a
nesday morning in Allegany Hos- disaster at Straight Creek, K y., two
s i , .
/
pital. A funeral service will be held years ago
*
Y
/
r V
. . .
.,
I
»1
l
C i
1
I this morning at 10:15 o'clock, in the
John D. Battle, executive secre-
Wea her In N C c H u V M c îÎG S
stein
Funeral
Home
and
burial lary Qf
National Coal Associa-
tr^ i« et u « rv it r>mptprv.
tjon
cai^d Lewis
outcry “ a sick
ening exhibition of mock heroics.”
He
declared
that
Lewis
“ has
W E S T V I R G I N I A and W E S T - ’
E R N P E N N S Y L V A N IA — Fair and
slightly
warmer today. Tomorrow
mostly cloudy and nnld followed by]
scattered showers.
will be in St. M ary s Cemetery.
H A R R Y L A M M R I T E S
Professional Basketball
B A S K E T B A L L A S S O C IA T IO N
A M E R IC A P L A Y O F F S
Chicago 69 , Washington 53.
A funeral service for H a J
• launched
a campaign of hysteria
Lu n m . 54. 7~1 M aryland Av
. ana emotional sensationalism which
who died Wednesday. will be
"Inow appears to have spread to those
ducted
tomorrow
afternoon
at
3 officlaLs oi th f government in whose
o clock m t^e b^eil1J
" iera t ?
I hands the
bituminous coal mines
Rev. .B
Ralph Mark, pastor of!
»
Central Methodist Church, will of-j
^_____________________
ficiate and w ill be assisted by Rev.
Hixon T. Bowersox, pastor of St.
Pau l’s Lutheran Church. The body
w ill be placed in Rase H ill Mauso
leum.
Active
pallbearers w ill
be
Wii-
British Lashes
( Continued from Page 1)
several small countries sought un
successfully
to
modify
the veto
liam Mouse, H arry Cole. W illiam power.
,
Paul Yarnell. Joseph R. Winders,
Eaton told the committee during a
Yfes? it'makes a nice-sound-
lag alibi. But maybe there’s t
erasom for "that feeling ” If you
•re chronically lacking in eo-
• tgy these spring days, better
bee* a talk with your doctor;
He may find a condition that
needs correction. And then, i i
be gives you a prescription,
we’d like so com pound irl
Walsh, McCagh,
Pharmacy
f lllln i n or« proter»»-
tions
th an
any
p h a r
macy
between
Pitta-
bnrfh and BaltUnora.
Corner
Bedford
and
C e n tre St*.
W t D ELIV ER— FREE!
Just Phone
3646 or
9 43—
Mrs. L. O. Miller
announces
the Op ening Tod ay of the
M
iller T r a v e l A g e n c y
104 Frederick Street
Headquarters for
L U G G A G E
Come in and let us plan your vacation
A L L TY PES OF ESCO RTED TO U RS
H O TEL R ESER V A TIO N S
PHONE 1120
Edward
P.
M artz
and
H arry
L.
Stegmaier.
Honorary pallbearers w ill be W il
liam Sherman. J. H. Mosner, L a w
rence Shafferm an, A. W . Bergeron,
hearing on American aid to Greece
and Turkey that the United Nations
was unable to act in the crisis now
because “ the Russian delegate has
exercised a continued veto— holding
W ilfred T. Normand, George Aldom/ back,
conf using
and
delaying
—
Carl F. Schmutz, Lyn n Lashley and which has made it impossible to be
George A. Caswell.
Lilienthal Wins
; ready now.”
Council Called “ Im portant”
Here
at United
Nations
head
quarters,
S ir
Alexander Cadogan
( Continued from Page 1)
made one of his strongest speeches
is “ naive” toward Russia and has on the veto in the Security Coun-
a "misconception of the
Russian cil as soon as it convened,
threat.”
He said the council had become
He said the record shows that i "completely obstructed, sterile and
Lilienthal has a philosophy which impotent” in the Albanian case,
disagrees with "a tremendous ma-
Cadogan acknowledged
that this
jority” of the Senate.
case might involve no immediate
“ The Senate should not confirm breach of the peace, although, he
anybody unless he is the man the said, British warships might well
Senate would have appointed," Taft have returned “ with good effect”
counseled. "And if a preferential gunfire from Albanian shore bat-
vote had been taken he would be teries as they passed through Corfu
well below 100 on the Senate list.” Channel last May.
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There are two types — Punji. a
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THE ITEM S . . . Shirts both dress and
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It's just the beginning
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.
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w
CUMBERLAND
• Reg
U. S. Patent Office
TWO
THC CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, M D ,
FRIDAY, APRIL
4,
1947
170 Md. Council
Bills Approved
ANNAPOLIS Md
Apirl 3 >P> -
Maryland*
Legislative
C o u n c i l
chalked up a good batting average
during the 1947 General Assembly
when It proposed 212 bills, of which
approximately 170 mere passed, Dr
Horaoe Flack disclosed today. Dr.
Flack, director of the Department
of Legislative Reference, said the
council's record was even better
than that because some of Its bills
were incorporated In large part In
other measure.* which won Anal ap
proval.
The record was remarkable In
▼tew of the fact that it was the
legislative Council's first trial in of
fering bills that were not considered
more or leas “administration meas
ure* *
The council was created under
Gov. O'Conor's administration to
serve as a fact-finding body and
prepare
measures
for
legislative
action.
Before the advent of the Lane ad
ministration members of the coun
cil. composed chiefly of leaders of
the majority part> in the Legisla
ture. a aa considered an “administra
tion'’ group.
But In this ca*, the council re
commendations for the first time
▼sere made by a “lame duck” conn
ed of which many members did not
return to the 1947 Assembly.
Jap Repetitions
(Continued from Page r)
when the 8tate Department released
a text of a statement given by Gen.
Prank R. McCoy. United States
member on the commission, at a
dosed session today.
McCoy told the commission that
en February 13 the United States
government submitted the proposal,
to make a start on taking repara
tions. to the commission and advised
It that the United States considered
the plan an -urgent first move
In
getting
reparations
removals
started"
Strike Brings Ruhr's Big
Coal Industry To Halt
EBSEN, Germany, April 3. OF) -
Crowds demonstrated in more than
a score of the B uhrs citiea and
towns today in support of 300.000
miners whose 24-hour strike over
lood shortages brought the areas’
giant coal Industry almost to com
plete standstill
B r i t i s h occupation authorities
made no attem pt to intervene in the
mass protests over the food situa
tion. and reports from all sections
of the industrial valley indicated
there wert no disorders.
In a number of cities m i n e r t
Joined in the demotist rations In
which banners were carried bearing
slogans of protest directed at the
occupation authorities.
I DEATHS
Two More Jews Accused
Of Terrorism Doomed
JERUSALEM. April J. (jp>—Two
more Jews accused of terrorism were
doomed today by a military court
and the four others already under
sentence of death were quoted by
the underground organization Irgun
Zvai Leumi as defiantly renouncing
appeals for clemency in their be
half.
Meier PeinsUMn and David Aculei,
reputed Irgun members accused of
taking part in an armed attack on
Hie Jerusalem railway station last
October, took the sentence calmly.
Woman Collapses, Dies
Af Bowie Race Track
Maple Leah Win
BOWIE. Md., April S. (Ab—Mrs.
Iva McConnell Swords, 57. New
Castle. Pa., on her first visit to a
race track, collapsed and died to
day at the Bowie race track before
the first race.
Mrs. Swords fell at an entryway
to the track and was pronounced
dead a few minutes later at the
zn ek infirmary. Relatives said she
was visiting a eon. Joseph, of Wash
ing, for the Easter holidays.
Undergoes Operation
BALTIMORE. April S. (TP)— Dr.
Harry W. Martin, noted Hollywood
urologist and husband of Movie
DPTR OTT, April 3 (TP.—Making Columnist Loud la O. Parsons, un
f a ir few shots count heavily, the derwent an abdominal operation st
Toronto Maple Leafs moved with
in one victory of the Stanley Cup
finals tonight by whipping the De
troit Red Wings. 4 to I. to take a
three-to-one edge in games in their
K rt-of-seven aeries before 14,577
fans.
Fresh Fish
for LBfttm Menu*
Stacey's Mkt
S I N . C ene re S i. T el. 4 4
Johns Hopkins Hospital today and
attending physicians pronounced It
a success
Robinson Kiyoes Wilson
MRS. CAROLINE LEWIS
Mrs. Caroline Lewis. 81, widow of
Edmund
Lewis,
d i e d
yesterday
morning al 9:30 o'clock at her home
In LaVale, after an illness of several
years.
She was a native of West Brom
ids. Staffordshire. E n g l a n d , a
daughter of the late Edward and
Caroline Harrison. Mrs. Lewis wa.s a
member of Centre Street Methodist
Church.
Her husband and a daughter. Em
ma Lewis, were fatally injured in an
automobile accident a number of
years ago.
•
Surviving are four daughters. Mrs.
Charlotte “Lottie" Welsch, Balti
more; Mrs. Elizabeth Wills and Mrs.
Ada Twigg, both of this city, and
Mrs. Gladys Gibbs, at home; two
sons. William, at home, and John,
six grandchildren and three great
grandchildren.
A funeral service will be conduct
ed Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock in
the Haler Funeral Home by Rev.
Ross Shaw, pastor of Park Place
Methodist Church. Interm ent will be
In Hillcrest Burial Park.
MRS. LENA SWEITZER
Mrs. Lena Sweitser. mother of
Clarence S. Sweatier, about 83. 223
Oienn Street, died yesterday morning
at the home of a daughter. Mrs
William Wilhelm in Baltimore. The
Switzer* were former residents of
Cumberland but left here 20 or more
years ago.
Surviving besides her son Clar
ence and M n. Wilhelm, are another
daughter, Mrs. Lee Daniels, Balti
more Pike, and a son Charles H.
Sweitser.
Baltimore;
two sisters
M n. M artha Hasson. Baltimore and
Mrs. Elizabeth Lauderbeck. Balti
more; one brother Charles Strott.
Baltimore, three grandchildren and
one great grandchild.
Funeral services will be held at
the home of Mrs. Wilhelm, in Balti
more. Monday afternoon a t 2:30
o’clock.
Mine Inspection Showed
1No Imminent Danger
a
a
Rex Enright Takes
Issue With Fester
COLUMBIA. 8 C . April 3 (TPI —
basic issues, which ii* described a-s hopeful ot meutii.il umfi* ntion be
b lear cut "
#
cause everyone wants it »
CENTRALIA. IU.. April 3 (A*) —
Secretary of the Interior Krug re
ported today that a federal inspec
tion made less than a week before
the Centralia coal mine explosion
in which ill died March 25 showed
“no imminent danger."
Krug. Federal Coal mines Ad
ministrator.
submitted
what
lie
termed a “preliminary report of the
disaster an d 'events leading to it"
to a United States Senate Subcom
mittee which began a federal in
vestigation of the tragedy here to
day.
Krug's report was made rn a let
ter to the subcommittee, wiilch said
earlier today It would ask Krug
to appear before it in Washington.
The body said also it would allow
John L. Lewis, head of Ute AFL
United Mine Workers, to appear
"ll he wants to "
Trapped Men Phoned Far Aid
Previous to Krug's report, a com
pany superintendent who testified
before the subcommittee revealed
for the first time that some of the
workers trapped in the mine tele-
<He said the conference was “not
Marshall declared that his pro-
proving a failure, but also not pros- pus* I was based on the assumption
lug a success." He declared that that tile level of Oerman md'istrv
Rex Enright, head loot hall coach
at j while economic unity of Germany J will ic raised and that plan** now
the
University of South Carolina.1 would
not be achieved bv tile nun ut-1 set aside for export as reparations
phoned to Hie main shaft for ald said
tonight
that
criticisms
of]tem in the Soviet capital, he was,could be vised to boost that level
immediately alter the explosion.
southern colleges by Wesley Fesler.
Harry Nierman, assistant supering Ohio State coach, were “ridiculous "!
tendent of the Centralia Coal Coin-(
"It looks like Fesler vs already
pally, said concentrations ot cai bon | trying to establish an alibi for next
monoxide and absence of oxygen fall," Enright said
masks made rescue efforts linpos-'
Tile new Ohio State mentor said
sible at the time.
| last night
that "southern school
The Senate committee sought to agents" were constantly covering
determine the cause of the blast Ohio and Pennsylvania seeking to
in its questioning of witnesses as recruit football players,
federal mine inspectors continued
Fesler said he would advise Ohio
an
underground
survey
of
Hie boys not to be swayed by the lure
workings in other attempts to de- of
football
scholarships
because
termine the cau.se of tile explosion.; “there isn t time to get an educn-
An electrical flash or a rock or > tion’* at such schools, that the schol-
other missile falling into an open I arshipa expire if a boy is hurt or
box of dynamite caps were. sug- fails to make tile grade, and that
Rested as possible causes by two! “there is not time for books, let
witnesses.
'alone social activities."
Krug asserted in
his report that
Enright said that
"education
‘neither tile preliminary or tile'comes first and football second with
final report" of inpectlons "found us. We insist on the boys keeping up
imminent danger which would have In their studies and the players’
called into play emergency proce- averages compare favorably with the
dure under the mine safety code.” rest of the student body."
Inspected March 17-29
---------------------------
The preliminary report on Hie lA lliflB H B M ilk
first inspection made last November b V U ljlflllP PIIIH
4 was followed by a
final report ( Continued
from Pogo t)
• • • • • • • a
Complots Moola
From ................. 11:30 a .m . ta 12 p .m .
Featuring Steaks and Fried Chicken
e
Nicholson s
Maple Taoem
1003 Oldtown Rood
Phono 943
511 "Unsafe"
AKRON. O . April 3 (AV-Welter
weight
Champion
Roy
(Sugar)
Robinson unleashed his heavy artil
lery tonight and belted out Fred
Wilson, of Baltimore, in the third
of a scheduled non-title 10-rounder
at Akron Armory. Robinson weighed
153. Wilson 159.
B. And 0. Bond Hearing
FELIX G. MANTHEI^
Felix Gregory Manthety. 56. 406‘*
Furnace Street, a B. and O. store
helper, died early yesterday morn
ing In Allegany Hospital where he
was admitted Wednesday. Ho had
been 111 ainee Monday.
Born In Cumberland, he was a
son of Mrs. Mary M. Hurt Man-
theiy. this city, and the late John
Manthely. He belonged to Cumber
land Council.* No. 586. Knights of
Columbus; Cumberland Aerie No.
245. Fraternal Order of Eagles;
Henry Hart Post No. 1411. Veterans
of Foreign Wars; Disabled American
Veterans, and the Brotherhood of
Railway Clerks.
Mr. Manthety was also a member
of SS. Peter and Paul Catholic
Church and the Holy Name Society
of the pariah.
In addition to his mother, he Is
survived by his widow, Mrs. Clara
Free Manthely; three brothers. Paul
and John Manthely. this city. and
Gregory Manthely. Hagerstown, and
a sister Miss Clara Manthely, this
(Continued from Pete i)
“I point out,” he said, “that Se
cretary Krug is doing now what
lie should have done ever arnee the
safety code became effective. He's
starting to enforce his own code -
but after 111 men died at Centra
lia."
“Now. on this particular day of
our Lord, Mr. Krug found 518 mines
not safe.
“May God In heaven forgive him
for not finding those mines before,
and not closing them down before
those men died."
Urgea Miners* Return Monday
Questioned by Rep. Nixon <R-
based on an inspection made March leans from other states, but non-
17-20 this year. Krug said.
striking dairymen of Louisiana have
Krug said the final inspection been withholding their shipments
showed 55 items of non-compliance in the face of the violence which
with the federal safety code, in- has narked the strike,
eluding
52
repeat
oflenses, and
Twenty-five men have been In-
showed also that “progress reports dieted for stealing milk and ro
of the operating manager" on cor- tarding the malls when Illinois Cen-
recUona of deficiencies “had been tral Railroad trains were entered
misleading.
st Amite, La., last week and thous-
Krug said he
did not have an ands of gallons of milk removed,
opportunity to consider remedial ac-|
The atrtke was started March 24
Hon in consequence of the bad by locate of the AFL-affiliated Dairy
chowing because the disaster had Employee. Chauffeurs and Mainten-
already occurred before the preli- an ce Employee and the Interaatkm -
°r
report was re- aj Brotherhood of Teamsters,
reived.
;
The action followed an announce-
He maintained there had been no ment of New orleans distributors
violation of the Krug-Lewis agree- tr,at the price paid producers would
ment. as alleged by Lewis, and said be cut from $5.75 per hundredweight
the
Krug-Lewis agreement and ^ $5 20.
Calif.!, Lewis said he would “herejthe federal code requires the clos
publicly state" that he had re-jmg of mines only where the fed-
commended to the miners Hist they(eral inspector or the union mine
end Hie lr current stoppage next safety committee finds the exis-
Monday.
! truce of imminent danger."
He said he believed they would
resume work “in any mine that*
Marshall (alls
safe enough to enter.
Rumbling out a demand for “sur
cease of this bloodletting." he said
Three County Mines
(Continued from Pone at)
seemed to be of the opinion that
(Continued from Page 1)
that “all hope has been given up"
or reaching a settlement on repara
tions at the Moscow meeting. He
described the reparations issue as In
"deadlock." but said the conference
the UMW Ie opposed to Com m una,, the mine. ordered cloud hed been
bringing out end., d^veiop.ng
“but this butchery of coal miners picked rather suddenly and one
in the Krug slaughter houses does operator
ventured
the
opinion,
more to make Communists than “Krug is on the spot and had to do
anything else In this country."
something.
Looks as if someone
Krug, in issuing his order, made Jo** went down the list and picked
no comment on Lewis* accusations names at random "
of "negligence." But Sen. Cordon
It was indicated here last night
(R-Ore ), chairman of a Senate that these three mines will remain
Public Lands Subcommittee which' closed until a federal inspection is
opened an inquiry into th© disaster made, or until an order is received.
at Centralia, IU., today, announced rescinding the action.
Operators
that Krug will be called to testify said. “we have no idea how long
when the investigation moves back this will take."
to Washington.
Lewis was invited to give his views
to the House Labor Subcommittee
on the memorial shutdown, the
Centralia disaster of last Tuesday.
College Baseball
city
.
The body is at the Haler Funeral and anything else he cared to say
Home
WiUi radio chains broadcasting his
testimony and a packed room list-
ERNEST HUTH RITES
euhig tensely, he delivered three
A
funeral
service
for
Ernest proposals He asked that Congress:
WO.000.000 bond
between Stephen Hutto,
TI,M Rot* Street.
I. Adopt » resolution celling up-
the RPC and Hie Baltimore and who died Tuesday In Allegany H os-, on President Truman to remove
Duke 2. Ohio U 0.
Charlotte Hornets <Tri-State>
Davidson Col Ieee 2
12.
Beautiful, Sheer
NYLON
STOCKINGS
B
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V
Debbie Shop
82 Baltimore St.
Next to Rond's Drug Store
HABEEB’S
FLOWERS
NBBEEB’S
EASTER
FLOWERS
CUT
FLOWERS
Rote*
dot
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ee.ee
Mixed Bouquet*
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CORSAGES
Orchid
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Gardenia
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§8.94
U M
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Tulips ........................
§2-13-54
H yacinths............................ $2-83
Jonquils
91.59-52.99
HABEEBS
FLOWER
SHOP
24 N. Mechanic St.
Phono 2749
HBBEEB'S
FLOWERS
HABEEB'S
WASHINGTON, April
3
(TP. —
• Chairman Tobey (R-NH) said today
Hie Senate Banking Committee will
open public hearings April IO on an
Ohio Railroad.
To Begia Prison Term
WASHINGTON, April 8. UH—U.
& Army headquarter! In Germany
sent word today th a t WAC Captain
Kathleen Nash Durant win be start
ed back to this country "at an early
date*’ to begin serving her five-year
sentence for theft of the Hesse
crown Jewels.
Weather In Nearby States
WE8T V I R G I N I A and WEST
ERN PENNSYLVANIA — Pair and
slightly warmer today. Tomorrow
pital, will be conducted tomorrow
at 10:30 o’clock in St. Mary ’s Catho
lic Church. Burial will be in the
church cemetery. A pro-burial mass
will ba held Monday at • a. rn. in
St. Mary’s Church.
MA8ON INFANT DIES
Sharon Rebecca Mason, three-
day-old daughter of William R.
and Norma Jean Hamilton Mason,
948 Maryland Avenue, died Wed
nesday morning in Allegany Hos
pital. A funeral service will be held
this morning at 10:15 o'clock In the
Stein Funeral Home and burial
will be in St. Mary's Cemetery.
HARRY LAMM RITES
A funeral service for Harry 8.
mostly cloudy and mild followed by L\mm. 54. 721 Maryland Avenue.
scattered showers.
who died Wednesday, will be con
ducted tomorrow afternoon at 3
o'clock in the Stein Funeral Home.
Rev. ,B. Ralph Mark, pastor of
Professional Basketball
. — _
BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION O F 'Ccntral Methodist Church, will^of-
AM ERICA PLAYOFFS
Chicago 89. Washington 53.
Krug—"this modern Hercules with
the No. 12 shoe and the size 5 h a t"
2. Pass speedy legislation requiring
federal mine inspectors to dose pits
they find violating federal safety
standards.
3. Return the $750,000 fine asses
sed against the United Mine Work
ers for contempt of court, to be
used as a trust for the widows
and orphans of the Centralia vic
tims and of the miners killed in a
disaster at Straight Creek, Kyn two
years ago.
John D. Battle, executive secre
tary of the National Coal Associa
tion. called Lewis’ outcry "a sick
ening exhibition of mock heroics.’’
He
declared
that
Lewis
"has
launched
a campaign of hysteria
and emotional sensationalism which
now appears to have spread to those
officials of the government in abase
hands the bituminous coal mine*
now rest."
( i l « ? r a b H t d i
lag alibi. Bai maybe d u n ’s a
m am for "that feeling " If yon
aas ohfomcaliy lacking in aa*
sagy (hee© f* * * | days* bs was
b a n a talk wick your doctor
Mc may find a condition that
an d a correction. And fia t, if
bo gives yon a prescription,
we’d like ta eomyowed M
Walsh, McOagh,
Pharmacy
r
praaV*
tk u xm pkar-
bavMB pi ho
we DELIVER—FREE!
Just Phono
3444 sr 943—
British Lashes
Ariste and will be assisted by Rev
Hixon T. Bowersox. pastor of St.
Paul's Lutheran Church. The body
will be placed In Roe© Hill Mauso-
(Continued from Page 1)
Unm
several small countries sought un
Active pallbearers will be WH- successfully
to
modify the veto
Ham Mouse. Harry Cote, William I power.
Ifs Now I Ifs at Schwarzenbach's I
HEGO-CELANESE
HEGO-CELANESE
DRESS SHIRTS
Blue, ton, and natural
4.35
coordinated men's
in fine Celanese
popular prices -
Paul Yarnell. Joseph R. Winders.
Edward P. Marts and Harry L.
Stegmater.
Honorary pallbearers will be Wil
liam Sherman. J. H. Mosner, Law
rence Shafferman. A. W. Bergeron,
Wilfred T. Normand. George Aldom,
Eaton told the committee during a
hearing on American aid to Greece
and Turkey that the United Nations
was unable to act in the crisis now
because "the Russian delegate ha*
exercised a continued veto—holding
back, confusing and delaying —
Carl F. Schmutx, Lynn Lashley and which has made It impossible to be
George A.. Caswell.
ready now ”
Council Called "Important"
Lilienfhal Wins
Here at United Nations head
quarters.
Sir
Alexander Cadogan
(Continued from Page 1)
made one of his strongest speeches
is “naive” toward Russia and has on the veto in the Security Coun-
a "misconception of the Russian cli as soon as it convened,
threat.”
He said the council had become
He said the record shows th at “completely obstructed, sterile and
Lilienthal has a philosophy w hich1 impotent" in the Albanian case,
disagrees with "a tremendous m a - j
Cadogan acknowledged that tills
jority” of the Senate.
case might involve no immediate
“The Senate should not confirm breach of the peace, although, he
1 anybody unless he is the man the said. British warships might w ell I
Senate would have appointed." Taft I have returned “with good effect"!
This is the story of fabric . . . the story of blended
colors . . . of superior tailoring . . . of distinc
tive men's furnishings. Rarely have fabrics been
woven, colors blended, garments so beautifully
made . . . at popular prices . . . with the long
wear of custom quality. You'll find every item
flattering and completely comfortable
See this
new
ideo
in
men's wear . . . exclusively
Schwarzenbach's.
of
HEGO-CELANESE
SPORTS SHIRTS
counseled. "And if a preferential
vote had been taken he would be
well below IOO on the Senate list."
gunfire from Albanian shore bat
teries as they passed through Corf u
Channel last May.
By Linda and Jarry Walter
:a>>>>::ccco::c*>::ccccccccccccccc<ccccccccccccccccccg
>
I
Mrs. L. O. Miller
I
announces
the Opening Today of the
M ille r T ravel hewer
104 Frederick Street
Headquarters for
L U G G A G E
Come in and lot at plan your vacation
A U TYPES OF ESCORTED TOURS
HOTEL RESERVATIONS
PHONE 1120
Btu*, to*, natural 0 *4 whit*
4.35
THI PLAN . .
wear. presented
Schwarzenbach's
. Cusfom-quahty men's
to you exclusively by
in Cumberland, mode
from
fabrics
controlled
by
standard
specif lections along ovary stop af pro
duction from tho yarn to the finished
garment.
THE ITEMS . . . Shirts, beth dress end
sports, boxer waist shorts, paiomas. ond
self-lined robes.
It's just the beginning
of a long line of men's furnishings, oil
manufactured under this sensational now
plan.
THI FABRIC . . . Cool, washable, rich-
looking Hego fabric made from Celanese*
yarn.
There are two types — Funji. a
plain fugi-type weave, and Confetti —
a diamond pattern dobby weave.
THI MAKERS
. . Celanese Corpore-
lion and Hego Fabrics hove |oined with
the finest manufacturers in the men's
wear field to bring you men's furnishings
of excellent construction, unusual quality,
and exceptional value.
HEGO-CELANESE
PAJAMAS
Blue, tan, maize, and natural
6.50
HEGO-CELANESE
BOXER SHORTS
All elastic waist.
White only.
1.50
HEGO-CELANESE
RUBIS
•Before we start . . . I auppo.se we ought* decide how
many stroke* were gonna count!”
Navy and wine
fully I-
15.75
14I
CUMBERLAND
I
U. S. latent Office
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL
4,
1947
fHREE
Centerville Pair
Fined $100 Each
BED FO RD ,
P a .
April
3.—Four
cases scheduled for trial at the May
term of crim inal court were disposed
of before Judge J. Colvin Wright.
Pleas of guilty were made by the de
fendants involved.
Russell Dean lekes. Bedford, was
given a year in the Allegheny W ork
house for contempt of court. He ig
nored a court warrapt and was ex
tradited from Kingsport, Tenn.
Richard Weyant, 20, and Arden
D. Crawford, 21, were sentenced to
pay a fine of $100 and costs each
and serve a year In the county jail.
They were paroled immediately. The
two young men pleaded to a charge
of burglary, which, the judge told
them, could have gotten each 20
•
WARM AI R . . .
•
HOT WATER . . .
STEAM . . .
HEATI NG I NSTALLATI ONS
American
Home Modernizers
41 North Mechanic Street
Phone 4440
years in the penitentiary. They were
accused of stealing an automobile
tire and selling it to finance trip
from their home in Centerville tt
Cumberland.
Placed
on
probation
for thret
years and sentenced to pay a fim
of $100 and costs was Jam es E. Tice
He was charged with driving an
automobile
while
his
operator’*
¡license w'as suspended.
W illard Childers, who lives near
Riddlesburg, pleaded to larceny. He
was put on probation for five years
and ordered to pay a fine of $100
and costs.
T H IS S P R IN G . . .
Look Your Loveliest
W ith o . . .
CLASSIC
PERMANENT
Our Reputation is
Bu ilt On Finer H air
Styling. Better, Long
er Lasting Perman-.
ents.
CLASSIC
B E A U T Y SH O PPE
103 F RE D E RIC K ST.
P H O N E 3 0 6 3
ASSURE YOUR KI DDI ES OF
v
V v
Good-Looking Protection A g a in st t h e
W e a th e r ■
b ê
lAfi ftAVt
tot tors AMO G*IS
F a t h io n c o n t c io u t
youngster* w ill ador«
ft. rir fa*h«on-nghtne*»
.. . H e a lth conftcioui
another* will appreciate
the protection afforded
b> their 5 <7Ve*t4ruf44
feature*.
2’8
5
.98
SHOES — STREET FLOOR
J.
M E A S U RE
EA$Y- to-read red-merited
Pyre* m eaivong cup, safe
w th boiling water. C Q ^
M IX
USE a Pyrex Color Bowl.
2-1/2 times as strong as
ordinary bowls Set i 2 9J
BAKE
WATCH it brown just right in
the new Square Cake Dish
with handles. Buy 2
One pm* s>ze, liquid 4 M '
of four bowls, nested
A ~
for layer cakes. Each
err THUN A l t AT OUR
R Y R I X WART
S3 ?S
HOUSEWARES — FOURTH FLOOR
E a s t e r
f a s h i o n
C M 1
r
j
Easter inspires bright young fashions
for boys and girls . . . fashions with a flair for
crispness and neatness. The fabrics are the
finest, the finishing is superb . . . and you'll
find long-wear and lasting good-looks are
part and parcel of your purchase.
★ Bring the kiddies to greet
the Easter Bunny on our fourth
floor any afternoon 'til Easter
/#The Flying Ace
ROLLER SKATES
Rugged
riveted
and
bolted
construction,
adjustable
toe
clamps and shank6.
Every
single wheel rolls on real ball
bearings.
#/
3 .1 »
pair
Fourth Floor
Q u
a
k e r L a c e
C
l o
t h
s
Heirloom quality for America’s loveliest tables.
Quaker Lace cloths bring
you a heritage of rare lace patterns borrowed from museum treasures . . .
and bring, too, the fine American craftsmanship, quality yarns and down-to-
earth wearing qualities which are your assurance of lasting table beauty
through years to come!
In four popular sizes . . . 63 by 81 inches, 72 by
»0 inches, 54 by 72 inches and 63 by 83 inches.
«
» a
to ss
.95
LINENS
THIRD FLOOR
L ost
W e e k !
MYSTIC FOAM Demonstration
Make
your
Spring
cleaning
easier
with
Mystic Foam, the miracle cleaner
For rugs, upholstery and fine fabrics.
Let the factory demonstrator show you
how to clean your home.
Fourth Floor
G allon .,
% gallon
Q uart ...
1 .1 »
1.00
fi.Ti*
Cotton and Rayon Dresses
. , . 1n prints, plains
and stripes. Sizes 1 to 3.
1 .0 8 t(>
5 .0 8
Spring Coats . . . light blue, rose, maize, pink,
navy and aqua. Sizes 1 to 3.
1 0 .0 8 10 1 4 .0 8
Boys’ Jersey Suits . . . blue, aqua, yellow and
brown. Sizes 1 to 3.
¡2 .2 5
3 .0 8
Boys’ Wash Suits . . . cotton pique and linen
in white, plains or stripes. Sizes 1 to 3.
2 .2 5
5 .0 8
G irls’ Dresses , ,
S to 6x
. plains and prints.
Sizes
I . » «
5 . 9 8
Spring C o.!« . . . pretty pastel sharie«
Sizes
3 to 8x.
1 2 .98 to 1 7 .88
Skirts . . . pastel colors.
1 .0 8 40 5 .0 0
Boys’ Coats . . . tweed and solid navy or light
blue. Sizes 5 to 6x.
1 0 .0 8 to 1 2 .0 8
Cardigan and Slipover Sweaters . , . long and
6hort sleeves. Pastels and navy, red, brown and
dark green.
Sizes 7 to 14.
2 .0 5
5 .0 0
Dresses . . . stripes, prints, pastels and white
confirmation dresses. Sizes 7 to 14.
2 .9 8 to 7 .9 8
Cbubbie Dresses . . . prints and stripes. Size*
»H to 14 %.
2 .9 8 to .VOW
Coats . . . checks, plaids, stripes, solid pastels
and navy.
Sizes 7 to 14.
1 7 .0 8
2 2 .0 8
Chubbie Coats .
Sizes 8 Ms to 1412.
grey, navy and pastels.
2 2 .0 8
Skirt« . . . plaids, grey, navy and pastels. Sizes
7 *°
2 .9 8
5 .9 8
Margaret O’Brien B Io vm « . , . ( f fine
cloth . . . long or aiioit sleevas. Sizes 7 to 14.
8.08
Junioretts Drr****« . . . cottons, radons and
crepes in
prints, stripes, checks and
plain
pastels. Sizes 9 to 15 and 10 to 16.
5 .9 8 “ 1 2 .9 8
Juniorette Coats . . . pastels and atrip««. 3k ««
9 to 15 and 10 to 14.
2 2 .0 8 *> 2 0 .0 8
Juniorette Suits . . . in flattering pastel shade«.
Sizes 9 to 15 and 10 to 14.
2 0 .0 8 10 3 *5 .0 0
Blouses . . . cotton and rayon in dressy and
tailored styles. W hite and white with red trim.
Size. 9 to 15.
3 .}|8 to
SECOND
FLOOR
Joining the Easter Parade this year!
S h e e r N y l o n H o s i e r y
N O MEND -
BE
PHOENIX - VIRGINIA REEL - KAYSER
You’ll have the loveliest legs In the Easter Parade If you let these five
famous brand names determine your choice of sheer nylons . . . for
these labels w ill guarantee you proper fit and wearability . . . they
w ill bring you the newest shades to blend with the season’s leading
colors.
HOSIERY — STREET FLOOR
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
1947
DHR EE
Ginger
Picture
713 cub
I *99
3/A cup «*°,v
3/A cup ***'
woW
t/2 cup ^
M>P^» « £ T
- fco*W* *99*-
bah**
bob**
ASSURE YOUR KIPNIS Of
v
V v
(('Looking R o t a t io n A s f a s t th e fofeatlior I
§
l U
f 'V
*
POI K m AMO KRU
fa sh io n conations
youngster* will adore
gheir fashion•nghtneaa
• . . H e a lth co n scio u s
sn oth en will appreciate
Ute protection afforded
^ A ,1, C
INMMBHwF w
features.
SHOES — STREET FLOOR
TRY T H IS R IC IP E
POR EASTER!
You'll have the loveliest legs In the Easter Parade lf you let these five
famous brand names determine your choice of sheer nylons . . . for
these labels will guarantee you proper fit and wearability . . . they
will bring you the newest shades to blend with the season’s leading
colors.
HOSIERY — STREET FLOOR
Heirloom quality for America’s loveliest tables. Quuker Lace cloths bring
you a heritage of rare lace patterns borrowed from museum treasures . . #
and bring, too, the fine American craftsmanship, quality yarns and down*to*
cai til wearing qualities which are your assurance of lasting table beauty
through years to come! In four popular sires . . . 63 by 81 Inches, 72 by
§0 Inches, 54 by 72 inches and 63 by 83 inches.
«
“
»
2
2
“
LINENS — THIRD FLOOR
DU.* .V!.XI*"- .■<<: '
MWHBK3MBMI
"The Flying Ace"
ROLLER SKATES
Rugged
riveted
and
bolted
construction,
adjustable
toe
clamps and shanks.
Every
single wheel rolls on real ball
bearings.
3 * 4 9 P»ir
Fourth Floor
*. i aS*
Quaker Lace
C l o t h s
Last
Week ?
MYSTIC FOAM Demonstration
i t Nortk Mechanic Street
Phone 4440
Joining the Easter Parade this year!
Sheer Nylon Hosiery
N O MEND
-
BE
PHOENIX
- VIRGINIA REEL
- KAYSER
Make year Spring cleaning easier with
Mystic foam, tho miracle cleaner
For rugs, upholstery and fine fabrics.
D*t the factory demonstrator show you
how to clean your home.
Ga,lon .................................I.AS
’* gallon ..............
*****1.98
.................................e s *
Centerville Pair
Fined $100 Each
BEDFORD. Pa., April 3 —Four
cases scheduled for trial at the May
term of criminal court were disposed
of before Judge J. Colvin Wright.
Pleas of guilty were made by the de
fendants involved.
Russell Dean Ickes. Bedford, was
given a year in the Allegheny Work
house for contempt of court. He ig
nored a court warrant and was ex
tradited from Kingsport. Tenn.
Richard Weyant, 20, and Arden
D. Crawford. 21. were sentenced to
pay a Ane of HOO and costs each
and serve a year in the county jail
T h e y were paroled immediately. The
two young men pleaded to a charge
of burglary, which, the Judge told
them, could have gotten each 20
a WARM AIR . . .
a
ROT WATER . . .
STEAM . . .
■IATIRR IRSTALLATIORS
American
Home Modernizers
years in the penitentiary. They wen
accused of stealing an automobih
tire and selling it to finance trip
from their home in Centerville U
Cumberland.
Placed on probation for three
years and sentenced to pay a fin*
of $100 and costs was James E. Tice
He was charged with driving an
automobile
while
his
operator*!
license was suspended.
Willard Childers, who lives near
Riddlesburg, pleaded to larceny. He
was put on probation for five years
and ordered to pay rn fine of $100
and costs.
T H IS SPRIN G . . .
Look Yowr Loveliest
Wirt* e . , .
CLASSIC
PERMANENT
Our Reputation is
Built On Finer Hair
Styling. Better, Long
er Lasting Persian-.
en ta.
CLASSIC
BEAUTY SHOWE
MEASURE
EASY-to-read s*d-i*orfc*d
Pyr*s meotvtmg cup, Mf*
wiOi boiling wot*». 50/
M IX
USI a Pyr** Color Row!.
2-1/2 tim** at strong at
ordinary bowls S*t * 2 h
B A K I
WATCH it brown just right in
the (tow Savor* Cob* Diah
with hand!**. Buy 2 J Q ,
On* par biz*, liquid
of four bow It, netted A K
for lay*? cahot, loch
s i r ma au a t o v a mix w a xt c o m l*...osir $3ff
HOUSEWARES — FOURTH FLOOR
Fourth Floor
★ Bring the kiddies to greet
the Easter Bunny on our fourth
floor any attern o o h 'til Easter
Easter inspires bright young fashions
for boys and girls • . . fashions with a flair for
crispness and neatness. The fabrics are the
finest, the finishing is superb . . . and you'll
find long-wear and lasting good-looks are
port and parcel of your purchase.
SECOND FLOOR
Margiret OU * tan Bloman . . . dr floe fcroe£-
cloth . . . long or abort sleave*. Size* 7 to 14.
S . N
J uni arette Breme* . . . cottons, rayon* a n i
crepes in prints, stripes, checks and pAaia
pastels. Si aes 9 to IS and IO to Ii.
s . s s * i s . s a
Junior.*!? Conto . . . pastel* and atrip#*. (Bra*
• to 15 and IO to 14.
2 2 M * 28.88
Juniorette Suit* . . . in flattering pastel shade*.
Sizes 9 to 15 and IO to 14.
2 9 .8 8 to T I . 9 9
i
Blouse* . . . cotton and rayon In drcaay and
tailored styles. White and white with red trim.
Size* > to IS.
3 .9 S *«> S .O *
Colton and Rayon Dresses . , , In prints, plains
and stripes. Sizes I to 3.
1 .9 9 to
3 .9 8
Spring Coats . . . light blue, rose. maize, pink,
navy and aqua. Sizes I to 3.
IO.SS to i t.s s
Boys* Jersey Aults . , . blue, aqua, yellow and
brown. Sizes I to 3.
2 .2 3 *°
3 .9 8
Boys* Wash Saits . . . cotton pique and Mnan
In white, plains or stripes. Sizes I to 3.
2 .2 5 to ( . s s
flirt*' Du n n . . . plaint and prints.
Sura
•tote
I .SS 10 S.AS
It print €•*•* . . . pretty pastel ahiuW. Biwa
l t o 6 x
1 2 .9 8 to 1 7 .9 8
Skirts . . . pastel colors.
1 .8 8
3 . 8 8
Boys* Coots . . . tweed and solid navy or light
blue. Sizes 5 to 6x.
1 8 .8 8 40 1 2 .8 8
Cardigan and Slipover Sweaters . . . long and
short sleeves. Pastels and navy, red, brown and
dark green.
Sizes 7 to 14.
2 .8 3 40 3 .0 8
Dresses . . . stripes, prints, pastels and white
confirmation dresses. Sizes 7 to 14.
2.SS to 7.AS
Chubb!? n i f f * . . . print, and .tripe.. Biz?*
TH to 14*.
2 .8 8 40 8 . 8 8
Coals . . . checks, plaids, stripes, solid pastels
and navy. Sizes 7 lo 14.
1 7 .8 8 40 2 2 . 8 8
Chubbie Coats . . . grey, navy and pastels.
Sizes 8% to I41*.
2 2 . 8 8
Skirt* . . . plaids, grey, navy and pastels. Sizes
’ to 1J-
3 .A S to 5 .B S
F- OUR
THE C U M B E R L A N D
NEWS, CU M BERLAN D,
M D ,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
1947
The Cumberland New; - HOW TO
KEEP WELL
P .bluhed dally , ex cept Sunday , 7 -9 8 , Mechanic St., Cumberland,
Mary land, by Tha Time» 4k Allffcanlan Co mpany .
____________ _
E: tered as » eco nd cla» t mall m atter at Cumberland, M a ry l an d
under the act o i March 3, 18 7 9.
Member o i The Audit Bureau o f Circulatio n.
Member o f Th e Aaao clated Frets
H
H Ro binso n, M anaging Edito r.
Telepho ne 4 6 00
Subscriptio n rate* by Carriera
30c per week, 05 c » Ingle co py
Mai) Bubaerlptlo n rates upo n applicatio n.
Th* Cumberland
News
assume» no
financial
respo nsibility
fo r
ty po graphical erro r» in adv ertisem ents, but will reprint that part o f
an adv erttaament in which th# ty po graphical erro r o ccur*. Erro r* muat
■>♦ rcp o rfd at o no a.
________________
F rida y M orn in g , A pril 4, 19 47
Good Friday Observed By
Christians Throughout World
As th e Len ten season goes Into Its solemn climax ,
Ch ristian s of all den om in ation s are moved to more
devout recollection of th e day s of tragedy th a t pre
ceded th e glorious trium ph of Ch ristendom.
T h us
Good Friday mean s much to all wh o recall th e P assion
of Ch rist as an Inspiration, with out parallel in h istory ,
to a better ordered world.
Th e story of th e Passion sh ows h ow only great
« arrifice can offset th e evils of th e world an d deliver
m an kin d from th e curse of cumulative wan ton n ess.
Only in th is way can men come to recognize one a n
oth er as broth ers on a common road, each with h is
own burden. Easter lies ah ead, th e spiritual crown of
th e y ear, an d Easter Is associated in th e m in ds of all
with seasonal joy an d peaceful aspiration . Yet a Cal
vary of compassion m ust precede spiritual an ticipation
of Easter. We need to commemorate in our h earts
th ose values for wh ich Ch rist wen t down to His death
to lead us all to fairer ex pectations of life an d im
mortality .
* Th us wf may best look forward lo Easter and to a
realization of God-given peace on earth , to mark th e
adven t of Spring for all m an kin d.
State Legislature And Partial
Review Of Its Activities
In some respects, th e session of th e Mary lan d
Legislature wh ich closed its n in ety -day meeting last
Monday n igh t, was one of th e most im portan t h eld in
m an y y ears.
A mass of work was done in th e closing
week of th e gath erin g, during wh ich time members
engaged in h eated debates, tempers flared, at times
to wh ite h eat.
It Is m ast certain n ot every body was
ra tifie d with th e outcome of some battles over
measures, but Governor Lane probably will look upon
th e accomplish men ts with perso nal pride.
Mr. Lane, serving th e first n in ety -some day s of
h is regime, an d ex periencing h is first h an d-to-h an d
struggle with a Legislature, as Governor, found it
necessary , at times, to ex ercise ex treme pressure in
order to secure en actm en t of h is legislative program.
And h e succeeded in th is w ith out th e necessity of
ch an gin g, very much , h is set agenda, especially as it
applied to spending an d revenue.
Up to th e time h e
foun d it n ecessary to assert h imself on recalcitran t
members of h is Party , in order to h old th em In line
on specified measures, th e session h ad become one of
confusion, an d until ten day s before th e session ended
It was never certain w h at migh t h appen .
Part of th is was traceable to a budget Mr. Lane
mi bm it ted.
Many th ough t, a t th e time, an d still do,
th a t th e Govern or’s financial docum en t was all out
of portion to th e immediate needs of th e State.
Re
publican members of th e Legislature, with th e aid
of some Democrats, sough t to no avail to h ave it
reduced as much as several million dollars.
It was
th e opinidh of th ose wh o believed th e budget sh ould
be trimmed th at various departm en ts could do with
less, and th at man y of th e items earm arked for h uge
am oun ts could h ave been elimin ated for th e time
being.
It is our opinion th at appropriation s to th e
University of Mary lan d an d th e D epartm en t of Edu
cation could h ave been reduced with out ln terferrin g
with th e proper fun ction s of eith er.
But with th e ex ception of a promise to lop off
$500,000 a y ear for th e n ex t two y ears, th e budget
was approved almost with out ch an gin g a pun ctuation
m ark
Of course, th is tremen dous spending program
called for th e raising of h uge sums.
Th is was finally
accomplish ed by settin g up a sales tax and by in
creasin g th e income levy , alth ough th e Governor h as
said th at If th e sales tax return s are greater th an
e Unrated it may not be necessary to resort to th e
h igh er income tax .
W h eth er or not th a t becom es
n ecessary n eith er th e sales tax n or th e Income levy
Increase bills are so inspiring as to cause a tossing
up of h ats an d ch eering.
Th e Govern or’s spending
an d revenue program is such as to cause us to winch ,
an d makes one wonder if h e h as taken a page from
th e Roosevelt policy book to spend, spend, spend,
tax . tax , tax .
We m ust h ope Mr. Lan e will see th e
advisability of h olding up wh atever portions of h is
spending program is not of a pressing n ature, an d
wh ich can be postponed until conditions perm it th em
being carried out to a more economical advan tage to
tax pay ers.
Notion To See Revival Of
Wartime Home Gardenina
Th e United Slates th is y ear will see a revival of
In terest in h ome garden in g equal to th at during war
y ears wh en production of food was a prime necessity .
Continued h igh cost of most foods is responsible for
th e ex pected increase in h ome production.
Because
of such activities during past y ears, wh ich were crowd
ed with amazing success, m an y h ouseh olders find both
needed ex ercise an d en joy m en t in caring for a plot
In th e backy ard, or in th e vacan t lot n ex t door.
It is predicted th ere will be 20,000.000 h ome g ar
dens th rough out th e n ation , approx imately th e n um
ber durin g'th e war y ears.
Seed sales are in creasing
rapidly th rough out th e country .
Andrew J. Wing, director of th e National Garden
In stitute, say s h is office is deluged with calls for
booklets on plan tin g an d also on h ome can n in g.
If
European s adopted some of th e resourcefullness of
Americans in providing th eir food needs, th ere would
be fewer calls for American relief, with th e result
th a t it would be passible to make more th an a token
rut in income tax es.
U p In The Air
In th is th ree-dimen sion al age. th e h elicopter may
become th e poor m an ’s airplane. One model now be-
lnc developed is simply strapped to a m an ’s back, like
an outboard motor. It will go straigh t up, or take h im
a* 60 miles an h our to any spot th a t h as a lan din g
space 25 feet square.
II h e wan ts to escape h is m oth er-in -law or h is
creditors, h e can simply go straigh t up and h over until
h is persecutor slinks away .
Quite an idea, th is notion of puttin g an outboard
inptor on a man!
Anoth er on e-m an model, sligh tly larger, h as an
enclosed seat, landing wh eels and a single guiding
•tick It can probably be sold in quan tity for $750
A future campaign slogan may be: “Two h eli
copters on every roof!”
By Dr. Theodore K. Van Dellen
T o the limtt o f sp a ce, q ues
tio ns p erta ining to the p reven
tio n o f d isea se will b e a n
swered .
Perso na l rep lies will
b e ma d e, und er p ro p er limita
tio ns,
when return s ta m p e d
envelo p e is inclo sed .
Dr. Va n
Dellen
will no t
m ake diag
n oses o r p rescrib e to r ind ivi
d ua l d isea ses.
GOOD AND POOR APPETITES
A
PPETITE an d h un ger are n ot
sy nony mous alth o th ey are
often presen t at th e same
time. An individual may be
starved wh en h e sits down to din
n er but by th e tim e th e dessert is
reac h ed, th e sen sation h as vanish ed.
Neverth eless, appetite ex ists for th e
straw berry
sh ortcake, pie, or ice
cream th a t Is served.
Hunger Is an in n ate craving for
food. N ature was kind in providing
th is m ech an ism because it notifies
th e brain th a t fuel of some kind
m ust be provided. W h en th e urge
is stron g enough , even th e most
finicky eater will settle for alm ost
an y th in g. In th e beginning stage,
th ere
Is a feeling
of
em ptiness,
weakness, an d
irritability
caused
perh aps by a depleted blood sugar
level. If m ore meals are missed,
gnaw ing pangs appear at in tervals
of a few m inutes, wh ich last for a
second or two. After a wh ile th e
con traction s cease for a period of
on e-h all to two h ours wh en th e
cram plike m ovem ents will recom
mence. Unless n utrim en t is taken ,
th e cy cle will be resumed.
Appetite depends to a great ex
ten t
upon past ex perience. 11
a
certain restauran t ex cels in ch icken
pie, we know beforeh and th a t we
will relish it. Custom an d tradition
are also p art of th e picture. Many
a bride h as h ad to con ten d w ith
criticism of h er cooking until sh e
learn ed to bake th e m eat loaf “like
m oth er used to m ake.” En viron m en t
is likewise im portan t since ex cite
m en t, noise, lack of cleanliness, an d
poor service ten d to depress th e de
sire to eat. W orry an d fatigue act
sim ilarly as deterren ts. O ur sense
organ s are brough t in to play for th e
appearan ce, taste, an d smell add to
or detract from our en joy m en t of
th e dish .
But, in general, th e m ajority of
us receive sufficien t
n ourish m en t
because if we are “off our feed” a t
one meal we m ake up for it w ith
th e nex t. T h ere is, h owever, a pe
culiar ty jie of lack of appetite
a n
orex ia nervosa—th a t is serious. It
is
partial
to
y oung
women
but
sh ould n ot be confused with th e
tem porary dislike of food th a t a f
flicts th e girl wh o Is too ex cited
about h er date to both er eatin g.
W h en th e
disorder
Is m arked,
th ere is a great, decrease in w eigh t
th o n ot necessarily of stren gth . T h e
patien t becomes so un dern ourish ed
th a t sh e resembles pictures of th e
victims of con cen tration camps. No
defin ite evidence of organic trouble
can be found alth o th e menses m ay
cease an d a basal m etabolism test
usually
sh ows
th a t
th e
th y roid
gland is producing an in adequate
am oun t ol its secretion. Th is h as
led some auth orities to believe th a t
th e endocrine sy stem Is disturbed
but th e ch an ces are th a t th e gland
sy m ptom s are a result rath er th an
a cause.
More ph y sicians feel th at, a psy
ch ological conflict is th e basis. T h e
girl seems to be as m uch afraid of
life as of eatin g; sh e Is.sta rved
em otionally as well as ph y sically .
Durin g th e first week or more of
treatm en t forced feeding I with a
tube | may be necessary . Th is is
followed by a diet h igh in calories
an d vitam ins and th e adm in istra
tion of th y roid ex tract. M eanwh ile,
an attem pt is m ade to m ake th e
sufferer realize th e source ol h er
difficulty in order to h elp h er to
m ature m entally . As sh e becomes
less determ ined to rcjeet. life sh e
will be more inclined to taste food.
ABNORMAL PATHWAY
B W w riters: W h at is a fistula?
Is operation th e cure?
REPLY
A fistula Is a tiny passageway th ru
wh ich m aterial escapes from an in
fection deep in th e body . Surgery is
necessary , n ot only to remove th e
source but also th e tract.
SIN! S CONTAGION
E
T. writes: 1 sleep with my
m oth er
wh o
h as
ch ronic
sin us
trouble. Will th is affect my h ealth ?
REPLY
Sin us trouble Is contagious in th is
sense only wh en th ere is an acute
flareup, such as alter a cold.
(Co py right: 194 7 : By The Chicago Tribune)
It Says Here
By
BOR HOPK
HEY! NONE OF THAT!
The Washington Merry- Go- Round
Cenfralia, III. , Is Center Of John L. Lewis’ Civil War Against Progressive Miners,-
Humor Slips Info Moscow Peace Conference,- Radio Censorship
------------------------------------
Say s DREW I'EARSON ----------------------------------------------
14 of th e favorite brun ettes or
cuties from New York to Las An
geles are arrivin g in California th is
weekend on a special car of th e S an
to
Fe
Superch ief
called,
of
all
th in gs, th e “My Favortie B run ette.”
Th ey left New York on April 1
an d will be h ere in tim e for th e Eas
ter weekend. Just, to keep in th e
spirit of th e occasion we are go
ing to greet th em at th e station
with
14
little
brun n ette bunnies.
Since th is is th e easier season. I
am going to color some eggs for
th em . I guess y ou know wh ere I
get my supply —or don ’t y ou listen
on Tuesday n igh ts?
• Professor Colonna took a special
plane down fo Ch icago wh ere h e m et
th e train and gave th e girls th eir
C aliforn ia diets—orange .juice and
filet of smog.
And of course th e ch am ber of
commerce
will
paddle
down
and
h an d th em th e waterwings to th e
city . W ith all th ese brun ettes coming
in to Unvn it is th e first time th e
ch am ber of commerce will h ave a
legitim ate alibi for an y darkn ess
th a t h as spread over th e city .
We Intend to sh ow th e girls all
th e lan dm arks in town. W e’ll even
introduce th em to a few pedestri
an s—^ th ey are allowed to h ave
visitors.
And of course a t Holly wood and
Vine th ey may start out to see
Th e points of in terest, but wh en th ey
end up th ey will be th e points of
in terest.
Th e girls are probably very an x l-
to
see
C raum an ’s Ch inese T h e
atre wh ere stars h ave all th eir foot
prin ts.
A lter th ey see th at we ll
take th em into th e Bank of A m rr-
ica wh ere th ey can see G raurn an s
footp- ’Us.
(Co py right, 194 7 , by KK8 , Inc.!
W ASHINGTON, April 3. (J P)~ T h e
en tire n ation was deeply sadden ed
by th e tragic death of 111 coal
m in ers at C en tralia, an d it is de
voutly to be h oped th a t th e disaster
wall prove a lesson to m ine operators
wh o h ave resisted federal mine in
spection.
However, It Is sometimes h ealth y
to see w h eth er th ere is any blood
on th e h an ds of th ose wh o ch arge
oth er people w ith m urder.
And a
ch eck-up on Joh n L. Lewis's record
m akes
one
wonder
w h eth er
h is
memory is sh ort or w h eth er h e h ad
ton gue-in -ch eek
wh en
h e
h urled
th e
m urder
ch arge
a t
Secretary
Krug.
It so h appen s th at C en tralia. 111.,
Is in t h e cen ter of a coal field wh ere
Joh n L. Lewis* staged one of th e
bloodiest civil wars in labor h istory
again st
th e
Progressive
M iners.
W h en it ended, 21 of Lewis's rivals
were dead.
And. unlike th e C en
tralia mine disaster, th ey did n ot
die accidentally .
Pag« * after page «»f testimo ny
taken
by
the
Illino is
Mining
t ’o n>mis‘ i<m sho w ho w Lewis’s
henchm en <*arri« *« l o n this blo o dy
battle.
« As conclusive proof th a t th is war
h ad
Lewis's blessing, h e actually
paid $300.000 out ol th e U n ited Mine
W orkers treasury to Carl Elsh off,
owner of a mine at Springfield, 111.,
to close down, th us th row ing rival
Progressive M iners out of work. In
oth er words, Lewis paid out th e dues
of h is own m en to a mine owner,
wh o oth erw ise would
h ave
given
gain ful employ m ent, as a rew ard
for closing down.
No t far fro m Centralia a l n
o ccurred
the
famo us
Herrin
massacre,
where
the
steam
sho v eJ men’s unio n first started
strip
mining.
Lewis
sent
his
miners an
inflammato ry tele
gram describing them as “ o ut
laws,” fo llo wing which 400 Lewis
men surro und« *« ! a handful o f
steamsho v el
wo rkers,
marched
them into a field, lined them up
after the manner o f the Nazis,
and mo wed them do wn in co ld
blo o d.
T h is Is th e m an wh o now’ poin ts
a finger a t Secretary of th e In terior
K rug and cries: "M urder ”
Th ese are also some of th e th in gs
wh ich S en ators probing th e C en
tralia tragedy m igh t query Joh n L.
Lewis about wh en h e pon tificates
before th em . However, no legislator
y et h as h ad th e nerve to tan gle
w ith m igh ty Joh n .
Note — Th e W ash in gton M errv-
G o-R oun d. as its con tribution to
m ine safety , will publish th e n am es
of future m ine operators w’h o flout
federal inspection recom m endations.
Backstage In Mo sco w’
Th ough U. S. diplom ats at Moscow
are engaged in th e deadly serious
business of writing th e peace, th ey
som etim es slip in a little h um or
Moscow advisers were inform ally
discussing one of th e m ain problems
worry ing th e delegates
h ow G er
m an in dustry can be built up suffi
ciently so sh e can pay reparation s
but at th e sam e tim e so sh e will
not be stron g enough to wage war.
Th e conversation revolved aroun d
w'h at are war in dustries’ Wh ile it
was agreed th at steel plan ts con
tribute to war. it was also agreed
th a t steel is indispensable to peace.
Rem arked one delegate:
“Even an aspirin factory is a war
factory , since a m odern arm y can
not figh t w ith out aspirin .”
“Anri a plan t m an ufacturin g baby
carriages
is
also
a
war
p la n t,’
quipped G en eral Lucius Clay , com
m an der of
U .S .-occupied G erm any ,
“because it h el})s th e in fan try . *
Radio Censo rship
To get th e full picture of W illiam
B
S h im 's
ex it
from
Columbia
Broadcasting y ou h ave to go back
to th e day s » before Hitler, wh en
Sh irer was CBS correspondent in
G erm an y and one of th e men wh o
h elned
warn th e world regardin g
Naziland.
Sh irer did a great job for th e
Am erican public both with h is book
an d on th e air, an d CBS was proud
of h im. More recently , h owever, Bill
h as not been en th usiastic over loans
to Greece an d Turkey , h as raised
some red
flags regarding a drift
toward war. Now, after long y ears
of service, Rill is off th e air
So many den ials an d count erde-
n la 1-1 h ave been issued bv CBS offi
cials th a t it is difficult to know
w h eth er CBS or th e W illiams Soap
Com pany ousted Sh irer.
However,
wh en th e Pearson-A lien team was
working for th e same W illiams Com
pany , it was impossible to say an y
th in g bordering on political opinion
with out h aving a battery of lawy ers
buzzing over th e radio script. Even
th e advance prediction th a t FDR
would defeat
VV’endell
Willkie
in
194f> — a foregone certain ty
sen t
cold sh ivers up and down th e spon
sor’s back.
M eanwh ile, th e Columbia network
h as been increasingly timid about
freedom of th e air, an d in 1943
parted company with one of th eir
star
com m en tators,
Cecil
Brown.
He h ad been telling some un pleasan t
truth s about th e conduct of th e war.
M eanwh ile, th e two most fearless
ch am pion s of air freedom are th<*
Am erican
Broadcastin g
Company
and M utual. ABC's courage is well
known an d long establish ed. But
th ough M utual is partly dom in ated
by th e Ch icago Tribun e's Colonel
McCormick,
it
was
h is
network
wh ich took on Cecil Brown an d
wh ich h as now offered an outlet to
Bill Sh irer. Th ough h e may m ur
der th e news in th e Tibune, Col.
McCormick seems to believe th at all
sides sh ould be given a ch an ce to
be h eard over a radio network, and
lets M utual's capable ch ief, Ed Ko-
bak. operate accordingly .
Oil Refinery To Russia
Some weeks ago th ere was a big
outcry in Congress regardin g lcn d-
lease to Russia, an d an am en dm en t
was
passed
stopping
all
furth er
len d-lease sh ipm en ts. At th a t time,
$25.000.000
w orth
of
oil
refinery
equipm en t was about to leave th e
USA
Last week, h owever. Secretary of
State M arsh all sen t a confidential
cable to U n dersecretary ol
S tate
Aeh eson wh ich surprised th ose wh o
know' about it
M arsh all asked th a t
Congress
OK
sh ipm en t
of
th e
$25.000,000 oil refining equipm ent to
Russia
M arsh all’s request is based on th e
fact th a t th e Russians already h ad
obtain ed title to th e oil equipm ent
un der earlier lend-lease and since,
h e contends, th ey already own th e
property , h e w an ts th em to h ave
permission to sh ip it.
Some con
gressmen are a little dubious, th ough
inclined to th in k th at if an y sm all
concessions
will
make
M arsh all’s
path easier in Moscow, it sh ould
be gran ted.
• CopvrlRh t. 1947, hv
Th«* Bril Sy ftdlratr, Inc.)
Tw enty y ears ago, a fellow nam ed
M ark Hellinger was writing a daily
piece
about
Broadway .
In
th ose
day s, I figured a column was some-
th in g wh ich h eld
up a building, and
w h e n
I c a m e
a c r os s a g ood
y arn I ’d generally
pass
it
on
to
Mark.
Now
th a t
I ’m
singing
th e
D a i l y
Deadline
Blues my self. I d
like to take back
one of th e stories
I
gave
h im.
I
t r us t t h e m a n
with th e can dy -
apple h eart won’t
mind.
Billy Rose
I t s a s t or y
about th e fabulous gam bler known
as Nick th e Greek. Nick is in th e
tradition of th e gam bler wh o bet a
h un dred
th ousan d
on
a
h orse,
watch ed h im stum ble a few feet
from
th e
finish line, and
never
dropped th e inch -long ash from h is
cigarette.
One sum m er evening I was stan d
ing outside th e restauran t wh ere
th e bookies and bootleggers used to
come for th eir daily ration of pin e
apple ch eesecake
Nick tlie Greek
strolled up and said h ello. I was
writing songs at th at time, an d h e
fancied a ballad ol mine th en c ur
ren t. As usual, th e gam bler’s cloth es
m atch ed h is m an n ers, and h is m an
ners were very good.
Our palaver was in terrupted by a
gent- with a tooth pick in h is m outh .
He drew Nick aside and wh ispered
som eth in g to h im.
“If y ou h ave noth in g better to
do.” said th e gambler, wh en h e came
back, “walk down to 34th Street
with me
Th ey 're play ing ton igh t
in a loft across th e street
from
Macy 's. May be y ou’d like to w atch .”
We walked south on Broadway . I
knew lie was takin g me to th e
famous floating dice game. To keep
a
jum p
ah ead
of
th e
law,
th e
gam blers would set up sh op each
n igh t in h
differen t
l oc a t i on .
Th ough th is Involved th e h ush -h ush
move of several tons of paraph er
nalia. it was not an im portant con
sideration wh en tiie h ouse w;ux cut-
Ignorance Seen As Cause Of
L a b o r - M a n a g e m e n t F r i c t i o n
____________________ B t DAVID LAWRENCE -------------------
tin g on a n igh tly play wh ich ran
into seven figures.
As we picked our way th rough th e
afte r-th ea tre
crowds,
Nick
began
to tell me about some poems h e was
reading. And th ey weren't th e easy
poems of Edgar Guest. He talked
about Burns an d Sh elley , Housm an
an d Swinburne. I h ad h eard th a t
Nick was a patron of th e arts as
well as of th e freckled cubes. By th e
time we got to 34th Street, I sensed
h e
liked
th e
culture
stuff,
and
w asn 't just puttin g it on to impress
th e boy s.
We passed th rough th e doorway
of an old lott building. Anoth er
gen t with a tooth pick in h is face
gave us th e up-an d-dow n . An as
sortm en t of smells—prin ter's ink,
leath er,
old
cloth es
dum m ies—
wash ed over us as we climbed th ree
fligh ts.
A th ird
tooth p kk-in -th e-
iace opened a h eavy m etal fire-door,
an d
we walked in to th e biggest
dice gam e in th e world.
Th is was th e crap game of O. K.
Coakley —th e
bootleggers Bradley .
In th e cen ter of a low-ceilinged
room big as a skatin g rink stood a
single
billiard
table.
Around
it,
eigh t deep, clustered th e play ers.
Th ey m ade room for Nick as fish
erm en m igh t lor Izaak W alton
I
pressed th rough th e r.ow d, stood
n ex t to h im, an d loosed around.
T h e table looked like th e counting
room of th e Mint. By th e ligh t ol
th e tin lam p h an gin g from th e ceil
ing. I recognized Arnold Rofh stein,
Big French y , an d a couple of leg
en dary bootleggers I prefer n ot to
n am e because th ey ’re now respect
ed
partn ers
in
n ation al
wh isky
companies.
As usual, Nick bet again st th e
dice. You could h an g a derby h at
on my ey es wh en I saw th e n um
bers on th e bills wiiich ch anged
h an ds with each pass. A few rolls
later, a well-known com edian pick
ed up th e dice. Nick kept fadin g
h im, an d covering all side bets. Th e
comic made eleven passes in a row.
“See y ou again, gen tlem en ,” said
Nick, as h e turn ed away lrom th e
table.
He h ad lost $240.000.
On th e wav back to h is h otel, I
kept waiting for h im to curse, sn ap
W ASHINGTON. April 3 — CIO
economists h ave figured out from
h survey of
19 steel companies,
represen tin g 9 0 per ren t of Ingot
capacity , th a t a substan tial wage
boost can be given with out raising
prices
or
seriously
lm pa It ing
profits.
T h is is an in terestin g illustration
of wh v America Is facing m ore an d
more m isun derstan din g and friction
between labor an d m an agem en t. Th e
CIO report is, of course, one-sided
and disregards th e responsibility of
m an agem en t to protect th e steel
business in th e Am erican economic
sy stem.
Th e report select« a 30-cen t-an -
h our wage rise an d say s if steel
com panies operate a t 9 5 per cent of
capacity th e profits would be $136.-
000.000 with out
a price rise, but
neglects to poin t out th at 40 per
cen t of such profits m ust go for
federal tax es and r substan tial sum
in addition for state tax es. O ut of
th e $8 1.600.000 of profits rem ain in g
after federal tax es, th e 19 com panies
m ust set aside am ple reserves for
th e future an d alscTpay a fair return
to th e investors or run th e risk of
n ot being able to raise money wh en
borrowing
or
investing
becomes
•necessary
in
th e
m on ey -raisin g
m arkets.
Latest figures sh ow th a t th e steel
com panies earn ed only 6.2 per cen t
on th eir n et w orth from 1941 to 1945
an d
19 46.
wh ich was th eir best
peacetim e y ear from th e stan dpoin t
of dem and, th ey earn ed only 7.3
p« *r cent.
Cy cle of Years Not Co nsidered
Th en . too. th ere is appuren th no
con sideration given by th e CIO to
th e cy cle of y ears. Tf business m en
increased wages an d th ereby raised
th eir fix ed ch arges on th e basis of
abn orm al
earn in gs
In
any
given
vear, th ey would find th em selves
loaded with a h eavy fix ed ex pense
a) a subsequen t tim e wh en dem an d
falls off and mills in th e steel busi
ness. for Instance, are compelled to
run a t reduced capacity .
Th e am oun t of m isrepresen tation
of th e profits of com panies being
circulated by labor-un ion “econom
ists" th ese day is m atch ed only bv
th e m isin form ation distributed by
naive com m en tn tors wh o never op-
ern ted a risk capital business and
do n ot know th e first th in g about
reserves needed to keep a business
operatin g over
a period of y ears
wh en dem and and prices of m ater
ials bough t are subject to cy clical
fluctuation s.
Th e average observer would jum p
to th e conclusion th a t th ere is a
simple answer to th is problem of
risk—nam ely , to devise profit-sh ar
ing sy stem s wh ereby , as profits go
up or down, th e workers sh are th e
risks with th e m an agem en t. But if
th ere is an y labor union in th e n a
tion al friend wh ich h as ever en
dorsed th e idea of binding workers
by con tract to sh are losses with th e
stockh olders, wh ile allowing m an
agem en t to determ in e suitable re
serves for depressions or falling m ar
kets. th is w riter h as never h eard of
any such n ation al union.
Th e modern labor leader is will
ing to talk profits wh en th ey are
h igh . But wh en a depression occurs,
as it did in 1932, and com panies like
th ose in th e steel business suffer
a drastic drop in earn in gs, th e cry
is loud an d vigorous th at corpora
tion s sh ould pay for employ e wages
out of reserves and keep production
going an d prevent plan ts from clos
ing th eir furnaces.
Canno t Hav e Bo th Way s
Th e labor unions certain ly can n ot
h ave it both way s.
Th ey can n ot
in sist th a t th e m easure of wages
sh ould be th e profits earn ed in good
y ears and th at th ere be no wage
cuts wh en dem and falls off.
Every body knows th at th e steel
business is good today largely be
m use th e backlog of dem and from
th e war y ears h as not been satisfied
and probably will n ot be for an oth er
y ear or more. To raise wages by
ex trem e calculation s now is to force
price increases eith er now or wh en
dem and falls. T h e con struction in
dustry is deeply In terested in th e
h is fingers, kick a garbage can, do
an y th in g. In stead, h e told me about
a
pain tin g h e
h ad
seen
at
th e
M etropolitan
Museum - “Old
Lady
C uttin g Her Fin gern ails,” by Rem
bran dt. “Th ere’s some doubt about
its auth en ticity ,” h e said. "It's been
ascribed to Nich olas Macs, but it’s
a great picture all th e sam e.”
O utside h is h otel, h e Invited me
up for a n igh tcap. I went in with
h im, waiting for th e gesture wh ich
would in dicate h e was distressed at
blowing a quarter of a million in a
quarter of an h our.
Nick’s room was h igh -up and cool.
On th e n igh t-table n ex t to h is bed
was a plate with a single oran ge
on it. He poured me a drin k. As I
sipped it. I saw* h is brows pull to
geth er in a frown.
“Here it comes,” I said to my self.
He started to ligh t a cigarette,
sn apped off th e flame and reach ed
for th e teleph one. “I w an t th e m an
ager,” h e said, an d th e softness was
out of h is voice. As h e waited, h is
fingers drum -rolled on th e tabletop.
“M cKelway ?” said Nick. “Some
th in g very distressing h as h appened.
As y ou know, I like a little fruit
before I go to bed W h en I moved
in I asked th at an orange and a
ban an a be sen t to my room each
n igh t. Th e orange Is h ere, but th e
ban an a is missing.”
He listened for a second an d h ung
up. T h en th e man wh o h ad lost
enough to buy h alf th e ban an as in
South America turn ed to me with a
smile.
“It's all righ t," h e said. “Th ey 're
going to send one righ t up.”
(Co py right. 194 7 . by Billy
Romm
rHOME LOANS- i
An aid to home ownership
. . . The Loan Plans here
. . . The cooperation you
receive here . . . Just a
part of our service
WESTERN
MARYLAND
J I 0 3»
60 Pershing St.
price of steel and so is th e auto
in dustry .
If
th e
steel
companies
could be guaran teed for fivp y ears
or more th eir present level of pr. ius,
th ey could take ch ances with a h ig
h er wage level. But th e CIO isn t k o—
Ing to un derw rite th e profits of th e
steel com panies or th e level of de
m and In th e nex t five y ears, nor is
th e CIO going to be able to defend
itself from criticism if its pressure
for wage increases puts th e fix ed-
ex pem e Items of th e steel com pan
ies so h igh th a t America, for m anv
y ears to come, m ust pay an abn or
mally h igh price for its steel.
Th e true economic statesm an sh ip
wh ich is lacking will come onlv
wh en economists for labor unions
presen t all sides of th e picture an d
prove th at, after tax es, profits are
adequate to w arran t a fair return
on capital Invested and th a t dem an d
Is ROing to con tin ue for a flx ed
period ah ead.
But th is kind of a n
aly sis will be valueless unless labor
unions are willing to agree, as a
condition of wage boosts based on
capacity to
pay ,
th a t
th ey
will,
w ith out strikes or th reat of strikes,
accept an equally ex trem e reduction
in wages wh en dem an d fails off or
wh en .con sum er resistan ce is such
th at price reduction s m ust be g ran t
ed
It Is n ot enough to cite figure«
of profits before tax es w ith out com
parin g th e average earn in gs af er
tax es for a five or ten -y ear period
and th e am oun t of
reserves lair
aside to preserve a business again st
enforced liquidation wh en times ge;
It Is apparen t th at th e am oun t
of ign oran ce about th e operation s
of
our
profit-an d-loss
sy stem
is
tragic and th at th is is one of th e
m ain causes of labor-m an agem en t
friction
wh ich
n eith er
laws
nor
strikes can cure but wh ich educa
tion alone can clarify .
• Repro ductio n Right» R***r» » <f)
NOTICE ALL ELKS
Please meet at Elks Home at 7 45
p. m., Friday , April 4th , to m arch
In body to S tein ’s Fun eral Horn#
for
Elk’s
Service
for
our
lai«
B roth er H arry S. L m m .
J E. YARN ALL,
Secretary
Adv.— N -T-A pr 4
■to|
M
Easter Togs
for the
C h i l d r e n i
Lillian s *
GIRL SH O P
' T o l l
t"
6 4 Baltimore St.
• Yo u seek co unsel o f th«
« blest Phy sician. Nex t,
b rin g his prescriptio ns to
this “ Reliable” Pharmacv
where skilled p ro feisio na l
service and fresh, po tent
drugs are alway s assured.
KE* LOI, r H’S
DRUG STORE
221 Mary land Ave.
Ph one 251
Camera
Fans
VISIT
HARVEY'S
Camera
For Your Photographic
SUPPLIES
and
EQUIPMENT
NOTE: Cumberland Camera
Club meets every 4th Wed
n esday at Knights ot Malta
Home, Prospect Square, City.
41
H a l l i t i x i r r
>trr« * l
FOUR
THE
C U M BER LAN D
NEWS,
CUM BERLAND,
M D ,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4,
1947
The Cumberland News HOW TO
KEEP WELL
r .bilobed dally, except Bund**, ?-• 8. Mechanic St., Cumberland.
Man,end, by The Ti mo * Alleaanlan Com pany.
Ct terrd aa *ecocd elaat mall matter at Cumberland. Maryland,
and*? the aet ol March 2 117*.
Member of The Audit Bureau of Circulation.
Member af The Annodated y>reM
H 8 Robinson, Manafln* Editor.
Telephone 4000
Subscription rates by Carrier*
Me per week. Ok single copy
Mao Subscription rn tee upon application.
The Cumberland Mews assumes no financial responsibility Im
typos mph leal errors in advertisemente. but will reprint that part of
ac adrertlaamsnt ta which the typographical error occurs Errors must
aa reportad hi anoa
_____________
Friday Morning, April 4, 1947
Good Friday Observed By
Christians Throughout World
Ai the Lenten season goes Into Its solemn climax,
Christiana of all denominations are moved to more
devout recollection of the days of tragedy that pre
ceded the glorious triumph of Christendom.
Thus
Good Friday means much to all who recall the Passion
of Christ as an inspiration, without parallel In history,
to a better ordered world.
The story of the Passion shows how only great
sacrifice can offset the evils of the world and deliver
mankind from the curse of cumulative wantonness.
Only in this way can men come to recognize one an
other as brothers on a common road, each with his
own burden. Easter lies ahead, the spiritual crown of
the year, and Easter Is associated in the minds of all
with seasonal Joy and peaceful aspiration. Yet a Cal
vary of compassion must precede spiritual anticipation
of Easter. We need to commemorate in our hearts
those values for which Christ went down to His death
to lead u t all to fairer expectations of life and im
mortality.
• Thus we may best look forward to E aster and to a
realization of Ood-given peace on earth , to m ark the
advent of Spring for all mankind.
State Legislature And Partial
Review Of Its Activities
In some respects, the session of the Maryland
Legislature which closed its ninety-day meeting last
Monday night, was one of the mast important held in
many years.
A mass of work was done in the closing
week of the gathering, during which time members
engaged in heated debates, tempers flared, at times
to white heat.
It is mast certain not everybody was
satisfied with the outcome of some battles over
measures, but Governor Lane probably will look upon
the accomplishments with personal pride.
Mr. Lane, serving the first ninety-some days of
his regime, and experiencing his first hand-to-hand
struggle with a Legislature, as Governor, found it
necessary, at times, to exercise extreme pressure in
order to secure enactment of his legislative program.
And he succeeded in this without the necessity of
changing, very much, his set agenda, especially as it
applied to spending and revenue.
Up to the time he
found it necessary to assert himself on recalcitrant
members of his Party, in order to hold them in line
on >*pecified measures, the session had become one of
confusion, and until ten days before the session ended
It was never certain what might happen.
Part of this was traceable to a budget Mr. Lane
aubmitted.
Many thought, at the time, and still do.
that the Governor’s financial document was all out
of portion to the immediate needs of the State.
Re
publican members of the Legislature, with the ald
of some Democrats, sought to no avail to have it
reduced as much as several million dollars.
It was
the opinidh of those who believed the budget should
be trimmed that various departments could do with
less, and that many of the Rems earmarked for huge
amounts could have been eliminated for the time
being.
It is our opinion that appropriations to the
University of Maryland and the Department of Edu
cation could have been reduced without interferrlng
with the proper functions of either.
But with the exception of a promise to lop off
$500 000 a year for the next two years, the budget
was approved almost without changing a punctuation
mark > Of course, this tremendous spending program
called for the raising of huge sums.
This was finally
accomplished by setting up a sales tax and by in
creasing the income levy, although the Governor has
•aid that lf the sales tax returns are greater than
clim ated it may not be necessary to resort to the
higher income tax.
Whether or not that becomes
necessary neither the sales tax nor the income levy
Increase bills are so inspiring as to cause a tossing
up of hate and cheering.
The Governor’s spending
and revenue program is such as to cause us to winch,
and makes one wonder if he has taken a page from
the Roosevelt policy book to spend, spend, spend,
tax. tax, tax.
We must hope Mr. Lane will see the
advisability of holding up whatever portions of his
•pending program is not of a pressing nature, and
which can be postponed until conditions permit them
being carried out to a more economical advantage to
taxpayers.
Nation To See Revival Of
Wartime Home Gardening
The United States this year will see a revival of
Interest in home gardening equal to that during war
years when production of food was a prime necessity.
Continued high cost of most foods is responsible for
the expected increase in home production.
Because
©f such activities during past years, which were crown
ed with amazing success, many householders find both
needed exercise and enjoyment in caring for a plot
hi the backyard, or in the vacant lot next door.
It is predicted there will be 20.000 000 home gar
dens throughout the nation, approximately the num
ber during*the war years.
Seed sales are increasing
rapidly throughout the country.
Andrew J. Wing, director of the National Garden
Institute*, says his office is deluged with calls for
booklets on planting and also on home canning.
If
Bu romans adopted some of the resourceful! ness of
Americans in providing their food needs, there would
be fewer calls for American relief, with the result
that it would be passible to make more than a token
cu* in income taxes.
Up In The Air
In this three-dimensional age. the helicopter may
become the poor man’s airplane. One model now be
ing developed is simply strapped to a man’s back, like
an outboard motor. It will go straight up, or take him
at 60 miles an hour to any spot that has a landing
space 25 feet square.
Ii he wants to escape his mother-in-law or his
creditors, he can simply go straight up and hover until
his persecutor slinks away.
Quite an idea, this notion of putting an outboard
nxptor on a m an!
Another one-m an model, slightly larger, has an
enclosed seat, landing wheels and a single guiding
■tick It can probably be sold in quantity for $750
A future cam paign slogan may be. "Two heli
copters on every roof!”
By Or. Theodore IL Van Delton
To the limit ot space, ques-
tious pertaining to the proven-
(loo of disease will he an
swered. Personal replies will
he made, under proper limita
tions* when return stamped
envelope is inclosed. Dr. Fan
Pollen will not make diag
noses or prescribe tor indivi
dual diseases*
GOOD AND POOR APPETITES
A
P P E T IT E and hunger are not
synonymous altho they are
often present at the same
lune. An individual may be
starved when he sits down to din
ner but by the time the dessert is
reached, the sensation has vanished.
Nevertheless, appetite exists for Hie
strawberry shortcake, pie, or ice
cream that is served.
Hunger ut an innate craving for
food. Nature was kind in providing
this mechanism because it notifies
the brain that fuel of some kind
must be provided. When the urge
Is strong enough, even the most
finicky Miter will settle for almost
anything. In the beginning stage,
there is a feeling of emptiness,
weakness, and
irritability
caused
perhaps by a depleted blood sugar
level. If more meals are missed,
gnawing pangs appear at intervals
of a few minutes, w'hich last for a
second or two. After a while the
contractions cease for a period of
one-half to two hours when the
crampiike movements will recom
mence. Unless nutriment is taken,
tile cycle will be resumed.
Appetite depends to a great ex
tent upon past experience. If a
certain restaurant excels in chicken
pie. we know beforehand that we
will relish it. Custom and tradition
are also part of tile picture. Many
a bride has had to contend with
criticism of her cooking until she
learned to bake the meat loaf "like
mother used to make.** Environment
is likewise important since excite
ment, noise, lack of cleanliness, and
poor service tend to depress the de
sire to eat. Worry and fatigue act
similarly as deterrents. Our sense
organs are brought into play for the
appearance, taste, and smell add to
or detract from our enjoyment of
the dish.
But. in general, the majority of
us receive sufficient
nourishment
because lf we are “off our feed” at
one meal we make up for it with
the next There is, however, a pe
culiar type of lack of appetite an
orexia nervosa—that is serious. It
is partial to young women but
should not be confused with the
temporary dislike of fax! that af
flicts the girl who is too excited
about her date to bother eating
When the disorder is marked,
there Is a great.decrease in weight
tho not necessarily of strength. The
patient becomes so undernourished
that she resembles pictures of the
victims of concentration camps. No
definite evidence of organic trouble
can be found altho the menses may
('ease and a basal metabolism tr-L
usually shown
that
the
thyroid
gland Is producing an inadequate
amount of its secretion. This has
led some authorities to believe that
the endocrine system is disturbed
but the chances are that the Rland
symptoms are a result rather titan
a cause.
More physicians feel that a psy
chological conflict Is the basis. Tile
girl seems to be as much afraid of
life as of eating; she i s .starved
emotionally as well as physically.
During the first week or more of
treatment forced feeding I with a
tube I may be necessary. This is
followed by a diet high in calories
and vitamins and the administra
tion of thyroid extract. Meanwhile,
an attempt is made to make the
sufferer realize the source of her
difficulty in order to help her to
mature mentally. As she becomes
leas determined to reject life she
will be more inclined to taste food.
ABNORMAL PATHWAY
B W writers: What is a fistula?
Is operation the cure?
REPLY
A fistula Is a tiny passageway thru
which material escapes from an in
fect ion deep in the body. Surgery is
necessary, not only to remove the
source but also tile tract.
SINUS CONTAGION
E
T. writes: I sleep with my
motlier
who
has
chronic
suns
trouble. Will this affect my health?
REPLY
Sinus trouble Is contagious in this
«en*e only when there is an acuta
flareup, such as after a cold.
(Copyright: 1*47: By The Chicago Tribune)
It Says Here
B y
b o b H o ra
HEY! NONE OF THAT!
The Washington Merry-Go-Round
Centralia, III., Is Center Of John t. Lewis' Civil War Against Progressive Miners,*
Humor Slips Into Moscow Peace Conference,* Radio Censorship
Says DREW PEARSON
14 of the favorite brunettes* or
cuties from New York to Lot* An
geles are arriving in California this
weekend on a special car of the San
to Fe Superchief called, of all
things, the “My Favorite Brunette.”
They left New York on April I
and will be here in time for the Eas
ter weekend. Just to keep in the
spirit of the occasion we are go
ing to greet them at the station
with 14 little brunnette bunnies.
Since tiijs is the easter season, I
am going to color some eggs tor
them. I guess you know where I
get my supply—or don’t you listen
on Tuesday nights?
’ Professor Colonna took a .special
plane down to Chicago where he met
the train and gave the girls their
California diets—orange juice and
filet of smog.
And of course the chamber of
commerce will paddle down and
hand them the w aterings to the
city. With all these brunettes coming
into towm it is the first time the
chamber of commerce will have a
legitimate alibi for any darkness
that has spread over the city.
We intend to show the girls all
the landmarks fen town. We’ll even
introduce them to a few pedestri
ans--*f they are allowed to have
visitors.
Anc of course at Hollywood and
Vine they may start out to see
(the points of interest, but wfhen they
end up they will be the points of
Interest.
The girls are probably very anxl-
to see Grauman’s Chinese The
atre where stars have all their foot
prints.
After they nee that well
take them Into the Bank of Amer
ica where tliey can see Graurnans
footp nts
(Copyright, 1S47, by XT'S. Inc.I
WASHINGTON. April 3. (AV-The
entire nation was deeply saddened
by Hie tragic death of III coal
miners at Centralia, and it is de
voutly to be hoi>ed that the disaster
will prove a lesson to mine operators
who have resisted fednal mine in
spection.
However, It is >*omet lines healthy
to see whether there is any blood
on the hands of those who charge
other people with murder. And s
check-up on John L. Lewis's record
makes one wonder whether
his
memory is short or whether he had
tongue-in-cheek when he
hurled
the murder charge at Secretary
Krug.
It so happens that Centralia. Iii ,
is In the center of a coal field where
John L. Lewis* staged one of the
bloodiest civil wars in labor history
against
tile
Progressive
Miners.
VV bm it ended. 21 of Lewis's rivals
were dead. And. unlike the Cen
tralia mine disaster, they did not
die accidentally.
Page after page of testimony
taken
by the
Illinois Mining
Commis* inn show
how le u b's
henchmen carried on tim bloods
battle.
As < (inclusive proof that this war
had Lewis* blessing, he actually
paid $300000 out of the United Mine
Workers treasury to Carl Falloff,
owner of a mine at Springfield. 111.,
to close down. thus throwing rival
Progressive Miners out of work In
other words. Lewis paid out the dues
oI his own men to a mine owner,
who otherwise would have Rh rn
gainful employment, as a reward
for closing down.
Not far from Centralia also
occurred
the
famous
Herrin
massacre,
where
the
steam
fthovejmen’* union first started
strip mining.
Lewis sent
his
miners an inflammatory tele
gram describing them as “out
laws.” following whirh 4M l.rw»%
men surrounded a handful of
steamshovel workers,
marched
them into a field, lined them up
after the manner of the Nails,
and mowed them down in rold
blood.
This is the man who now points
a finger at Secretary of the Interior
Krug and cries: “Murder ”
These are also some of the things
which Senators probing the Cen
tralia tragedy might query John L.
Lewis about when he pontificates
before them. However, no legislator
yet has had tile nerve to tangle
with mighty John.
Note — The Washington Merry-
Go-Round. as its contribution to
mine safety, will publish the names*
of future mine operators w*ho flout
federal inspection recommendations.
B ackstage In Moscow
Though U. S. diplomats at Moscow
are engaged in the deadly serious
business of writing the peace, they
sometimes slip in a little humor
Moscow advisers were informally
discussing one of the main problems
worrying the delegates how Ger
man industry can be built up suffi
ciently so she can pay reparations
but at the .same time so aha will
not be strong enough to wage war.
The conversation revolved around
what are war industries? While it
was agreed that steel plants con
tribute to war. it was also agreed
that steel is indispensable to peace.
Remarked one delegate:
“Even an aspirin factory If a war
factory, since a modern army can
not fight without aspirin.”
“And a plant manufacturing baby
carriages is also a
war plant.”
quipped General Lucius Clay. com
mander of U S -occupied Germany,
“because it heljxs tin* infantry ”
Radio Censorship
To get the full picture of "Willtam
B
Shirers
exit
from
Columbia
Broadcasting you have to go back
to Cie days • before Hitler, when
Stiller was CRS correspondent in
Germany and otic of the men who
helped warn Uh* world regarding
N Hiland.
Shirer did a great job for the
American public both with his book
and on the air, and CBS was proud
of him. More recently, however. Bill
has not been enthusiastic over loans
to Greece and Turkey, has raised
some red flags regarding a drift
toward war. Now. after long years
of service. Bill is off the air
8o many denials and cotinterde*
ntals have been issued bv CBS offi
cials that it is difluull to know
whether CBS or the Williams J&iap
Company ousted Sharer. However,
when the Pearson-Alien team was
working for the same Williams Com
pany, it was impossible to say any
thing bordering on political opinion
without having a battery of lawyers
buy/iiig o\rr the radio script. Even
the advance prediction that FUR
would defeat
Wendell WiUkie In
1940 — a foregone certainty
sent
rold shivers up and down the apOH-
aor’g back
Meanwhile. Hie Columbia network
has been increasingly timid about
freedom of the air. and in 1943
parted company with one of their
star commentators. Cecil
Brown.
He had been telling some unpleasant
truths about the conduct of the war.
Meanwhile, the two most fearless
champions of air freedom are the
Ameriean
Broadcasting
Company
and Mutual
ABC’s < (Mirage Is well
known and long established
But
though Mutual is partly dominated
by the Chicago Tribunes Colonel
McCormick, lf
was hts network
which took on Cecil Brown and
which has now offered an outlet to
Bill Shirer. Though he muy mur
der the news in the Ti butle. Col.
McCormick seems to believe that all
sides should be given a chaine to
be heard over a radio network, and
lets Mutual’s' ca pa bk* chiel. Ed Ka
bala operate accordingly.
Oil Refinery To Russia
Some weeks ago there was a big
nutcrv in Congress regarding lend-
lease to Russia, and an amendment
was passed stopping
all
flintier
lend-lease shipments. At that time.
$25,000,000 worth of
oil
refinery
equipment was about to leave the
USA
Last week, however. Secretary of
Slate Marshall sent a confidential
cable to Undersecretary of State
Acheson which surprised those who
kiu»w alroot it
Marshall asked thai
Congress
OK
shipment
of
tile
$25,000,000 oil refining equipment to
Russia
Marshall’s request is based on the
fact that the Russians already had
obtained title to the oil equipment
under earlier lend-lea.se and since.
he contends, they already own the
proirerty^ he wants them to have
permission to ship it. Some con-
gmtncnefi are a little dubious, though
inclined to think that if any small
concessions will make
Marshalls
path easier in Moscow, it should
br granted.
• Copyright 1947. hr
Th** Brl! b)tidir*ir. Inc I
ro^Q tstS H oet
by “S itI if
Twenty years ago. a fellow named
Mark ilellinger was writing a daily
piece about
Broadway.
In those
days, I figured a column was some-
m
rn thing which held
up a building, and
w h e n I c a m e
a c r o s s a g o o d
yarn I d generally
pass
it
on
to
Mark. Now thai
I’m
singing
the
D a i l y
Deadline
Blues myself. Id
like to take back
one of the stones
I
gave
him.
I
t r u s t t h e m a n
|with the candy*
tpple heart won t
mind.
Billy Roar
I t ' s a s t o r y
about the fabulous gambler known
as Nick Hie Greek. Nick is in the
tradition of the gambler who bet a
hundred
thousand
on
a
horse,
watched him .stumble a few feet
from the finbh line, and never
dropped tile inch-long ash from his
cigarette.
One summer evening I was stand
ing outside the restaurant where
the bookies and bootlegger* used to
conic for their daily ration of pine
apple cheesecake Nick the Greek
strolled up and said hello. I was
writing songs at thai time, and he
fancied a ballad of mine then cur
rent. A." usual, the gambler's clothes
matched hts manners, slid his man
ners were very good.
Our palaver was interrupted by a
gent with a toothpick in his mouth.
He drew Nick aside and whispered
something to him.
“If you have nothing better to
do.” said the gambler, when he came
back, “walk down to 34th Street
with me They're playing tonight
in a loft across the street from
Macy a. Maybe you’d like to watch '*
We walked south on Broadway. I
knew he was taking me to the
famous floating dice game. To keep
a jump ahead of the law. the
gamblers would set up shop each
night in a different
l o c a t i o n .
Though this involved the huah-hush
move of several tons of parapher
nalia. it was not an important con
sideration when live house was cut-
Ignorance Seen As Cause Of
Labor-Management Friction
By DAVID LA W RENCE
ting on a nightly play which ran
into seven figures.
As we picked our way through the
after-theatre crowds, Nick bebait
to tell me about some poems he was
reading. And they weren’t the easy
poems of Edgar Guest He talked
about Burns and Shelley, Housmau
and Swinburne I had heard that
Nick was a patron of the arts as
well as of the freckled cubes. By tile
time we got to 34th Street, I sensed
he liked tile culture stuff, and
waan I just putting it on to impress
the boys.
We pa^ed through the doorway
of an old loll building. Another
gent with a toothpick in his face
gave us the up-and-down. An as
sortment of smells—printer's ink.
leather,
old
clothes
dummies -
washed over as as we climbed three
flights. A third toothpick-in-the-
face opened a heavy metal fire-door,
and we walked into the biggest
due game in the world.
This was the crap game of O K.
Coakley—live bootleger s Bradley.
In the center of a low-ceihnged
room big a.s a skating rink Blood a
single
billiard
table.
Around
it,
eight deep, clustered the players,
They made room for Nick as fish
ermen might for I/aak Walton
I
pressed through the < owd. stood
next to him. and looked around.
The table looked like the counting
room of the Mint. By the light ol
the tin lamp hanging from the ceil
ing. I recognized Arnold Rofhstein.
Big Frenchy, and a couple of leg
endary bootleggers I prefer not to
name because they’re now respect
ed
partners
in
national
whisky
companies.
As usual, Nick bet against the
dice. You could hang a derby hat
on my eyes when I saw the num
bers on the bills which changed
hands with each pass. A few rolls
later, a well-known comedian pick
ed up the dire. Nick kept fading
him, and covering all side bets. The
comic made eleven passes in a row.
“See you again, gentlemen.’’ said
Nick, as he turned away I rom the
table.
He had lost $240 (MIO.
On the way back to his hotel. I
kept waiting tor him to curse, snap
WASHINGTON. April 3 — CIO
economists have figured out from
a survey of 19 steel companies,
representing 90 per cent of ingot
rapacity, that a substantial wage
boost can be given without raising
prices
or
seriously
impairing
profits.
Tliis Is an Interesting Illustration
of why America is facing more and
more misunderstanding and friction
between labor and management Tile
CIO report is, of course, one-sided
and disregard* the responsibility of
management to protect the steel
basinest in the American economic
system.
The report selects a 30-cent-an-
hour wage rise and says lf steel
companies operate at 95 per cent of
capacity the profits would be $136-
000.000 without a price rtae
but
neglects to point out that 40 per
cent of such profits must go for
federal taxes and a substantial sum
in addition for state taxes. Out of
the $81,600,000 of profits remaining
after federal taxes, the 19 companies
must set aside ample reserves for
the future and alae/pay a fair return
to the investors or run the risk of
not being able to raise money when
borrowing
or
investing
becomes
necessary
in
the
money-raising
markets
Late.st figures show that the .steel
companies earned only 62 per cent
on their net worth from I9*i to 1945
and
1946.
which was their best
peacetime year from the standpoint
of demand, they earned only 73
per cent.
Cycle of Year* Not Considered
Then. too. there is apparently no
coiiMderation given bv the CIO to
the cycle of years. If business men
increased wages and thereby raised
their fixed charges on the basts of
abnormal earnings In ain
given
year. they would find themselves
loaded with a heavy fixed expend
at a subsequent time when demand
falls off and mills in the steel busi
ness. for Instance, are compelled to
run at reduced rapacity.
The amount of misrepresentation
of the profit* of companies being
circulated by labor-union "econom
ists" these day is matched only bv
the misinformation distributed by
naive commentators who never op
erated a risk capital business and
do not know the first thing about
reserves needed to keep * business
operating over a period of years
when demand and prices of m ater
ials bought are subject to cyclical
fluctuations.
The average observer would Jump
fo thr conclusion that there is a
simple answer to this problem of
risk—namely, to devise profit-shar
ing systems whereby, aa profits go
up or down. the workers share the
risks with the management. But lf
there is any labor union tai the na
tional friend which has ever en
dorsed the idea of binding workers
bv contract to share losses with the
stockholders, while allowing man
agement to determine suitable re
serves for depressions or falling m ar
kets this writer has never heard of
any such national union
The modern labor leader ta will
ing to talk profits when they are
hu*h But when a depression occurs.
as it did In 1932. and companies like
those in the steel business suffer
a drastic drop in earnings, the cry
ta loud and vigorous that corpora
tions should pav for employe wages
out of reserves and keep production
going and prevent plants from clon
ing their furnaces.
( annot Have Both Way*
Tile labor unions certainly cannot
have it both wavs
They c a n n o t
insist that tile mewsure of w;i<*es
should be the profits earned in good
years and that there be no wage
cuts when demand falls off.
Everybody knows that the steel
b UM ness is good today largely be
rn ase the backlog of demand from
the war years has not been satisfied
and probably will not be for another
year or more. To raise wages bv
extreme calculations now Is to force
price increases either now or when
demand falls. The construction in
dustry Is deeply Interested in the
las fingers, kirk a garbage can. do
anything. Instead, he told me about
a painting he had seen at the
Metropolitan Museum -“Old Lady
Cutting Her Fingernails.’* bv Rem
brandt. “There’s some doubt about
its authenticity.** he said "It’s been
ascribed to Nicholas Macs. but it s
a great picture all the same ”
Outside his hotel, he invited me
up for a nightcap. I went in with
him. waiting for the gesture win h
would indicate he was distressed at
blowing a quarter of a million in a
quarter of an hour.
Nick s room was high-up and cool.
On the night-table next to la bcd
was a plate with a single orange
on it He poured me a drink As I
sipped it. I saw hi* brows pull to
gether in a frown.
* Here it comes. ’ I said to myself.
He started to light a cigarette,
.mapped off the flame and reached
for the telephone. "I want the man
ager.” he said, and the softness was
out of his voice. As he waited, his
fingers drum-rolled on the tabletop.
“McKelway?” said Nick "Some
thing very distressing has happened.
As you know, I like a little fruit
before I go to bed When I moved
m I asked that an orange and a
banana be sent to my room each
night. The orange is here, but the
banana is missing.”
He listened for a second and hung
up. Then the man who had last
enough to buy half the bananas in
South America turned to me with a
smile.
"It s all right." he said. “They re
going to semi one right up
'Copyright. 1947. bv Huh R.^r.
-HOME LOANS-
An aid to home ownership
. , , The Loan Plans here
. . . The cooperation you
receive here . . . Just a
part of our service
WESTERN
MARYLAND
it if iii wi* | l o a n A $ |’n
60 Pershing St.
price of steel and ao ta the auto
industry. It the steel companies
could be guaranteed tor five years
or more their present level of pi flit,
they could take chancel w.th a hig
her w age level. But the CIO im) t go
ing to underwrite the profits of the
steel com pa Hie. or tile level of de
mand In the next five years, nor is
the CIO going to be able to defend
itself from criticism if Its pressure
for wage increases puts the fixed-
expense Items of the steel compan
ies so high that America, for mar.v
5 tv us f i* comr, rn st pav an abnor
mally high price for its steel
The mw* economic statesmanship
which is lacking will come univ
when economists for labor unions
pre.sent all sides of the picture ami
prove that, after taxes, profit* are
adequate to warrant a fair return
on capital invested and that demand
is going to continue for a fixed
period ahead.
But this kind of an-
aly as w ill De valueless unless labor
unions are willing to agree, as a
condition of wage boosts bited on
capacity to pav. that they will.
without strikes or threat of strike*,
accept ap equally extreme reduction
in wages w:ien demand fails off or
when •censoroar reM-stance is such
that pn.e “eductkm* must be grant
ed.
It ta not enough to cite figure*
of profits before taxes without com
paring the average earnings after
taxes for a five or ten-year period
and the amount of reserves lair
aside to preserve a business against
enforced liquidation when limes gat
bad.
It ta apparent that the amount
of ignorance about the operations
of lair proflt-and-loM system
ta
trunic and that this ta one of the
main cau.sf.x of labor-management
friction
winch neither laws nor
strikes can cure but which educa
tion alone can clarify.
I Reproduction Right 8 It***
— 1 *
■■ 1 ■
1
■
N O TICE ALL ELKS
Please meet at Elks Home at 7 4ft
p. rn., Friday, April 4th. to march
in body to Stein‘I Funeral Homa
for
Elk’s
Service
for
mar
late
Brother Harry S. I-amra
J K. YARNALL.
Secretary
Adv -N -T-A pr 4
r n y* m '
SMKSM8I
r
I
T
Easter Togs
for the
Children
Lillian’s
GIRL SHOP
'T o la lo Teens"
64 Baltimore St.
m m m I
• You seek counsel of th#
ablest Physician. Next*
bring hit prescriptions to
this '’Reliable” Pharmacy
w here skilled prefm—nal
service and fresh, potent
drugs are always assured.
K E I L O U C A S
DRUG STORR
221 Moreland Are.
fkoR« 231
Camera
Fans
VISIT
HARVRT*S
"Camera Corner*
For Your Photographic
SUPPLIES
and
EQUIPMENT
NOTE: Cumberlond Cantaro
Club meets every 4th W ed
nesday ot Knights of M olto
Home. Prospect Square, City.
41 R allim m r M rert
9-H N. CCNTRC
T H E
C U M B E R L A N D
N E W S ,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D
FR ID A Y ,
A P R IL
4 ,
Ì9 4 7
YOL ) GE PlGwT ^
DEAF?** IT S ONE
O F M IN E - - >5— -
I CAN S E E
/
t h a t _________ _
department executive board meet mg
April 24; and Mrs Margaret Stitcher
was Yiamed chairm an for the M ay
6 meeting.
Daniel Sherk was the
speaker for the Pan-American pro
gram. under the chairmanship of
Mrs. Ovelia Walker.
w
h e r e d id y o u p u t
T H AT H A IR ? I W A N T
T O T AKE A N O T H E R
L OOK A T iT
V b .
and
T rrea a
E ln a b e th
B o slry,
P ie d
mont. W . Va.
F ra n c is Joseph Hess. 112 K ern s Avenue,
and Beu lah O live Athev
109 Lam a Avenue.
Theodore
Bruce
Barnes»,
Artrrna:..
Pa.,
and Ed ith iSirbaugh Ja c k on, city.
W illia m
Bell.
H igh
Street,
Lonacom r sr.
and
D orothy Ju n e Shockey. C harlestow n,
Lonaconing
B ern ard C lrtu s W alsh
Mt
Havagr
and
Nora tioldnborough. Sp rm gt rld
W
Va
A lva C. Le a la. llo rse Shoe Run, W
Va..
and Pea rl Leona Schurg. 5€ Sp ring Street,
P’rostburg.
W endell
H ow ard
W a rn ick .
ar.d
Je a n
E la in e Saville. Piedm ont. W . Va
W a lte r Peter G ra y . W in d sor Hotel, ar.d
D orothy Je a n Sm ith, 218 G lenn S t r e f
Jam es Edgar K albaiigh W e U trn p o rt and
Ida K a th e rn W ildm au, New ("reek
W . V a.
IT M U ST
B E O N E
O F VO UG
?
Ow n
—
D A G W O O D , L
WHOSE
h a ir is
t h is 1 FOU N D
O N VO u R COAT
Miss Angela Ruppenkamp, daugh
ter of John G . Ruppenkamp, 729
Oldtown Road, has chosen April 7
for her marriage
to
Everett
W
Justice, Ridgeley.
Rev. Lawrence P.
Landrigan will officiate at the cere
mony in St. M a ry’s Catholic Church.
Miss Frances Ruppenkamp and
Edward Ruppenkamp w ill be
the
attendants.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
St. M ary’s High School and is em
ployed
at
the
A and P
Super
Market. Mr. Justice, a veteran of
the ETO , Is a graduate of Parsons.
W . Va.,
High
School and is em
ployed by
the
Western Maryland
Railroad.
Marriage Licenses
H en ry Sauer,
1000 O ldtow n
Road,
and
H elena Edna Aronson, city.
C larence
W a y n e
G o ff.
Tunnelton.
W
Va., and Hazel Alberta Sines, Sw anton.
Donald Ro lan d D ayton. W esternport. and
Anna Lee Ju n k ins. K e ysrr, W . Va
O lendnn Thom as Skidm ore.
Elkins.
W
Bv M A R IE M E R R B A C H
i
L O N A C O N IN G , April 3 — Good
Friday will be marked b y a union
ben ice of Pro testan t congregations
;n First Presb yterian Church from
12 noon to 3 p. m., sponsored by
the Lonaconing Ministerium .
Meditation
for
the
first word,
"Forgiveness" will be by the Rev. L.
J. Moore, pastor ol Barton Metho-
r
t { hurch. Rev. Stanley H. Jewell,
Barton Presbyterian Chureh mini.s-
er, will conduct the meditation for
t ne
^*cond
period
on
"Authority
at the Cross ’’ A choral selection,
He Took My Place ’ will be given
by Mr. and Mrs. Lorraine Lee.
• Remembrance," the third period
of meditation, w ill be conducted by
Rev. Raymond M. Crowe, pastor of
Grace Methodist Church, Midland.
During
the
fourth
period,
Rev.
G lenn I. Bailey, pastor of Pente
costal
Holiness Church, Lonacon
ing. will meditate on "Submission at
f * f t iv«?, K m f T n t v m 9frá <r* u , In t . W e tld tight, ,
thr Cross.” Mrs. Glenn I. Bailey
will sing a solo, "The Christ ol the
Cross."
Rev. John E. Stacks, pastor ol
First Methodist Church, will lead
the
meditation
on
"Suffering
at
the Cross.” A choral selection by
Miss Doris Lee Sm ith will be "H e
Taketh the Sin of the W orld.”
"Victory at the Cross,” the sixth
word,
will
be
the meditation
by
Rev.
E
C.
Hunt, pastor of
the
Assembly of God Church, Lonacon
ing. The seventh word, "Confiden
ce at the Cross,’’ will be the con
cluding
meditation
period
led
by
Rev. C. H. Goshorn, pastor of First
Presbyterian
Church.
Lonaconing.
The
Presbyterian choir w ill sing
"O n C alvary."
Miss Beeman To Be Wed
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Beem in an
nounce the approaching marriage of
their daughter, Phyllis Esther, to
Hubert Gibson Nicol, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jam es Andrew Nicol.
The candlelight ceremony will be
solemnized Saturday at 7:30 p. m.
in
Pentecostal
Holiness
Church,
with Rev. Glenn I. Bailey, pastor,
officiating.
Mrs.
Bailey
will
sing
several selections, accompanied at
the piano by Miss Bethea Johnson.
The bride w ill wear a two-piece
beige suit with pink and black ac
cessories and a corsage of pink rose
buds.
Her
maid
of
honor,
Miss
Shirley W illiam s, w ill wear a brown
suit with pink accessories and
h
corsage of white gardenias. George
Walbert,
Frostburg,
w ill
be
best
man.
Miss Beeman, a graduate of Cen
tral High School in 1944. is em
ployed at the Celanese plant. Mr.
Nicol, a W orld W a r I I veteran, is
also a Celanese employe.
Following
a
wedding
reception
at the home of the bride’s parents,
the couple will leave on a six-day
trip to Washington, D . C .
Brief Hem
A
letter of thanks,
dated
last
September 22, was received by Cen
tral pupils of grades five and six,
last year’s Room 103, from a 13-year
old boy in Poland who had received
their Red Cross parcel.
On days when the ground is easy
to
work,
divide
and
transplant
clumps of pinks, sweet williams and
campanulas.
Legion Auxiliary Plans
Veterans' Proj ects
The Ijpgion Auxiliary formulated
plans for an entertaniment for the
patients at Newton D. Baker Hos
pital and an Easter party for the
veterans at
Perry
Point,
at the
meeting Tuesday night.
The group
also contributed to the state fund
lor
transporting
hospitalized
vet
erans to ball games.
Announcement was made of the
<F4
Yesterday’« Answer
Z ) H
Fresh Rock Bass, Shad
and
Buck
Roe,
Steamed
Jum bo
Shrimp, Stewing and Frying Oysters.
it
All kind of fillets including Salmon and Halibut Steaks
Swift’s Premium Hams
58«
HEALTH
SPOT
SH O ES
S A L L Y 'S S A L L IE S
Young
feet
need
oorreet
«hoes
foi
health and strength — "Health ©pot"
Shoes have extra features to give need
ed support.
Oxfords and high shoe*
In tan and white.
All sixes.
Picnic Shoulders . . lb. 4 5c
A weekend special
Swifts Product
rhone 1580
79 Baltimore Street
Second Floor
Tender Chickens . . lb. 59 c
young home drest... light and heavy
W H IS K IE S
ot lowest prices
O P E N 9 TO 9
C U M B E R L A N D
L IQ U O R ST O R E
105 Baltimore St.
Phone 9 63
L — .
,‘ T r : n - a r . '. T x -
r
t...'
J
“ All
I
worry
about
when
«he
cackles is whether she’s laying
or lying.”
ccoun
M odern
Waterfall
in
W all
Sleek streamlined bedroom suite in walnut veneers and sturdy oak
interiors. At this low price we include the dresser or vanity, chest
of drawers, full size bed or a twin size bed. Sparkling circular
mirrors.
Come to our greenhouses
on the Town House and
make your own selection
Fresh from Greenhouse to You
5-piece O ak Dinettes
Extension style table with four sturdy matching chairs
in
solid
oak.
A
grand
value
and
s t u r d i l y
constructed for
4 h mw
durability
......... ............................
i\ew innersprm g so la liens
Sm artly styled sofa beds in a wide selection of new dur
able tabircs. Open quickly and easily into a full sized
bed. Choose now while our stocks are plentiful Contains
spacious bedding compartment which
***
is c o n c e a le d .................................from
Roses
Gardenias
Violet*
Orchids
Carnations
Roses
Gladioli .,
Daffodils
Lilies
..............
M ued Bouquets
t y & Pershing Sts
Phone 5161
Lilies, per bloom and bud
Tulips
........ from
Hyacinths . . . . . . . from
Hydrongcas . . . . . . .from
Cmerias . . . .
Azaleas
Geraniums . .
Combinations
£uu auu
HU KI Ll
J U J U
1
QQCld d llE O
H f i i r s u u
n a r i u
uoa □un
ac*:
wl Ll Ll jL L lL Sinru
□ J U
UUU
auEuuH u h u h
LiU
□UU M LI
5JL2UU
J J M U U J
UaiOfl
HWU J
□ UUU WL2UX
M
j i u a
THE C U M B E R LA N D NEW S, C U M BERLAN D ,
M D
FRIDAY,
A PR IL
4,
1947
E. W. Justice To Wed
Angela Ruppenkamp
Miss Angels Ruppenkamp. daugh
ter of John G. Ruppenkamp, 729
Oldtown Road, has chosen April 7
for her m arriage
to
Everett W
Justice, Ridgeley. Rev. Lawrence P.
L andm an will officiate at the cere
mony in St. M ary’s Catholic Church.
Miss Frances Ruppenkamp and
Edward Ruppenkamp will be the
attendants.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
St. M ary’s High School and is em
ployed
at
the
A and P Super
M arket. Mr Justice, a veteran of
the ETO. is a graduate of Parsons.
, W. Va.,
High
School and is em
ployed by
the
W estern Maryland
I Railroad.
YOUSE PIG HT *
© E A P - ITS OME
OF M IN E -- >—
I CAN SEE J
— t h a t
departm ent executive board meeting
April 24; and Mrs. M argaret Stitcher
Wits nam ed ahairm an for the May
6 meeting.
Daniel Sherk was the
speaker for tile Pan-American pro
gram, under the chairm anship of
Mrs. Ovelia Walker.
V a. and Tar aa* Elisabeth Bonify, Firif-
rnont. W. Va.
PT anc ta Joseph Hu b. 112 Kama Avenue,
and Beulah Olive Athe\
109 Lama Avan a.
Theodora
Hruca
Barite*
Ar terne ». Fa..
and Edith Birbaugh J a c k i n city.
William Bell. High Street, Lonaeor
g.
and Dorothy Juno Bh nkay. CBavlaatown,
Lonaconing
Bernard Clatua W*l.*h
Mt
h a t . g r
ai d
Nora Ooltlaborough, Sprint I.eld W
Va
Alva C. lea la. Hora* Shoe Run
W
V a .
and Pearl le o n a Mc tin rf. M Spring Street.
Frontburg.
Wendell
Howard
Warm* It
and
Jean
Elaine Seville. Piedmont W Va
Walter Peter Gray. Windsor Hotel
and
Dorothy Jean Smith, l i t Glenn Siree-
Jamea Edgar Kalbaugh Westernport and
Ida Hat hem W ildman. Na* Creek W. Va.
THAT HAIR ? I WANT
“TO TAKE ANOTHER
a- l o o k AT IT
IT MUST
BE ONE
o f y o u ®
I O w n -
H A G W O O D , *
WHOSE HAIC is
THIS I FOUND
ON YOU*? COAT
Marriage Licenses
Henry Sauer. 1000 Oldtown Road, and
Helena Edna Aronaon, city.
Clarence Wayne
Coff.
Tunnelton,
W
Va., and Hazel Alberta Sine* Swanton
Donald Roland Dayton. Westernport, and
Anna Lee Junkina, Keyser. W. Va
Glendon Thomas Skidmore. Elkins, W
By MARIE MERRBACH
|
I
£ J O
NA <
I LONACONING, April 3 — Good
|
Friday Kill be marked by a union
i / y
service of Protestant congregations
/Zj
Ay TOT"__ »
in First Presbyterian Church from
jO
12 noon to 3 p. rn., sponsored by
Bd
© i
y* . f a I
the Lonaconing Mintsterium.
MKk
IjiyA
M editation
for
the
lim word.
tJ L . a. ^
*J S M
Forgiveness will be by the Rev. L.
■■ ■■■■
r - ......mm
J. Moore, pallor of Barton Metho-
__ ______
diM church. Rev. Stanley H. Jewell,
Barton Presbyterian Church minis- the Cross ** Mrs
Glenn I. Bailey
:<r, will conduct the meditation for -will sing a solo, T h e C hrist of the
the * acond period chi "Authority (Cross
at the Crows.** A choral selection,!
Rev. John E. Stacks, pastor of
He Took My Place’* will be given First M ethodist Church, will lead
by Mr. and Mrs. Lorraine Lee
I the meditation on
“Suffering at
“Remembrance.** the third period the Cross ” A choral selection by
of m editation, will be conducted by Miss Doris Lee Sm ith will be “He
Rev. Raymond M. Crowe, pastor of Taketh the Sin of the World.**
Grace Methodist Church. Midland
“Victory at the Cross" the sixth
During
the
fourth
period.
Rev. word, will be the meditation by
Glenn I. Bailey, pastor of Pente- Rev. E
C. Hunt, pastor of the
c«ttal Holiness Church. Lon aeon- Assembly of God Church. Lonacon
ing. will meditate on “Submission at ling. The seventh word. “Confkien-
iLegion Auxiliary Plans
Veterans' Projects
The Legion Auxiliary formulated
plans for an entertainm ent for the
patients a t Newton D. Baker Hos
pital and an Easter party for the
veterans at
Perry Point,
at the
meeting Tuesday night
Tile group
also contributed to the state fund
for transporting hospitalized vet
erans to ball games
Announcement was made of the
ce at the Cross,** will be Hie con-'
eluding meditation period led by
Rev. C. H. Gob!lorn, pastor of First
Presbyterian Church. Lonaconing.
The Presbyterian choir will sing
On Calvary.’*
Miss Beeman Ta Be Wed
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bee m in an
nounce the approaching m arriage of
their daughter, Phyllis Esther, to
Hubert Gibson Nicol. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jam es Andrew Nicol.
The candlelight ceremony will be
solemnized Saturday at 7:30 p. rn.
in
Pentecostal
Holiness
Church,
with Rev. Glenn I. Bailey, pastor,
officiating
Mrs. Bailey
will sing
several selections, accompanied at
the piano by Miss Bethea Johnson.
Tile bride will wear a two-piece
beige suit with pink and black ac
cessories and a corsage of pink rose
buds.
Her
maid of honor. Miss
.Shirley W illiam s, will w ea r a brown
suit with pink accessor lea and a
corsage of white gardenias. George
Walbert. Frostburg, will be
best
man.
Miss Beeman, a graduate of Cen
tral High School in 1944. la em
ployed a t the Celanese plant. Mr
Nicol, a World W ar l l veteran, is
also a Celanese employe.
Following a wedding
reception
at the home of the bride's parents,
the couple will leave on a six-day
trip to W ashington. D. C.
Brief Item
A letter of thanks, dated last
September 22, was received by Cen
tral pupils of grades five and six.
last year's Room 103. from a 13-year
old boy in Poland who had received
their Red Cross parcel.
On days when the ground Is easy
to
work.
divide
and
transplant
clumps of pinks, sweet williams and
! campanulas.
' ' “ " ' " " W
O
,
Children's
HEALTH SPOT
SHOES
r D
K
Fresh Rock Bass, Shad
and Buck Roc, Steamed Jumbo Sjpyfr
Shrimp, Stewing and Frying Oysters.
^ (F
All kind of fillets including Salmon ond Halibut Steaks.
SwHPs Premium N a m
„ 58c
Picnic Shoulders . . lh. 45c
A weekend special
Swifts Product
WmmSth
Tender Chickens .. lh. 59c
Jm m \
young home drest
light ond heavy
SALLY'S SALLIES
b o ,
et lowest prices
Burkey
CUMBERLAND
LIQUOR STORE
IQS Baltimore St.
Brothera M a rk e t
144 N. Centre St.
Phone 943
Free
Delivery
Service
' A c c o u n t ! !
“All I worry about when *he
cackles la whether sh es laying
or lying.**
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Sleek streamlined bedroom suite in walnut veneers and sturdy oak
^
l l l l
interiors. At this low price we include the dresser or vanity, chest
v
I
# U U
of drawers, full size bed or a twin size bed. Sparkling circular
J -
mirrors.
Come to our greenhouses
on the Town House and
make your own selection
5-piece Oak Dinettes
Extension style table with four sturdy matching chairs
in
solid
oak.
A
grand
value
and
s t u r d i l y
constructed for
C f c S T
durability ......................•••••
Fresh from Greenhouse to You
New Innerspring Sofa Beds
Smortly styled sofa beds in a wide selection of new dur
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g*
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Roses
Gardenias
Violet*
Orchid*
SIMMONS
Mattress .
rspring
Carnations
Bo m i —
Gladioli .,
Daffodil*
Lilies
...........
Mixed Bouquet*
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T O W N
H O U S E
Liberty & Pershing St*
Phone 5161
Lilies, per bloom ond bud $1 OO
Tulips
........... from SI OO
Hyacinth* ......... from SI OO
H ydrangea*.......... from $3.00
Cinenos ....
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Geraniums . .
Combination*
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Phone 3799
.© L B€RNJTGN
9-11 N C € N T R €
Evelyn Lashley Chooses
June 25 For Wedding
Junior Extension
To Become Bride
Of J. 0. Sharreff
ing a meeting of Maryland district
foresters.
George R. Hughes, Jr., Is home
from Washington, Pa., for the holi-
Miss
Evelyn Loul *
1 ’
J1L*® ’'
Mr. find Mi
H.nold E Naughtnn,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph K
MacDonald Terrace, leave for
La.st.ley, 822 Camden Avenue. hies Baltimore today to visit relatives
over Easter.
Roland Leach. Windsor Hotel, who
operates the blind news stand in
Introduces Saiomi
For Club Donations
Woman s Civic
Dr. H a ro ld Benj am in W ill
Club Schedule
Is Announced
Address Joint Meeting
“Salomi” the Junior Extension 4-
H Club china pig was introduced
by James Morgan, at the Sadie
Hawkins party held by the club.
Wednesday
night at the
LaVale
firemens hall. Mr. Morgan, trea
surer, explained that “Salomi” will
and the late Dr. Sharrett. ^ ¿ o u r t H o u w 'w U fieäve'för'B al. jbe brought to each meeting so mem-
...
.
me uourt House win leave ior uai
bcr¡g mfty (jn)[) jn |hfMr sparp ( h;ilUM,
¡us contributions towards the club
house. Tentative plans for tlie club
timore this morning, to spend Easter
Lucas,
house have been discussed for the
b* iected June 25 for the date of her
marriage to John O. Sharrett, son
cf Mrs. George O. Sharrett. The
Dingle
The
wedding
ceremony
will
be
solemnized in the First Presbyterian wiUl his MsU,r
Mrs c
M
Church, with Rev. William A. Eisen- 27l)5
Terrace.
berger ofriclatlng.
j
Mrfs
Betty Nicklin,
109 North.
, m t .
The bride-elect Is a graduate of Centre street, leaves today for Cam- i
yea.r.
Allegany High School, where she den N j
to spend ten days with
was editor of the Alcohi Mirror; n» r m. ter, Mrs. John A. Donahue.
,, .
. _ ,
n
. .... AK___
chaner president of the Allegany j
Western M;tryland College stu-
yp
Daisy Mae and Li 1 Abner
P r « * Club, a member of the Hlatory I denUs who have' returned to West-1^ ^ . Fifty-nine membra attend-
C.ub
Tri-Hi-Y.
Astronomy
and minster after spending their spring
.
Par '
. ,
Spanish Clubs. She Is a senior at vacation here are Miss Ann Doo- jand da“
1«* featured the entertam-
S:e\ens
College.
Columbia,
MO., little, 113 North Allegany Street; " le,n
if?1*5, , ? rglan. Mrs.
Kav
president of the Columbia hall and Miss Bettv Miller
704 Frederick
’ ^Lss
Ferguson and
a memfjer of the college legislature. “ t i w t ; M i s s
Norma
A v ™ 123 F'loyd
were "> <=h» W of the
Burrall-Liason
committee,
college Grand
Avenue;
Miss Gwendolyn
Board
of
Publications
and
Phi pierce, Virginia Avenue; Miss Betty
Lambda Beta.
iDumire, Patterson Avenue; and Mi.v
Miss Wanda
j Shryock
were
Bennett and
Roy
judged
the
most
: ea c.it ion.
Refreshments were served by Miss
Joan Hyde, Robert
Heavner and
Mr Sharrett also is a graduate of Wilma Lee Steele, Patterson Ave- Hanley Golden.
Allegany. While there he was drum nue
Earl Morgan announced that the
An
active
schedule
has
been
planned tor members of the Wom
an’s Civic Club for April.
It l>e-
glns with the executive board meet
ing at
10 o’clock
April 10 at the
public library.
Mrs. William H. Blake will review
and
draw
a comparison between
Tolstoi’s
“ Anna
Karenina”
and
modern novels such as “ The Huck
sters” and “The Wayward Bus," at
the meeting of the Literature Group
at 2 o'clock April 10, in the public
library.
Mrs. Arthur Bright is making ar
rangements for members to attend
the first District meeting in West
minster, April 16.
“ Living in America the Beautiful.”
will
be the topic
for the general
meeting at 2, April 17 in Emmanuel
Episcopal parish house.
It will be
illustrated by moving pictures.
The American Home Group will
sponsor a card party for the W el
fare fund, April 24. The place to be
announced later.
Typo Auxiliary Has
Dinner Meeting
The Women's International Auxi
liary, No. 52, Typographical Union
held a dinner-meeting and nonu-
nated officers, last night at Shober’s
Restaurant. Mrs. Edith Biller pre
sided.
Mrs. Buelah DeBolt was nominat
'd president; Mrs. May Biller, vice
»resident; Mrs. Mary Lute man, se
cret ary-treasurer and Mrs. George
Cline, chaplain. The election will be
held M ay
l
and
installation
In
June.
County P- T And ACE
Plan Dinner Apr. 17
Bedford Road Club
To Hold Style Show
Mrs. Conwell Boor and Miss Ben
¡giving poems and prizes were won I
Miss Bean and Mrs. Vincent Lmc
1 ner.
major for the band, a member ol
John
W .
Christie,
Wilmington, next meetin8 will be held at the
the orchestra. Choral Club, Glee Del., has returned alter visiting T.
Club and AD K After graduating at Bailey Hunter, 15 North Allegany
Mercersburg Academy, MercersburgJ street.
Pa., he entered the University of j
Miss Angela Manley, Trost Ave-
tflil, Charlottesville
and
had nue; Miss Marguerite Keller, Fay-
con pie ted his first year there, when <
Geatz,
I .
L
T~
lr. in *c He was pledged to Sigma North Smallwood Street; Miss Lu- JcjfTlGS D fO W n m 6 3 u S
ng his commission Nov- ciUe Turano, Baltimore Street; and
home
of
William
and
Granville
Shumaker,
Rawlings,
May
1,
at
which time it is hoped that Miss
Dorothy
Emerson,
College
Park,
will be the guest speaker.
East Side P- TA Donates
To School Patrol Trip
ember 1943 he served as a fighter Miss
Elizabeth
Mattingly, Lowell
pilot instructor at 13 different sta- Avenue, are home for the holidays.
tions in the states. After serving
three and one half years he was
discharged and has returned to the
university
for
his
pre-medical
course.
Miss Dorothy Doolittle, 113 North
Allegany Street; and Miss Joy W il
son, Bedford Road, are home for
Easter
from
Penn
College
for
Women, Pittsburgh.
Mrs. Mabel Pope, 217 Washington
street, has returned from a Florida
Club Sing- Mar
The East Side P-TA voted $10
toward the expense of the School
Patrol
trip
to
Washington
and
named Fern Kenney, Keppler Loer-
ner and William Lynn members of
the Nominating committee at the
meeting Tuesday night, with Miss
Agnes Carroll presiding.
Dr. Richmond
Anderson, U. S.
Public
Health Service,
and
Miss
Elma
Georg,
physotherapist
for
League of Crippled Children, were
the speakers. The former discussed
the tests being given children in
public schools and the health and
nutrition programs being conducted.
Miss Georg talked of her work with
the league.
The $5 attendance award was won
by Miss Margaret Beck’s room. Miss
Earlene
Hardman
sang
several
numbers with Mrs. John Dorn at
the piano. Mrs. John Chisholm and
her committee served refreshments,
during the social hour.
The Allegany County Council of
Parent and Teacher and the Asso
ciation for Childhood E d u c a t io n
have secured Dr. Harold Benjamin
as the speaker for the joint dinner
meeting to be held at the Ali Ghan
Shrine Country Club, April 17.
Dr. Benjamin is a speaker of na
tional fame, noted author and now
is clean of the College of Education
at the University of Maryland. His
subject will be, “The next Century
in Childhood Education."
A special informative program will
be presented also by the two organ
izations.
which
have
worked
to
gether on a series of radio programs.
Mrs. Josephine Yam all, president
of the ACE. will leave by plane
Sunday for the national convention
in Oklahoma City. She will present
to the study clubs pictures and writ
ten records of progressive activities
carried on in Allegany county by
members of the ACE.
Representatives of all the elemen
tary schools in the city made a two
hour tour of the telephone exchange
recently, in connection with the so
cial studies work. The tour was con
ducted by Howard Smith, manager;
Edwin Rice, central office repair
man; Mrs. Phyllis Brooks, instructor
of local operators and Miss Wreatha
Tichnell, local supervisor.
Plans for a style show for the
May meeting were formulated at
the garden meeting of the Bedford
Road Homemakers Club, earlier in
the week at the home of Mrs. Earl
Smith, Central Avenue
Garden hints for planting and
flowers were given as the roll call
and RW SC alumni spoke of the ad
vantages of attending the course,
which Miss Maude A. Bean said will
be held J une 16
Gro up ring ing
was under the direction of Miss
Georgetta Klavuhn.
A recreational period was con
ducted by Mrs. J. R. Ear.som with
The Women’s Sport Club will m>t
(meet tonight, but
has postponed
the session until April 11.
A card party will be held tomor
row night at the Knights of Mai a
Home, Prospect Square, beginning
at 8 :30.
The
meeting
of
the
Johnson
Heights P-TA will be held April 15
I instead of the fourteenth.
rij
The next meeting of the
Je a n
Rowland Circle will b** held at 7 30
j April 7 at the home of Goldie Imes,
487 Eastern Avenue. Jean Leasure
will be co-hostess.
TREAT TOR
James Brown was elected presi
dent of the Club Sing-Mar of Trin
ity Lutheran Church at the meet
ing earlier in the week. His staff
includes Miss Ada Louise Ford, vice
president; Miss Dorothy Brant, sec
retary; Mrs. Virginia Lee Brant,
Personals
Miss
Louise
r 5°r ?
1
k
spending
the * holidays church who are serving overseas;
,
J.
n with her Parents, Mr. and Mrs. E for the Walther League convention
C a.none University, Washington, D.
i var, r.ronH
tn h*> hpirt in Tiinmstpr ph
m»v 3 1
Miss
Louise
Glick, student at
vacation. Her nephew, James Sour- treasurer; and Miss Delores Brant,
lock. Yale University, is visiting h er. I corresponding secretary.
Miss Anna Marie Avers, member
Plans were discussed for writing
of the faculty at Catonsville HijJh regularly to four members of the
4,u Fred Avers, Grand Avenue
¡to be held in Lancaster, Pa., May 31
I h’p
^ n
r
i
r
t
M rl 'lohn It
M r* and Mrs- Leroy Grabenstein to June 1 and Easter eggs were col-
U * i, in i wLmAcft™, V trLi
have ^turned
to
their home in ored for the sale Saturday at 1
W
« / » Ir e K
l ? P i acu,av Bowling Green after visiting Mr. and in the parish hall. A motion picture
- rii «
K a fi, T « h i*«
ir
rp
Mrs- e e Phillips, Washington.
“Tour of Washington,” was shown
s
v1“ ™ l Newton
,c n
r
--------------------
Camden .venue' after visit, n* their ^ V c e p h a f “ “
I
daughter, Miss Evelyn Lashley at
Columbia, Mo., and in Topeka and
Kansas City.
William Eisenberger, student at
Washington and Jefferson College.
Washington, Pa., is visiting his par
ents, Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Eisen
berger, 222 Washington street.
Mis* Helen Clare I>avis, student at
Penn Hall Junior College, Chumb-
er.vburg. Pa , Is spending the holi-
ca\> with her parents Mr and Mrs.
David
T. Davis, 217
Washington
street.
Mrs. Mark Nestle and her son
Mark Nestle, Jr., Seattle, Wash.,
were guests of the former’s brother
Robert L. Si&son, Braddock Road
Mrs. Nestle left for New* York to
sail, by way oi Panama, for Manilla,
where she will Join her husband
w ho has been there for the past one
and one half years.
Her son will
complete his studies in Seattle be
fore flying to Manilla.
George Kemp, former sheriff, is
recuperating at his home in LaVale,
alter an illness of five weeks.
Mias Anne Fahey Hughes, daugh
ter of
M r
and
Mrs. George R
Hughes,
Buckingham
Road,
Is
home for the E&ster holidays.
She
is a student at the Wom en’s Col
lege, University of North Carolina,
Greensboro, N. C.
William A. Parr, district forester,
was in Annapolis yesterday, attend-
W alter H. Kerns, Rockville, form
er resident here, has returned from
a Washington hospital, where he
was a patient for six weeks.
Gene Leyh has returned to his
home, 163 Thomas street, after be
ing a patient in Allegany Hospital.
Frank R. Hiner, student at the
University
of
Notre Dame, South
Bend, Ind., is visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Hiner, 700
Montgomery avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Edward Solomon
and daughter, Elaine, Woodlawn.
LaVale, have returned from a two
weeks vacation in Florida.
J u » t R e c e iv e d !
dozens of
W O M EN 'S
DRESSES
Sizes
161 i to 26! i
Never scour china or pottery. Hard
rubbing and cleaning powders may
cause the color or gilt to fade and
damage the smooth finish.
38 to 46
Prints!
Sheers!
Crepes!
Fro m 1 7.9 5
second floor
for
it's the
i I
Cottons
exciting new
California
Shop
the
blouse
beautiful
snow white and trimmed with wispy
lace like the cavalier of old . . ,
that should be your blouse for
Spring 1947
7 .0 8 to 1 4 .9 8
3.9» l0 1 4.9»
Lazarus — main floor
•tain floor
MM
Cumberland
I c M J L C m A r
from Lazarus
newly enlarged
accessory
dept.
f
the flower hat
a w isp of moline, a beautiful rose, a perky bow ,
a turist and a dash and voila . . .
your new
personality is born !
from
1 0 . 0 0
the fur sea
Russian K o lin s k y . . . . . . . .1 2 50
■ ■■
per skin
China M i n k . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1C 0
0
■w
per skin
Ranch M i n k . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
nn.oo
V v
per skin
W ild M i n k . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
c n °0
w V
per skin
ALL PRICES ARE TAX INCLUDED
the gloves
the bags
.
.
.
a .0 0
fabric . • • •
from ^
leather . • .
from
calf, corday, cobra, lizard,
alligator and plastic in a
beautiful selection of styles
and colors.
White, black, pastels
in all sizes
from 5 .0 0
p lu s tax
the j ewelry
the cosmetics
pearls, bracelets, earrings,
necklaces, pins and com
pacts to set off your cos
tume.
1 . 0 0
í rom
plus tax
large selection of cosmetics
by the follow ing famous
makers . . .
Charles of the
R itz, Herb Farm, Chen Yu,
Early American, Coty and
Charbert.
the hosiery
beautiful Claussner Nylons
45 ga. 30 den
........... 1 .0 5
51 ga. 30 den ........... 1 .9 5
51 ga.
15 den
........... 2 .5 0
the lingerie
lovely
fluffy
lingerie
by
Ba r b i z o n , V anity Fair,
R hythm, Yolandc, Stvank
and Lady Duff.
i t' s
L a z a r us
s e c o nd
f l o o r
f or
S ui t s !
LILLI ANN
PHILIP MANGONE
HANDMACHER
•
MOLLY
•
KAY-SAKS
MONARCH
•
KRALER
WEINER
SIX
THE CU M BERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
1947
Evelyn Lashley Chooses
June 25 For Wedding
Junior Extension
Introduces Salomi
Woman’s Civic
Club Schedule
Dr. Harold Benjamin Will
Address Joint Meeting
mg a meeting of Maryland district
foresters.
I
George R. Hughes, Jr., is home
from Washington, Pa., for the hoi I-1
'days.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Haughton.
807 MacDonald Terrace, leave for
Baltimore t
over Easter.
For Club Donations Is Announced
“Salomi” the Junior Extension 4 -(
An active
schedule
has
been
H Club china pig wits introduced planned for members of the Wom
by James Morgan, at the Sadie
Civic Club for April.
It be-
Typo Auxiliary Has
Dinner Meeting
Tlte Women's International Auxi
llary. No. 52. Typographical Union Parent and Teacher and the Asso
County P-T And ACE
Plan Dinner Apr. 17
The Allegany County Council of
Bedford Road Club
To Hold Style Show
Mrs. Con well Boor and Mi."
giving i roe rn a and prizes were won by
Mis* Bean and Mrs. Vincent lane-
ner.
Plans for a style show for the
~
May
meeting were formulated
at Hie Women s
Sport Club will
the garden meeting of the Bedford"***
* * *»* postpo ned
*»„.........______
... the MV. ion until April ll
A card party art!! be held torr.t*-
row night at the Knights of Mal a
beginning
To Become Bride
Of J. 0. Sterrett
Miss Evelyn Louise L a s h le y .
uSSH Ka*c»m dil»MA V tS^P>hSl I
•‘• "‘‘Tm party "held "by "uU club Kin* wlU. Ute cxccuUvc buard meet-
, .iinncr-n.'crtinK and nom!- ^Vbm for' C T . i i d ^ " r d u c aTion Tj" h
r
l
d
* t-n .o o ^ u . ml!
,
d ie ted June 25 for the date of her jSi!l
y
* Wednesday night at the LaVaie ing at
IO o clock
April IO at the „aled officers. Inst night at Shober'* have .secured Dr Harold Benjamin " ls » ,!.,* J ? L dieecti n i i M il!'o
.**
.
firemens hall. Mr. Morgan, trea- public library.
Restaurant, Mrs. Edith Biller pre- as the speaker for the Joint dinner X L JS JtJK liliih n
Row and Circle will be held at 7 to
surer, explained that ”Salomi" Will
Mrs. William H. Blake will review sldwl
v* h*ih ut in* an n h .» C»«*orgctta Klavuhn.
April 7 at the home of Goldie lr. es.
be brought to each meeting so mem- and draw ^ a comparison between
i ne
w ooing
cwwmony
wu.
«** llmorr thls morning, to ftpend Easter
I S * n o v e l s "u ch * s™Thr Huck?
solemnizedin the First^ b y t e r l a n wlUl hiR , LsU.r> Mri c> M ^
A l t e r s ” I n i The W avwar^Hus
al
marriage to John O. Sharrett, son
R0iand Leach. Windsor Hotel, who
-*niain*ri that ••Salami" will
cf Mr* GcorRf O SharrcU. The operatM, th, bilnd
stand ln lfur*r- W 1*1" ” 1 that flaloml
will
Dii.tie. and the late Dr. Sharrett.
Court House will leave for B a l-I
The
wedding
ceremony
will
be
Church, with Rev. William A. Eisen- 2705 Chelsea Terrace,
berger officiating.
Mr8
netty Nicklin,
IOO North
house Tentative plans for the club *t4-ra” and -The Wayward Bus,” at
house have been discussed for the «»«* meeting of the Literature Group
The bride-elect is a graduate of centre street' leaves’hxlav "for Cam- pfUlt >ear
*** «*clock APrU 10. ln u ** PubIil* lM.|d May
W.KAIJ
™
8“
.l» leaves waay xor ta m |
m 1m Wanda BenneU and Roy library.
Allegany High School, where she ^
N j
^ fcpend ^
dayg with
was editor of the Alcohi Mirror; ^
sister, Mrs. John A. Donahue,
charter president of the Allegany,
Western Maryland College stu
Press Club, a member of the History dents who have returned to West
Club
- - - - -
! Shrvock
were
judged
the
most I
Mrs. Arthur Bright Is making ar-
I typical Daisy Mae and LII Abner rangements for members to attend
^
,
I present. Fifty-nine members attend- tbe ftrst District meeting in West-
aenus wno nave returned to west- *
.
m in ster A n n i 16
« -
minster after spending their spring
feat tired the iStertain
“Living in America the Beautiful,” meeting Tuesday night, with Miss aether on a series of radio programs
Spanish Club. She is a junior at vacation here are Miss Ann Doc- ‘
wiU b T th e topic for the general Ague. Carroll presiding.
Mr. Josephine Yamall. president
Steven.
College
C^umbla
M ^ l.ule. 113 North Allegany Street;
,
Mb«^Rrel na FVrguMn and nieetlng at 2, April 17ln B nn»nuel1
Dr
Richmond Anderson. U. sJo f the ACP. will leave by plane
president of the Co.umbta hall and j miss Betty Miller. 704 Frederick
. •
** .
chari(e oI n ,. Episcopal parish house.
It will be Public Health Service, and Miss .Sunday for the national convention
•» a member of the college kgLMature; Street;
Miss
Norma
Avers
123
wrre ln char|,e 01 ^
Illustrated by moving pictures.
Elma
Oeorg.
physotheraptst
for In Oklahoma City. She will present
^ P u b lic a tio n s
and ’ Wit Pierce VmTtnm
M t^B ct’tv
Refreshments were served by Miss
n ,r American Home Group will League of Cripple.! Children, were to the study clubs pictures and writ-
Pien*, Virginia Avenue, Miss Betty
Joan Hyd<.
Robert Heavner and *P°lxsar * card party for the Wei- the speakers. The former discussed ten records of progressive activities
-starrw ArtigW.
fare fund, April 24. The place to be the tests being given children in carried on in Allegany county by
Road Homemakers Club, earlier in
the week at the home of Mrs Earl
Smith, Central Avenue
Garden hints for planting ami |b>nie, Pr«»»pr< t **;uar
flowers were given as the foil call ,il
and RW8C alumni simke of the a d -1
The
meeting
of
the
Johnson
vantages of attending the c o n n i e . Heights I*-TA will be held April IS
which Miss Maude A. Mean said will (Instead of the fourteenth
n*» ti in m i n ■
"p ....................i ut- iicai, mer** mg of the J»-.»ri
. . . . W A JO? J?
was under the direction of
“
ss the sp.-t.kcr for the jmnt dinner c.eorgetta Klavuhn
meeting to be held at the Alt Ghan
.
____ t
. .
_ a
.
Mrs. Ruelah De Bolt was nominat- Shrine Country Club. April 17.
. #^ r<J ealLon‘
- l)T,r
Wrt's
co*V
'
rrr' Avenue. Jean Leaaurs
ii pre id« iit
Mr.
Mac Hiller, vice
Dr Benjamin is a speaker of na- du(tP(* b\ Mrs J R Barsom with will be co-hostess.________________
resident; Mrs. Mary laiteuiaii, se- * kina I f a m e , noted author and now
cretary-treasurer and Mrs. George is dean of the College of Education
nine, chaplain. Tile election will be ut the University of Maryland. Hts
I
and installation
in subject will be. “Tile next Century
June.
in Childhood Education M
A .special informative program will
ner and William Lynn members of ne presented also by the twfo organ
the Nominating committee at the izations
which have worked to-
Lambda Beta.
----------------
Dumire, Patterson Avenue; and Miss
Robert Heavner
Mr Sharrett also is a graduate of Wilma Lee Steele, Patterson Ave- stanley Golden.
I announced later
Allegany. While there he was drum nue.
I FArl Morgan announced
that thei"™ 01™ *0 *****
major for the band, a member of
John W.
Christie. Wilmington, j
the orchestra. Choral Club, Glee Dei., has returned alter visiting* T.
Club and ADK. After graduating at Bailey Hunter, 15 North Allegany
Mercersburg Academy, Mercersburg.1 street.
Pm., he entered the University of j
Miss Angela Manley, Trost Ave-
Virgima, Charlottesville and had nue; Miss Marguerite Keller, Fay-
completed his first year there, when ette Street; Miss Patricia Geatz.l ,
“7^
TI
T~
Inducted He was pledged to Sigma North Smallwood Street; Miss Lu- JA fHPC KrOW fl
nB B flS
Nu Receiving his commission Nov- cl lie Turano, Baltimore Street; and
ember 1D43 he served as a fighter Miss
Elizabeth
Mattingly, Low eH TIiik ( jn f l .M jir
Avenue, are home for the holidays.
JH H | ■ 'OI
home of William and Granville j Cawl (S jIa D TA H a a a I a f
Shumaker, Rawlings, May
I. at tflSl jlQ6 K“ IA UOnSlCS
which time it is hoped that Miss
Dorothy
Emerson.
College
Park,
will be the guest speaker.
To School Patrol Trip
public schools and the health and members of the ACE.
[nutrition programs being conducted.
Representatives of all the elemen-
I Miss Georg talked of her work with tary schools in the city made a two
the league.
hour tour of the telephone exchange
The $5 attendance award was won recently. In connection with the go
by Miss Margaret Beck's room. Miss elal studies work. The tour was con-
Earlene
Hardman
sang
several ducted by Howard Smith, manager;
The East Side P-TA voted
SIO numbers with Mrs. John Dom at Edwin Rice, central office repair
toward the expense of the School the piano. Mrs. John Chisholm and man; Mrs. Phyllis Brooks, instructor
Patrol
trip to
Washington
and her committee served refreshments, of local operators and Miss Wreatha
named Fem Kenney, Keppler Loer-1 during the social hour.
Tichnell, local supervisor.
pilot instructor at 13 different sta
tions in the states. After serving
three and one half years he was
discharged and has returned to the
university
for
his
pre-medical
course.
Miss Dorothy Doolittle, 113 North
Allegany Street; and Miss Joy Wil
son, Bedford Road, are home for
Blaster
from
Penn
College
for
Women, Pittsburgh.
Mrs. Mabel Pope. 217 Washington
street, has returned from a Florida
vacation. Her nephew. James Scur-
lock. Yale University, is visiting her.
Miss Anna Marie Avers, member
nT ~ D ^ r ' c o S r
the
,acult* at Catonsville H1&
D G. ^
Jo ta Guck s t^ e n t at Scll0° 1- *•
s'* ndln*
Catholic University, Washington, D.
C., are spending the holidays with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John H.
Glick. 308 Washington street.
Personals
Miss
Louise
Click, student at
spending the holidays
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.
Fred Avers, Grand Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Grabenstein
have returned
to
their home in
Mr. and Mr,. Ralph E. Lashley f £ * U£
*
“ d
sri Ann
Rainh T^shiev
Jr
re- Mr_s; E
Phill*ps. Washington.
and son. Ralph Lashley. Jr., re
turned yesterday to their home. 822
Camden avenue, after visiting their
daughter. Miss Evelyn Lashley at
Columbia. Mo., and in Topeka and
Kansas City.
William Eisenberger, student at
Washington and Jefferson College.
Washington. Pa., Is visiting his par
ents. Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Eisen
berger. 222 Washington street.
Miss Helen Clare Davis, student at
Penn Hall Junior College, Chamb
ersburg. Pa., is spending the holi
days with her parents Mr. and Mrs.
Da\id T. Davis, 217 Washington
street.
Mrs. Mark Nestle and her son
Mark Nestle, Jr., Seattle, Wash.,
were guests of the former’s brother
Robert L. Si&son, Braddock Road.
Mrs. Nestle left for New York to
sail, by way of Panama, for Manilla.
where she will Join her husband
who has been there for the past one
and one half years.
Her son wrill
complete his studies in Seattle be
fore flying to Manilla.
George Kemp, former sheriff, is
recuperating at his home in LaVaie,
after an illness of five weeks.
Miss Anne Fahey Hughes, daugh
ter of Mr. and
Mrs. George R
Hughes.
Buckingham
Road,
is
home for the Easter holidays. She
is a student at the Women's Col
lege. University of North Carolina,
Greensboro, N. C.
William A. Parr, district forester,
was in Annapolis yesterday, attend-
Mrs. Newton Parker, Corrigan
ville, Is a surgical patient in Me
morial Hospital.
Walter H. Kerns, Rockville, form
er resident here, has returned from
a Washington hospital, where he
was a patient for six weeks.
Gene Leyh has returned to his
home, 163 Thomas street, after be
ing a patient in Allegany Hospital.
Frank R. Hlner, student at the
University of Notre Dame, 8outh
Bend. Ind., is visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Prank J. Hlner, 700
Montgomery avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Edward Solomon
and daughter, Elaine, Woodlawn,
LaVaie, have returned from a two
weeks vacation in Florida.
James Brown was elected presi
dent of the Club Sing-Mar of Trin
ity Lutheran Church at the meet
ing earlier in the week. His staff
includes Miss Ada Louise Ford, vice
president; Miss Dorothy Brant, sec
retary; Mrs. Virginia Lee Brant,
treasurer; and Miss Delores Brant,
corresponding secretary.
Plans were discussed for writing
regularly to four members of the
church who are serving overseas;
for the Walther League convention
to be held in Lancaster, Pa., May 31
to June I and Easter eggs were col
ored for the sale Saturday at I
in the parish hall. A motion picture
“Tour of Washington,” was shown
by the pastor.
WIFE PRESERVERS
Never scour china or pottery. Hard
rubbing and cleaning powders may
cause the color or gilt to fade and
damage the smooth finish.
Just Received!
dozens of
WOMEN'S
DRESSES
Sixes
164 to 264
31 to 46
Prints!
Sheers!
Crepes!
From 17.9 5
second floor
■J
%
cl
tm
I"*
Cottons
ifs lh#
exciting new
California
Shop
7 .9 8 to 1 4 .9 8
Lazarus — main Hoar
blouse
beautiful
x
snow white and trimmed with wispy
lace like the cavalier of old . . .
that should be your blouse for
Spring 1947
3.98 . 14.98
Hoof
mm
Cumberland
l l
jp *
Ii
fi I
*:
sP
rn
from Lazarus
newly enlarged
Ic v a c m A .
the flower hat
a wisp of moline, a beautiful rose, a perky bow,
a twist and a dash and voila . . . your new
personality is born !
from
1 0 . 0 0
the fur sea*'
Russian Kolinsky.......
12 V
skin
China M in k ..............
15°V
skin
Ranch M in k ..............
3 3 * V
skin
W ild M in k ................ a r
... skin
ALL PRICES ARE T A X INCLUDED
the gloves
fabric • • • • from I
leather . . . from
White, black, pastels
in all sizes
the jewelry
pearls, bracelets, earrings,
necklaces, pins and com
pacts to set o ff your cos
tume.
1 . 0 0
the bags
calf, corday, cobra, lizard,
alligator and plastic in a
beautiful selection of styles
and colors.
I rom 5.00
plus t a i
from
plu s t a i
the hosiery
beautiful Claussncr Nylons
45 ga. 30 den ............ 1 .9 5
51 ga. 30 d e n ............ 1 .9 5
51 ga. 15 den ............ 2.59
the cosmetics
large selection of cosmetics
by the following fam ous
m akers . . . Charles of the
Ritz. Herb Farm , Chen Yu,
Early American, Coty and
Charbcrt.
the lingerie
lovely
fluffy
lingerie
by
B a r b i z o n , Vanity Fair,
R h yth m , Yolande, Sw ank
and Lady Duff.
' i *WMte.* *& ?.-***& <
... .<•
,1 int rf*),U antiar i
*. ■*
i t s
L a z a r u s
s e c o n d
f l o o r
f or
S ui t s !
LILLI A N N
•
PHILIP MANGONE
•
HANDMACHER
•
M OLLY
•
KAY SAKS
•
MONARCH
KRALER
WEINER
Pldtt Will Direct
Good Friday Event
marron wi
and W C
M>l05 will
Cnieiftxior
Messiah
of Chri*
will
provic
The prog ru
Platt, music supervisor in
rount> schools, will direct a Good
Friday musical service, to be held
*odav at ? 45 p m at First Pres-
bvterian Church.
The Holy Week communion gerv-
e will be conducted tonight at 7:30
.n the church sanctuary, when new
members will be introduced.
Soloist, at the musical service to-
ill be Platt, William Wood
lletus Hart.sock, and their
be selected from “ The
n.” Handel’s oratorio. “ The
and the seven last words
John S. Gridley, organist,
the accompaniments,
folk ”*
Org4n prelude, “ Procession to Cal
vary,** (Stam en; anthem, “God So
Loved
the
World;
solo,
William
W ood, “ King Ever Glorious” ; solo,
«Handel) anthem, “ All in the April
E'en m g;”
three
choral
numbers,
R E M E M B E R
. . . we're
OPEN
FRIDAY
EVENINGS
until
8 P.M.
Shop & Save
at the
NATIONAL
STORES
16-18 Wineow St.
“ F’ather, into Thy Hands,” “ It Is
Finished,” and “ Christ, We Do All
Adore nice;'* and solo, W, Cletus
Hartsock, “ God. My Father, Why
Hast Thou Forsaken M e?”
On Easter Sunday morning there
!will be two worship services, one
at 9 and the other at 11 o’clock. The
latter will bo broadcast by Station
W TBO *
Three Persons Treated
In Memori al Hospi tal
i
George A. Keefer, 63, Route 1, a
B. *and O
worker, was treated in
Memorial Hospital yesterday morn-
| tng for a deep laceration of the
right arm alter he was struck by
i part ol a jack while at work.
Treated in the same hospital yes-
terdav were Iris Landis, 21, Spring-
field, W
Va., a Sloan Glass Com-
! pany worker, who cut her right
thumb while wiping glasses, and
Donald Shirey,
14. Buffalo Mills.
Pa., who had X-rays taken of a
right ajikle injury,__________________
Local Pol i ce Recover
Two Stol en Cars
Police Wednesday recovered two
automobiles that were reported stol
en Wednesday afternoon and night
One of the vehicles was found in
front oi
the home of Lt. James
E.
Van
Cumberland
Police
De
partment,
Lt. Van said Mrs. Florence Bis
hop. Route 5, Fairgrounds reported
that her automobile was taken from
the rear of the Western Maryland
Railway
Freight
Station,
Canal
Street, about
11:20 p
m.
Tues
day. He said the stolen car was
discovered parked in front of his
home about 1:55 a. m. Wednesday.
The second vehicle, reported stol
en by Willis B Dawson was found
parked in an alley between Penn
sylvania Avenue and South Street.
Dawson said the machine was taken
from
the rear oi
his home. 210
Thomas Street.
Police
are
still
machine reported
W. Robinson, 435
He asserted the car was taken iron
in front of his home, Wednesday
afternoon.
If stored
dahlia
tubers appear
The more nearly entire the roots than reduce the root systems to fit!
Fleshy rooted woody plants such
shriveled, moisten them and if there ol woody plants are left during the small holes.
as
magl«>lias
or
the
tulip
tree,
are decay spots on
them, these process of transplanting, the m
o
r e
j ------------------------- 'should
la*
obtained
and
planted
should be completely cut awav and easily the plants seem to take hold!
Argentina is second only to the early in spring Plants of this sort
the wounds well dusted with dry in their new locations. ^In
'
United States in the amount oi corn i usually transplant less succe&duUy
sulphur dust.
Marge enough for the roots, rather
town.
«in the autumn
looking
lor
a
stolen by Fred
Grand
Avenue
Woody vines can be removed at
this time from trellis, which require
repair or painting, with less dam
age than at any other season.
USE G E N U IN E
INSELBRIC or
CELOBRIC
We guarantee a $75 00 to $100 saving
on your siding |ob.
No waiting . . .
all
work
guaranteed
.
.
.
new
roofs applied
. . .
No down pay
ment
.
.
.
36
months
to
pay.
Applied Locolly By
Harry W. Young
Phnne
4S-W
JUST
R E C E IV E D !
¡ 1* *
3
1 a
r i
i
n
‘ s
f a
r
s
l
i
p
s
. .
.
F O R E A S T E R G I F T S . . .
now you con choose from six
famous lines of quality slips
DANCE
TONIGHT
MI NKE’ S
COTTAGE INN
M U S I C
B Y
BOB KENNEDY
and His Orchestra
A D M ISSIO N 11.00 C O U PLE
DANCE
E V E R Y
F R ID A Y
N IG H T
s Ètta ri
Êta b ir
tf ta re s
i . ; i9
RADELLE
MISS SWANK
ALIDA
BLUE SWAN
JOSIE
ABDELNOOR
Only at Martin*s will you find such
a diversified selection of fine qual
ity, dependable slips. Tailored and
lace trimmed styles in luxurious
crepes and satin.
Black, tearosc
and white.
1
W hen you buy a watch . . .
B U Y
F R O M
A
WATCHMAKER!
J. N E W C O M E
Formerly of Homilton W otch Company
215
V I R G I N IA
A V E N U E
LO ANS
Top
V a lu t
on
D IA M O N D S ,
W A T C H E S , TO O LS, etc.
Ftne quality gloves in washable fabrics
Sm artly
detailed, beautifully finished. Shorties and whip
stitch styles. White, blue, pink or grey. All sizes.
f D P i T M W
forty-seven baltimore street
forty-seven baltimore street
from
-
//Z£ .f
f
. S ’
1 1 7 Bolt* m o r t Str e ot
Phon« 3 7 00
Big Reductions in Wards
Pre-Easter SALE
of New Spring Fashions
MISSES COATS
Th s is rea! news! A before-Easter sate of 100% ali-woof
coats’ It's all this years Spring stock featuring every new
success style. Long coats — short coats — toppers in Spring
time colors. Look your best for Easter and save !
Originally $38 to $48
$
NOW 26
MISSES' SUITS
Originally $14.98 to $45
Hard to believe, isn't it? Spring '47 suits at a sale price and
before Easter! Pick from fashion-crammed styles— swallow-
tous — pepiums — dressmakers — classics.
In all-wool
gabardine, suedes, twills Shop now and save !
NOW
TO
DRESSES: Women, Misses, Juniors
Originally $7.98 to $24.98
Just in time for your Easter buying — a whole collection
of brand new Spring dresses reduced for this event. Gay
young prints, soft pastels, lingerie-trimmed dark crepes!
Don't miss this opportunity! Choose your dresses today!
NOW
157 Boftumorc Street
Phon« 3700
Smart Touches
Your Easter
for
O u tfi t
The touch of a sparkling plastic patent
handbag brings Spring brightness to \oi»Y
suit or coat. Choose yours from Ward«
huge collection ... handbag.- that lead the
fanhion parade lor thru color and -n le.
2 98
T«|
And a final touch
eri^p rasori glove*
that accent the coat, the -uit, tin* hand
bag; by their very lightness. In muted
panels or white . . . clcverlv tucked for
hack-o'-the-hand interest. Sizes b to R.
TH E
C U M BER LA N D
N EW S,
C U M BER LA N D ,
M D.,
FRID A Y,
A P R IL
4,
194/
S E V E N
T T
Pldtt Will Direct
Good Friday Event
Jack Piatt. mu*ic supervisor In
county schools, w ill direct a Good
Friday musical service, to be held
?oda\ at 7 45 p. rn at First Pres
byterian Church.
The Holy Week communion serv
ice will be conducted tonight at 7:30
in tile church sanctuary, when newj
men hers w ill be introduced.
Soloist at Hie musical service to
morrow will be Platt. W illiam Wood
and W Cletus Hartsock. and their
solo* will be selected from “ The
Crucifixion.” Handel’s oratorio. “ The
Messiah’ . and the seven last words
of Christ. John S. Gridley, organist,
w ill provide the accompaniments.
The prog ram follows:
Organ prelude. "Procession to Cal- j
vary.” {Stainer >; anthem. “ God So
Loved
the
W orld;
solo.
W illiam
Wood. “ King Ever Glorious ”; solo.
(H andel); anthem, "A ll in the April!
Evening.”
three choral
numbers.
'Father, into Thy Hands.” "It Is
Finished.” and “Christ. We Do All
Adore Thee;’’ and solo, W. Cletus
Hartsock. “ God. My Father, Why
Hast Thou Forsaken Me?”
On Easter Sunday morning there
will be two worship services, one
at 9 and Hie other at ll o’clock. The
latter w ill be broadcast by Station
W TBO •
Three Persons Treated
In Memorial Hospital
George A. Keefer. 63. Route I, a
B *and O. worker, wa* treated In
Memorial Hospital yesterday morn
ing for a deep laceration of the
right arm alter he was struck by
part of a jack while at work.
Treated in the same hospital yes
terday were Iris Landis. 21, Spring
field.'W . Va., a Sloan Glass Com
pany worker, who cut her right
thumb while wiping glasses, and
Donald 8hir«*y,
14. Buffalo Mills.
Pa., who had X-rays taken of a
right ankle injury.__________________
Local Police Recover
Two Stolen (ars
1
Police Wednesday recovered two
automobiles that were reported stol
en Wednesday afternoon and night
One of the vehicles was found in
front of the home of L l. Jam es
E.
Van
Cumberland
Police
De
partment.
Lt. Van said Mrs. Florence B is
hop. Route 5, Fairgrounds reported
that her automobile was taken from
the rear of the Western Maryland
Railway
Freight
Station.
Canal
Street, about
11:20 p.
in
Tues
day. He said tile stolen car was
discovered parked in front of his
home about 1:55 a. rn. Weunesday.
The second vehicle, refu ted stol
en by W illis B. Dawson was found
parked in an alley between Penn
sylvania Avenue and South Street
Dawson said the machine was taken
from
the rear of
his home. 210
Thomas Street
Police
are
still
looking
tor
a
machine reported stolen by Fled
W. Robinson, 435 Grand Avenue
He asserted the car was taken Iron
in front of his home. Wednesdnv
afternoon.
If stored
dahlia
tubers appear
Tile more nearly entire the roots than reduce the root systems to fit!
shriveled, moisten them and if there of woody plants are left during the small holes.
are decay
spots on
them, these process of transplanting,
the more
..... ...... —-..... .......
should be completely cut away anti easily the plants seem to take hold I
Argentina
the wounds well dusted with dry j in their new locations
’
United State
sulphur dust.
Marge enough for the roots, rather
rowu.
Is second only to the
vs in the amount of corn
Fleshy rooted woody plants such
as
magrihiias
or
the
tulip tree,
should
bt'
obtained
and
planted
early in spring. Plants of this sort
usually transplant less success!lilly
in the autumn
Woody vines can be removed at
this time from trellis, which require
repair or painting, with less dam
age than at any other season.
REMEMBER
. . . we’re
OPEN
FRIDAY
EVENINGS
until
I P.M.
Shop A Save
at th#
NATIONAL
STORES
16-18 Wineow St.
USE GENUINE
INSELBRIC or
CELOBRIC
W t guarantee a $75.00 ta $100 saving
on your tiding job. No waiting . . .
all wark
guaranteed
.
.
.
new
too ft Applied . . . No down pay
ment
. . .
36 months to pay.
Applied Locally By
Harry W. Young
JUST RECEIVED!
i t 's M
a r t i n
' s
f o r s l i p s • • •
F O R E A S T E R G I F T S . . .
now you con choose from fix
famous lines of quality slipt
DANCE
TONIGHT
MMKE'S
COTTAGE INN
M U S IC
BT
BOB KEHREDY
and His Orchestra
ADMISSION BIM COUPLE
DANCE
EVERT
RU D A T
NIGHT
WImr you buy rn watch . . ,
SUY FROM A WATCHMAKER!
J. NEWCOME
formerly ai Hamilton Watch Company
215 VIRGINIA AVINUK
I:
L O A N S
Top Volo# ON DIAMONDS,
WATCHES, TOOLS, ole.
s m a r t
B r u s h a b l e f a b r i c
y i a c e s
1.39
Fine quality gloves In washable fabrics
Smartly
detailed, beautifully finished Shorties and whip
stitch styles. White, blue, pink or grey. All sues.
TO ARTW
forty-senen baltimore street
RADELLE
M ISS S W A N K
A LID A
BLUE SW A N
JO SIE
A BD ELN O U R
Only at Martin's will you find such
a diversified selection of fine qual'
tty, dependable slips Tailored and
lace trimmed styles in lulu nous
crepes and sutin. Black, tearose
and white.
IR Pl PTI V)7
forty-seven baltimore street
from 3 , 9 8
II T Baltimore Street
Phone 3700
Big Reductions in Wards
Pre-Easter SALE
of New Spring Fashions
MISSES' COATS
Th is is reo! news* A before-Easter sate of 100ft£ afl-woo!
coats! Its all this year's Spring stock featuring every new
success style Long coats — short coats — toppers in Spring
time colors. Look your best for Eoster and save!
Originally $38 to $48
$
NOW 26 .‘36
MISSES' SUITS
Originally $14.98 to $45
Hord to believe, isn't it? Spring '47 suits at a sale price and
before Easter! Pick from fashion-crammed styles— swallow
tails — pepiums — dressmakers — classics.
In all-wool
gabardine, suedes, twills Shop now and save !
NOW
$
TO 26
t
DRESSES: Women, Misses, Juniors
Originally $7.98 to $24.98
Just in time for your Easter buying — a whole collection
of brand new Spring dresses reduced for this event. Gay
young prints, soft pastels, lingerie-trimmed dark crepes!
Don't miss this opportunity! Choose your dresses today!
N O IA f
119 Baltimore Street
Phone 3700
Smart Touches for
Your Easter Outfit
•
a^^waM i s
\w %
ct
|
i n
J H I I “
T I
handbag bring* Spring bright™*** to v out
suit or coat. Choose votjn from U ardu
Hugo collection . . . handbag* that lead lh#*
fashion |t*r.idr for their ro|«w .«<i«I *i\le.
2 ^ 8
And a final touch
ert*p ravon emotes
that aeeent the coat, the -tnt. the hand
b a g bv th eir eery ligh tness. In m uted
pastel* oir white . . . eleverlr nickel for
ha* k-o -the h an d rn Wrest. Size* b to R.
TELEPHONE STRIKE
NOT JUSTIFIED
COMPANY HAS OFFERED TO ARBITRATE
BASIC WAGES IN MARYLAND
T h e pre s e nt c o n tra c ts w ith th e loc a l
Unions a re e x tre m e ly lib e ra l.
T h e Com pa ny is w illin g to re n e w th e m .
One U nion, th e M a ry la n d Te le phone
T ra ffic U nion, In c ., ha s a gre e d to a
re n e w a l.
O ur w a ge s c om pa re fa v o ra b ly w ith
thos e pa id by o th e r bus ine s s e s in th is
c om m unity fo r w o rk re q u irin g s im ila r
s k ill a nd tra in in g .
T h e Com pa ny ha s o ffe re d to a rb itra te
th e ba s ic w a ge s — w e be lie v e th a t o u r
w a ge s a re fa ir, a nd w e a re w illin g to
ha v e th is te s t m a de .
O ur w a ge ra te s ha v e be e n inc re a s e d
5 6 % in th e la s t 6 y e a rs .
T h is is in a ddition to re g u la r, progrè s *
s iv e w a g e inc re a s e s .
O ur e m ploy e e s ha v e 8 holida y s a nd uo
to 3 w e e k s v a c a tions w ith pa y e a c h
y e a r.
T h e y ha v e s ic k ne s s b e n e fits a nd pe n
s ions — w ith fu ll c os t pa id by th e
T e le phone C om pa ny .
T h e y ha v e good w o rk in g c onditions .
T h e ir w o rk is s te a dy .
ASED on the fa c ts a bov e , the re is no jus tific a tion
for a te le phone s trik e on Monda y , April 7 ,
Such a Strike W ill-
En d an g er th e p u b lic safety .
Han d icap man y b u sin ess co n cern s in th is co m
mu n ity .
Serio u sly in co n v en ien ce th e p eo p le in th is co m
mu n ity .
Dep riv e sev eral th o u san d telep h o n e emp lo y ees in
Mary lan d o f th eir reg u lar earn in g s.
Natio n al o r Local Barg ain in g ?
This co mpa ny ha s been ba rg a ining in g o o d
fa ith with the lo ca l Unio ns fo r a number o f
y ea rs, is do ing so no w a nd will co ntinue to
do so .
But NOW the Unio ns’ dema nds fo llo w a
na tio na l pa ttern.
The v a st ma jo rity o f the serv ice we furnish
is lo ca l in na ture. The ra tes which o ur cus
to mers pa y in Ma ry la nd fo r this serv ice a re
reg ula ted by the Sta te reg ula to ry bo dy . This
Co mpa ny in the pa st ha s a lwa y s ba rg a ined
a nd m a de co ntra cts lo ca lly with represent-
a tiv es o f the lo ca l Unio ns.
The Co mpa ny a nd representa tiv es o f the
lo ca l Unio ns a re fa milia r with Ma ry la nd
co nditio ns a nd they a re in the best po sitio n
to neg o tia te co ntra cts to meet co nditio ns in
this co mmunity . This is the best wa y it ca n
be do ne fo r a Sta te reg ula ted public serv ice
co mpa ny .
Here's Wh at th e Un io n s'
Deman d s Me a n—
An increa se to em plo y ees in Ma ry la nd ra ng
ing fro m $12 to $3 3 per week.
An a nnua l increa se in co st o f pro v iding tele
pho ne serv ice which equa tes to $3 .7 9 per
mo nth fo r ev ery subscriber we serv e.
An a nnua l increa se o f $15 ,17 0 ,0 0 0 in the
co st o f furnishing telepho ne serv ice.
An increa se o f 90 % in the Co mpa ny ’s to ta l
w a g e pa y ments ma de in 194 6 to em plo y ees
represented by the Unio ns.
Six times the to ta l ea rning s o f the Co mpa ny
in 194 6 .
Here Is Ou r Policy on Wag es
W e believ e tha t em plo y ees sho uld be w ell pa id a nd
a lso tha t w a g es sho uld co m pa re fa v o ra bly with tho se
pa id by o ther businesses in this co m m unity fo r wo rk
requiring sim ila r skill a nd tra ining . To m a ke sure
tha t this po licy is ca rried o ut w e a re co ntinua lly
co m pa ring w a g es in the telepho ne business with
o ther w a g es in the co m m unity .
Wag es th at are to o lo w aie n o t fair to emp lo y ees —
wh o d o th e wo rk . Wag es th at are to o h ig h are n o t
fair to th e p u b lic — wh o b u y th e serv ice.
W e wa nt to be fa ir a bo ut w a g es a nd do w ha t is best
fo r bo th em plo y ee» a ndtelepho ne user*. It is the
teleph o ne user, a fter a ll w ho na v * u* them o ney
tha t w e pa y o ut in wa g e»
O ur pre s e nt c ontra c ts w ith th e Unions
re p re s e n tin g M a ry la n d e m ploy e e s a re
e x tre m e ly lib e ra l a nd w e ha v e re p e a t
e dly o ffe re d to re n e w th e m . (One unionf
th e M a ry la n d Te le phone T ra ffic U nion,
In c . ha s a gre e d to a re n e w a l).
T h e Com pa ny ha s a ls o o ffe re d to a rbi
tra te ba s ic w a ge s in th is s ta te .
Wo wan t emp lo y ees to b e satisfied with th eir wag es
an d wo rk in g co n d itio n s. Bu t we also wan t th e p u b lic
to b e satisfied with th e serv ice an d th e p rice th ey
p ay . fo r it. An d we wan t th e in v esto rs to b e satisfied
ab o u t th e mo n ey th ey h av e in v ested —so th ey will
co n tin u e to in v est in th e telep h o n e b u sin ess.
It ta k e s a ll th re e — W o rk e rs — B uy e rs
In v e s to rs — to k e e p a bus ine s s going.
A T EL EPHONE STRIKE IS NOT JUSTIFIED
The C h e s a p e a k e & Potom a c T e l e p h o n e Compa ny
of B a ltim o re C ity
\
NOT JUSTIFIED
eOMPMY HAS OFFERED TO ARBITRATE BASIC WAGES IR MARYLAND
Th* present contracts with the local
Unions are extremely liberal.
The Company Is willing to renew them.
One Union, the Maryland Telephone
Traffic Union, Inc., has agreed to a
renewal.
Our wages compare favorably with
those paid by other businesses in this
community for work requiring similar
skill and training.
The Company has offered to arbitrate
the basic wages — we believe that our
wages are fair, and we are willing to
have this test made.
Our wage rates have been increased
56% In the last 6 years.
This is In addition to regular, progres
sive wage Increases.
Our employees have 8 holidays and uo
to 3 weeks vacations with pay each
year.
They have sickness benefits and pen
sions — with full cost paid by the
Telephone Company.
They have good working conditions.
Their work is steady.
ASED on the facts above, there is no justification
for a telephone strike on Monday, April 7.
Such a Strike Will -
Endanger the public safety.
Handicap many business concerns in this com
munity.
Seriously inconvenience the people in this com
munity.
Deprive several thousand telephone employees in
Maryland of their regular earnings.
National or Local Bargaining?
This company has been bargaining in good
faith with the local Unions for a number of
years, is doing so now and will continue to
do so.
But NOW the Union*’ demands follow a
national pattern.
The vast majority of the service we furnish
is local in nature. The rates which our cus
tomers pay in Maryland for this service are
regulated by the State regulatory body. Thi*
Company in the past ha* alway* bargained
and m ade contract* locally with represent-
ative* of the local Union*.
The Company and representatives of the
local Unions are familiar with Maryland
conditions and they are in the best position
to negotiate contracts to meet conditions in
this community. This is the best way it can
be done for a State regulated public service
company.
Here's What the Unions'
Demands Mean—
An increase to em ployees in Maryland rang
ing from $12 to $33 per week.
An annual increase in cost of providing tele
phone service which equates to $3.79 per
month for every subscriber we serve.
An annual increase of $15,170,000 in the
cost of furnishing telephone service.
An increase of 90% in the Company’s total
wage payments made in 1946 to em ployees
represented by the Unions.
Six times the total earnings of the Company
in 1946.
Here Is Our Policy on Wages
We believe that employees should be well paid and
alto that wages should compare favorably with those
paid by other businesses in this community for work
requiring similar skill and training. To make sure
thai this policy is carried out we are continually
comparing wages in the telephone business with
other wages in the community.
Wages that are too low are not fair to employees —■
who do the work. Wages that are too high are not
fair to the public — who buy the service.
W e want to be fair about wages and do what is best
for both employees and telephone users. It is the
telephone user, after all, who ow vs us the money
that we pay out in wages.
Our present contracts with the Unions
representing Maryland employees are
extremely liberal and we have repeat
edly offered to renew them. (One union,
the Maryland Telephone Traffic Union,
Inc. has agreed to a renewal).
The Company has also offered to arbi
trate basic wages in this state.
We want employees to be satisfied with their wages
and working conditions. But we also want the public
to be satisfied with the service and the price they
pay. for it. And we want the investors to be satisfied
about the money they have invested—so they will
continue to invest in the telephone business.
It takes all throe— Workers — Buyers
Investors — to keep a business going.
A TELEPHONE STRIKE IS NOT JUSTIFIED
The C h e sap e ak e & Potom ac Telephone Com pany
of Baltimore City
*
of his daughter, Mrs. Charles A
Bubo, Lincoln Street.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Smith. Jr.,
are spending the Easter holidays
here.
Miss Alma Peters, who has been
ill with the flu at Potomac Valley
Hospital, has returned to her home
on East Street.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sanders have
returned
from
Bradenton,
Fla,,
where they spent the last three
months.
to Mrs. Louise Dean, home servict
secretary for Allegany County Chap
ter of the American Red Cross.
Mrs*. Dean pointed out that the
office has only one worker avail
able to investigate such cases, and
that the work would be less com
plicated
if appeals for aid
were
made either by the family itself
or by signed letters from interested
friends. Such letters will be kept
confidential on request.
The
Red
Cross
handles
cases
which
involve
veterans
or
their
dependents, but it can refer other
cases
to the proper agency, she
explained.
i r\*
John
Smith,
Robert
Magruder,
lourt Discusses
mX™ ssyRichard omum and
lY r s u n a ls
k f r v * !
Steve Dulin is ill at, his home on
Naming Successor
^
„
Y
I
r
i
I
I
j Street, is reported improving after
lO J. L * Aronhalt
I Luk' ‘ McDowell, Spring Street, is
recovering from an attack of flu.
Miss Anna Rendlo, Spring street.
By I I HI. M rD O W H J*
who
suffered
a
paralytic
stroke
K K V S FR . W Va , April 3
At a Tuesday, was admitted to Potomac
kmtr meeting today of the Mineral Valley Hospital.
C
¡at v Court, discussion was held |
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wert man.
concerning
a
successor to J.
E New* Creek, announce the birth of
A; nhalt, justice of the peace for a
daughter
at
Potomac
Valley
New Creek District, who resigned Hospital.
r< ently because of ill health.
Mr. and Mrs. William Diehl, Bur-
No decision was reached. There lington, announce the birth of a
a*e said to be four candidates for daughter at Potomac Valley Hoe-
the appointment.
pita!.
The court also decided to employ |
Noah Rotruck is ill at the home
a dog
catcher for the city and
— ........
CO ;r.tv, p rovid ed th e in corp orated
municipalities of th e cou n ty agree
to con trib u te toward his salary.
Roger* S ervice S et
A funeral service for Mausbv L.
Rogers, who died Monday morning,
were held Thursday at 2 p. m
at the home on New Creek Drive,
with Rev. A. R. Showalter, pastor
of the Church of the Brethren
officiating.
Interment will be tn
Queens Point Cemetery.
Red man Rites
Final rites for Mrs. Vem ia Red
man, 53. wife of Zann Redman, who )
da d Tuesday morning, were hel<
!
Thursday at 2 30 p. m. at Janes
M* thodist Church, with Rev. Melvin
W ishington. Piedmont, officiating
Pallbearers will be Joseph Wilson.
APPEAL FOR PLUMBING
« 3a
CTHDC D C D M IT CM CD
retail
store
and
showroom
for
j I U K l i LKrlll rlLtU
plumbing and heating supplies and
equipment.
Anotnor application for an occu-
The application was denied by the
paney permit has been denied in city engineer because the building
the city engineer s office and refer- ; is located in a Residential C zoning
red to the Board of Zoning Appeals, district. It was formerly used as a
increasing
the
board’s
current storeroom. Tobias Lazarus and John
agenda of cases to eight. The board R. Treiber are listed as the owners,
has scheduled a hearing April lfi i
Charles Paul Boeder, 6<>9 Pied-
W
B. Harshberger, representing mont Avenue, secured a permit to
the Sun Heating Company, 28 North ¡build a five-room brick one-story
Liberty Street, appealed to the board house on Ashland Avenue, at an
for a permit to use the first story ¡estimated cost of $4,000. The 32 by
4 0-foot structure will have a con
crete block foundation and a con
crete roof.
Work will be done by
the owner.
John (»ornali was granted a per
mit to enclose a rear porch, 5 by f>
teet long, at 775 MacDonald Ten ace,
will» trame walls covered wit li melai
lath and stucco. Work will be done
by L. A
Run ion, at an estimated
cost of $350,
A partition between
the pantry and kitchen will be re
moved.
L ITTL E 'S
Uaster
Anonymous Appeals Are
Received By Red Cross
Hummingbirds are called beija-
flores, or “ llower-klssers,” in Brazil
According to Scandinavian tradi
tion. the swallow hovered over the
cross
of
Jesus,
crying
*‘8 vala!
Svale!” (console, console!), whence
it was called svalow, the bird of
consolation.
Several anonymous appeals for aid
to needy
families have been re
ceived at the local Red Cross office,
but. such appeals should tie signed
to insure investigation,
according
Diam onds
$3 4 .00 up
The Sm art Shop
£
SHOE SALE
W a tch e s
Dress or Play styles in your favorite colors
of red, blue, brown, block and white. Su it
able
heel
heights
for
growing
girls
or
ladies. Open or closed toes and backs. Sizes
4 to 9.
Earrings
W t Cat) F»r and D t llm
Harry Footer & Co
C ItA N E R S & d y e r s
36 North Liberty St.
MA IE I»-TO <.» T R ic o n t i»
Ot K S P P i Cl A LT I
as Easter itself
the soft side draping
gives the new longer
line that looks so
t«S
V i.
A V E .
M A R
Sr«
EM ONE SUS»
Brown or black in styles for boys and girls.
Leather or com position soles in sizes S V i
to 3 . Reg. values to $3 .5 0.
Sim ulated
Pearls . . .
$2.5 0 up
Electrical
Fixtures
Receptacle*
LADIES' ARCH SUPPORT
SLIPPERS
Xk,
Sw itch Boxes
Romx W ire
Eleven N orth Liberty Street
Toggle
Switches
S oli k id u p p ers, leath er or eovcred h eel*
in sm art n ew S p rin g styles.
We h ave
b een fam ou s for th e s e b ran d s in th i* lin e
for years.
All wid th s an d sires.
Lam p Sockets
City Electrical
Appliance
109 Frederick Street
BOYS’
OXFORDS
BOYS'
CLODHOPPERS
Com pacts $2.25 to $4 8
Ou r lin e of Roy’s Clod h op p ers is
n ow
b igger th an ever.
W e
h ave
field sh oes, Army typ es an d sch ool
styles.
Brown or b lack , sizes I to (i with
leath er or ru b b er soles th at ean b e
resoled .
Full or Single
Size
Cotton & Felt
Restaurant
Grode
A
Restau ran t
Men's Dress Oxfords
31 Baltim ore St
IS O PEN
O N
Brown
or black
w ith
feather
soles
and
Goodyear welts. A ny style you wish in sizes
6 to 11.
INNERSPRING
MATTRESS
Men's Work Shoes
A ny type your job requires and the
price
your
pocketbook
will
allow.
Fam ous brands os Endicott-Johnson,
G orilla, Ranger and m ony others.
Billfolds $2.4 0 to $20
Other suggestions include
manicure sets, music boxes,
dresser
sets,
birthstone
rings, bracelets, necklaces
and chatelaines
9 Tru e . the w o rd ti connmy
d<*cs not conic first to m in d
w h e re the h e a lth o f y o u r
household is concerned. But
« vtn in tim e* o f illness, no
one w ishes to pay an unw ar
ranted price. O u r charges are
uniform ly fair— econom ical.
A l
l
pri ce
s i ncl ude l
ederai tan
Sm oll
Down
Paym ent
Delivers
Balance
$1.25
per
week
GOOD
GOODS COME
IN
L IT T L E
PACKAGES
K FECH ’S
D R U G S T O R E
irgmio Ave
Phone 1686
165 Baltimore Street
Cumberland, Md
4 2-4 6 Boltim ore Street
Phone 7 0
S IN C E 1851
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY,
A P RIL
4 ,
194 7
N IN E
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD, FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
1947
NINE
Court Discusses
Naming Successor
To J. E.Aronhalt
B t l i k e M c D o w
e l l
KEYSER. W Va , April 3 -A t a
te n t meet mg today of the Mineral
County Court, discussion was held
eoncerr.ing a successor to J. E
Aronhait, Justice of the peace for
Kerr Creek District, who resigned
recently because of ill health.
No decision was reached. There
are said to be four candidates for
the appointment.
The court also decided to employ
a dog catcher for the city and
county, provided the incorporated
municipalities of the county agree
to contribute toward his salary.
R ogers Service S et
A funeral service for Mausby L.
Ropers, who died Monday morning,
were held Thursday at 2 p. rn
a t the home on New Creek Drive.
With Rev. A. R. Show<er. pastor
of the Church of the Brethren
officiating.
Interm ent will be In
Queens Point Cemetery.
Redman Rites
Pinal rites for Mrs. Vernia Red
m an, S3, wife of Zann Redman, who
died Tuesday morning, were heir
Thursday at 2:30 p. rn. at Janes
M ethodist Church, with Rev. Melvin
W ashington, Piedmont, officiating
Pallbearers will be Joseph Wilson.
Altar You've Triad Hit It
TRY THE BEST
P H O N E
John
Smith,
Robert
Magruder.
Eugene Rolls, Richard Gillum and
Maurice Perry
Personals
Steve Dulin is iii at his home on
Spring Street.
Mrs.
Emma
Aronhait.
Spring
Street, is reported improving after
an illness.
Luke McDowell, Spring Street, Is
recovering from an attack of flu.
Miss Anna Rendlr. Spring street,
who suffered
a
paralytic stroke
Tuesday, was admitted to Potomac
Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W ertman.
New Creek, announce the birth of
a
daughter
a t
Potomac
Valley
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. William Diehl, Bur
lington, announce the birth of a
daughter a t Potomac Valley Hos
pital.
Noah Rolruck is ill at the home
of his daughter. Mrs. Charles A
Bobo, Lincoln Street.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Smith. Jr.,
are spending the Easter holidays
here.
Miss Alma Peters, who has been
ill with the flu at Potomac Valley
Hospital, has returned to her home
on East Street.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sanders have
returned
from
Bradenton.
Fla.,
where they spent the last three
months.
Anonymous Appeals Are
Received By Red Cross
Several anonymous appeals for aid
to needy families have been re
ceived at the local Red Cross office,
but such appeals should be signed
to insure investigation, according
to Mrs. Louise Dean, home servici
secretary for Allegany County C hap
ter of the American Red Crass.
Mrs. Dean pointed out tliat the
office has only one worker avail
able to investigate such cases, and
that the work would be Jess com
plicated
if ap|H*»Ls for aid were
made either by the family itself
or bv signed letters from interested
friends. Burh letters will be kept
.confidential on request.
Tile
Red
Cross
handles cases
which
involve veterans or
their
dependents, but It can refer other
cases to the proper agency, she
explained.
According to Scandinavian tra d !-ii
Hon, the swallow hovered over the
crass
of
Jesus,
crying
“Svala!
Svale!" (console, console!), whence
it was called svalow, the bird of
consolation.
APPEAL FOR PLUMBING
STORE PERMIT FILED
Allot lier application for an occu
pancy permit ha* been denied in
I la* city engineer s office and refer
red to tile Board of Zoning Appeals,
increasing
tile
bourd's
current
agenda of cases to eight. The board
has scheduled a I lea ring April 16
W
B. Harshberger, representing
the Sun Heating Company, 28 North
Liberty Street, appealed to the board
for a permit to use the first story
of a two-story brick building at 431-
433 North Mechanic Street as a
retail
store
and
showroom
for
plumbing and heating supplies and
equipment.
The application was denied by the
city engineer because the building
is located in a Residential C zoning
district. It was formerly used as a
storeroom. Tobias latzarus and Joint
R. Treiber are listed as the owners.
Charles Paul Roader, 609 Pied
mont Avenue, secured a permit to
build a five-room brick one-story
house on Ashland Avenue, at un
[estimated cast of $4,000. Tile 32 by
40-foot structure will have a con
crete block foundation and a con
crete roof. Work will be clone by
the owner.
John Gornall was granted a per
mit to enclose a rear porch. 5 by 6
feet long, at 775 MacDonald Terrace.
with frame walls covered wit it mid a 1
lath and stucco. Work will be done
by L. A Hurt ion, at att estimated
cost of $350
A partition between
the pantry and kitchen will be re
moved.
Hummingbirds are called beija-
flores, or "flower-klssers,” in Brazil.
LITTLE'S
f o r her
ilC ( a s te r
197
We Can ret aa* Pen fee
Harry Footer ft Co.
CLEANERS A DYERS
Si North Liberty St.
■ABO-TO-GIT UC CO KPS
OCA a r r e c l A L T I
TIm Smart Shop
§
MB TA AVE, NUB Sri
m ows m s
Electrical
Fixtures
• Receptacles
• Switch Bowet
• Roms Wirt
$ Toggle
Switches
• Lamp Sockets
City Electrical
Appliance
109 Frederick Street
Just as Gay
as Easter itself . . .
the soft side draping
gives the new longer
line that looks so
right this spring.
Elevon North Uhaify
T h e
Restaurant
Grade "A" Restaurant
31 Baltimore St.
IS OPEN
ON
Mondays
A t t *
0 True, the word Crane ary
doc* OCK come hrs! to mind
w here the health of your
R o u s e hold is concerned. But
even in times of illness, no
one wishes to pay an unwar*
ranted price. Our charges are
ani Cornily f a i r — economical.
K E E C H ’S
DRUG STORE
d l Virginia Ave
Phone I6S6
Small
Down
Payment
Delivers
Balance
$1.25
per week
(Jutm
42-46 Baltimore Street
Phone 70
SHOE SALE
Ladies’ Spring Slippers
Drest or Ploy styles in your favorite colors
of red, blue, brown, block and white. Suit
able heel heights for growing girls ar
ladies. Open or closed toes and backs. Sizes
4 ta 9.
Z/
*
Kiddies’ Easter Slippers
Brown or block in stylos for beys end girls.
Leather ar composition soles in sizes
to 3. Reg. values to $3.50.
9 V k
.98 $
to
LADIES' ARCH SUPPORT
SLIPPERS
Hoft kid uppers, leather or covered Heeia
In nmart new Spring styles.
We have
bren famous for these brands In this line
for years. All widths and aloes.
• o
.98 $
••
•
to
BOYS'
BOYS’
OXFORDS
CLODHOPPERS
Brown or Mark, Rim I to 6 with
Our line of Boy** Clodhopper* la
leather or rubber sole* that can be
fouled.
now bigger than ever.
Wr have
field a hora. Army type* and achoo!
sty lee.
52-98 to $3-98
$2-79 to $4-48
Men's Dress Oxfords
Brown or block with leather soles and
Goodyear welts. Any style you wish in sizes
6 to ll.
Men's Work Shoes
Any type your fob requires ond tho
price your pocketbook will allow.
Famous brands os Endicott-Johnson,
Gorilla, Ranger ond mony others.
t
CUT D A T U
SIOK
165 Baltimore Street
Cumberland, Md.
Diamonds
$34.00 tip
Watches .. $27.50 up
Earrings • • • $1.20 op
Lapel Pins . $1.20 ap
WSF’
\
Simulated
Pearls . . .
t
$2.50 ap
Compacts $2.25 ta $4B
Pens . . .
$3.75 ap
Pen and
Pencil Sets
$5.95 up
Billfolds $2.40 to $20
O ther tmggt'.st iou* include
manicure seta, music boxes,
dresser
aria.
birthstone
ring*, bracelet*, necklaces
aud chatelaines.
Aff pticet include federal tea
GOOD
GOODS COMS
IN
LITTLI
SINCE 1851
MARKET CO
FRIDAY, APRIL
4,
1947
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD
mosphere. It was first described by
Arthur Heaviside, a British scien
tist, who was experimenting with
Sir W illiam Preecr in
1892,
w it h
parallel telegraph lines
not been determined The new bud
get must be approved by M ay 25.
will have the opportunity lor addi
tional periods of one year up t<
jthree years. Specifications may b<
¡secured from the city clerk. Bui:
must be accompanied with certi
tied checks for $2,000.
Bids Are Sought
For Garbage Removal
The “ heavvside layer" is the lay
of Ionized air in the upper at
be received by
'pj1P cutting, flaking and pohsh-
'ouncil
Monday,’mg Gf stone tools by the M aya tribes
n
of Central America, who flourished
t will cover only until 1200, is the finest known to
successful bidder I archaeologists.
*
____
D aily Lenten
Devotional
Prepared by
DR. V E R E V. L O P E R
for the Fed eral C oun cil of the Ctiurche_s
of C hrtst in
A m erica -Copyright
1947
S u f f e r in g
There thev crucified him .
Luke 23 :
33.
Read M atth ew 27:3 3 -4 4 .
The first words oi a young mother
who had a difficult tune in child
birth were, “ Now I understand the
FR ESH
A N D
S M O K E D
. A T S P E C IA L P R IC E S
S A L E
OF
M E A T S .
EASTER
Tenderized Smoked Picnic
Fresh Country
JUMBO
Butter
EA ST ER S P E C IA L
Double A ttraction
C O N T IN U O U S
E N T E R T A IN M E N T
Are Back Again
Choice Beef
The
Tucker Sisters
Rib Roast ,b 39c I Roast
r ec ipe
A N D T H IS
T IM E
W IT H
‘ JUMBO
FRENCH TC
“The 3
Loose Nuts
P U R E — A L L M E A T
G R O U N D B E E F ..........
SPECIAL
Owens and
Parker
• > Ol Rf M IS S IN G vmrethmc good
|
ti \ou don t buv a pr ol I rjnk \ Jumbo |
Peanut Butter lod-n SO-OH delicious’
|
Folks vis it tjNicN m«»rc likelresh roastrd
|
pranuts *h.in froh roasicd peanuts. No
|
oihcr peanut butter goes you more
|
©j rural peanut butter flavor. W ith all
|
j
l*r>c nJtur<|! golden oil left
!
,n Spteads easier Blends
\
easier. W rite tor IR L fc
\
Ketipe Booklet today.
) ess*
y» cup o''Hi
y, |raspo°°
LAMB
BREAST
VEAL
RnflST
VEAL
CHOPS
Sensational
Song Stylists
I or t ran k lo » J f Spue Co, Cttuinmilt 2 Obto
SMOKED
b ^
h n
I Sliced Pork
15c I Liver
Be Your Prettiest This Easter
BUY NOW!
Only Two Days Until Easter p
1
SELECTIONS UNLIMITED
(
Buy That Beautiful Easter Hat You've
Wanted To Own at Fields Saturday at
“Prices You Like to Pay!”
AND AGAIN M U R PH Y w i n
S E L L
M O RE
GLOVES
I HA!
E V E R B E F O R E . . .
WHITE. PINK and BLUE
Sucdcd Royon
CLOVES
I Others 5.98 to 20.00)
Most Glamorous Styles You Ever Saw
Saturday at Field’s
The M ost Gorgeous
YOU GET VALUES THAT AMAZE YOU!
YOU SEE STYLES THAT GLORIFY YOU
COLORS
MATRONS
HALF HATS
Black
Wh ite
Navy
Brown
Toast
( offer
R e d
\q ilA
Lime
firry
Pu rp le
Pin k
Yellow
Beige
S an d
POMPADOURS
FLOWER HATS
PILL BOXES
SAILORS
HALOS
OFF FACE
POSTILLIONS
BONNETS
BERETS
TRICKY BRIMS
BIG FLARES
PICTURE HAT
G. C. Mu r p h y Co
Lorqe, M edium , Sm all
Hcadsizcs
119 B A L T IM O R E ST
13 8 to 14 8 B A L T IM O R E S T R E E T
I EN
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD,
■— — — —
—
—
■
* "
FRIDAY, APRIL
1947
Bids Are Sought
for Garbage Removal
will have tile opportunity for addi
tional period* of one year up to
j three years. Specifications may be
I secured from the city clerk. Bids
mu.st be accompanied with certi-
Sealed bm.- for the collection of
checks for $2,000.
SaibaKC and ashes for Hie year be
£ii.univ May I will be received by
the
Mayor
and Council Monday.
April 21. at IO a. rn
W hile the contract will cover only
a
.ride sear. the successful bidder
The cutting, flaking and polish
ing of stone tools by the M aya tribes
of Central America, who flourished
until 1200
is tile finest known to
archaeologists.
Fellowship Of
Prayer
.Doily Lenten Devotional
Prepared by
DR. V E R E V. LO PER
for tho fe d e ra l C o un cil of the C h u r chee
Of C h ritt ta
A m erica
C o p yrig h t
1947
City Finishes Fiscal
Year With Surplus
O I H M W V F R I E N D S
S74
T d hate made it easy »/ I hadn't had anither helping
al that delicious *Jum bo French Toast.**
buffering:
There they crucified him,
33.
Read Matthew 27 33-44.
Luke 23:
J crucifixion of Christ ”
Let us take more when
wider
hie
experience
jail of our suffering, physical and with redemptive suffering shall fur-
spiritual. bv which we have given flier open our eves to the glory of
new life to human souls, and see the eros*.
what it will reveal as we U>ok at the
le i I It Pray: Father of the Living
Face upon the cross
and the dead. we thank thee for all
The changing expressions reflect those who have been faithful unto
loneliness but no pathos or despair, death in their loyalty to religious
We see the suffering our weakness and patriotic convictions.
Forgive
has bellied to bring on him and the us if we have sometimes counted our
.
.
.
.
.
M m utt Ii bv which aion, mc can live- as U h . important, and make us
> f r
J.. i_*!S
truly live
His eyes are shining and more worthy of him whose name we
i clear.
They look into the past to bear.
Amen.
the prophets who were p e r s e c u t e d -----------"r----~r
m
,
__,
____ _
1
1
June 14 was proclaimed as flag yet been compiled and the exact
lav bv President Wilson in 1915
surplus in the c it y 's accounts has
not been determined The new bud- biosphere. It was first described by
get must be approved by May 25.
I Arthur Heaviside, a British acien-
Cuinberlands income for 1948-47
will
exceed
expectations
slightly.
md appropriations will not be all
pent, Arthur B. Gibson, city audi
tor. said yesterday, adding that the
the preparation of a 1947-48 budget
Is expected to start soon.
Gibson said all records have not
lust, who was experimenting with
Hie “ heavyside layer” Is the lay- Slr w illiam Preeer in 1892. with
cr of ionised air in the upper at-1 parallel telegraph lines
before him.
They look around him
with tender love for
mother
and
T h e f i r s t words of a young mother friend.
They look into the
future,
who had a difficult time in child-
"Today shalt thou be with
me in
birth were, “ Now I understand the Paradise.” This is no helpless lamb
1
j with slumping body but a brave,
I X K I T O R K n o t ic e
triumphant soul, confident all men
T H IS IS TO G IV E n o h c f That the
w ill be drawn unto
him
A Roman
uh .rioer h»*' obtained from the Orphan*’ centurion speaks the final truth,
Court of Allegany County. M a rla n d
let- J “Truly this w as the Soil Of God.”
ter* Testamentary on the estate of Emma
• VO L R E M IS S IN G wmctlnnc good
•I vou don I buv a jar ol Frank v |umbo
Peanut Bulter today SO-O H drlmom*
F o lk ' sax it ta<4e* more like 1re*h roasted
peanuts than fresh roasted pcanutv N o
O t h e r peanut butter goes you more
rural peanut buffer flavor W ith all
the natural golden oil left
£
in Spreads easier Blends
easier. W r ite for E R L E
Recipe Booklet today.
Jar trenk I ts UT SptaGo, CimtmmsH 2 Ohio
•
C U P THIS RECIPE
I
•JUMBO
f r e n c h TRBBT
I n o
% cup nota
y, ifjipooa wh
TE in bread
franks |*ii"h°
peanut Butt**
I
M n together effV r n * . *od u
I
rfu n u b c e o lW ^ P "*
Spread a ibm .he* Ct
Cu|
nut botte*. top with a
l8
and dip into egg
1H.» ta* «"«•» * * * "
I
I
I
I
; s„., ko. v * * d
J
I VkW *«•»«*»•"*
_ J
lf! •
C. Kenny late ol Allegany County, M ary
land. deceased. All person, having claims;
j against the deceased are hereby warned
j to exhibit the same, with the vouchers1
thereof duly
authenticated,
to the sub
scriber on or before the 26th day of Sep
tember
5947. They may otherwise by law
be excluded from all benefit of the said
estate. All persons knowing themselves in
debted
to said
estate are requested
to
i make immediate payment
Oiven under my hand this 26th day of
March 1947.
SIM O N K K EN N Y .
I
Executor.
I
224 W
Washington Street
Hagerstown. Maryland.
—Adv
N-Mar. 2B-Apr. 4-11-1B
O RD ER N IM
In the Matter of the sal# of th# Real
Estate of Henry Bockhouse. Deceased
In the Orphan*' Court of A l l e g a n y
County. Maryland
Ordered this 26th day of March. 1947
by the Orphans' Court of Allegany Coun-
j tjr. M aryland, that th# sale of Real Es
tate made bv Charles T. Bockhouse, Exe
cutor of
Htnry Bockhouse. late of
said
County’and State, deceased, and reported
to the Orphans’ Court on this 26th da
of March. 1947. be ratified and confirmed
I unless
c a u s e
to the contrary thereof
bt
shown or. or before the 26th day ot April
1947.
provided a copy of this order bt
I inserted in some newspaper printed and
published in Allegany County. Maryland, j
, once a week for three successive weeks
before the 19th day of April. 1947.
The report states the amount of sale
to be $2,000 OO
_____
J
FR EN C H VAN M ET E R .
W H .U A M C
A BBO T T.
H U G H ST EV EN SO N
Judge* of the Orphans’ Court
True Copy
Ir M
A. .C H A RLES STEW A RT,
Register of Wills
_ Advertisement
N-Mar
'JR-Apr
4-11
All this we see and we shall see
O
MARKET CO
AND THIS
T IM I WITH
Owens and
Parker
Sensational
Song Stylists
4
E M C I IOU S N IM K E
T H IE IS TO G IV E M O U C K
That the
j.vubseribar has obtained from the Orphans',
it ourt of Allegany County, M aryland
let
ters Testam entary on the enate of B ru c e
*Che*nut
late of Allegany County. M a ry
land
deceased
All perron* having claim*
against the deceased arr hereby
warned
to exhibit
the same,
with
the vouchers
I thereof
dulv
authenticated
to the
sub-
i scriber on or before the 26th day of Sep
tem ber
1947. They may otherwise by law
1 ne excluded from all benefit of the aaid
estate
All
persons
knowing
themselves
; Indebted to said estate are requested to
make Immediate p*\ merit
.
Given under my hand this 26th day vt
March, 1947.
A l.VIN H
W ILBO N
Executor
Route No 3 Bedford Road
Cumberland. M aryland
Advertisement
N-Mar
2*-Apr 4-lt-ll
arnut
EASTER
FRESH AND SMOKED I
* . AT SPECIAL PRICES I
Fresh Country
I
Eggs
45c|
Tenderixed Smoked Picnic I
Hams....» 47e|
EASTER SPECIAL
LAMB ROAST
•
..........*. 33c j
Choice Beef
I
Rib Roast ,* 39c |
Loin End Pork
I
Rcast....Hi.47c|
CDenial
pure — a l l m eat
o c . I
OrtvWL GROUND R EE F ..........lh. OOO
VEIL I
BOIL I
CHOPS I
BEEF I
j ib. 25c |ib. 25c j
I PESL I UMC I
ROAST I BRESSI
jib. 25c |ib. 18c j
I Special—Frying Chickens^ 59c
I SMOKED I PORK I
B*eoN I satfofii
I lh. 45c jib 35c I
PURE I’.ann Skart
LARD I Rib R««f
jib 39c ja. 30c
I vm1
I
I Stew.... i,. 15c
I Sliced Pork
| Liver
„ 39c
WM
rn
rn
P P M
T H '* '
B S C *
.V T T °>
n*
STT'-*
B V 0 0 5 ® !
c
A
$
g wk**
^
to
hi
»o»ictf-
Amo
m r s .
• • I
lo&m.‘"'"I
•**#f kmn .
*•"•111 ttyu
^
7
i
C w/AC%CCtZ7CZ'A//.;
Be Your Prettiest This Easter
BUY NOW!
Only Two Days Until Easter
SELECTIONS UNLIMITED
J J V J
TV
. AND AGAIN M U RPH Y W IL L
SELL
MORE
G LO VES
THAN
EY ER BEFO R E . . .
WHITE PINK and HUE
Sueded Rayon
CLOVES
EVERY
$ 4 .O O
SIZE
FRSWO*
,
n t voun* t S T o 'd
. A *
. „
0
*7
an®
l n »iz»
You Can Buy That Beautiful Easter Hat You’ve
So Long Wanted To Own at Fields Saturday at
“Prices You Like to Pay!”
The Most Gorgeous
(Other* 5.98 to 20.00)
Most Glamorous Stylos You Evor Saw
Saturday at Field’s
F°*
T
.
1 ** < *
COAT
SETS Bom,
'"ort*.
Co*»POi'Oft#*
Urt* y
*olt
floor
M f
COO
sn #
S O V '
to'
loc*
Come to FIELD’S for Your EASTER HAT!
YOU SEE STYLES THAT GLORIFY Y O U
YOU GET VALUES THAT AMAZE YOU I
)«r»al
*ts«
e»* ob
sd *
WW,
wa
VTO*
r f
w w m G . C . M u
r p h
y C o
138 ta 148 BALTIMORE STREET
HALF HATS
• FLOWER HATS
SAILORS
• OFF FACE
BONNETS
TRICKY BRIMS
PICTURE HAT
COLORS
# Black
# W hite
# Navy
% Brown
f Toast
B Coffee
# Red
# Aqua
# I.(me
# (tre y
# Purple
# Pink
# Yellow
a Beige
# Sand
MATRONS
POMPADOURS
PILL BOXES
HALOS
POSTILLIONS
BERETS
BIG FLARES
FIELD’S
119 BALTIMORE ST.
Lorqe, Medium, Small
Hcadsises
THE
CUMBERLAND
NEWS,
CUMBERLAND,
M D.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4,
19 47
ELEVEN
FREE PARKING -HOME OWNED W OPERATED *30 WINEOW
S U P E R Ï Ï 1A R K E T
o f Arwfu ra n d
A p o a u *:
Lem p a n f
No wonder CHIFFON is preferred!
Here’s why it s the soap you’ve always wanted:
I . Chiffon is G e n t l e with
your most delicate fabrics,
SAFE with colors! Your lovely
th in gs u.st lon ger, look th eir best
-w ith gen tle Ch iffo n ctre. Colors
wake up an d sin g! Every th in g
wash able is sale in (Tiiflun .
dL • Chiffon m akes dishes
shine and glassw are glisten!
Dish es, glasses come clean fast in
Ch ifloo s in stan t suds. Th ey sh im
with lots less polish in g-so n atu
rally y ou're out o f th e kitch en
much quicker.
Chiffon is mild as a
lotion on your hands! Even
with dish es to wash th ree times a
day — Ch iffon keeps y our h an ds
soft an d lovely . Ch iffon is mild
because it’s a ll p u re so a p !
N o purer
soap was ever made.
A favorite overnight in
C h i c a g o, N ew York, B o ston,
P h i l a d e l p h i a, and wherever
it's been introduced!
Housewiv es can tell a. winner the minute they try it.
That’s why Chiffon Soap Flakes became their
fav orite almost ov ernight. Ev en in new stores where
many old fav orite brands were in stock—
CHIFFON outsold them all!
Right now y our grocer has Chiffon. The v ery
same soap that dev elops instant suds . . . washes faster,
whiter, better . . . keeps hands soft and sm ooth!
Get Chiffon Flakes today —and see for y ourself why
no o ther so a p ever wo n so ma ny friend s so fa st f
No purer soap was ever made!
but now fhere& plenty here for you !
C’h ase an d San born
Coffee ..................
ni. 47 c
Apple Py equick
.‘ST 41c
Tri-Valley
Fruit Cocktail
No. V i 3 Q -
can
U v v
Staley s
Sweetose Sy rup 24 bottle 19 C
Bland Lard
3 cîirt. Ç1.29
S taar Straw berry
Preserv es ............ 1
t47 c
Arm our’s S tar or Swift’s Prem ium
Tendered Hams .b 63c
Ten der Juicy
Chuck Roast
■» 49 c
Veal Leg Roast
.., 49 c
Veal
Shoulder Chops . lb. 45c
Ready to E at
Picnics .................,b 51c
Home Dressed Roastin g
Chickens ............. .b. 59 c
Fresh
Ground Beef ...... 37 c
Fresh
Pork Sausage ... >» 43c
Clover Sprin g’s
Creamery Butter .h 7 1c
Fruits
Iceberg
Lettuce
2 h eads 19 c
Ten der Pascal
Celery . , . ........................... bun . 25c
Solid New
Cabbage
2 «». 15c
Crisp Ten der
Carrots
3
bun . 25c
T en der
New P e as
2 ,bs 39 c
Red Hutton
Radishes .’...... 2 lbs 13c
Well Bleach ed
Endiv e
2hds 35c
r . s. No. i
J ersey Sweets 3 lbs. 29 c
M arsh Seedless
Grapefruit...... 5 r« 25c
Fan cy Elatin g or Cookin g
Apples
2 lbs. 25c
U. S. No. 1 M ain e
P otatoes
15
peek 59 c
Frozen
Haddock Fillets ». 39 c
Frozen
Perch Fillets ......(b. 29 c
Frozen Sweeten ed
Strawberries ... Pkg. 49 c
Frozen
Fordhook Limas Pk,. 37 c
Frozen
Fresh Spinach
.. pkg. 23c
Readv to Bake
P ie s
49 c .„a 59 c
DELIVERY
AT LOW
COST . . . M1RKET CLOSES 9 P. M. FRIDAY
Calvert
Alaska Pin k
Salmon
Nestle'»
Del Monte
Sliced or Crush ed
Pineapple
No.
2 ViA Q .
can
» V W
Homogen ized
MILK
foil 49c
4
can
can
c a n s
Tri-Valley
Peaches
n o
29 c
Market Leaders Generally Decline
Although Selling Pressure Lacking
NEW’ YORK. April 3 (TP)—Stock at 241 on on ly 80 sh ares, Great
market
leaders
gen erally g a ve North ern
Railway
on e
at
43%,
groun d today alth ough th ere were
...» Air Lan es on e at 241* an d
a n umber of exception s an d sellin g Tran scon tien tal an d Western Air
pressure was lackin g durin g
greater part of th e proceedin gs.
Tran sfers of 680,000 sh ares were
th e same as th e day before.
Norfolk an d Western was up on e
th ej.seven eigh th at 21 %. Ah ead were
Ch ry sler, Gen eral Motors, South
ern Pacific, Texas Compan y , Un ited
States Lin es, Paramoun t Pictures,
Gen eral Electric, Ph elps Dodge, In -
TRAVEL CASES B Y
tern ation al Nickel, Un ited Aircraft
an d Boein g.
American Tobacco “B" dropped to
a n ew 1947 low wh en tradin g in
th e “righ ts” of th e compan y ’s n ew
stock issue appeared on th e big
board. It subsequen tly stiffen d an d
fin ish ed with a n et declin e of five
eigh th at 70%. Pen n sy lvan ia Rail
road also touch ed bottom with a
dip of five eigh th at 21.
Eastman Kodak con ceded two at
239ti. Barber Asph alt 2% at 52*4,
Ch esapeake an d Oh io 1% at 46%,
Beth leh em 1% at 90% an d Un ited
States Steel 1% at, 72%.
Forward Curb movers were Ry an
Con solidated Petroleum,
E l l i ot t
Compan y ,
Salt
Dome
Oil
an d
American
Gas.
Stumblers
were
American Republics, Solar Aircraft,
Stan dard Cap
an d
Burma Ltd.
Turn over h ere was 170,000 sh ares
versus 210,000 y esterday .
Tradin g dragged in th e bon d mar
ket today an d most railway lin es
were fraction ally off or un ch an ged
from Wedn esday ’s close.
Total sales were $2,740,000, com
pared with Wedn esday ’s $3,030,000.
Most
Un ited
States
Treasury I
bon ds w ere un ch an ged, keepin g to I
th e best levels of th e y ear, in over- !
th e-coun ter tradin g, but th e 2%s
of September ’67-72 were off 1-32 at
a fin al bid of 105 31-32.
T
IA V E L tough — light —
air tight— every case ie
owner registered and guaran
teed to giv e y ou a lifetime of
serv ice. Lux uriously lined
and appointed, sealed for
protection from moisture,
mildew and dust, at journey ’s
end, wherev er, however you
trav el, y our clothes arrive
fresh and crisp in this newest,
smartest luggage ki *M the
world.
Choose from ten match ed
models for your every need
and Durpom.
Baltimore Livestock
BALTIMORE,
April
3
(/I*)
—
tUSDA).
Cattle-500-100 h oldovers n ot in
cluded, total salable supply 600;
receipts ligh t; gen eral trade active;
slaugh ter steers
fully
steady
to
stron g with earlier th is week, in
stan ces 25 h igh er, all oth er classes
fully steady ; truck lot top good an d
ch oice fed steers aroun d 1.110 lb
25.10 early top; several loads an d
lots 23.65-24.50; top medium to aver
age
good sh ort
feds 20.50-22.75;
h eifers scarce, small supply medium
an d good 15.00-20.00; meager supply
good y oun g h eifer ty pe beef cows
17.00-18.00, common an d medium
cows of dairy breedin g largely 12.00-
14.00; top medium cows to 16.00;
can n ers
an d
cutters
9.50-11.50;
Fictur« wl ore fh e
l o d i * »' i po c i ou*
wordrob# cat# and th e
com pan ion overnight cast.
T h e r e 's no d o u b t a b o u t it
WE
C A N
G I V E
Y O U
LOWER MONTHLY PAYMENTS
on your auto
H E R E ’S
HOW
Just drive up to th is office
, . brin g a record of th e
pay men ts y ou h ave already
made with y ou. We'll work
out a Plan wh ile y ou wait to
give y our mon th ly pay men ts
you can con ven ien tly meet.
Check Our Rates
IF THE
B A L A N C E
OWED on YOUR
CAR IS
_
$100
200
3 0 0
6 0 0
9 0 0
WE CAN
R E D U C E
y our MONTHLY
PAYMENTS TO
" ~ $ 7 .53 ~
15.06
2 2 .59
44.6 7
6 6 .3 2
And, any amount up to S I 500 with
monthly payments in proportion
A i f f ! if y ou h aven ’t a car but w an t to borrow on y our sign ature,
y our furn iture or y our n ote, ph on e or come to th is office.
We can make y ou a loan an d give y ou th e same low, m on th ly
pay m en ts th a t we give to th ose wh o own autos.
North American Acceptance
C O R P O R A T IO N
Corner of Frederick and Centre Street*
sh elly can n ers down to 9.00 an d be
low;' good beef bulls
17.50-18 00;
medium an d good weigh ty sausage
aulls 15.50-17.00; ligh t an d medium
weigh ts
12.50-15.00;
stockers
an d
feeders active, steady ; small lot
ch oice n ative feeder steers aroun d
615 lb 21.00; few lots 19.00-50; com
mon ligh t stockers 16.00.
Calves-250-vealers scarce, active,
steady with Wedn esday ; mixed lots
good an d ch oice 150-220 lbs largely
22.00-25.00;
strictly
ch oice
27.00; ;
common an d medium 10.00-17.00; j
culls aroun d 8.00, un derweigh ts as,
low as 5.00.
Hogs-700-active,
barrows
a n d
gilts fron t 180-220 lUs 1.00 h igh er!
th an Wedn esday , all oth er weigh t.4 i
an d sows 75 cen ts h igh er; practical j
top 27.50; good an d ch oice 120-140
lbs 24.00-25; 140-160 lbs 25.00-25;
160-180 lbs 26 00-25;
180-220 lbs
27.25-50; 220-250 lbs 26.50-75; 250-
300 lbs 25.50-75; 300-350 lbs 24.50-
H; 8 8 0 lbs up 29 J O-7 8 | good and
ch oice sows 21.50-75 with h eavy
sows lower.
Sh eep-25-receipts slaugh ter iambs
an d slaugh ter ewes too meager to
warran t fair test of market; in
quiry broad an d un derton e steady ;
good an d ch oice 80-110 lbs wooled
; lambs salable from 25.50 down ; good
an d ch oice slaugh ter ewes 9.00 down .
Position Of Treasury
WASHINGTON, April 3 <7P)—'Th e
position of th e Treasury April 1 ;
Receipts, $97,545,780.22; expen di
tures. $423.287,931.56; balan ce, $5,-
102,293,926 72; customs receipts for
mon th $3,007,202.92; receipts fiscal
y ear July 1, $32,462,147.295.04; ex
pen ditures fiscal y ear, $29,536.147,-
861.17; excess of receipts, $2,925.-
999.433.87; total debt, $257,876,305,-
359.84; decrease un der previous day ,
$1.430.014.309.43; gold assets, *$20,-
485,868,955.31.
mixed
9 4;
No. i white 9 3'/« -9 4%; No. 2
Durin g th e sprin g clean -up of
b arley —Maltin g 1.8 0 - 2.oo n omin al;!tbe sh rub borders, do n ot remote
feed 1.40 -1.60 n omin al.
an y of th e mulch from aroun d
field seed- Per h un dredweigh t: Nomt- laurels, rh ododen dron s an d azaleas
n al; red clover
4 ¡.00-41.00, sweet clov« t .in ipea if ic an dP(*D
HS tO be U n -
11 50-13.00; red top 17.50-18 00; timoth y ,11" “ ®® 11 1S
i
7.40 -7.7 4.
|sigh tly n ear th e fron t of th e beds.
Hew York Stocks
Chicaoo Grain Market
CHICAGO, April 3 (/P)—With th e
exception of th e May delivery of
wh eat, all grain con tracts closed
h igh er on th e Board of Trade today
after a session of n ervous, erratic
price movemen ts. Closin g futures;
W H SA T
May
2 45 %-2.46 %.
J uly
2 22-
2 22%,
September
2 17 -2.17 %,
December
2.15-2.15%
CORN— May 1.7 5 %-1.7 5 , J uly 1.S9 %-1 8 9 .
Septem ber 1.62%*%, December 1.48 %.
OATS
May 8 « %-%,
J uly
8 0%-%. S e p
tember 7 5V« -%, December 7 2,/<i-%.
BARLEY
May 1 55.
LARD—J u ly 26.45. Septem ber 25.8 0, O cto
ber 24.00, Nov ember 21.00.
CASH W H EAT—None.
,
CORN
No. 1 y ellow 1.8 4%; No. 2 1.8 3%;
No. 3 1.8 0%-1 8 1%; No. 4 i.7 3%-1.7 6 ; No
5 1.64%-1.7 1; sam ple grade 1.58 %.
OATS— No. 1 h eav y m ix ed 9 6 %;
No.
1
NEW
YORK.
April
3
(41—Stock
list.
today ’* close:
Atr Red ii .........
LOF Ol ............
53%
Alg Corp ............
4%
M artin Gl . . .
29 * «
Al C D .............. 17 8
Minn Mol . . . .
10%
Am Can . . . . . .
9 2
M K Ai T . . . .
57 %
Am C Fd ..........
49 %
M Ward .........
57 %
Atn Rdr ............
14%
Nat Bis ..............
31 %
Am R Mill . . . .
33%
Nat Dls
..........
21 %
ATT ..................... 165
NY Cen ............
17 V*
Am Tob D . . . .
7 0%
Nori Wsn . . . .
241
Am W W k l . . .
10%
Nor Am Av n ..
10
Anaconda
..........
40
O hio Oil
............
23%
Armour
..............
13%
O wens 111 Gl .
7 4
Av co Mfg ..........
6%
Pack Mtrs . . . .
6 3 8
B and O ............
14
Pan Amn Atr
13%
Bendix ................
33%
Param t
............
27
Beth Stl ............
9 0 %
Pa RR
...........
21
Boo Airp
..........
21%
Philip Morris
33 3 «
Budd Co ............
12%
Ply rn Oil . . . .
23%
('« •¡an ...................
20
Pr.sd Stl Car .
13%
C and O . . . . .
401 «
Pullm an
.........
57
Chry s
................
9 6 %
I*ur Oil ..............
24%
Col O E ............
11%
Rad Crp
.........
8 %
Comw Solv . . . .
24
Rep Stl ............
» 7 %
Comw Sou . . . .
3%
R Tob B .........
69%
Con Ed
..............
27 %
Srs Roe ............
36
Cunt Mtrs . . . .
9 %
Hoc Vac . . . . . .
14%
Cont Oil ............
39 %
Sou Par . . . .
40%
Curt
Wr
.........
5%
Sper Crp .........
21%
Doug Air ..........
7 1%
Sta Br
..............
34%
duPont
. . . . . . . 18 5%
SO Ind ..............
40 %
Elau Lit« » .........
58 %
SO NJ
60s «
G en El
............
35%
Stud« baker . . . .
21%
Gen Fds ............
43
Tidew O i l .........
19 %
Gen Mtrs ..........
59 %
Tlm k RB .........
48 %
G oodrich
.........
63%
T w ent Cent
..
33%
Goody r
............
.
Un Carbide ..
9 9
Q rhm l*g .........
4%
U n Aire .........
20%
(it N Pfd ..........
1
United Carbon
7 6%
G rey hnd
.......... 30%
United Corp .
3%
Int N Can . . . .
32%
US Rubber . . .
51
Int T & T . . . .
13%
US S t ................
7 2 %
Intst Dept . . . .
22%
W arner Bros .
15%
Kenn Cop .........
47
W est Elee . . . .
25%
Kroger ................
46%
Yng S T
.........
68
BABY CHICKS
TRI-STATE
Feed and Supply Co.
49 Hen derson Ave.Tel. 2950-M
Closing Notice
We Will Close
COOD FRIDAY
at 12 Noon
E. V. COYLE’S
45 Baltimore St.
New York Produce
NEW YORK, April 3 (>P) — Eggs
43.459, steady . New York spot quota
tion s follow; (based on wh olesale
sales by receivers to jobbers an d
large retailers.) Wh ites: Extra fan cy
h eavy weigh t 49-50; extras 1 an d 2
large 46.25-47; extras 1-2 medium
46.5; extra 3 large 45.25-45.5; extra
4 large’44.5.
Butter 712,328;
firm. Wh olesale
prices on bulk carton s: Creamery ,
h igh er th an 92 score an d premium
marks <AA) 65.5 cen ts, 92 score <A>
65, 90 score (B> 64.5, 89 score (C)
62.5-63.5. (New tubs usually com
man d on qrh alf cen t a poun d over
th e bulk carton price).
Everything you need for the Easter Feast is right here — displayed for quick, cosy
selection . . . priced low for real econom y. So com e in and fill your shopping basket
. . . fill it to overflow ing with the big valu es th a t abound in every deportm ent . .. fill
it with top quolity foods that give you the most m ealtim e pleasure for your money.
For quality . . . for variety . . . for economy —
fill your H o lid a y menu from top to
bottom with our super-values . . . we hove them by the Easter basketful.
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1947
ELEVEN
Market Leaders Generally Decline
Although Selling Pressure Lacking
NEW YORK. April 3
Stock
m arket
leaders
generally
g a v e
ground today although there were
a cum ber of exceptions and selling
pressure was lacking
during
the
gi eater p art of th e proceedings.
T ransfers of 680.000 shares were
th** same as th e day before.
Norfolk and W estern was up one
at 241 on only 80 shares. G reat
N orthern
Railway
one
a t
43 %,
.— ». Air tulles one a t 24Vi and
T ranscontiental and
W estern
Air
seven eighth a t 21l*. Ahead were
Chrysler, G eneral Motors. S ou th
ern Pacific, Texas Com pany, U nited
States Lines, P aram ount Pictures,
G eneral Electric. Phelps Dodge, In -
TRAVEL CASES BY
TRAVEL lough—Ii gin —
I air tight—•very cete Is
owner registered end guaran
teed to give you a lifetime of
service. Luxuriously lined
and appointed, sealed for
protection from moisture,
mildew and dust, at journey's
end, wherever, however yon
travel, your clothes arrive
fresh and crisp in this newest,
smartest luggage in all die
world.
Choose from tan matched
models for your every need
and oarfXMa*
tem atio n al Nickel. U nited A ircraft
and Boeing.
A m erican Tobacco “B” dropj>ed to
a near 1947 low when trading in
the “rig h ts” of the com pany’s new’
stock issue appeared on the big
board. It subskjuently stiflend and
finished with a n et decline of five
eighth a t 70%. Pennsylvania R ail
road also touched bottom w ith a
dip of five eighth a t 21.
Eastm an Kodak conceded tw o at
239V*. B arber A sphalt 2'« a t 52*4,
Chesapeake and O hio 1% a t 46%,
Bethlehem 1% a t 90% and United
States Steel 1% a t 72%.
Forw ard C urb movers were Ryan
Coasolidaled
Petroleum ,
E l l i o t t
Company,
S alt
Dome
Oil
and
American
Gas.
Stum blers
were
Am erican Republics, Solar A ircraft,
S tan d ard
C ap
and
B urm a
Ltd.
Turnover here was 170,000 shares
versus 210,000 yesterday.
T rading dragged in the bond m ar
ket today and m ost railway lines
were fractionally off or unchanged
from W ednesday’s close.
T otal sales were $2,740,000, com
pared w ith W ednesday’s $3,030,000.
Most
United S tates
Treasury J
.shelly canners dow n to 9 00 and be
heads were unchanged, keeping
to low;
good
beef
bulls
17,50-18 00;
the best levels of the year, in over- medium and good weighty sausage
the-counter trading, but the 2%s ;ju 11s 15.50-17 00; light and medium
of Septem ber 67-72 were oil 1-32 at weights
12.50-15.00;
stockers
and
a final bld of 105 31-32.
I teeners
active,
steady;
sm all
lot
choice native feeder steers around I
615 lb 21.00; few lots 19 00-50; com
mon light stockers 16.00.
(
Calves-250-vealers scarce, active,
— steady w ith Wcdne.sday; mixed lots
good and choice 150-220 lbs largely
in. 22.00-25.00;
strictly
choice
27 00;
common
and
medium
10 00-17.00;
culls around 8.00, underw eights as
to low as 5.00.
strong with earlier this week, in-1
Hogs-700-actlve,
barrows
a n d
stances 25 higher, all other classes |Kilts from 180-220 bxs 1.00 higher
fully steady; truck lot top good and Uiun W ednesday, all oth er weight.*
Baltimore Livestock
BALTIM ORE,
April
3
• USDA).
C attle-500-IOO holdovers not
eluded,
total salable
supply
GOO;
receipts light; general trade active;
slaughter
steers
fully
steady
Position Of Treasury
W ASHINGTON. April 3 i^V -T he
position of tile T reasury April I;
Receipts. $97,545.780 22; expendi
tures. $423 287.931 56;
balance, $5.-
102,293.926 72; custom s receipts for
m onth
$3,007,202.92; receipts fiscal
year July I. $32,462.147 295 04; ex
penditures fiscal year. $29,536,147.-
861.17; excess of receipts, $2,925 -
999.433 87; total debt, $257,876,305,-
359 84; decrease under previous day,
$1,430,014,309.43;
gold
assets. ‘$20.-
485.868,955.31,
mu»-d #4; No. I whit* tSM i-04%; No. I
D icing
the spring clean-up of
* ^barley—Malting I so - a oo n o m in a l th e shrub borders, do not rem ote
ferd I *0-1 so nominal.
any of the
m ulch
from
around
rrEta.) seed- Per hundredweight. Nomi- laurels, rhododendrons and azaleas
na); red cloyer 43 00-47 00;
sweet clover
|t ^ ^ drep
to be Un-
near the front of the bedi.
clover 43.00-47 OO.
sweet clover
11 S0-13.00,
red
top
1750-18 00;
tim othy
7.40-7.74.
sightly
choice fed steers around 1.110 lb
25.10 early top; several loads and
lots 23.65-24.50; top m edium to aver
age
good
short
feds 20 50-22.75;
heifers scarce, sm all supply medium
and good 15.00-2000; m eager supply
good young heifer type beef cows
17.00-18.00,
common
and
medium
cows of dairy breeding largely 12.00-
14.00; top m edium cows to 16.00;
canners
and
cutters
9.50-11.50;
itll other
and sows 75 cents higher; practical
top 27.50; good and choice 120-140
lbs 24.00-25;
140-160 lbs 25 00-25;
160-180
lbs
26 00-25;
180-220
lbs
27.25-50; 220-250 lbs 26.50-75 ; 250
Chicano Grain Market
CHICAGO, April 3 CZP)—W ith the
exception of the May delivery of
wheat, all grain contracts closed
higher on the Board of T rade today
300 lbs 25.50-75 ; 300-350 lbs 24.50-'after a session of nervous, erratic
75; 350 lt>s up 23 50-75; good and Pr4ce m ovements. Closing futures:
c h o ir *
so w *
21 5 0 -7 S
w ith
h c iiv v I
VV HEAT— May
2 4 i',-1 4 « > ,.
July
J 22-
c n o itc
SOWS
J l . W - i a
WILT!
n e a v y
H rptr mb? r
2 17-3.17%,
December
.SOWS lo w e r.
2.15-2 15%
Sheep-25-receipts slaughter lam bs: c o rn m u 1 75%-175. July 1 *9%-i 69
and slaughter ewes too m eager to
There's no doubt about it
WE
C A N
G I V E
Y O U
LOWER MOHTHLY PAYMENTS
on your auto
factored ore the
t o d i e s ’ s p a c i o u s
w ardrobe ease and lh#
com p an ion overnigh t c a se .
to L B € R N / T € I N
9-11 N CCNTRC
/ J
HERE’S
HOW
Just drive ap lo this offiet
• . bring • record of tho
payments yon ba vt already
modo with yon. Wa'll work
oat rn Pion whit* yon wait to
fivt your monthly payments
yow cen conveniently meet.
Check Our Rates
IF THE
B A L A N C E
OWED oa YOUR
CAR IS
WE CAN
R E D U C E
your MONTHLY
PAYMENTS TO
$100
$ 7.53
200
15.06
300
22.59
600
44.67
900
66.32
And, any amount up to $1500 with
monthly payment* in proportion
A
| | J lf jom haven’t a ear bvt want to borrow on your signature,
your furniture dr your note, phone or come to this office.
We can make you a loan and give you the same low, monthly
payments that we give to those who own autos.
North American Acceptance
CORPORATION
Comer of Frederick end Centre Streets
w arrant fair test of m arket; in
quiry broad and undertone steady;
good and choice 80-110 lbs wooled
lambs .salable from 25.50 down; good
and choice slaughter ewes 9.00 down.
New York Slocks
S«'ntrm b*r I 62% -% , Decem ber 148% .
OATS
May 88% -% . July M % -% . S ep
tem ber 75% -% , Dec. rn ber 72% -'«.
BARLEY
May I 55.
LARD—Ju ly 24 45. Septem ber 25 SO. O cto
ber 24 OO. N ovem ber 31 OO.
CASH W HEAT—None.
,
CORN
No. I yellow I 14%; No. 3 1.13%,
No. 3 1.B0%-1 SI %; No. 4 1.73»«-1.7I; No
5 I 441 a-1 71; sam ple grade I 58%.
OATS— No. I heavy m ixed 94% ; No. I
NEW
YORK.
today'a close:
Air Redn ............33%
Alg C o r p
« '•
Al C D
I™
Ain C an ........... 97
Am C Fd ............49%
Ain Rtlr .............. 14%
Ani R Mill . . . . 33%
ATT .....................1*9
Ain Tub II . . . . 70%
Am W Wits . . . 18%
A naconda ............40
A rm our .............. 13%
Avco Mfg .........
6Va
B and O ........... 14
Bend tx .................. 33%
Beth St I ..............90%
Boe Atrp ............21s*
Budd C o
12%
Celan .....................20
C an d O ............48%
C hrys
.................. 98 %
Col O E ........... 11%
Corn*' Holy . . . . 24
Coni w Bou . . . .
3 %
Con Ed ................ 37%
C ont M tra . . . .
«%
C ont Oil ..............39%
C urt W r .........
5*«
Dour Air ............71%
d u i'o n t
...............185%
Elau L ite ............ 58%
G en El ................ 35%
Oen Fds ........... 43
O en M tra
SD1,
G oodrich
............63%
April
3
—Slock
list.
I .OF OI ..
M artin GI
M inn Moi ,
M K 4 T i
M W ard
Nat Bis
N at Ola .,
NY Cen
53 C
29 *<
10%
57*i
57Ji
31 »i
2 1 ' ;
17V.
Norf W sn ..........241
Nor Ain Avn .
O hio Oil .........
O w ens III OI ,
Pack M trs . ..
P an Amn Air
P a ra m t ..........
1% HR
...........
Philip M orns
Plym OU . . . .
I’r.Ml Btl C ar ,
P ullm an
.........
IO
23%
74
6%
13%
27
21
33%
23%
13%
57
I*ur Oil ............. 2V
R ad Crp
Rep Btl
R Tub B
Bra Roe
Boc Var .
Bou Pac ,
Sper C rp
S ta Br ...
BO Ind ..
SO NJ
Stud* baker
8%
37%
40%
36
14%
40%
21%
34%
40%
86s*
21%
(m odyr
. . .
O rhm lit .
Cit N Pfd .
G reyhnd
In t N C an
In t T Ac T
In tst D ept
K enn Cop
55%
4%
43%
30%
32%
13%
22%
47
K roger ................ 46%
Ttdew O i l
19%
TUnk RB .........48%
Tw ent C ent
. . 33%
Un C arbide . . . 99
Un Aire .............. 20%
U nited C arb o n . 76%
U nited C orp . .
3%
US R ubber . . . . SI
US S t .................. 72%
W arner Broa . . 15%
W est Eire ......... 25%
Yng 8 T
68
New York Produce
NEW YORK. April 3 (ZF) — Eggs
43,459. steady. New York spot quota
tions follow;
(based on wholesale
sales by receivers to jobbers and
large retailers ! W hites: E xtra fancy
1 heavyweight 49-50; extras I and 2
large 46.25-47; extras 1-2 medium
46.5; extra 3 large 45.25-45.5; extra
4 large* 44.5.
B utter 712,328;
firm. W holesale
prices on bulk cartons; Creamery,
higher than 92 score and premium
m arks <AA» 65 5 cents, 92 score (A>
65, 90 score tB) 64.5, 89 score (Cl
62.5-635. (New tubs usually com
mand on*>h&lf cent a pound over
the bulk carton price).
£
A V ie h
• fo o d„ * < * - ' S O & S
in seven big cities
but now there'spleiriy here for you!
____________________
No wonder CHIFFON is preferred!
Here’s why it’s the soap you’ve always waited:
I
Chiffon ie GE WTI I with
your most delicate fabrics,
SAFE with colors! Your lovely
dungs last longer, look their beat
— with gentle Chiffon care. Colon
wake up and ting! Everything
washable at gale in (M o o .
__
2 a Chiffon nobel dishes
shine cold glassware glisten!
Dishes, glasses come clean Last in
Chiffon’* instant suds. They shim
wrich lots less polishing—to natu
rally you’re out of che kitchen
mach quicker.
ewe Chiffon is mild as a
lotion an your hands I Even
with dishes to wash three times a
day — Chiffon keeps your hands
soft and lovely. Chiffon is m id
because it’s nilpart soap! No purer
A favorite overnight in
Chicago, New York, Bostoh,
Philadelphia, and wherever
it's been introduced!
Housewives can tell a winner the minute they try kl
That's why Chiffon Soap Flakes became their
favorite almost overnight. Even in new stores where
many ok! favorite brands were in stock—
CHIFFON outsold them all!
Right now your grocer has Chiffon. The very
same soap that develops instant suds... washes faster,
whiter, better . . . keeps hands soft and smooth!
Get Chiffon Flakes today—and see for yourself why
mo other soap ever won so many friends to fast!
No Miler soap ms ever made I
BABY CHICKS
TRI-STATE
Feed md Supply Co.
49 Henderson Ave.TeL 2950-M
Closing Notice
We Win Close
GOOD FRIDAY
at 12 Nooa
E. V. COYLE’S
45 Baltimore St.
Everything you need for the Easter Feast is right here — displayed far quick, easy
selection . . . priced low for real economy. So come in ond fill your shopping basket
. . . fill it to overflowing with tho big values that abound in every department... fill
it with top quality foods that give you the moat mealtime pleasure for your money.
For quality • • • for variety • • • fur economy — fill your Holiday many from tuff em
bottom with amw taper valuea • • • we bove them by tho latter basketful.
Chase and Sanborn
Coffee .............. ib. 47c
Apple Pyequick
41c
Tri-Valley
Frau Cocktail
39c
Staley’s
Sweetose Syrup 24
19c
Swift’s
Bland Lard
Bl$129
Staar Strawberry
Preserves
1 1,47c
Armour’s Star or Swift’s Premium
Tendered Hams
.b. 63c
Tender Jniey
Chuck Roast ... i»49c
Veal Leg Roast . . .b 49c
Veal
Shoulder Chops . * . 45c
th. Sic
Iceberg
Lettuce
2 heads 19c
Tender Pascal
Celery
bun. 25c
Solid New
Cabbage......2 lbs. 15c
Crisp Tender
Carrots....... 3 bun. 25c
Tender
New Peas
2 lbs. 39c
Red Button
Radishes ....2.^ 13c
Well Blear bed
Endive
2 bds. 35c
IT. S. No. I
Jersey Sweets 3 ^
29c
Marsh Seedless
Grapefruit
5 «. 25c
Fancy Eating or Cooking
Apples........2 .h. 25c
IT. S. No. I Maine
Potatoes.... 15 ^ 59c
Ready to Eat
Picnics
eeeeeooooeeeeeeeee
Home Dressed Roasting
Chickens ........ . 59c
Fresh
Ground Beef
». 37c
Fresh
Pork Sausage ... ib.43c
Clover Spring’s
Creamery Butter >». 71c
Frosen
Haddock Fillets . 39c
Frosen
Perch Fillets ... » 29c
Frosen Sweetened
Strawberries ... PM- 49c
Frosen
Fordhook Limas Pkg. 37c
Frozen
Fresh Spinach .. Pkg. 23c
Ready to Bake
Pies
49c
59c
DEWERT RT LOW COST .. . .MEET OLOSES I L
I PRIORY
ommuni
S U P E R TR B R K E T
PREE PARKING HOME OWNED < W OPE RAT ED ■ JO WINEOW ST
T . V ELVE
TH E
C U M B E R L A N D
NEW S,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D ,
F RID A Y,
A P R IL
4,
1947
Woman Fi ned $20
On Gami ng Charge
New Taxi cab Is
Stol en, Wrecked
ArG'.« ■
l.lKll- <» n thr
•
'
:
v j-y pHr-o d
..
u 14
1C kpot on H pinbstU
• r-
r I
i\
p , I d ' ÎÎ M r s
I - o r -
I
V .1. C
• ! , . ! « .• n a p i n
, .
* Wiiii Hi. an d J'ark
a
P i.
■ r, Î4'» <!u y
P t .
f { <c..rt o n li « l i . i M «•
1,1.. .
c c a m n u < • v u
.e 1 ’ . \<
i i K M P t t
I i \ n n
j ,
• 1 ,1 ' • 11 *
- 1 O' !
a 11 o r
Y
}
{ l i
: iO ir
(1
tcUi
H * I i - r r
p . u.l $1
i ‘ »r
, :
o P? oli« '
1 * I l î.ttliPi
;
to p ' Hu a kp'
t hit
,'i: « d
♦
r a
1 0
a r
f lio r t
t y p e ,
F o w . f
r e i n r K « ' i l
M i a t ,
n . ila
î ’iU« .
in
'lu
« .'ily
, \
fi’a i; *o
(ill
bP
f-. nif
f
p.i 1.
V
h
Inr
(fM
<n
p ‘ n b * ’ ill
m a r h i i i C A
M
lid, Utt r I rill
Im
Vi '
: ■ U'lthV' T:
ij tin' pa< k.vL-f
tha t
.
» f t p
•! fn l lo r 2!>
*
a ' •
. n i l ’
•
' r i h . ,
H i D ee C lub
■ ■ 4 2 9 V irgin io A v c.
HAVC IVfi
M C iin i-V
M u iic
Ev ery T h u r id o y
• nd S o fu r d o y N i g h f
By 1 hr
Kings of Swing
. S t o k - n
. o . - . l r i ( i a y
m o r n i n g
f r o m |
t h e p a r k i n g
l o t I n t h e
r o a r o f
U i e
g u o r n
C i t y
H o t o l .
a
r c c t m t l y
p u r -
( • h a > * ‘ d
1947
. s e d a n
o w n e d
b y
J d h n n v
w a s
l o u n d
w r e c k e d ,
. • . « • v e r . U
h < . n r ^
l a P - r
a t
t l i c
t o p
t>l
l > i n y
H i l l
o n F l o t i t e 40,
e a s t
o f
f u i n b e r l a n d
' H i e
e a l i ,
l > a d l y
d a i n a g e t l
o n
t h e
r i g h t
. . i d c .
W i i A
t a k e n
w h i l e
t h e
c l r i v i I w st.
e a t i n g I n m h i n t h e h o t e l
l e . t a u r a n t
l a o e i n u n e d
t o
p n . s
p K s s e c u t i o n
(tl
t h e
( a ; o
t l a
( a h
c o m p a n y
m a n a ' o n u n t y e s t e r d a y a n n o u n c e d i t
w i l l
p a y
a
r e w a r d
o f $50
l o r
i n
f o r m a t i o n l e a d i n g , t o t h e a r r e s t a n d
( j n v i ' t i . i i i
o f
t h e
p a r t y
o r
p a r t i e s
re.'{H> n.sd)le t o r t h e t h e l t a n d w r e c k .
Bowl i ng Green Man
Fi ned For Assaul t
!
I
K e n n e t h
M o r r i & . ' y e y ,
B o w l i n g
G r e e n , 25- v e a r - o l d
W o r l d
W a r
I I
v e t e r a n , w a - s
f « i u n d
g u i l t y
i n ' I ’ l m l
M a g i . ' t r n t e . s C o u r t y e . s t e i d a y o l
a . s -
s a u l t i n g
K l m e r
I )
W a k e l i e l d , 500
N o r t h
C e n t r e
H l n - e t .
t o l l o w m g
a
t r a l l i r
i n c i d e n t
o n
B o u t h
C e n t r e
H i n ' C t
W i d n e s d a y
a l t « * r n o o n
H e
w a s h n e d
$2 5 a n d c o s t . s b y
M a g l . s -
t r a t i * F r a n k A . I ’ e r d e w .
M o r r i s M ’ v
w a ; . a v i u s e d <»1
a t t a c k
i n g
W a k e f i e l d
a t
t h e
A .
a n d
P
S u p e r
M a r k e t
p a r k i n g
l o t
o n
W i n e o w
S t r e e t .
F i v e
s u t u r c . s
w e r e
ireQUire<l
t o
c l o s e
a
l a c e r a t i o n
o n
W a k e f i e l d ' s j a w .
S l a t e
' i V o o p e r
W i l l i a m
P .
B a k c i
. s a i d
M o r i L S 7e y
w a s
d r i v i n g
n o r t h
o n S o u t h C e n t r e S t r e e t a n d
W a k e
f i e l d
w a s t r a v e l i n g
i n
t h e
o i i j K i . ' - i t e
d i r e c t i o n . T h e f o r n i e r ' s c a r a l l e g e d l y
w a s f o r c e d t o t h e c u r b a n d h e g a v e
c h a s e , s t o p p i n g a t t h e m a r k e t w h e r e
W a k e f i e l d h a d h a l t e d , a c c o r d i n g t o
t h e o f T t c e r
H e a d d e d t h a t t h e n s -
. s a u l t
t o o k
p l a c e
w h e n
W a k e f i e l d
; c a m e
o u t
o l
t h e
m a r k e t
Four Men Enl i st
In Guard Uni t
1
F ’ o l l o w u i g t h e t r i a l M o r r i . s s e y o b
t a i n e d
a
w a r r a n t
e h a r u i n g
W a k e
H e l d
w i t h -
r e e k l e . s ' ^
d r i v i n g ,
a n d
P i ' o o p e r B a k e r . s a i d t h e e a . s e w i l l b e
|<11s p o . ' . e d
o f
S a t u r d a y
i n
T r i a l
! M a -’ 1st r a t e . s C o u r t .
F V i i i r m e n e n l i s t e d i n C o m p a n y C ,
N a t i o n a l
G u a r d
h e r e
I h i . s
w e e k
I h e y
a r e .
R i c h a r d
K .
M a t l i c k ,
C h a i l i ’ .s
W
S h e p p a r d .
H a r r y
V .
L o n g , a n d C h a i i e . s R . C r a w t o r d
A r t i e l e . s o l
W a r w e r e r e a d t o t h e
m e m l a u . v o f H e a d q u a r t e r . s C o m p a n y ,
a n d t h e r i f l e u n i t h a d i n . s t r u c t i o n i n
o p e r a t i o n
a n d
m a i n t e n a n c e of t h e
B r o w n i n g A u h m i a t i c R i f l e .
B o t h
u n i t s
. s a w
p i c t u r e s on t h e
p r o p o . s c d
C o m p u l s o r y
M i l i t a r y
r r a u i i n g p r o g r a m .
R e g a l
l i h e s
w h i c h
a r e
o t h e r w i s e
h a r d y
a r e
t e n d e r
w h e n
t h e y
f i r s t
. s t a r t t o g r o w i n t h e s i n i n g . A l a U '
f r o s t m a y s t u n t t h e t o ^ x s a n d k e e p
t h e m f r o m f l o w e r i n g
T a v e a s u p p l y
o f s t r a w o r l e a v e s h a n d y t h a t c a n
b e t h r o w n o v e r t h e p l a n t s w h e n a
l a t e t r u s t t h r e a t e n s .
Enl i st In Army
T r u e f r u ‘ n d . s a r e g l a d t o c l i n g t o
y o u . . s a y s a w r i t e r
Y e s . s i r — f o r a l l
, v o u K * w o r t h .
T w o y o u t h s e n l i s t e d i n t l i e A r m y
A i r
F o r c e s
f o r
t h r e e
y e a r s
y e s t e r
d a y a t t h e l o c a l r e c r u i t i n g s t a t i o n
H i c y
a r c
P a u l
D o n a l d
G o e t z . 17,
V a l i e v
R o a d ,
a n d
P a u l
D a v i d
T h r a . s h e r , 18.
M i d l a n d
I f
t h e r e
I s
m u c h
irc« ‘Zin g a n d
t h a w i n g m a n y s m a l l u n c o v e r e d r o c k
p l a n t s a r e l a s t b y b e i n g h e a v e d o u t
o f t h e g r o u n d a n d d r i e d o u t . I n a n y
e v e n t , m a n y o f t h e m n e e d r e p l a n t
i n g n o w .
S t e r i l i z e a l l s o i l u . s e d l o r s e e d . o w
i n g w i t h b o l i n g w a t e r o r a f i i c n l m n i
p o w d e r . B e t t e r 5t i l l , i f y o u c a n o b
t a i n i t , b u y p r o f e s s i o n a l l y s t e r i l i z e d
s o i l .
N O T I C E A L L E L K S
j
P l e a . s e m e e t a t E l k s H o m e a t 7 45
i p . m . . F r i d a y . A p r i l 4t h , t o m a r c h t n
I b o d y
t o S t e i n ’ s
F u n e r a l
H o m e
f o r
E l k ' s
S e r v i c e
f o r
o u r
l a t e
B r o t h e r
H a r r y S . L a m m
J
E Y A R N A L L ,
S e c r e t a r y
I A d v . - N - T - A p r . 4
Is Satisfy ing
TEA
1 5/ B o itim r r « S*.
P h o n e 3 7 0 0
Hardware Sale...
EVERY ITEM REDUCED!
77c
tC R IIN DOOR LATCH
Cut F*rirel Fine for screen
or et'» rm doorii. Locks frorn kiside.
with dull brass finish.
won't ha rm the most lender g rass. Has
15 flex ible ttoel
t<*elh, 48 * ha ndle.
PORCH LANTERN
|88
(,u l Friiel This a ntique
finished cof» per la ntern ca n’t rust! Has
clear g lass sha de 7 inches long .
No. 14 1.29
ELECTRIC WIRE
Cut Price! No. 14 rubber
cov ered wire. Price is lor KX)-ft. roll.
1 57 Baltimor« !>t.
Phone 3700
Reduced Prices
at WARDS!
WHITI PORCMJUN IHAMtlWAIIf WfTN fMARf BIACIC
^
^
f t *
Fo r a ap ic-Mid-ap an k Ì4cheo , hiay a who ie n ew airt o f A ll k iMip en fllwa, a ^
^
tractiv e crio k in g wart, in o wv -whft« p o rcelain en amel, wHh n eat black trftn . Hu rry in fo r
do u ble bo iler, p erco lato r, dish p an , ami ro v ereti sto ck p o ts . . . all aco n o n iically p riced!
Fr t i u . ed! A fa v t i i ite
g sidening and a lFpiirpose hoe . . . b 4-
» < h a a rbon-steel blade.
ha mlle.
A simple lix lure tlial s
ideal for hard-to*!ig ht places.
to
install. L'ses clticient 2U-wait bulb.
6 2 ^
SASH CORD REDUCED!
< 1)1 Price’ A sm<*nlh, pli-
•nt. and sti« mg sa sh cord ma de of
-turdv white eotlon fabric. 50 ft. long .
SALE
ALUMINUM MAIL BOX
-| 57
Vi on'l ru'-t and w on’t
streak y our hoii>e.
It ea sily ba m lb’s
larg e or small letters. Can be locked.
SALE
OVAL WASTE BASKET
Dura ble meta l, ta stefully
decora ted. Your ch oice o f a ttra ctiv e
brig ht colors. H in ry to b« y !
*
V
ò
-
____
mm
1
ê
I
MEDICINE CABINET
^ ^ ^
Attra ctiv e steel ca binet
. . . finished in la sting baked-on ena m el.
Ha s a mirrored front; 2 shelv es!
SPARK PLUG SALE
Riv erside plug s— y ou ca n’t g et
f i n e r ! Eng ineered to g iv e ea sier atarting ,
better g as milea g e, m ote powet!
o
o
o
o
o
* -
o o o c e o
f l P B O O O O O O D D D
3 5 -PC. SOCKET SET
f!ut pruod! It's two sets
2 0
In one! Ha s -U" and ) 2* driv e parts in
•lies from % inch to D i inches.
( ill Prue! (doses do« us
sdenfly , quickly . For hea v y rig lit «»r
left hand doors.
Big lO-inch cy linder.
SALE! POLISH CLOTH
Heav y
poll iiiiig r!« » lh,
a bsorbent knit. Ideal for clea ning the
car, household use! H lb. roll.
4 . 9 5
knife, 4 blades are car bon cutlery sleel.
Sta inless steel ha ndles. Bell hook.
FIELDER’S GLOVE
Fiidorsed
hv
’’(dia rlie
Keller” o f the Ya nkees! Trea ted cow
hide with lea ther lining . Felt pa« lded.
98'
LEAGUE BASEBALL
H.'rc's a da ndv , offii ia!
size ball lor pra ctice! It’s endorsed by
*Ted VI dlia ms.B Horsehide cov ered.
TWELVE
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4,
1947
Woman Fined $20
On Gaming Charge
A; rented Wednesday night on the
complaint of a 23-year-old man,
who said a *45 Jackpot on a pinball
machine aas not paid off. Mrs. Lor
etta Renner, who operates a tavern
a* tile comer ol Williams and Park
.Street,
viac
fined
$20 yesterday
morning in Police Court on a charge
of maintaining a gaming device.
Detective Lt, R
Km rn et t Flynn
ic third he made tin arrest after
John E Hill. Christie Road. told
officers Mrs. Renner paid $1 for
20 free games obtained by his father
bul refused to pay the jackpot hit
bv himself.
Tile machine, a race horse type,
Is licensed. Police remarked that
other business places in the city
reportedly operate on
the aa me
principle of paying cash for free
games on pinball machine*. How
ever. officers said. little tan be
done without witnesses
New Taxicab Is
Stolen, Wrecked
Stolen yesterday morning from
the parking lot in the rear of the
! Queen City Hotel, a recently pur
chased
1947
sedan
owned
by
I Johnny’s Cabs was found wrecked
.several hours later at the top of
Long Hill on Route 40, east of
i Cumberland.
H ie cab, badly damage! on the
right side. was taken while the
]driver was eating lunch in the hotel
restaurant.
I
Determined to press prosecution
of the
case, the
cab
company
management yesterday announced it
j will pay a reward of $50 for in
formation leading to the arrest and
conviction of the party or parties
responsible for the theft and wreck.
Bowling Green Man
Fined For Assault
Kenneth
Morrissey,
on South Centre Street and Wake
field was traveling in tile opposite
direction. The former’s car allegedly
was forced to the curb and he gave
B o w l i n g chasc. stopping at the market where
Green. 25-year-old World War II j W ^ctteld had halted, according U.
_ . . the officer. He added that the as*
veteran, was found guilty in Dial sall|t took place when Wakefield
Magistrates Court yesterday of as-|came out of the market,
saulting Elmer D
Wakefield, 500
Following the trial Morrissey ob-
North Centre Street, following attained a warrant charging Wake-
traffic
incident on South Centre held
with- reckless driving,
and
Street
Wednesday
afternoon. He Trooper Baker said the case will be
Four Men Enlist
In Guard Unit
was fined $25 and costs by Magis
irate Frank A. Perdew.
Morrissey was accused of attack-
lug Wakefield at the A. and P.
Super
Market
parking
lot
on
Wineow Street. Five sutures were
, required to close a laceration on
Wakefield s jaw.
State Trooper William F. Bakei
said Morrissey was driving north
disposed
of
Saturday
Magistrates Court.
in
Trial
Four men enlisted in Company C,
National Guard
here
this week.
They
ait,
Richard
K.
Matlick.
Charles W. Sheppard. Harry
V.
Long, and Charles R. Crawford.
Articles of War were read to the
members of Headquarters Company.
and the rifle unit had instruction in
operation and maintenance of the
Browning Automatic Rifle.
Both units saw pictures on the
proposed
Compulsory
Training program.
M i l i t a r y
Regal lilies which are otherwise
hardy are tender when they first
start to grow in the spring. A late
frost may stunt the tops and keep
them from flowering Tavc a supply
of straw or leaves handy that can
be thrown over the plants when a
late frost threatens.
Enlist In Army
True friends are glad to cling to
you. says a writer
Yes, sir—for all
you re worth.
Two youths enlisted in the Army
Air Forces for three years yester
day at the local recruiting station
They are Paul Donald Goetz. 17.
Valley
Road,
and
Paul
David
Thrasher, 18, Midland
lf there is much freezing and
thawing many small uncovered rock
plants are lost by being heaved out
of the ground and dried out. In any
event, many of them need replant
ing now.
Sterilize all soil used for seed sow*
lng with holing water or a sterilizing
powder. Better still, if you can ob
tain it, buy professionally sterilized
soil.
NOTICE ALL ELKS
Please meet at Elks Home at 7:43
p. rn . Friday. April 4th. to march in
j body to Stein’s Funeral Home for
Elks Service for our late Brother
Harry S. Lamm.
J E YARNALL,
Secretary
Adv.-N-T-Apr. 4
Sugar is sold in tiny packages that
contain only a teaspoonful for 25
rents a package in Lhasa. Hbet.
Hi D ee C lub
■ 4 2 9 Virginia Awm.
DANCING NIGHTLY
M illie Every T hurtdoy
mud Soturdoy N ight
Bg The
Kings of Swing
S E M M
Is Satisfying
157 Baltimore it.
Phone 3700
157 Baltim ore St.
Phone 3700
Hardware Sale..*
EVERY ITEM REDUCED!
77c
SCREEN DOOR LATCH
Cut Price! Fine for screen
or storm doors. Locks from inside.
Steel with dull brass finish.
62c
U W N RAKE SALE
Cut Price! A rake that
won't harm the most tender grass. Has
IS flexible et eel teeth, 48* handle.
I M
PORCH LANTERN
Cut Price! This antique
finished copper lantern can’t rust! Has
clear glass shade 7 inches long*
1.29
Na 14 I 4 7
ELECTRIC WIRE
Cut Price! No. 14 rubber
oovered wire. Price is for 100-ft. rolL
•ARDEN HOE SALK
77 C
Reduced! A f av o r it e
gardening and all-purpose hoe . . . t>V
inch carbon-steel blade. 52" handle.
FLUORESCENT LIGHT
3.88
A simple fixture that s
b4ieus Bulb
ideal for hard-to-light places. Easy to
install. Uses efficient 20-watt bulb.
SASH CORD REDUCED!
- „
A O L
Cut Price! A smooth, pli
ant, and strong sash cord made of
sturdy white cotton labric. 50 ft. long.
1.57
SALI
ALUMINUM MAIL BOX
Won’t rust and won’t
streak your house.
It easily handles
large or small letters. Can be locked.
Reduced Prices
at WARDS!
t
t
o
*
for rn qne-end-cpen h fc c h c m , h a y a w h o le rnmw am t af Ala kmmpmathm, •
Rw ~
tractive cooking ware. Snowy-whita porcelain enamel, with neat black lr tm. Hurry in for
double boiler, percolator, dish pan, and coveted stock pots • • • all econ on in-ally priced!
SALE
OVAL WASTI BASKET
7 7 c
Durable metal, tastefully
decorated. Your choice of attractive
bright colors. Harry to bay!
MEDICINE CABINET
Attractive steel cabinet
. . . finished in lasting baked-on enamel.
Has a mirrored front; 2 shelves!
EF ARK FLUG SALE
33
Riverside plugs—you can’t get
finer! Engineered to give easier starting,
better gas mileage, mote powee!
80000
BOO OOO
m o o n 00 P O P O
35-PC. SOCKET SIT
Cut-priced! It's two sets
2 0 ^ ®
in one! Has Va* aud VS drive parts in
tiles from H i inch to l h inches.
1.28
SCREEN-DOOR CLOSER
( ut Price! (doses doors
silently, quickly. For heavv right or
left hand doors. Big 10-inch cylinder.
SALI! POLISH CLOTH
. .55c
Heavy
polishing cloth,
absorbent knit. Ideal for cleaning the
ear, household use! Vi lh. roll.
CAMPERS* KNIFE
An ideal al l-p ur pos e
knife, 4 blades are carbon cutlery steel.
Stainless steel handles. Belt hook.
4.95
FIELDER’S GLOVE
Endorsed by "Charlie
Keller’- of the Yankees! Treated cow
hide with leather lining. Felt padded.
98*
LEAGUE BASEBALL
Here's a dandy, official
si/e ball for practice! It's endorsed by
"Ted Williams.!! Horsehide covered*
f
A
A
TH E
C U M B E R L A N D
N E W S,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D .f
F R ID A Y ,
A P R IL
4,
19 47
T H IR T E E N
•~MEmAC&OLA STAS" com es to
A STANDSTILL. A RESCUE BOAT
IS PUT CVERTME SID E*
7 —
* MEANWHILE, THE BRIGHT
FINGER OF A 5EARCWLIGWT
STROKES TWE SURFACE OF
THE SE A *
p rize to the Fren chm an who co u ld
fin d a way to p reserv e fresh io o d.
It was Nicho las Ap p ert who disco v
ered the secret o f en clo sin g fo o d in
hermetically sealed jars. So he wo n
the p rize an d in tro du ced a p ro cess
which is n o w o n e o f the biggest o f
the lo n e lin e o f essen tial p ro cesses
we call the Life Lin e o f America.
Snow Plow Pinth Hils
For The Stork
LEESBURG. Va. « w W illiam T.
Man n , highway emp lo y ee, was driv
in g his sn o wp lo w at 2
a m. when
h* disco v ered a car stu ck in sn o w
- ice. ro u ld n e n elp ? He co u ld.
W ith the aid o f the hu sban d a
'wo man was remo v ed to the sn o w
p lo w
an d the three headed fo r
to wn . The sto rk wo n the race an d
they deliv ered a baby . Man n then
dro v e the “family ” o n to a ho sp ital
in his m u lti-to n v ehicle.
The Diesel mo to r was adap ted
to o cean tran sp o rt
by a Dan ish
’ship bu ildin g co n cern .
Berliners Give
Bread In Church
Collection Plate
AP N^wsfeatu rrs
BERLIN.—When wo rship ers co me
____________________________________ ! to St. An n e’s Ev an gelical Chu rch j
.
„
, in su bu rban Dahlem, the fo rmer!
jo n e Nicho las Ap p ert. Bo n ap arte s> p arjsp
n f
famed
p asto r.
M artin
„
_
so ldiers, lack in g fresh fo o d o n their Niemo eller,
they brin g
slices
o f
Two Fren chmen can be credited ex ten ded camp aign s, were
d y i n g bread to p lace o n a co llectio n p late,
with startin g the can n ed fo o ds in
- ' fro m scu rv y in su ch great n u mbers
Thu s sharin g o f their daily bread
du stry :
Nap o leo n Bo n ap arte an d | that in 17 95 Nap o leo n o ffered a fro m a ratio n which in so me cases
is merely su bsisten ce-lev el is p art o f
a welfare p ro ject directed by Frau
Su san n ah Dress, wife o f the p resen t
p asto r, the Rev . W alter Dress, p ro
fesso r o f religio n at the Un iv ersity
o f Berlin .
The bread is co llected at each
serv ice fo r distribu tio n to German
refu gees an d destitu te r e t u r n e d
p riso n ers o f war.
The mo tto fo r Frau Dress’s bread
camp aign is “Yo u r first slice o f
bread fo r the refu gees.” When her
hu sban d p reached a sen n o n o n it
he said: “We are alway s hu n gry , so
o n e p iece o f bread less a week wo n ’t
mak e an y differen ce to an y o f u s.”
Berlin ers get abo u t eight thm
slices o f bread p er day . Children get
six
I t’s bro wn bread, made o f a
mix tu re o f wheat an d ry e.
St. An n e's Chu rch is also u sed
by the St. Bern ard’s Catho lic co n
gregatio n , who se bu ildin g was de
stro y ed du rmg the war. The Catho
lics "hav e jo in ed in the bread co l
lectio n an d the o ther welfare p ro j
ects, in clu din g co llectio n s o f mo n ey
fo r the p u rchase- o f artificial legs
fo r retu rn ed p riso n ers.
The fir.'it mo dern Eu ro p ean set
tlemen t in Green lan d dates fro m
J17 21.
All o lef "leav es, stalk s an d trash
sho u ld be remo v ed fro m v egetable
an d flo wer garden s n o w, bu t care
sho u ld be tak en n o t to u n co v er bu lbs
co mp letely a t first n o r to in ju re th#
n ew gro wths o n herbaceo u s p lan t*.
N O T IC E A L L E L K S
Please m eet at Elk s Ho me at 7 45
d. m.. Friday , Ap ril 4 th, to march
in bo dy to Stein ’s Fu n eral Ho me fo i
Elk s Serv ice fo r o u r la te Bro thel
Harry S Lamm.
J. E. YARNALL.
Secretary
Adv .-N-T-Ap r. 4
_____
Instigator Of Canning
» " ¿ « t o e , I
Bo ltW é by THE O. r AVA FT!OTT CO.. B a ltim o re, Md.
W J &a h*mo r* it.
Prior* 37 00
rose bushes
W CHfiD F A f*O m ¥ A * M E m *
m k m as 9 5 * *
Prarrww rmmm ww^fw * — known and kwod
•he wartri a m* for ltv"rr »mifewil bewwtw.
Cboopw v«m«v few-trite wannfrr and eoW from
TTard* Wage «dkirHrm. AH Knwhe* noted fror
orw xW il growth, ncorl Graded to «tandaad
br A n r n r n AhM>c» t*o o
of k u rtw-r y lu tx v
SHof> Warde Carden Drpertmenff Jkm wfH ha
|HewM»d lo find — not only a compiete Ime of
m»r*erv Mock — b ni afl the tools ferttlmrr;
aprayr ?mH w»da eon need— at lower prwW
Spirea V H (Bridal W reath), 2-3 ft 75e
Peach T r e e s ................................ 1.25
Apple Trees, 4-6 ft., e a c h
1.25
Plum T r e e * ............................. . 1.75
Raspberry B u s h e s ...........................9 8c
FI R Bt NDI.S
Bu ddy Dale Sho p s
60 Baltimore Street
Fort Cum berland Hotel Bldg.
CH O O SE YOUR HAT
FOR THE EASTER PARADE
FROM THE LARGEST VARIETY
OF BEAUTIFUL STYLES W E HAVE
EVER GATHERED
Each One
A
N
EXACT copy OF A
HIGH PRICED ORIGINAL
THESE ARE O U R PRICES AT ALL TIMES!
W HY PAY M O R E ?
All The Trimmings For
E A S T E R
Easter Baskets
Beautiful Easter baskets. oN »t*e*, a# efrapee.
EASTER
m *
GRASS, pkg.
1 9
3
9
"
end
NO NE HIGHER
FRESH, BEAUTIFUL
P O T T E D P L A N T S
Tulips............1.49 and 2.25
Jonquils.................... 79c
Hyacinths
98c and 1.98
Public Service Market W IL L B E OPEN TO 8 P.M. FRI.
BUY YOUR EASTER H AM at the P.S.
•TENDERIZED «LEAN
HAMS
i / o * # -
W in # **
• W H O L t OR
S H A N K HALF
• 12 to IS LB.
AVERAGE
FRUIT & N U T
Choc. Covered
E A S T E R
EG GS
2 1 $1.8 9
N ESTLES
Homogenized
M I L K
tall
cans 6 9c
Wrapped Novelties
Cellophane wrapped Easter baskets and osscrted
novelties, very attractive, too.
1 9
8 0 .1 9
SHORT
S H A N K S
D O M IN O
G RA N U LA T ED
SUGAR
10 L 97 c
FRESH
C O U N T R Y
E G G S
49c
McCrory's Kiddie Party — Liberty Theatre — Saturday Morning
doz.
Sno sheen
C A K E
FLOUR
large
• ¥ | <»
box
*
W ilson
Sliced
Libby»
PU RE
Peaches
Tomato
LARD
JU IC E
">
carton
No 2*2
con
•
H i oz * > € ) c
con
Great
No rther«
BEANS
» 1 5 9 *
SAVE 10<
O N
1 LB. BUTTER
So * specia l Genera l Milk
offer at oer display o f
ß o tty C + o c U **
A M
BREAKFAST
Z o C
TRAY
m u t — o w e t o a n r o M
i
orne ein aw «*«•** <**•>
Hanover Pork and Beans , ......... 2 1-lb.
cans 25c
Gibb's Tomato Catsup .. . • •••••• 14-ox.
bttl. 21c
Old Dutch Salad Dressing
............. 36-oz. jar 69c
Yellow American Cheese
...............2 lb.
box 97c
Yellow Whole Kernel
....... 2 No. 2
cans 37c
Valley Pride Sweet Peas
.............No. 2
can
19c
YES IT’S NO MISTAKE THESE I’KKES ARE CORRECT
SALE OF
GRADE " A "
M IL K FED VEAL
FRESH FRUITS
A N D VEGETABLES
RUMP
ROAST
SHOULDER
ROAST
2
r „ a
“ PLAY SAFE“ o n the Hig hwa y !
10
SAFE TRAVEL FEATURES
1. LIFE IN SU R A N C E
2. PERSONAL A C C ID EN T
IN SU R A N C E
3. H O SPIT A LIZA T IO N
INSURANCE
4. A M B U L A N C E INSURANCE.
Pays expense up to $10 for
ambulance service to or from
hospital arising from any one
covered accident
5. ID EN T IF IC A T IO N SERVICE
6. BAIL BO ND CERTIFICATE
7. EM ERGENCY REPAIR
CERTIFICATE
8. FIRE and THEFT IN SU R A N C E
on your car — also C O M PR E
HENSIVE IN SU R A N C E
9. COLLISION IN SU R A N C E
10. T O W IN G and LABOR COSTS
ft pays to use every caution when
driving . . . also to be sure you have
protection for yourself and your auto
mobile in case the unexpected happens.
W hen you drive your passenger
car purchased under the comprehen
sive Am erican Bank Credit P l a n -
made available by this Bank through
Dealers in this area— you are provided
at low cost with 10 valuable "Sate
T rave l" feature*.
One of these— Am bulance fnstm»
ance— is concisely described in th«
adjoining box. Y ou 'll appreciate th**
protection.
This modern Plan far time buvwr*
of cars assures you of economical, dig-
nfied
credit
at
this
Bank,
which
specializes m automobile finoncmg.
So, when you buy your cor, osk
your Dealer for the time plan that
give* '"more than money con buy.
Seco nd
Na tio na l
Ba nk
OF C U M B E R L A N D
Installment Loan Department
Phone 1100
George A. Caswell, Manager
Open Monday thru Friday 9 to 5
Saturday 9 to 12
MEMBER
FEDERAL
DEPOSIT
INSURANCE
CORPORATION
mm
! jI
i ili
I *
WÊÊÊÊÊ
»AN OLD T IM E IN STIT U T IO N W IT H N EW -T IM E WAYS«
THE CU M BERLAN D NEWS, CUM BERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
1947
THIRTEEN
•'U E"AB601A STAR* COMES TO
A STANDSTILL. A RESCUE BOAT
IS PUT OVER THE SIDE*
MEANWHILE, TUE BRIGHT
FINGER OF A SEARCHLIGHT
STROKES THE SURFACE OF
THE SEA*
prize to the Frerichm an who could
find a way to preserve fresh food.
It was Nicholas Appert who discov
ered th e secret of enclosing food in
herm etically sealed jars. So he won
the prize and introduced a process
which is now one of the biggest of
the lone line of essential processes
we call the Life Line of America.
Berliners Give
Bread In Church
Collection Plate
is merely subsistence-level is p art of
a welfare project directed by Frau
Susannah Dress, wife of the present
pastor, the Rev. W alter Dress, pro
fessor of religion at the University
of Berlin
The bread is collected a t each
service for distribution to G erm an
retugees and destitute r e t u r n e d
prisoners of war.
The m otto for Frau D ress’s bread
cam paign is “Your first slice of
bread for the refugees ’’ W hen her
husband preached a serm on on it
he said: “We are always hungry, so
one piece of bread less a week won’t
m ake any difference to any of us."
Berliners get
about
eight th in
All ole? heaves, stalks abd tra A
slices of bread per day. C hildren get should be removed from vegetable
six
I t s brown bread, m ade of a anr*
gardens now, but care
m ixture of w heat and rye.
should be taken not to uncover bulb*
St. Aline s C hurch is also used completely a t ftrrt nor to injure th#
by the St. B ernard's Catholic con- n**w growth* on herbaceous p.a..ta.
gregation, whose building wa* de-, "
'
strayed during the war T he C atho-
N O T IC E A L L E L K S
ne* have joined in the bread col
lection and the other w elfare proj-
Please m eet a t Elks Home at 7:48
eels, including collections of money o. rn . Friday. A pnl 4th. to m arch
for the purchase of artificial legs in body to S tein’s Funeral Home foi
for returned prisoners.
Elk s Service for our late B rothel
------------------------------
H arry 8 Lamm.
Tile flr.*t m odern European set-
J. !• YARNALL*
tlem ent in G reenland dates from
Secretary
1721.
Adv -N -T-A pr. 4
Snow Plow Pinch Hits
For The Stork
LEESBURG. Va. PP.—W illiam T.
M ann, highw ay employee, wa* driv
ing his snowplow a t 2 a. rn. when
he discovered a car stuck in snow
a r " ice. “Could he help? He could.
W ith the ald of th e husband a
woman was removed to the snow
plow
and
th e three
headed
for
town. T he stork won the race and
they delivered a baby. M ann th en
drove th e “fam ily” on to a hospital
in his m ulti-ton vehicle.
The Diesel motor was adapted
to ocean transport bf 8 Danish
shipbuilding concern.
Instigator Of Canning
Two Frenchm en can be credited
with startin g th e canned foods in
dustry:
Napoleon B onaparte and
AP NMrsfeature*
BERLIN —W hen w orshipers come
to S t. A nne’s Evangelical C hurch
M1 . .
.
in suburban Dahlem . the form er
one Nicholas Appert. B onaparte s pa rjg|1
ferried
pastor.
M artin
.soldiers, lacking fresh food on their j Niemoeller.
they
bring
slices
of
extended cam paigns, were d y i n g bread to place on a collection plate,
from scurvy in such great num bers
T his sharing of th eir daily bread
th a t in 1795 Napoleon offered a from a ration w hich In some cases
Pnom 3700
rose bushes
W O fllO -FAM O eS W M MTNtM
as b t at 9
5
' * *
fmmom name w l d i i kin jaw and lowed
%
tiw
im linNP^BP MNKwri
w w
Mid w in e f?* un
Vi
. AH
Fb^T^ffbff'i £^HP
n o n v T N p w m , fiji* n i w iofw i to w v k v w i
bf Atmnean AneoMaticm off No m ryoaaa.
— fVywtmwd lb s w i ba
imri- not only a complete bne ai
prT M ock— Tmh aft the look, fcrtih»r;
W and m ds yow need— at lower passee!
Spirea VH (Bridal Wreath),
2-3 ft. 7Se
Peoch T rees..............................1.25
Apple Trees, 4-6 ft., e a c h ........... 1.25
Plum T re e *.......... ............
1.75
Raspberry B ushes....................... f ie
PKB BLNDLB
Buddy Dale Shops
60 Baltimore Street
Fort Cumberland Hotel Bldg.
CHOOSE YOUR HAT
FOR THE EASTER PARADE
FROM THE LARGEST VARIETY
OF BEAUTIFUL STYLES WE HAVE
EVER GATHERED
la c k One
/Mf IXACT COTY OF A
HIGH M ic r o ORIGINAL
THESE ARE OUR PRICES AT ALL TIMES I
WHY PAY M O RE?
• I * 9 7 ?
2
' 9 7
NONE HIGHER
T A >'l Ai"/ Ai"/ Ai 7 Ai"/ AI V Ai". AV/ AV*/ Av"/ AVV AVV BV'/ Ai"/ .VV IV V Ai"/ A V V t V / 4 W 'iV v 4 W B V V iV V J V ’/'kVV IV V AVV AVV IV v BV'/ IV . Ai". AV Ai"/ IV .t
All The Trimmings For
EASTER
Easter Baskets
EASTER
GRASS, pkg
Beautiful Roster baskets, cM sleet, aN Bhop08>
1 9 '
3 9 *
FRESH, IBEAUTIFUL
POTTED PLANTS
Tulips........ . 1.49 and 2.25
Jonquils..... ............79c
Hyacinths ... .. 98c and 1.98
Public Service Market W ILL BE OPEN TO 8 P.M. FRI
BUY YOUR EASTER HAM at the P.S.
•TENDERIZED • LEAN
HAMS
• WHOLE OR
SHANK HALE
• 12 to 15 LB.
AVERAGE
FRUIT A NUT
Choc. Covered
EASTER
EGGS
2 a.
•be SI .89
NESTLED
Homogenized
MILK
6 H 69c
Wrapped Novelties
Cellophane wrapped Easter boskets and oesorted
novelties, very attractive, too.
I O * - * 3 W
M‘ Crorq-
110-114
Ballo.
St.
DOM INO
GRANULATED
SUGAR
IO L 97c
FRESH
COUNTRY
EGGS
49c de*.
McCrory'* Kiddie Party — Liberty Theatre — Saturday Morning
me v
Snosheen
CAKE
FLOUR
s r 3 4 ^
Wilson
Sliced
Libby*
PURE
Peaches
Tomato
LARD
JUICE
Ire, 3 9 *
No V/2 A W C
con
•
•
“ “ 2 9
Great
Northern
BEANS
3 * , 5 9 *
S A V E 10<
I LB. BUTTER
28c
Milla
offer of owe display aff
BUU} Cam ias
BREAKFAST
TRAY
VO
FRESH FRUITS
A N D VEGETABLES
Large
HEAD
LETTUCE
2 for
17c
Large
PASCAL
CELERY
Stalk
25c
Yellow
COOKING
ONIONS
IO lb. bog
35c
Yellow
SWEET
POTATOES
3 lbs.
25c
Solid
NEW
CABBAGE
2 lbs
17c
Small
ONION
SETS
3 lbs
25c
Hanover Pork ond Beans . • ••••• 2 I -lh. cons 25c
Gibb's Tomato Catsup ... • •••••• 14-o*. bttl. 21c
Old Dutch Salad Dratting • ••••••• 36-oz. jar 69c
Yellow American Cheese . •
2 lb* box 97c
Yellow Whole Kernel
.......2 No. 2
cans 37c
Valley Pride Sweet Peat . ............No. 2
can 19c
YES IT ’S NO M ISTAKE THESE PRICES A R E C O R R E C T
SALE OF
GRADE " A "
M ILK FED VEAL
RUMP
ROAST
2 7 * * .
LEG
ROAST
27**.
SHOULDER H
ROAST
i i
2 1** H
Veal Shoulder Chops ». 23#
Veal Peeke! Roast . ISe
Ground Veal
» Mu
Home Dressed
Chickens
For Frying
O J I * ’ lb.
Fresh Ground
BEEF
lb. 35c
Smell Smoked Picnics lh. 49c
Grode A Sliced Bacon
th. 49c
Smoked Bacon Ends lh 37c
Armours Sausage lh. 47c
Sheep Brains ...
lh. 20c
Ring Puddmq .... lh. 30c
Old Home Bologna lh. 4Sc
Minced Ham ...
lh. 39c
Spiced Luncheon . lh. 57c
Boby Bee! Liver . . lh. 55c
|
G R A D E
>
‘A*
BEEF
I Sirloin Steak*
......... lb. 55c
|
> Round Steak*
........... lh 59r
j
I T-Bone Steoks ........ lb 57c
J
I Club Steak*
..........
lb 5Sc
|
> Rump Roast
.............. lh 4 Be
J
1
Lean Chuck .. ............. lb 4S« <
> Standing Rib
............ lb 45c
1
I Boneless Rib
............. lb 53c |
iJhpborui,
OfrAW)
Small Del.
Charge
“PLAY SAFE” on the Highway!
IO
SAFE TRAVEL FEATURES
1. LIFE INSURANCE
2. PERSONAL ACCIDENT
INSURANCE
3. HOSPITALIZATION
INSURANCE
4. AMBULANCE INSURANCE.
Pays expense up to $10 for
ambulance service to or from
hospital arising from any one
covered accident
5. IDENTIFICATION SERVICE
6. BAIL BOND CERTIFICATE
7. EMERGENCY REPAIR
CERTIFICATE
8. FIRE and THEFT INSURANCE
on your car — also COMPRE
HENSIVE INSURANCE
9. C O L L IS IO N IN S U R A N C E
IO. TOW ING ond LABOR COSTS
Ft pays to use evary caution when
driving . . . also to be sure you have
protection for yourself and your auto
mobile in case the unexpected happens.
W hen you drive your passenger
car purchased under the comprehen
sive Am erican Bank Credit P l a n -
made available by this Bank through
Dealers in this area— you are provided
at low cost with IO valuable “So ft
T ra ve l" features.
One of these— Ambulance fnsuv^
once— is concisely described in the
adjoining box. Vou'M appreciate Ihie
protection.
This modern Plan far time huyen
of cars assures you of economical, dig
h te d
credit
at
this
Bank,
which
specializes in automobile financing.
So, when you buy your tor, ask
your Dealer for the time pion that
gives "more thon money con buy."
Second
National
Bank
OF CUMBERLAND
Installment Loan Dapartment
Phone 11OO
George A. Co swell, Manager
O p e n Monday thru Friday 9 ta 5
Saturday 9 to 12
MEMBEft
FEDERAL
DEPOSIT
INSURANCE
CORPORATION
wm— m— mmAH OLD-TIME INSTITUTION W ITH NEW-TIME W
A Y S m
h
rOURTEEN
THE C U M B E R L A N D
NEW S,
C U M B ER LA N D ,
MD.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4,
1947
County Boys Are
Chosen To Attend
Model Legislature
Ihr
Go'
qu*
|OV
ov delegates who will represent
H1*Y groups of Allegany
and
* Pill High
Schools
here and
re High School, W esternport, at
“model legislature” to be held
Annapolis May 8, 9 and 10 have
n selected, according to Winfield
Adam, program and boys' accre-
. oi Central YMCA.
he annual
event
is
sponsored
*:.gh the
Maryland
Youth and
em m ent YMCA program to ac-
int high school boys with state
em m entjd
processes, the pro-
ure of drafting bills, and to give
them an opportunity
to
explore
areas where legislation is needed.
Each H i-Y club throughout the
state will send Its nominations for
boys to act as governor and state of
ficers during the session to program
headquarters
in
Annapolis,
and
those elected will
receive
special
training by Gov.
Lane’s
advisory
committee in procedures of the G en-
jeral Assembly.
j
The three "senators” from Alle-
jgany County will be
Gene
Shaw,
Allegany; David B. M cIntyre, Bruce;
and Robert L. Sta rcher, represent
ing the Rec Club of Central YMCA.
"D elegates’
Close, Bruce
nie Coberly
of
Dailey. George
Linn, Fort Hill;
ard Fazenbaker.
will
be Jam es
M
M. Anderson and Ber-
Allegany;
William
I^app and William
Wayne Baal, R ich-
Harold G. Michaels
and Richard Glenn Shaffer, Bruce
High School; and Richard G . Clow-
er. Allan D Macy and Charles A.
Piper, Jr., of the Rec Club.
A pre-legislative training session
will be held Saturday, April 12 at
the University of M aryland, when
the “governor” and other state of
ficers will be elected. The boys will
prepare bills to be presented a t the
model session before going to An
napolis.
They will visit various lo
cal service clubs on their return to
report on their experiences.
Plying of a flag with the unioni Yellowstone national park, as well
¡down is a signal of distress.
as more than 3,000 noneruptive hot
--------------------------------
¡springs, according to the Encyclo-
There are about 100 geysers in pod in Britannica.
Wake up to Nestles ...in ijou r coffee !
Smooth and thick as country cream!
Enroll Now-
for lessons in
• Dancing
# Singing
• Baton Twirling at
STECKMAN
DANCE STUDIOS
FROSTBURG
LO NACON ING
CUM BERLAND
*
222 Emily St.
Phone 616 M
A
CIRCLE
INN
for a
Good Time — Anytime
GOOD FOOD . . .
GOOD D RIN KS!
We Cater to
Private Parties & Banquets
Ph o n e 47S -J o r
4006
Fo r Reserv a tio n s
It's So Easy
TO MAKE A LOAN
at Our Office
NATIONAL
LOAN CO.
»01 SOUTH GEOROE STREET
F u r n i t u r e Lo a ns
AUTO LOANS IN 5 MINITTES
EASY REPAY PLAN
LESTER MILLENSON. Mgr.
PHONE 2017
M-P-l-
• B E E R
• W IN E
• LIQ U O RS
FISHER & ROBINETTE
493 Baltimore Ave.
O RANGE
A
L
U
M
I
N
U
M
Screen and Storm Sash
Ad d a com fort an d b eau ty . . . Switch
from win ter to iiu in mer in aecon d n .
from in sid e th e h ou se . . .
Free Kn timate—Sfl Mon th s to Pay
C U M B E R L A N D
HOME INSULATION CO.
819-821 N. M echanic St.
Phone 4700
-tv* « y>
v
L N /'*
lit
Observance
of
Good Friday
t
Groea
M .
F »»her*»
landA“°Embassy
Theatres
W ill be
Closed Until
5 P.M.
Friday
April 4th
You are cordially invited
to see
The Westinghouse
LAUNDRO MAT
wash without work
IN ACTUAL OPERATION
See this machine Wash, Rinse and
Dry Clothes Automatically
T
O
M
O
R
R
O
W
Saturday, April 5th . . , 1 P.M. to & P.M. at
S d n i v c r k
176 Baltimore Street
Phone 678
DON'T MISS SEEING THIS M A C H IN E IN OPERATION
fä c o R Q 5
1o Soy H°PP* Eal" '
Roses
Tn
IV u»*'-
Heortoc*1«
S T Ä - 8,,J9e
• ^
t 9 00°" Gotto»
: Ä
t
ä -
; r c Ä - "
a.a«Vc Beh«ve
• s * " ' - " : 0* r
; v
- a . w o « -
: ^ V c o U voyu
.
157 Baltimore St.
Phone 3 7 0 0
AG AIN AVAILABLE!
For Beautiful Walls
I S^PER ONE COAt
ENAMit / i
Keep your moms fresh and bright-looking all the vear
’round with Wards linest WASHABLE wall enamel! Su
per s smooth, mirror-like finish cleans jo easily . . . and it
keeps its beauty longer, too! Resists strong soaps, boiling
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FOURTEEN
T H E C U M B E R L A N D NEW S, C U M BER LA N D , MD.,
FRIDAY, A P R IL
4,
1947
County Boys Are
Chosen To Attend
Model Legislature
Boy delegates who will represent
th* Hi-Y groups of Allegany
and
Port Pill High
Schools
here and
Brace High School. Westernjiort. at
the ‘‘model legislature” to be held
In Annapolis May 8. 9 and IO have
been selected, according to Winfield
H Adam, program and boys' secre
tary of Central YMCA.
The annual event is sponsored
through the Maryland Youth and
Government YMCA program to ac
quaint high school boys with state
governmental
processes, the pro
cedure of drafting bills, and to give
them an opportunity
to
explore
areas where legislation is needed.
Each Hl-Y club throughout the
state will send its nominations for
boys to act as governor and state of
ficers during the session to program
headquarters
in
Annapolis,
and
those elected will
receive
special
training by Gov.
Lane's
advisory
committee in procedures of the Gen
eral Assembly.
Tile three “senators” from Alle
gany County will be Gene Shaw.
Allegany; David B. McIntyre. Bruce;
and Robert L. Starcher, represent
ing the Rec Club of C en tal YMCA.
“Delegates”
will
be James
M.
Close, Bruce M. Anderson and Ber
nie Coberly of Allegany;
William
Dailey. George Lapp and William
Linn, PVirt Hill; Wayne Baal, Rich
ard Fazenbaker. Harold G. Michaels
and Richard Glenn Shafter, Bruce
High School; and Richard G. Clow
er. Allan D. Macy and Charles A.
Piper, Jr., of the Rec Club.
A pre-legislative training session
will be held Saturday, April 12 at
the University of Maryland, when
the “governor” and other state of
ficers will be elected. The boys will
prepare bills to be presented at the
model session before going to An
napolis. They will visit various lo
cal service clubs on their return to
report on their experiences.
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Second Section— Pages 15 to 28— Classified Ads
The Cumberland News
Tri-State News — Sports — Markets — Local
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A udit
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FRID A Y,
A P RIL
Frostburg Church
Plans Observance
Of Good Friday
Devotional Service
To Start At Noon
B t RUDOLPH N I C K EL
FRO STBU RG , April 3—Good F ri
d a y will be observed here with a
three-hour devotional .service from
12 noon to 3 p m. in First Method
ist Church under the auspices of
the Frostburg Ministerial Associa
tion.
The organist for the service will
be Mrs. Virgil Atkinson, from noon
to 1 p. m . and Miss Mabel Myers,
from 1 to 3 p. m
The ministers
and singers taking part and the or
der of service will be as follows:
Opening devotions, Rev. Watson
E Holley;
12:25 p. m.,
the first
word: 'Father. Forgive Them, for
They Know not What They Do,”
Rev. George L. Wehler, speaker,
and Mrs. George Griffith, soloist.
12 45 p. m., the second word:
• Verily I Say unto Thee,
Today
Thou Shalt Be with Me in Para
dise *’ Rev. Walter
D.
Mehrling.
sjveaker, and Mrs. Carl Storm, so
loist.
1 05 p. m . the third word: "Wom
an
Behold Thy Son! Behold Thy
Mother,” Rev. Watson
K.
Holley, I
ajieaker, and Miss Duthu Thomas,
▼lolin soloist.
1 25 p. m., the fourth word: “ My
Goc My God. Why Hast Thou For
saken Me?” Rev. J. F. Zimmer
man, speaker, and Miss Cleo Davis,
soloist,
1 45 p. m., the fifth word: “ I
Thirst,” Rev. W. D. Reese, speaker.
2 05 p. m., the sixth word: "It Is
F nished.” Rev. Henry Little, D. D.,
speaker.
2 25 p. m , the seventh
word:
• Fathej. into Thy Hands I Com
mend My Spirit.” Rev. Justus H
Liesmann, speaker, and Mrs. Her
man Wilson, soloist.
2:45 to 3 p m., there will be a
dosing service
The offering will be used to defray
expenses and benevolent work of
the Ministerial Association.
Elks Co mmittee* Na med
Following the annual Installation
of officers of Frostburg Lodge No.
370, B P. O. Elks. Tuesday evening,
Joseph P. Montana, newly installed
exalted ruler, announced committee
appointment* for the ensuing year
as follows:
Board of Governors — Richard
M.icMannis. William Dudley, W il
liam
Byers, Leslie Brode,
Walter
Close.
Samuel Gerson
and John
Durst.
S kJe and Relief—DeWayne Mc-
Atee.
William Byers and
Arthur
Kirby.
Social Sessions — Carmel Pinto,
Elmer Rupp, David Jenkins. Charles
Ehultx, Josiah Williams and George»
Bradley.
Sou*! and Community Welfare—
V B. r Bo wards, Joseph Condon,
W iliiam M. Thomas, Joseph Lyons,
J om*p*i Me Ken/je and Joeseph rteese
Recreation - Ray Middleton. Rlt-
ahie Middleton. John Crowe, Llovd
HAGAN
fJ c e C te a m .
CARLTON
R EST A U R A N T
K«mney, W. Va,
Griffith, Orlando Parise, Jack W il
helm, Joseph Bolt, William Dudley,!
John
Workman, Andrew
Smith,
Richard MacMannis, David Powell1
and Jaseph Reese.
Judiciary—Milton Gerson,
Noeli
Sjieir Cook, Edward J. Ryan, Gor-
man Getty and Earle Cobey.
Reception
—
Joseph
LaPorta,
George G. Jeffries, Samuel Gerson
and Philip Krause.
Lapsation — J.
William
Shea,
Joseph Reese, Arthur Kirby, Ben-
jjamine Gerson and John Durst.
Entertainment—Robert Lemmert,
Walter Close, Arthur Kirby, Leslie
Brode.
Francis
Richardson, Fred
Stoudt, Samuel Gerson, Josiah W il
liams, Jack Palmer, John Crowe and
William Zeller.
Membership — Joseph
Condon,
John Keller, A. C. Stewart, Chester
Stewart, and Max Matthias.
Publicity—Rudolph Nickel, Henry
Minick, Leslie Brode, Joseph La
Porta and George Jeffries.
Civic — A. C. Stewart, Carmel
Pinto, I>r. W. O. McLane, Jaseph
Spates and G. Woodrow Layman.
Flag Day and Memorial—Upton
B. F. Edwards, Arthur Kirby, W il
liam Byers, DeWayne McAtee, Jack
Palmer, Elmer Rupp, Noel Cook,
Fred Ash, William B. Yates, Gus
Zeller and Philip Krause.
|
Building—John
Keller, Rudolph
Mendelsohn.
Clarence
Rephann,
Robert Lammert, John Durst, Rich
ard Holben and Samuel Walker.
Veteran’s
Service — John Cllse,
George Jeffries and Josiah Williams.
Appointive officers are U. B. F
, Edwards, esquire;
Earl Welshaar,
¡chaplain; John Clise, inner guard,
and Fred Ash, organist.
Frostburg Briefs
A series of 38 colored slides will
be show'll Sunday at 7:30 p. m., as
part of the Easter program of St.
Paul’s Lutheran Church school. The
slides were prepared in Hollywood
under direction of Cecil B. De Mille
and tell the Easter story. Members
of the school will help to interpret
the
pictures
in
recitations
and
songs. Mrs. George Savage is chair
man of the program committee.
The Ladies Bowling League of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles will not
hold its usual matches Friday night.
A funeral service for Emory Merr-
bach, 56, who died Wednesday in
Miners Hospital, will be held Friday
at 2 p. m., at the Durst Funeral
Home, with Rev. Walter D. Mehr
ling, pastor of Zion Evangelical and
Reformed Church, officiating. Burial
will be in the church cemetery, Mt.
Pleasant Street.
Fro stburg Perso na ls
Frank T. Powers, district mine in
spector, has recovered after being
confined to hi* home for a week
with influenza. His wife, who was
a patient in Miners Hospital, is
recuperating at their home, Wood
Street.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Wroodrow’ Lay
man, East Main Street, and Mr.
and Mrs. George Hale are vacation
ing in New York.
Miss Bessie Gehauf, a teacher at
Hill Street School, is reported seri
ously ill at her home, Grant Street.
Mrs.
Mary
J . Rank, East Loo
Street, is home after visiting her
son, Iaiwrence Rank, who has been
•seriously ill for the past eight weeks
in West Pf im Hospital. Pittsburgh.
John A. Hughes, 76 Spring Street,
is home
from
AUegauy Hospital.
Cumberland, following an operation.
Do na ld Chambers,
veteran
of
World W ar n, ia home from the
Veteran»' HrwpitaJ, AspinwaM. P a ,
where he underwent an operation.
Prot Ban C. Diehl, •{ Frostburg
State Teachers’ College faculty, is
spending the Raster vacation in the
Smoky Mountain district of Ten
nessee.
Mrs
Rudolph
Mendelsohn
and
son, Howard, East Main Street, are
in Baltimore visiting relatives.
Walter Plummer,
244 Mechanic
Street, will accompany the 70-voice
a cappella choir of Ohio Wesleyan
University when it starts on
a
week’s tour Easter Sunday.
The
opening concert will be given in New
Philadelphia. O . on Easter Day,
and die last, one will be broadcast
over C BS in New York City the
following Saturday at 3:45 p. m.
Parsons, Thomas
Churches Will
Mark Good Friday
By H ELEN CO LLETT
PARSONS, W. Va., April 3 —
Good
Friday
services
are
being
planned, by churches here and in
Thomas.
The
annual
union
service
of
Parsons churches will be held to
day from 1:30 to 3 p. m. at First
Baptist Church, under the direction
of Rev. O. M. Botts. The theme will
be the seven last words of Christ.
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In Thomas, the 20th annual Good
Friday service will be held at First
Presbyterian Church from 1:30 to
3 p. m., with Carol Ann Cooper and
Mrs.
Wayne Cornwall
as
music
directors. Andrew Mann, a music
student at Davis and Elkins Col
lege, and Mrs. Don Reilly will be
soloists.
Ag ed Ma n Ho no red
Arthur G. Lipscomb was honored
at a family dinner in Parson* this
week in observance of his 80th
birthday. He and his wife. Mrs.
Faith Shaffer Lipscomb, will ob
serve their 55th wedding anniver
sary next month.
Mr. Lipscomb
started his career in the mercantile
business with his brother, Archibald
Lipscomb, and later entered the
plumbing business. He retired sev
eral years ago,
Lo ug hry Serv ice Held
A funeral service was conducted
at
the
Greenlief
Funeral
Home
Wednesday afternoon for Samuel
Patrick
Loughry, 65, real
estate
dealer of this county and a resident
of Parsons for 27 years, who died
in Tucker County Hospital Monday
afternoon of a cerebral hemorr
hage.
He was bom in St. George, a son
of the late Samuel V. and Alcinda
Biggs Loughry. He is survived by
his
widow,
the
former
Louisa
Shahan, and the following sons
and
daughters,
Gay
and
Roy
Loughry', both of Parsons;
Earl,
Cecil,
Troy,
and
Miss
Dorine
Loughry, all of Washington, D. C.;
Mrs. Elsie Woodyard. Grafton; Mrs.
Charles Jones. Bronx. New York
City, and
Mrs.
Bessie
Simmons,
Parsons.
Three sisters, Mrs. Laura Plum,
Parsons;
Mrs.
Nancy
V. Miller
Cleveland,
O.,
and
Mrs. Lenora
Plumbo, Buffalo Mills, Pa.;
two
brothers, G. S. Loughry, St. George,
and Hiram Frank Loughry, Par
sons,
and
several
grandchildren
also survive.
Rev. I. E. Lewis, retired minister
of Parsons, assisted by Rev. E. C.
Marple, pastor of the Church of
God, officiated and interment was
in tiie Parsons City Cemetery.
W a y brig ht Serv ice Held
A funeral service was conducted
at the residence for Achum Cline
Waybright, 64. Horseshoe Run, who
died at his home there this week of
a
lingering
illnea*.
Rev.
Daniel
Spaid,
pastor
of
the
Brethren
church, officiated
and
Interment
was In the cemetery at Accident.
Md.
Mr. Waybright was born at Cherry
Point, Pendleton County, a son of
the late George and Elizabeth Zic-
kafoose WaybriRht. He was twice
married He is survived by his sec
ond wife, the former Eva Harsh-
two brothers, Abel Waybright, Fel-
lowsville, and Hendrix Waybright,
Erwin; two sisters, Mrs. Sarah W ar
ner, Pendleton County, and Mrs.
Martha Bennett, Horseshoe Run,
and a step-sister, Mrs. Elizabeth
Stemple, also of Horseshoe Run.
Tho m a s Resident Ikies
A funeral service was conducted
at St. Thonms Catholic Church in
Thomas Wednesday afternoon for
Tepus "Sleepy” GedwllJis, 62, who
died at the Nelle Rest Home in
Parsons, where he had made his
home for the past 11 years.
He was born in Lithuania Decem
ber 25, 1884, a son of the late Barney
and Mary Mnwskis Gedwillls, and
came from his native county to
Thomas at the age of 14 He was
formerly employed
by the Davis
Coal and Coke Company and also as
a grave digger at St. Thomas Ceme
tery.
He Is survived by two brothers
Barney
Gedwillis,
Thomas,
and
Walter Gedwillls, of Boston. Mass.
Rev.
Father Francis
S p llla r of
ficiated and Interment was in St.
Thomas Cemetery.
Pennington Indicted
For Manslaughter;
Pleads Not Guilty
By MYRTLE PARK
PETERSBU RG , W. Va., April 3—
James Pennington, Jr., Keyser, who
was indicted Tuesday on a man
slaughter charge in the highway
death last November of a 15-year-
old Petersburg, boy, pleaded not
guilty to the charge before Judge
Ernest A See in Circuit Court yes
terday. HLs trial was set for May
19.
The accident victim, Paul Woods,
was iatally injured when struck by
a heavy truck on Route 42 in the
Town Hill section of Petersburg.
Authorities identified Pennington us
driver of the truck.
Three Y o uths Sentenced
Three
Petersburg
youths,
who
pleaded guilty to stealing cross ties
from the Central Tie and Lumber
Company, were given prison sen
tences.
Richard Wayne Wratchford and
Joe Alt, Jr., were sentenced to one
to 10 years in the Medium Security
Prison at Huttonsville, and Brady
David Mongold was sentenced to
one to 10 years in West Virginia
Penitentiary at Moundsville.
Earl
Edward
Alt
and
Ralph
Clinton
Alt,
indicted
on similar
charges, pleaded guilty to stealing
cross ties and were paroled for
three and four years, respectively.
Indictments were also returned
against Charles Eston Conrad and
Richard
Kesner,
charging
them
with stealing cross ties from the
company and reselling them to the
owners. Both pleaded guilty, and
each w'as paroled for three years.
Ernest William Hinkle lyid Curtis
Odell Whetzel also indicted for a
felony in stealing cross ties, both
pleaded guilty and were paroled
for four and three years, respec
tively. Should the paroles be broken,
however. Judge See warned, they
will be liable for penitentiary terms
of from one to 10 years.
Ellwo o d Turley Hies
Word was received here by Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Turley, Spring
Street, that their son, Ellwood Tur
ley died Tuesday night w'hile visit
ing his sister, Mrs. May Alt, in
Baltimore. Mr. Turley had gone
there from his home in Moorefleld
to visit for a few days. Besides his
parents, he leaves his widow and
three
children;
fo u r
brothers,
Charles Turley and Frank Turley,
Cumberland, Md.; Guy Turley and
Stanley Turley, Petersburg, and one
sister, Mrs. May Alt, Baltimore.
Personals
Junior Roby, who is attending
military school at Staunton, Va.,
was here visiting his grand parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Roby.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
Clark.
Baltimore, are visiting Mrs. W. C
Moomau.
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Blanchard
moved yesterdny to their homo on
Davis Street.
FIFTEEN
Harry Broadwater
Dies At His Home
In Bloomington
By G EO RG E W. DADDYSMAN
W ESTERN P O R T ,
April
3 — A
funeral service for Harry Thomas
Broadwater, 32, who died today at
7:30 a. m. at his home in Blooming
ton after an illness of seven years,
will be held Saturday at 2:30 p. m.
at the Church of the Brethren in
Westemport, with Rev. J. Emmert
Dettra,
pastor, officiating.
Inter
ment will be in Philos Cemetery.
Mr. Broadwater was born at Bond.
Md., a .son of Ephraim Broadwater,
Moscow, and
the late
Mrs. Ida
Rounds Broadwater. He had lived in
the vicinity of Bloomington all of
his life and was a member of the
Dunkirk Church at Bond.
Besides his widow. Mrs. Blanche
Beeman Broadwater, he is survived
by three sons, Wilbert Thomas,
Clarence Benjamin and Leo Del-
mars Broadwater, all at home; his
father; five brothers, Stanley Broad
water, Lonaconing; Edison Broad-
water, Reynolds; Wheeler Broad
water, Barton; Darius Broadwater,
Westemport, and Marshall Broad
water, Moscow; and two sisters, Mrs.
Gus Broadwater. Moscow, and Mrs.
Lucinda Green, Frostburg!
Sco uts Pla n Serv ice
The troop* of tin* Tri-Towns Dis
trict of the Boy Scouts will hold
their annual Easter Sunrise service
Sunday. They will leave by bus and
automobiles from the Westemport
City Building at 4:30 a. m.
The message will be delivered by
Rev. Tally Hanna. Wood Street.
Westemport. a student at West Vir-
ginia-Wesleyan College, Buchannon.
The scouts will return in time to at
tend the services at their respective
churches Sunday morning.
Tro o p Pla ns Ba nquet
The 13th anniversary of Troop 33
Boy Scouts, sponsored by Piedmont
Trinity Methodist church, will be
observed with a banquet Tuesday at
6 o’clock in the educational room of
the church. Alton R. Fortney, chair
man of the Tri-Towns district, will
act as toastmaster.
Kenneth
Jackson,
Cumberland
scout executive of Potomac Council
will present medal* for those passing
tests at recent meetings of the
Board of Review, to members of the
troop. Rev. Raymond L. Moore,
pastor, will be a guest.
Many former members are ex- j
pected to attend. Since the troop j
MT. SAVAGE 4-H
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ID IO T S D E L IG H T ——
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121 I Mom St.
Radio Repairs — Tubes — Ports
N O T I C E
Effective Saturday, April 5, 1947, »he
City Tax Collector's office, City Moll,
Frostburg,
Maryland,
will
close
at
12 00 o'clock noon every Saturday,
until further notice.
MAYOR AND COUNCILMEN OF
FROSTBURG. MD.
By MRS. RO SE O’RO U RKE
MT. SAVAGE, April 3 -The Mt.
Savage Church Hill 4-H Club was
organized March 28 at. the h o m e of
Mrs. Thomas Jenkins. Officers elect
ed were: president, Sarah Laxhley;
vice president, Norma Boore; secre
tary, Mina Snyder; treasurer, Phyl
lis Jenkins; recorder, Gina Snyder;
parliamentarian, Leona Lashley.
Miss Gloria Bohn, leader of coun
ty 4-H groups, displayed different
sewing projects and discussed the
meaning of 4-H. Booklets* and mem
bership cards were distributed. The
next meeting will la* held at the
home of Mrs. Robert Wilson.
Personals
John Flanigan and Kenneth G il
more, Santa Cruz, N. M., are spend
ing the Easter holidays with Mr,
and Mrs. Michael Flanigan, Sr.
Mis* Peggie Poland, student at
West Virginia University, Morgan
town. Is spending the Easter holi
days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs
Harry Poland.
IM M ED IA TE
D ELIV ERY
C O N C R E T E
B L O C K S
4 and 8 inch
K IL N
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8 Taylor St.
Frostburg
Phono 322
Christian Beadiy, 76,
Dies In Granfsville
B v MRS. E V A B. B E A C H Y
ORA NTS V II,LE. April 3
Chris
tian C. Ueachy, 76, died at ids homt
Wednesday evening after an illness
of 14 year*.
Mr. Beachy was a member of the
Church of the Brethren in Accident
for many years, and resided with his
wife near Bittinger until his health
failed, when they moved here. Mrs
Beachy died Inst. December,
Tlu
only
immediate
survivor
is
an
adopted son, Lt. Frank Beachy, Fort
Worth, Tex.
A funeral service will be held Bat-
urday at. 2:30 p. m. at the residence
with interment in Grantsville Ceme
tery.
For Sale
1942 Chrysler Royal
4 door sedan
1935 Studebaker
Dumo Truck
CROWE
Pontiac Garace
Frostburg Route 4 0
Phone 4 8 I-W -4
BUILDING SUPPLIES
W e C a r r y A Complete Line of the Following Items
Plumbing supplies and complete bathroom
outfits, sinks and cabinets, electrical wiring
supplies and light fixtures, roofing, siding,
builders hardware and paints.
OUR
PRICES
ARE
AS
LOW AS
POSSIBLE
It will pay you to see us before you buy
Laymans Hardware
39 E. M ain St.
Phone Frostburg 540
See Our Display of the
F A D A Table M odel
RADIOS
FADA for Tune —
and
Performance
» 2 5 . 9 0
Quality
up
LYTLE’S AUTO PARTS
& ACCESSORIES
When the roses and herbaceous
perennials air uncovered they may
be very readily fertilized by dig
ging in a coating of bone meal.
69 E. Moin S».
Frostburg, Md.
Don't Overhaulf Install1
New Dodge - Plymouth
M O TO RS
No Down Payment
12 Months To Pay
FROSTPURG AUTO CO.
Phone 350
FR I-SA T
PALACE
MAT N,TE
ANGEL ON MY SHOULDER”
Starring Paul Muni, Anne Baxter, Claude Raines
Fri. - Sa t.
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LYRIC
BORDERLAND”
Starring Wdhom Boyd as Hopalong Cassidy — George (Gabby) Hayes
//!
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LONGER
TiÄDf uAlt
u n d e r s e a l
H A N D
R U B B I R I Z I O
P R O T E C T I V E C O A T I N G
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I t ’* do wn undernea th whera
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Morton's Garage
Phone 300
Frostburg. Md
C H R Y S L E R P L Y M O U T H
Direct Factory Deolcr
was inaugurated in 1934, 150 mem
bers have belonged to the troop.
Membership cards for the 14th year
now starting will be distributed.
The banquet will be served bv the
Susannah Wesley Bible class of the
church. There will be a birthday
cake with 13 lighted candles.
Brief Item s
Tally Hanna and Miss Yvonne
Moore, students at West Virginia
Wesleyan College, Buchannon are
spending the Easter holiday’s at
their respective homes.
A special Christ Ambassador ser
vice will be held Friday at 7:30 p. m.
at the Assembly of God Pentecostal
Church, Maryland Avenue, Western-
port. The theme will be "Looking
at the Cross from Seven View
points”. The program will include
instrumental and vocal music. Rev.
Robert McIntosh will speak at the
morning and evening services Sun
day.
Troop 34, Boy Scouts, will hold a
weekend encampment at Horse Rock
near Westemport. ’,”roops 33 and 34
will play an outdoor basketball game
Saturday at 2:30 p. m.
Hot beds should be started soon
regardless of whether the season
seems early or not. Seeds of early
cabbages, tomatoes, cauliflowers, egg
plants amongst the vegetables and
of dahlias, stocks and candytuft
amongst the flowers may be sown
now for early crops.
Dwarf nasturtium* and the waxy-
flowered portulaca are two especial-
ly good edging plants for poor soil.
LO ST
Reward
for
return,
or
information
leading to recovery of two-year old
Beagle dog. Brown head, white body
with large black patches, white tail
with black patch at base. Chest, legs
ond sides picked with black, answers
to the name of "Tony.” Missing from
North Main Street section,
Keyser,
since March 9. Contact W. C. Pifer,
West Virginia State Liquor Stor*
or Dial 21607
EASTER SUGGESTIONS
SMOKED SKINNED HAM Ur|d
............... .lb. 57c
BREAKFAST BACON »,
48c
HOME DRESSED CHICKENS
• Canadian Bacon
• Chopped Beef
• Boiled H am
REES MARKET
Phone 328
Frostburg, M d .
BY "JOSELLI
##
IN A S P E C IA L .
P R E - E A S T E R
SALE
R E G U L A R $2 9. 95
s 2 4
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Sizes for Juniors and misses.
Fine quality
all wool fabrics.
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EASTER HATS
Hurry,
hurry, hurry, select your
Easter
Bonnet while our stocks
are complete.
Flattering Spring
styles
in
all
the
most
wanted
colors.
Fine materials that belie
their tiny prices.
$ 1
It»
U P T O $9.00
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SANFORIZED BROADCLOTH
W I I I T E
S I I I I I T S
• PERFECT F IT T IN G
• S A N F O R IZ E D S H R U N K
• S IZ E S 14 TO 16 V i
• SLEEV ES 32 T O 35
Buy him one of these quality shirts for
Easter.
Perfect fit, long
w e an n q
broad
cloth.
The finest we've seen in years for
this reasonable price.
Tavern
EASTER CANDLES
For Your Easter Table
Bunnl» « ,
Duck» .
Ang el» ,
Ba x ter
Egg*.
all
in
com plete candle
nets
by ' Ta v ern".
Dres& up y o ur Ea ster
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set
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EASTER CARDS
Types For All Ages
Hllll a co mplete » electio n o f thr.se
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"Ha llma rk"
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Humo ro us o r » erio u» subject» fo r
all ages.
5 C
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[Z D E P A R T M E N T
S T O R E
Second Section— Pages 15 to 28—Classified Ads ]
The Cumberland News
j Tri-State News — Sports - Markets
LocoTj
Frostburg Church
Plans Observance
Of Good Friday
Devotional Service
To Start At Noon
Bt RUDOLPH NICKEL
FROSTBURG. April 3—Good Fri
day will be observed here with a
three-hour devotional service from
12 noon to 3 p m. in First Method
ist Church under the auspices of
the Frostburg Ministerial Associa
tion.
The organist for the service will
be Mrs. Virgil Atkinson, from noon
to I p. rn . and Mins Mabel Myers,
from I to 3 p. rn
The ministers
and singers taking part and the or
der of service will be as follows:
Opening devotions, Rev. Watson
S. Holley;
12:25 p. rn.,
the first
word: 'Father, Forgive Them, for
They Know not What They Do/*
Rev. George L. Wehler. speaker,
and Mrs. George Griffith, soloist.
12 45 p. rn., the second word:
•Verily I Say unto Thee.
Today
Thou Shalt Be with Me in Para
dise ** Rev. Walter
D.
Mehrllng.
speaker, and Mrs. Carl Storm, so
loist.
I OS p. rn., the third word: "Wom
an. Behold Thy Son! Behold Thy
Mother.** Rev. Watson
E
Holley.
Speaker, and Miss Du Urn Thomas,
violin soloist.
I 25 p. rn., the fourth word: “My
God. My God. Why Hast Thou For
saken Me?” Rev. J. F. Zimmer
man, speaker, and Miss Cleo Davis,
soloist.
1 45 p. rn., the fifth word: **I
Thirst,” Rev. W. D. Reese, speaker.
2 05 p. m„ the sixth word: "It Is
Finished,” Rev. Henry Little, D. D.,
apeaker.
2 25 p. m., the seventh word:
“FatheiL into Thy Hands I Com
mend My Spirit,” Rev. Justus H.
Liesmann, speaker, and Mrs. Her
man Wilson, soloist.
2:45 to 3 p. rn, there will be a
dosing service.
The offering will be used to defray
expenses awl benevolent work of
the Ministerial Association.
Elks Committees Named
Following the annual installation
of officers of Frostburg Lodge No.
270. B. P. O. Elks, Tuesday evening,
Joseph P. Montana, newly installed
exalted ruler, announced committee
appointments for the ensuing year
as follows:
Board of Governors — Richard
MacMannis, William Dudley. Wil
liam Byers, Leslie Brode. Walter
Close, Samuel O rson and John
Durst.
Sick and Relief—DeWayne Mc-
Atee. William Byers and Arthur
Kirby.
Social Sessions — Carmel Pinto,
Elmer Rupp. David Jenkins. Charles
Shul tx. J os I ah Williams and George
Bradley.
St*iai and Community Welfare—
I L ? E adward* Joseph Condon,
William M. Thomas. Joseph Lyons,
Joseph McKenzie and Joseph Reese.
Recreation — Ray Middleton. Rit
chie Middleton, John Crowe. Lloyd
HAGA)
cPee C*iea
CARLTON
RESTAURANT
Romney, W. Va.
Griffith, Orlando Parise, Jack Wil
helm, Joseph Bolt, William Dudley,
John
Workman, Andrew
Smith,
Richard M&cMannis, David Powell
and Joseph Reese.
Judiciary—Milton Gerson,
Noel
Speir Cook, Edward J. Ryan, Gor
man Getty and Earle Cobey.
Reception
—
Joseph
LaPorta,
George G. Jeffries, Samuel Gerson
and Philip Krause.
Lavation — J. William
Shea,
Joseph Reese, Arthur Kirby, Ben
jam in Gerson and John Durst.
Entertainment—Robert Lemmert,
Walter Close, Arthur Kirby, Leslie
Brode. Francis Richardson, Fred
Stoudt, Samuel Gerson, Joslah Wil
liams, Jack Palmer, John Crowe and
William Zeller.
Membership — Joseph
Condon,
John Keller, A. C. Stewart, Chester
Stewart, and Max Matthias.
Publicity—Rudolph Nickel. Henry
Minick, Leslie Brode. Joseph La
Porta and George Jeffries.
Civie — A. C. Stewart, Carmel
Pinto, Dr. W. O. McLane, Joseph
Spates and G. Woodrow Layman.
Flag Day and Memorial—Upton
B. F. Edwards. Arthur Kirby, Wil
liam Byers, DeWayne McAtee, Jack
Palmer, Elmer Rupp, Noel Cook,
Fred Ash, William B. Yates, Gus
Zeller and Philip Krause.
Building—John Keller, Rudolph
Mendelsohn,
Clarence
Rephann,
Robert Lammert, John Durst, Rich
ard Holben and Samuel Walker.
Veteran’s Service — John Clise,
George Jeffries and Josi&h Williams.
Appointive officers are U. B. F.
Edwards, esquire; Earl Weiahaar,
chaplain; John Clise, inner guard,
and Fred Ash, organist.
Frostburg Briefs
A series of 38 colored slides will
be shown Sunday at 7:30 p. rn., as
part of the Easter program of St.
Paul’s Lutheran Church school. The
slides were prepared in Hollywood
under direct ion of Cecil B. De Mille
and tell the Easter story. Members
of the school will help to interpret
the pictures in recitations
and
songs. Mrs. George Savage is chair
man of the program committee.
The Ladies Bowling League of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles will not
hold its usual matches Friday night.
A funeral service for Emory Merr-
bach, 56, who died Wednesday in
Miners Hospital, will be held Friday
ai 2 p. rn., at the Durst Funeral
Home, with Rev. Walter D. Mew
ling, pastor of Zion Evangelical and
Reformed Church, officiating. Burial
will be in the church cemetery. Mt.
Pleasant Street.
Frostburg Personals
Frank T. Powers, district mine in
spector, has recovered after
confined to his home for a week
with influenza. His wife, who was
a patient in Miners Hospital, is
recuperating at their home, Wood
Street.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Woodrow Lay
man. East Main Street, and Mr.
and Mrs. George Hale are vacation
ing in New York.
Miss Bessie Gehauf, a teacher at
Hill Street School, Is reported seri
ously ill at her home, Grant Street.
Mrs. Mary
J. Rank, asst Loo
Street, is home after visiting her
son. Lawrence Rank, who hag been
seriously IU for the past eight weeks
in West Penn Hospital. Pittsburgh.
John A. Hughes, 76 Spring Street,
is home from Allegany Has)ital,
Cumberland, following an operation
Donald
Chambers,
veteran of
World War n , is home Bom the
Veteran, H eptad, Aspinwall, Pa.,
where he underwent na operation
ProL Man G Olehl, af P o sto n *
State Teachers’ College faculty, is
spending the Blaster vacation in the
Smoky Mountain district of Ten
nessee.
Mrs. Rudolph Mendelsohn and
son. Howard, Bast Main Street, are
in Baltimore visiting relatives.
Walter Plummer, 244 Mechanic
Street, will accompany the 70-voice
a cappella choir of Ohio Wesleyan
University when it starts on a
week’s tour Easter Sunday.
The
opening concert wUl be given In New
Philadelphia, O.. on Easter Day,
and the last one will be broadcast
over CBS In New York City the
following Saturday at 3:46 p. rn
Parsons, Thomas
Churches Will
Nark Good Friday
E le c tr ic A p p lia n c e C o .
I* Union Sr.
Lonaconing, Md.
Complete Lime Of
Lighting Fixtures For Your Homo
also
12-2, 14-2 on* 14-3
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IDIOT'S DELIGHT — "ain't" only the nome of o play.
It Could Moon Suying Unknown Brands
GOOD NAMES — GOOD VALUE
ROA VICTOR
SONORA
MAJESTIC
Radio Phone Combinations and Players
WE TRUST YOU — TRUST UR
D. & H. Novelty Co. Record Shop
121 I. Mein St.
Radio Repairs — Tubes — tarts
BUILDING SUPPLIES
We Carry A Complete tine of the Following Hems
Plumbing supplies and complete bathroom
outfits, sinks and cabinets, electrical wiring
supplies and light fixtures, roofing, siding,
builders hardware and paints.
OUR PRICES ARE AS LOW AS POSSIBLE
It will pay you to see us before you buy
Laymans Hardware
39 I. Main St.
Phone Frostburg 540
By HELEN COLLETT
PARSONS, W. Va., Apili 3 —
Good Friday services are being
plannee^ by churches here and in
Thomas.
The annual
union
service
of
Parsons churches will be held to
day from 1:30 to 3 p. rn. at First
Baptist Church, under the direction
of Rev. O. M. Botte. The theme will
be the seven last words of Christ.
In Thomas, the 20th annual Oood
Friday service wiU be held at First
Presbyterian Church from 1:30 to
3 p. rn., with Carol Ann Cooper and
Mrs. Wayne Cornwall as music
directors. Andrew Mann, a music
student at Davis and Elkins Col
lege, and Mrs. Don Reilly will be
soloists.
Aged Man Honored
Arthur O. Lipscomb was honored
at a family dinner in Parsons this
week in observance of his 80th
birthday. He and his wife, Mrs.
Faith Shaffer Lipscomb, will ob
serve their 55th wedding anniver
sary next month. Mr. Lipscomb
.started his career in tin* mercantile
business with his brother, Archibald
Lipscomb, and later entered the
plumbing business. He retired sev
eral years ago.
Loaghry Service Held
A funeral service was conducted
at the Greenlief Funeral Home
Wednesday afternoon for Samuel
Patrick Loughry, 65, real estate
dealer of this county and a resident
of Parsons for 27 years, who died
in Tucker County Hospital Monday
afternoon of a cerebral hemorr
hage.
He was born in St. George, a son
of the late Samuel V. and Alcinda
Biggs Loughry. He is survived by
his
widow,
the
former
Louisa
Shahan, and the following sons
and
daughters.
Gay
and
Roy
Loughry, both of Parsons; Earl,
Cecil.
Troy,
and
Miss
Dorine
Loughry, all of Washington, D. C.;
Mrs. Elsie Woodyard, Grafton; Mrs.
Charles Jones, Bronx, New York
City, and Mrs. Bessie Simmons,
Parsons.
Three sisters, Mrs. Laura Plum,
Parsons;
Mrs. Nancy V. Miller,
Cleveland, O., and Mrs. Lenora
Plumbo, Buffalo Mills. Pa.; two
brothers, G. S. Loughry, St. George,
and Hiram Frank Loughry. Par
sons,
and
several
grandchildren
also survive.
Rev. I. E. Lewis, retired minister
of Parsons, assisted by Rev. E. C.
Marple, pastor of the Church of
God. officiated and interment was
in the Parsons City Cemetery.
Waybrlght Service Held
A funeral service was conducted
at the residence for Achum Cline
Waybrlght, 64, Horseshoe Run, who
died at his home there this week of
a lingering illness. Rev. Daniel
fifcaid.
pastor
of
the
Brethren
church, officiated and Interment
wa* In the cemetery at Accident,
Md.
Mr. Waybrlght was barn at Cherry
Feint, Pendleton County, a son of
the late George and Elizabeth Zic-
kafoose Waybrlght. He was twice
married. He is survived by his sec
ond wife, the former Eva Harsh*
two brothers, Abel Waybrlght, Fel-
lowavlUe, and Hendrix Wavbright,
Erwin; two sisters, Mrs. Sarah War
ner, Pendleton County, and Mrs.
Martha Bennett, Horseshoe Run,
and a step-sister, Mrs. Elizabeth
Stemple. also of Horseshoe Run.
Thomas Resident Dies
A funeral service was conducted
at St. Thomas Catholic Church in
Thomas Wednesday afternoon for
Tepua "Sleepy” Gedwlllls, 62, who
died at the Nella Rest Home in
Parsons, where he had made his
home for the past ll years.
He was bom in Lithuania Decem
ber 25,1884, a son of the late Barney
and Mary Mawskis Gedwlllls. and
came from his native county to
Thomas at the age of 14. He was
formerly employed by the Davis
Coal and Coke Company and also as
a grave digger at St. Thomas Ceme
tery.
He is survived by two brothers,
Barney
Gedwlllls,
Thomas,
and
Walter Gedwlllls, of Boston, Mass
Rev. Father Francis Spiller of
ficiated and Interment was In St.
Thomas Cemetery.
Pennington Indicted
For Manslaughter;
Pleads Not Guilty
By MYRTLE FARK
PETERSBURG, W. Va., April 3—
James Pennington, Jr., Keyser, who
was indicted Tuesday on a man
slaughter charge in the highway
death last November of a 15-year-
old Petersburg, boy, pleaded not
guilty to the charge before Judge
Ernest A. See in Circuit Court yes
terday. His trial was set for May
19.
The accident victim. Paul Woods,
was fatally Injured when struck by
a heavy truck on Route 42 in the
Town Hill section of Petersburg.
Authorities identified Pennington as
driver of the truck.
Three Yoaths Sentenced
Three Petersburg
youths, who
pleaded guilty to stealing cross ties
from the Central Tie and Lumber
Company, were given prison sen
tences.
Richard Wayne Wratchford and
Joe Alt, Jr., were sentenced to one
to IO years in the Medium Security
Prison at Huttonsville, and Brady
David Mongold was sentenced to
one to IO years in West Virginia
Penitentiary at Moundsville.
Earl
Edward
Alt
and
Ralph
Clinton Alt. indicted on similar
charges, pleaded guilty to stealing
cross ties and wen* paroled for
three and four years, respectively.
Indictments were also returned
against Charles Es ton Conrad and
Richard
Kesner,
charging
them
with stealing cross ties from the
company and reselling them to the
owners. Both pleaded guilty, and
each was paroled few three years.
Ernest William Hinkle npd Curtis
Odell Whetzel also indicted for a
felony in stealing crass ties, both
pleaded guilty and were paroled
for four and three years, respec
tively. Should the paroles be broken,
however, Judge See warned, they
will be liable for penitentiary terms
of from one to IO years.
Ellwood Turley Dies
Word was received here by Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Turley, Spring
Street, that their son, Ellwood Tur
ley died Tuesday night while visit
ing his sister, Mrs. May Alt, in
Baltimore. Mr. Turley had gone
there from his home in Moorefield
to visit for a few days. Besides his
parents, he leaves his widow and
three
children;
f o u r
brothers,
Charles Turley and Frank Turley,
Cumberland, Md.; Guy Turley and
Stanley Turley, Petersburg, and one
sister, Mrs. May Alt, Baltimore.
Personals
Junior Roby, who is attending
military school at Staunton, Va.,
was here visiting his grand parents,
Mr. and Mn. A. A. Roby.
Mr. and Mn. William Clark,
Baltimore, ore visiting Mn. W. C
Moomau.
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Blanchard
moved yesterday to their home on
Davis Street.
Harry Broadwater
Dies Al His Home
In Bloomington
By GEORGE W. DADDYSMAN
WESTERNPORT, April
3 — A
funeral service for Harry Thomas
Broadwater, 32. who died today at
7:30 a. rn. at his home in Blooming
ton after an illness of seven years,
will be held Saturday at 2:30 p. in.
at the Church of the Brethren in
Westernport, with Rev. J. Qnmert
Dettra, pastor, officiating. Inter
ment will be In Philos Cemetery.
Mr. Broadwater was bom at Bond.
Md., a son of Ephraim Broadwater.
Moscow, and the late Mrs. Ida
Rounds Broadwater. He had lived in
the vicinity of Bloomington all of
his life and was a member of the
Dunkirk Church at Bond.
Besides his widow, Mrs. Blanche
Beeman Broadwater, he is survived
by three sons, Wilbert Thomas.
Clarence Benjamin and Leo Del
m a r Broadwater, all at home; hts
father; five brothers. Stanley Broad
water, Lonaconing; Edison Broad
water, Reynolds; Wheeler Broad
water, Barton; Darius Broadwater,
Westernport, and Marshall Broad
water. Moscow; and two sisters. Mrs.
Gus Broadwater. Moscow, and Mrs.
Lucinda Green. Frostburg.
Scouts Flan Service
The troops of the Tri-Towns Dis
trict of the Boy Scouts will hold
their annua! Easter Sunrise service
Sunday. They will leave by bus and
automobiles from the Westernport
City Building at 4:30 a. rn.
The message will be delivered by
Rev. Tally Hanna. Wood Street.
Westernport, a student at West Vir
ginia-Wesleyan College. Buchannon
The scouts will return in time to at
tend the services git their respective
churches Sunday morning.
Troop Plans Banquet
The 13th anniversary of Troop 33
Boy Scouts, sponsored by Piedmont
Trinity Methodist church, will be
observed with a banquet Tuesday at
6 o'clock in the educational room of
the church. Alton R. Fortney, chair
man of the Tri-Towns district, will
act as toastmaster.
Kenneth
Jackson,
Cumberland
scout executive of Potomac Council!
will present medals for those passing
tests at recent meetings of the:
Board of Review*, to members of the
troop. Rev. Raymond L. Moore,
pastor, will be a guest.
Many former members are ex
pected to attend. Since the troop
MT. SAVAGE 4-H
CLUB ORGANIZED
By MRS. ROSE O’ROURKE
MT. SAVAGE, April 3-T he Mt.
Savage Church Hill 4-H Club was
organized March 28 at the home of
Mrs. Thomas Jenkins. Officers elect
ed were: president, Sarah La^hley;
vice president. Norma Boore; secre
tary, Mina Snyder; treasurer, Phyl
lis Jenkins; recorder, Gina Snyder;
parliamentarian. Leona Lashley.
Miss Gloria Bohn, leader of coun
ty 4-H groups, displayed different
sewing projects and discussed the
meaning of 4-H. Booklets* and mem
bership cards were distributed. The
next meeting will be held at tile
home of Mrs. Robert Wilson.
Personals
John Flanigan and Kenneth Gil
more, Santa Cruz, N. M., are spend
ing the Easter holidays with Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Flanigan, Sr.
Miss Peggie Poland, student at
West Virginia University, Morgan
town, is spending the Easter holi
days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Poland.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
C O N C R E T E
B L O C K S
4 aud 8 inch
KILN M HD
LEWIS
CONCRETE PRODUCTS CO.
8 Taylor St.
Frostburg
Fbona 322
N O T I C E
E ffects Saturday, April 5, 1947, the
City Ta* Collector's office, City Moll,
Frostburg, Maryland, will close at
12.-OO o’clock Noon ovary Saturday,
until furtbar notice.
MAYOR AND COUNCILMEN OF
FROSTBURG. MD.
Christian Beachy, 76,
Dies In Grantsville
By MRS. EVA B. BEACHY
GRANTSVILLE, April 3
Chris
tian C. Beachy, 76. died at his home
Wednesday evening after an illness
of 14 years.
Mr. Beachy was a member of the
Church of tlw» Brethren in Accident
for many years, and resided with hLs
wife near Blltlnger until his health
failed, when they moved here. Mrs
Beachy died Inst December.
Tile
only
immediate
survivor
is
an
adopted son, Lt. Prank Beachy, Fort
Worth, Tex.
A funeral sendee will be held flat-
urday at 2:30 p. rn. at the residence,
with interment in Grantsville Ceme
tcry.
For Sale
IM I Chrysin Royal
4 door Mdau
1935 Studebaker
Dump Truak
CROWE
Faunae Garage
Frostburg Rout* 40
M m * 481-W-4
Moke your cor
STAY
NEW
LONGER
S t * Our Display ut the
FADA Table Model
RANOS
FADA for Tune — Quality
and
Performance
LYTLE’S AUTO PARTS
A ACCESSORIES
69 I. Main St.
Frostburg, Md.
When the roses and herbaceous
perennials ale uncovered they may
be very readily fertilized bv dig
ging in a coating of bone meal.
Don’t Overhaul! InstalV
New Dodge - Plymouth
MOTORS
No Down Payment
72 Months To Par
FROSTBURG AUTO OO.
Phone 350
taxor mam
U N M M M L
S I A N O
^
R U O IIR I2 IO
PROTECTIVE CORTINO
FRI-SAT
MAT. - NITE
PALACE
ANGEL ON MY SHOULDER"
Starring Paul Muni, Anna Baxter, Claude Raines
F it - Sat.
NITE ONLY
LYRIC
"BORDERLAND
S tor ring William Boyd os Hopalong Cassidy — George (Gabby) Hayes
iii
It’* down underneath where
runt and corroaion make
carn old and noisy first.
Rocke, gravel, road chemi
cals noon eat through fenders.
Protect your oar now with
•’UNDERSEAL.” the new,
bough H inch thick rubbery
coating that fights under
body destruction, quieta
noises, in su lates against
fumes, drafts, dust, heat.
Ask today about this new
B
taction that's guaranteed
the life of your carf
Morton’s Baraga
Phone 300
Frostburg. Md.
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
Direct Factory Dealer
wax inaugurated in 1934, 150 mem
bers have belonged to the troop.
Membership cards for the 14th year
now starting will be distributed.
The banquet will be served by the
Susannah Wesley Bible class of the
church. There will be a birthday
cake with 13 lighted candles.
Brief Items
Thlly Hanna and Miss Yvonne
Moore, students at West Virginia
Wesleyan College. Buchannon, are
spending the Easter holidays at
their respective homes.
A special Christ Ambassador ser
vice will be held Friday at 7:30 p. rn.
at the Assembly of God Pentecostal
Church. Maryland Avenue, Western-
port. The theme will be "Looking
at the Cross from Seven View
points”. The program will include1
instrumental and vocal music. Rev I
Robert McIntosh will speak at the
morning and evening services Sun
day.
Troop 34, Boy Scouts, will hold a
weekend encampment at Hor?* Rock
near Westernport. Troops 33 and 34;
will play an outdoor basketball game
Saturday at 2:30 p. m.
FIFTEEN
Hot beds should be started soon
regardless of whether the season
seems early or not. Seeds of early
cabbages, tomatoes, cauliflowers, es*
plants amongst the vegetables and
of dahlias, stocks and candytuft
amongst the flowers may be sown
now for early crops.
Dwarf nasturtiums and the waxy-
flowered portulaca are two especial-
ly good edging plants for poor sod.
LOST
Reword for return, or information
leading to recovery of two-year old
Beagle dog. Brown bead, white body
with largo block patches, white toil
with block patck at bast. Chest, logs
and sides picked with block, answers
to tho nam# of ’Tony." Missing from
North Main Street section, Keyser,
since March 9. Contact W. C. Fifer,
West Virginia State Liquor Store
or Dial 21607
EASTER SUGGESTIONS
SMOKES SUBBED NAM
.......... *57e
BREAKFAST B A B O R ^
........ » 43c
HOME DRESSED SMOKERS
• C anadian Bacon
a Chopped Baa#
• Balled Ham
REES MARKET
Phone 328
Ffottbwg, MaL
«P£?
BY "JOSELLI"
IN A SPECIAL .
P R E - E A S T E R
SALE
R E G U L A R $29.95
•24.
Just bi time For Easter . . . a Special Salt af thew quality and
style-first "Joselli" Saits.
Pastels, deep colors, checks, stripes, aad
plains in this selection. Sixes for Juniors ond misses. Finn aualitw
aH wool fabrics.
Sat thorn at this budget price.
EASTER HATS
Hurry, burry, hurry, select your
Easter Bonnet while eur stocks
are complete.
Flattering Spring
styles in all tba most wonted
colors.
Fin# materials that belie
their tiny prices.
I
8 8
o r TO $9.00
Back Again! Better Than Ever!
SANFORIZED BROADCLOTH
W
H
I T E
S H I R T S
• PERFECT FITTING
• SANFORIZED SHRUNK
• sizes id to a y ,
• SLEEVES 32 TO 35
Im km ow af Hmm quality abut, tee
E—tor.
Perfect tit, Ion, wearing brood*
cloth.
Tho tinter we're Mon in Mart toe
this reasonable price.
Tavern
EASTER CANDLES
For Your Easter Table
Bunn!**,
Duck*.
A lignin,
Spitter
XKI*. all in complete candle sets
by ‘Tavern”. Dress up your Easter
baskets with theee.
89c
M f
Hallmark
EASTER CARDS
Types For All Ages
UUU a complete selection of these
famed
“ Hallmark”
Bu-,ter
Cards.
Humorous or serious subjects
for
aH ate*.
5C
ta $1.00
d e p a r t m e n t
s t o r e
S IX TE E N
TH E
C U M B E R L A N D
N E W S ,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D .,
F R ID A Y ,
A P R IL
4,
1947
James O’Rourke Is
Named Commander
Of Barton Legion
pv D A V ID L. K IK K
B A R TO N April 3—Jam es O ’Rourke
was elected commander of Barton
P om No. 189. American Legion, at
the regular meeting held last night
in post headquarters.
Other
officers
elected
to
serve
for the ensuing year mere Giffen
McCormick, Calvin Lamberson. ser
geant-at-arms; Thomas Footen. his
to rian ; and
Howard Broadwater,
tru stee.
Those re-elected were Paul Davis,
adjutant; J. Irvin M artin, finance
officer;
and Pm nk Trulev, chap
lain.
Officers of Mountain Dis
trict will be invited to install officers
af the next regular meeting, April
16
Joseph
Davis,
past commander,
conducted the business session. Fo l
lowing
the
meeting,
refreshments
were served by the committee
in
eharge.
Guild Na mes Officers
Mrs
Alexander
Cross
mas
re
elect e :
president
of the Ladies’
Guild of the Presbyterian Church at
♦he regular meeting held last night
ton the church a social rooms
Other officers elected mere Mrs
Richard
W right, vice
president;
M rs
Laura Kyle, secretary;
Mrs.
Lulu Boucher, treasurer; and Mrs
David Gomans. Sr., assistant, treas
urer.
Following the election a business
tew ion was held at m-hich time Mrs
Orcvs appointed a committee com
posed of Mrs. M ary Mom bray, Mrs
Cora Inskeep. and Miss Jennie Ins-
keep. for the social to be held dunng
the month of June.
Hostesses at the meeting Includ
ed Mesdames Bertha Bradley and
Fllen
Wilson,
and
M lss
Bessie
Keyes.
M*» re* To Clo se
Barton
Merchants
Association
voted to close their stores all day
Good Friday.
The stores remained
open Wednesday afternoon in order
to give employes a full holiday F r i
day.
Perso na ls
W illiam Chappell, steward at the
club of Barton Hose Company No. 1,
is ill at his home.
Mr. and Mrs W illiam Harvey and
children, Carolyn and Billy, Charles
Town, W . Va , are visiting the lat-
fers brothers. Courtney and Gray-
rion Andrews, over the Easter holi
days.
Miss Maude Mowrbray will spend
the holidays with rer sister.
Mrs.
Joseph Gobel, New Haven, Conn.
Mr. and Mrs. W illiam P Cooper
and children, Betty Ann and Louise,
mill spend the weekend with friends
and
relatives
in
Baltim ore and
Washington.
Miss M ary Major, seventh grade
instructor at Barton School, left to
day for New York City.
Mrs. Dolores Moore Dorn an is a
oatient a t Memorial Hospital, Cum
berland.
Andrew
Penman
has
recovered
after being confined to his home
lollowing a fall several weeks ago.
AGED PETERSBURG
WOMAN SUCCUMBS
By M Y R TL E P A R K
P E TE R S B U R G . W . Va., April 3—
Mrs. M ary Susan Gum . 8 6, widow
of Jack Gum. died at
the home
of her daughter. Mrs. Mernie Shan-
holtz, Virginia Avenue last
night.
Mrs. Gum mas a daughter of the
late John Kimble and Ann Rebec
ca Tm gier Kim ble and mas born
near Landes, W . Va.
She is survived besides her daugh
ter, by another daughter, Mrs. Ethel
Shobe,
Moorefteld;
six
grandchil
dren and two great-grandchildren;
six brothers Hnd sisters, Mrs. Stella
M. Harm an, Grafton, W’. Va.; Adam
H. Kimble, Milford, 111.; Jam es P.
Kimble,
Fort
Ashby;
Jacob
G.
Kimble. Maysville; Mrs. Jennie F.
Alt, Pansy; E li P. Kimble, Milford,
111., and one half-sister, Mrs. Sarah
E. Porter, Petersburg
Mrs. Gum m’as a member of the
Petersburg Baptist Church where a
funeral service mill be held Satu r
day at 2 p. m., with burial m the
liam ily cemetery near Landes.
Personals
i
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Cunning-
jham, Romney, announce tlie birth
| of a daughter. Linda Ann.
Mrs.
Cunningham
is
the
former
Miss
Jean Biddle, daughter oi Mrs. Rose
Michael. Petersburg.
!
Mrs
Mary Townsend, M aysville.
remains criticlally ill at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Elm er
i road, MHysville.
Mrs. C. H
Park and son;
'M ary
Simpkins,
Petersburg;
Oscar
Keplinger,
Maysville,
Mrs. Roy Bean and son. Fabius, are
spending a few days in Washington
¡visiting relatives.
A. L. H ill remains critically iU
at his home.
Rex-
Miss
Mra
and
Easter Candlelight
Service Planned
By L IL L IA N IK X R TK L L
H YN D M A N . Pa.. April 2— An Eas
ter candlelight service will be held
Sunday night at 7:30 in the Church
of the Brethren, with Rev. John H.
Buffenmyer, pastor, officiating.
This mill be a service consisting
of congregational singing, prayers,
i responsive
readings
and
special
numbers. A large candle, represent
in g the Christ Candle will be light-
led. from which speakers will light
j candles
representing
faith,
hope,
¡courage, loyalty and love. Each per
son
in
the
congregation
will
be
given a small candle to be lighted
near the close of the program.
Bible Class Meets
The Young Adult Bible Class oi
the Methodist Church held its regu
lar monthly meeting recently and a
covered dish supper m the church
social room. The program consisted
of a vocal solo, Mrs. John A. Top
per;
clarinet solo, L. Huston
Al
bright; leading, Mrs. Dorothy M il
ler; vocal duet, Mrs. Francis Sm ith
and Mrs. Fred Porter.
Perso na ls
Eugene Ringler was admitted to
Memorial
Hospital.
Cumberland.
Tuesday.
Recent
guests
of
M n
Nettie
Harclerode
mere
Mr.
and
Mrs
Charles Blackburn, Altoona. Pa
Mrs. Thomas Bryant and daugh
ter, fSvelyn Fay, and Mrs. Mildred
Deneen are «pending several day*
with relatives in New York.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Shaffer an-
nounce the birth of a son recently.
G E T S E T for spring! Trade your
ole tractors, cars, trucks for the
new 4 in I Revolutionary Jeep.
Let us demonstrate how you can
save 751» of your present cos -a
with the new
W illy« equipment
line.
Cali
106-J-4
Penn-M ar
Motor Co., W lllvs Sale« Sc Service,
Corriganville, Md.
Advertiirm ent-N-T-Mar
M-71-2%-
____________
2 5 -^ 6 - 3 7- 2 « -2 9 -3 1
A o r
1 -2 -3 -4
W ork on the law n can start soon-,
er than most people realize. Grass
seed may be sown on thin spots: just
as soon as the ground is no longer
soggy.
More than 1 9 8 .0 0 0 ,0 0 0
pounds of
starch were used in 1945 by U. 6
textile manufacturers.
Lucky ’s Ea sier Specia ls
B A B Y C H IC K S
Pla ce o rder* no w fo r deliv ery o n
da le y o u « pecify . We a re no w
sto rking hea v y breed Chicks ton
limited qua ntities.
SPECIAL COLORED CHICKS
PRICHARD'S
Fro stburg . Md.
1 W Ma in St.
Pho ne« 1 5 8 —1 5 9
Bla ckhea ds to o . No wa iting
V«». It »• true. there ta « safe j
harmless m edKated liquid esllec ]
« L IE R IX that doe« u p pun pin j
o v ern ight Xa it art» to lo o sen
and remo v e j
Bgly black heart* Tho se who lo ilo wed sim
p le dim tio o s an d ap p lied K lw » » i n p o c j
retm n g were am.t-rin gly su rp rised when the» .
fMtad tbesr (* tu p lesan d bUr k headshad disap p eared j
to beac u ser» enthusiastically p raise K iasrsi an d j
sUteo they are n o longer emh-irraaaed
ONLY
to d are n o w bap p v with th an clea»
_
r i r r
Uaa Blears a. II o n e ap - M J k
&; can o n do e* n o t satisfy . y o u « et / |
(
W v k tr y au f rwerx ry back . A» *
to t
NEaawlMbV atm
T A S CUT RATE
frM tb a rf, Md.
5 ccio lt
Brté oy and Saturday
KRAUT
2
19c
TOMATO JUICE “ ,r. 25c
R n u m t 'i No rwo o d
COFFEE
• "
IU | .
...
4 5 c
DUDLEY’S GROCERY
Lrkha rt
Pho ne 2 0 2 -W
OeTrv ery Serv ice
Expert Repairing
\ll Ma ke* o f Ra dio «
Wa *her* a nd Reirig era to ra
Gua ra nteed Repa ir Herv ico
Ca ll 37 -R
We Pu*-up a nd Deliv er!
FROSTBURG RADIO
SALES & SERVICE
1 9 9 I. Mo in St.
Fro stburg
F O R
H O M E
GAR DE NE R S €
Seeds • Supplies • Fertilizers • Sprayers -,
GARDEN SETS
3 piece. A well made set
of hand
garden tools.
Necessary for every gar
dener.
57c
NEEDY VALUES
Broom R a k e s .............................. 59c up
Garden R a k e s ........................$1.29 up
Hand C u ltiv a to r................... $1.35 ea.
Garden Hoe ............................ 95c up
Spade F o r k ............................ $1.39 up
P r u n e r ..................................... $1.95 up
Grots H o o k ................................ 69c ea.
HEDGE SHEARS
Rugged for long wear.
Very sharp steel blades
for heavy or light cuts.
$4.25
For the Kiddies
GARDEN SET
Co nsists o f ra ke, sho v el
a nd ho e. Brig ht red.
49c set
LAWN MOWERS
Extra quality mowers of pre-war
quality with post-mar improvements.
Roller bearings
throughout. Seli-
sharpening.
SEEDS
R«d CloT«r
.......................
S40 00 bu.
Mommoth Red Clover...........
S40 00 bu.
Grimm Altolfo
....... ..
S33 75 bu.
Orchord Gro$» ....................
S4 95 bu.*
! Low« Seed . .
..............
39c lb up
, Onion Set« .........................
FERTILIZERS
5-10-5—S 4 3 . 3 Q to»
C for potato«« and
truck gardens)
J 12 6- 8 4 0 . 5 » *>■
ifor grass, o a ts, wheat
and
general)
4 12-4-34 1 .5 0 *»"
♦for corn)
W e a re p ro u d to
o ffer mo re co m-
p lete sto cks o f every g a rd en in g
n eed. Flo wer, veg eta b le a n d la wn
seed s, p a cka g ed a n d in b u lk ; g a rd
en to to o ls, fertilizers, in secticid es.
A
“ o n e sto p *' g a rd n er’s
s u p p l y
h o u se.
l'Eric h a rd
VIGORO
Complete plant food for
vegetables, lawn flomeie,
shrubs and trees.
5 Hi. 't t i f
10 lb » O r
» ">• « 1 .4 5
'«o ">• 8 3 .70
SEEDS
RadtahM
le ttu r a
Sq u ash
Po le Bean *
Bu sh Bean *
Cabbaga
Lima Bean s
Cu cu mber
Yello w Co rn
To rn ato « «
White Co rn
Carro l*
Dwarf Pea*
Pep p er*
Po le Pea*
Beel*
Tu rn ip s
W aterm elo n
V IS IT OUR BIG STO RE
‘A On e S to p ” M o n ey S a vin g Trip
Fo r A ll Yo u r N eed
«
HARDWARE
FROSTBURG, MD.
PHONES 158-159
G o l d e n W e d d i n g
Fifth
Pt.
Vi Pt.
HIRAM
I WALK«
i m p e r i a l
- w.L.t* » »*“'
IMPERIAL
FIFTH
P IN T ..
W ine
Beer
Port, Sherry and
^
Muscatel fifth
• • ]I
Old Shay Deluxe
n rm
per can .............
C a s e
$3.50
Canadian Club
FIFTH
........................*5.5«
S e a g ra m 's V.O .
FIFTH
................
(¡Eo lfttn
*0 1 1 (1 0 ST
s. f i n c h a co. , i nc
UNI niIV. M-
a-
P .M . DeLuxe ..............
Corstoirs W hite Seal .
Calvert S p e c ia l............
Seagram's 1
Crown .
Calvert Reserve ..........
King Block Label . . .
Three Feathers ..........
Schenley .......................
Park & T“ ford Reserve
fifth
pint
Vi pt.
3.50
2 25
1.14
3.52
2.25
1.14
3.49
1.14
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.60
2.26
1.15
CIGARETTES
C A RTO N
S 1.37
Cut Rate Liquor
Store FROSTBURC
J*
♦
V
ÍA.
»
#
M
I
«
♦
«
#
y
PHILLIPS’
FL O W E R SH O P
for
• Funeral Flowers
• Potted Plants
• Cut Flowers
• Weddings and
• Home Decoration
W l
DELIVER
ANYWHERE
lonoeomng
Phon« >3
To Remind You!
Friday, April 4th
Good Friday
Bonks W ill NOT Be Open
Fidelity Bank
The Bonk With The Town Clock“
T R O M B I ILf. ( 'M ntibvr T D I. C . ) M D
EASTER EGGS
Co co an u t Creams
Fru ii & Nu t
Lo mewt tn Price
P A R I S E
C O N FEC TIO N ER Y
i f I Ma m St, Pho n« Fro tfburg 4 34
T
N
r
% ; T
a n d su d d en ly it s
Be ready for this wonderful day, with something
new from Griffiths. There is still time to choose that
new suit, hat, dress, or whatever new you most desire.
W e hove a wonderful assortment of accessories
that will add the final touch to any oufit.
W e invite you to visit us
before Easter.
■
'"Ta. - -v* Í
V / ? H L ’
V* *
è
OF FROSTBURG
Coat and Suits ...................... . . 3 9%
to 7 5 qg
Dresao»
.........................................10 98 to 3 9 98
Your Spring Hat ................................. 3 50 to 25.00
Raincoats
................................................ 17.98 to 39 98
........................................................... 5.00 to 25 00
Glovei>
................................................................ 1 25 to 6 98
Hoaieary
.................................................................... 1 00 to 1 95
Blouses
......................................................................... 3.98
to 10 98
Costume Jew elry ................................
100 to 35.00
Sweaters
................................................................................ . 3 9« to 10 98
Henry Rosenfeld Cosmetics ..................................................... 100 to 7 50
Ju d y
and
Jill Cosmetics .......................................................... 100
to 7 5 0
Evening G o w n s ........................................................................................ 25 00 to 49 9s
M A Y YOUR EASTFR BE H A P P Y
■ -4—« - JX Av-dki A,,
.* a. -*. A.
SIXTEEN
THE C U M B E R L A N D
N EW S,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D .,
F R ID A Y ,
A P R IL 4,
1947
-
I - L '
James O'Rourke Is
Named Commander
Of Barton Legion
Bv DAVID E. KIRK
BARTON April 3—Jum es O'Rourke
wa* elected com m ander of B arton
post No. 189. American Legion, at
the regular m eeting held last night
in post headquarters.
O ther
officers elected to serve
for the ensuing year were Giffen
McCormick. Calvin Lamberson. ser
g ea n t-at-an n s, Thom as Footen. his
torian:
and
Howard Broadw ater,
tnu-tee.
Those re-elected were Paul Davis,
ad ju tan t; J. I n in M artin, finance
officer; and P rank Truley. ch ap
lain.
Officers of M ountain Dis
trict will be invited to install officers
a t th e next regular m eeting, April
16.
Joseph Davis, past com m ander,
conducted th e business session. Fol
lowing the m eeting, refreshm ents
were served by th e com m ittee
in
eh arg*
Guild Names Officers
Mrs
Alexander
Cross
was
re
elected
president
of the Ladies’
Guild of the Presbyterian C hurch at
♦he regular m eeting held last night
In the church a social rooms.
O ther officers elected were M rs
R ichard
W right, vice
president;
M rs
L aura Kyle. secretary; Mrs.
Lulu Boucher, treasurer; and M rs
David Go wans. S r, assistant treas
urer.
Following th e election a business
cession was held. a t which tim e Mrs.
Dross appointed a com m ittee com
posed of Mrs. M ary Mowbray. M rs
Cora Inskeep. and Miss Jennie Ina-
keep. for the social to be held during
th e m onth of June.
Hostesses a t th e m eeting Includ
ed M esdames B ertha Bradley and
d e n
Wilson,
and
M iss Bessie
Keyes.
Mores To Close
B arton
M erchants
Association
voted to close their stores all day
Good Friday.
The stores remained
open W ednesday afternoon in order
to give employes a full holiday F ri
day.
Personals
William Chappell, stew ard at the
club of B arton Hose Com pany No. I,
is ill at his home.
Mr. and Mrs W illiam Harvey and
children. Carolyn and Billy. Charles
Town. W. Va., are visiting Hie la t
ter s brotliers, Courtney and G ray-
don Andrews, over the Baster holi
days.
Miss M aude Mowbray will spend
the holidays w ith rer sister. Mrs.
Joseph Gobel, New Haven, Conn.
Mr. and Mrs. W illiam P. Cooper
and children. B etty Ann and Louise,
will spend the weekend w ith friends
and relatives
in
B altim ore and
W ashington.
Miss Mary' M ajor, seventh grade
instructor a t B arton School, left to
day for New York City.
Mrs. Dolores Moore Doman Is a
patient at Memorial Hospital, Cum
berland.
Andrew Penman h as recovered
after being confined to his home
follow mg a fall several weeks ago
AGED PETERSBURG
WOMAN SUCCUMBS
By MYRTLE PARK
PETERSBURG. W. Va., April 3— '
Mrs. Mary Susan Gum . 86. wide*
of Jack Gum . died at the home
of lier daughter. Mrs. Mernie Shati-
holtz, Virginia Avenue lt*t night.
Mrs. Gum was a daughter of Hie
late John Kimble and Ann Rebec
ca Tingler Kimble and was born
near Landes. W. Va.
She is survived besides her daugh
ter. by another daughter, Mrs. Ethel
Shobe, Moorefield; six grandchil
dren and two great-grandchildren;
six brothers and sisters. Mrs. Stella
M. H arm an, G rafton, W. Va.; Adam
H. Kimble. M ilford. IU.; Jam es P.
Kimble,
F ort
Ashby;
Jacob
G.
Kimble. M aysville; Mrs. Jennie F.
Alt, Pansy; EU P. Kimble. Milford,
IU., and one half-sister, Mrs. S arah
E. Porter. Petersburg.
Mrs. Gum was a m em ber of the
Petersburg B aptist C hurch where a
funeral service will be held S atu r
day at 2 p. iii., with burial iii Ute
tanuly cem etery near Landes.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene C unning
ham . Romney, announce the birth
of a daughter. Linda Ann
Mrs.
C unningham
is tire
form er
Miss
Jean Biddie, daughter of Mrs. Rose
M ichael. Petersburg.
Mrs
Mary Townsend. Maysville,
rem ains criticially ill at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Elmer Rex-
road. Maysville.
Mrs. C. H
Park and son; Miss
M ary Sim pkins. Petersburg;
Mrs.
O scar
Keplinger,
Maysville,
and
Mrs. Roy Bean and son. Fabius, are
spending a few days in W ashington
visiting relatives.
A
L. HIU rem ains critically BJ
a t his home.
W ork on the lawn can sta rt soon
er th an m ost people realize. G rass
seed may be sown on th in spots just
as soon as the ground is no longer
soggy.
More th a n 198.000,000 pounds of
starch were used in 1945 by U. 6.
textile m anufacturers.
Easter Candlelight
Service Planned
By LILLIAN CRABTREE
HYNDMAN. Pa.. April 2—An Eas
ter candlelight service will be held
Sunday night at 7:30 in the C hurch
of Hie B rethren, a ith Rev. John H.
Buffenmver, pastor, officiating.
Tills will be a service consisting
of congregational .singing, prayers,
responsive
readings
and
special
num bers. A large candle, represent
in g Hie Christ Candle will be light
ed. from which speakers will light
I candles
representing
faith,
hope,
[courage, loyalty and love. Each per
son
in
the congregation
will
be
given a sm all candle to be lighted
near the close of the program .
Bible (Tass Meet*
The Young Adult Bible Class of
the M ethodist C hurch held its regu
lar m onthly m eeting recently and a
I covered dish supper iii the church
social room
The program constated
of a vocal solo. Mrs. John A. T op
per; clarinet solo, L. Huston Al
bright; reading. Mrs. Dorothy Mil
ler; vocal duet. Mrs. Francis Sm ith
and Mrs. Fred Porter.
Personals
Eugene Ringlet wa* adm itted to
M emorial
Hospital.
Cum berland.
Tuesday.
Recent
guests
of
Mr>
Nettie
Harclerode
acre
Mr.
and
Mrs
C harles Blackburn. Altoona. Pa
Mrs. Thom as B ryant and daugh
ter. Evelyn Fay, and Mrs. Mildred
Deneen are spending several days
with relative* in New York.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Shaffer a n -
tiounce the birth of a ton recently.
G ET SET for spring! T rade your
ok
tractors, ears. trucks for the
new 4 in I Revolutionary Jeep.
Let us dem onstrate bow you can
save 75** of your present costs
with the new Wt’.lvs equipm ent
line
Cai!
106-J-4
Penn-M ar
Motor C o. Wlllvs Sales dr Service.
Corrigan Ville, Md.
Advrrtoemmt-N-T-Mar
X - l l t l *
___________ aa-aa-ae-re-ag-as-n aor l-a-i-e
Liickvs Easter
Colden Wedding
Did rn
ddtng
Fifth
Ft.
V: Pl.
SABY CHICKS
Place orders now for delivery w
date yea specify. We are now
stocking heavy breed Chicks in
limited quantities.
SPECIAL COLORED CRICKS
PRICHARD’S
Frostburg, Md.
I W. Main St.
Phones US—159
CARDER SETS
3 piece. A well made aet
of hand garden tools.
Necessary for every gar
dener.
57e
W H Y VALVES
Broom Bokos............................. 59c up
Gordon Bokos.......................$1.29 up
Hood Cultivator.................. $1.35 eo.
Gordon H o e ..............................95c up
Spade Fork........................... $1.39 up
Frunor............................... $1.95 up
Grots Hook............................... 69c m .
HEDGE SMEARS
Rugged for long wear.
Very sh arp steel blades
for heavy or light cuts.
For fko Kiddies
BARDEN SIT
Consists of rake, shovel
and hoe. Bright red.
*
P I M P L E S
y: Disappeared O^ermaht
Y f
49c sot
LAWN MOWERS
Extra quality mowers of pre-war
quality with poet-war improvements.
Roller bearings throughout. Self-
sharpening.
Wine
Beer
Fort, Shorty and
Muscatel fifth
• ®
Old Shay Deloit
per coe ...............
Co m
$3.50
FIFTH
Canadian Club
* 5 .5 »
Seagram’s V.O.
* 5 .2 3
FIFTH
JT 1
/ a J
Hashheads tee. He m lllni
Yea. It
t a
true, t h
e
r e
t o
e
W
e
I
barmie*!, medicated liquid calW
K U IR C X that dries up pimple!
evermcbt tm It aru to loosen and remove
■aly blackheads. Those who followed mm-
pie direct loos and applied t OUaeoei Bpm
na! y surprised wuen they I
kneads hid disappeared
their pi in plea sad Marl
users e»tbus»aWicaUy praise i
they ase bo loafer em bn Massed
happy with tbwr clear
S ums*
dors nor satiny, j o .
Vtasfan today. sure.
T E S CUT RATEE4S*
5 zctoh
KRAUT
2 "
19c
TOMATO JUICE
28c
K esaer's Norwood
C O FFEEN ”
» 45c
000112*$ 0R0DERT
Eckhart
Phone 202-W
Delivery Service
SEEDS
Red Clover.............................
$4000 bu.
Mom moth Red Clever..........
Grimm Alfolfo
...................
Orc herd Grow .....................
Lowe Seed ...........................
Onion Soft ...........................
FERTILIZERS
5-10-5—* 4 3 . 5 * to .
( for potatoes and
truck gardensI
S - 1 2 - 0 - S 4 * .* * n a
(for grass, oats. wheat
and general i
4 12 4 -3 4 1 .3 * ta.
♦for com)
We anre proud to off mr morm com•
pimtm atocha of moory pardoning
need. Flowert vmgetable and lawn
ae md a, packaged and in bulk; pard-
mn to tools, fertiliser a, inaecticidea.
rn
A “one atop09 pardner*a aupply
houam.
VIG0R0
Com plete plant food for
vegetables, lawn flower*,
shrubs and trees.
* * 45**
*• a e r
» »■ S1.4S
loo iv. * 3.7*
SEEDS
IMPERIAL
FIFTH
kadish**
Lettuce
Cabbage
Car a other
Tam at os*
Carrots
rapper*
Expert Repairing
All Makes of Radios
H a s h r n and R efrigerators
G uaranteed R epair Bar rio
Call 37-R
Ute P ick-up and Denver!
FROSTBURG RADIO
SALES i SERVICE
IO* I M n Sr.
P r ic h a r d
Squash
Pale Beans
Bumh Beans
Lima B rim
Yellow Corn
Whit* Corn
Dwarf Peas
Pale Peas
Turnips
Watermelon
F.M. DeLuxe ...................................................
Corita irs White S e a l........................................ 3.52
Calvert Spacial.................................................... 3.49
Seagram's '7' Crown ........................................... 3.95
Calvert Baserva ................................................. 3.9S
King Block Label ........................................ .
Three Feathers ................................................. 3.95
Schanlay ............................................................... 3.95
Fork it Telford Becarve .................................... 3.60
fifth
pint
Vt pf.
3.50
2.25
1.14
3.52
2.25
1.14
3.49
1.14
3.9S
2.50
1.25
3.9S
2.50
1.25
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.95
2.50
1.25
3.60
2.26
1.15
FINT
CIGARETTES
CABTON 1 .3 7
VISIT OUR RIG STORE
44 A One Stop99 Money Saving Trip
For All Your floods
H A R D W A R E
FROSTBURG, MD.
LUCKY
Cut Rate Liquor
Store FROSTBURG
PHONES 158-159
I
PHILLIPS’
FLOWER SHOR
A
*
I
V
rn
for
o Funeral Flower*
• Fatted Floats
• Cut Flowers
• Waddings End
• Homa Decoration
WE
DELIVER
ANYWHERE
Lonaconing
Fbone t i
S ’.*:.*.:#.'Ce;:#;
To Reaiind You!
Friday, April 4th
Good Friday
Banks Will NOT Ba Open
Fidelity Bank
"The font With The Town Clock”
r R O i m i f i (Member F D.I.C.) MD.
EASTER EGGS
Cocoanut Creams
Fruit & Nut
Loved in Price
P A R I S E
CONFECTIONERY
I. Mom St , Rhone Fretfburg 434
and suddenly it's
Be ready for this w onderful day, w ith som ething
new from G riffith s. There is still tim e to choose that
new suit, hat, dress, or whatever new you most desire.
W e hove o wonderful assortm ent of accessories
that w ill add the fin al touch to any oufit.
W e invite you to visit us
before Eoster.
OF FROSTBURG
Coat and Suite ...............................39 IR to 79 49
DTT!**# ................................................IO 98 to 39 98
Your Spring H at .................................... 3 50 to 25 09
Raincoat* .......................................................17 98 to 39 98
Bagh ...................................................................... 5 00 to 25 00
Gloves
......................................................................... 125 to
698
Hosiery
..................................................................... I OO to 195
Blouses
................................................................................... 3 98 to 10 98
Costume Jewelry ....................................
IOO to 35 00
Sweater* ............................................................................................. 3 98 to 10 98
Henry Rosenfeld
Cosmetic* ........................................................ I OO to 7 50
Judy and
Jill Cosmetics ................................................................... I oo to 7 *)
Bvening G o w n * ....................................................................................................25 00 to 49 98
M A Y YOUR EASTER BE HAPPY
r n
■ K M B S tttf a lf tiilild B
'.Pi PibPLP1
* * * — * — *■ * —■ *
% A *• -*
>
THE CUM BERLAND
NEWS, CUMBERLAND,
MD.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4,
194?
SEVENTEEN
ALONG THE POTOMAC
TO WASHINGTON
By J . GLENN BEALL___
iM e m l» e r of C ongr e s s f r om
M a n la nd S ix th D is tr ic t)
ie Republican *j>ot light in Con-
laM week was beamed on the
q uestion.
compromise was reached
m*v-
days ago on the income tax
tion after months of delx ite in
Hour-e Ways and Means Com
mittee where such legislation nmst
originate. One group insisted upon
a 20 per cent slash in income levies
“across the board” on all income
levels.
i
Taking heed of hundreds of pro-
| tests that this “help the wealthy”
i would
give
the
upper
income
¡brackets a larger share of the cash
savings, another group urged a dif-
Ifeient type of income tax cut.
The compromise in effect pro
poses (1)
30 per cent on tax able
.incomes (after ex emptions and de
ductions) of $1,000 or less: (2)
20
per cent up to $302,000, and <3) lOVi
per cent on higher levels.
It is interesting to note that the
largest benefits of this bill will go
to about 20 million small wage earn
ers. Six ty-one per cent of the re
duction favors
persons
receiving
net incomes of $5,000 or less and of
this amount 71 per cent goes to
those with incomes of less than $3,-
000.
This plan, as passed by the House
of Representatives by a vote of 273-
137, would
b e retroactive to Janu
ary 1, 1947. It has now gone to the
Senate Finance
Committee where
we hope it will be acted upon soon.
By voting for this bill, we feel
that income tax reduction will so
stimulate business that the Federal
Government will actually get more
revenue to apply on the huge public j
debt of 259 billion dollars.
Of course, we haven’t forgotten1
the other important phase of our
financial problem—that of Federal j
Spending.
President Truman in his January i
Budget message to Congress said
that, $39.1 billion (including ex cise j
tax es) was the lowest figure possi
ble. Ex penditures were set at $37.5
billion and surplus at $1.6 billion.
A few weeks ago the
House of
Representatives
set
a ceiling of
$31.5 billion on spending. The Sen
ate voted a $4.5 billion saving. As
we report to you the two chambers
had not yet come to agreement.
You can be sure that we are keep
ing a weathered eye on this im
portant legislation because we fully
realize that tax es cannot be cut un
less ex penditures are substantially
lowered.
Citizens of LaVale, in Allegany
County would like the Post Office
¡Department to change the name of
| the past office from Long to La
Vale.
It is a simple req uest and
there is no reason that the petition
signed by the citizens of LaVale
won’t be given favorable consider
ation.
We have felt for a long time that
sugar
regulations offenders have
been dealt with a little too severely.
It was gratifying to learn that a
Frederick County merchant’s sus
pension to sell sugar has been lift
ed.
We have
listened
witii a great
deal of interest
to
the series of
broadcasts given by Mrs. John H.
Werner who has been interviewing
the members of the Montgomery
County Board
of
Commissioners
over Station WBCC in Bethesda ev
ery Monday and Friday at 6 p. rn.
The board
members are
making
their positions clear on many vital
local Issues.
From what we hear,
they too are having many fiscal
problems to solve.
Last week we attended a meeting
of the House Sub-Committee of the
Public Works Committee at which
time House He olution 1874 was ap-
proved. This legislation ex tends t«
¡one year the time for making appli
cation for funds under the Federa.
i Aid Highway Act of 1944.
tJniesj
the time is
ex tended.
Marylanc
¡along with other states might las«
| the funds already allocated becau?*
i of the difficulty surrounding
thi
placing under agreement and con
tract of such funds.
i
Now is the time to prepare for
your weekend visit to Washingtor
to see the Cherry Blossoms.
Thej
promise to be at the height of thek
glory about April 10.
PERFUMES
Mai* Oui. By R ourjoi» ............................-12.00
htiulton Old H p lce .........................................
Tabu by Dana
.............................
$3.25
•l^ntbrrir Tweed .....................................
Evening In Pari* . . .
................................
lardlry Bond Street ..............................
so
Hud nut. Yanky Clov er ............................* ,<>0
Hudnut Gemey .........................................
Barbara Gould Sky lark ............................» *-.»
I>entheric Ilark Brilliance ..................$15.00
Three Flowers by llu d n u t..................... $1.00
A>er* Pink C lov er ....................................
Violet Sec
...................................................... * l,0°
Wrisley, Spring Flower
SO AP
W hite cakes ©i Lily of th e
I V alley;
Yellow
cukes
ol
1 H oneysuckle and pink cak rs
I of Apple Blossom Sm ooth a*
satin
. . . for
b a th
and
com plex ion.
Box of 3
5 9
'
t o i l e t w a t e r s
and COLOGNES
^
Bond Street Toilrt
*
* * .$1.0#
Yanky Mov er Toilet
. . . . . . — f l 25
•l> enth erie
* u * te r
* 1 1 5
F \ enlng in Pari* Tot ri W ater
..................fiJ O
Ev ening In ***** Cologne ....... • ...............*1.00
• E e a c l na k i s
Cologne
.
...................
f l > M
Yard lev L a v e nd er < « loffie
..$1.00
Old Spice Toilet W ate r .......................’/.....$ L W
V iole t
See Cologne
......................
...$4 25
T a b u C olonia
............................................. *1.75
G e m * ? T oi l e t W a t e r
............................
. . * 1 0 «
\ l ol e t S e e T oi l e t W a
..........................................™
K s m H oneyw icfcle C olonne
.........
. . *j.00
M os nU t n • " * ' » > " V *
.................
•8 i» ecUil Btorea
WIN A
CHEVROLET!
. Enter P ep so d en t’s
M Ÿ FAVORITE BRUNETTE
CONTEST
EVERY WEEK
CRIVR01ETS
s
FRICIDAIRES
to
• 100 B lit s
tie t easy eon-
t est rulea and
« ruining
I’rp-
aodent tipa id
our store« .
P E P S O D E N T
P R O D U C T S
Antiseptic, MTMill ....................
Antiseptic, la r g e ......................
Tooth Fante, large tube . . . .
Tooth Fondar large aire . . .
Tooth Brush
...................
Prpaodent Wx rth cïeanæ ra
A ntiseptic for
a el
T ooth
teeth.
Bmahea
with Irlum ” .
ean, refreshed m outh,
for
» parklln*.
clean
H a rrie t Ilub h a rd Ayer
LU X U R IA
Cleaniter . . . Be» utifi*T
r. l.oo
Barbara Gould
Liquid Velvet
of Peaches
Give*
a
colorful,
na tura l
skin
tone th a t can com pletely glorify
a dull, d rab com plex ion. Choice
of » untan, Blonde, M anderln
or
Brunette » hades.
* 1 . 5 0
Attractive Yet Sturdy
EASTER
BASKETS
15c - 19c - 25c
39c ■ 49c * 59c
Colorful
EASTER GRASS
2 -Ounces
| i |
(i
B U L K .............
■
7 4
B A L T IM O R E
S T R E E T
C U M B E R L A N D , M D .
PEO PLES featu re
PHOTO-FINISHING
by CHRISTOPHER
ASK FOR THE JUMBO SIZE
Tak e Pictures This E aster-----
R oll Film A re A v a ila b le in M ost Sizes
LARGE
ASSORTMENT
PLUSH TOYS
and NOVELTIES
$1.7 5; $1.98; $2.19; $2.49
$3.19; $3.6 9 °"<* $4.9 8
Dolls, Duck» , Sw ans, Geese, B unnies, R abbits, C tnrkena and m an?
others. T hey’re adorable . . . each d ifferent . . . In color, m ate ria l
and styling T he kiddles will love them !
E A S T E R
C A R D S
5 * _ 1 0 *
* 2 5 "
EGG D Y E
Chick Chick, Rit or I’aas . . .
In brilliant and pastel colors.
10"
Fach
W E E K -E N D
C A S E S
2 0 -Inch Sin*
* 2 . 4 »
ATTENTION :—Certain Toilet
Preparation» , Luggage, Bill
fold*. etc., and J ewelry sub
ject to 20% tax under Fed
eral
Internal
Kev enue
Act
effectiv e April 1, 1044. Alarm
Clocks retailing at not more
than $5.INI and Watches re
tailing
at
not
more
than
*05 00 subject to 10% tax ;
all others tax ed 20c.
/ /
APRIL
SHOWERS
TOILETRIES
The Fragrance of Youth
Fragrance supreme in a youthful perfume by Cheramy. Be smart in the
touch that adds glamor . . . the touch of April Showers.
Talcum Powder, jumbo . . 39c
Eau De C o lo g n e
$1.00
Both Powder .............. $1.00
Bath Softener................ $1.25
Perfume, purse size . . . . 6 5c
Sach et............................. $1.25
Im h o *
A
CHfWAMV
s
»
1
8
- i n c h
s i z e ZIPPER BAGS
Large, roomy bogs made of heavy, durable
materials. R einforced,
and trimmed Icother
and with a zipper opening the length ot
the bog. Handy for shopping, weck-endmg.
traveling and
tor carrying baby * req uisites.
$
$2.73 Value
TODAY t h r u s a t . o n l y
SPECIAL SALE! — Today Thru Saturday Only
BOOK
MATCHES
1 2 '
mmin» risi-Tj'
~
Box x>f 50
Books . . . ,
m
SPECIAL S*l E — Today, Thru Saturday Only
G L A S S A SH
TRAYS
25c
Value
i »
'
Brooks Tebson
CIGARS
5 for 35c
Box or 50—$3.25
Rogers Air-Tite
TOBACCO
POUCHES
$1.00 & $2.50
PINAUD
Lilac Vegetal
[>n ounces In all In
a
iw tial com bination pack
age th a t saves you money.
’» »
the
sm all
at r.e lo r
raveling
Stock up nowl
SPECIAL
$1.9 2 V a lur
9 7 "
fyfor
rtfc-
fSrpA
SPECIAL!
D a g g e t t & Ramjdcll
PERFECT
SHAMPOO
A
golden
opportunity to
on a product of q uality. P prfe"
sham poo by D aggett di R am a-
dell. . . for
Bheen y0U
adore in h a ir.
$1 .5 0
8 8 . 0 0
Bottle . . • •
P
A
C
V
I
Ju a
I
iJ JL ■ EASY! EASY!
SQUIBB
DENTAL
CREAM
Lar**
| O
f
Tube ..
M .9 9
N O M I C 0 1 D W A V E
with eosior to vta
PLASTIC CURLKRS
Compiate « ritti SO $'K 4 9
PLASTIC CURLftS
le w . rn.
B elili KH *1
Long lasting wavas . \ 11
easy to stylo I ^
J
Help* Relieve Minor Aches and
Muscular Pains
AN ACIN
T A M P A X
PO N D S C R E A M
Box
of 30 ,
Bottle
of 50
: $ » "
59"
A vailable in th ree absorben-
cies to
nult
individual
re
q uirem ent» .
Box
of 10 . . .
Box of 40
3 1 '
$1.05
Cold C ream for C leansing, L iq ue
fying for oily skin cleansing and
V anishing
for
holding
your
m ake-up and for th a t re fre sh
ing “one-m inute” m ask.
3 9
'
SOLITAIR
CAKE M AKE-UP
For a smooth.
Xk d f l A
v elv ety complex ion — I l U v
Fashion Point
LIPSTICK
F a sh ione d
to
fit
th e
lips.
; ,° r .............. $ 1 .0 0
rlf-
COLORFUL ASSORTMENT
NOVELTIES
Rabbit and Cart
Rabbit and Egg .......
Rabbit Novelty . . . .
or;C ,
Sheep N o v e lty................
-_C
^
Duck N ovelty
’ ] * *..................
ft*
4
i . v ^
4
1 0
25c
®V7
J Vfkmmy Lou Peanut
Brittle
Pound Box
1 9 * *
b r az il -nut
FUDGE
Pound
‘ l i i 1
m
B O X E D
c
a n d i
e
s
Chocolate Covered Sweets
GOLD CRAFT
M
A|
Gold Box, Pound ___
b l . Z i
b a r o n e t
•* ¡^*
rn 1 n tUr - T : / ° u n d
51 .1 1
T
2
S2.5(
M A M M Y LOU
£ «
Cho co la tes,
Pound .. . 0U <
MYRA M ONET
m
Pound ..................
7 0 C
b a t h p o w d e r s
Suttons Body Powder
V’iolet Sec
. ................................
*Lentherie ..........*
*.........
Ay ers Pink Clov er .........................................
Yardley g
....... .................................................
iiemey ..........
..............................................
Ev ening in Paris
,
*
.........................
•Special Store» ........................................
b a t h s a l t s
1»..^: a,
.
Ev ening in Paris Cry stals
Wrisley Crystals, 4-Pounds ’
Bathasweet, large size
.................
Yardley Bath Salts
.......................
Old Spice, bath salts . ’.‘i .....................
. . . . . . . . . . . .
.$1.00
• S1.50
I1 J8
$ I M
51.50
$1.25
$1.25
. 59 c
^1 I-*
$1.50
$ 1 -IMI
IVORY
F L A K E S
Large Size
K . *
3 3
RFIV!
For Coughs
"G et Rem and G el R e
lief” . . . from simple
colds . . . tickling and
th roa t
Irrita tion
caused
by colds.
6 0c
Size ... 4»
I M
I r W
I J
i l l «
$1.00 PEPTO-BiSMOL............ 89c
For (’part Stomach
25c FFENAMINT GUM
.......... 19c
Lax ativ e, Box of Hi
65c BIS0D01 ANTACID POWDER ... 49c
Medium Slit, 3-Ottnrex
*S0 EFFERVESCENT SALT
57c
TV
Sire,
Kruular
4 -Oanee
iOc P. D. ALOPHEN P!LLS 7777777 49c
Bottle of 100, for only
SQUIBB MINERAL OIL ......... ,_69c
TV Pint, Fffeotiv e Fuhrirant
WAMPOLES PREPARATION
SI.04
SI.10 Pint Sire. For (Inly
UFGUFNTINE OINTMENT
TTT~47c
.» 0c Tube for Minor Burns
7EMAC0L LOTION ............... 97c
$1.00 Sire. Soothing Antiseptie
VIIJRINE EYE WASH 7 .T
..... 49c
F’or Tired Fy es, fiftr Value
We reserve th e righ t to lim it q ua ntitie s a nd refuse to >ell to dealer« .
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
194?
SEVENTEEN
AL0N6 IHE POTOMAC
IO WASHINGTON
By J. GLENN BEALL___
(Member of Concrew from
Maryland Sixth District)
T he Republican npnt light in Con-
freaa laM week was beamed on the
tax question.
A compromise was reached sev
eral days ago on the income tax
question after m onths of debate in
th e House Ways and M eans Com
m ittee w here such legislation m ust
originate. O ne group insisted upon
a 20 per cent slash in income levies;
“across th e board" on all income
levels.
T aking heed of hundreds of pro
tests th a t this “help the w ealthy"
would
give
the
upper
income
brackets a larger share of the cash
savings, another group urged a d il
ig e n t type of income tax cut.
T he compromise in effect pro
poses (I)
30 per cent on taxable
incomes (after exem ptions and d e
ductions) of ti .OOO or less: (2)
20
per cent up to $302,000. and (3) 10*4
per cent on higher levels.
I t is interesting to note th a t the
largest benefits of this bill will go
to about 20 million sm all wage e a rn
ers. 81xty-one per cent of th e re
duction favors
persons
receiving
net incomes of $5,000 or less and of
th is am ount 71 per
cent
goes to
those w ith incomes of less th an $3,-
000.
This plan, as passed by th e House
of R epresentatives by a vote of 273-
137, would be retroactive to Ja n u
ary I, 1947.
It has now gone to th e
Senate Finance
C om m ittee where
we hope it will be acted upon soon.
By voting for this bill, we feel
th a t income tax reduction
will so
stim ulate business th a t the Federal
G overnm ent will actually get more
revenue to apply on th e huge public
debt of 259 billion dollars.
O f course, we haven’t forgotten
the other im jiortant phase of our
financial problem —th a t of Federal
Spending.
President T rum an in his Jan u ary
B udget message to Congress said
th a t $39.1 billion (including excise
taxes) was the lowest figure possi
ble.
Expend ittires were set ut $37.5
billion and surplus a t $1.6 billion.
A few weeks ago
th e
House of
R epresentatives
set
a ceiling of
$31.5 billion on spending. T he S en
ate voted a $4.5 billion saving.
As
we report to you the two cham bers
had not yet come to agreem ent.
You can be sure th a t we are keep
ing a w eathered eye on this ini-
portunt legislation because we fully
realize th a t taxes cannot be cut u n
less expenditures are substantially
lowered.
Citizens of LaVale, in Allegany I
County would like the Post Office
D epartm ent to change the nam e of
the past office from Long to L a
Vale.
It is a sim ple request and
there Is no reason th a t th e petition
signed by th e citizens of LaVale
won’t be given favorable consider
ation.
I
We have felt for a long tim e th at
sugar
regulations
offender*
have
been dealt w ith a little too severely.
It was gratifying to learn th a t a
Frederick County m erchant’s sus
pension to sell sugAr has been lift
ed.
We huve
listened
with a great
deal of interest
to
the
w ries of
broadcasts given by Mrs. Jo h n H.
W erner who has been interview ing
the m em bers of th e M ontgomery
I County Board
of
Commissioners
lover S tation WBCO In B ethesda ev-
jery M onday and Friday at 6 p. rn
T he board
m em bers
are
m aking
'th e ir positions clear on m any vital
local Issues.
From w hat we hear.
I they too are having m any lineal
| problems to solve.
Last week we attended a m eeting
of the House Sub-C om m ittee of th e
[public W orks Com m ittee a t which
tim e House lie obit ion 1874 was ap*
proved.
This legislation extends ti
one year the tim e for m aking appli
cation for funds under th e F edera
Aid Highway Act of 1944
Unie.sj
the tim e is
extended.
M arylanc
along w ith other .states m ight Ins*
I the funds already allocated becauw
of the difficulty .surrounding
th#
placing under agreem ent and con
f r a c t of such funds
Now In th e tune to prepare foe
(your weekend visit to W ashingtor
to see the C herry Blossoms.
The?
prom ise to be a t th e height of th ei
glory about April IO.
PERFUMES
Mala Oui, By Bourjois......................... $2.$$
Nbutton Old tiptoe................................ $2.50
Tabu by liana
............................ $3.25
•Lenthertc Tweed ............
$3.00
Evening In F a r ts........................................$1.65
Yardley Bond Street
................$ 2 .5 $
Hod nut, Yanky Clover
.............. $1.$$
Hudnut Gentry ....................................$1.5$
Barbara Gould Skylark....................... $1.71
Lenthertc Dark Brilliance ................. $15.$$
Three Flowers by Hudnut
........... $1.0#
Ayres Pink Clover...............................$1.25
Violet floe ............................................ SIJ#
A
E
S E R V I C E
DRUG STORES
Attractive Yet Sturdy
EASTER
BASKETS
I5 c - 19c - 25c
39c • 4 9 c • 59c
Colorful
EASTER BRASS
IO '
2-Ounces
BULK .,
Wrisley, Spring Flower
SOAP
PEOPLES
PHOTO-FINISHING
by CHRISTOPHER
ASK FOR THE JUMBO SIZE
RA*
W hite cake* of Lily of Cb*
Water;
Yellow -tea
I Honeysuckle Mid Pink cake*
Lf Apple Blo*nom. anorth •»
•atm . . . for bath and
complexion.
l e x Cf 3
1 ... 5 0 *
74 BALTIMORE STREET
CUMBERLAND, MD.
Take Pictures This Easter-----
Roll Film Are Available in Most Sizes
Ski
LARGE
ASSORTMENT . . .
PLUSH TOYS
and NOVELTIES
S1.75; S1.98; S2.19; S2.49
$3.19; $3.69
$4.98
Dolls, Duck*, Swan*. Ore se. Bunnia*. Rabbit*. Chicken* and rn* a e
others. T h ey re adorable . . . each different . . . In color, m aterial
and airling Th* kiddie* will tov* them I
TOILET WATERS
and COLOGNES j
Bead Street Tellet W ater....................... SUM
Yanky Claver Toilet W ater....................SI.##
* Lenthertc Bouquets, Each ............. ....U I S
Evening In Faria Tellet W ater................ $1.75
Evening In Farts Cologne..............
$1.5#
* Lead mktg Cologne ................................ $1.##
Yardley Lavender Cologne......................$1 J#
Old tiptoe Toilet W ater
....... $1.$#
Violet See Cologne
....................$1.1#
Tabu Colonia ...........................................$4.25
Gemey Toilet Water ................................$1.75
Violet Hee Toilet W ater...........................$1.##
Ayers Honeysuckle Colonge ....................$1.15
Mountain Heather Cologne ....................$14#
•H p rrlftl Wore*
W I N A
C H E V R O L E T !
in te r Pepsoden t's
I V * : Ay OR / Ti i k u s 11 JI
I
I
COHU SI
ST IVERY WEEK
a
cam tu n
•
ftltltMKIS
I#
•MS BIUS
a et anay con
tact rule* and
winning
rep
andent tip* in
our store*.
PEPSODENT
PRODUCTS
Antiseptic, anna ....................
Antiseptic, ta rg e .......................
Tooth Paste, large tube ........
Teeth Pender, large afcse . . . .
Teeth Brush .............................
UMM
«*«••*•*
Harriet Hubbard Ayer
LUXURIA
Cleanser • . . Beautifier
$2 J I
Jar . . . .
EASTER
CARDS
5 * _ 1 0 *
EGG DYE
Chick Chick, RH or P ass . . .
la brilliant and past*) color*.
APRIL
SHOWERS
TOILETRIES
Tin Fragrance rf Youth
Fragrance aaprrmr in rn youthful perfume by Chemmy. Br
touch that odds glomor . . . th# touch of April Shower*.
in the
1.00
IO*
Each
Ut MMM*
t tooth caornaor* “ w ith
•
Ic for a wean. refreshed mouth.
Barbara Gould
Liquid Velvet
of Peaches
Give*
rn
colorful,
n atu ral
akin
tone th a t can completely glorify
a dull, drab complexion. Choice
of Suntan. Blonde, Mandarin or
Brunette Shade*.
Antlaaptlc
Tooth Bi
teeth.
■park ling.
clean
<1*50
WEEK-END
CASES
20-Inch 8 tao
*2 .4 0
A T T E N T I O N C e r ta in T ellet
P reparation*. I.ogaac*. B ill
fold*, etc., an d Jew elry aub-
jtr t to *0% ta x en d er P ei-
•ra l
In tern al
Bevenne
Act
effe ctiv e April I , 1*44. Alar**
Clock* reta ilin g a t not m ore
th a n 15.0* an d W atch** re
ta ilin g
a t
s o t
m er*
th a n
5*5.00 su b ject to 1*% te x :
n il other* ta x ed M o.
Talcum Powder, {umbo .. 39c
Iou Do Cologne
$1.00
Both Powder .............. $1.00
Both Softener
$1.25
Perfume, purse size . . . . 65c
S achet............................. $1.25
CMfRAMV
M .
SPECIAL SALE!
fWjL _
18-inch size ZIPPER BAGS
—
Ll** Made of heavy, dure
Today Thru Saturday Orly
BOOK
MATCHES
Boa arf 50
W A S *
iB ook,.....................
I
Larga, roomy hogs mod# of hrovy, durohlr
materials. Reinforced, and trimmed leather,
•sd with a zipper opening the length of
the hog. Handy for shopping, week-ending,
traveling sod for carrying baby's requisites.
$2.7$ Value *
TODAY THRU SAT. ONLY
SPECIAL SME — Today, Thru Saturday Only
GLASS ASH
TRAYS
1 9 *
Brooks Tebson
CIGARS
5 for 35c
Box of se—$3.25
Rogers Air-Tite
TOBACCO
POUCHES
31.00 5 $2.50
E W
PINAUD
Jvl Lilac Vegetal
Ten ounce* In all m •
, OC CI* 2 combination pack
age th a t eave* you money.
UM- the small ait* for
traveling. Stock up noel
SPECIAL
$1.92 Value
ror
9 7 *
Only . .. * * 9
SPECIAL!
Daggett I Ramsdell
PERFECT
SHAMPOO
A (olden opportunity to save
on a product of quality. Perfect
shampoo by Daggett Sc Rams
dell . . . for silken sheen you
adore In hair.
EASY! EASY! EASY!
!
m ie n ti
WGBBX
(LH
Shampoo <
$1.50
Bottle
*1
. 0 #
SQUIBB
DEHTAL
CREAM
r 4 3 *
lone lo sting wows . 11 ^
MRSR
xv urn w w e rn ^
,
So easy lo stylet^
■OMI €018 WAY! XS3&
PSP
PLASTIC CORLISS
■ w e S IA #
J
CUMM
l l b n
I t N N M M
w
.
PLASTIC CURIIMS
Helps Rollovo Minor Ache# and
Muscular Pains
ANACIN
r» 3 9 *
r r 5 9 *
TAMPAX
PONDS CREAM
Available In three absorben
cies to suit individual re
quirem ents.
Box
of IO ..
Box of 40 . . . $1.05
3 1 *
Cold Cream for C lean in g , Lique
fying for oily akin cleansing and
Vanishing
for
holding
your
make-up and for th a t refresh
ing • one-m inute" mask.
3 9 *
SOLITAIR
CAKE MAKE-UP
F#r ‘ ‘rum‘legion $1.00
Fashion Point
LIPSTICK
r a tio n e d
I* fit th* Up*.
,on*’
SI.OO
la stin g
..................... W ■ IW W
COLORFUL ASSORTMENT
NOVELTIES
Robblt end Copt
.................... 25c
Rabbit and Egg ...........
45c
Rabbit Novelty .................................... 25c
Sheep N ovelty...................................... 25c
Duck Novelty........................................ 25c
J? * 9
M ammy Lea Peanut
Brittle
a MKP
Pound Box
b r a z i l - n u t
FUDGE
Pound
4 9 *
• r -
S d -----
B O X E D
C A N D I E S
Chocolate Covered Sweets
GOLD CRAFT
M A f
Gold Box, P o u n d ..............
BARONET
M OM
Miniatures, Pound ••••*!• ▼ ■■IU
GOLD CRAFT
M
EM
Chocolates . . . . 2 pound# ▼ ■•O U
MAMMY LOU
B M .
Chocolates, Pound . * • O I K
MYRA MONET
7 H -
Pound ..................
IOO
BATH POWDERS
Sutton* Body Powder ........................................ ....9 6 a
Violet S e c .........................................................................$1.9#
* Lenthertc ...................................................................... $1.50
Ayer* Pink C lover ...................................
Yardley a
................................................... .
Gemey
........................................................
Evening in Pari* .....................................
•Special Stores
$1.25
$1.5#
$1.50
$1.25
t a ?
BATH SALTS
Evening in Paris C rystal* ...............................
Wrisley Crystal*. 4-Pound* .............................
Ba ilia sweet, large size .....................................
Yardley Bath Salt* ..............................................
Old Spice, bath smite .........................................
...$1.23
. . . 59c
...$1.19
...$ 1 5 0
...HO#
IVORY
FLAKES
Large Size
IC *
3 3
For Cough#
••Get Krill and cirl Hr-
lief" . . . from simple
colds . . . tickling and
throat
Irritation caused
by colds.
49*
HOME REMEDIES
$1.00 PEPT0-BISM0L.................... Me
Per (’part Mtumarh
25c FEENAMINT GUM
................I Se
Laxative. Box of I*
We BISODOL ANTACID POWDER ... .49c
Medium st!*. 3-Oanres
*90 EFFERVESCENT SALT............. 57c
IV
Mi**,
R egular
4-Ounce
IOC P. D. ALOPHEN PILLS T
49c
Bettie af lee. for only
SQUIBB MINERAL OIL ...................69c
IV rim. Effective Labricant
WAMP0LES PREPARATION..........$1.04
Bl.I* Pint Site, Par Only
UPGUENTINE OINTMENT.................Alc
SOe Tab* far Miner Barn*
7EMAC0L LOTION..........................Cle
Bl.M Hire. Southing Antileptic
MORINE EYE WASH ................ 49*
Per Tired Rye*, ate Valor
W e reserve Hip right to lim it q u a n tities and refuge i m sell to dealer*.
rGHTEEN
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4 ,
1947
L iste n ^ V o r l d
nurse. W e’d let our poor and weak
go untended and our outlaws run
ioose as wild beasts.
B> L L M E K O B 1 N SO N
“ 1 H 1 W I L L B K D O N E "
I dislike that word “ resignation.**
! have never consciously been re-
ugned in my live. The very notion
raises the hackles on my neck.
Nor do I believe that resignation
* a fine virtue even amongst Chris-
san*. If we actually believed it a
nrtue. we wouldn’t have a hospital
n the land nor a doctor nor a
Fortunately we don’t believe in
[ resignation. We believe in a much
more aggressive and progressive at
titude. We believe that we should
fight every evil with all our power
and cry “ Uncle” only when the evil
is completely beyond our control.
Moreover, I believe we should con
tinue to fight until the problem is
solved and that such struggle is
the core of our civilization.
more hum an < ry than th at final
p rayer— “ Oh
my
Lath er,
if
it
be possible, let this cup
pass
from me: nevertheless not as I
w ill, but as thou w ilt.’*
death deliberately, head high, spirit
unwavering.
Y e t to all of us must come—
to the powerful as well as to the
w eak— issues w hich we cannot
overcome,
problems
w hich
we
cannot
solve,
such
issues
as
there cam e to C h rist when He
entered into the old garden of
Gethsem ane. In all our langu
age there is no more tragic or
Into that prayer God breathed all
our human agony, all our rebellion,
all our vain despair.
For He was not deceived by that
which lay ahead. He had chosen His
lot, and deliberately. And now He
was facing that which lav at its
certain end. Wo belittle him if we
think he went to that end reluct
antly or meekly as a lamb to the
slaughter. He knew full well the
punishment that awaited those who
offended the high priests and the
Roman conquerors.
He was young. He loved life ard
ently. But having chosen His course
He would not turn back. He went
to
His
torture,
humiliation
and
It seems
to
me
there
is
a
great lesson in that to all of us
who must
come
some
day
to
our Gethsem ane— to all of
us
who dare to love and
believe
and give and see our faith be
trayed. To each of
us in
his
turn
must
come
the
scourge,
the crown of thorns, the broken
heart.
We may not avoid these things.
They are part of some great plan
which we cannot comprehend but;
which we must follow. But we can
choose the manner in which we
face them.
We may face them in terror and
hate as lashed cowards, and live
through all our days with everlast-1
ing regret. Or we may face them
with pride and determination, feel-'
ing that however great the punish
ment, our love and trust were W’orth
t lie price. We may weep before
hand and beg that the cup may I
pass. But when it does not pass we
drink
it to its bitter dregs like
men. and as men we drink and
murmur, “Thy will be done.”
Human life is a frail and fre
quently a sordid thing. But it has
its moments. And I know of no
nobler
moment
than
that which
comes to pass when a man takes
his
fate
in
his
hands
and
ac
cepts it without whinning. For in
that moment he touches the dignity
of a god.
(C opyright. 1947. K in g Features Syn dicate*
Driver Fined $2 0.75
In Headon Collision
Robert
Hook
is
credited
with
inventing
the
compound
micro
scope in 1665.
Charged with reckless driving fol
lowing a headon collision on Town
Hill Mountain Tuesday afternoon,
! Joseph J. Shugrue. 617 Frederick
Street, was fined $20.75 when ar
raigned before Magistrate Oliver H
(Bruce,
Jr.,
in
Trial
Magistrates
Court Wednesday. He entered a plea
of guilty.
State Trooper William F Baker,
who made the arrest, .said Shugru«
failed to make a curve and crashed
headon
against
a
tractor - trailer
truck
operated
by
Steve
Sefcik,
Hightstown, N. J.
Stewart N. Williams, Moscow, P a ,
charged with exceeding 30 mile> ar.
hour on Route 40 at Amcelle March
29. forfeited bond of $6 45. He w aj
arrested
by
Trooper
Harry
Hol-
singer.
Cornish tin mines have enough
ore
reserves
to permit contmuu
operation for 50 to 100 years, »
is estimated.
Favorite Vesserf with Babies-
' ¿c,. •: "
BORROW SENSIBLY
If ytm need co»h for Spring oxptnsci,
am Mrvic« is prompt, friendly ond
privat «.
Loons up to $300.00
We prefer fo moke loom
cm ugnature j alone
INDUSTRIAL LOAN
SOCIETY. INC.
W«, 301, Liberty Trust Bldg.
Phone 97
í>m ootfi.Delicious
U E I N Z
S T R A IN E R A P P L E
S A U C E
YELLOW TOP CAB
Delivery Service
A N D GENERAL HAULING
4841-J
Quick
24
Hour Service
Anywhere — Any Time
A*
NOT too Tart* •
NOT too Sweet *
Just Eight 6>r Your
Infant
.«A
sâ u - e
ce.
I*/
cA«»4' 0* ,,
K
S *» c* boe
e*V*C'c 0tA»«"1.' onV!
S . *
° °
io F '
o d o *
% vte'vO7.
r
'
2L
- . 1
«à? -
Write Your Own Check» As You
Need Them.
Open A
Speciot Checking Account
Y O U B U Y 15
C H E C K S F O R
1.00
m in im u m b a la n ce req u ired
AFo ch a rg e fo r d e p a rts
THE COMMERCIAL
SAVINGS BANK
City Ra il ftq. _
Cumberla nd. Md.
Memb er fed . Dep o sit In su ra n ce Co rp .
look "for ih 6
Complete Line o f
H E IN Z B A B / FO O D S
RE F U S A L S • M E A TS • V E G E TA B L E S • F RU ITS • O E S S E RTS
W ËÊÊKSÊBBBSÊBB"**
that will be
deeply cherished
$5 .95 „ $15 .95
A gift to be treasured
forever. Beautiful Ros
ary Beads and Crucifix,
exquisitely boxed.
From
mm • * ¥ • 9
Open an
'LB'
'
Account
â L B Í R N Í T Í I N
9-H N.CENTRE
Tra d itio na lly Yo urs
.
What’s Easter Without
Colored Eggs!
Egg Dyes
PAAS _
I Pk'* 25«
PRESTO
pk* l(k
CHICK CHICK... Pk* 10«
For Pickling F.ggs .. . Use
Iona Cut
Beets
2 oJ 19c
1
»Mi
21«
It’s the truth, fo lk s, a nd its a ctua l,
A & P D a iry Fo o d s a re sa tief a ctua l!
FRESH BUTTER
„
Ä ilvert> rook R o H
y e w
Prtc«*
MEI -0-RIT CHEESE
...........
A m e ric a n o r P im e n to
CRESTVIEW EGOS
______
G m LCMHeed to R o ti *4y
70c
Sic
Sunnybrook Eggs
FRESH . . . ORAOF “ A"
•n o b meet InapeeAed
b r
*a -
■rii . . . »Muring you th*
Inett
P*#trr
egg*
obtain
able . . . uo matter how you
preparo them. They've ivand.
D(hb« i 55c
Add Zip to Easter Meals
With A&P Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Iceberg Lettuce
2 “ 17c
F re *h from ( ';ilit«»rni>i
gram i lor *hIh<Is
*irr Htl
Beets or Carrots
2 " " 1 7 c
Y oung
tend er
garden-fre*h
Florida Oranges
8 hB“55c
C hock fu ll of
sva ert, golden juiee
Eastern Apples
3
35c
Ex cellent fo r co o king
_ _ _I ’. S. No . 1
Juicy Seedless
Grapefruit
6
29c
*’*'k Ik
p~ * 50«
Texa* ^ F o r
80'»
CALIF. PASCAL CFI.FRV »-'** K *
MAINE POTATOES *• • ■*• »
YELLOW ONIONS *• *• *•*•»
. » “ > '** 25«
FRESH PINE APPI ES
................
"«* 25c
Last chanee to buy those delie tous . , .
er*
HOT CROSS BUNS
The»«» d e lic io u »ly ap iry , fru it ft lk d
t i n t í n favorite» w ill be ta k e n o ff
«»le
S a tu r d a y n ig h t.
K n jo y
them
w h ile y o u ra n .
T a r k a * * o f 0 ........ 29c
Easter Layer Cake..............79c
'5o la ye r golden ..ap rico t tillin g , n u rx h m allo w Icing topped w iH i toAkfed cocoannl
Dated Sugared Donuts
21c
■lane P a rk e r ..
grand
for hreakfnst
»r atvytime
Marvel Enriched Bread ... .Ill 13c
liia s fa better
— Kee|m t»etier_.
Spread* b etter
Ttude* b etter
Iv o r y
Soap
Iugular
Si/,«* 2 c 21c
Iv o r y
Soap
Fo r Gra nd Ea sier Ea ting
Jr
immrnrnntmmtmc mrrttrttttrtttt
FAMOUS NAMES IN HAMS
M**
« O H '
■ ***»
READY-TO-EAT and
SMOKED, SKINNED
Hams
tom ona.
emtmre-
»m ok«si
o r
re a d y -to -e a t
^
R a m »
ar«»
«n r
n n m h o
Ms§
f ‘.
one
ehoie#
fo r
U a t e r
V
feaater». S e rv e th em w ith
I k
Sn n n > b ro o k
fo r
a M
Mm
A
13-18 Lh. WHOLE
W/HSK HALF................ “ • We
MTT HALF .................“ * 85#
★
Owr Kaff twatnw d o W O T tw»>e m i*
ixmfme
e#
v e m o v e G l
SA10KED PtCNICS ________
■*
X u n n y fie ld
R e a d y -te -e e d . . . . M
I k
FANCY SLAB BACON................. »
G r u W *'A ‘* . . . W h o la w R a t i
SLICED BACON
.................»■ M#
G ra d # " A ' 1
h *4i aand^ O fh e r R r w A l
FANCY, «RAW “ A"
Hen Turkeys
HemVjk - t o - O o o k
/ b e ia
M - 141- R k Apyee a # **
«5
C
ROASTING CHICKENS
____
Pk
F re «h , F o k y deeaaed
PRYtNTi CHICKENS
_____ ** IS*
Teewh, F b H> d r ea aed
FANCY THICKI IN(tS
.......
lie
L o n g
In la n d
fu ll«
deeaaed
SPECIAL EASTER
Klobassi
i » 59c
VEAL RUMP R O A S T .......
VEAL SHOULDER CHOPS .
TENDER VEAL CUTLETS ..
VEAL RIB CHOPS ............
BONELESS STEWING VEAL
lb. 55c
lb. 49c
lb. 7Se
lb. 69c
lb. 50c
Fish a nd Sea fo o d
FROZEN HADDOCK FILLETS
’**
FROZEN REDFISH FILLETS
............. •* 27c
FROZEN SALMON STEAKS
**■ 55*
FRESH STEWING 0VSTFRS
Ps~ 6t<
FROZEN GREFN SHRIMP
.................... M*
« O'CLOCK
Coffee
Uh. 39c
Ked Gírele,
X Ib a. 81 r
B o k a r
Lb. 4Se
White House
Evaoorated
Milk
4 “ 47c
F o rtifia i!
w ith
4041
('n it*
V ita m in
Its per p int.
Sp ring Clea ning N eed s
For AH Varnished or Pstaled Surface*
A-PENN FLOOR WAX
FURNITURE POLISH
NOCTH. CLEANER
p*»»t
m i.
2 ^ 4
A -P e n n X - o f
IN I
l J ,
l l , h .
P k g .
j Q c
i
Spie & Span .
Mt«. 21c I •
m s:!-
Per-
»oiial
Tn k ct 17c
Dreft
ThaA
M in c ie
hn áa III a ro v ery
P a rk a g r
Crisco
51c
1.47
C M
n.h.
Can
Sweetheart
Soap
I.arge
H . l u x e i al*«» 17c
EIGHTEEN
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL
1947
Listen NA/orld
By ELSIE ROBINSON
I
-THV HILL BE DONE”
I dislike that word “resignation.”
! have never consciously been re
u s e d in my live. The very notion
raises the hackles on my neck.
Nor do I believe that resignation
a a fine virtue even amongst Chris-
iniis. If i e actually believed it a
nrtue. we wouldn’t have a hospital
n the land nor a doctor nor a
nurse. We d let our poor and weak
go untended and our outlaws run
loose as wild beasts.
|
Fortunately we don't believe in
I resignation. We believe in a much
more aggressive and progressive a t
titude. We believe that we should
fight every evil with all our power
and cry “Uncle” only when the evil
is completely beyond our control.
Moreover, I believe we should con
tinue to fight until the problem is
solved and that such struggle is
the core of our civilization.
Yet to all of tis must come—
to the powerful as well as to the
weak—issues which we cannot
overcome, problems which we
cannot solve, such issues as
there catne to Christ when He
entered into the old garden of
Gethsemane. In all our langu
age there is no more tragic or
more human cry than that final
prayer—“Oh my Father, if it
be possible, let this cup pass
from me: nevertheless not as I
will, but as thou wilt.”
Into that prayer God breathed all
our human agony, all our rebellion,
all our vain despair.
For He was not deceived by that
which lay ahead. He had chosen His
lot, and deliberately. And now He
was facing that which lay at its
certain end. We belittle him if we
think he went to that end reluct
antly or meekly as a lamb to the
slaughter. He knew full well the
punishment that awaited those who
offended the high priests and the
Roman conquerors.
He was young. He loved life ard
ently. But having chosen His course
He would not turn back. He went
to His torture, humiliation
and
death deliberately, head high, spirit
unwavering.
•
It seems to me there is a
great lesson in that to all of us
who must comr some day to
our Gethsemane—to all of us
who dare to love and believe
and give and see our faith be
trayed. To each of us in his
turn must come the scourge,
the crown of thorns, the broken
heart.
We may not avoid these things.
They are part of some great plan
which we cannot comprehend but
which we must follow. But we can
Ichoose the manner in which we
face them.
We may face them in terror and
hate as lashed cowards, and live
through all our days with everlast
ing regret. Or we may face them
with pride and determination, feel
ing that however great the punish
ment. our love and trust were worth
tile price. We may weep before
hand and beg that the cup may
pass. But when it does not pass we
drink it to its bitter dregs like
men. and as men we drink and
murmur, "Thy will be done.”
Human Hie is a frail and fre
quently a sordid thing. But it has
1 its moments. And I know of no
nobler moment than that which
comes to pass when a man takes
his fate in his hands and ac
cepts it without whlnnlng. For in
that moment he touches the dignity
of a god.
• Copyright. 1947. King EYatures Syndicate*
i
Robert
Hook
is credited
with
inventing
the
compound
micro
scope in 1665.
Driver Fined $20.75
In Headon Collision
Charged with reckless driving fol
lowing a headon collision on Town
Hill Mountain Tuesday afternoon.
Joseph J. Shugrue. 617 Frederick
Street, was fined 120.75 when ar
raigned before Magistrate Oliver H
Bruce,
Jr.. in Trial
Magistrates
Court Wednesday. He entered a plea
of guilty.
State Trooper William F. Baker.
who rnaJe the arrest, said Shugruo
failed to make a curve and crashed
headon against a tractor - trailer
truck operated
by Steve Sefcxk.
Hightstown. N. J.
Stewart N. Williams. Moscow. Pa.
charged with exceeding 30 miles an
hour on Route 40 at Amceile Marcn
29. forfeited bond of $6 45. He wa*
arrested by Trooper Ham
Hoi-
singer.
Cornish tm mines have era)tub
ore reserves to permit contmuu
operation for 50 to IOO years, I
is estimated.
Favorite Dessert with Babies'
i s .
t
o
BORROW SENSIBLY
B BM —ad coak for Spring expanse!,
mr terrace ii prompt, friendly gad
privet*.
Loo ut tap to $300.00
We prefer to moke horn
rn npncterei e/one
INDUSTRIAL LOAN
SOCIETY, INO.
Ne. 301, Liberty Trull Bldg.
Phone 97
mooHi,P*lieious
MEINZ
RAI NEP APPLE
SAUCE
YELLOW TOV CAI
Delivery Service
AND GIN ERAL HAULING
NOT too Tart’
NOT too Sweet-:
Just Right ‘fbr Vour
Infant
* a*** VS***
-
Quick Mf Hoer Service
Anywhere — Any Time
Write Tear Owe Checks As Yoe
Need Them. Open A
Spi ciol Checking Account
YOD BUY 1ft
CHECKS FOB
1 . 0 0
BP minimum m in e * required
fro chargt foe deposits
THE COMMERCIAL
SATINCS BANK
o a r SUM Sp. — Onnabartand. MS.
Member fid. Deposit Insurance Corp.
heiin
HEINZ MRT FOODS
BBMALB "MOATS • VMCTASLBS • MUNIS • OftSSIKVB
deeply cherished
$535 ,o $1535
A gift to be treasured
forever. Beautiful Ros
ery Beode end Crucifix,
exquisitely boxed.
Open an
'LB'
Account
Ck L B € R N J T € IN
9-11 N.C€NTR€
l l
rn
Traditionally Yours. e
e
For Grand Easter Eating}r
mmmmmmmummtm tm m tuum m iittmmammmmmmmmm
FAMOUS NAMES IN HAMS
NIO****
A ff
■UNNHrXBLe
Whafs Easter Without
Colored Eggs!
Egg Dyes
PAAS
1 ^ * 2So
PRESTO
" • bk
CHICK CHICK...
ll*
luiunumiwnm tnaanuiiimwniiiiiuwtm
For Pickling Eggs . . . Use
Iona Cut
Beets
Ifs the truth, folks, and ifs
A A P Dairy Foods are satiefactuaU
READY-TO-EAT and
SMOKES, SKINNED
Hams
6 3
snaked ne rowdy-to eat
B aal nr^ our am ber
mn e tanto*
tor
Rase tor
len tira. (tore* ibm with
IL
laaaybreek Keen tor a
*
grand trawl.
IS -It LL VV NOLI
FRESH BUTTER ........
gllvaftraak BoU
Hew Lew Petro
MEL-O-BIT CHEESE.........
Amerlru nr Ft na Mi to
CRESTVIEW EGOS_______
Qnarantirj I* NeMrfR
70*
SI*
ess
mum MLP
BITT MLP
•
oooe e
On HOV
removedM
Sun ny brook Eggs
BQCfll
(M H M •A 1
rWieOTV # 0 0 VNraWKr
H
2 cl! 19c
2 to. * 4 Cann 2 | |
aorta . .
Barat
abt* . .
M ia r la i yea th*
r g ga
ahtaia-
aantter b r a y«a
. T bey’ro RVaat.
55c
SMOKED PICNICS
taaay field
Ready
FANCY SLAB BACON
BgM^ MAM
u m o an me#
SI.ICED BACON
Meade **A*'
FANCY, QRADE “ A*
Hen Turkeys
• m B -
IM -IK
A dd Zip to Easter Meals
With A A P Fresh Fruits and
J
». 63c
Iceberg Lettuce......2
Frrnh from I nlifnrnia _
grand for ealnd*
Beets or Carrots
2'
Young
tender
__ garden-fre«h
Lb. Bag
R0AST1N0 CHICKENS _
FRYING CHICKEN*____
FANCY DUCKLINGS
me
me
It *
Florida Oranges
8:
Chock full of aw rat, gulden Juke
Eastern Apples
3 “ 35c
Excellent for cauking
IT. X. No. I
CALIF. PASCAL CELERY
J.k
MAINE POTATOES
........ * * Soc
YELLOW ONIONS * *
....
FRESH PINEAPPLES •r " ........................... ■“ * 2 5 *
Juicy Seedless
Grapefruit
6 ~ 29c
Texan
RO**
SPECIAL EASTER
Klobassi
59c
VEAL RUMP R O A ST ....................lh. SSc
VEAL SHOULDER C H O PS
lb. 49c
TENDER VEAL CUTLETS . . . . lb. 7S«
VIAL RIB CHOPS.........................lb. 69«
BONELESS STEWING VEAL . . » . 50c
Fish and Seafood
FROZEN HADDOCK FILLETS
* ti*
FROZEN REDFISH FILLETS
27*
FROZEN SALMON STEAKS
** SS*
FRESH STEWING OYSTERS
" " t h
FROZEN (KEEN SHRIMP.............**• Mc
iiiiiiinum m iium iim fm im nnim m iittinnnim w tiiiiniiuiiuninifuim niniB im iiiium tttmtwwtnittittttttwnM iRttunwt
Last abanet to buy those doAsioen ,, »
A O'CLOCK
Coffee
u 39c
Rad Girt'lr.
t Iba. tie
Itotuur
Lb. t ic
HOT CROSS BUNS
White House
Evaporated
Milk
4 “ 47c
Fortified with 4*0 I ah*
Yltania IM pet plat.
Th*** Aelieiaaoly opirjr, frail W et
lenten favor Hee will hr bakra aff
•air Saturday night.
Rainy them
I. Pi
wkU* y*a can. farkag* of 0
Easter Layer Cake............ 79c
Two layer golden...apricot filling, rn trxhniallnw Iring topped wUh toanted Coronita*
Dated Sugared Donuts
21c
Jane P a rk e r.,
grand for breakfast! ._
or u f f t h M
Marvel Enriched Bread
7^ I
Tnanta better
It rape better
Spread* bettor.
tm iiuiiiiiiim m um u n im n m in n u n im u n in m n w im u tm m iu u in n iim nwM W W tm m m taunMum
Spring Cloasting Needs
F or AN V arnished o r P ainted S oriaee*
21c
Spic & Span
A-PENN FLOOR W AX
.........
25*
FURNITURE POI ISH
*■ *»
■» 17c
NOCTi. CLEAMER........... *•**• n * It*
\ i s \ N v\\k v
i
f«‘gul»r
Hire
Ivory
Soap
2 r«k™ 21c
P er-
onnnl
Ivory
Soap
2 r . , « 2,7c
Dreft
T hai MI— to
node D tarom y
Largo
M
A .
Package
Sweetheart
Soap
Larga
d ■■
Tbeluxa Cake JL g y
Ra dio in Rev iew“—
n Nel works Wi l l
Ai y JO H N CRUSH Y
Laster On The Air
listeners will have
î of
mi
a rich
if Easter music, drama and
try to choose from on Sun-
;h in fact, that you had
better make your
selections in ad
vance. Of all the
special
ptofci»*"-
planned for East
er, certainly the
most ambitious is
the
C o l u m b i a
Broadcasting Sys
tem's
full
hour
program * * T h e
Son
Ol
M an,'
which is possibly
the first Passion
Play ever written
e x c l u s i v ely for
for radio.
Man ' was prepared
—vou can hardly say it was written
— try Archibald MacLeiah from the
itory of the passion and the Resur
rection in tlie King James version
©I the Bible
The text Is confined
entirely to the Gospels of Matthew.
Mark. Luke and John, who are the
only speaking voices portrayed. The
v ¿sic will consist of selections from
Jnfisnn Sebastian Bachs “Matthew
Ptssion,” “ John Passion” and the
B Minor Mass
The production Is
t r e s u l t of months ol work and
► udy by the best brains in C B S and
should be well worth listening to.
(CBS 1:30 to 2 30 p. m. ES T).
The story of the Resurrection will
• *0
be
dramatized
on the ad-j
n.liable “ Greatest Story Ever Told”
program
<ABC 6:30
p. m. EST).
Tins drama will complete a .series
three which depicted on suc
cessive Sundays the betrayal, the
Crucifixion and the resurrection of
Christ.
Feature Good
Jo hn Cro sby
*The Son Of
IT S A M A Z IN G . . .
To know who is the most
powerful Communist in Amer
ica, as rev eoled in the neV
sensational instalment of "I
VVos in Stalin's Spy Ring/'
The Communist is Charles
Dirbo, who hos supreme com
mand ov er the American Com
munist Party nex t to Stalin
himself! Ev ery reader of this
startling confession will realize
*h y
J.
Edgor
Hoov er
colls
Communists the most danger
ous 5th column that Americo
hos ev er known.
Ih r re will be several special pro
grams 1 or early risers.
As usual.
C BS will broadrast the traditional
dawn service ol the old Moravian
Church at Winston-Salem. N. C. <6
to 7 a m EST>, which has been an
annual event since 1766.
NBC will
cover the dawn service at Radio
City in New' York at which the Rev.
Halford
E
Luccock of the Yale
University Divinity School will de
liver the sermon. <8:05 a. m. EST)
from Hollywood, ABC
will bring
the sunrise services at thm Holly
wood Bowl <8:30 a. m EST). This
event,
incidentally,
will
have
a
distinctly Holylwood flavor with a
couple of child movie stars, Claude
Jarman. Jr. and Elizabeth Taylor,
delivering respectively “The Lord's
Prayer”
and
“Salutation
to
the
Dawn." a recital which will not be
greeted with delirious enthusiasm
by just everyone.
The air will !>c
full of
Easter
music running the gamut from Bach
to Irving Berlin.
One of the high
lights will certainly bo Arturo Tos
canini leading the NBC Symphony
in the final concert of the season
<5 p. m. E S T) which will open with
tiie prelude and Good Friday music
from Wagner's “ Parsifal." It will be
an all Wagner program.
The Now
¡Yolk Philharmonic under the di
rection of Iicopold Stokowski will
play the Choral from Bach's Easter
Cantata,
the
good
Friday
music
from Parsifal, and Rimsky-Korsak
off's "Russian Easter.” (C BS 3 p i
m EST)
1
I he Easter parade will of course
(^Dine in for its share of attention.
The Mutual Broadcasting System
will pick up descriptive broadcasts
from Parts, London, New York City.
Chicago, and Main Street in Shenan
doah. Iowa. (11:30 a. m. EST) Fan
nie Hurst, an expert at that sort ol
thing, will handle New York’s Fifth
Avenue
crowd.
The
handful ol
citizens who own television sets will
be able to see the show at home via
NBC s
television
station
W N B T
which will set up its cameras in
front of Rockefeller Center
From
3:30 to 3:45 p. m. (EST>, ABC will
present on-the-spot descriptions ol
the Easter finery from the m ain“
thoroughfares of New York
Chi
cago. Detroit, Hollywood, and S a n ,
Francisco.
Fri day Proarars
By C. E. BUTTERFIELD
N EW Y O RK , April 3
Good F ri
day
programs
and
another C BS
documentary, this one on the na
tions
health, are on the network
lists for Fiday.
The Good Friday
broadcasts as
announced
in
ad
vance :
M B S— 10:15 a. m., Narration of
"Three Years."
*
NBC— 12:15
p. m , Holy week ser
vice from Chicago; 12:30 p. m., Can
tata, “ Seven Last Words of Christ;’
7 p. m., Supper club from Duke Uni
versity, Durham, N. C., Perry Como
and a 150-voice choir.
The C BS documentary is title
“ A Long Life and a Merry One,’
and will go into the hour at
1<
cancelling It Pays to Be Ignoran
for one time. The program will de;
j with medical science, medical care
longevity and other health ques
tions.
Mark Warnow'.t Soundoff. which
has been an M B S feature since lat'
last summer, switches back to CB£
at a 7:30 time. The Andrews sisters
are guests.
Earl Browder, former head of thr
Communist party, is to be question
ed in Meet the Pres» on M B S at 10
. . . Speaker at 10:45 on NBC Is to
t>e Sen. Glen H. Taylor of Idaho.
The Radio Clock
WTBO Highlights
FR ID A Y , APRIL 4
Tim * I* « a s te rn sta n d a rd . F or c * n tra i
s ta n d a rd s u b tra c t on# h o u r, fo r moun>
ta in a ta n d a rd s u b tra c t tw o h o u r*. S o m *
• ocal s ta tio n s ch a n g e h o u r of re la y to fit
local sch ed u le*. L a s t m m u ts p ro g ram
ch a n g e * can n o t be in clu d ed .
7 00
7 30
7 15
« 0 0
ft IS
R 45
9 00
C opyright. 10,7 . N
T Trib u n ,. In « .
IT'S IN APRIL
COSMOPOLITAN
Adv.—T-April 3 N-April 4
SW IFTS PREMIUM
HAMS, whole or holf
= E
,b* f t . i r
Examine
all
trees
and
shrubs
which were moved last fall, or dur-
j ing the winter, so as to be sure they
are not loosened from the soil or
heaved out by the frost or wind.
Ü
CHICKENS
_
—_ Root) mg lb
Fry er»
1 MANTHEIY’S 1
I
MARKET
=
400 York Place
HÏ1IIIIIIII ^one 2847 ||||||||f|
45 th ANNIVERSARY
MORE FLAVOR
PER CUP AND
’MORE
CUPS PER
POUND
Than When
Caffee A lane
k
U s e d ^ = -
0 « * I p H
SPECIAL
—
( fy l< s e u
i$
0
u
e
a
iy
E v e n in g
6 .00
N > »n R e p o rt fur !5 M lr m — nbc
E r ic Sevnrr-id
N e t r i
P e rio d — ch*
N e tw o rk
S ile n t
(1 h r.)
a be-east
T e ii y S e r ia l In R e p e a t—a h c- w e a t
H o p IJa r r ig a n R e p e a t— m bs-w est
6 :15
A m e r ic a S e re n a d e ; S p o rts — nbc
R e p o rt F ro m W a s h in g to n — cha
S k y K in g In R e p e n t— a b r- n e s t
6 30
lied Ita rb e r K- S p o rts Tim e
che
J a c k A rm s tro n g R e p e a t— a b c- w e st
C a p t. M id n ig h t R e p e a t— m b s-w est
6 46— R o w e ll Th o m a s f b N e w s e a s t — nbc
W o rld N e w s A- C o m m e n ta ry — rb s
Te n n e s s e e Je d
R e p e a t — sh e- w est
Torn M ix In R e p e a t— m bs w est
7 :00 — R a d io ’s S fip p e r C lu b — n b c- b a sir
M y s te r y
D ra m a
fo r
W e e k — cb*
N e w s an d C o m m e n ta r y — a be
F u lto n L e w is , J r . , C o m m e n t — m bs
7 :15— N e w s A- C o m m e n t of W o rld — n b r
J a c k S m ith S e rie s fo r S o n g — cbs
E lm e r D a v is C o m m e n ta r y — ab c
D a n c in g M u s ic O rch . (15 M > — m bs
7 :30
Th e
M a n o r
H o u se
P a r ty — nbc
To B e A n n o u n c e d — cbs
- Th e L o n e R a n g e r D r a m a — a b c
H e n r y J . T a y lo r C o m m e n t — m bs
7 :45— H
V . K a lte n b o rn C o m m e n t— n b r
B ill B r a n d t S p o rts C o m m e n t— m bs
1:00— Th e
P a u l L a v a lla M e lo d y — nbc
F a fm y B r ic e as B a b y S n o o k s— cb«
F a t
M a n ,
D e te c tiv e
D r a m a — abc
B u r l Iv e s R e co rd e d S o n g s — m bs
8 :15— V e r a H o lly , Th e D ’ A r c y s — m bs
8 :30— A la n Y o u n g C o m e d v S h o w — nbc
A d v e n tu re s o f th e Th in M a n — cbs
T h is Is F .B . I. . D ra m a S e r ie s — ab c
L e a v e It to G irls , G u e s t— m bs
8 :55— F iv e M in u te s N e w s P e r io d — cbs
9:00— P e o p le A re F u n n y In S t u n t s — nbc
G ln n y
S im m s
an d
V a r ie t y — cha
B r e a k th e B a n k , a (ju lz S h o w — a b c
G a b r ie l H e a tt e r C o m m e n t— m bs
9:15— R e a l L if e D r a m a S e r ie s — m bs
• ;30— A b a L y m a n 's W a ltz T im e — nbc
M o o re and D u ra n te C o m e d y — cb*
S h e r iff’s D e te c tiv e D r a m a — a b c
B u lld o g
D ru m m o n d
D r a m a — m bs
9:55— F iv e M in u te s S p o rts S p o t— a b c
10:00 — M y s te r y T h e a te r M y s te rie s — nbc
It P a y s to R e Ig n o r a n t— cbs
B o x in g
B o u t.
S p o rts
S h o w — ab c
M e e t th e P re s s in In t e r v ie w s — m bs
10:30— B ill S te rn , H is S p o rts S p o t— nbc
To B e A n n o u n c e d — cbs
D a te N ig h t, P o p u la r Tu n e s — m b*
10:45— W e e k ly T a lk s by G u e s ts — nbc
11:00— N e w s fo r lfi M in u te s — n b c- b aslc
S u p p e r C lu b R e p e a t— o th e r nbc
N e w s , V a r ie ty , D a n ce , 2 h rs .— ch*
N e w s and D a n e * B a n d H o u r— ab c
N e w s. D a n ce B a n d , 2 h o u rs — m b s
11: 15— V a r ie t y A N e w « to 1 a .m .— n b c
12:00— D a n c e B a n d H r . — a b c- w e s t o n ly
1 0 0 0
10 10
10:45
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11:30
11:45
12:15
12 45
I .00
1 45
2 00
2 15
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3 15
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4 00
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7 :00
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30
:00
:30
00
.10
10 00
10 30
10 45
11:00
11:15
11:30
12:00
Ynw n Patro l.
New*.
Special flood F rid a y Program .
W o rld New* Round-Up (N B C ).
M orning Melodies.
N ew s.
Honeym oon In New Y ork
(N B C
M orning M editation*
N't l*ou O lm ste d iN H C I.
M usic for Frid a y
Road nt I,If« (N lU ’ t.
Jo yce Jo rd a n . M l)
(N B C ).
Krrd W a rin g Allow <N B C ).
Ja c k Herch 8 how (N H C l,
M u m c at M id-Day
M id-D ay News.
W ord * and M usic iNB<’ ».
Sketches in Melody (N B C ).
Robert M cCorm ick
(N B C ).
To d ay's C h ild ren iN B O .
W o m a n In W h ite tN B C i,
M a sq u e ra d e iN U C i
B e tty C rocker tN B C ).
New s.
I.ile Can Be B ea u tifu l <NBC).
Ma Perk in s iN B C t.
P rp p rr Y ou ng ’s Fam ily tN B C ),
Right to M ap p in g s (N B C ).
Hackblage W ife (N B C ).
B trlla D allas (N B C *.
Lorenzo Jones (N B C t.
Young W id d rr Brow n tN B C ).
Moods in Music,
Parent-Teachers Program .
News.
/
Y o u r G arden.
C a p ta in
Stubby
and
The
B u c
caneers.
News (N B C ).
Serenade to Am erica (N B C ).
The Sportsm an's Corner.
W in n ie The W ave.
The Supper Club (N B C t.
News of the W o rld tN B C ).
H yndm an H igh School Band .
Bin g Crosby.
The A llan Young Show (N B C ),
People Arc F u n n y tN B C t,
W a ltz Tim * tN B C i.
M ystery Th eatre tN B C ).
H ere’s To Veterans.
Ta lk by Sen. G len H. TavlA r
(N B C t.
News from N B C (N B C ).
H arkness of W ashington
(N B C t.
Th e W o rld s G re a t Novels (N B C ).
News (N B C t.
For a Delicious,
EASTER DINNER
DRIVE OUT TO GORDON'S
D in n e rs
S e rv e d
S u n d a y
12:30 P. M . 't il
11:00 P .
M.
(W eek
D a y * 5 P .
M. ’til I A. M.)
R e s e rv a tio n s N o t N e ce ssary
GORDONS
GRILL
3 Vii les Out Oidtown Road
"Little Lady "
TOILET WATER
A lovely addition to that precious
E A S T E R B A S K E T
Not Mother's . . .
HER VERY O W N COSMETICS
By Helene Pessl
23 N. Liberty
Svi’
Phone 457 6
]
Moite r, Heav y Duty
BATTERIES
For All M a ke i of
CARS and TRUCKS
JOE
THE
MOTORIST
FRIEND
17 3 Ba ltimo re St.
Pho ne 6 9 0
h r*t g rad e
Ih 59c
Mcot
Href, Po rk,
V« *a l. l a m b .
R o a s t in g
a n d
Frying
C htrkrn*
BUTTER ....
gold
Ih 69c
HAMS e w ift's p re m iu m
<•>
w ilao n c e rtifie d
whole a r
sh an k h a lf
Ih 62c
COOKIES S
.
IX 35c
B u r r y 'a H o m esp i
C
r r C
L a rg e 4< ranl*ville
k U U O
A||
« h ile
.............
dot 55c
V E G E TA B L E S — Including: Calif.
Vsparacus, Grren Onions, Ra d is hr*,
New
Berta . Rhuba rb, Fresh
Pine
a pple.
for Letter Meo fj and Groceri es
Carl M clnty re
436 Cumberiend St.
Phones 348 0, 3481, 348 2
FLY
OVER LAKE GORDON
FROSTBURG, CELANESE and KELLY
IN A 5
• PASENGER BEECHCRAFT
.50
ROUND
TRIP
PER
PERSON
EASTER SUNDAY
BEECHCRAFT, STINSON, 2 CRUISERS
AVAILABLE FOR FLIGHTS
MAKE IT A PARTY
Cumberland Airway s Inc.
Phone 39 09
Municipal Airport
FREE FLIGHTS SUNDAY
Tiid
11is
subject
"Foreign
Policy
,'risis.”
Burl Ives Ls going to do his M B S
’5 minutes at
8 “ live'’ instead of
om recordings because Bing Cros-
)y ls to drop around as the guest.
Because of Good Friday there will
e no weekly fi ;ht, so ABC is pre-
rnting the ABC Symphony orehes-
.a at 10 and Hal M cIntyre’s band
it 10:30.
Bill Stern is doing for NBC al
30 11 w* first of several broadcasts
rom the Masters goli tournament
at Augusta, Ga.
How Australia
Became Known
As 'Parrot Land'
Sand
It is time ior the kitchen gardener
to prepare a planting schedule for
the season. To reap as large a harv
est of fresh vegetables as possible
lrom a limited area it is essential to
chart planting dates and arrange
for succession plantings.
jt/Pt Newsieatures
D A RW IN —A
16th century map
and one of the earliest In which any
j part of Australia Ls shown depicts
the outline on the northern coast
line with the words “ terra pstttaco-
rum”—"land of parrots.” That, was
a pretty accurate observation be-
I cause Australia has the greatest
variety of parrots of any country.
There are 59 Australian species
of the order Psittaciformes • par
rot-like birds)—and 16 1 species in
the Australian region which takes
in Now Zealand and tiie oceanic
islands from Wallace’s Line
(be
tween
Bali and
Lombok
in
the
Malay Archipelago) to the
wich Islands.
Australian parrots range
from
the tiny ftg-parrots
great black cockatoo. Probably the
best, known is the budgerigar (Mcl-
opsittacus
undulatus),
the
tiny
green-and-yellow
warbling
grass
|parrots which are bred all over the
world today but take on nearly a
1 hundred delicate and exotic colors
in the cages of expert breeders.
in
to
size
the
YOU’RE
-J
GETTING
WARM!
r6 = f
For ICf
IC E C R E A M
IN S U R A N C E
O r a l m ot f
owyHwg w i*
A third of Denmark’s population
earns
its
living
by
farming
or
fishing.
'
LOOK in the YELLOW PAGES
•4 Y eve T*l*pbo n* Dtr*«)*ry
your fam y 's cereal favori tes/
Q u aker
West Side Residents
Your FORD’S
LEE ST. STORE
Prescription
Dept.
Is now open and staffed by highly
efficie nt professional pharmacists.
FORD'S DRUG STORES
Cumberland and
Frostburg
FOR FIRE
EXTINGUISHER
SALES AND SERVICE
See The Men Who Know
PROVEN EQUIPMENT
QuœJ/e ï *PticÁ O'Tcjt
1 Quaker Puffed Wheat Spa rkle t
1 Quaker Puffed Rtce Sparkle«
2 Quaker M uffe t*
2 Quaker Corn Fla ke *
2 Quaker Rice Flakes
2 Quaker Wheat Fla ke *
IS A WISE INVESTM ENT
CUMBERLAND FIRE
EQUIPMENT SUPPLY
P. O. Box 7 7 8 , Cumberland, Md.
IO SERVINGS...6 CEREALS
T/re
/ost won/m
cereo/
co/ £ /res/rttess/
D A IN T Y
D E L L
E V A P O R A T E D
MILK
“ Enriched With Vita min I)"
6 r , 6 9 c
Vesper Melting Sug a r Very Tende j
Peas
No.
2 35c
P re m ie r W hole
Beets
2
No. 2
cans 35c
S to kle rg
Cut Beets 2
21c
C ha se a nd S a n b orns In sta n t
COFFEE
K E N N Y S
N O R W O O D
COFFEE.................
M r 47 c
MAYONNAISE
„,45c
D U j f i l i c Ir r A h
H u n t *
TOMATO SAUCE
s •*.
can
5c
SPAM or TREET
19 AC. 41c
P re m ie r
SPICED PEARS
1 35c
ja r
la rg e
9>*
25c
H e in z
CATSUP ........
N . B .
C .
P re m iu m
CRACKERS
X 24c
N w ifU P re m iu m — A rm o u rs K la r — Te n d e ritrd
HAMS
Who le o r Ha lf
lb. 6 3c
B ro o k fie ld S m a ll L in k
A ll Size* A v a ila b le
A rm o u r* S t a r
SAUSAGE
57c
SLICED BACON
P o rk
L o in
ROAST
. * 74c
i« 55c
LAMB SHOULDER
« . 43c
I resh
H om e D re *t
ROASTING CHICKENS
...................» . 59 c
A rm o u r* S t a r
M e a d o » G o ld C re a m e ry
PEPERONI
lb 79c I BUTTER
ï.„7 lc
I irst o f The Yea r l o r Ea ster — Genuine Spring La mb
VEGETABLES
ir e s t i L a w le r llo w r r *
YELLOW JONQUILS ............ 2
35c
N ew G re e n
Onions 2
19c
N ew
tre « h
Red Beets 2 X 23
4'r ͻf* B e d H u lio n
Radishes 21 15c
l e n d e r 4 a h i.
Aspargus
39c
< n * p S o lid
ICEBERG LETTUCE
2,;,:;. 19c
N ew S o u th e rn
RED POTATOES ................
4 25c
Fresh Country
EGGS
La rg e, All White
doz.57c
Del Mo nte Sliced
PEACHES
'...29 c
K a ra
SYRUP 5
45c
Sea »id e C a lif
l im a
BEANS 2 'L 59c
S n id e r*
“ O ld
l a t h i o n ''
Chille Sauce !>*, 29
M a k e * A n y th in * Ta s te B e tte r
P o p u la r
B ra n d «
Cigarettes ‘I “ ....
■Î pkgs
7f),
U n n u n n P u re 4a n e
SUGAR 10 „.. 95c
Ma g ic C’hef
PREPARED SPAGHETTI
Reg . 18 c Ja r — Rea l \ a lur
D el
M o n te L a r ly
G a rd e n
| L x p a rt- t.e rm s n
Aspa'gus N;.„3 37c j BEER
S2.40
► r i f
and
« P A N
2
41C
2
21 c
CARLITZ BROS
-SELF-SERVE
FOOD MARKET
PHONE 27 6 0
CORNER FIRST STREET A ND GRAND AVENUE, SOUTH CUMBERLAND
PHONE 27 6 0
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, M D , FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1947
NINETEEN
R a d io in R e v ie w
Bv JOHN CROSBY
Easter On The Air
Radio
listeners, will have a rich
lea*st
of Easter music, drama
and
pageantry to choose from on Sun
day, so much In fact, that you had
better make your
selections in ad
vance. Of all the
special
pi ogt.......
planned for East
er, certainly the
most ambitious is
the C o l u m b i a
Broadcasting Sys
tem's
full
hour
program ‘ ‘ T h e
Son
Of
Man,"
which is possibly
the first Passion
ml Play ever written
J . h, rrmmH*
e x c I u s i v ely for
John Croaky
for rmd|a
**The Son Of Man" was prepared
•-you can hardly say it wb:^ written
—tty Archibald MacLemh from the
»tory of the passion and the Resur
rection in the King James version
oi the Bible. The text is confined
entirely to Ute Gospels of Matthew.
Mark, Luke and John, who are the
only speaking voices portrayed. Tile
music will com 1st of selections from
Johann Sebastian Bach's "Matthew
Passion.** "John Passion" and the
B Minor Mass
Tile prix! ut Hon Is
tile result of months o! work and
t adv bv the best brains in CBS and
should be well worth listening to.
(CBS 1:30 to 2 30 p. rn. EST).
The story' of the Resurrection will
a.so
be
dramatised
on the ad
mirable ‘‘Greatest Story Ever Told”
program
(ABC 6:30 p. rn. EST).
This drama will complete a series
Networks Will
Feature Good
Friday Programs
of three which depicted on suc-
ces&ive Sundays the betrayal, the
Crucifixion and the resurrection of
Christ.
There will be several special pro
grams for early risers.
As usual.
Ay C\ E. BUTTERFIELD
CBS will broadcast the traditional
NEW YORK, April 3 Good Fri-
dawn service of the old Moravian ,
*
,
Church at Winston-Salem. N. C. <6 <**y programs and another CBS
to 7 a rn. EST), which has been an documentary, this one on the na-
annual event since 1766.
NBC will tions' health, are on the network
r<?!r,„1t L dv \rL •«**“
"5 "° Jut, for Ftd.y.
Tho Good Frld.y
City in New York at which the Rev.
Qjrl
Halford E Luccock of the Yale broadcasta aa announced in ad-
University Divinity School will de
liver the sermon. i8 05 a rn. EST)
rn., Narration of
Vance:
ermon. <8 05
a rn. EST* MBS—10:15
from Hollywood, ABC
will bring "Three Years."
the sunrise services at th » Holly-'
NBC- 12:15 p. rn., Holvweek ser-
wood Bowl (8:30 a. rn E8T). Thla vice from Chicago; 12:30 p. rn., Can-
event,
incidentally, will
have a
distinctly Holylwood flavor with a T k a D a Hi A f l n r l
couple of child movie stars, Claude: "B v ixOUIU Ll UL IV
Jarman. Jr. and Elizabeth Taylor.
«■*■*** . . . . . -
delivering respectively "The Lord’s
FRIDAY, april 4
Prayer" and
"Salutation to the I
Tim# is •■•urn standard. For csntrsi
V £ 'uh' ,r,!,kh wll'hno,t b- w ."fStlSK 3 W a
g re e te d
w ith
delirioiLs
e n t h u s i a s m local station s change hour of relay to fit
tats, "Seven Last Words of Christ;’
7 p rn.. Supper club from Duke Urn
versify, Durham, N. C., Perry Conv
and a 150-voiee choir.
The CBS documentary is title
"A Long Life and a Merry One.
and will go Into the hour at 1<
I cancelling It Pays to Be Ignoran
for one time The program will des
with medical science, medical carr
longevity and other health ques-
i tions.
Mark Warnow's Soundoff. which
has been an MBS feature since lat'
last summer, switches back to CB.1
at a 7:30 time The Andrews sisters
are guests.
Earl Browder, former head of th*
Communist party, is to be question
ed in Meet the Pre** on MBS at IO
. . . Speaker at 10:45 on NBC is to
be Sen. Glen H. Taylor of Idaho,
uid
his subject "Foreign
Policy
Jrisia."
Burl Ives Is going to do ids MBS
*5 minutes at 8 “live’ instead of
om recordings because Bing Cros-
>y is to drop around as the guevt
Because of Good Friday there will
e no weekly fl:ht. so ABC is pre-)
rnting the ABC Symphony orches-
.a at IO and Hal McIntyre's band
it 10.30
Bill Stern i> doing for NBG at*
’ 30 the first of several broadcasts I
rom the Masters golf tournament
.it Augusta, Ga
It is time tor the kitchen gardener
to prepare a planting schedule for!
wile season. To reap as large a harv
est of fresh vegetables as possible
from a limited area It is essential to
chan planting dates and arrange
for succession plantings.
How Australia
Became Known
As Parrot Land'
i/Pi Newsteatures
DARWIN- A 16th century map
and one of the earliest In which any
part of Australia is shown depicts
the outline on the northern coast
line with the words "terra pstttaco-
rum *—"land of parrots." That m*as
a pretty accurate observation be
cause Australia has the greatest
variety of parrots of any country.
There are 59 Australian species
of Hie order PMttaciforme.s (par
rot-like birds)—and 161 species in
the Australian region which takes |
In New Zealand and the Oceanic
islands from Wallace's Line (be
tween Bali and Lombok in the
Malay Archipelago) to the Sand
wich Islands.
Australian parrots range in size
from the tiny flg-parrots to the
great black cockatoo. Probably the
best known in the budgerigar »Mei-
opsittacus
undulatus).
the
tiny
grcen-and-yellow
warbling
grass
!parrots which are bred all over the
world today but take on nearly a
hundred delicate and exotic colors
in the cages of expert breeder*.
A third of Denmark s population
ranis
its
living by
farming
or
fishing
'
f p .
YOHE
- J
k t t im
pmL
WARM!
ICI cai AM
IMS UR ANCI
LOOK in the YELLOW H U S
rn* yam T « M « m BW > Mary
WTBO Highlights
IT'S A M A ZIN G . . .
To know who is tho most
powerful Communist in Amer
ica, os revealed in the new
sensational instalment of "I
Was in Stalin's Spy Ring."
Tho Communist is Charles
Dirba, who has supreme com
mand over the American Com
munist Party next to Stalin
himself! Every reader of this
startling confession will realize
why* J. Edgar Hoover calls
Communists the most danger
ous 5th column that America
hat aver known.
IT'S IN APRIL
COSMOPOLITAN
Adv —T-Aprll 3. N-April 4
by Just everyone.
I
TTie air will be
full of
Easter
muAlc running the gamut from Bach
to Irving Berlin
One of the high
light* will certainly be Arturo Tos
canini leading the* NBC Symphony
in the final concert of the .season
I <5 p. rn. EST) which will open with
the prelude and Good Friday music
I from Wagners "Parsifal" It will be
I an all Wagner program. The New
York Philharmonic under the di
rection of Lieopold Stokowski will
j play the Choral from Bach s Easter
{Cantata, the good Friday music
from Parsifal, and Rimsky-Korsak
off's "Russian Easter." (CBS 3 p
rn EST)
j
The Easter parade will of course
come in for its share of attention.
The Mutual Broadcasting System
will pick up descriptive broadcasts
from Paris. London, New York City.
Chicago, and Main Street in Shenan
doah, Iowa. (11:30 a. rn. EST) Fan
nie Hurst, an expert at that sort OI
thing, will handle New York’s Fifth
Avenue crowd.
The
handful ol
citizens who own television sets will
be able to see the show at home via
NBC's
television
station
WNBT
which will set up its cameras in
front of Rockefeller Center
From
3:30 to 3:45 p. rn. <E6T), ABC will
present on-the-spot descriptions of
the Easter finery from the main
thoroughfares of New York, Chi
cago. Detroit, Hollywood, and San
Francisco.
C o p y rig h t. 1947. N
▼ T rib u n e . I n t .
Examine mil trees and shrubs I
which were moved last fall, or d u r-1
ing the winter, so as to be sure they i
are not loosened from the soil or.
heaved out by the front or wind
2L
SW IFTS PREMIUM
A
SS HAMS, whole or half 55
H
lb. 6 5 *
M
J
CH ICKEN S
|
E E to o if in g lb 5 H |»
Fryers f t 7 f E E
I M AN TH EIY’S I
I
M A R K ET
I
EE
400 York Ploce
==
alumni! w— 2*47 mum!
45in ANNIVERSARY ;
Q 4 7^
J
MORE FLAVOR
PER CUP AND
"MORE
CUPS PER
POUND
T h a n W h e n
Coffee Atone
Is
Used ZZ-
t s IU
SPECIAL
C*f-OC i /
( yr
local schedules. L ast m inute program
changes cannot ba ineiudsd.
Evening
• :00
» w * Rrjiort f o r 1ft M in a —nhc
Kric Mevaretd N ew t Period—cb*
N e t w o r k S i l e n t l l h r . )
a b c eu at
T e r r y S e r i a l In I t a p e a t —a b c - w e s t
H o p Harriman H e p c a t —m b * - w e s t
• :1 S
A m e r i c a S e r e n a d e ; S p o r t a — n o c
fteport From W a s h i n g t o n —cha
S k y K i n g In R e p e a t — a b r - w e s t
8 :3 0
R e d B a r b e r S t S p o r t a T i m e
ch a
J a c k A r m s t r o n g R epeat—a b c - w e a t
C a p t . M i d n i g h t R e p e a t - n ib s - w e n
• :4b— I orwell Thom aa a N ew araat—nbe
World New* A C om m entary—cha
T enn essee Jed
R e p e a t — ahc-w est
T o m Mix In R e p e a t — m b * w e s t
7:00— Radio'd Sapper Club— nbc-baalr
M yatery
Drama
f o r
W e e n — cba
N ew s and C om m entary—abc
Fulton f.ewla. Jr., C o m m e n t —mba
7:15— N e w s dr C o m m e n t of W o r l d — nhr
J a c k Sm ith S e r i e s for Song—cb*
Ulmer D avis C om m entary—abc
D ancing Music Orch. (16 M.l — mba
7:30
T h e Manor
H o u s e
P a r t y —nbc
T o Be A nnounced—cbs
- The Ix>n* Ranger Drama—abe
Henry J. T aylor C om m ent—mbd
7:40— H. V. Kaltenborn Com m ent—nor
Bill Brandt Sports C om m ent—mb*
8:00—T he Paul L avage M elody—nbc
Kafiny Brice aa Baby Snook#—che
Fat Man, D etective Dram a—abc
Burl Ives Recorded Song*—mba
• :15— Vera Holly. T he D’Arcye—mb*
8:30—Alan Young Comedv S h o w — nbc
Adventure* of the Thin Man—cha
T his la F.B.I.. Drama Series—abc
L eave It to Girl*. Gue*-t—mbo
8:55— F ive M inutes N ew t Period—che
8:00— People Are Funny in S tunts—nbc
Ginny
Sim m s and
V ariety—cha
Break the Bank, a g u ll Show —abe
Gabriel H eatter Com m ent—mba
0:15— Real L ife Dram a Serlea—mb#
0:30—Abe Lym an a W alt* T im e—nbc
Moor# and Durante C om edy—che
S h eriffs D etective Dram a—abc
Bulldog Drummond Dram a—mb#
• :5 b — F ive M inute* Sport# Spot—abc
10:00— M yatery T heater M ysteries—nbc
it Pave to Be Ignorant—c b #
B oxing Bout,
Sports Show —abc
M eet the Pres* in Interview s—mba
10:30—Bill Stern, H is Sporta Spot—nbc
To Be Announced—cbs
D ate N ight, Popular T unes—mb*
10 45— W eekly T alks by G uests—nbc
11:00— N ew s for 1ft M inutes—n b c-basic
Supper Club R epeat—other nbc
N ew e, V ariety, D ance. 2 hr*.— che
N ew # and Dane# Band Hour—abc
N ewe. Dance Band. 2 hour#—mbe
1 1: is —- V ariety A New* to I a m .—nbc
12:00—D ance Band H r.—a b c -w eet only
7 WI
Y aw n P atro l.
7 IO
New*.
7 Ift
ftperia) Good Friday Program.
• OO
W o rld New* K o u n d -U p iN BC ).
• 15
M orning M elodist.
8 4ft
New*.
• OO
H o n ey m oo n In New Y ork ( N B O
• IO
M orn in g Meditation*
9 4ft
N rlaon O lm ste d iN B C ).
IO OO
MuMc for F rid a y
10 IO
f t nad ol Life ( N B O .
10:45
Joyce J o r d a n . M I). * N B O .
11 OO
F re d W a rin g Show (NRC*.
11:30
Ja c k llerch Shorn I N B O .
11:45
Music a t M td -D av
12 lft
M id -D ay New*.
12 4ft
W o rds a n d Muaic • N B O .
I OO
S k e tc h e s in Melody i N B O .
1 45
R obert M cCorm ick
(NRCI.
2 OO
T o d ay * C h ild re n i N B O ,
2 15
Woman in While (NBO,
2 l l M a sq u e ra d e ( N B O
2 4(r B elly C ro ck er i N B O .
2 ftft
News.
3 OO
LIIr C a n Be B e au tifu l <NBC>,
3 15
Ma P e r k in s * N B O .
3 IO
P epp er Y oung'* F am ily ( N B O ,
3 45
R ig ht lo H a p p in e s s ( N B O .
4 OO
B a c k sta g e W ife iN B C i.
4 IS
S tella D allas ( N B O .
4 IO
L orenzo Jo n e s ( N B O .
4 45
Y oung W id der B row n (N BC).
5 OO
M oods in Music.
5:15
P a r e n t - T e a c h e rs P ro g ra m .
5:30
News.
5:35
Y o u r G a r d e n
5:45
C a p ta in
S tu b b y
a n d
Tile
B u c
can ee rs.
6 OO
News (N B C (.
« 15
S ere n a d e to A m erica iN B C ).
C 30
T h e S p o rts m a n * C o rn er.
6 45
W in n ie T h e W ave.
7:00
T h e S u p p e r Club ( N B O .
7:15
New* of th e W o rld 'N B O .
7:30
H y n d m a n H igh School B a n d .
S OO
B in g Crosby.
S JO
T h e Allan Y oung Show ( N B O ,
9 OO
P eople Are P u n n y ( N B O ,
9 IO
W alt* T im e ( N B O
10 OO
M ystery T h e a t r e ( N B O .
10 30
Here'* To V eteran*
10.45
T a lk by S en. G len H. T a y lo r
(NBO.
11 OO
New* fro m NBC ( N B O .
11:1ft
H ark n e s* of W a a h in g to n
( N B O .
11.30
T h e W o rld * O re s* Novel* ( N B O
12 OO
New* i N B O .
YOUR FAM a y ? CEREAL FAVORITE?/
QUAKER
Pac/c'0'7£H
Wool Side Residents
Your FORD’S
LEE ST. STORE
Prescription Dept.
lo now open and staffed by highly
efficient professional pharmacists.
FORD'S DRUG STORES
Cumberland and Frostburg
For a Delicious
EASTER DINNER
DRIVE OUT TO GORDON'S
D i n n e r s
S e r v e d
S u n d a y
12;:ie F . M. ’til
ll:#*) T . M.
( W e e k
D a y * ft P.
M.
iii I
A. M.)
R e s e r v a t i o n * N e t N e c e s s a r y
GORDON'S
GRILL
3 Miles Out Old town Read
FOR FIRE
EXTINGUISHER
SALES AND SERVICE
So* Tho Men W ho Know
,
PROVEN EQUIPMENT
IS A WISE INVESTMENT
CUMBERLAND FIRE
EQUIPMENT SUPPLY
P. 0. lex 771, Cumberland. Md.
1 Qaeker Puffed Wkeet Spertiles
2 QmrIi t Muff eta
2 Quaker Rice Flakes
S a c *
Quote*‘P o ctO fS M
coetZeueto-
Rice I perk! sn
1 Quaker
2 Quaker Cern flakes
2 Quaker Wkeet Flakes
IO SERVMGS...6 CEREALS
The /ast mat rn cere*/cowveme/ice & freshness/
"Little Lady"
TOILET WATER
A lovely addition to that precious
EASTER BASKET
Not Mother's . . .
HER VERY OWN COSMETICS
By Helene Pessl
S U ,
23 N. Liberty
Phone 4Sfi
SA A A Adfr A A A A A A A A A A A A A dk A, A ^Nb A A O A
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BATTERIES
For All M alm af
CARS and TRUCKS
THE
MOTORIST
FRIEND
173 Baltimore S I
Phone 696
M cot
PU-H, Pork.
Veal, Lamb.
Roma ti ng and
Frying
C h ic k e n *
cheese :::r;z......... st#
NUTTER
.........„ 69c
y g y p awifl'e premium we wilson rertifird
n R R u whole er
ftQ aa
abank h a l f
lh. D C G
C A f l lP I B C Assortment hr
| lh. B B .
W U U k l E e Burry * Homespun I pkg. O D D
ENNS 'sr.sr??....... 55c
FLY
OVER UKE NORDON
FR0STNUR6, CEUNESE and KELLY
IN A 5 - PASEN6ER NEECHCRAFY
V Ff.H A B IT S — Including: Calif.
Aaparaguh. Green Onions, Radishes.
New Reels, Rhubarb, Fresh Pine
apple.
For Lotte* M eats and Groceries
Carl M clntyre
ROUND
YRIP
PER
PERSON
EA STER SUNDAY
BEECHCRAFT, STINSON, 2 CRUISERS
AVAILABLE FOR FLIGHTS
M AKE IT A PARTY
436 Cumberland St.
Phones 3480. 3481, 3482
Cumberland Airways Inc.
Phone 3909
Municipal Airport
FREE FLIGHTS SUNDAY
Vesper Melting Sugar Very Tende(
Peas
2
35c
Premier Whole
Beets
2
35c
COFFEE
KENNYS
NORWOOD
M a jestic F re sh
MAYONNAISE
TOMATO SAUCE *
5c
SPAM or TREET
Hein*
CATSUP
N. B. C
Premium
CRACKERS
Nu ift* Premium — Armours alar — Tendertaed
HAMS
Whole or Half
ib. 6 3 c
Hroekfield Smell Link
All S u n Available
Armours Atar
SAUSAGE
t» 57c
Bgnara Cut
LAMB SHOULDER
43c
SLICED BACOH
Perk Lein
ROAST
f r e a k H o m e D r e s t
ROASTING CHICKENS
Armour* Atar
PEPERONI
AU l i t e s
lb.
Meadow Geld Creamery
TNC I NUTTER........... ^ 7 le
First of The Year For Easter — Genuine Spring Lamb
D om ino P ure C a n e
SONAR IO
95c
M agic C h ef
PREPARED SPA6HETTI
Reg. 18c Jar — Real Value
Del Monte Early Garden
I
Eiyort-t.erman
Aopg’guc
37c I NEER *“ - $2.40
/
5 ‘Xthphonb ^
/V 0\jcIsm J GARLITZ BROS
—SELF-SERVE—
FOOD MARKET
d e& w ty.
S a u t e e
PHONE 2760
CORNER FIRST STREET AND GRAND AVENUE, SOUTH CUMBERLAND
PHONE 2760
rW ENTY
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
A,
194?
STRAW S IN THE W IN D
B R O A D W A Y
By DANTON WALKKK
M a n ha tiu i M ctno rand u
Senato r Claud e Pepper o f Flo rid a
•all call fo r a co mplete inv estiga-
Bo n o f the Ro x as Ad ministratio n in
Kite Philippines, which will be ac
cused
o f
ev ery
thing fro m alleged '
co llabo ratio n with
! the wro ng peo ple
d u ring wartime to .
-alleged squ elching!
I o f mino rities since ;
. . . Ambassad o rj
Affiliated Yo ung Demo crats o f New
Yo rk will ad v o cate a United Natio n;
Day . . . . Gen. Jimmy Do o little, no w
head o f the Air Fo rce Asso ciatio n,
will ho ld a reu nio n with his To ky c
Raid ers in Miami o n April 18. . . .
Jim Parley s memo irs will be pu b
lished by Whittlesey Ho use. .. . Jim
my By rnes the latest fo rmer big
go v ernment o fficial who 'l hav e a
bo o k o u t and three pu blishers are
bid d ing against each o ther to get It.
ie reaso n is mo re recent than the
ambling mess that go t into print.
. . James Caesar Petrillo 's lo ng-
umo red crackd o wn o n d isc jo ckey s
•n’t far o ff and tho se in the kno w
laim tlie music czar has so me ugly I
harges to sling aro u nd if he d o esn’t j
iet his way . . . . Do n’t be su rprised j
f the case o f Gerhart Eisler, the
"ierman Co mmunist, is d efend ed by
O. Jo hn Ro gge, fo rmerly o f the
Justice Department. . . . Brigad ier
General Ev ans (Gu ng-Ho ) Carlso n
is recu perating fro m his lo ng illness.
. . . Pau l Po rter to recu perate fro m ;
his frit) to Greece by a Flo rid a v isit I
. . . Mrs. Tru man will be asked to !
ho ld the White Ho use Easter egg-
ro lling festiv ities, using plastic eggs
(Mrs. Tru man anno u nced that the
trad itio nal egg-ro lling wo uld be d is-j
co ntinu ed because the wo rld Is to o
sho rt o f fo o d to waste it this way ).
Glo ria Swanso n d efinitely is no t
v isiting the nite spo ts no r any o ther
places in the co inpry iy o f her o ne-i
time hu sband . Michael Farmer, as:
repo rted elsew here. He was no t ev en
inv ited to the birthd ay party o f-
their teen-age d au ghter. Michele j
Farmer. . . Oleg Cassini planed o ut;
to the Co ast this week to wind up
mo st o f his Ho lly wo o d affairs. His
nex t v entu re will be a New Yo rk
d ress sho p. . . Fred McEv o y ’s stay
in Switzerland being pro lo nged by u
ro mance with a Swiss girl o f a nice
family
bu t
no
great
wealth. . .
Friend s o f NBC anno u ncer To m
O'Brien say he sho uld be ex cused a
few “flu ffs” o n the air; lies been
walking o n clo ud s since meeting
May o r
O’Dwy er’s niece, Jo an. . .
Betty Bigelo w, who mad e head lines
in the Alv in Paris fo o tball fix case,
will so o n wed an unkno wn. . . Jo hn
Bo les’ d au ghter, Marcella, recently
ex changed v o ws d o wn Tex as way
with Capt. Go o d all McCullo ugh,
Archd uke Otto o f Hapsburg, pre
tend er to the thro ne o f Au stria, will
blanket the United States with a
lectu re to u r beginning nex t mo nth.
. . . Frank
Sinatra
and
Jimmy
¡Du rante will sign papers this week
fo r a jo int perso nal to u r at a stag
gering stipend . . . Gene Kelly will
| make a nite club and theatre to u r to
pay o ff the tax bill ru n up o n him
while he was still in the Nav y . . .
j Van Jo hnso n’s reco rd s will be re
leased in abo u t six weeks. Tho se
who ’v e had a pre-hearing say Cro s
by . Sinatra and Co mo hav e no thing
to wo rry abo ut. Co mo , incid entally ,!
will be singing fo r a so up spo nso r
nex t y ear. . . Univ ersal Pictu res re-!
po rted pay ing o ne millio n d o llars
fo r the rights to "Harv ey .” pay ments
to be mad e o v er a ten-y ear perio d .
Bing Cro sby is to p co ntend er fo rj
the Fi ank Fay ro le when the sto ry j
o f the inv isible rabbit reaches the
screen.
Tennessee Williams’ “Battle o f
the Angels,” o nce tried o u t in Bo s
to n and banned there because o f its
unseemly language, will be rev iv ed
fo r Bro ad way . . . Still ano ther v er
sio n o f Mark Twain's "Co nnecticu t
Yankee” sched uled fo r the stage
nex t y ear. . . Fto rello (Bu tch) La-
Gu ard ia will ho ld the bato n and
giv e the d o wnbeat fo r the o pening
nu mbers at the first Carnegie Hall
Po p Co ncerts, which start May 1,
. . . An ind epend ent mo v ie pro d u cer
alread y has a d o cu mentary film o n
the Co lly er affair, titled “Hermit
Ho use.” . . . Lo o k fo r Mark Helllng-
er to start a stu d io o f his o wn, with
ex clusiv e rights to all o f Hem mg-
way ’s sto ries as a starter.
4
W. Bed ell Smith
cabled the State;
(I3epartment fro m
I Mo sco w to cu t o u t
the
“lugubrio us
o bo e
so lo s”
and j
“eso teric
d iscu s
sio ns o f scientific
su bjects" o n fu -
Glo ria Swanso n tu re
bro ad casts
aimed at the So v iets.. . . The United
Natio ns will set u p an Internatio nal!
Civ il Send ee Co mmissio n. . . . The
Jack Fry e, recently resigned pres
id ent o f TWA, will sho rtly an
no unce his new airline co nnectio ns.
. . . The Geo rge Raft-Leo Du ro cher
friend ship o f y ears has chilled and
if See Us Fo r No v el
$1.19
PLASTIC
HAIRBRUSH
2 9 '
D.D.T.
Liquid Spray
O P E N
Id eas Fo r Neo n Signs
1 A. M. » •
10 P. M.
••v e n Day s t
Week
Mechanic
Wo rk
and
Lu bricatio n
Queen City
Neon
Prt'Hollday Special
6 9e
1IA N. Mechanic
st .
Pho ne 6 4
OWL
E S S O
Serv ¡center
St.. r none 64
m m ß
i r
i u
i r
IS Hend erso n A w
Pho ne 10M
TRUCKS
RAUPACH'S
NEW GARAGE
SALES and SERVICE
Mech a n ic
at Bow St.
Phone 4160
For Real
Italian Spaghetti
Mid
Veal Cacciottori
Fineit Italian Dishes,
Steaks, Chicken & Chops
Sandwiches
W INES and BEER
— Visit —
Little Lena’s
Village
107 N. Centre Ctreet'
Tel. 1930-W
Open Until 2 A.M .
Open Send ay s—2 P. M. to 2 A. M.
EMERY’S
Motor Coach Lines
New Daily Service
Between
Cumberland, Md.
a n d
OAKLAND, MD.
Via:-
W estern po rt
Lu ke
Blo o mingto n
D eer P ark
Mt. I« ke Parti
Three Round Trips Daily
Including Sundays and Holidoys
Leave Cumberland:—
11:00 a. m.—5:15 p. m.—7 :15 p. m.
Leave Oakland:—
8 :30 a. m.—1:00 p. m.—9 :30 p. m.
PHONE 2618
K il ls flies,
m osq u itoes,
m oth s,
fleas,
rpaches
and
bed b u g s
«"•/y
full pint 19
DR. WEST
TOOTH PASTE
tut 8a 2 * * 2 9 *
_J |j j D E E P CUT RATE P
SELF-SERVE
Baltimore Street at Centre
50c
PHILLIPS
Milk of Magnesia
SM IN O «.(ANIMO
SPECIAL
75e
Household Chamois
35c
PAINT
BRUSHES
HEADQ UARTERS FO R
30c
SACCHARIN
TABLETS
bo x o f 100
X
cut to
-
...
to t
Y °"r
so » *1 * — A
F R U IT E H U T
BO GS
Sho p
" ' a * « nd w*r o r
-A o V
* !!!
J W
I I U
I I U
I I U P IIIW
IP IIIIP C T
EASTER GIFTS
OF LASTING
BEAUTY . . .
FINER HAN DBAGS . . .
Plostic, potent leather, leather and alligator . . By “Sur-tite
end New Yorker" ............................8 3 . 5 0 «> 8 1 0 . 0 0
fO LO IN G UMBRELLAS ............. 810.00 *« 8 20.00
UMBRELLAS . . . Plaids and Nylons S I.,*»!)
i0 K I .% 00
,0SAIllts ........................ 8 5 .00 *° 8 20.00
PIN S . . . » d [AR R IN G S E T S
80.00 * 8 1 0 0
DIAMONDS roR APRI1
J OHN A. NIERMAN
JEWELRY
57 Pershing St. . , . Next to the Postoffice . . , Pho ne 748 W
$1 .0 0 O u B a r r y
PINK METAL
LIPSTICK/?
M
« 5 0 e
SOe Milk of Majir a
TABLETS
bottle of 100
R E Y M E R S'
chocolate
COVERED
FRUIT
AND
NUT
EGGS!
$ 3.0 0
I lb. Sft*
PULL* STUFMD
EASTER ANIMALS
ia
differ«"*
,
•"<* co ,o r*
Priced from
$1,59 to $2.19
Mo tt delicio ua Ea ster Eg g *
we ev a r ha d. Ma de o f fine
crea m. Cho ck full o f fruit
a nd nuts a nd co v ered with the mo st delicio us
lig ht o r da rk cho co la te.
$1.25
SIMILAC
BABY FOOD
cut to
98 c
I
DELUX-
.
frui t1 co
JUT
eg g s
LADY STERLING
CHOCOLATE COVERED
Fruit and Nut
EGGS
$ 1.95
$1.39
N AM ES PUT ON FREE
I WITH H J T I
DECORATION
59c
ELECTRIC
»RON CORDS
set to
y
39e
IAS'
STUFFED & DRESSED
2 lb.
1 lb.
SpecialVJrTcVo tor
this *ole.at . . .
1.59 «<> 2.19
50<
PABLUM
BABY FOOD
YOU U
u te e m s
N E W TYPE
S HAM POO
H D C M C
M W H A fR
U K L i l t CONDITIONING
ACTION
75c
PAD LOCKS
LWITH TWO KEYS
i t e n ç 1
I CHA» » 00-
6 0 c SIZE
cut to
4 9 c
PALMOLIVE
SOAP
Maw
2 bare far 2 1 *
N O N -A LC O H O LIC ^!
W
I L D
R
O
O
T
C R E A M -O IL FO R M U L A
BRUTI
BRRR
Now with ea»ier-to-ute
PLASTIC CURLERS
: HOME PERMANENT
Deluxe Kit
Regular Kit,
fiber curler*
Be Popular!
Its easy to be the belle o f the ball
and the d arling o f the stag line.
Ju st enro ll to d ay and learn to d ance
in
a
few
ho u rs
u nd er
ex pert
teachers.
75c
BAYERS GENUINI
ASPIRIN
TABLETS
B o ttle o f 100
,,r* - 59 a
la
CLASSES OPEN — Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
WINTER DANCE STUDIO
■
■
Co rn er Ba ltimo re & Cen tre
— Ov er Da rlin g S h o p
F O R A PPO IN T M EN T
Pho ne 4300 o r 18ÍM1-M o r Co mp In
1.00
Stainlenn Steel
Yo ur
Refrig era to
WILL IT LAST THRU THE SUMMER?
Call Us for
EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE
AUTO RAD IO R E P A IR S
Drive in Service 8:30 to 12 N oon
CUMBERLAND ELECTRIC CO.
Phone 619
137 Virginio Ave.
Expansion
Band
onchant-
mont in this colorful
package. Pursa Bacon of
Perfume and Eau de Cologne.
AM to * t»
mil pritl
1.50
KOTEX
SANITARY NAPKINS
R e g u la r J u n io * « o d
Su per
Bo r o f 12
2 5
Jilt AMAZING EVERSHARP'
BALL-POINT
TAT A NEVV LOW PRICI
*6 .95
luxuries ... Eau da
Cologne, Talcum and Bubbling
Bath Etsenca....................3.35
Other Gift §efs 1.50 to 9.<
oneI day
MULTIPLE VITAMIN
Capsuled
W e v e r sh a r p
M
/tè M
à ip is
NE MOW
Prompt, affettiva RELIEF from
functional “PERIODIC" PAIN
BOX OF TABIETS 49c
For a Real Smooth
Shave
Try GILLETTE Bl:
Double Edge
Razor BLADES
N O W
10 <°r 49°
WAKEFUL
TONIGHT?
Dragged out tomorrow?
lg«. Site Bottle
Cut ta
83c
FA S TEETH
DENTAL PLATE POWDER
cut to
40 c
SIZE
4 9 C
For Good-Looking Ho /r —
Va seline
TOADI MAIM
HAIR TONIC
EXTRA VALUE
PAAS Pure Food
Easter Egg Colors
With an ogg dipper
and the Magic
Writer.
LOTION
m THE W ill «UNO IM § 9 C™
n» *•»
never sticky • never greasy
Try ADMIRACION
Shampoo
O l l or
Foamy
SI.IS SIZI
cut 4o $1 . 1 9
75c SIZE CUT TO
)
69c
HOUSEHOLD
RUBBER
GLOVES
pair
39e
EASY!
EASY!
so -o -o EASY!
OVD SPICI
TOILET WATER,
America's favorite
scent
.00
$1
plus tax
lang to tting w av n
Sa eaiy to ttyto
(Ztb u u t
HOME COLD W A V I . '/ ) '
with « aty to
PLASTIC CURLERS
Comptai»
".*30
$140
PlflU*
I V
Cv » i*r»
to *
R«tHI Kilt $100
U. S. TIME
KELTON
WAIST WATCH
$7.6 0
plu» tax
50c MENNEN
SHAVING CREAM
So rich and concentrated,
it removes excess oil from
the beard.
NOW ONLY
BUY
YOUR
CIGARETTES BY
THE CARTON
popular brands
$ | 4 4
•carton
fVVEMTY
THE CUMBERLAND NEW$, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
194?
STRAWS IN TH I WIND
B R O A D W A Y
Bf DANTON WALKER
Manhattan Memoranda
Senator Claude Pepper of Florida
vin call for a complete investiga
tion of the Roxas Administration in
Hie Philippines, which will be ac
cused
of every
thing from alleged
! collaboration with
the wrong people
during wartime to
[alleged squelching
I of minorit ic* since
. . . . Ambassador
W. Bedell Smith
cabled the State
.Department from
I Moscow to cut out
; the
“lugubrious
oboe solos" and
I “esoteric
disc us -
: sions of scientific
subjects" on fu-
Gleria O w w lure
broadcasts
aimed at the Soviets.. . . The United
Nations will aet up an International
Civil Service Commission. . . . The
Of i i
I A IL ta
is r. ML
• svm Days s
rha
Wart sai
Affiliated Young Democrats of New
York will advocate a United Nation.1
Day. . . . Gen. Jimmy Doolittle, now
head of the Air Force Association.
will hold a reunion with his Tokyc
Raiders in Miami on April IO. . . .
Jim Farley’s memoirs will be pub
lished by Whittlesey House... . Jim
my Byrnes the latest former big
government official who’l have a
book out and three publishers are
bidding against each other to get it.
Jack Frye, recently resigned pres
ident of TWA. will shortly an
nounce his new airline connections
. . . The George Raft-Leo Durocher
friendship of years has chilled and
’n* reason is more recent than the
ambling mess that got into print.
. . James Caesar Fetrillo's long-
umored crackdown on disc jockeys
n ’t far off and those In the know
laim the music czar has some ugly
harges to sling around if he doesn’t
jet his way. . . . Don’t be surprised
f the case of Gerhart Eisler. the
merman Communist, is defended by
O. John Rogge, formerly of the
Tustice Department. . . . Brigadier
General Evans <Gung-Ho> Carlson
is recuperating from hts long illness.
. . . Paul Porter to recuperate from
his trfn to Greece by a Florida visit.
. . . Mrs. Truman will be asked to
hold the White House Easter egg-
rolling festivities, using plastic eggs
(Mrs. Truman announced that tile
traditional egg-rolling would be dis
continued because the world Is too
short of food to waste it this way).
Gloria Swanson definitely is not
visiting the nite spots nor any other
places in the c o m p ly of her one
time husband. Michael Farmer, as
reported elsewhere. He was not even
invited to the birthday party of
their teen-age daughter, Michele
Farmer. . . Oleg Cassini planed out
to the Coast this week to wind up
most of his Hollywood affairs. His
next venture will be a New York
dress shop. . . Fred McEvoy’s stay
in Switzerland being prolonged by u
romance with a Swiss girl of a nice
family
but
no
great
wealth. . .
Friends of NBC announcer Tom
O'Brien say he should be excused a
few "fluffs’’ on the air; he* been
walking on clouds since meeting
Mayor
O’Dwyer's niece. Joan. . .
Betty Bigelow, who made headlines
in the Alvin Parts football fix case,
will soon wed an unknown. . . John
Boles* daughter, Marcella, recently
exchanged vows down Texas way
with Capt. Good a ll McCullough.
Archduke Otto of Hapsburg, pre
tender to the throne of Austria, will
blanket the United States with a
lecture tour beginning next month.
. . . Prank
Sinatra
and
Jimmy
Durante will sign papers this week
for a Joint personal tour at a stag
gering stipend. . . Gene Kelly will
make a nite club and theatre tour to
pay off the tax bill run up on him
while he was still in the Navy. . .
Van Johnson's records will be re
leased in about six weeks. Those
who’ve had a pre-hearing say Cros
by. Sinatra and Como have nothing
to worry about. Como, incidentally.
will be singing for a soup sponsor
next year. . . Universal Pictures re-!
potted paying one million dollars
I for the rights to “Harvey," payments
to be made over a ten-year period.;
iBing Crosby is top contender for
the Frank Fay role when the story
I of the invisible rabbit reaches the
screen.
Tennessee William.*?* “Battle of
the Angels," once tried out in Bos
ton and banned there because of its
unseemly language, will be revived
for Broadway. . . Still another ver
sion of Mark Twain* "Connecticut
Yankee" scheduled for the stag*
next year. . . FloreUo «Butch) La-
Guardta will hold the baton and
rim* the downbeat for the opening
numbers at the first Carnegie Hall
Pop Concerts, which start May I
. . . An independent movie producer
already has a documentary film or.
the Collyer affair, titled “Hermit
House ” . . . Look for Mark Helling-
er to start a studio of his own. with
exclusive rights to all of Heming
way’s stories as a starter.
OWL
i $ t i
So nr scouter
TRUCKS
RAUPACH^
NEW GARAGE
SALES and SERVICE
Mechanic al Saw Si.
Pkaaa 4160
* SM Ut h r N m )
F tkf HoAO t iaa*
•orwood w pro *’OwO
Queen City
Neon
w
o o m
r
N r Reel
Hallos Spaghetti
■ a i
foal Oaceiattari
Emeer Italian Dishes,
Steaks, Chicken I Choy
Sandwiches
WINES and BIER
— Visit —
Little Lena’s
Village
107 N. Contra Ctreet*
Tai. 1930-W
Open Until 2 A.M .
P. M. ta 2 A. M.
EMERY’S
Motor Coach Linos
*
New Daily Service
Oat mean
Cumberland, Md.
and
OAKLAND, MD.
Via:—
Westernport
Lake
Bloomington
Deer Park
ML Lake P ull
Throe Rosa* Tripe Dally
Including Seeley* sad Holidays
Leave Cumberland:—
11:00 A OL—0:15 p. rn.—7:15 p. rn.
Leave Oakland:—
t;JS a mc—1:00 p. rn.—0:30 p. rn.
PHONE SBIB
OF LASTING
EASTER G IF T S -™ !
FINER HANDBAGS . . .
Plastic, patent leather, lea thor and alligator . . ly “Sur-tite
end New Yorker''...................... 83.5# ** B l O .O #
FOLDING UMIRILLAS.................. B IO .# # * # 2 # .# #
UMBRELLAS . . . Plaids
awd Nylons # 4 . 5 0 to # 1 5 .# #
ROSARIES ..........................................# 5 . 0 0 *« S 2 0 .0 #
PINS . . . sod EAR RING SETS
# # .# # to $ 1 0 0
_______ EXQUISITE DIAMONDS von, APRIL _______
JOHN A. NIERMAN
JEWELRY
57 Pershing S t . . . . Next to the Postoffice . . . Phono 741-W
Be Popular!
■I
Ifs easy to be the belle of the ball
and the darling of the stag line.
Just enroll today and learn to dance
In
a few
hours
under expert
teachers.
CLASSES OPEN — Monday, Wednesday, Friday end Saturday
WINTER DANCE STUDIO
Corner Baltimore A Centre — Over Darling Shep
FOR APPOINTMENT
Phone 4300 ar 1SM-M ar Come la
Your Refrigerator:—
WILL IT UST THRO TNE S0UUERT
Call Ut for
EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE
AUTO RADIO REPAIRS
Drive in Service 8:30 to 12 Noon
CUMBERLAND ELECTRIC CO.
Rhone #19
137 Virginia Ava.
DR. WEST
TIUTN PISH
aal ta J far 2 f * J
V
}
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Maut d illtism Easter E ffs % q w aa I f
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LADY STERLING
•HO CO LAT I tOVKREO
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Fruit and Nut | mm»&'
No Milk of Mofor a
TABLETS
k H h 4 IS*
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I I J I to IM *:
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r
$ 1 . 9 5 2 m .
$ 1.3 9 1 a.
NAMES PUT ON FREE
SUS
SIMILAC
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9 8 *
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ELECTRIC
MON CORDS
STOPPED A OBISSIO
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i
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75c
PAD LOCKS’
LWITH TWO REYS
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^
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DRENE
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tyo t/'u M
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SH AM PO O X
wan hA!k'
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Now with eesier-te-use
PLASTIC CURLERS
: NOBE PERMANENT
OilneKN *£
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n e
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ASPIRIN
TAOISTS
to to * . IN
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Regular Kit.
•ber cur Ism
Refill.
no cur tem
*1M
AtSpncmphmtrnr
Spring enchonf*
meet hi this colorful
pockoge. Purse Bacon of
Perfume and Eau de Cologne.
Me* nHtaa
| J 0
L it
Stainleon Steel
rely both
luxuries. . . Cow de
Cologne, Tolcum end Bubbling
Both Eooenco.....................L S I
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^ _
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Q C «
Regular lunio* ted
# #
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H
H
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For Good-looking Hair—
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Prempt, effective R1UIF frees
fmntUnal V B O OtC" PAIM
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EXTRA VALUC
FAAS Bura Food
Easier Egg Belen
nom cot* WAUN
wUk eeoy ta ma
MASTIC CURLERS
sS T $142
«—
Sr
tam rat $100
Me MENNEN
tUINN MEIR
Sa rich .ad caac.atrat.4.
M r«mov«t .le u .H fraai
NOW ONLY
U. S. TIME
KELTON
WHIST WITCH
$ 7 . 4 0
•UY
YOUR
CIGARETTES BY
THE CIRTOH
popular broads
S .W U T t S
Ad vice To Th e Lo velo rn
Peo ple Who Sa y Their “ Feeling s Will
N ev er C ha ng e* ’ Betra y Im m a turity
—
-----
B y
B E A T R I C E
F A I R F A X
>
f amou.% Authority on Problems of Lov e
and Marriage
I wonder how old a p erson has m ust one hav e had to realize that it
to
be before he learns
the
f a l l a c y is imp ossible lor ev en the deep est
o f the conv iction that one disap -iliurt 10
maintain its sharp ness for-
p fitment in lov e means a p erma- f u 1
'
ent broken heart. Or to p ut it an-
What I hiu try ing
to say , of
how much ex p erience couiwe, j.s p 1Hl v ehon any one makes
■—
——
ilie statement
that
“my feelings
will nev er change,” it simp ly means
that tie has not matured suffi
ciently
to know that no human
feeling can be static and that the
mood of a moment, or a y ear, or
(p erhap s ev en longer, must ev en
tually change lor the better.
None of this, I know, is going to
conv ince the y oung lady who signs
herself “Anony mous” to this letter:
“Dear Miss Fairfax :
“I hav e been going steady with
a boy lor a y ear now. I think he is
v ery wonderful and I alway s will
think so. We both cared lor each
¡other v ery much and had p lanned to
get married as soon as p ossible.
"Howev er, this boy has alway s
ibcen hap p y -go-lucky and alway s did
(and want where he p leased.This has
jbeen the only reason for disagree-
!ments.
Recently , we had a little
argument and alter a discussion
lie told me may be we had better
not marry , since he was so uncertain
¡of his moods and at any time might
want to change his job or go away
lor awhile. He said he nev er wanted
lo hurt me and knew he would if
he didn't learn to accep t resp onsi
bilities and be dejiendable.
“Ev ery thing is all on now, but I
know my feelings will nev er change
and I will nev er look for any one
else.
I don't intend to marry just
for a marriage certificate, because I
nev er want to hurt any one else,
knowing I’d alway s be thinking of
someone else.
"I know there’s got to be a p urp ose
in life for ev ery one and since I
can’t go on and on just making mer
ry , I’d like to find out something.
I’d like
to hav e something of my
v ery own. It I sav ed enough money ,
would there be any way p ossible
for me to adop t a little babv from
an orp hanage and hav e a little p lace
ol my own? i d like that v ery much,
but i m afraid there is some techni
cality which p rohibits a sinRle girl
from adop ting children.
Is there
any orp hanage that allows this?
“Incidentally , I am 21 and p lease
don't tell me 1 will change nn mind
some day and meet someone else.
I know I won’t.”
This girl is obv iously in up mood
to be told any thing. But she sur
p rises me v ery much when she tells
me that she is 21 y ears old. I would
hav e thought she was about 15.
because her letter is ty p ical teen
age talk.
There is hardly a woman in the
world who. during the teen age.
TW ENTY-O NE
ha>. not gone through a p hase ol this
soi t,, and there is hardly a woman
in the world who has not liv ed
through It and, in time, found that
the p articular incident receded so
far into the background, both in
time and in emotional feeling, that
she could not recap ture tnat emo
tion no matter how hard she tried
It just ceased to matter.
1 his girl is right in tier behel
that child adop tion agencies are
against p ermitting single women to
adop t children ov er whose destiny
the agencies hav e control. Ex cep -:
tions are sometimes made where
such agencies feel that a p articular
woman us a comp letely mature and
reliable indiv idual who would gut
the child the -sort of sta n d a r d s a n d
ideals that would make him into a
well-balanced
p erson. They
defi
nitely would nev er giv e a child to
any one who was unhealthily harp
ing in her mind on something that
hap p ened y ears before
I suggest that “Anony mous” think
thus ov er before deciding to dev ote
the rest of her life to being sorry
for herself
(Co py rig ht, 1 947,
By King PYa lurrs Siiidirfltf, in« »
Lease Is Promoted
Carlton Lease, son oi Mr
and
Mrs. William B Lea » e, 631 Lmcoin
Street, has been p romoted to staff
sergeant at Tulin air base, Vienna,
Austria.
Sgt.
Lease entered
the
Army
in October.
1942. and saw
combat duty in the Europ ean thc-
f or.
After a
furlough
in the
states, he returned to Europ e for
the second time last Sep tember.
There are about 65.000.000 ma>s
of all ages in the United Stares
p op ulation
I
I
\ * ì% TéW*-
TOP IT WITH HOMART:
S 5 S
I :
r
TETLEY
O R A N G I P I K O i
f
n
a
n
n
n
n
A® 1 TEA
Now Only
1
* wo
•
100°o A L L W O O L
• FREE A L T E R A T I O N S
•
f r e e l a y a w a y
• S u e s for Toll, Short, Slim
end Stout M e n
• Sotisfoction G U A R A N T E E D
Hard Worsted SU IT S
29 50
•
1 0 0 °0 A L L W O O L
&
• C O V E R T S
• T W I S T S
\
• G A B A R D I N E S
▼
• A L T E R A T I O N S FREE
S A L E ! All Wool
SPORT C O A T S
• Fifth Avenue Styles
• Beautiful Colors
Worth $20.00!
S A L E ! New Spring
T O P C O A T S
• C A M E L H A IR S
• FLEECES
• C O V E R T S
SLACKS
For Work, Ploy or Dress !
$
Extra Tailors and Salesmen
A Small Deposit Holds Your Choice
STORE H O U RS
W eekdays 9 until 5
Saturdays 9 until 6
CLOTH ES
2 9
Baltimore St.
ot Mechanic
T o u g h F lo o r E n a m e l
Master Mixed
«•*.
3 *^^
A durable enam el for w oo a, srone,
conciete, linoleum , m etal floors.
Ones overnight to o rich finish. AM
colors. G allo n covers 7 0 0 *q. ft.
& 'v /
O. P. O. SUITS
R E D U C E D !
Just in time for Easter
T W E E D S
«
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SHETLANDS
C H E V I O T S
rs
fx
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>>-
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F too St Roof Cootina
Asbestos Fibra
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It's practicoiy a new roof w *e *
y ew use Sears Roe Quality roo#
coat mg. Seats crocks a nd
Dries to waterproof fWwttc
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D u r » b ' e
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M o s t e c M i x a d
5 Gai. 3 ' ^
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Se a it cracks oroend windows, doors.
ck imnmyt, foundotion. W o n t crack.
A p p fy wfQ, p«ety Im fe. Feoell»a*
fer gèozwtg.
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Strong, w«fl built.
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Un-
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c o v e n 20 *q
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3-in. deep.
U H H ry
M i x e r
56 9 5
Put it So 0 voriety
of vie*. 3 cu. ft.
capacity.
Pressed
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B o t e m c e t
S t e e l S a a b
3-98
W e a t h e r - t i g h t
2-lig h t a t tr a c tiv e
basement window,
p am te d
to
- m e t
rv tt. 15 X 12» .
BU Y ON
Sears
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36 in. width
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Repair
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I
H e x a g o n a l S h in g le s
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H e x a g o n a l design shingles com bin«
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Briclc-Effect S id in g
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H e avy asphalt roll siding wdl g,y«
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fade-r«*i*tm g, d«B«s weather.
p "ITÏ
K im s u l In s u la t io n
A Saving Price J00 Sqt 6 - ^ ^
Insulate your
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now, Kumul
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won't sa g or settle. Snug, clean,
fits between rafters ot |ot»tw
Hom art Adjustable
Steel J a c k Post
Ea sy to ksfa F, A d i ^
8 95
Ats cwfuTStoble steftl bostmenf
p o st with a built-in jack. U s« >o
r e p la c e o ld c e lla r p o sts . , .
b rin g s a g g i n g flo o rs b a c k to
level. Lifts u p to 1 5,0 0 0 Ibs.j
a d ju sts from 5-ft. 7 -in. to 8 -ft.
4 in
Grey finish, easy to install
a nd adjust.
More Clean Heof
Leti Fuel Cost
with
H O M A R T
STEEL
F U R N A C E
Installations
Arranged and
Financed
C ra ftsm a n H a n d D rill
Sturdy Q uality
2 - 49
3-jciw chuck for round shank drill*
up to ’A ' diam. For drilling w ood
or metc*l. Screw -cop handle for
drills.
22 IN C H
To be sure you II have a
worm, healthful home next
win ter,
order
your
new
H O M A R T
All Steel
Fur
nace N O W 1 Advanced en
gineering
features.
Heavy
gauge
boiler
plate
steel
. . . welded
scams,
gas
light, dust tight .Convenient
waist high handle easily op-
ferates center dump grates
A lot of furnace tor less
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Damper Regulator Included
fRflFTSMRN i
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5 -4 9
Top quolity 24 -inch aluminum
6
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Rugged, Efficient!
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1 4 -in.
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Fluorescent
13 95
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bathroom, recreation room with soft
giareless fight. Underwriters’ A p
proved. W ith tw o 2v -W . bkrb*.
PAY NOTHING TIL NOV. 1st
Craftsman S a w
26-In. 10-Pr.
2-98
Craftsm an top quality alloy steel
b la d e «carefully tempered. Taper
ground ko reduce binding. Cross cut
• rtf» C orv«d hardw ood bond*«.
T o u g h T w ist D r ills
1 79
C a rb o n steel, perfectly tem pered
twist drills in sizes from 1
1 6 to Vi
in. diam. Precision ground. For use
in hand or breast drills.
C r a f t s m a n Q u a lit y
A Thousand Uses ty.9 5
Highest quality ball bearings in
handpiece; needle bearin g motor
coupling. 50 ' long. Rust-resistant
piated steol end fitting*.
# *
J
N a u t ic a l F i x t u r e
} light Ceding
W alnut-effect holder corvea enw ry
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d e a r bottom.
.SEARS
1 79 B A I.TIM O P E ST.
CUM BERLAN D, MD.
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1947
TWENTY-ONE
s s
Advice To The Lovelorn
People Who Say Their “Feelings Will
Never C hange” Betray Immaturity
—
By
BEATRI CE FAIRFAX
.
*
Famous Authority on Problems of Loro
and M s m ags
I wonder how old a person has
to be before he learns the fallacy
of the conviction that one disap-
p biliment in love means a perma
nent broken heart
O r to put it an
th er way,
how
much experience
must one have had to realize that it
is impossible for even the deepest
hurt to m aintain its sharpness for
ever?
W h at
I
am
trying
to say, of
conine, is that. when anyone makes
the
statement
that
"m y
ieeliiigs
will never change,” it simply means
that
tie
has not
matured
suffi
ciently
to
know
that
no human
feeling can be static and that the
mood of a moment, or a year, or
perhajis even
longer,
must even
tually
change
lor
the
better.
None of this, I know, is going to
convince the young lady who signs
herself ‘‘Anonymous” to this letter:
"D ear Miss Fairfax:
" I have been going steady with
a boy for a year now. I think he Is
very wonderful and I always will
think so
W e both cared for each
other very much and had planned to
get married as soon as possible.
"However,
this
boy
has
always
been happy-go-lucky and always did
and want where he pleased. This has
been the only reason for disagree
ments.
Recently, we had a little
argument and
alter
a discussion
lie told me maybe we had better
not marry, since he whs so uncertain
of his moods and at any time might
want to change his job or go away
[for awhile. He said he never wanted
to hurt me and knew he would if
he didn't learn to accept responsi
bilities and be dependable.
•‘Everything is all of! now, but I
know my feelings will never change
and I will never look for anyone
else.
I don't intend to m arry just
for a m arriage certificate, because I
never want to hurt anyone else,
knowing I d always be thinking of
someone else.
" I know theres got to be a purpose
in Hie lor everyone and since I
can’t go on and on just making m er
ry, I ’d like to find out something
I ’d like
to have .something of my
very own. If I saved enough money,
would
there be any
way possible
for me to adopt a little baby from
an orphanage and have a little place
ot my own? I'd like that very much,
but I'm afraid there is some techni
cality which prohibits a single g irl1
from adopting children.
Is there
any orphanage that allows this?
‘‘Incidentally, I am 21 and please
don t tell me I will change m> mind
some day and meet someone else
I know I won’t.”
This girl is obviously in no mood
to be told anything. But she sur
prises me very much when she tells
me that she is 21 years old I would
have
thought
she
was about
15.
because her letter is typical teen
age talk.
There is hardlv a woman In the
world
who, during
the teen
age.
has not gone through a phase of this
.'>ort. and there is hardly a woman
in the world
who has
not
lived
through It and, in time, found that
the particular incident receded so
far Into the background, both in
ame and in emotional feeling, that
she could not recapture tnat emo
tion no matter how hard she tried
It just ceased to matter
This girl is right in her beliel
that
child
adoption
agencies
are
against permitting single women to
adopt children over whose destiny
the agencies have control. Excep
tions are sometimes
made
where
such agencies feel that a particular
woman is a completely m a tu re and
reliable Individual who would give
the child the sort of standards and
ideals that would make hun lido a
well-balanced
person. They
defi
nitely would never give a child to
anyone who was unhealthily harp
ing in her mind on something that
happened years before
I RUggej-t that "Anonymous” think
thus over before deciding to devote
the rest ot her life to being sorrv
for herself
• Cup* right, 1947,
Bv King EYatui*' Syndicate Inc I
Lease Is Promoted
Carlton
I ra »■
son ut
M r
and
Mrs. W illiam H Lei* »r, 631 Lincoln
Street, has bren promoted to staff
sergeant at Tulin air base Vienna,
Austria
Sgt.
Lease entered
the
Army
in October.
1942, and saw
combat duty in the European the
ater.
After
a
furlough
in tile
states, he returned to Europe for
the second time last September.
There are about 65.000.000 males
»f all ages in tile United States
u lu la tio n
TOP IT WITH HOMART/
S S S
S S K
TETLEY
2£ iZ
'< J S
rn
O P A N G f
P f H O I
&
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TEA
Tough Floor Enamel
Master Mixed
gal.
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A durable anomal For wooa, Pong,
Concrete, linoleum, instal floor!.
O na! overnight lo a rich finish. A l
colon. C odon cavort 7 0 0 »q. ft
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WTT-
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Asbestos Fifer#
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9 8 c
V t p ro d k o d y e now roof weae
you uta S o o n Ana quality to o l
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B e a u ti* 0 ' ’ ^
o
n
B t
*
Boot But O n ™
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ho- ; JST,
evervs
9v'°'e ■ -
y
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^
0 ,0 ° ' CC
Caulking Compound
3 . 2 5
5 Gal.
Most of Mixed
JUMm Im jaggiaMMl
^ —- — —
» do
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cMemey*, dom ufo Hon. W o n ’t crock.
f i n # R o o f
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m
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i
98c
Strong, well bult.
Hoi 3 metal bound
knot* o f fin es t
Tampico tiber so*
ii hardwood block
Rock W ool
P ellets
I 49
•Hrease room com
fort. Insulate un
moored attics. Bog
covers 20 sq. H.
3-in. deep.
56-95
Put it lo a variety
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capacity.
Pressed
3.98
W eo th er • tig h t
2-light attractive
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•UY ON
Soars
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TERMS
tnt. 15 a 124%
SEARS
ROEBUCK A N D CO
rr- iti; ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
::: f w l
■ e e - d f
Golvonixed Screen
3 6 in. w idth
R
2 5 c
Repair
Tho**
Screen!,
Keep
Out
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Heovy
Bronze
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Lacquered.
Fosses
Government
Specif teat ions.
I Z Z
H exagonal Shingles
Special Value W -
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Hexagonal design shingles cornbin*
p le a sin g a p p e a ra n c e a n d lasting
protection. Fade-resistant Voimont
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L
t i —
a
•rick-H I#ct Siding
less Than
Sq
H e a vy asphalt roll siding will give
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pearance. Embossed Brick affect ie
fad#-resisting, doh as se a a thor.
r -
s
Kimful Insulation
A Saving Price too W 6*50
Insulate your Homa
now, kirn sui
b'onWat-typo is mo»stuiO-prO-fed,
won t sag or settle. Snug, clean,
hts b e tw e e n rafters or joists.
Homart Adjustable
Steel Jack Post
Easy to tojta*, Ad it#
3 . 9 5
Ast cMftvrstoble steel b o s am ani
p o st with a built-m jock. U sa ta
re p lace o ld c e llar post* . . .
b rin g s a g g in g P oo rs b o ck ta
level. Lifts up to 1 5 ,0 0 0 Ibs.i
ort justs from 5-ft. 7-»n. to 8 -ft.
4 in
Grey finish,
and ad|ust.
easy re install
More Clean Heat
Lets Fuel Cost
with
HOMART
STEEL FURNACE
•
I n s t a lla t io n s
Arranged and
Financed
124*
22 INCH
To be sure you'll have a
warm, healthful home nest
winter,
order
your
new
H O M ART
All Steel
Fur-
nact N O W ? Advanced en
gineering
features.
Heavy
gouge
boiler
plgte
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. . . welded
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gas
tight, dust-tight .Convenient
waist high handle easily op
erates center dump grates.
A lot of furnace for less
money.
Damper Regulator Included
PAY NOTHING TIL NOV. 1st
Craftsm an H and Drill
Sturdy Quality
2 -4 9
3-jaw chuck for round shank drills
up to V* ' diam. For drilling wood
or meted. Screw-cop Hand la for
drills.
rRBFTSMRM t
kwnHBingpppMBppp
L
J
C raftsm an L#vr
5
A Q
Top quo I tty 2 4-inch aluminum 6
glass love!. Trued edges, machined
end polished. Guaranteed accu
rate, meats Fadarol specification*.
Caam
C raftsm an Brae#
R u g g ed , E ffic ie n t!
3 * ^ ®
Does the job faster, cleaner, with
less effort? Holds oil squuie shank
drills,
to
Vc-in.
round
shank
drills. H e a vy steel fram e.
S m art C#ilina Unit
Fluorescent
1 3 * ^
Streamlined, slender; Ahs kitchen,
bathroom, recreation room with soft
giareless light. Underwriters* A p
proved. W ith tw o 2 v-W . bhibe.
Craftsm an Saw
26-ln. 10-Pt.
2-98
Craftsman top quality alloy Peal
M o d e eore fully tempered. Toper
ground lo reduce binding. Cross a d
Or tsp. v e rv e * nor owooo nonom.
Tough Twist Drills
r- i»
;
1-79
Craftsman . . .
1
C arbo n steal, porfectty tem pered
twist drills in sizes from I
16 to %
In. diam. Precision ground. For usa
In hand or breast drills.
C raftsm an Q uality
A Thousand Uses
9.95
H ighest qu ality b all b e a rin g s in
handpiece; needle b e a rin g mot or
coupling. 50* long. Rusf-restsfant
plated stool end fittings.
N autical Fixture
l-light Ceiling
4-^9
W a ln u t effect holder co nred enem y
w ood spokos.TronsVcont gloss W ode,
'men***
Ellis
1 7 9 B A L T IM O R E S T .
CUMBERLAND, MD.
IT’S A GLORIOUS EASTER
FOR THE WISE SHOPPER . . . FOR THE THRIFTY S H O P P E R WHO KNOWS STYLE . . .
MATERIALS . . . TAILORING . . . IT'S A GLORIOUS EASTER BECAUSE YOU GET THE MOST
BRILLIANT STYLES . . . THE NEWEST, MOST DESIRABLE COLORS AND MATERIALS . . .
YOU GET MORE IN QUALITY . . . MORE VALUE . . . AND YOU S AVE MORE AT
MAURICE'S . . . SEE OUR SMASH-HIT COLLECTION.
A SENSATIONAL REPEAT HOSIERY EVENT . . . NOW
. . . LOWER THAN PRE-WAR FOR THIS QUALITY . . .
51 GAUGE . . . 30 DENIER . . . EXTRA SHEER
NYLON
HOSIERY
Guaranteed
Absolutely
Perfect
Full fashioned
Reg. $1.97 I
Pair
. . . A sensational hosiery event . . . Just
in time to complete your Easter wardrobe
with a pair of the finest Nylons obtainable
. . . Gorgeously sheer . . . In all the sparkling
new shades . . . all sizes . . . Buy several
paid« . . save . . .
Street Floor
I !
Misses Sixes 10-20
Junior Sizes
9 -15
Women's Sixes 38 - 52
Stout Sixes 351/4 - 51 Vi
! 4Ä-' «k. .<* im» ». *ht,:. ¿mi*., M i- t
FASHIONS
STREET FLOOR
PRESENTING AN OUTSTANDING COLLECTION OF
DYNAMIC NEW . . . EASTER
FASHION SENSATIONS OF
THE SEASON . . . IN A GIG
ANTIC COLLECTION___
EASTER DRESSES
8 91 I» IR»’
G ay, gtddy, delightful . . .
p rints . . . B rig h t solid pas
tels . . . in bembergs, gab
ardines, crepes, sheer crepes
and Jerseys . . . A ll the ex
citin g
new
designs
.
.
.
F as cin atin g styles th at w ill
set you so b eau tifu lly ap art
In the Ea s te r parade . . .
DRESS SMARTER FOR LESS . . . SAVE ON
OUR NEW SPRING
BUDGET DRESSES
. . . B rillia n t new creations
In spuns, cottons, cham bravs
and seersucker . . . In this
group we are also present
ing sm art brunch coats and
cotton
h W M
coats
.
.
m an y
of
them
are
styled
w ith zippers. . . .
3« to 7S)
f
COATS-SUITS »»a TOPPER S
Styled for a glorious Easter in wool crepes, shetlands, wool flan
nels, twills and suedes . . . Blazer stripes . . . Bright new spring
colors . . . Aqua, pink, brown, toast, beige, red, black and navies
. . . Right from the pages of America's leading fashion magazines
and designing boards . . . For your Easter . . . Maurice's Street
Floor . . .
t o
From ( umberland's largest and most com
plete Children’s and Infant’s Department . . «
TOTS’ EASTER . . .
COATS and
?C0AT SETS
Bright fabrics . . . Gay .styles for the
darlings of the Easter parade . . ,
Suedes . . . Shetlands and tweeds . . .
Green rose, powder blue, navy and tan
. . Sizes 1 to 3 and 4 to 6 1* . . .
SMART, NEW. TOTS'
5-97 16-97
EASTER DRESSES
2
, 9 7
t o
5 - 9 7
Paatel* . . . crepes . . . Dressy spuns . . . In
a glorious collection <»1 the smartest Easter
dresses in years
. , Beautiful new shades
. . . Sparking white confirmations . . , sizes
1 to 3, 4 to 6 1 a, and 7 to 14.
TOTS’ CRISP. NEW
COTTONS
| . 5 0
t o
2
9 7
Bright new . . . washable cottons . , ,
Made in famous inakeis ol ltner dresses
. . Sures 1 to 3, 4 to
and 7 to 14
. . . Buy now and save . . .
V
>' ->X .V
f r y
Lt/
' ■ W
/
)
- V
k
:
"
/ /
M
\ r *
GIRL'S EASTER
COATS, SUITS
and TOPPERS
19
9 7
Smart new suedes, shetlands and tweeds . . . In all the glowing new colors and styles . . . Per
fectly detailed coats, toppers and suits . . . made for smart style and long wear . . . sizes 7 to 14
and 10 to 16.
GIRLS’ SPARKLING NEW
EASTER DRESSES
2-97
to
6'9J
Paatels . . . silks spuns . . . dressy crepes . . , they're
all here in a glorious collection of the smartest dress
es in years for the smart Jr. MLss. . . . Sizes 7 to 14
. . . You dress them smarter and save more when
you shop at. Maurice’s.
GIRLS’ CRISP . . . COOL
COTTON
DRESSES
p 7
to
3-97
The .smartest assortment ol cottons wc have been
able to pieM'iit in years . . . Bright creations she ll*
wear with pride. . . . Size« 7 to 14. . . . Second floor.
C U M BER! A N D 'S FIN EST A PPA REL STORE
,
,
—
—
..^à Æ ^m éÊÈËÉÊÈmI
BOYS’ and SMALL BOYS1
E A S T E R
SUITS
. . Popular Eton styles . . .
Special
long
pants styles—
just like dads . . . tailored
from long wearing tweeds and
herringbones . . . in assorted
colors . . . Many of these suits
have extra pants . . . Choose
his Easter Suit at Maurices
and save . . .
19.97
a 4
FO R
SCHOOL . . .
F O R
P L A Y
O R
DRESS . . . OUTFIT
YOUR
B O Y
A 1
MAURICE’S BOYS’
DEPARTMENT . . .
Y O U ’LL
S A V I
M O R E . . .
F IN E R
Q U A LITY.
BOYS DRESS SHIRTS
Q-f C Q
From ........................
BOYS WOOL DRESS
C O Q 7
P A N T S ...............from
•
Boys' Dress PANTS
Q-| Q 7
Sanforized . . . . from V l i w l
BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS Q i C Q
From
............................ $ l « w a r
BOYS' SPRING
Q-l Q 7
SW EA T ER S
from V « « V I
I W ENTY-TW O
T H E C U M B E R L A N D N EW S,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
MD.,
FR ID A Y ,
A P R IL
4,
1947
IT’S A GLORIOUS EASTER
FOR TNE WISE SHOPPER . . . FOR TNE THRIFTT SHOPPER WHO KNOWS STYLE . . .
MATERIALS... TAILORING... ir s A GLORIOUS EASTER RECAUSE YOU GET THE MOST
RRILLIANT STYLES . . . THE NEWEST, MOST DESIRARLE COLORS AND MATERIALS . . .
YOU GET MORE IN QUALITY . . . MORE VALUE . . . ANO YOU SAVE MORE AT
MAURICE’S . . . SEE OUR SMASH-HIT COLLECTION.
•
. M V
2* ' J .
- T S r
A SENSATIONAL REPEAT HOSIERY EVENT . . . NOW
. . . LOWER THAN PRE-WAR FOR THIS QUALITY . . .
SI GAUGE... SO DENIER... EXTRA SNEER
NYLON
HOSIERY
Guaranteed
Absolutely
Perfect
Full fashioned
Reg. $1.97
I .55
Pair
. . . A sensational hosiery event . . . Just
in time to complete your Easter wardrobe
with a pair of the finest Nylons obtainable
. . . Gorgeously sheer . . . In all the sparkling
new shades . . . all sizes . • . Buy several
paid* . . save . . .
Street Floor
Mltteo Sixes IO - 20
Junior Sixes 9 - 15
Women's Sixes 38 - 52
Stout Sixes 3514 - 51 Va
FASHIONS
STREIT FLOOR
PRESENTING AN OUTSTANDING COLLECTION OF
DYNAMIC NEW . . . EASTER
FASHION SENSATIONS OF
THE SEASON . . . IN A GIG
ANTIC COLLECTION . . .
EASTER DRESSES
fi n to I R n
Guy, giddy, delightful . . .
print* . . . Bright xii id pas
tel* . . . In bemberg*. gab
ardine*. crepes, sheer crepe*
and Jerseys . . . All the es*
citing
new
designs
.
.
.
Fascinating styles that will
set vou so beautifully apart
In the Easter parade . . .
DRESS SMARTER FOR LESS . . . SAVE ON
OUR NEW SPRING
BUDGET DRESSES
. . . Brilliant new creations
In spun*, cottons, chambrays
and seersucker . . . In tilts
group we are also present
ing smart brunch m ats and
cotton
house
coala . .
many of
them
are
etyted
with sippers. . . .
COATS-SUITS a.d TOPPERS
Styled for a glorious Easter in wool crepes, shetlands, wool flan
nels, twills and suedes . . . Blazer stripes . . . Bright new spring
colors . . . Aqua, pink, brown, toast, beige, red, black and navies
. . . Right from the pages of America's leading fashion magazines
and designing boards . . . For your Easter . . . Maurice's Street
Floor . . .
to
A,... ’i&krd
;• lf*"- VV
Bright fabrics . . . Gay styles for the
darlings of the Ka.stet parade . . ,
Suedes . . . Shetlands and tweeds . . .
Green, rose, powder blue, navy and tan
. . Sizes I to 3 and 4 to 6>» . . .
SMART, REW, TOTS*
Fro ai Cumberland’s largest and most com
plete Children’s and Infant’s Deportm ent. • «
TOTS’ EASTER ...
COATS and
COAT SETS
5*116*
EASTER DRESSES
2
, 9 7
t o
5
Pasted . . . clepes . . . Dressy .spalls . . . In
a glorious collection of the sm artest I n t e r
dre.HNe* In years
. . Beaut ll ill new ahadeis
. . . Sparking white confirmations . . . sizes
I to 3, 4 to 6 's, and 7 to 14.
TOTS' CRISP, HEW
COTTONS
I -50 *o 2 97
Bi i*.’lit new . . . washable cottons . . .
Made by famous tnakeis id finer dic.s&es
. . Bizes I to 3. 4 to fi'%, and 7 to Ii
. . . Buy now and save . . .
CIRL'S EASTER
COATS, SNITS
and TOPPERS
1997
Smart new suedes, shetlands and tweeds . . . In all the glowing new colors and styles . . . Per
fectly detailed coats, toppers and suits . . , made for smart style and long wear . . . sizes 7 to 14
and IO to 16.
GIRLS’ SPARKLING NEW
EASTER DRESSES
2 *
to 6 *
Pastels . . . silk* spans . . . dressy crepes . . . they're
all here In a glorious collection of the Minutest drebo
rn in years for the atnart Jr. MLsh. . . . Bizes 7 to 14
. . . You dress them sm arter and save more when
you a11op at Maurice*.
GIRLS’ CRISP . . . COOL
COTTON
DRESSES
I *
to
3 *
The smartest assortment ol cottons we have been
able to piesent In years . . . Bright creations she ll
wear with pride. . . . Bizets 7 to 14. . . . Bccomi Hour.
I}
GUMBERT AND'S FINEST APPAREL STORE
i
rn
*
I
I I
I I
I
5
I \
BOYS’ and SMALL BOYS’
EASTER SUITS
. . F»opular Eton styles . . .
Special
long
pants styles—
just like dads . . . tailored
from long wearing tweeds and
herringbones . . . in assorted
colors . . . Many of these suits
have extra pants . . . Choose
hts Faster 8uit at Maurices
and save . . •
19.97
rom
s c h o o l . . .
F O R P L A Y
OR
DRESS . . . OL TF TI
YOLK
B O T
A l
MAURICE’S ROYS*
DEPARTMENT . .
Y O U ’ LL
S A Y
M O R S . . . r.
FINER
QUALITY
BOYS DB CSS SHIRTS
From .................. . nil
BOYS WOOL DRESS
9 9 Q 7
R A N T S ............fram ^W * 9 1
Boys' Drest RANTS
M
Q 7
Sonforixed .... from ▼ ■ ■ w l
BOYS' SFORT SHIRTS
From ....................
ROYS' SPRING
SWEATERS ...
from
$1.0
$ 1 . 9 7
CUM BERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL
1947
HOLLYWOOD
By l O l l I l A PARSONS
April 2—Tell tlu
th aiatl oHaomahi
that a rale run .
on the screen , an ci
she exits haught•
tly. That's where
Maria Mon tez is
l i f e r e n t . She
¡read the script ol
foverlxmrd 1 or the
Hie Exile." wen t
[part of t he Coun t -
an d
asked
¡1 Kmc,las Fairban ks
it
she could
la*
Ibis co-star in his
flrst
prod uction
or F a i r b a n ks
|Coin pan y, in c.
Her Un iversal*
n te r n a 11,0n al
I ><> sr. said , ' Hold
on . Kid . T hat Un ’t
Emerson imjxirtan t en ough
u *
Whereupon Maria held ?
poin t that it. is the. best!
role shed read in ages, she
to d o it -an d she is!
te sid elin es.
Douglas was
f Ruptured
I*» » hmi O lU i Amt 0*_
W«mm • Form Pittin g
M I L L I * Trm» .
• h»< h pri-n i-a natural r>M
W»*u and ro miiMrt to w<-rkutfr,
• ■Ikin g
|> n « uig, hmmm b*< I
d ast in*, •» mmnn« at
You f u n < an n oi al
Ford » o W wit ¡tout (tur p ro to »
Iron and amtaarotr.
K « r two » Mkl U»m oos
•alt vtmi j'litiKiu Mo rt do
Odtng to tr-o p a.
V rrtr m , t „ d ,r (.* f K tK
*» p i*'» , u a l d ra vrlo p a .
Cl 1
M L T IM O K I
AST)
R 47 g
( I V T M hTh
cry
pleased with these d evelop-
len ta on accoun t of he is the
MKlucer-star of “The Exile" An
ther giMxi reason Maria wan ted to
lo the picture is
th at she
has
» ng ad mired the work
of
Max
Jpuls. who will d irect. So every*
xxly’s happy.
I missed Charlie Feld m an s call
n New York, but he left word for
n e that he has sign ed Myrn a Loy
or John Stein beck's picture, “Thè
<« d Pon y,” with
Lewis Mileston e,
\ ho, by the way,
is in town n ow,
d rei tmg for him. Robert Mltchuin
’lays opposite Myrn a.
I his will Im*
Myrn a 's first time
»l Republic an d the lirst on e lor
Charlie
Feld man un d er his New
Deal witli Papa Herb Yates.
M> t n a has the flatterin g reputa
tion lor bein g “lucky" for a picture!
-She was luckv lor “The He.st Years
of Our
Lives”, all right. It won
as man y Oscars as cats have lives.
Bill
Powell thin ks man y ol
his
beat
movies were
mad e with
her
an d shes just, fin ished an other hit
with Cary G ran t an d Shirley Tem
ple in “Tlie Bachelor An d The Bob
by-Sox.”
When LorruIn e Miller was In Hol-
j lywood , she could n 't get to first
j base, but sin ce she’s been in “H» p-
j py Birthd ay.” she’s hud
perhaps
more offerts than an y youn g actress
i on the New York stage.
I saw her the other even in g at
the Stork Club an d site is extreme
ly pretty. On the stage she looks
like Iren e Dun n e, hut off stage. I
could n ’t see the resemblan ce. M ay-
i>e it’s because her haird o on the
stage is like Iren e’s.
Miss Miller tells me she goes to
Hollywood for "D istan t Drum*-,” Mil
ton Sperlin g’s epic which stars Gary
Cooper.
Sn apshots of New York an d Hol
lywood collected at ran d om: Mon a
Freeman , who is so good in “Dear
| Ituth,” exiM Cts a baby in October
She’s Mrs. Pat
Nern ey
on
her
charge accoun ts.
Saw Faye Fmcrsou Roosevelt with
Elliott in the Q ib Room She looked
i n ythin g but the glamorous girl I
I kn ew in Hollywood . She’s much too
pretty to let herself go like that.
Fran ces Neal
an d
Van
Heflin
were there. Fran ces Ls a good ex
ample of how a girl can have chil
d ren an d still keep her figure She
looks lovely.
Natalie Thompson , Bob Hutton 's
former wife, is just out of the hos
pital where she told me she’s been
very sick with yellow jaun d ice, an d ,
believe me, I can sympathize with
her. That isn ’t an ythin g for a lad y!
to have.
Chatted with Alva Giin bel an d
er husban d , Bern ard , fcihe asked me
o come to a meetin g at the un i
versity, but I ’m off to Baltimore
0 stay un til my show Sun d ay when
rod Allen , the n ew Cover boy, will
<e my guest.
Everyon e in New York says that
he gen tleman with whom the for-
n ore Mrs. Charles Feld man is seen
everywhere is her “Big Momen t."
Oon a an d Charlie Chaplin seem
to Ih* on a merry-go-roun d . Saw
hem first at "21” then later with
1 party of frien d s at the Cub Room,
'» lon g them Jo David son , the sculp
tor. an d Dorothy Parker.
Jack Ben n y’s spon sors art* eyein g
« show whipped up
hy
Reggie
| Gard in er, Gregory Ratoff an d Ed ith
j iwyn n for Mr Big’s “Bummer Re
placemen t” Spo t.
Hai hai a
I« uwren ce
was
havin g
t rouble showin g emotion with Tj’
’ower for a scen e in “Captain From
C astile,’ so d irector Hen ry Kin g
said , “just preten d he’s Fran k Sin -;
atra, Hon ey.”
The Van John son s lun chin g with'
Greg Bautzer at
the
Hollywood
Brown Derby—gettin g their pitchers
taken .
¿Stan ley Grittis, recen tly appoin t
ed
ambassad or
to
Polan d ,
an d
chairman of the board of d irectors
at Paramoun t, receivin g con grat
ulation s on his assign men t.
TWENTY-THREE
I asked Walter Win chell tin * n ame
of the pretty girl with whom he was
d oin g h hectic samba Hi* said she
was Kay Buckley, d oin g a very good
oh in the play "Burlesque.” “T h at’s
net* boy frien d ,” Waller said , poin t
in g to a d istin guished lookin g gen
tleman .
Waiter told me $200,000
had been raised for the Damon
Run yon Memorial Can cer Fun d .
The Jack W arn ers are at the
Wald orf-Astoria. Also, the Duke an d
I in ches of Win d sor an d tlu* M ahar
aja an d M aharan i of Hn rad o.
Gary Cooper, Ed d ie Braken , Mi
chael Arlen , an d Paul Douglas were
a few of the people I saw in pass
in g.
Saw Con stan ce Talmad ge Giblyn
lun chin g at "21” an d who d o you
thin k she was with? George Rosen -!
berg of Hollywood , n o less.
T h at’» all tod ay.
In the vegetable gard en the as
paragus bed should receive atten tion
tirst as it is amon gst the first of the
peim an en t plan ts to start growth
an d this n ew growth can be ea.rilv
d amaged .
füa it il i: x )
Husband s! Wives!
Want new Pep and Vim?
Thousan d « of
couplo* n ro w» >ak, worn -out, *« •
hauaUxt w .l. ly Ix-cuum * | NM| y 1,« « kn ir o n
F o r
tii*w vim viulitv. try OatrvK Ton ic Tn hlrU .
< on t/iin « iron you, fix» , m ay n ii*d for fa'll; n lxo
vitam in H ,. ( n » t regular $1 00 n i/.« n ow
im iy 7 9 c’
For « air at ail d rug stores everywhere—
In Cumberlun d . at H an d ’s Cut Hate.
_____________
—Ad vertisemen t |
“LONESOME
Trail”
— with —
JIMMY WAKELY
LEE
LASSES" WHITE
JOHN JAMES
C h a p te r
'!
"N on of
th e
(iu» ril« m a n "
CARTOON
NEWS
SHORT
DOORBELLS”
— with —
ANNE GW YNNE
ROBERT SHAYNE
ROSCOE KARNS
JOHN EIDRIDGE
Now M any W cor
F A LSE TFTTH
W ith Little Worry
Eat. talk, laugh or mi<*< zr »
hout
it ¡i
ol
i n 'ir ur r false teeth d roppin g. « lippin g
or wabblin g FAHTKETH hold s filates flrmei
an d more comfortably. T hla pleasan t pow
d er has n o gummy, gooev, pasty tmste or
• « ••lin g. Ihiesn ’t cause n ausea. It's alkaline
<no n-acid). checks "plate od or" (denture
b r e a th i. Get FA STIC FTTH at an y d rug More
- Ad vertisemen t
Wi Tm
GIRLS! WOMEN! TRY THIS IF YOU’RE
N E R V O U S
RAND'S
WORN OUT F R O M
G E T T IN G U P
N IG H T S ?
• H v o n let y p nights—hav e frequent dr
•e e to paac y o ur w ater-y es. and hav e
nackAc.he, c*ur to eacess acidity m Hie
m me, he glad y o u're reading this:
Three generation« ago Dr. Kilmer, a
Wmmo m do cto r, fo und hundreds
o f his
pa* ents with this tro uble. So he m.idr a
in edict ne o f IF» herbs, ro o ts, v egetables.
He called it “ Swamp-Ro o t.”
Mitirms of men and wo men hav e taken
It~ o f ten with ama/ing result« .
S» 4ro p Rint go ea nght to wo rk to
Dua/> o u t kidney s . . . increases flo w o f
•ruse, helping reliev e recess acidity . . . so
« w irritated bladder gets a go o d flushing
o ut
to o
Many repo rt getting a go rx i
■ught s Sleep after the fir» t few d o ***
Cautio n: take as dim ted.
Fo r free trial supply , send to Dept R
Kilmer * Co .. Inc . R „ 1255. Stamfo rd,’
C<**n Of - get full sired bo ttle o f Swamp
Ro o t to day
at y o o t
diugat.ee.
___
_ _ _ _ _
Ad vertisem en t j
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS ACIDS
f* t!p 15 M ilas o f K id n e y T u b« »
F lu sh O u t P o iao n o u t
W a s t e
If Too hayran excess of ariris in yourblood.
j
kid n ey tubes may be over-
w need. Thesetiny filters and tubes are wo rk-
I: »* day and night to help Nature rid your
a Wf!**
Po iso no us waste,
w ben diso rder o f kidney functio n permits
► ao no ua matter to remain
in y o ur Wo o d, it
an a *raus* nagiring backache, r hr umatir
rain s
m
° f l*n ’(,*nd enf r*nr. getting up
PJ nrS* undrr tkf ey es,
k a -arhca an d dimness. Frequent o r scanty
**3b« rning so me!
g y
k
Z A
wro ng W,th
y o ur kidney s o r Wadder,
. |KLdn.d,‘ .tt,T A**4 kelp the same aa ho w-
y w EruggUt fo r Do an'« Pills, a
l
<bo retie. n*ed successfully
by mil-
L, Z
D,“ n "
» ¡a“ » *
t
P
16 mi1** 0 1 kidney
fc-3. a ? ¿ ¡ L i M S r * “ ’• tn m » w
^
Adv crUsement ;
Weak,Watery Blood
Blamed for Making
Men and Women
Look and Feel Older
T H I N T H E I R Y E A R S
Bo w do y o u feel at the end o f a day ’
1* that « id time pep and driv e lacking’
Hav e y o u checked-up o n y o ur blo o d
•trength lately ? Tho usands no w regain-
tnr glo wing go o d lo o ks and v itality
thro ugh the release o f v ibrant energy to
•i*ry muscle, fibre, cell.
Iv ery day —ev ery ho ur—millio n* o f
tiny red-blo o d-ceil* must po ur fo rth
fro m the marro w o f y o ur bo nes to re
place tho se that are wo rn-o ut. A lo w
blo o d co unt may afTect y o u in sev eral
w*vp no appetite, underweight, no ener-
g*
a general run-do wn co nditio n, lack
•e resistance to infectio n and disease.
To get real relief y o u m ust keep up
fo ur blo o d Strength Medical autho rities.
bT analy sis o f the blo o d, hav e by po sl-
t v e pro o f sho wn that 8 SS To nic ia
amarmgly effectiv e in building up lo w
b o o d strength In no n-o rganic nutri
tio nal anemia. This Is due to the SS3
To nic fo rmula which co ntains special
wnd po tent activ ating ingredients
A *o 8 SS To nic helps y o u enjo y the
fo o d y o u eat by increasing the gastric
C restiv e J uice when ft Is no n-o rganl-
ea ly to o little o r scanty —thus the sto m-
a *h will hav e little cause to get balky
with gas blo at and giv e o ff that so ur
fo o d taste
Do n't wait* Energize y o ur bo dy with
rich, red-blo o d Start o n SSS To nic no w.
As v igo ro us blo o d surges thro ugho ut
y o ur who le bo dy , greater freshness and
• ’rength aho uld make y o u eat better,
weep better, feel better, wo rk better,
p ay better, hav e a healthy co lo r glo w in
y o ur akin—firm flesh All o ut ho llo w
p.aces MUllo na o f bo ttles so ld (let a
bo ttle fro m y o ur drug sto re. 8 S8 To nic
fcelps Build Sturdy Health.
Adv ert iMMunit
On ‘CERTAIN DAYS
of The Month!
Do female fun ction al mon thly d is
turban ces make you feel n ervous,
Itd gety, cran ky, so tired an d ’d rag
ged out’- at such times? Then d o
try Lyd ia E. Pin khain s Vegetable
Compoun d to relieve such symp
toms. It’s fa mo u s for this purpose!
Taken reg ularly—P in kh am ’s
Compoun d helps build up resist
an ce again st such d istress. An d
the kin d of prod uct you
should buy. Thousan d s have re
ported ben efit! Wo rth , try n ig .
V E G E T A B L E
C O M P O U N D
H I H K I D S !
HERE’S TIIE
BIGGEST EASTER
TREAT CHILDREN
OF EVERY AGE
HAVE EVER ENJOYED!
_
EASTER M O NDAY
DOORS
OPEN
A T
9
A M
SH O W ST ART S A T 9 :30 A. M.
Fi '
\y\w wy.*.»*- *—
•'•'Mill*n ,/WA
W Ê F * i
/ J jd c A iè te '¡¿ te a V ic
a
S
t
r
a
n
d
*
NOW
FEATURE AT: 12 - 1:55 - 3:48 . 5:42 * 7:35 - 9 :3
3
Mí bhty ..Magnificent.
HIE
FREE
HAGAN
ICE
C P ' A M
FOR
EVERY
CHILD!
F E A T U R E
PICTURE
SHIRLEY
TEMPLE
A li*
In Technico lo r
N fN f hi Th« State It Gionftes *
SPECTACLE As Dig As The Dreams of America1
STARS-Blanng |fl A Cast DI Thousands':
COLOR-Piarmng As The California Skies1
BA R B A R A
MIILAND, STANVVYCJÍ FITZGERALD
i f.
I N
“REBECCA OF
SUNNYBROOK
F4RM”
WITH
RANDOLPH SCOTT
J ACK HALEY
BILL ROBINSON
—
i
PLUS FOUR COLOR C A R T O O N S
HAGAN H E CREAM TO
EVERY CHILD ATTENDING
ALL SEATS 25c — NOW ON SALE
t)
, V " M a n n a
C
° L
O r
5 * R T q O N
• JOIBI FARROW
fcr m EARttOW
A -
G R A C E
M .
FISHER
PRESENTS
A T T H E PO PU LAR
MARYLAND
GALA EASTER
— PARTY_ _
S A T U R D A Y
MORKfNG, APRIL 5th
Doors Opon
8
45
A. M.
Show Starts
r t:3 0
A. M.
LET
Y O U «
TASTE
DECIDE!
•William Penn
Admissio n
"0; Adults and Children 2 5 c Î
All Seats
ne. Tax
f.KACF ¡VI, MMIIKK
EMBA55M
FAMILY THF.A TBB
SHOOTHTKT SHERI
FUNNIEST COWBOY
NOW SHOWING
— Thru Sat. —
IN ORSKRVANCE OF CiOOIl
F a i n Al'
THIS
T H E A T R E
W ILL
RF
CLO SED
U N T IL
5 P. M. FKIHAY. APRIL 4th
IN PERSON
PARRISH"
— T H E -
M AGICIAN
SEE: Eoster Bunnies Appear From Nowhere
SEE: The M agic Fish Bowl . . .
SEE: Birth Of Old Glory . . .
SEE: 101 Other Feats Of M agic . . .
PLUS — T H IS B R A N D N E W FULL
LEN G TH FEATURE PICTURE!
First Showing in Cumberland
FRO M TH E C O M IC PAGES TO
THE SCREEN . . . .
that laughable, troubful
r *
Lone Hand
Texan"
ADDI-, D
S H O R T
H IT S
First Chapter of a Brand
New Thrilling Serial
“DAUGHTER OF DON Q”
2 R E E L C O M E D Y A N D N E W S
E X T R A
Color
Cartoons
FREE
F R O M H ILL'S
T O Y STORE
Real Live
Easter
Bunnies
t he at r e c l os e d
t od ay
UNTIL ft P. M IN ORKFKVANCi:
OF C.OOD
IRIDA Y
DO ORS OPEN
5 P. M.
T O D A Y
A T
STARTS
TO DAY
THEATRE CLOSED TODAY
UNTIL ft P M IN ORSI KVANC’E
OF GOOD
I RID A Y
Feature Schedule
-FOR T O D A Y O N LY -
5:30
7:28
9 :26
H a p p y
H A P p y
\
R° ^ AN qe ,
S ° H G S !
M - G - M ' s H A PPIE ST HIT!
Ffc/wtf m m • a
m m
J
*'n9 s 7 great song hits!
finds the right guy to
sing love songs to! t
M i u m m • i m r o u m
j
Hollywood’s new romantic favorite t
A riot of loughs I
f]Sa .
S
I
PLUS: A GRAND SELECTION OF SHORT HITS
%
f flr
^
atda
SAYs°C
en q
LA^ O H o n ,
* t o d a y
• L A S I DAY • EDDI E B R A C K E N — C A S S D A LEY in " L A D I E S M A N "
S T A R T IN G
• S A T U R D A Y •
I T ’S T E R R I F I C » I T ’S DARING ROMANCE
MARK, H EU iN G ER
»to vwJjbTHC ÜUIfâ 'n swiSs
i Sow Tuft s
ivitÂ,
Ann BLYTH
V
tik d flu ÿi&i oj M líA i/ií.T W ^
m th Rutli WARRICK.
WILLIAM GARGAN • THOMAS GOMEZ • MARY NASH • JOHN LITEL
EX TR A •
SPREE FOR A L L ” C A R T O O N — N O V E L T Y A N D N E W S FLASHES
HEY KIDS
EX T R A s p e c i a l
O N E S H O W I N G O N L Y
SATURDAY MORN’i'G AT 9:30 A. M.
COME EARLY FOR E G G HUNT
PRIZE WINNING SEATS DOORS OPEN 8:30 A. M.
McCRORY'S 5c & 10c STORE PRESENTS
CUMBERLAND’S GREATEST
E A S T E R I M i m
* E X T R A *
THE FULL LENGTH
RIOT OF FUN FEATURE
ON OUR STAGE
THE GIANT REAL LIVE
BUNHY PflHCE
T O M T H U M B
W E D D IN G C O M P A N Y OF 25
Presented by
W IN T E R D A N C E ST U D IO
TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE—BUY THEM
EARLY—SEAT SALE LIMITED TO CAPACIT ' OF THEATRE
v iä j f c ö *
THE
COLOR COMIC
CARTOONS
and
BUGS
BUNNY
SINGING — DANCING
CHILDREN’S
Amateur Contest
EGG HI NT PRIZES
REAL LIVE
b u n n i e s
— • —
EASTER BASKETS
ADMISSION — ADULTS
CHILDREN
.
.
. 2 5 *
THE CUMBERLAND
NEWS,
CUMBERLAND,
MD.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
1947
TWENTY-THREE
KEEPING UP WITH
HOLLYWOOD I
I__________
By LOUELLA PARSONS
I
BALTIMORE. April 2 -T ell the
average actress th arati oetaolnshi
average actress that a role run.
J\i*t 20 minutes on the screen, and
iaha exits haught
ily. That's where
Maria Monte?, is
d i f f e r e n t . She
head the script of
overboard for the
"H ie Exile," went
b a rt of the Count -
less
and
asked
IAnights Fairbanks
ii
she could be
lins co- st iti in In1
first
production
Is.I F a i l b a n k s
|c<>mpany. lur.
Her Universal-
I: I l l er t a i lo mil
posse.- sain. "Hold
on, kaK T hat tan!
Pave fjnerson inijiortant enough
for
you." Whereuixm Maria held
to her point th at it is the. best
femme role she'd read in ages, she
wanted to do it—and she is!
On the sidelines. Douglas was
Ruptured
Dm r ia l VtMf* Hmm Dm-
Wmm rn Paean P itting
MILLUS T i m
■kirk frmwiAtm —I— I few
4m ta i »a l tun IBI ll ii ii NM.
m Wm|. flaring, Son* Sari
cry pleased with these develop*
.cuts on account of he la the
roducer-star of ‘‘Tile Exile.” An
ither good reason Maria wanted to
lo the picture is th at she has
>ng admired the work
of
Max
rpul.s, who will direct. So evcry-
xjdys happy.
I missed Charlie Feldman’s call
n New York, but he left word for
ne th at he has signed Myrna Loy
ior John Steinbeck's picture, “The
lied Pony,” with Lewis Milestone,
A ho. by the way, is In town now.
lim iting for him. Roliert M inburn
•lays opposite Myrna.
This will lie Myriads first time
it Republic and the first one tor
Charlie KY id man under his New
Deal with Papa Herb Yates.
Myrna has the flattering reputa
tion for being “lucky” for a picture
She was lucly ior "The Best Years
of Our Lives", all right. It won
as many Oscars as cats have lives.
Bill
Powell thinks many of
his
best movies were made with her
and she’s just finished another hit
with Cary G rant and Shirley Tem
ple in “Tile Bachelor And The Bob
by-Sox.”
When Lorraine Miller was In Hoi-
RAND'S
Writ* a* kxIbt Im P M I
I m is plaid, aaa I rd bit iii pa
C I T
B A L I ( M O U
AND
B A T S
CE N T BM BTA.
•William Penn
lywood, she couldn't get to first
base, but since she’s been in "Hap
py Birthday.” shes had
i**rhai>.s
more oilers than any young actress
on the New York stage.
I saw lier the other evening at
the Stork Club and she is extreme
ly pretty. On the stage she looks
like Irene Dunne, but off stage, I
I couldn’t sec the resemblance. May
be It’s because her hairdo on the
stage is like Irene’s.
Miss Miller tells me she goes to
Hollywood for "Distant Drums,** Mil
ton Sperling's epic which stars Gary
Cooler.
Snapshots of New York and Hol
lywood collected at random: Mona
Freeman, who Is so good in “Dear
I Ruth." exjM Cts a baby In Oc tober
►Shes Mrs. Pat Nerncy
on
her
'charge accounts.
Saw Faye Emerson Roosevelt with
Elliott in the Q ib Room. She looked
i ny thing but the glamorous girl I
I knew in Hollywood. She’s much too
pretty to let herself go like that.
Frances Neal
and Van Heflin
were there. Fiances Is a good ex-
’ ample of how a girl can have chil
dren and still keep her figure She
looks lovely.
Natalie Thompson, Bob Hutton’s
former wife, Is just out of the hos
pital where she told me she’s been
very sick with yellow jaundice, and,
i believe me. I can sympathize with
I lier. T hat isn t anything for a lady
to have.
Chatted with Alva Gimbel and
cr husband. B e r n a r d . She a s k e d me
o come to a meeting at the unl-
ersity. but I ’m of! to Baltimore
0 stay until my show Sunday when
red Allen, the new Cover boy, will
a* my guest.
Everyone in New York says that
he gentleman with whom the for
bore Mrs. Charles Feld man is seen
everywhere Is her "Big Moment."
Cons and Charlie Chaplin seem
to be on a merry-go-round. Saw
hem first at ”21’’ then later with
1 party of friends at the Cub Room,
inning them Jo Davidson, the sculp-
or, and Dorothy Parker.
Jack Benny's siKinsnrs are eyeing
a show
whipped up
by
Regale
Gardiner, Gregory Ratoff and Edith
iwynn ior Mr. Rig s "Bummer Re
placement’’ NJ Hit.
Barbara Lawrence
was
having
trouble showing emotion with Ty
’ow c r for a scene Iii "Captain From
Castile," so director Henry King
said, "just pretend lie’s Frank Sin
atra. Honey.”
The Van Johnsons lunching with
Greg Bautzer at
the
Hollywood
Brown Derby—getting their pitchers
taken.
Stanley Griffis, recently appoint
ed
ambassador
to
Poland,
and
chairman of the board of directors
at Param ount, receiving congrat
ulations on his assignment.
I asked W alter Winehell the name
of the pretty girl with whom he was
d o in g a hectic Satilla! He said she
was K.iy Buckley, doing a very good
‘ob In the plav ’’Burlesque." "That's
lier boy friend,” Walter said, point
ing to a distinguished looking gen
tleman.
Waiter
told me $300,000
had been raised for the Damon
Runyon Memorial Cancer Fund.
The Jack W arners are at the
W aldorf-Astoria. Also, the Duke and
Ouches of Windsor and the M ahar
aja and M aharani of Barado.
Gary Cooper, Eddie Braken. Mi
chael Arlrn, and Paul Douglas wert)
a few of the people I saw in [Miss
ing
Kaw Constance Tai mad ge Giblyn
lunching at "21” and who do you
think she was with? George Rosen
berg of Hollywood, no less.
T hat's all today.
In the vegetable garden the as
paragus bed should receive attention
first as it is amongst the first of tile
permanent plants to start growth
and this new growth ran lie easily
damaged.
Husbands! Wives!
Want new Pep and Vim?
T hous.,imIbi of cuu|>Ibo sr* *«-ak. worn ou t. - i
tutus!*-,) solely hr, must lowly In, It* iron
lu r
nrw vim vitality, try (Wrwt iunic Taliirt*.
Cunt* dim iron you. lim. may nm l for |»n; also
vitamin Hi. fist rrgular $1 HO mm now ant v 79r*
F or »»le s t ail d ru g d o r m e v rry w h e re -
in C u m b erlan d , a t R a n d 's C u t H ate
Advrrlisrment
.............. Y ------------------------------
“
“
| « A B * E S i |
Z Z
"LONESOME
Trail”
— with —
JIMMY WAKELY
LEE ' LASSES” WHITE
JOHN JAMES
I h . i p l * r
?
"Hon »f lh*
( • u a r d « m a n ' '
a
CARTOON
a
NEWS
a
SHORT
” 1 RING
DOORBELLS”
— with —
ANNE GWYNNE
ROBERT SHAYNE
ROSCOE KARNS
JOHN ELDRIDGE
Now M ony W oof
FALSE TFFTH I
With Little Worry
Eat. talk. Inuit h or aurene mahout I* ii
of Insecure raise teeth dropping, slipplnr
or arwhhlttig FAHTEETH holds plates firmer
and m ort comfortably. Tina pleasant pow
der has no gummy, gooey, pasty taste or
• feting. Doesn't cause nausea. It's alkallnr
(non-acid). Checks "plate odor" (denture
breath*. Ort FA8TEETH at any drug M o r e
—Advertisement
Svuuub TO. TaaXcat v
§ MARYLAND
T 7 ) . 5 ')7 ). ( P u I u A a » ,
THEATRE CLOSED TODAT
UNTIL 5 r. M IN OBSERVANC E
OF HOOD FRIDA V
GIRIS! WOMEN! TRV THIS IF YOU’RE
N ERV O U S
WORN OUT FROM
G E T T IN G U P
N IG H T S ?
• V you get up nights— have frequent (le
ave to pave your w ater—yes. and have
backache, due to excess acidity vt the
■nne. be glad you're reading this:
Three generations ago D r. Kilmer, rn
fam ous doctor, found hundreds of hts
irn tt with this trouble. So he m ade a
in r d id ne of 16 herbs, roots, vegetables,
fetiaams
He railed it "Sw am p R oot.”
Mtil. oni of men and women have taken
I t—often with am azing results.
Swam p-Root goes right to work to
SuMh o u t kidneys . . . increases flow of
Br ia r, helping relieve excess acidity . . . so
•he irritated bladder gets a good flushing
o at, too
M any report getting a good
Bight's sleep after the Aret /aw dose*
C aution : take as direr ted.
Far free trial supply, send to D ept. R.
Kilm er & Co.. Inr , Bo* 12S5, Stam ford,
Coon Or — get full sired bottle ot Swamp-
Moot tartog ag your drugstore.
Advertisement
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS ACIDS
H a lp IS M ite s o f K id n o y T u b s #
F lu s h O u t P o is o n o u s W a s ts
If roo have a a ex com of acids la your blood,
Bour It aulos of kidney tabes may ha over
worked. These t my niters and tubas ara work-
lax day aad Bight to halp N atant rid your
system af assess adds aad poisoaoaa waste.
Whoa disorder of kidney function permits
pmmmem m atter to remain Is your Mood, it
tosyraaar naggiaghaekacha.rhetanaMcpalng,
leg pains, loss e t pep and energy, getting up
Bight*. swelling, puffiness under the eyes.
headaches and dirtiness. Frequent or scanty
passages with smarting and burning some
times shows there is something wrong arith
pour kidneys or bladder.
Kidneys may need help the same as bow-
• » . so aah your druggist for Doan’s Pills, a
Sim ulant diuretic, used successfully by mii-
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relief aad trill help the I i miles of kidney
Rubes Rash out poisonous WMH flam p aw
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TUR TIEU n u t
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bv analysis of th e blood, have by posi
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T W E N T Y - F O U R
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, M D,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
194 7
Hapes A n d FUchock Suspended Indefinitely
Ruling Virtually
Careers Of Two
Closes
Commissioner Ads
In Alleged "Fix"
(/!•
PH ILA D ELPH IA ,
April
3
Merle H apes and Prank FUcho ck,
New Yo rk G ian ts ace hack ho ld play
ers who became entangled in a t
tempt.*' to fix th e Natio nal Fo o tball
le a g u e « C ham pio nship game last
December 15, to day were suspended
indefinitely
in
the
latest
chapter p |/,J A nr.uo u a N
EXHIBITION GAMES
PIRATES BEAT PHILS
1
CLEARW ATER, Fla., April 3 (ff*\
'Hie
Pittsburgh
Pirates
pushed
acro ss .six runs In th e fo urth inning
to day
to defeat th e
Philadelphia
Phils, 10 to 7, in the Phils' final
spring train in g gam e here.
scandal since
o f the biggest spo rt
th e 1919 Wo rld Series.
League Co m m issio ner
Bert
Bell
anno unced he had fo und the two
•guilty
o f
actio ns detrim ental
to
th e welfare o f the Natio nal Lea
gue
and o f pro fessio nal fo o tball,’*
adding :
100 (101 101 — 10 15
4
IN» .000 202 00»
7
8
4
Srwrll Rnd Klilttr; Judd Miiunrv (5» nfid
Ko rc h* r i7» mid Hrmlnick, PadiiHt (6).
SOX W IN EASILY
L IT T L E ROCK. April 3 u P t- T h r
American League C ham pio n Bo sto n
Red Bo x turned lo o se th eir po wer
behind
th e
slx-htt
pitching
o l
Ro o kie H arry Do rish to defeat th e
This sus}>ensio n prev ents the em - u tt> Ro ck Trav elers o f th e S o uth-
pl< \m en t o f Hap« *.- o r File ho ck b\ *» rn Asso ciatio n 8-2 in an exhibitio n
e.* \ club iii 1-1 it? Natio n« ! Fo o tball aam c liera tiKittv
Dv .gue s.* p la\er, <o a*h o r in any bo s to n ial> ___.. .m o 100 ooo—i t4 i
rapacity, w h a tso e v e r ”
l i t t l e r o c k iba> . 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 - 2
6
2
The C o m m issio n er's ru lin g all but
no rmh *n« i M» yr*: no wer*. Marino 12 » .
t« ■ e finis t<> th e playing dl j
(,t Jo hn o n •«> **n<■» Do o ittu« Dtckej (•).
. who o nce ro amed the h.n k
field a t the Univ ersity o f Mts.sl.s-
alppl. and Filcho ck. pro sta r since
le v ing In dia n a Univ ersity campus.
T he decisio n cam e Just 24 ho urs
a fte r three New Yo rk m en had been
sentenced fo r a ttem pting to bribe
tbe player*- to thro w the game. Da-
T.d K
K rakauer, Harv ey S tcm m er
and
Jero m e
Zero wltz were giv en
pi so n
sentences
while
a
fo urth
m ar
SOX Oi l EAT INDIANS
TU CSON, Art/., April 3 O P i-C ass
M ichaels spo iled a n o therw ise tig h t
pitching perfo rm ance by Do n Black
to day by slum m ing a fifth Inning
ho m e run that
gav e the Chicago
W hite So x a 2 to 1 win o v er the
Clev eland Indians.
< i Aim M D
CHICAOO 1 A)
Hlitck, Berry (7*,
. . 000 100 000-1 10 1
. » 01 010 OOX—2 « 0
Lemo n do and Lo pez
Alv m Paris, will be sentenced He*i» n (7» ;
Maltfbervar (« » und
M o nday.
r "*a
Te
.mo t ■ at the tri.1l o f th e lo ur
Itl.D S TRIM ATLANTA
tho w ed that neither Hapes no r Pil-
ATLANTA, April 3 (/Pi—W ith v et-
rl.o ck
accepted tlic o lfered bribe. eran pitchers Jo e Beggs and H arry
B ’h we» c placed o n the L eagues G um bcrt
lim iting
the
A tlanta
'V ten ded list o n g in a ih o n J a n u a n c ra c ke rs to three hits, th e C incin-
F
the day Paris was co nv icted in na(1 R efjs defeated th e S o uthern
N* 71 Yo rk o n charges o f trying to Asso ciatio n team 4-2 in an exhi-
Px the game between the G iants buicm baseball gam e here to day,
an d Chicago Bears.
C in c in n a ti inl» .. 201 000 010—4 a 3
Hapes, ho wev er was no t perm it- A t l a n t a <sa» ....... 000 000 200— 2
3
0
tn . rviav in
o am*»
wnn h\
Br8 8s. Gumbert
181 and Larnano : Ad-
teu to p,a\ JIJ the game, wo n d>
Bush (g
Ko vgl
and un
th e Bears 24-10. T h e fo rm er M is-,
elssippi *ar adm itted to M ayo r Wil-
G IA N T S SW AM P CUBS
linm O"Dwyer o f New Yo rk a few
PH O E N IX . Ariz., April 3 (yp>—’The
ho ur? befo re th e game th a t he re- New Yo rk G ia n ts ra n wild in th e
chiv ed th e o ffer
Filcho ck, a g re a t;fifth inning to day as they blasted
passer playing w ith the G ian ts fo r th e Chicago Cubs 12 to 0 to sweep
th e first seaso n after un der-study- a
tw o -gam e
exhibitio n
baseball
ii g S am m y Baugh at W ashingto n,¡series here.
T he G ia n ts wo n the
d* nled he h ad been appro ached.
first, gam e yesterday 9 to 1.
D uring th e Paris trial, h o w e v e r,|c h ic a o o <n> ..........
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 s
1
r.-c ta c k'
he h ad no t to ld
t e New
Yo rk
ma>o r
the
truth.jmv infato n «fl» Ko zlo w, Tho mpso n (7> « nd
Paris testified he mHde an o tter o f co o per, warren i7t.
I 500 In ca-h and a $1.000 Ix-t to I
n D n u ,„ u
. . .
H .pe.' a » e e l belo rr the
gam e Two
.
! ,
,, " ,
d v s l» *er, he said he
m ade the MIAM I,
F l a
, April 3 <A*i
A o ne-
» - me Oiler to the e x-In dia n a player ™*n do uble play bv C atch er Jake
P aris also testified
that n eith er E *'1/ helped keep th e P h iladelph ia,
p 'a v e r accepted. D uring
the week Athletics under co ntro l while
th e
hr to re th e title game, he said he St. Ito uis Bro wns picked up a t to 1
sttem p ted to change th eir nunds v^ ,o rV
fro m C o nnie
M a c ks club
befo re the fray be-
Shipley Resigns
Âs U. 01 Maryland
Basketball Coach
Allegany Senior-Alumni
Turns Back 194 7 Eleven
C O LLEG E PARK. Md.. April 3 (/Pi
—•After 24 years serv ice. H
Burto n
Shipley to day was reliev ed o f his jo b
as U niv ersity o f M aryland's head
basket ball co ach a t his o wn request.
A thletic Directo r Jim T a tum a n -
no uno ed th e M o ip ttQ o i o l Bhipic\ s
resignatio n, which the v eteran m en-
Ka,u ‘s C am pers
Schoolboys Fumble
Away Game 12 To 0
Iix JO H N L. BO ItUIIEKT
co mbined Senio r-A lum ni elev en
! turned back the 1947 editio n o f Al-
12 to 0 yesterday
to r had tendered three times in the
past. T a tu m said a successo r will be ,ls
nam ed in the near future.
Shipley
will
co ntinue
as
head
baseball co ach, a jo b he has held fo r
th e past 24 years, and carry o n his
duties h.s an Instructo r in the
afterno o n o n the ('ampo ia-llo
Co ach
Bo b
Pence
ended
his
spring fo o tball pro gram .
T h e po w er-laden Senio rs sho wed
the
scho o lbo y
elev en,
w hich
had
had sev eral weeks o f fundam entals,
nhv xi- h v h a t the finished pro duct lo o ks like
as halfback Bruce A nderso n pun ch - 1
Ids 36 to th e Senio r 42 w here M o rt
Peskin snaged the pigskin and to o k
it
back
to the
Senio r
48
Fro m
th is po int the Senio rs dro v e to th eir
fir.'.t, to uchdo wn.
Peskin an d Dick Clo wer picked up
.i first o n the Allegany 42 Po wers
| gained th ree yards th ro ug h the c en
t e r and then ‘T ra v e lin g To m'* dro p
ped the ball o n the next piay but
Lucas do v e o n th e o v al to sav e th e
day fo r the Senio rs. Po wers then
co m pleted the first o f th ree passes
to lankv G len
B rant fo r a n o th e r
first do wn o n the 32. Po wer« go t
and Peskin three yards as th e
cal educatio n dep artm en t.
•■"*•*'*» *•' * » ***'* " ,‘u7" '; , I 17 ‘,,vr‘‘ ¡perio d ended with the Senio r» h av -
Shlpley co ached fo o tball, baseball f, m e r
,o m . o n e - f o o t line fo r
ing
f1jg{ o n t}je Allegany
20
and basketball a t Perkio m en Prep. ’.I1*.,,
to uchdo w n o "« 1' f
|
A barkfleld-ln-m o tio n penalty an d
M arshall Co llege and the U niv ersity ,e 'st^((
perio d an d lull back
jR three yarcl
p OWf,rs
o f D elaw are tx*fo re return in g to his f o inmy
o wers added o ne lo r sate,y u ri,r r A nderso n’s fiv e yard p irk-up
alm a m a te r in 1923.
[,o m ¡hp
o n
and bro ught up th ird do wn and 12
D uring the sum m er o f 1923 lie ilnV . 1
v ,[
.I’*'
1
perio d
fo R(J Hg thp M,ro ,ul p jrjo ^ « tarted.
pilo ted M artinsburg
W. Va., to a
scho o lbo y elev en
o nly
had
title In
the
Blue
Ridge
Baseball!.,!PwaesfiJ0n o f th + bal1 Rfv<*n
League, and during th a t tim e co n-i 1 llcy ftimbled away th r lr chances
v erted Hack Wilso n', later w ith th e o n thrpp ^caM o n s. were fo rced to
Chicago Cubs, fro m a catch er to an h ,!11’
twice and
lo st
tlie ball o n
o utfielder
do wn» twice.
D uring
the
first
B h lpleys
basketball
t r a i n s
at lill<c peilo ds o f play the 47 o utfit
M aryland hav e wo n 243 and lo st 199
games.
Middies Defeat
Harvard 3 To 1
G len
B ra n t and his lankv fram e
so lv ed th e pro blem as
he bro ught
do wn an aerial fro m Po wers o n th«
10. an d ^Anderso n mo v ed to the sev
en fo r a first o n the next play. F o ur
plays later Anderso n dashed th ro ug h
a h o le in t h e center o f th e line fo r
• w m t o unable to find it.sr l bui ...
rtcclrtlnK
KUll
'
stan za
tl.p spIks.i
my ina- place kick lo r th e po int wax blocked,
chine began
to click, ro lling
up 45'
ANNAl’G L IS, Md., April 3 OTV-
R o nnie
B urto n
hurled
the
Nav y
baseball team
to a n o th e r v icto ry
here to day, th e M idshipm en besting
H arv ard 3 to 1 o n a so ggy diam o nd.
Burto n,
in
w inning
his seco nd
co nsecutiv e
game,
pitched
n o -h it
ball
until
the sev enth
w hen
the tack
v isito rs m anaged to po und three o f ¡m aterial
yards o v er land and hav ing a driv e
sto pped o n the Senio r 10-yard m urk- j
er as tim e ran o ut.
l ease Plays Well
‘“S o n n y ”
Lease gav e
indicatio ns !
th a t he m ay satisfy Co ach Pence’s
desires a t the quarterback slo t and
W ulter Cecil sho wed plenty o f driv - !
ing po wer fro m his halfback po si
tio n.
O n th e line Jo h n V ernall a n d| ^ v *c
W ayne Dawso n had the brun t o f
the wo rk in sto pping th e Senio r a t-
Po wer» Reco ver** Fum ble
A Lease to Cecil* lateral m idw av
in th e th ird perio d was fum bled an d
Po wers reco v ered to set up th e sec-
( C o n tin u e d o n P a g e
jy. Co l. a )
RESID EN TS O F LaV A LE
T h e a n n ua l m eeting o f th e LaVau«
Im pro v em ent Asso ciatio n will
be held M o nday April 7th a t 7:30 in
the Lai Vale Scho o l Building.
Fiv e
T h e y bo th lo o k like all-city D irecto rs
will
be
elected.
So m e
¡m atters o f im po rtance will be dxs-
W IN 135 POUND TITLE
T h e Ridgeley Bro kers w o n th e 135 po und class
basketball ch am p io nship title in th e seco nd a n n u a l Go ld M edal Basketball T o urn a m e n t, spo nso red by
C en tral YMCA an d th e C um berland Jun io r C h a m be r o f Co mmerce, by no sing o ut th e C um berland
P irates 27 to 26 in th e final
gam e o f th e to u rn a m e n t
held a t th e Y recently. Players sho w n in th e
picture K N E E L IN G (left to rig ht), R o bert
S tarkey , R o bert K esner. SECO N D R O W (left to
right)
Gil L am bert, Ho ward Rho des, Paul Fisher, a n d J im F la n a g a n .
BACK R O W
(left to righ t)
E nnis
G ano e, R andall Starkey, Bud Jewell. “T uc k” Spencer, m an ag er.
th ru
fo ur h its past N av y fie lde rs1
N either
team co uld
get
started
slo wed by th e slippery
field.
1 tn th e early p a rt o f the
first perio d. jcussec**
Nav y sco red in the third o n two To m m y Po wers return ed Ja y Dick-
° nl.v m em bers o f th e Asso ciatio n
e iio js and singles bv
Fraley and e n ’s kicko fT fro m his 22
to the Sen- are eligible to v o te
fo r directo rs, but
« «
t h * \ lo r 36
T h r r e Pla™
to gain a ll residents o f
La Vale
final tally *n th e sixth o n a H arv ard yardage an d Po wers punted to the
Allegany 19 w'here “S o n n y ” Lease
i?AAv\VARD.
^
« ** thp baM ba<* *> ^
3 0.
T he
Wallace (3). Reiiiy » 3» . Go dm (2i and!Senio rs th rew up a stiff defense and
Ha mien; Burto n and Duquette.
M erv in Co pp bo o ted th e ball fro m
are inv ited
to a tten d this m eeting an d m ay
beco me m embers.
Jam e s E. Judy. Secretary.
A dv .-N -T-A pr 4-5
Schedule Is Adopted
By All America Loop
Ali
li as
but the day
• me co nv inced they wo uld no t ac-
r'*pt th* o ffers.
Snavely Will Be
Grid Instructor
A lo ng fly fro m Jo e A stro th ’s bat
with H enry M ajeski and Ed Jo o st
¡o n
base in th e fifth in ning go t
aw ay fro m o utfielder Allan Zarilla
W alt Judn ich reco v ered th e ball and
fired it to Jo h n n y B erardino who
relayed to Early.
T h e St. Lo uis c a tc h e r tagged M a-
S T R O rD S B U R G , Pa.. April 3.
and Jo o K* ln ri*Pid successio n
lart Snav ely. w h o » Univ ersity o f
, ,
N o rth
Caro lina fo o tball teai* was ST
yo uis <a » ,
o o o
2in oi>; 4 * l
One o f the po werho uses o f the East
Mo Cahan, Flo res »6» and Astro th; Mun
ir. 1946
Will serv e as an instructo r crlei> Karmfr <6* and
Early,
at the fo urth an n ual co aching clin-:
T IG E R S -B R A V E S T IE
'o udsburg S ta te T each -
MOBILE. Ala.. April 3 » *>.—'The
er- Co bege Ju n e 23 to 28^
Detro it Tigers bunched three straig ht letters, an d o n th e sleev e o f each
The clinic, under the directio n
o l singles
in th e eigh th inning but ^ th e m ark f° r city cham pio n.
M arty Baldwin o f Stro udsburg.
is co uldn’t break a 1-all tie w ith th e
As sw eaters and letters were giv en
r -r-.so red by th e E astern Pennsyl-
Bo sto n
Brav es
to day
in
an ex- to fo o tball players, th e basketball
hibitlo n baseball gam e called afte r players
CHICA OO . April 3 t>P»
T he
American Fo o tball Co nference
appro v ed a rev ised 1947 league p lay
ing schedule, calling fo r
14 co n
tests fo r each o f th e eight m e m
bers o n
a
h o m e -a n d-h o m e basis.
Forf Hill High
Athletes Honored
Sw eaters, letters and certificates
were aw arded to fo o tball an d ba.^-
ketball players o f F o rt Hill H ich
Scho o l at an u n u M j r held s t the ( n d „ ^
, ctatjnK riatf
scho o l yesterday m o rning by faculty earlier th a n last seaso n,
and students.
Speakers a t th e assem bly were
“Bill” H ah n , grid co ach; “Bo bby”
C av an aug h, basketball co ach; Vic
to r Heisey, principal,
an d
Elm er
Freeland an d L arry H ansro te, co
captains o f the cham pio n fo o tball
team.
Certificates, .sweaters and letters
were aw arded to 21 fo o tball players
an d th e fo o tball stude n t m anager.
T he sw eaters are red w ith white
Maryland Nine
Downs Dartmouth
v *nla Scho lastic Co aches Asso cia-
,
„
sev en and o ne-half innings to per-
O ne o f th e highlights o f th e clinic
Tigers to catch a train .
w i
be
th e
Co aches
Asso ciatio n dé t r o i t (a» ............. oo o ooo
10—l
5 o
B nquet June 2i w hen E dm und E. bo s to n <n> .......
o o o 100 o x—l
2 o
* P ip ’ Miller, assistant co ach a t the
receiv ed
o nly
certificates
excepting fo r three, Do n W imer,
U. S. Nav al Academy, will be the
s,*eaker.
Nav y
Head
C o ach
To m
H am ilto n also will attend.
• • CLIP THIS AD! • •
•
STREET CAR [
• RDS OPERATORS •
: WANTED :
•
No Experience Necessary
#
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•
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STEADY WORK
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•
#
PENSION SYSTEM
CH ANCE TO ADVANCE
(tie)
Bento n and Tebbetts; Bpahn,
Lanfran*
co ni r8 » and Mani.
Ruel Is Calmly
Pebu'Minq Browns
M IAM I. Fla., April 3 (JPy—M uddy
Ruel calmly go es abo ut the task o f
rebuilding
the
St.
Lo uis
Bro wns B ennett,
aro und sho rtsto p Vern S tephens and Lewi-
Jo h n n y
B erardino w ith
his
first
So pho mo res^—G lenn Burke, Chas.
div isio n
go al
a t
least
twfo years L attim er, Jo h n Alderto n. L arry Mc-
away.
Kenzie an d Edgar Tucker.
A ltho ugh th e Bro wnie cam p o n
S tude n t M an ag er—Jo e Craze,
the Sho res o f Biscayne Bay bubbles j
Basketball Squad
with o ptim ism , there is little r e a l !
C ertificates to Senio rs — C apt.
ho pe o f graduatio n fro m the bo t- R o bert Frye, Elm er Freeland, Do n
to m half o f the league in R uel’s W imer, R o bert C unn in gh am .
Lo t-
first year as m anager.
ters to W im er, C un n in g h am
and
Giv en a break in steady pitching Cage,
by ro o kies Clarence Io tt and Fres
Junio rs — Milfo rd D ean, Jam es
Sanfo rd an d a go o d freshm an year M anges and C linto n Cage,
by first basem an Jerry W itte, th e
So pho m o res—C harles L attim er.
Bro wns
sho uld
impro v e
o n
last!
S tude n t M anager—Ray Stev enso n,
year's dreary sev enth-place finish.
C heer L eader—Jeann ie Dav is, cer-
Little m o re is to be expected.
tificate
and
letter,
and
Do lo res
..................
" 1
Chase, a certificate.
So ldier Field o n F riday nights, were
: the o nly club to anno unce its card
! im m ediately.
O th er Ro cket ho m e gam es: Sept.
19.
Buffalo ;
Sept.
26,
Clev eland;
Oct. 3. Bro o klyn; Oct. 24. New Y o rk;
„ .
,
_ | No v . 7. B altim o re;
and
No v . 21.
R o bert C un n in g h a m
an d
C linto n
Francisco
Cage.
Awards were m ade as fo llo ws:
Fo o tball Squad
Sw eaters an d letters to Senio rs—
Elm er Freeland and L arry H ansro te,
co -captains;
M erv in Co x. W illiam
Dailey. G eo rge Lapp, Ro bert Frye.
M edfo rd
Nicho lso n
and
R o bert
Myers.
Jun io rs—R o nald C atlett, W illiam
Trieber,
R ay
Stev enso n,
Jim m y
Manges, Ro nald Sensabaugh, Fred
M ilfo rd
D ean a n d Jack
CO LLEG E PARK. Md . April 3 t/P
—S tuffy Ev ans, Univ ersity o f M ary
la n d’s
h a rd-h ittin g
left
fielder,
dro v e in fo ur run s and sco red a n -
o th e r to lead th e Old L iners to a
7-4 v icto ry o v er D a rtm o uth 's to ur-
T h e league prev io usly h a d
np- in?^basebiflL tear?,‘ , 1-
pro v ed a sim ilar 56-gam e schedule.
i n f a ^ ba(L
‘
but so me clubs dem an ded a rev i- {!?
tries, a n d sto le ho m e in
sio n to achiev e a be tte r
trav el
bal-
J ’.,
.
a/t*™
ance between E ast a n d W est Co ast Nick Panella, w ho rc» i
ed M a r \-
entries
la n d’s sta rtin g hurler. Bo b Keene.
’
in th e fifth, allo wed o nly a pair o f
T h e seaso n will o pen o n F riday singles in his to ur o n th e m o und
night
Aug.
29,
betw een
the
Las ancj fan ned fiv e.
He w as credited
Angeles D o ns an d the Chicago Ro c- Wjthi th e v icto ry,
kets a t So ldier Field in Chicago , j
D a rtm o uth to o k a 4-2 lead in th e
T h e
Ro ckets,
who
will
play
all fu-s t two innings, but E v ans wTent
o f
th e ir
sev en
ho m e
gam es
a t f0 ^ 0rk an d acco unted fo r his fiv e
: ••• 1
*,
-a***
IHÉMNK
.«.«(MI» aHMWHÉriill
SPRING
Ortiz To Defend Crown
LOS ANGELES, April 3 — i/P>—
M anager T o m m y F a rm e r said to day
th a t W o rld Bantamw-eight C h a m
pio n M anuel O rtiz wo uld defend his
title in a m a tc h May 28 a t Ho no lulu
w ith Kui K o ng Yo ung o t Hawaii.
F a rm e r said Ortiz, who regained
th e cro wn in a 15-ro und bo ut here
M arch 11 wdth Haro ld D ade a lte r
runs.
C atch er H aro ld C layto n blasted a
ho m er in th e seco nd to wind up
th e D a rtm o uth sco ring. T h e v isito rs
go t th ree in th e first.
DARTMOUTH
.............................3 10 000 000—4
MARYLAND
...............................2 00 02 0 3 0x —7
Keene
14 » .
Panella
<5»
and
Co ndo n,
Jo hn.sto n: Ing ram (5 » , Do o le (3 ) and Clay
to n, Yo ung .
Baltimore Buys Poat
TUCSON. Ariz., April 3 »£>>—T h e
Clev eland In dian s to day so ld P itc h
er R ay Po at, fo rm er te a m m a te o f
M anager Lo u B o udreau a t th e U n i
v ersity o f Illino is, to th e Baltim o re
Club o f tlie In te rn a tio n a l League.
Po at. 29, had been w ith th e I n
dians beto re in 1942, 1943 and 1944
Tins w.iv his last c h a n c e with the
dro pping it to the Chicago Negro T ribe and his wro rk during spring
in S an Francisco in Ja n ua ry , h ad train in g did no t im press th e bo ard
been giv en a g uaran tee o f $15.000 o f strategy.
;o rd 37(2 per c e n t o f th e gate re-
At B altim o re last y ear P o at wo n
¡ceipts.
! 12 gam es while lo sing o nly sev en.
Mu st b e t î te W yea rs o f mçr
Wrr4» (« i tnJo rma+io «
V Apply I« P*rto f»
Mo-** « q» Mo *d« v *♦*-»
fcMPlOYMtMT Of*» Cf
CAPITAL TRANSIT
COMPANY
3$ 32 M STREET. N. W.
Wasbmqfo« 7. D. C.
• »
Open 24 Hours
Lovers Leap
Esso Station
SERVING
COFFEE,
SANDWICHES,
SOUP
E. 0. PAXTON. Prop.
BATTERY
SERVICE
({LICK
CHARGE
Keyser Moose May
Go To Chicago
T he Keyser Mo o se team tv hirh
wo n the W est Virginia Mo o se bas
ketball title m ay g et an o p p o rtun
ity to app ear in th e N atio nal Mo o se
to urn am en t to be held in Chicago .
Keyser wo n its first ro und gam e
in the W est Virginia to urn am en t by
defeating G ra fto n 63 to 56, then
dum ped Beckley 51 to 40 and no sed
o ut Mo rganto wui 49 to 47 in th e
sem i-final. In th e finals they again
cam e th ro ugh by defeating Buck-
h a n n o n 55 to 53.
• •
do rr n o w !
• Lubricate Chassis
• Change Oil
• Flush Radiator
NOW
tor better driving o t
Get Set
for
Summer
Driving
W o rn p is to n
nngs ro b yo ur engine o f its
po wer and co st yo u mo ney in wasted
gas and o il. Let us check yo ur engine
and, if needed, install a new set o f Gen
uine Fo rd rings to resto re new car
perfo rmance.
“ Insist o n Genuine Fo rd Pa rts**
St. George M o to r Co.
Y O U R F R IE N D L Y FO RD D EA LE R
215 S. George Street
Phone 58 0
JOIN THE EASTER PARADE
w i t h
CARNEGIE PARK SPORTSWEAR
For Casual Good
Looks
ond Comfort . ,
1 00% W ool
SPORT COAT
H a n d so m e ly ta ilo re d fo r
dress o r sports w ear
14
.50
$-
and
Contrasting
SLACKS
o l Gabardine
S O 50
8
Nev er befo re hav e we had such a wide and v aried selectio n o f
G abardines.
All th e new est shades o f ta n , bro wn, green, blue,
an d gray.
P lain o r pleated styles.
All sizes.
cARNEGIE Park SPORTSWEAR
Baltimore ot Mechanic
TRADE
SA
IN
Are you riding
to trouble on
old, weak tires
j. , -Change NO W to
Ê tough - P/us - Value
m
>>*4Pvc
Yo ur v ery life depends o n the tires
yo u dnv e—a tire failure can land
yo u in serio us tro uble right no w.
Why no t insure yo ur family’s safe
ty to day with new, to ugh, Armo -
rubber tread Kellys o n yo ur car?
Kellys are co nscientio usly built. 53
years o f rubber skill give yo u extra
safety facto rs, and extra tho usands
o f tro uble-free miles.
PAY AS YOU RIDE!
Ask about our Easy Pay Plan
N o red 1 ape
D R IV E IN
T O M O R R O W
16plus
tax
6.00-16
KELLY TIRE SERVICE
119 South Mechanic Street
Phone 300
TWENTY-FOUR
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, M D ,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1947
Hapes A nd Fiichock Suspended Indefinitely
♦
-
' '
'
*
--
Ruling Virtually Closes
Careers Of Two Players
EXHIBITION GAMES
Commissioner Arts
In Alleged "F ir
PHILADELPHIA. April 3
(/P»~
Merle Hapra and Frank Fiichock,
York Olanta ace backfield play
ers who became entangled in a t
tempt* to fix th# National Football
League's Championship game last
December 15. today were suspended
indefinitely In the latest chapter
of the biggest sport scandal since
the 1919 World Series
League Commissioner Bert Bell
announced he had found the two
“guilty of actions detrim ental to
the welfare of the National Lea
gue and of professional football,”
anding:
•‘This suspension prevents the em
ployment of Hape.s or Fiichock bv
club In the National Football
League a*, player, coach or In any
rapacity, whatsoever”
The Commissioner’s ruling all but
w a le finis to the playing days of
Hnpes. who once roamed the back
fold at the University of Missis
sippi. and Fiichock. pro star since
Ie vlng Indiana University campus.
Tile decision came Just 24 hours
after three New York men had bern
sentenced for attem pting to bribe
the players to throw the game. Da-
vid K Krakauer. Harvey Stemmer
and Jerome Zarowltz were given
prison
sentences while
a
fourth
man. Alvin Paris, will be sentenced
Monday.
Testimony at the trial of the four
thorned that neither Hapes nor Fii
chock accepted the offered bribe.
B^th were placed on the League’s
suspended list originally on January
$ the day Paris was convicted in
New York on charges of trying to
f‘x the game between the Giants
and Chicago Bears.
Hapes. however, was not perm it
ted to play in the game, won by
the Bears 24-10. The former Mis
sissippi star admitted to Mayor Wil
lie m ODwyer of New York a few
hours before the game th at he re
ceived the offer. Fiichock. a great
pa-sser playing with the Giants for
the first season after u n d erstu d y
ing Sammy Baugh at W ashington,
denied he had been approached.
During the Parts trial, however, I chicago »ni
ooo ooo ooo— • s
F-. rhofk
he had not told
•>«> >•«-'» •
the New York mayor the truth, 'Livingston tm Koeiow, Thorn pron <7j and
Paris testified he made an offer of
cooper. w arren (7>.
••’.500 in cash and a $1,000 bet to
RRnwxM n n w u A*.
Hap** a week beiore the game Two*
I D O W N A .
d vs tatw . he said lie made the
pr
T 'Z
? 1
same offer to the ex-lndl»na player ™a" d™ .^ .
f,’..
. ffiilfiii hit p f '
Paris also te-stifieh that, neither t»rl> helped keep the Philadelphia,
p ater accepted. Dunn* the week p i e t i e s under “ ".‘S
before the title game, he said he ®J-*'®*1is Bro* iu
pick*il up i t to I
awarded to football and bas
attempted to chatter their minds vlr,orv ,rom Connie M acks clnb
bu* the day before the fray be
anie convinced they would not ac
cept the offers.
PIRATES BEAT PHILS
t
CLEARWATER, Fla., April 3 (A*i
- T h e Pittsburgh
Pirates pushed
across six runs In the fourth inning
today to defeat the Philadelphia
Phils, IO to 7, in the Phils’ final
spring training game here.
PITTSBUKCIH
i N i
..IOO BOI 1 0 1 -1 0 IS
4
PHILADELPHIA <N> .OOO 302 003— 7
•
4
A r«r 11 and Kluttr: Judd Maunrv 'S' and
Koerhrr (7» aud Hrmtnirk. P a d ir tt tat,
SOX WIN EASILY
LITTLE ROCK. April 3 </Ph-Thf
American League Champion Boston j
Red Sox turned loose their power
behind
the
six-hit
pitching
ol I
Rookie Harry Dor tall to defeat the
Little Rock Traveler® of the S o u th -1
ern Association a-Ii in an exhibition
game here today.
HOSTON (ALI
. . .
070 IOO OOO—* 14 I
LITTLE ROCK
|8A» . OOO OOO 2 0 0 -2
6 2
Hori*h aud Ha>ra; Flowers, M arino <2>.
Johnson <St aud D oolittle. Dickey ii) .
SOX DEFEAT INDIANS
TUCSON. Ari/ , April 3 (/Th—Cass
Michaels spoiled un otherwise tight
pitching performance by Don Black
today by slamming a fifth inning
home run that Rave the Chicago
White Sox a 2 to I win over the
Cleveland Indians.
CLEVELAND
_______ OOO IOO 0 0 0 -1
IO 1
CHICAGO (Ai
.... OOI 010 00k—2
• 0
Black. Berry <71, Lemon (OI and Lopes.
H egan <7>; H aynnea. M altrberfer ( i t and
Trenh.
REDS TRIM ATLANTA
ATLANTA. April 3 (Ab—With vet
eran pitchers Joe Beggs and Harry
Gumbert
limiting
the
A tlanta
Crackers to three hit*, the Cincin
nati Reds defeated the Southern
Association team 4-2 in an exhi
bition ba.seball game here today.
CINCINNATI iNLl
...2 0 1 OOO 010—4 < 3
ATLANTA (SAI
OOO OOO 200—2
3
0
Beggs, Gumbert (ll and Lamano; Ad
kins, Bush (Si. Koval (OI and Ulisney.
GIANTS SWAMP CUBS
PHOENIX. Ariz., April 3 (/Pi—The
New York G iants ran wild in the
fifth inning today as they blasted
the Chicago Cubs 12 to 0 to sweep
a
two-game
exhibition
baseball
series here. The G iants won the
first game yesterday 0 to I.
ll
I
(Bl
and
McCullom I
Shipley Resigns
As U. Of Maryland
Basketball (oath
Allegany Senior-Alumni
Turns Back 1947 Eleven
Schoolboys Fumble
Away Game 12 To 0
COLLEGE PARK. Md., April 3 (/P.
•After 24 years nervier, II Burton
Shipley today was relieved of his job
as University of Maryland's head
basket bail coach ut his ow n request.
Athletic Director Jim Tatum an
nounced the ac ceptance of Shipley's
resignation, which the veteran m en
tor had tendered three times in the
pn.st. Tatum said a successor will be
named in Hie near future.
Shipley
will
continue
as
head
baseball coach, a Job he has held for
the past 24 years, and carry on his
duties as an instructor in the physi
cal education departm ent.
Shipley coached football, baseball
and basketball at Perkiomen Prep.
M arshall College and the University
of Delaware before returning to his
alma m ater in 1923
During the summer of 1923 hr
piloted M artinsburg W. Va., to a,
. ..
. „
..
tit lr in (hr Bine Riclar Ba.vlmll
th' b*1' T
V
Umr!1
League. and during th at lime con- ,lle' fumbled »»»> thru chant i n
verted Hack WIK.,/, later with the 0,1 thr" <*<•"**».
•"
Chicago Cubs, from - *•« ♦/•!>•*■
«nlP|,nl twice and last the ball on
By JOHN L. B O H ITIFKT
A combined Senior-Alumni eleven
turned back the 1947 edition of Al- i
legany’s Campers 12 to 0 yesterday
afternoon on the C a m p o b ello field I
as Coach
Bob Pence ended
his
sp rin g football p ro g ra m .
Tile flower-la d e n S e n io rs showed
tile schoolboy eleven, which had
had several weeks of fundam entals.!
what the finished product looks like
as halfback Bruce Anderson punch
ed over from the one-foot line for
the first touchdown near the end I
of the second period and fullback'
Tommy Powers added one for sa le ty ,
from the three-yard marker on the
Inst play of the third period
T h e
schoolboy
eleven
only
h ad
a catcher to an
outfielder
Shipley's
basketball
t r a m s
at
Maryland have won 243 and lost 199
games.
/P>-
I downs twice.
During
the
first
three periods of play the 47 outfit
icerned unable to find itself but in
the last stanza the srhoollMiy m a
chine began to click, rolling up 45
yards over land and having a drive
stopped on the Senior 10-yard m ark
er aa time ran out.
I/ease Playa Well
•‘Sonny” Lease gave indications
that he may satisfy Coach Pence**
desires at tile quarterback slot and
WIN 135 POUND TITLE mm The Ridgeley Brokers won the 135 pound class
basketball championship title in the second annual Gold Medal Basketball Tournam ent, sponsored by
Central YMCA and the Cumberland Junior Cham ber of Commerce, by nosing out the Cumberland
Pirates 27 to 26 in the final game of the tournam ent held at the Y
recently. Players
shown in the
picture KNEELING (left to right),
Robert Starkey, Robert Kesner. SECOND ROW
(left to right!
GII Lambert, Howard Rhodes, Paul
Fisher, and Jim Flanagan.
BACK ROW (left to right)
Ennis
Ganoe, Randall Starkey. Bud Jewell, “Tuck” Spencer, manager.
Middies Defeat
Harvard 3 To I
ANNAPOLIS, Md.. April 3
Ronnie Burton
hurled the Navy
baseball team to another victory Walter Cecil showed plenty of driv
here today, the Midshipmen besting in" power from his halfback posi-
Harvard 3 to I on a soggy diamond tion. On the line John Vernall and
Burton, in winning his second Wayne Dawson had the brunt of
consecutive
game, pitched no-hit! the work in stopping the Senior at-
ball until the seventh when the tack
They both look like all-city
visitors managed to pound three of materia).
their four hit* past Navy fielders'
Neither team could get started
slowed by the slippery field.
hi the early part of th# first period.
Navy scored in the third on two Tommy Powers returned Jay Dick-
rrrors and singles bv Fraley and en s kickoff from hts 22 to the Sen-
Boney, who came across with thej tor 36.
Three plays failed to gain
final tally in the sixth on a H arvard; yardage and Powers punted to the
error-
Allegany 19 where ‘‘Sonny’* Lease
bls 3« to the Senior 42 where M ort
1 Peskin stinged tile pigskUi and took
it back to the Senior 48
From
this point the Seniors drove to their
ftr*t touchdown
Peskin and Dick Clower picked up
a first on the Allegany 42 Powers
j gained three yards through the cen
ter and then “Traveling Tom” drop
ped tire ball on the next play but
Lucas dove on the oval to save the
dav tor the Seniors. Powers then
completed the first of three passes
to tankv Glen Brant for another
first down on the 32, Pawers got
nine and Pitkin three yards aa th#
period ended with the Seniors hav
ing a first on the Allegany 20
A barkfleld-ln-motion penalty and
a three yard lo.** bv Powers offset
Bruce Anderson's five ytrd pick-up
and brought lip third down and 12
to go as the second period started
a le n Brant and hi* lanky frame
solved the problem a* he brought
down an aerial from Powen on th#
IO. and ^Anderson moved to the sev
en for a first cm the next play. Four
plays later Anderson dashed through
a hole in the center of the line for
the deciding score
Stan Bishop*
place kick for the point was blocked.
Pow en Recover* Fumble
A Lease to Cecil* lateral midway
in the third period wa* fumbled and
Powers recovered to set up the sec-
( Continued on Page 25. Col. a)
Fort Hill High
Athletes Honored
Schedule Is Adopted
By All America Loop
CHICAGO, April 3 (AV The All-
Amencan Football Conference has
,,
. . .
.
.
approved a revised 1947 league play
Sweaters, letters and certificates
.
. ,
,,
Maryland Nine
Downs Dartmouth
COLLEGE PARK M d . April 3 UT
HARVARD
................................. OOO OOO 100—1
NAVY ......................................... 002 OOI OOx—3
W allace (3). Reilly (31, Godin (St and
Hamlen: Burton and Duquette.
took the ball back to hi* 30
The
Seniors threw up a stiff defense and
Mervin Copp booted the ball from
RESIDENTS OF La VALE
The annual meeting of the LaVaJe
Civic Improvement Association will
be held Monday April 7th at 7 30 rn
the LaVale School Building.
FU#
Directors will be elected.
Soma
m atters of importance mill be dis
cussed.
Only members of the Association
are eligible to vote for directors, but
all residents of LaVale
are aim ed
to attend this meeting and may
become members.
Jam es E Judy. Secretary.
Adv.-N-T-Apr 4-5
.WMS
today.
ketball players of Fort Hill High
ing schedule, calling for 14 con-!-S tu ffy Evans. University of Mary-
tests for each of the eight mein- lands
hard-hitting
left
fielder,!
hers on a hom e-and-hom e basis, drove in four runs and scored an- SPRING
Suavely Will Be
Grid instructor
STROUDSBURG. Pa., April 3. (IT)
.
_ 11v
•—Car] Snavely, whose University of ^ J K J ! JJS ?1?]?
;
A long fly from Joe Astroth’s bat School at an assembly held at the an(j a
7 dosing date " a week other to lcad the ° ld Lmprs to *
with Henry Majeski and Ed Joost ^bool yesterday morning by faculty earlier than last season
7 "4 victory over Dartm outh s tour-
on base in the fifth inning g o t1
away from outfielder Allan Zarilla.
W alt Judnich recovered the ball and
fired it to Johnny Berardlno who
relayed to Early.
The St. Louis catcher tagged M a- .
M .
.
.
.
. .
jeski and Joost In rapid succession
Wan,™** rn-
and students.
Speakers at the assembly were
“Bill’* Hahn, grid coach; “Bobby”
Cavanaugh, basketball coach; Vic-
Freeland and Larry Hansrote, co
captains of the champion football
team.
. . . . . . .
PHILADELPHIA (Al
. 000 010 000—1 • 4
North
C arolina football teal# w as ST lo u is ia* ...........
OOO
210 oix—4
n
1
one of the powerhouses Of the East;
McCshan, Flores (fit and A stroth; Mull
in 1946. will serve as an instructor crie*- Burner ««•
Early.
at the fourth annual coaching clin-.
TIGERS-BRAVES TIE
lr at East Stroudsburg State T each -'
MOBILE, Ala.. April 3 <*»>—'The
cr- Co.iege June 23 to 28
Detroit Tigers bunched three straight i letters, and on the sleeve of each
The clinic, under the direction
of sjn gies jn the eighth inning
b u t !15 the m ark for city champion.
M arty
Baldwin of Stroudsburg,
is eoyjdn’t break
* 1-all tie with th e ’ As sweaters
and letters
were given
The ieague previously had ap- jin
and . d o u b le
proved a aimllar 5«-game schedule. 1
Evan!> had a M1”!l* and * doub1'
but some clubs demanded a revi
sion to achieve a better travel bal
ance between East and West Coast
entries.
in
in four tries, and stole home
the seventh.
Nick Panella, who relieved M ary
land's starting hurler. Bob Keene.
in the fifth, allowed only a pair of
The season will open on F rid ay ; singles in his tour on the mound
night Aug. 29, between the LaB and fanned five. He was credited
C ertificate sweaters
and letters
Angel** Doni' and ,he ChlcaB0 Roo‘ with the victory
w ee awarded* trT^l football platers
at Soldler Plcld in Chicago.
Dartm outh took a 4-2 lead til the
and the footbaU student m an ag e?:
RocReLs-
who will
play all flrst two uinmgs. but Evans went
and the football student mam
u
. ()f their Mven
home
games at to work ancj accounted for his five
Soldier Field on Friday nights, were runs.
the only club to announce its card I
catcher Harold Clayton blasted a
immediately.
homer in the second
to wind up
Other Rocket home games: Sept ;the Dartm outh scoring. The visitors
The sweaters are red with white
L T i T s A o L t l ’c C e rtie " t o i t o i
? rar „
t0day in„A n ,*,x' S a v m tl#‘re c d lX ''o n l? * cm m cafes i 19' Bu,Ialo;
^
26
Cleveland: I got three ta the first,
v-m a scnoiastic t,o*cnes assocm , hibitlon baseball game called after Players received
only
certm cates Oct. 3, Brooklyn; Oct. 24. New York; j Da r t m o u t h ......................
Mon.
One of the highlights of the clinic
Tigers to catch a train.
will
be the Coaches
Association d e t r o it (A> ........... ooo ooo ta—1 s e
B nquet June 2& when Edmund E. boston (N> ...............ooo loo ox—I
2 0
'R ip - Miller, assistant coach at the|
B, nlI)n
B h„ h,„ lr. a.
U. S. Naval Academy, will be the coni (ti and Mast.
sh a k er. Navy Head Coach Tom
-----------------------------
seven and one-half innings to per- excepting for three, Don Wimer
' Robert Cunningham and Clinton
Cage.
Awards were made as follows:
Football Squad
Sweaters and letters to Seniors—
Elmer Freeland and Larry Hansrote,
Nov. 7, Baltimore;
San Francisco.
and Nov.
. .310 000 000—4
21 [MARYLAND
............................. 200 020 30x—7
’
Keene
(4». Panella
(5 > and
Condon.
Johnston: Ingram (Si, Dooie
(3) and Clay
ton. Young.
Orfiz To Defend Crown
Hamilton also will attend.
• • cue TMS AOI • •
•
STREET CAR
*
• BOS OPERATORS •
: WANTED :
•
No Expononco Necessary #
Ear* While You Loam
•
•
^ A vg. W ttk ty la m in g s 9
• $ 6 0 ° ° a i t w i c k •
•
STEADY WORK
•
•
PAID VACATIONS
«
•
PENSION SYSTEM
CHANCE TO ADVANCE
•
•
Must be t i to AO pear* of mg*
rn
0
Writ* lo t Information
g
rn Apply •• Parson
g
Mamiitgt Monday tfcra M d**
®
KMPVOYMt-NT OfHCI
®
• CAPITAL TRANSIT •
•
COMPANY
•
•
JI 32 M STREET. N. W.
a
Washmgfoo 7, D. C.
Ruel Is Calmly
Rebuilding Browns
Baltimore Buys Poat
TUCSON. A riz. April 3 «/?►—The
t
LOS ANGELES. April
3 — (/Pi—
... „
,
....
co-captains; Mervin Cox
William M anager Tommy Farm er said today cieveTand^ind/ans today .sold Pitch-
Dailey. George Lapp, Robert Frye , th at World Bantamweight Cham - er Rav Poatt former team m ate of
Medford
Nicholson
and
Robert pion Manuel Ortiz would defend his Manager Lou Boudreau at the Uni-
Mr
S
tx
- .
.. „ w n .
j title in a m atch May 28 at Honolulu v ^ ity of IllinoLs. to the Baltimore
Juniora—Ronald Catlett, William
withi Kui Kong Young of Hawaii. Club of the International League.
MIAMI. Fla.,
April 3 (/P>—Muddy Trieber, Ray
Stevenson,
J im m y
Farm er said Ortiz, who regained
pout. 29. had been with the In-
Ruel calmly rocs about
the task o f Manges.
Ronald Sensabaugh, Fred the crown in a 15-round bout heir chan* beiore in 1942, 1943 and 1944.
rebuilding the St. Louis
Browns Bennett,
Milford Dean and Jack March ll with Harold Dade after This w as his last chance with the
around shortstop Vem Stephens and Lewis.
j dropping it to the Chicago Negro Tribe and his work during spring
Johnny
Berardlno with his first
Sophomores Glenn
Burke. Chas. 1
sa n Francisco in January, had training did not impress Hie board
goal
at least two years Lattim er, John Alderton. Larry Mc
Kenzie and Edgar Tucker.
Student M anager—Joe Craze.
Basketball Squad
Certificates to Seniors — Capt.
division
away.
Although the Brownie camp on
the Shores of Biscayne Bay bubbles
with optimism, there is little real
been given a guarantee of $15,000 of strategy.
Ord 37^ per cent of the gate re-
At Baltimore last year Poat won
ceipts.
112 games while lasing only seven.
hope of graduation from
the bot- Robert Flye, Elmer Freeland, Don
tom half of the league
in Ruel's Wimer. Robert Cunningham. Let-
first year as manager.
ters to Wimer, Cunningham and
Given a break in .steady pitching Cage.
by rookies Clarence Iott and Fres
Sanford and a good freshman year
by first baseman Jerry W itte, the
Browns
should
improve
on
last
year’s dreary seventh-place finish.
Little more is to be expected.
Juniors — Milford Dean, James
Manges and Clinton Cage.
Sophomores—Charles Lattimer.
Student M anager—Ray Stevenson.
Cheer Leader—Jeannie Davus. cer
tificate
and
letter, and
Dolores
Chase, a certificate.
Open 24 Hours
Lovers Leap
Esso Station
SERVING
COFFEE.
SANDWICHES.
SOUP
E. 0. PIXTON. Prop.
BATTERY
SERVICE
QUICK CHARGE
Keyser Moose May
Go To Chicago
The Keyser Moose team w’hich
I won the West Virginia Moose bas
ketball title may get an opportun-
; ity to appear in the National Moose
j tournam ent to be held in Chicago.
Keyser won its first round came
in the West Virginia tournam ent by
defeating Grafton 63 to 56. then
dumped Beckley 51 to 40 and nosed
out Morgantown 49 to 47 in the
semi-final. In the finals they again
icame through by defeating Buck-
! hannon 55 to 53
• • D O IT N O W !
• Lubricate Chassis
I
• Change Oil
• Flush Radiator
NOW
Get Set
for
Summer
Driving
for better driving at
^ t t w l Day* • a. rn
la !4 p
m
^
(
|
l i m
I* I J. n
4
Wo r n p i s t o n
rings rob your engine of its
power and cost you money in wasted
gas and oil. Let us check your engine
and, if needed, install a new set of Gen
uine Ford rings to restore new car
performance.
“Insist on Genuine Ford Parts"
St. George Motor Co.
YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER
215 S. George Street
Phone 580
JOIN THE EASTER PARADE
with
CARNEGIE PARK SPORTSWEAR
For Casual Good Looks
and Comfort . ,
100% Wool
SPORT COAT
Handsomely tailored for
dress or sports wear
14
.50
and
Contrasting
SLACKS
of Gabardina
‘8
50
Never before have we had such a wide and varied .^election of
Gabardine*.
All the newest shades of tan. brown, green, blue,
and gray. Plain or pleated styles.
All sizes.
C arnegie P ark S portswear
Baltimore at Mechanic
TRADE-
SALE
IN
Ar« frog riding
to trouble on
old, weak tiros
KOW lo
tough-Piss- Yu I UU
Your very life depend* on the tires
you drive—a tire failure can land
you in serious trouble right now.
Why not insure your family's safe
ty today w ith new, tough, Armo-
rubbcr tread Kellys on your car?
Kellys arc conscientiously built. S3
y ears of rubber skill give you ex tra
safety factors, and extra thousands
of trouble-free miles.
PAY AS YOU RIDE!
Ask about our Easy Pay Plan
No red tape
DRIVE IN
TOMORROW
KELLY TIRE SERVICE
119 South Mechanic Street
Phone 300
Nelson And Demaret Are 400 Bowle,s tn!er
Tied For Masters Lead
Field 0158 lead
By Veteran Texans
DGUSTA. Ga„ April 3 </P
of veteran campaigners,
Nelson
and Jimmy Demaret,
the field of 58 in today's ojM» ninK
id of the 11th annual Masters
f Tournament
w i t h three under
Davis Eagles Nine
Will Be Honored
Roxy Tournament
An array of approximately 400
bowlers, who were regulars at the
Savoy alleys last season, will com
pete for prizes in the handicap
tournament to be conducted at the
Savoy over three weekends this
month.
Green Would Outlaw
Bribery In Sports
WASHINGTON,
April
3
(/P) —
President Abe J. Green of the
National Boxing Association favors
federal action to outlaw bribery in
sports.
His endorsement of legislation
authored by Hep. Hebert <D-La)
Bowie Entries
FIR ST POST 2 PM EST
$2,500, claim ing, 4 and up, £
The tournaments will start the was read to the House today by Rep.
i»
M
two native Texans, with Nel-
w retired at Roanoke. Tex.,
cm arit won playing out of
>alif„ had a one stroke lead
■ven ot tiers who tied at 70.
in, winner of the event In
id 1042, posted rounds of 35-
• the par 72 < 36-36) national
while
Demaret shot the
ird course in 36-33.
were George Schnie-
weekend of April 12-13 and will con
tinue the next two weekends with
players competing for prizes in var
ious divisions. First prize in each
division will be $100, second prizes
$25, third prizes $15 and fourth
prizes $ 10.
Entrant* for the tournament must
have bowled a minimum of 21 games
PARSONS. April 3.—Tlie sports
By-¡committee of the local Fraternal
Order of Eagles of Davis announced
that at as|H*cia! meeting in the Aerie
Home on Easter Sunday afternoon
.< presentation of sjxirts awards will
be made to the last year’s team by
the Worthy President Albert Berg- during the past season and handi-
strom and will include sports awards, ^aP* ar® based on an average of 130
,
At d tm m pictum .
for women and 160 for men.
Highlighting the day’s
pr o gr a m !
Manager Reginald Golightly will
diMu . his plans for ttw coming UC6 GS KClOlOCG
bi>.M-i>all season. All players expect
-1 . - m
. ■■
inti to tryout tor the local team are
^OUm H 0U S6
urged to attend tlie meeting.
70
r .
. .
. . „ , ____ . ,
-
T r u s t e d of G race
Methodist
Episcopal
I nder the 1< a d e r s h l p of their ; Church to Storer Brothers,
Incorporated,
Canfield (R-NJ). Both Green and
Canfield are from Paterson, N. J.
Green wrote Canfield saying the
Hebert Bill “should be very vigor
ously pushed.
“I hope that it is not sidetrarked
as unimportant legislation x x x.
It is very important that there be
on the books of the country u
measure which will always be avail
able with which to strike hard at
the crooks and other vermin who
prostitute sports.”
YFSTFRDAY S RESULTS
Salt Lake Cit
(•ri.rsTftFAM
1— Mr.
Pharned,
F
Hanes,
7 10,
3.30;
O arter,
R.
Bendinellt,
14.7 0,
Dissident, A. Snider. 4.50; tim e 126.
2— Hy gro’s Flier, F.
Hanes,
16 60,
V ir gin ia¡5.10; Buddy M aisel, C
Rogers, 5.7 0.
4 » 0,
8 .30;
7 .60.
4.20;
Arte
Oliv
I *-w
C.
Cha:
e o n :
Frei
Won
Haa:
Wil
h am
of Washington, D
74
Derr
the w
e gret
H<
manager, the Eiigles had a success- j
$ 12.8 00 for property
at
c om e r
J o h n P al m e r ; u i v ;i o n las :
\t« ar
w i n n i n g 2 0 ou t Avenue and
Second Street.
¡Busy J eanne. G. La'fleus, 8 40; tim e 113 1-5
N
C J i m m v F e r r i e r
Ol o f *10 ir am w i n l ave d
T h e t e am w o n
Paul A *
o l ad >'8 and
K m sley . to I
3— Piet,
J
Stout,
24 40.
6.40.
4
40;
,
*
,,
,
,
*’
g am t S p i ay e a.
i n e t e am w o n Robert
r
Davis, J r. and Eva O. D avi s ,: Dauntedid,
A.
Snider,
3.40,
2 8 0;
War
onxiny Buua
01 pnoenix, the championship of Davis without
«5.200. property on Roberts Street,
¡Raider, C. Rogers, 3 60; tim e :46 1-5 . (new
of New Orleans, Ed suffering a defeat and was the lead-
MHry a . and
w illiam
h .
H am m ill, to track record.
i l n e t o n
D e l
an d
u m m t o i n
c t n l e
T
C
o
r
a
R. and Edward S ch affer, » 1.8 00 G ay
4—Toy
Bomb,
M
Buxton,
17 20.
9 60,
ungion. LXi
ano „r in the Mountain State Le» fhie|8(r^ t prop,,rty
6
30; Tintia, r. Bernhardt,
12 9 0. 7.10; Fire
before w i t h d r aw i n g
t o
p l ay
i n d e -
Mary J ulia Metz, to Anna
m
and Car-
pendent ball. Manager Golightly
h y le
M.
Steward,
Independence
Street
v n i h ave lHAt y e ar s t e am b ac k as
B. D e n m , B a. i m , . to N . t h . n
v e i l
as
s e ve r al
e x - s e r vi c e m e n
l o r ^
antj Helen m. sh erry , »
2.8 00, Ridgewuy
t h e c o m i n g s e a s o n.'
Terrace.
in« t
vo u r ’K
« p am
f n i
Richard
C. and S ofia R.
Sim m ons, to Broomride. F. Zehr, 2.50; time
15« 4-5.
M e m b e r s OI
l as t
y
e ar s
l e am
J „ hn J oRpph L o l b t ]
Hr
and Alvprna Ann
7 - F an d an go, H. Mora. 11.7 0, 6
40 . 4.5 0.
receive jackets will be Manager
iJ O -
$12,000. Bedford Street.
Our Best, J . Robertson, 11.8 0, 5 20; Speedy
H ar o l d
j<3n>
i;
an d K ath e rin e
M. Shaw,
to|S h ow
W al t e r ' A i m e r and Elizabeth M. S tevenson, $2.500,
property
at
Second
and
S ou th
Streets.
Dudley , Lonaconlng.
Merten
I.
and
J ulia
P.
Morgan,
to
George
C.
and
Mary
E.
Rice,
$2.500.
ikii,i.*ion Street.
E
Logsdon, to Ver-
the
1 as a
trouble
in a
South African
darkhon.e
with the
38-36 card
Power, F. A
Sm ith, 9 9 0; time 111 4-5.
8 - Yesnow, E. Campbell. 8 .40, 4.30, 3.60;;
Artillerist, P. Roberts. 5.20, 3.9 0; St. J oc k ,1
J . Stout, 6 50; tim e 110 4-5 .
6 — B attleflre,
J .
Robertson,
3 40,
2.60, ;
2 10;
Plucky
Boy ,
A
Snider,
4 60,
2.9 0, '
both had
i-yard, par
cue Sara-
Neison. in
Cpht, explo
of the hole j
even par tl
hole*, then b
the stroke b*
even throug!
1*3.c*i* on the*
n but hr* took off his
g k.< rolled up his pants
the ball out onto the
sank an 8-foot putt for
the sand trap at the
5ed to within a foot
ror his birdie.
He was
irouch tlie first eight
irdicd the ninth but lost
ick on the 10th. He was
7 12 holes but had an
480-vard 13th hole with
lightly, business manager,
Sell, equipment manager,
Maleonski. and players, Ernest Ar-
1 eagle in viar< Thurman Kelley, Francis Male-
lot land-
Albert Kerzic, John Cousins,
the front i Andrew Paczosa, Stanley Borkoski,
I^rinccton Street.
Herbert und Flora
Fred Turek. Clay Holcombe, John
non I. and Edna V. Carter, $1,000, Garden
Lawrence, Charles Moore,
F r a nc i s city Home« *ub-divi» ion
Ceroski. Gene Worden, John Becker, J
Walter Govedich, John Grigas, War
ren Heath and Ellery R. Hinkle.
Interstate Basketball
Meeting Is Called
ir. K<
A short- meeting of the Interstate
Basketball League will
be h e ld at
1 putt that, with his birdie Central YMCA Sunday afternoon
ount-ed for his rhree under at 2 o'clock to close out the ses-
j si on, Clifton Van Roby, president,
Jones, the famed grand- [ announced last night,
playing
with
defending j
Van Roby said forfeits will be
7 Herman Reiser, went out i returned and all unfinished business
ar 36. but ran into trouble transacted. He stressed that the
pronri nine and after three meeting would be short due to it
i dropped four strokes to ¡being Easter Sunday,
er had a methodical 37-37
t, had to do some srram-
und the preens to get that.
C. Rogers. .7 .30. tim e 144
8
G round Signal, O . Laflcur, 12 60. 5.9 0,
4.10; Simond, J . Stout, 4 20, 3.20; A -Ina-
hurry . It. Bendinelli, 3.50; tim e 147 2-5.
D Q -M usical Kid also ran; A-Mrs. E. C.
Salsbury A’ Mrs. E. O. Hess entry .
I>Q-Finished third but was disqualified.
DAILY DOUBLE— Mr. 1’harnrU and lly *
gro's flier paid $".K.IK*.
Joe DiMaggio Will
Remain In Florida
Allegany Senior
(Continued from Page 2 4)
ond Senior tally. Powers recovered
on the Allegany 28. Two plays gain
ed two yards and then Powers hit
Brant on the 18 with a pass for a
first. Powers and Peskin hit the
tackles for 13 yards and a first on
the five. Four plays later Powers
Tepsic Quits Dodgers
HAVANA, April 3 (/P)—Joe Tep
sic, former Penn State College base
ball and football star who received
a $17,000 bonus for signing a base
ball contract with the Brooklyn
Dodgers last May, said today that
he was quitting the club.
Tepsic had been assigned to the
Mobile, Ala., farm in the South
ern Association on option two days
ago but balked at leaving the Dod
gers. He said he was a big leaguer
until it could be proved otherwise.
Branch Rickey, president of the
Dodgers, asked Tepsic to change
his mind last night, but the 23
year old outfielder from Slovan, Pa ,
remained adamant today and said!| / r r T r r . rN . . . . r
-
x r . , r r
he would fly home tomorrow after- f Y r
l"RDA Y J j ( R A T i r ' A
noon. Tlie Dodgers have provided
him transportation as far as New
York.
BOWIE
1
Amperage,
J
Breen,
8
4 40,
3;
J r
O'Sullivan. I). West, 4.40, 3.20,
Aiken, F.
Kelly , 7 60; tim e 116 3-5
2
Rebllne, R. Howell, 27 .20. 11 8 0 . 7 40,
Catey es, D. Scocca, 5.20. 3.8 0; W aza Walla,
D. W est, 6 8 0; time 116.
3— Hy Maedlc. W, L. Tay lor, 9 , 5, 3.40;
Ringalong, R. Root, 9 .60, 3.60; Top Boots. I
H. Keene, 4 40; tim e 115 4-5 .
4— Rakem up, H. Keene, 34 40, 14 8 0, 8 40;
D auber’s
Girl,
A.
S theirer,
7 .60,
5 8 0;
Bram blette, J
Breen, 8 .20; time 116 1-5.
5— Orage,
R.
Root.
49 .40,
13.20.
5.40;
Breakage, J . Onorato, 4.8 0
3; Cham ade,
A Kirkland, 3.20; tim e 115 1-5.
6—G al
Ann,
A.
K irkland,
10.20,
4 60,
3 40; Ice Dancer, D. W est, 5.20. 4.20; Cha-
lupa, R. Root, 5.8 0; tim e 149 2-5.
7 —O utsider, F. Lullo, 8 . 4 40, 3 20; Loch
Ness,
J .
DeW itt,
5.60,
3.20;
H em fox,
J .
Dehicia, 3; tim e 1:53 4-5 .
8 —G en ial
Sam
S.,
C.
Cusim ano,
6.20,
3 40 .
2.60;
Selcap.
R.
Root,
3 60.
2.60;
Tchada, F. Cisneros, 3 40; tim e 151 4-5 .
DAILY
D O U B LE —Am perage
and
Keb-
line paid » 19 5.« « .
xAlunony Kid
108 New Book
113
xTim otl
108 Hanup
113
Im perious Fox
116 Comías*
108
Hainis
111 La O suna
108
Electric
113 Over Gold
113
xRivrr Bank
111 xEddie Bo G ee
109
Lady Marine
106
2- » 2.500. m aidens. 3. 6 Í.
xSun Volo
108 A larosa
113
P om pey s Song
118 Aigopeg
113
Ethel Morse
113 xSincon
113
xAU Quiet
108 xCarib Song
108
Roy al Surada
113 Glory Be
113
xCoolamny
108 Big Dub
118
Happy Hoodlum
118 SqufHe
113
Pas* Dun
118 Redtgal
113
3—» 3,000, allowances, 2, 4 Í.
Undercut
118 c-L ittle Bobby
116
C athie J ean
115 a-Hrown Fox
116
a-T urning Point
116 c-S am b a Step
116
Haggy
118 Little Knick
118
Top Foot
116 Mr. Toison
116
Mary Ann
U S Cai tie Mark
116
a-H igh Orounc
Stallie entry .
c-B ob an et Stable entry .
4
$2,500, claim ing, 4 and up. 6 Í.
xWild Agent
102 xTopper
112
Fogoso
116 Edtnar J ojan
1 1 !
A uk y loa
11(1 Air Defense
113
xAng« i Cholly
108 Hetty Twig
106
Indian Hun
113 Hibernian
111
Who.sHldlt
108 xEpay
108
xDurk M ischief
111
5 —$2,500, claim ing, 4 and up, 6 f.
G ay Venture
113 R u n n ing R iot
108
Silver Whisk.
108 Fair D ate
106
xArdent Miss
104 x B attle Star
111
» Miss Ttpper
103 Noah's Choice
116
G old in Babe
108 Sarem p Singer
108
xMl s* Sun lea
101 Walter H aight
116
T iptolate
108
6
$3,500, claim ing, 4 and up. 6 Í.
xMy Willow
107 Tear Drop
106
Sgt. Aim
114 Mis* Neddie
111
x Bill G.
111 xGIt
109
Page II
116 xNora Belle
106
Victim
116 » -H onour S tudent
122
H ippomenes
122 Rollino
114
a-Tum ble Boy
116 Irish Hay
113
Evely n Rolls
108 Woofie
117
» -M rs, V
D. and R. C. Waple entry .
7 —$4,000, allow ance, 4 and up, 1 1-16
m.
Sp an ish Uhi
114 xGnlatjnlk
9 9
folleto
120 Sm iling Lass
103 j
Inguaiar
108 xBcau W y nn
113
J ousting Match
118 Collnova
106 !
8
» 2,500, claim ing, 4 and up, 1 1-16
in.
Big J ack
120 Rom ance Boy
120 j
V Day
i i .‘> s d i t e l a»
115
xSir J erom e
115 xHopewell
115
XCaffetiie
115 xl.ady Leaopa
I 10
a-Oil the W ane
115 x lrish Echo
1 1 »
a-G. C. Ham ilton
120
84 Nominated For
Derby Trials
LOUISVILLE. Ky., April 3 (/PI
inated for the $10,000 added Derby
trial, to be run here on Tuesday.
April 29 .
The trial, over a one-mile course,
is open to those colts, geldings anti
fillies which are eligible for the
Kentucky Derby, to be run the fol-
The Derby trial nominations In-
I eluded such performers as Faultless,
,1!; Jet Pilot. Riskolator, Double Jay,
Cosmic Bomb, Stepfather, Colonel
OF, Fervent, Peey Nell and Blue
Gulfsfream Entries
1—» 2,300. claim ing, 4 and up, 6 f.
Liberty Head
116 Red Vulcan
Sir Echo
114 S alutation
xPark Heights
114 xStrolling Don
War Atla.s
114 Abogada
Sergeant Bob
111 Harry O.
Lady G eorgan n a 112 Mae W atch
Shoeless Lass
114 In T h e W ings
H erodotus
111 xEast Norwich
2
» 2,300, m aidens, 4 and up, 6 f.
xNoika
I ni i
I x ò ay Tulip
‘ Mary 's Rosebud
W< ather Map
¡ xH y gro’s G al
Mcrrtek Balte
¡ x lililíes Choice
115 Fanturbie
115 Conform able
lit) G rafairch an
110 xM oim m u
120 xMoon
Pool
110 x Pari-J oe
115 Ever Venture
112 I.Iti le < ii if
3
$2.300, m aiden filli*
2. 4 f.
T ODAYS w
f t 'o n s
l» r • H l ’C K ’* WEAVER
T h e Louisville Time s
HOWIE (M uddy )
1
Alimony Kid, llan u p . New Book.
2
Pompey s Song, Big Dub, Happy Hood
lum.
3—Little Knick. Undercut, Brown Fox.
4— Fogoso, Dark Mischief, Anky los.
5
Walter H aight, Silver W hisk,
Battle
Star.
6 — Honour Student, H ippomenes, Victim.
7 —Collnova, Colieto, Sm iling Lass.
8 v Day. Big Jack,
m ipewell.
BEST BET— V Day .
G I T E S T R E A M <Eax!>
1—Sir Echo, Abogada, Park H eights
2
Little tlrlf,
G rafairchan,
Ever
Ven
ture.
3
4
5
Mis6
I xHocorro
i Non ferro
i x Donna Ilruce
Shadow Dance
No Melody
Higlilo
Spring trolly
112 Needle F a n
117 VI Hid
107 Ditty Box
117 IMav Eda
117 Spring Song
117 G alilee
117 O dd Pigeon
116
109
106
111
114
111
117
109
115118
120
112
110
115
122
120
117
117
117
117
117
117
117
118
122
107
1U6
105
107
113
112
Colls Sign Stalloni
BALTIMORE, April 3. i/F—The
Baltimore Colts of the All-America
Professional Football League an
nounced tonight the signing of Tony
¿stalloni, 216-pound guard and cap-
( tin of la^t, year’s University of
Delaware eleven
which won the
post-season "Cigar’’ bowl contest
Stalloni, 25-year-old Chester. Pa.,
resident, was picked by the Balti
more Touchdown Club as the ’ most
valuable" player in the Mason-Dix-
on Conference.
No selections.
Swift Town. Carreau. Et Ostina.
-O.
K.
Ruby ,
D evastating,
Tedious
a-S tay and Elliott entry .
x-5 lbs. AAC.
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla., April 3
(JP — Joe DiMaggio, still hobbling
around after a recent operation on
his foot, will tie left behind for fur
ther rest and conditioning when the
New York Yankees leave their train
ing ramp here Friday, Manager
Bu'ky Harris said today.
ral other men who have been ,
F i
m
I round IS
n or who Period on J I quarterback sneak
hii\e minor ailments will remain Copp
Moose Team To Meet
A meeting of all players who wish
BOWIE:
1—Freelands Lad, Caroline Ann.
W alter
Haight,
Fogoso;
2— Fly ing
Hero,
Svengali,
Angel Cholly ,
Rem olee;
3— Nu-
Ko,
Eddie
B o
Gee,
Roy al
Favor,
Me-
neither; 4— Charge On, Liquidator; 5— Free „ ,
,
Son,
Rocket Shell,
D otty s
Bull
Glorlou.s! o at l i r a ay .
Bid; 8—Red Torch, W apan,
Beilciapper.. | scheduled May 2, the day before the
' Kentucky Derby.
Purses Increased
LOUISVILLE, Ky., April 3 (/P)—
An increase from $1,500 to $1,800 in
the minimum purse was announced
today in the Churchill Downs’ con- j
dition book covering the first 10
days of the 19 -day spring race meet- I
ing here.
The book shows an increase of
almost $30,000 in the overall dis
tribution for the period.
Tlie Kentucky Oaks, a mile and
a sixteenth run for 3-year-old fil
lies, gets half the total raise, the
stakes having been boosted from
$10,000 to $25.000.
The Kentucky Oaks is one of
seven stakes to be run during the
spring meeting, which opens on
Saturday, April 26, and closes on
May 17. The Oaks is
(H ’LFNTREAM:
1— Float Away , Barbara's
*i
,
_
,
,
,
I .
.
.
. .
__
,
,
. Girl, Rose c ave. Rough Shower, Chiclette,
With the exception of the Ken
scored on an off-tackle smash from to try out for the Moose baseball
Frank Hunter, Arthur
j ; 2
Munster; 3— tucky Derby, which carries an add-
the three to end the TD parade for team has been called for this after-
;i*ouj» c; 4 Airily,
jopier.
car m u s,
vai-,(wj value of $1 0 0 0 0 0
n o n tho rmir«
¡the afternoon.
noon at 5 o’clock at Stitcher
P
i
C
d
,
«
'
»
i
c
h
I* *25*00« ^ < 1 the othe?
Dick Clower picked up the biggest ¡by Frank Williams, manager.
¡Broti.sviiif
¡stakes are $10,000 added affairs.
i
piece of yardage for the Seniors as
Hp Rolls, Bright Argosy , Hi Neighbor.
7
Markabllity . H islronic. Crazy Whirl.
B
Memory Boss. Bravrom e, W hich Cup
BEST BET— O. K. Kuby .
BOWIE (G ood)
(By The Associated Press)
1—Conilass. Electric, Rlverbauk.
2
Roy al
Sarada,
All
Quiet,
Pompey s
Song
3
Saggy , Little Knick. Undercut
4
Anky los, Angel Cholly , Wild Agent.
5
W alter H aight, P’alr Date, O ay Ven
ture.
(i
Victim, Honour S tudent, Bill O.
7 —Colieto. J ousting Match, Collnova.
8
V
Day . Sir J erome, Rom ance Boy .
BEST— Colieto.
GULF8 TREAM (Fast Track)
(By The Associated Prejs)
1— Park Heights, Red Vulcan. Sir Echo.
2—G rafairch an ,
G ay
Tulip,
Ever
Ven
ture.
3— Play Eda, Non Ferro. Spring Folly .
4—Rarco-Crum p Entry . El Osuna, Bomb
Sight.
5— H u tchin s-W ise
Entry ,
T edious
Miss.
C hanteuse.
6 — Bright Argosy . Hi Neighbor, He Rolls.
7 — H istrionic, Markability , Mercy Angel
8
W hich Cup, Black Ra. Fanar Grier.
BEST
BET— H u tchins-W ise
entry , fifth
race.
N O T I C E
Bartenders Local 569
No Meet ing Will Be Held
Sunday, April 6th
Meeting Called Sunday
April 13th
E. R. MULLEN
President
4
» 2.300. claim ing, 4 and up. 6 f.
H arpstrings
110 Bomb S igh t
xn Bob O S ullivan 112 G r an d d ad
bComenow
122 xT rnnessee Maid
J udge Duvry
115 xCarrrau
Rose mere Deo
105 xT ennls Ball
Mixer
115 xShore Patrol
a-El O suna
117 Sir Gerald
b-Sw ift Town
122 Alldepends
a-J . G. Leipcr, J r. and Mrs. 8 . Bonfrisco j
entry .
b-R arco Stable and G. M. Crump entry .
IS,7 00, allow ances, 4 and up
p. and '
M . 7 f.
a-M y Star
108
Tedious Miss
110-
k-O
K. Ruby
10H Dina Belle
10«
French Lure
108 D evastatin g
n o
Slender Lady
110 Chanteuse
108
a-J . M. H utchins and II. 11. Wise entry . I
-------- ----------------- ---------------
I
6 - » 3.200. allowances, C lass D, 4 and up,
1 1-16 m.
Bright. Argosy
111 Mescara
121*
Vuldimi Craft
123 Unknown Reward 111)
111 Neighbor
123 Ho Rolls
123
7 $2 10«. claiming,
Mercy Angel
118
xBean Pot
111
x a-W inn p earl
113
xCrazy Whirl
106
x a-M olasses Bill 113
Erica
lio
xPeggy Silver
113
n-M iss
P.
Phipps
entry .
College Lacrosse
Navy 19. Dartmouth 5
STEINLA
Announces the OpeninQ
of •
BUDGET DEPT.
for the purchase of
íi
m
Ì
I D
^ I E A R
r i R E S
4 and up, 1 1-16 in j
Pendrugon
113
Homer
108 !
xLudy Ty rant
108
Histrionic
123 j
xM arkability
118;
xSurfside
m
xG artcr
108 •
and
Colgate
Farm i
8
» 2 300. claim ing, 4 and up. F and M
1 1-16 m.
xAral
114 xBluck Ra
Bravrom e
113 Memory Boss
xD aim on's Maid
102 Which Cop
xMon Teak
122 xPunar Orier
x-5 lbs. AAC
111 !
110
It I
106
Batteries * Accessories
Come In
and Open Your Account
Today
See E A Kmton, Dept Mgr.
218 South Mechanic St.
Phone 2550
»
lie went for 19 yards in the final
A
to Seeil lateral in the last
to help the Yankee slu^^er with I
o
f
play picked up 25 yard.*-
training H arm said
for Allegany and was their largest
Ir. Mai Stevens, club physician, !
will stay behind to check on the
~
C O N C O R D
TTie Seniors led 9 to 2 hi first
prccrass of DiMaggio, kmgpin in downs. They completed three of
the club’s attack.
Ruffin Cancels Bouts
nine passes for 26 yards and gained
a net 114 yards on the ground. Alle
gany had none for two in the air
and a net 54 yards gained on the
ground. Tlie Seniors fumbled twice
recovering both while Allegany re-
NEW YORK. April 3—f/JV-Maurie
Waxman. manager of Bobby
Ruffin..
jg w York
. f t . , trieved only 2 of 5 fumbles
:taine of Milwaukee by a ALIK,*AN,r
r °"-
knockout in a Pittsburgh
iday night, said today he
riled the next four dates
liter because of injuries he
:e Fc
wa
Or
ts being called
with BUI Eddy
New Orleans,
r Branding of
<
v. N. Y.,
kith Walter Cabey Ixtwis
n at Holyoke, Mass., April
th Willie Beltram of New
the St. Nicholas arena
SENIORS
Vernail
.............. I E . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Brant
Kerfe .............................. L T .............................
Yoder
H* rshbprger
..............L O
.................. Shaw
W right
......................... C ................................. Sm ith
Dnwson
........................R Q .............................
Luca
Carrot
..........................R t .................. Houndshel)
Piper
....................... R E . . ......................
Harper
Lease
Q H
Clower
Cecil
............................ , L H . ............... Andersor
Dieken
..........................H I ! ...........................
Penkin
‘ "l'l> .......................FB..........................
Power.» .
A llegany —Sw an, Burkett
Bruce, Frennell, Caldwell
Senior*
DeHart. Cox, Bi*hop.
Score by period» :
SENIORS ................................ 0
6
6 0— 12
ALLEGANY
................... 0
0
0 0— 0
Touchdown*
Anderson, Powers.
R c h r e e
Bower*
Umpire — Long. Head
linesm an
Kiosterm an.
off were
of Flint.
April 7;
H am i l t o n , I „ Substitution*
'lor i,e t , Morton
iyve got the
to
Ix your DODGE
ir or truck!"
...and our mechanics have the
“KNOW HOW” to give dependable
DODGE-PLVMOUTH
SERVICE
Yoi/ff find our slock of factory-engineered parts for
Dodge-Plymoutti cars . . . and Dodge Job-Rated trucks
most complete! For your service needs . . . SEE US FIRST.
Cur expert mechanics have the "know-how'# to do the
job rinht .
.
. and our prices are reasonable.
Gurley Brothers
fro dge-P lym o uth
Sales-Servic«
1
4
I
t>e ** Trade-in
™
™
Allowance
Six# 6.00-16 *f*d Tax Extva
Ttip Calrway City Transfer Company of Ij Crosse, Wis., his Just
eompleted lilty y ears of trucking service. CONGRATULATIONS!
I r uck operators wls> keep mileage records know wliieli tires are
be« *. Mr. Murphy 's exp.-ri<inee with Riversides fine performane*
on his 400 tracks soW hhn on RiVKRSIDK passenger tires.
TIRE RECAPPING AT W ARDS
Your smooth tires are RKGAITKI) with honest care at Wards.
Is* moans months ot extra wear from vour [iresei* tir.a!
PROMPT FREE
MOUNTING
S»ze
Price*
4 .4 0 /4 ,50 -2 1....... $1 2.25
4 .7 5 /5.0 0 -1 9....... 12.25
5.2 5 /5.5 0 -1 8 ....... 13.40
5.2 5/5.50 -1 7 ........ 14.65
fO% Dows cmd $6.00 a
5*ze
Price*
6.00-1 6................. $1 4 .8 0
6 2 5 /6 .5 0 -1 6 ....... 17 .95
7 .00-1 5................. 19.90
7 .00-1 6................. 20.35
Bv y t Fottr 6.00 16 Tir—f
U B E R A I T R A D E - I N A L L O W A N C E O N Y O U R O L D TI RES!
SAVE
SAVE
SAVE
because Concord manufac
tures their own clothes and
se Ms D IR EC T to y out
because Concord oper
ates in a Factory Loft
out of the high rent
districts^
b e c a u s e
C o n c o r d
does business in huge
v o l u m e for p e n n y
profì tri
A L L W O O L
• GABARDINES, WORSTEDS,
TWEEDS. SHETLANDS.
• ALL SIZES. MODELS AMD j
SHADES FOR SPRING.
• FREE ALTERATIONS
Use Our Convenient
LAYAWAY PLAN!
p l k t t Y S
CONCOR
FACTORY
SHOWROOM
S. Mechanic St. in the Footer Factory Bldg.
USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN
T H E C U M B E R L A N D
N EW S,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D .,
F R ID A Y ,
A P R IL
4,
1947
Nelson And Demaret Are
Tied For Masters' Lead
Field Of 58 Lead
By Veteran Texans
AUGUSTA, G a, April 3 <4’^ A
of veteran campaigners, By-
•on N elson
arx!
Jimmy D e m a re t,
r e the field of 58 in today * openintc
•otmd of the lith annual Masters
Davis Eagles Nine
Will Be Honored
400 Bowlers Enter
Boxy Tournament
An array of approximately 400
bowlers, who were regulars a t the
Savoy alleys last season, will com
pete for prizes in the handicap
tournam ent to be conducted at the
Savoy
over three weekends this
month.
Green Would Outlaw
Bribery In Sports
WASHINGTON,
April
S
(/Pl —
FTesident
Abe J. Green
of
the
National Boxing Association favors
federal action to outlaw bribery in
sports.
His
endorsement
of legislation
authored by Rep. Hebert tD-La)
Bowie Entries
FIR ST PO ST I PM EST
I—-12,500, claim ing. 4 mid up. I (.
PARSONS, April 3 .-T h e sports
committee of the local Fraternal
Order of Eagles of Davis announced
that at a special m e e tin g in the Aerie
Home on Easter Sunday afternoon
3oJf Tournam ent with three under j presentation of athort* awards will
jar Si* s.
be made to the last year’s team by
The two native Texans, with Nel- the Worthy President Albert Berg
man now retired at Roanoke. Tex . stiom and will Include sports awards,
md Demaret won playing out of jackets and team pictures.
Dial, C alif, had a one stroke lead
Highlighting the day’s p r o g r a m
riff seven oilier* who tied at 70.
Mn ti ager
Reginald
Oolightly will
Nelson, Witmer of the event In j discus! his plans for the coming
(937 and 1942. posted rounds of 35- baseball season. All players expect-
14 over the par 72 <36-36> national me to tryout, for the local team are
^ 1 5 “
7 hU*
D™ ™ 'V ho1 th' ur? r ’ t4' ; ' ,er:d “ r
, ^ . , 1
«»<>««
* Pi.t o p .i
I HW-xard course in 36-33.
1
Under the l e a d e r s h i p of their | d jUrfh (0 s to re r B rother*. in co rp o rated .
Tied at 70 were George Schnle- manager, the Eagles had a success-j $12 boo
for
p ro p erty st co rn er
v irg in ia
e r of Salt Lake City, John Palmer ful season last year winning 20 o u t
Avenue and second s tre e t.
a ! Bacin. N. C., Jimmy Frrrier of 0f 30 games played. The team won
Roli*”t R ; Davit.* j " an d Bv* o. Davis.
$5 200. p ro p erty on Robert* S treet.
M ary A. an d W illiam ll. HammtU.
to
C ora R. and E d v a rd S ch affer, ti.SOO Gay
S treet property.
M ary Ju lia Meta, to A nna M. and C a r
lyle
M.
S tew ard.
Independence
S tre et
p ro p erty .
B arb ara B. D ennis R aw lins, to N ath an
The tournam ents will start the was read to the House today by Rep.
weekend of April 12-13 and will co n -,Canfield IR -N J). Both Green and
tinue the next two weekends with;CanIie,d are from Paterson, N. J.
players competing for prizes in var-
Green wrote Canfield saying the
ious divisions. First prize in each | HebertL BillI “should be very vigor-
d 1 vision will be $100, second prizes
$25. third prizes $15 and fourth
prizes $10.
Entrants for the tournam ent m art
have bowled a minimum of 21 games
during the past season and handi
caps are based on an average of 130
for women and 160 for men.
xAlimtmy Kid
xTim oti
Im perious Pox
R am is
E lectric
xR iver B ank
I-ady M arine
108 New Book
108 H anup
116 C ornless
111 La O suna
113 O ver Gold
111 xEddie Bo Clee
106
ID
in
108
108
113
IOO
T W E N T Y -F IV E
2 —92.500, m aidens.
Deeds Recorded
At Court House
ously pushed.
*‘I hope th at it is not sidetracked
as unim portant legislation x x x .
It is very im portant th at there be
on the books of the country a
measure which will always be avail
able with which to strike hard at
the crooks and other vermin who
prostitute sports.”
xSun Volo
Pompey* Song
Ethel M orse
xAll Q uirt
: Royal Barads
xCoolamay
Happy Hoodlum
Pas* Dun
108
118
113
108
ll]
108
118
118
3. 6 f.
Alaro*a
Aigopeg
xStncon
xCarib Song
G lory Be
Rig I)uU
Snuffle
K rdigal
YESTERDAY S RESULTS
<2 T L P !T R E AM
1— Mr.
P h arn ed .
P.
H»nea,
I IO, 4 80
330;
O a rter,
R.
B eadm en!.
14.70.
8 30,
D issident, A. S nider. 4.50; tim e 126.
2—H ygro's Plier. P.
Mane*.
16 60, 7 60
5.10; Buddy Mantel. C. Rogers, 5.70. 420;
Busy Jean n e, O. Lafleus. 8 40; tim e 113 1-5.
3—P iet,
J
S tout.
24 40,
6.40.
4 40,
_
.
______ . . . _____ _____ ___ _____ ___ _______ _ D auntedid.
A.
S nider,
3.40,
2 80;
W ar
Chicago. Johnny Bulla Of Phoenix, the championship Of Davis Without
$5 200. p ro p erty on Robert* S treet. R aider, C. Roger*. 3 60; tim e
46 1-5. (new
Ari* . Fred Haas of New Orleans. Brl suffering a defeat and was the lead-
M ary
a . an d w illiam n Hammtil. to track record
IT,
.
. . . . .
.
,
____.
V
.
C ora R and E dw ard S ch affer, $1,800
G ay
4
Toy
Bomb,
M
B uxton, 17 20, 9 60,
Oliver of
Wilmington, Del , and „ r in the M ountain State League Btrpt,t propc.r ty.
b io ; T in tia. r B e rn h ard t, 1 2 9 0. 7 .10:
Fire
t / » v
Worsham of W ashington, D j before withdrawing to play inde-
M ary Ju lia Met*, to A nna m
and c a r - Power. p. a . sm ith , boo. tim e iii 4-5.
C .
i p e n d e n t
b a ll.
M a n a g e r
O o l i g h tl y
lyle
M
S tew ard.
Independence
S treet a JL ,Y 'V i ° » L b e r S ^ B M V w - 4st°'
Bobbv Locke, the South African v-(ij have last year’s team back as
B
RawIlnili to N a th an J sto u t. 6.so; tim e no 4 -5.
’
Chair.p io n ,
r a t e d
a s
a d a rk h o rM * v .P u
^
.s e v e ra l
e x - s e r v i c e m e n
f o r B and Helen
m. sh e rry .
$2,800. Ridgew ay
e - B a ttietire.
J .
R obertson.
3 4 0 . 2 so.
coe lender,
had
trouble with
the the coming season.
* I T errace.
210:
Plucky
Boy. a. sn id e r,
tee a.90;
p m . M d turned rn . 38-36 card;
M ember, of lust year', teami t o l J T S S t f * 3 1 “Si** A
tor a 74 total
receive jackets will be M anager Go- i^nbel. $ 12,000 B edford stre e t.
(o u r Best, J. R obertson, ii so. 5 2 0 . speedy
D enaret
and Nelson both had lightly, business m anager, Harold
3
$3,000. allow ances, 2. 4 f.
U ndercut
118 c -t.ittle Bobby
C ath ie Jea n
115 a - Brown Pox
a- Turtling Point 116
r-S am b a Step
Raggy
118 L ittle Rn lek
Top Foot
116 Mr. ToUon
M ary A nn
115 C astle M ark
a-H igh G round Stable en try .
C -Bobanet S table en try .
4 $2,500. claim ing. 4 and up, 6 f.
113
113
IU
108
113
us
IU
IU
116
ll*
IIH
118
116
116
84 Nominated For
Derby Trials
LOUISVILLE, K y , April 3 (/Pl —
Churchill Downs announced today
that 84 three-year-olds were nom
inated for the $10,000 added Derby
trial, to be run here on Tuesday.
April 29.
Tile trial, over a one-mile course.
is o|ten to those colts, geldings and
fillies which are eligible for the
Kentucky Derby, to be run tile fol
lowing Saturday. Tile Derby eligibles
total 135.
Tile Derby trial nominations in
cluded such performers as Faultless,
Jet Pilot. Riskolator, Double Jay.
Cosmic Bomb, Stepfather, Colonel
O F Fervent, Peey Nell and Blue
Border.
Gulfsfream Entries
dire ie* on the cif?
five. 15th hole, w
men made hi* fan
1935.
Deman \s
ed in the water s
of the green but
ult 485-yard, par 3 ^
equipment m anager, W alter
Gene Sara- j Maleonskl. and players, Ernest Ar-
ible eagle in j hal.f Thurm an Kelley, Francis Male-
shot land- onski, Albert Kerzie, John Cousins,
at the front 1 Andrew Paczosa. Stanley Borkoski.
he took off his j p ^ d Turek. Clay Holcombe, John
shoes and socks rolled up his pants Lawrence, Charles Moore, Francis
and blasted the bail out onto the ceroski . Gene Worden, John Becker,
rr»M»n.
He sank an 8-foot putt for y/alter Govedich, John Grlgas. W ar-
a four.
Nelson, In the sand trap at the
fight, exploded to within a foot
of the hole for his birdie.
He was
even par through tile first eight
hoiet. then birdied the ninth but lost
the stroke back on the 10th. He was
even through 12 holes but had an
ear'e on the 480-yard 13th hole with
ren Heath and Ellery R. Hinkle.
Interstate Basketball
Heeling Is (ailed
A short meeting of the Interstate
............ .........Basketball League will be held at
a 12-foot putt that. with his birdie Central YMCA Sunday afternoon
at 2 o’clock to close out the ses
sion, Clifton Van Roby, president,
announced last night.
Van Roby said forfeit* will be
returned and all unfinished business
transacted. He stressed th at the
meeting would be short due to it
being Easter Sunday.
a* 15. accounted for his three under
par total.
Bobby Jones, the famed grand-
fiarr.mer, playing
wTith
defending
champion Herman Keiser, went out
in even par 36, but ran into trouble
or. the second nine and after three
Biles had dropixxi four strokes to
par. Keiser had a methodical 37-37
for a 74. had to do some scram
bling around the greens to get that.
Joe DiMaggio Will”
Remain In Florida
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla., April 3
(ZP — Joe DiMaggio. still hobbling
around after a recent operation on
his foot, will be left behind for fur-.
noroH# fnr
the- rest and conditioning when the '**
®nd ^
170 parade lor
New York Yankees leave their tra in
ing camp here Friday, M anager
Bucky H am s said today.
Several other men who have been
rtow to round into condition or who
have minor ailments will remain
here to help the Yankee slugger with
kl* training. Harris said.
Dr. Mal Stevens, chib physician,
also will stay behind to check cm the
progress of DiMaggio, kingpin in
the club's attack.
Jo h n
E.
an d
K ath erin e
M.
Hhaw.
to
Aimer and E lizabeth M. Stevenson, $2,500.
p ro p erty
a t
Second
an d
S outh
S treets.
Dudley, L onaconing.
M erten
L
an d
Ju lia
P.
M organ,
to
G eorge
C.
an d
M ary
E.
R lre,
$2,500.
P h n c e to n S treet.
H erbert an d F lora E Logsdon, to V er
non I. and E dna V. C a rte r, $1 800. G arden
C ity Hom es sub-divtsion.
Allegany Senior
(Continued from Page 24)
ond Senior tally. Powers recovered
on the Allegany 28. Two plays gain
ed two yards and then Powers hit
B rant on the 18 with a pass for a
first. Powers and Peskin h it the
tackles for 13 yards and a first on
the five. Four plays later Powers
scored on an off-tackle smash from
Tepsic Quits Dodgers
HAVANA. April 3 (/Pl—Joe Tep
sic, former Penn State College base
ball and football star who received
a $17,000 bonus for signing a base
ball contract with the Brooklyn
Dodgers last May. said today th at
he was quitting the club.
Tepsic had been assigned to the
Mobile, Ala., farm in the South
ern Association on option two days
ago but balked at leaving the Dod
gers. He said he was a big leaguer
until it could be proved otherwise.
Branch Rickey, president of the
Dodgers, asked Tepsic to change
his mind last night, but the 23
year old outfielder from Slovan, P a ,
remained adam ant today and said
he would fly home tomorrow after
noon. Tile Dodgers have provided
him transportation as far as New
York.
Buffin Cancels Bouts
NEW YORK. April 3—Uh—Maurie
ta x m a n , m anager of Bobby Ruffin,
New York lightweight who lost to
Juste Fontaine of Milwaukee by a
technical knockout in a Pittsburgh
fight Monday night, said today he I H ershberger
had cancelled the next four dates!
the afternoon
Dick Clower picked up the biggest
piece of yardage for the Seniors hr
he went for 19 yards in the final
period on a quarterback sneak. A
Copp to Secil lateral in the last
minute Of play picked up 25 yards
for Allegany and was their largest
contribution for the day.
The Seniors led 9 to S to first
downs. They completed three of
nine passes for 26 yards and gained
a net 114 yards on the ground. Alle
gany had none for two in the air
and a net 54 yards gained on the
ground. The Seniors fumbled twice
recovering both while Allegany re
trieved only 2 of 5 fumbles.
ALLEGANY
Po*.
SENIORS
V ernail ........................ L E ...........................
B ran t
Kefir ......................... LT.............
Yoder
L O . . . , ,
Sham-
....................C ................................ S m ith
Show. C. Rotter*. 3.30. tim e 144
I G round Signal, G . L afleur. 12 60. 5 BO.
4 10; Bi m ood
J. Stout, 4 20 . 3.20; A -Ina-
h u rry , R. B cndinelll, 3 50; tim e 147 2-5.
D Q -M ustcal Kid also ra n ; A-M rs. E. C.
B anbury A Mr*. E. O. He** en try .
DQ-PinlRhed th ird but was di-qualified
DAILY DOI BLL— Mr. Pharned and My-
gra's filar paid $58.60.
BOWIE
1
Am perage, J, ltre rn ,
8
4 40. 3;
Jr
O 'Sullivan. D. W est. 4.40, 3.20. Aiken, P.
Kelly. 7 60; tim e 116 3-5
2
U ndine
K. Howell. 27 20. l l HO
7 40,
Cateye*. D. Score*. 5 20. 3.80, W aza W all*.
D. W est, 6 80; tim e 116
3— Hy M aedic. W. L. T aylor, 9, 5. 3.40;
R ingalong, R. Root, 9.60, 3.60; Top Boots.
H. K eene, 4.40; tim e 115 4-5.
4—R akem up, H. K eene. 34 40, 14 SO. 8 40;
D auber’*
G irl,
A.
fk h e ire r,
7.60.
5.80;
B ram blette, J. B reen. 6.20; tim e 116 1-5.
5—O rage,
R.
Root.
4B.40,
13.20,
5.40;
B reakage. J. O norato. 4.80. 3; C ham ade,
A K irkland. 3.20; tim e 115 1-5.
6—G al
A nn.
A.
K irkland.
10 20.
4 60,
3.40; Ice D ancer. D. W est. 5 20. 4.20; C ha-
lupa, R. Root, 5.80; tim e 149 2-5.
7—O u tsid er. P. Lullo. 8. 4 40. 3 20; Loch
Ne$s.
J.
D ew itt,
5.60,
3.20; H em fox, J.
De lucia. 3; tim e 1:53 4-5.
8—G enial Sam 8., C.
C usim ano,
6 20.
3 40.
2.60;
Beleap.
R.
Root.
3 60.
2.60;
T chada. P. C ic e ro s . 3.40; tim e 151 4-5.
DAILY
DOI BLE—Aiaperaca
and
Reb
iine paid $195.(19.
xW iid A grnt
102
xTopper
112
F og OM)
116
Hilmar Jo ja n
IU
Ankylo*
116
Air Drfetiftt)
IU
xAtigvi ('holly
108
B etty Twig
106
In d ian Hun
111
H ibernian
l l!
W hoaaitlll
toe
xEpay
106
xD ark M ischief
U t
$—$2,500, claim ing.
4 and up. 6 f.
G ay V enture
113
R unning R iot
108
Silver W hi*k
108 P air D ate
106
x Ar dent Mi**
104
xR attle S ta r
IU
JtMis.s T ipper
10J
N oah'* Choice
116
Gold* n Bu be
108 S arem p Hinger
108
xM ua Hun Ira
lot
W alter H aight
116
T lp to late
108
6
S I '.OO, claiining.
4 and up. • I.
xMy VViUt.w
107 T ear D rop
106
bgt. Alia
114
Mi** Neddie
IU
* Bul a .
111
xO it
IOO
Page II
116 xN ora Belie
106
Victim
116 a -llo n o u r S tu d en t 122
Hlppom ene*
122 Roilltio
114
a -Tumble Boy
116
Irish Hay
113
Evelyn Roils
108 W oolie
117
i-M rs. V
D. an d It C. W apie en try .
7—$4,000, allow ance, 4 and up, I I* 16 rn
S panish Uhl
114 xG alaqiilk
99
C olleto
120 Sm iling La**
103
Ingom ar
108 x llta u W ynn
U3
Jouating M atch
118 Colinova
106
8
$2,500, claim lug.
4 and up. I I- 16 in
Big Jack
120
Rom ance Boy
120
V Day
115
xChl.Mam
115
xHir Jerom e
115 xHnpewell
115
xCaf lr m r
11 I xLady U n Opa
I lo
a-O n the W ane
115
a irish Echo
115
a-G . C. H am ilton 120
a-8* ay and E lliott
en try .
I ODAY’S W FT "'HIS
Rv "BUCK” WEAVER
T he I aal*Ville Time*
BOWIE I M uddy)
1
Alimony Kid. l(*tiup. New Bonk
2
Pompey* Sun*. Bl* Dub. H appy Hood
lum.
3—L ittle K ntck U ndercut. Brow n Po*.
4 - Po* oso. D ark M ischief, Ankylos.
5
W alter H aight. Stiver W hisk, B attle
S ta r.
6 - H onour S tu d en t. Hlppom ene*. Victim.
7—Colinov*. C o litic, Sm iling Lass.
8
V Day. Rig Jack , mrpewelL
B IS T B IT —V Day.
GIT
I—
2
ture.
J—
4—
5—
Miss
6
7—
8
BE
ESTEE AM (I ax il
S ir Echo. Abu*tula
P ark Height*
L ittle G rit. O ra fairc h a n ,
Ever Ven-
No selections.
Sw ift Town. C arreau . El O suna
O.
K.
Ruby.
D evastating,
Tedious
Ile Rolls. B right Argosy. Hi N eighbor.
M arkabtlity. Hist runic. C rsty W hirl.
M emory Bo**. B ravrom e, W hich Cup
ST BET—O. K. Roby.
X-5 lbs. AAC.
Moose Team To Meet
YFfTpRDAY'S SCRATCH'S
BOW IE: I —F reelan d s Lad. C aroline Ann.
W’a lter
H aight,
Pogoso;
2—Flying
Hero.
Svengali.
Angel Cholly,
Rem olee;
3—N u-
Ko.
E ddie
Bo
G ee,
R oyal
Favor.
Me-
n e ith e r; 4—C harge On, L iq u id ato r; 5— Free
Son, R ocket Shell, D otty* Bull G lorious
Bid; $ —Red T orch, W apan, B ellclapper..
A meeting of all players who wish!S S ^ S T S ^ ^ J S S t
to try out for the Moose baseball
team has been called for this after
noon at 5 o’clock at Stitcher Field,
by Frank Williams, manager.
er. C hlclette,
F rank H unter. A rth u r J.; 2
M unster; 3—
Loujac;
4—A irily.
Jopier.
C arious,
Val-
dina
Fleet;
5—Albulil,
Legislator.
L and
’N Sea.
T edious Miss,
G ray
M oonbeam.
Scottsville.
Purses Increased
LOUISVILLE, Ky., April 3 t/P)—
An increase from $1,500 to $1,800 in
the minimum purse was announced
today in the Churchill Downs’ con
dition book covering the first IO
days of the 19-day spring race m eet
ing here.
The book shows an increase of
almost $30,000 in tile overall dis
tribution for the period.
Tile Kentucky Oaks, a mile and
a sixteenth run for 3-year-old fil
lies, gels half the total raise, the
stakes having been boosted from
$10,000 to $25,000.
Tile Kentucky Oaks is one of
seven stakes to be run during the
spring meeting, which opens on
Saturday, April 26, and closes on
Saturday, May 17. The Oaks is
scheduled May 2, the day before the
Kentucky Derby.
With the exception of the Ken
tucky Derby, which carries an add
ed value of $100,000, and the Oaks
which Is $25,000 added, the other
stakes are $10,000 added affairs.
BOWIE (GawdI
(By The Associated Pres*)
I—Conilms*. E lectric, R iverbank.
2
Royal
Saratt*.
AU
Q uiet,
Pompey*
Song.
3
Saggy, L ittle K niek. U nderrut
4
Ankylos, Angel ('holly. W ild Agent.
5
W alter H aight, P air D ate. G ay Ven
tu re.
6
Victim . H onour S tu d en t, Bill O.
7—Colleto, Jo u stin g M atch, Colinova.
8
V
Day. Sir Jerom e, R om ance Boy.
BENT—Colleto.
G IT .ENTRE AM (East Track)
(By The Associated Pre**)
1— P ark H eights, Red V ulcan. Sir Echo
2—G ra fairc h an , O ay T ulip, Ever V e n -,
ture.
3— Play Eda. Non F erro. S pring Polly. I
4—R arco-C rum p E n try . El O suna. Bomb
Sight.
5— H utchins-W ise E n try , T edious
MI**.
C hanteuse.
6— B right Argosy. HI N eighbor. He Rolls
7—H istrionic, M arkability, M ercy Angel
8
W hich Cup. Black R a, P a n a r O n e r.
BEST
BLT—H utchins-W ise entry, fifth
race.
I—$2,300, claim ing.
4 an d up
$ f.
L iberty Head
us
Red Vulcan
116
S ir Echo
114 S alu tatio n
tov
xPark Height*
114 xHtrolllng Don
106
W ar Atlas
114 Abo* ad*
l l!
S ergeant Bob
IU
H arry O.
114
Lady O eo rg an u a
n a
Mae W atch
IU
Shoeless La**
114 In T he W irt*
117
H erodotus
IU
xEast Norwich
IDV
2
*2 JOO, m aid n u , 4 and up. 6 (.
xNoika
US
Fan lur hie
115
Agave
I IS C onform able
I IS 1
xGay T ulip
n o
G ra fa irc h an
120
M ary'* Rosebud
n o
XMnitieli; A
112
W eather Map
120 * M. HUI
Pool
n o
x lly g ro 's (tai
HO x l'a n -Jo e
115
M errick Belle
115 Ever V entura
122
x lttllirs Cholee
n a
L ittle ( in t
PJO
3
$2,300, m aiden fillies, 2. 4 f.
xN ororro
112 Needle P an
117
Non fee re
117 VI Bld
117
vD onna Bruce
107
D itty Box
117
Shadow D ance
117 Play K«;*
117
No Melody
117 S pring Song
117
R ighto
117 (lattice
117
Hprtng Polly
117 Odd Pigeon
117
4- $2,300. claim ing. 4 an d up. 6 I.
H am strin g *
n o
Dumb flight
UK
Bt > t > Sullivan 112 G tam lctad
122
bComenow
122 x T rn n rsare M aid
107
Judge D a v ev
115 x C arrrait
UM
Host m ere I lee
105
xT rnnl* Hall
IO*
Mixer
115 xHhore P atro l
107
a-E l O suna
117 Sir G erald
113
b -S w ift Town
122 A ildepend*
112
a -J. G. Leiper. J r. an d Mrs. 8 B onfrtsco
en try .
b -R arco Stable
and
O. M. C rum p
en try
5— $2,700. allowance*, 4 and up. P.
and I
M , 7 f.
a-M y S ta r
toe
Tedious Miss
HO
a-O K Ruby
108 D ilia Belle
108
F rench Lure
108 D evastating
n o
S lender Lady
n o
C hanteuse
108
a -J
M
H utchins and Ii. ll. Wise entry i
6
$3,200. allow ances. C lass D. 4 and
up
I 1-16 rn
B right Argosy
IU
M escara
121
VaUlina C raft
123 U nknow n Rew ard
IU j
Hi NeighlMir
123
He Rolla
123
7—$2,300. claim ing.
4 and up
I I
16 rn
Mercy Angel
UR
Pendragon
113
xBean Pot
111
Homer
108
x a-W innpearl
IU
xLady T y ra n t
lot
xC rasy W hirl
106
H istrionic
12J
x a - M olasses Bill 113 xM arkability
118
Erica
HO
xSurfside
IU
x l’cggv 8Uver
113
xCtarter
108
a-M lxa
P.
Phipps
and
C olgate
F arm
en try .
8
$2 IOO. claim ing.
4 and up. P and
M..
I 1-16 rn.
*
x Ai al
114
xBlack Ha
I t l l
B ravrom e
IU
M emory Bos*
no
xD aim on’s Maid
102
W hich Cup
IU
xMon Teak
122 x Fan a r G rier
106
x-5 lbs. AAC
(oils Sign Stalloni
BALTIMORF. April 3. f>P—Th#
Baltimore Colls of the AU-Amertcm
Professional
Football League an
nounced tonight the signing of Tony
Dalton!. 216-pound guard and eap-
t tin of la^t year’s University of
Delaware eleven
which
won
th e
post-season ••Cigar” bowl content
Stalloni, 25-year-old Chester. P a ,
resident, was picked by the Balti
more Touchdown Club as the * most
valuable” player rn the Maaon-Du*
on Conference.
(ollege Lacrosse
Navy 19. Dartmouth 9
STEINLA
Announce! the Opening
et e
BUDGET DEPT.
for the pure hate et
[ g o t3 D /Y I EAR
TIRES
Batteries * l cttttetitt
Come In
ond Open Your Account
Todoy
See I A. Kmton, Dept Mfr.
218 South Mechonic St.
Phone 25 SO
N O T I C E
Bartenders Local 569
No Meeting W ill Be Held
Sunday, April 6th
M eetinf Called Sunday
April 13th
E. R. MULLEN
President
. ,
_ .
.
, .
,
,
. D aw son
R o ........................... Lucas
for h;s fighter because of injuries he ca rro *
........................ R T ................. H oundsheii
received.
P iper .............................R E ........................ H arper
The bouts being called off were if*!? ..........................................
I
v
, I
*
. I Cecil
L H ............ ..
A nderson
a
*duled with Bill Eddy of Flint. Dieken ..................r h ................... Pe*kin
M ch.
at New Orleans, April
7 ;iC o p p ............................. fb
Power*
* .:h Patsy Branding of H am ilto n ,L 8“b?tlt“t,0.n'1
A iie g a n y -sw a n . B urkett.
, ___
. . . ,
T orbet. M orton, B rute. PrennelL Caldwell.
Ont., at Long Island City, N Y ..|Bt.nlora
April 15; aith W alter Cabev Lewis
(
}
e. M.r.»
Ap! Ii »»
2T and with Willie Bertram of New
York at
the St. Nicholas arena
here May 2
D eH art, Cox, Bishop.
Hr ore by period*;
0
6
6 0—12
ALLEGANY
........................ 0
0
0
0— 0
Touchdow n*— A nderson, Power*.
R e fere e — Bower*. U m pire — Long. Head
lin esm an —K losterm an.
*A
...and oar mechaaics have the
“KNOW H or to give dependable
DODGE-PLYMOUTH
SERVICE
YociTI fin d our stock o f factory-engineered parts for
Dodge-Plym outh cars . . . and Dodge Job-Rated trucks
most com plete! For your service needs . . . SEE US FIRST.
O ur expert m echanics have the "know -how " to do the
Job rinht . . . and our prices are reasonable.
Gurley Brothers
Bodge-Plymouth
1-------------
Solei-Servica
PROMPT FREE MOUNTING
Th* Gateway Gtv Transfer Company of la Crosse, Wi»., his inst
Completed filly years of In n king service. CONGR A TI 'I .ATH) NS!
Truck o p erato rs who keep m ileage records know which tires aw
b e * . Mr. Mwrphy's experience with Riversides fine performance
on las 400 trwrks sold him on RIVERSIDE passenger Urea.
TIM RECAPPING AT WARDS
Yow smooth tires are RECAPPED with honest rare at W ar*.
Dial moans months ot extra wear from yonr present tarred
M e t*
6.00-16................... $14.80
6.25/6.50-16......... 17.95
7.00-15................... 19.90
7J0O-16................... 30.35
WPK Dem* wed $AOO • Aaa* fey* fwr 4.00 IO TIna#
Six*
Prko*
4.40/4.50-71...
4.75/5.OO-1»...
5.25/5.50-1*...
5.XS/S.SO-17...
LIBERA! TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUK OLD TIRESI
C O N C O R D
SAVE
SAVE
SAVE
bec«(iM Concord memtfom
fur et their own clothe* emd
»elh DIRECT to you!
bec avie Concord oper
ate* in A Factory Loft
out of the high rent
distr ic Hi
because
C o n c o r d
does business in huge
volume for penny
profits!
•
ALL WOOL
>
2 7 “
• GABARDINES. WORSTEDS.
TWEEDS. SHETLANDS.
• A U SIZES, MODELS AND
SHADES FOK SM IN *.
• FREE ALTERATIONS
Vs* O ar C o a v n M
LAYAW AY M A M
j .
.Cfi*
i e -
l f
cONCOR
FACTORY
S H O W R O O M
313 S. Mechanic St. in th* Footer Factory Bldg.
USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN
T W E N T Y .S IX
F u n e ra l O lf a t t o r i
T H E
C U M B E R L A N D
N E W S ,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D . ,
F R I D A Y ,
A P R I L
4 ,
1 9 4 7
Auto Glass
We fcove available all of
th* finest equipment at no
added cost.
f u n e r a l
and
Ambulance Service
Phone 1454
309 Decatur
f f o f e V
F U N E R A L
S E R V I C E
Cumberland.
FYoatburf
Both Phone* »5
With restriction! lifted, metol
caskets and vaults are again
available tor those who prefer
them.
For A l l Faiths
»-DOCK Chrysler sedan 1935 model, fine
condition, Phone Frostburg 215.
1839 FXUili I 1., ton truck, 2 speed axle,
8 25 tires 1700. Phone 4674.
1940 PLYMOUTH. 2-door SedanMMO La
Salle, 2-door club coupe, 5 passenger.
514 R idgewood Ave Phone 2863-M.
1939 PLYMOUTH, radio, heater, like new.
Davi*
Service
Station.
Virginia
Ave
Phone .'8.1!, after 6 p. in.. Phone 858-j
*939 DODGE coach, radio, heater. Fine
condition Phone 104-J. L o n a e o n I ng
Shaw a Station, Moacow.
1941
CHEVR OLET Speclaf Deluxe Town
Sedan. R adio Heater, New
R ubber,
i
Ow ner, Phone Frost bur* 563-J
E I L E R C H E V R O L E T , I N C .
C H E V R O L E T
S A L E S & S E R V IC E
219 N. Mechanic
Phone 143
CASH FOR YOUR CAR
WFTZEL'8 ESSO STATION
PAR K A UNION STS.
MACK
passenger bus.
New
and used
R e truck parts.
Phone 858-W-3.
Cash-For-Your
C A R
Taylor Motor Co.
¿18 N
Machante
NASH
S E R V I C E
and
PAR TS
W * Specialize in Pointing
Body and fendei Work
T h e M - G - K M o t o r C o m p a n y
Phone 395
Buys 'Em High
Sells 'Em Low
C u m b e r l a n d M o t o r S a l e s
14 Wineow St.. Opp
A & P
R hone 4531
Open Evening:
1939 BUICK Special two door sedan, In-
quire Fairgo Esso Station.
B E S T U S E D C A R B U Y S
I N T O W N . . .
47 Chev. 2-door Flcetmaster
'46 Dodge, custom. 4 door
'42 Buick super convertible
'42 Plymouth 2 door
'41 Chev. 2 door
'41 Dodge 4 door
two '40 Dodge 4 doors
'39 Plymouth 4 door
'39 Plymouth 2 door
'40 Hudson 4 door sedan
SPECIAL . . . '32 Ford Coupe
Model B ..................................$175
AUTO TOPS S“
16— Money to Loan
26— Fot Sala Miscellaneo«*
26— For Sale, Mtscefla
Seifert's Furniture & Pianos
13-17 Frederick St.
OSTER 'S
M
o n e V
I
M
n n n i i I Pianos ~ R econditioned from $125 s p e n c e r individually designed *ty
. to $450
S o m e fa m o U s m a k „
!
health ^,PPort*. A lle U Allamong
CENTR E STR EET
LO A N C O M PA N Y
Fender & Body Work, Pointing
STR ONG AUTO SALES
Williams R oad
Phone 1194-M
- BODY AND
L U
A
N
C
O
M
P
A
N
Y
ic< )LMAN instant gasoline table top rang
PA I KIT
c u n o in m r
c
Phone 719-J -4
4 p. m
P A I N T
SHOP *0 N Centre St
Phone 439 2 «
COMPLETE PAINT JOBS
QUALITY GEMS & W ATCHES
Leslie
R :d" Ostcr, Located at
BUD Ac ED 8
i« end
Liicne.
COMPLETE bathroom outfits and fix-
tures, used. Phone 1364-J.
•*07 HENDER SON AVE
A U T O R A D I A T O R S E R V I C E
16-A— Financing
b r a n t -30 POTOMAC s t -
e v e n in g s 5 %
M O R T G A G E M O N E Y
G EN ER A L R EPAIR S
C-OAL COOKING stove end one combina
tion coal and gaa range. Phone 1497-14.
__________ ____________________ 1-19-tf
AIR CR AFT for sale, planes licensed, a
good condition. Pbone 4082-W
...........
3-5-31»
ONE horse, extra good leader, 9 yrs « d.
1550 lbs. Also plows and one horse mow
ing machine. George H. Johnson. Shaft.
; INTER NATIONAL
tractor
10-90.
Wood
saw frame. Phone 4220-R.
¿21 Ulenn St
Phune 23DU
W# provid*
homelik* comforH
bi ê modern conven*
ientfy located
funerei home.
lo e i* UNCIAL H l v i c r
NT H iD H X i 94
(VM KItXN O
é/o taëü /
T O W I N G
>
D a y o r N i g h t
1
PH O N E 395
T a y l o r M o t o r C o .
IM M E D I A T E !
C-A-S-H
F o r Y o u r C a r
H I G H E S T P R I C E S P A I D
R eliable Motors Co.
George <fc H arrison Sts.
Phone 81
It you are unable to drive in, phone and
a representative will coll at your home
•
I N S I S T O N
•
G E N U I N E F O R D P A R T S
A t t e n t i o n !
FOR D O W N ER S
W ards
have
R ebuilt
M otors
for
V-8s, every m oving p art replaced
or made
like new.
New
pistons,
rings, valves, cam shaft gears, m ain
and connecting rod bearings.
Im
m ediate allowance for old m o to r...
1937
Ford $117.95, exchange,
1938
Ford $122.95, exchange,
1939-40-41
85-90 hp. $127 95, exchange. 1939-40-
41 100 hp. $132.95, exchange.
M o n t g o m e r y W a r d & C o .
157 Baltim ore St.
Cum berland
'41 Ford Truck, 1*2 ton,
2 speed reor end, big tire»
'40 Ford Truck, 1 Vj ton
Service on All Cars - Cell For. Deliver
BUD & ED'S AUTO SER VICE
SO7 Henderson Ave.
Phone 3744
FOR DS
K E S S E L L
M OTOR C O M PA N Y R
R EPAIR ED BY
FOR D EXPER TS
Estimates Given - All Work Guaranteed
BITTNER 'S GAR AGE
15 Harrison St.
Phone 2091 -J
For R epairs & Improvements, to Build or
Î
»
. *?rfinHn™ Mortgage. More Monty
if WantedL R educing Payments.
B o x 3 0 3 B , c /
o T im e s - N e w s
17— For R ent
83 2 - 3 8- 4 0 N . M e c h a n ic
P h o n e 2 5 6 0
A D IA T O R S — R E M O V E D
K P A IR E D — R E C O R E D
E V E R S E F L U S H E D
SCHADE'S R ADIATOR SER VICE
N Mechanic at Valley
Phone 500
?— Baby Chicks
HABY CHICKS thousands weekly. U. S.-
w
Va
Approved Pullorum Controlled.
Write for
free catalogue end
prices.
R HODES HATCHER Y Box 125 PETER S
BUR G. W Va.. Phone 145.
2-15-4mos.
America's Toughest Truck
Trad e or Buv N o w iEorly de,i venes con be mode
7
o n
M o d e ls
fr o m
1 4 ,0 0 0
to
K A I S E R o r F R A Z E R
I M M E D I A T E D E L I V E R Y
R OTOTILLER
A ll Use Tractor
B a n k Terms
, U
S
and state approved
— Pullorum
! rested Baby
Chicks
Will have chicks In
| >oon
Leave vour order now
at
ALLEGANY FEED AND GR AIN CO.
Knox
St. Phone 2199
Cumberland
2-25-tf
o n
M o d e ls
fro m
I4 ,U U U
to
PR OFIT
W ITH 3-STAR CHICKS
4 7,0 0 0
lbs.
g ro ss .
W a rd ’s 3-star chicks lay more eggs,
m ature faster because they are d i
l l w ill pay anyone buying a truck rect decendants of pedigreed-sired
to look over R eo specifications as flocks I
Paren ts are U. S. Approved,
pullorum -tested!
100
as-hatched
war
Mit
eerily
Fune tel
some email drtaiU Mia» neret
ti nd
the
arrangement«
of
a
The burden can be appreciably lessened
ta
the hands of e competent Funeral
D,rector. Call . , .
G E O R G E F U N E R A L H O M E
Greene ot S
Smollwool
Phone 78
FLETCHER M OTOR
S A L E S & S E R V I C E
S T . G E O R G E M O T O R C O . 118 s m e c h a n i c a r . p h o n e 2obt
"Your Friendly Ford Dealer"
S. George St., Cumberland, Phone 580
mm
j to chassis, weight, etc. T h e highway
departm ents
through
the
various
states are cracking down on over
loads.
R A U PA C H 'S
G A R A G E
B o w & N . M e c h a n ic Sts.
P h o n e 4 1 6 0
$16.50.
MONTGOMER Y WAR D & CO.
157 BALTIMOR E ST CUMBER LAND, MD.
2-8-tf
FOR R ENT
5,000 Square Feet Space suitable
for Storage or W holesale. W ill R en t
all or part. Elevato r Service.
LAZAR US & TR EIBER
28 N. Liberty St.
Phone 3270
7 F*T DELUXE electric refrigerator. Elec
tric hair dryer 418 Md
Ave.
OUTSIDE House Paint, gloss while. $4 77
in 5 gal. cans. Builder’s Paint A- Supply
121 N Centre St.
MILCH
goats,
2 milking, ;i kid*, good
stock, reasonable. Phone 202J-J
EASTER Bunnies for »ale. Phone 2122-R
OAK Colonadr »30.
Oak Stairway, rail HF:ATI*N’0 *tove, combination stove, »maH
and banister »25. 807 Maryland Ave.
*** »love, 2-burner gas plate, 3-bumer
oil stove. Phllco radio, bed davenport,
table and chairs, beds, large what-not,
7 piece antique horsehair living room
suite, odd dishes and silver plate. 3d
Massachusetts Ave.. between 10 a. n
and 3 p. m., or call 3600-MX
SCR EEN DOOR S, screen windows, galvan
ized screen wire. Liberty Hardware.
SAW mill, with power unit; 21a ton GMC
truck. 1942 model; 1941 Allis-Chalmers
dozer;
gasoline
powered
chain
saw
Phone 810-W-3.
2 2 —
F u r n is h e d R o d m s
R OOM for rent, gentleman. 604 Maryland
A vc„
SLEEPING room,
suitable lor 2
centrally located. 137 N. Centre.
ladies,
gentlemen
SLEEPING
room,
twin
beds,
preferred. 514 Greene St.
2 LIGHT housekeeping, rooms, »ink frigid!
»ire. $15 week. 23 N. Lee St
SIX restaurant booths,
complete.
Write
R L. Wagner. Hyndman. Pa
' 1 ' 11
i
producer. A1 Pennel. Dehaven Rri
4 GOOD farm horses, one 44 in.
pony,
mining broke. Apply
George H. Donius
Frostburg. Md . R FD 2. Box 8«.
SVANS long range shooting gallery. Com-
2 SOR R EL horses. 1400 lbs each 7 yra.
old
1 bay horse. 1450 lbs., g %’ra. nié
John
Deere
corn
planter.
Phone 79
Frostburg; after
276-J-4, Cumberland.
SPOTTED saddle mare, 8 yrt
attractive. Phone 278-J-4
yra.
»wo
rnw,
• P
m,
old
Very
100 BUSHEL Sebags potatoes auitable foe
- d No Harry Keim, Salisbury. Pa ,
R .
plete with moving targets, extra parts, 4
— T"
""— I I I _
— ---------
etc
Enterprise
Amusement,
126
N
,
‘**4x®*8* 323 Baltimore Ava.,
Centre.
Apt- *•
LUMBER , from 12 room house, partly torn
down. James W. Custer. Blnlnr. W. Va
LIGHT weight gabardine suit, size 37-R.
sport coat, size 36. Phone 659-J.
KELVINATOR . good as new, lUOtf Bedford
St. Apply after 6.
R UDD gas hot
Ave.. Apt. 1.
water heater. 323 Ba.to.
HOT POINT electric refrigerator. Bengal
g;*x range, thermostatic oven; kitchen
cabinet. Phone 1476-W.
EVER GR EENS. R ichard Fey. Union Grov*
j
R oad, Phone 396-W-I or 2778.
ind chairs. 615 Yale fi®ne j FR ESH eggs for Easter, 721 Lafayette A»«.
any time.
LIVING
room,
bedroom
with
lavatory
Gentleman, 19 Washington St.
SLEEPING-room for gentleman. 30 N Lib
erty St.. Apt. B - i
25— R ooms with Board
10— Beauty Parlorv
C A G E
SCHOOL OF
BEAUTY CULTUR E
15 South Centre Street
VETER ANS TR AINING APPR OVED
TELEPHONE 571 J
In Memoriam
jry of
Hilly i
a toda
ig bro
our dear aon and
Hill
who passed
April 4. 194«.
itirr
and a
only loaned you to us till you wen
ehty-ooe
why should our lesrs in sorrow flow
>n God recalls His own.
thst is wnat He did, dear heart,
>n He took you from our home.
MOTHER AND BR OTHER
• f <
Zltff
Api
a i Bud) Neal
4lb 1941.
ur son snd broth-
w ho died « ypsi •
SPR ING it HER E
M-O-T-O-R -S
j Put Your Car In Tune with a Guaranteed
j R EBUILT MOTOR .
R emoved At Installed
J ny Is*cal Garage1,
All Part* Ar W'ork Guaranteed
CASH or TER MS — 48 Hr. SER VICE
All Make Ar Model Trucks At Cars
FOR DS $95 if Motor is R ebuildable
Motor R ebuilders
255 N Centre St.
Phone 4782
C E N T R A L M O T O R M A R T
The Home ot Good Clean Used Cart"
WE BUY, SELL & TR ADE
TEl EPHONC CUMBER LAND 4887
l orge Lot S. Centre at William» St.
LEAR N !
LOOK!
LOOK!
LOOK!
TOPS IN
USED CAR S
BEAUTY
CULTUR E
Veteran t Training Approved
G E O R G I A ' S A C A D E M Y
O F B E A U T Y C U L T U R E
Phon, 4079
164 N Mechanic St
11— Business Opportunities
.1500 INVESTMENT - Highly
profitable
permanent
buxine*«,
merchandising
a
commodity
In universal demand
with
equipment. Non competitive and sensa
tional in it» »ales appeal. No experience i
necessary. Backed by full cooperation)
of an old established firm. Write Box1
411 B c-o Timea-Newx.
I 3— Coal For Sola
gift from Clod.
Could 1 but have on*
Bon
I would ask tot
To iiv* again those happy hours
1 used to spend with you
*Tu lonesome here without you
And sad the weary way.
For life is not the same to us
F nee the day you went away.
Badly missed by his mother and mxter. J
MR S MAR GAR ET M. LOVE )
ODESSA NEAL
Frantz Oldsmobile 46 Old» Sdn. Hyd , R. H
OldimobiU Sol..-S«r»le. All Mofc«
Ü ?
2 Dr To* n Sdn • * M
• *W. »•"*•> and «odiato* S am «
I ? ° cSo,° 4 D
r ' Flu,d Dr- *
H
1*3 BEDFOR D «T
ph o n* is»«
Cadillac 61' Scdanex, Hyd, R H.
« « I
,
n
«
^1 Mercury 2 Dr. Sedan
W e re Buying Cars 41 Chev. Master DJx. 4 Dr. R H
S E E US TODAY I
*1 Plymouth 4 Dr., H.
VAN
METER 'S
AUTO
MAR T
41 DeSoto, 4 Dr., H.
Good Coal 75% Lump
Prompt Delivery, Phon*
SOMER SET Clean
lumpy
coal.
Treated
atoker. R . A. Haines. Phona 1791-J.
3-2-tf
50 Thomas St.
2— Automotive
©-■ »ei for spring! Trade your old trac
tors, car«, trucks for the new 4 in 1
R evolutionary jeep
Let us demonstrate
how you can save 75*r# of your present
cost« with the new Willys equipment
line C»II 105-J-4. Penn-Mar Motor Co„
^ !J*
Sale* Si
Service. Corriganvtlle.
Md
3-14-tf
ANY MAKE OB MODEL
J O H N S O N ' S
A U T O E X C H A N G E
Top Cash Prices Paid For Your Cor
Phone 4647 41 Chev. Spec. Deluxe, 4 Dr , R H.
41 Chev. Master Deluxe, 2 Dr., H.
41 Hudson 2 Dr. Town Sdn., R H.
41 Olds 4 Dr Sdn. 78. R H
41 Buick Spec. 4 Dr. Sdn., R H.
40 Dodge 4 Dr. Sdn., R H.
*29 S Oentra St
FO
*« r as
to
Valley
: truck, long wheel bas
wo door sedan. Propst
R oad
li* ’.’
PACKAR D
* I
four
door
sedan,
r»dio and heater, fine condition. Pen-
Mar Motor Co., Phone 105-J4.
Phone M3' 40 Buick Super Clb.
Cpe.
THOMPSOrsTBUICK 41 Plymouth 7 pas».,
Spec. Dlx.
•
*A IEP • 9 KMVIO • AtX'KSSOR IEh 39 Chrysler R oyal 4 Dr. R
• WASH •
41MONI/ . _ _
, . '
, ,
»29 N Mechanic St
P|»one I47C i9 P,ymouth 2 Dr- Sedan, H.
---------‘39 Dodge, 4 Dr. Sdn., H.
H.
li» l BUICK Special sedanet, radio, heater.
Excellent. »1495. Box 407-B c-o Time.s-
News.
19d0 CHEVR OLE1' radio and heater. »800.
Apply 140 N. Mechanic St., third floor,
or call 4561 -J between 5 and 7 p. m.
l? il PLYMOUTH 5 passenger coupe. Fully
equipped
A-l condition. 173 W. Main,
Frostburg Phone 643-M.
^ ANTED—1939 Plymouth, »650; 1940 Ply-j
mouth
»750;
business coupe
or
four]
door. W rite Box 409-B, c-o Times-News. j
294'. PLYMOUTH 4-door; 1941 Chevrolet
4-door; 194« Hudson 2-door; 1937 Ford)
Panel; 1934 Chevrolet 4-door; 1935 Ford
4-door
new
motor.
Wotrings
Body
Shop. 122 W. Second St. Phone 4984.
SAIaES HUDSON
i e n l d n s &
S c h r i v e r
M o t o r C o .
133 S
M echanic S t
Phone 13
1937 STUDEBAKER :a ton pick-up truck
C«n be seen after 5 p. m. John Crouse.
S.snesvtlle. W. Va.
R EBUILT EN G IN ES
Guaranteed:
Ford, Chevrolet,
Plymouth
and Dodge Engines
COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SER VICE
CR ANKSHAFTS R FGR OUND
Cosgrove Auto Machine Shop
252 N. Centre St.
Phone 887
DUMP TR UCKS
large and small, E. P 1
Price. Phone Frostburg 119.
1936 FOR D deluxe tudor. Phone 1015-W.
International Harvester
Authorized Dealer
Motor Trucks
Farm Tractors ¿z Machinery
LIGHT TR UCK & IMPLEMENT CO
115 S CENTR E ST
PHONE 3839
R EO Trucks & Buses
R A U P A C H ' S G A R A G E
low & N Mechanic Sts.
Phone 4160
19 4! \ ion panel G M C 38.000 miles
Vv .l] aell or trade on pick-up truck
Virginia Ave.
M
¡giA’
■ I ■
*'
y '
d
EASTER SPECIALS
1 9 3 9 B u ic k S e d a n
. . .
$ 9 4 5
1 9 3 9 O ld s m o b ile S e d a n ,
f u lly e q u ip p e d
. .
$ 89 5
1 9 3 7 C h e v . T o w n S e d a n $ 4 9 5
1 9 3 7
P a c k a r d 2 -d o o r,
o n e o w n e r
$ 5 2 5
1 9 3 7 D o d g e , ru n s g o o d $ 3 9 5
1 9 3 6 C h e v r o le t S t a n d a r d
G ULIC
AUTO EXCHANGE
BUY - SELL - TR ADE
Used B u t Not Abused Cars
305 S. Centre S t
Phone 1444
PACKAR D
SALES & SER VICE
Genuine
Packard
Parts &
Accessories
F o r t C u m b e r l a n d M o t o r »
361 Frederick St.
Phone 2665
Hare's Used Cars
A W ritten Guarantee W ith Every Car
Still Buying! Topping All Offers
219 S. MECHANIC ST.
PHONE 4397
36 Pontiac 4 Dr. Sedan, H.
- F fiV IC b 34 p|ymouth D|„
2-Dr.
S E E A L L T H E R E S T
T H E N S T O P H E R E
T O S E E T H E B E S T
BABB
M OTOR SALES
22 Wineow St.
Phone 4818
Directly Opposite Community Market
Ben Frantz, Mgr.
Ty Tyler, Asst. Mgr.
TR UCKS
TR UCKS
TR UCKS
1 9 4 2 F o r d
P / j - T L W . C h a s
& C o b .
1 0 0 H P.
19 4 1
F o rd T r a c t o r & T r a ile r
1 9 4 0 M a c k
10 W h e e l D u m p
19 4 1
C h e v . C a b . o v e r E n g in e . » ta
L . W , C h a s . & C a b
1 9 4 0 C h e v . R e f r ig e r a t o r B o d y
! 1 9 3 9 G M C . L . W . C o t t le
B o d y
19 4 0
D o d g e S t e e l D u m p
I 19 4 1
F o rd
1 -T P ic k U p ( L ik e
N e w )
1 9 3 9
In t. 3/4-T P ic k U p
1 9 3 6 G . M . C . L . W . F la t B e d
1 9 3 6 D o d g e
V2 -T P a n e l
1 9 3 5 F o rd V 2-T P a n e l
Also The Following Cars
1 9 4 2 O ld s .
C lu b
S e d a n
H y d .
R H .
19 41
O ld s 8 H y d 4 D o o r
S e d a n R . H
19 41
P o n t ia c 6 S e d a n C p e .
R .H .
19 41
P o n t ia c 4 D o o r S e d a n
R .H .
_____________________________
1 ^ 4 1
C h e v . 2 D o o r S e d a n R H . Berl'"
Yein
and
19 41
P ly . 2 D o o r S e d a n H
*'*«ned Btoverdol* Stoker
19 41
F o r d 2 D o o r S e d a n R .H .
1 9 4 0 B u ic k S p e c ia l 5 P a s s .
C p e . R .H .
1 9 4 0 P ly . 2 D o o r S e d a n H .
1 9 4 0 F o rd C p e , R .H .
1 9 4 0 F o rd 2 D o o r S e d a n R H .
1 9 3 9 B u ic k S p e c ia l 4 D o o r
S e d a n R .H .
H O M E C O O K I N G
Come & bring your guests, enjoy your
Easter dinner & meet your friends at
Mr». Boyers private dining room.
P h o n e 1 75 4 J
kitchen table
10 PIECE Hougcnot Walnut Dining R oom
Suite. Privately owned. Excellent condi
tion. Phone 1538
BLACK “ Lily Ann ' Suit. Brown coat, sizr
14. Phone 3769-R
PER CHEON horse, 6 yrs. old, *100. Phone
835-W-l,
SAWM ILL complete with motor. Set and
operating. Cheap. O. W R oas. Box 207,
Westernport, Md.
26-— F o t S a le M is c e lla n e o « *
COAL HFIATINO xtove. hratrol«. and one
*'£• oven gas range. Phon« 1497-M.
Hot .'iE
p a in t Ü Ü fatten
WlffieM’s
'Wallpaper Shop. 10 Humblrd St. Phone
J oDb.
F I R F. W O O D .
F u rn itu re
R epairing .
Screen
Doors, W indow Srreena, M oulding, Law n
C hairs. Phone 1114-W.
■ V S E O R C E N S .
M A P L E .
F R U IT
T R E E S
Savag e G ardens. M t. Savag e R oad
IT 'S S M A R T to be corseted in S m a rt Form
Foundations. G eorgia Sykes. 2026.
3
sam ple C hesterfield coats, sizes
20. »18.95. 807 M a ryla n d Ave.
W EN TLIN G
R ADIO
SALES
1 O M P I E T E L IN E , W E L L K N O W N M A K E ®
e R adio*
# Combination*
e Pioy«r*
107 BEDFOR D ST.
PHONE 1600
9,
14.
G R A Y
CO .— Used
fu rn itu re
bought.
Bold
exchanged.
Antiques.
R e a r
132
Polk
Phone 1815-J.
K K G IH T E H F D
Cocker
. „ d
¿ ^
V
r
S p an iel
puppies.
H arold
Meek.
A U T O M O B IL E In su ran ce to meet F in a n c ia l
R esponsibility La w »15 20. G len n W atson.
Phone 381.
8-9 -tf-T
24 H O U R service on hem stitching, button
holes, covered buttons, buckles and belts
Sing er Sew ing Center. 78 N C entre St.
Phone
.184
B-3-tf
V EN ETIA N BLINDS
Columbia,
Steel— Installed
Immediately
BUILDER S PAINT & SUPPLY
121 N. C E N T R E ST .
P H O N E 158
Plastic
Shower
Ensembles
Home Furnishing Corp.
128 Bedford St.
Ph0n* 3941-k
your Credit tt Good
Sum m it.
Md
Vale
S P E C IA L ! —Sew ing
M achines,
all
makes.
4 a
Your
home,
»I oo.
Phone
ms,
C A S range w ith side oven, in good shape.
I hone 106 a lte r « p. m. 336 Baltim o re
Avenue.
W IN C H E S T E R pump gun, 2 sets of diti
wardrobe trunk
Phone 1608-K
l.A R iik t e a t r a li and one isrgs cosi heat -
lp g sto**
Phone 149 7-M
!l- 2 l- tf
SA V E M O N EY !
The Best in New Furniture
— UNDER THE PR ICE —
M ax ’s
F u rn itu re
-
*7
V irg in ia
Ave
FILL DIR T
For Sole of Potomoc Pork.
W.H Mev|
to Cresaptcwn or
Bowling Green
R
G. R OBESON
P h o n e 4 2 1 - R
Wards .
.
. New I
POR TABLE
W A SH ER S
Now Available for:
IMMEDIATE DELIVER Y!
Ideal tor Everyday Laundry
Purposes
$32.95
SANDER S - EDGER S Montgomery Ward & Co.
157 Baltim ore S t .
Cuxr.oerland
New — BICYCLES — Used
G om pictr Lin e Accessories At P a rts
W agon
At
Scooter
W heels
R etired.
G u aran teed
R epairs. A ll M akes. W h lz/cr B ik e M otors
VET'S BICYCLE SALES 4 SER VICE
30 Queen C ity Pavem en t
Phone 19 50-R
J U S T received; C arload
of bedroom
and
livin g
room
suites;
sewing
m achines,
breakfast sets, kitchen cabinets, tnner-
spring m attresses and Congoleum
rug*
R EINHAR TS, 17 BALTIMOR E ST.
The Peoples Furniture Store
FILL GR OUND-CALL 4588
For R ent, Phone 158
BUILDER S PAINT
&
SUPPLY
J O E JO H N 3 C O A L
P H O N E 3135____________________M T
S A V A G E
G U A R A N T E E D
Good
Coal.
Prom pt
de
livery. R o y K irch n er.
Phone 1657-J.
G U A R A N T E E D ™
ashes
J
burg 3531
S 8 i - w
a f ' * * S
h c T ' * ’
FUR NITUR E
Immediate Delivery!
i Desks, Steel or Wood
Wringer R olls, All Makot
M I L E S A P P IJA N C E As S E H V I C B
158 N. Centre 8t
Phone 848
CASE
FAR M
IMPLEMENTS
D e ijiv a l M ilkers Ac Sep arato rs
COLLINS MOTOR SALES
NEW EQUIPMENT fN STOCK
t
No.
»
K arq uh ar saw m ill
w ith
10* WP
diesel power u nit. 1 No. 12 P a rq u h a r saw
m ill w ilh 50 H P diesel power u n it
M a li
saw«, sw inging cut-off aaw i for aawm .U*
garden
tracto rs
and
equipm ent,
f a r m
wagons
on
rubber,
plow*,
dtsc
harrow «,
c u ltiv a to rs m owers, and o th e r equipm ent.
USED EQUIPMENT tM STOCK
and
P E N N S Y L V A N IA
stoker
and
nut
coal. S t e e l , 2 - d r O W e r Filp>c
Georges
Creek
Big
Vein
M ine
R un,
W
e r “ l i e »
Phone 2989-W .
W .
F.
W h ltm e r
E m ily
St.
g
Allis-C halm ers
tra cto r
w ith
Sjnft-
r *I
•
a •
.
I
L U L L IN G M U I O R
S A L F S
dozer,
model
S
Allis-C halm ers
trs ’ -vr
Cha.rs, Aluminum or Wood
n .
822-j
------------------------- —
j
dieSel POW*r Unlt* C*** ***
W A SH ER SER VICE
E D
B erlin
coal,
wood
____
H Do,B
[>hor-
Steel, 4-drawer Files
O E N E R A L I
D
c
Baker,
39 34-R
in3-« Dazor Desk Lamps
S,eel Security Boxes
A L L
M A K E S
W R IN O E R
R O L L S - P A R T »
SKELLEY APPLIANCE & SER VICE
536 Pm* Av*.
equipm ent can be seen at the
FAR M EQUIPMENT CO
____________________ ,k ° " ’ 4421 3 « » M o* S..
n,m 3f l
PR EM IER DUPLEX
Som#r»#f, Pe
WETZEL - CONSUMER S COAL
J .:?1-“ Steel Card Index Files
oVo SPeed-0-Print Duplicators v a cuum c le a n e r sales & service BANANAS
818 D nl'
♦*
C
I*
S E R V I C E * P A R T S ON A L L M A K E S
DM IN AA IN AO
BANANAS
Pen n sylvan ia * Deer P ark . Md.
8toksr and 9 0% Lum p Coal
O iO R Q E S C R E E E B IO V E IN
H E R M A N R 8H A N K
Phone 385
Duplicating Supplies
I Pencil Sharpeners
R eal R ubber Bands
104
S.
Liberty St.
Phone
1722
Beovcrdal*
Po. Peo
Stok,, 4 Nu. C o .I C
u
m
b
e
r l a
n
d
O
f f i c e
Pennsylvania R un of
Mine
H
F
W A K EM A N
PHO NE 339 W .*
S u
p
p
l y C
o
A lcu fö q
Tractor trailer load to sell
by the b u n c h .................. $1 4 9 to $2 50
also by the pound
OR ANGES
Florida sweet and juicy
20 lb
b a g
........................................... s i 4$
AUTHOR IZED
SALES & SER VICE
Wringer R oll All Washers 8 lb bag
......................................
^
tog
H enry Bo ch ^ LaV a^ e Wp^n*en 39^3*-^
17 N. Liberty St'
Phone 176
CUMBER LAND MAYTAG
Texas Seedless Grapefruit
. _ ? Pontiac 5 Pass. Cpe. H. 80MER 8ET~C0UNTYB reliable "¿¿¿IT~RTy•
u-iiw -aw^ 35 N. Mechanic
1938 Ford Cpe H.
1936 Chev. 2 Door Sedan H
C E N T R A L
M OTOR M AR T
Largest Used Car Lot in Town
S. Centre & Williams Sts.
We Buy, Sell and Trade
Phone 4887
3— Accessorie», Tire», Port»
12-17-tf-N
4 P
Welmer. Mt. 8avage 2 1 3 7
Clites Best Big Vein
Oil Treoted Pea Stoker - - -- ■ - ' » VTnri.
.
---------- —---------- ------------- ^ en s
dress
hats.
Special
$3.9 5.
KESSEDL'8 B e rlin coal, resum ing business j M en’s white and colored d re s s s h ir t *
Im m ediate deliveries. Phone 3155-J
le o n e
*
«
aress snirts
yi> & $3.50.
M en’s dress oxfords.
Ph. 1590 EASTER SPECIALS
BER LIN'S GUAR ANTEED BIG VEIN COAL
S6.00. BEAVER DALE PEA STOKER .
OIL TR EATED.
PHONE 3715-W
B E R L IN coal, guaranteed. *6.50 ton. Wood
G en eral H au lin g
Phone 4851-J
1-18-ti
STEINLA
MOTOR CO., Inc.
Can Presently Supply A
M A C K TR UCK
To Fit Your Work — Also
R eliable Service And Parts
For America's Top Line of Trucks
C. A. Smith — Service Manager
See Us At
2-door............
1936 Ford Convertible
sedan, new top,
radio & heater . . $545
1932 Chevrolet 6-wheel
coupe, has all
good 600:16 tires $325
V A N METER
AUTO M AR T
open evenings
$465 218 S. Mechanic St.
Phone 2550
*€> n
r
Phone 4647 ,2 3 S Llbcrty St
¿
i
Forget Costly R epairs,
R eplace with
New Dodge - Plymouth
M O T O R S
TIME PAYMENTS
Can Be Arranged
Gurley Brothers
DODGE - PLYMOUTH
SALES - SER VICE
Phone 258
5 0 0
USED CARS
W AN TED
IM M EDIATELY
W e
T-O-P
All Offers
Prices
Don't Stop Us
We Pay Cash
All Makes and Models
ELCAR
— SALES —
Headquarters for Trading
O P P . P O S T O F F IC E
P H O N E 344
" The Home of Good Used Cars"
600x16 ATLAS
Plus Tax
W E T Z E L S E S S O
TIR ES
$13.20
P A R K * U N IO N F I ’S
F E L T E N ’8
good
grade
Som erset
coal,
prom pt d elivery
Phone 1173-W
3-7-311
1
C O A L — *6.50
ton.
Phone 1737-M.
ton
d elivery,
*7.00
16— Electric Work, Fixture«
E L E C T R IC W O R K
“
M O T O R
repairing,
w iring
and
fixture«.
Queen C ity
E le ctric Co..
158 Frederick
S t
Plionc 117
browns and blacks. 2 0 styles to pick
from $4.95 to $8 95.
Boys’
dress
oxfords, measured to fit your feet
$3.95, $4.95, «fc $5.95.
M en’s Melbroke j
ties, wrinkle-proof as advertised in
Life $1.0 0.
THE HUB
Army and Navy Goods
19 N. Centre St.
Men s and Boys' Wear
_
Phone 2672
Baldwin & Betsy R oss
SPINET PIA N O S
See These Beautiful Piano*
EXPER T TUNING SER VICE
MILLENSON'S
317 Virginio Ave.
g
r -
U
\ A
t VOUP. ú fíO C C P y STO A c l
W HEELS and R IMS
B. F. Goodrich
159 N Centre St.
Phone 611
AUTO PAR TS
Safety Glass — Cyl. Head*
Sealed Beam Adapter Kits
Springs & Leafs
Shocks & Knees
Mufflers — Axle Shafts
Ignition Parts — Bearings
Hub Caps — Carburetors
Generators — Heaters
R adiator Grilles
Beerman Auto Wreckers
PHONE 2270
153 WINEOW ST
16— Money T o Loon
LO A N S! LO A N S!
EachTimeaCowFreshens
AMAZING NEW PRODUCT
AT W O LF S
g*,
Step-On Kitchen Garbage Can .
La n Sa ve Yo u Up to
$ 2 7.0 0 Gl.de-O-Matic
Electric
Iron
with Thermostatic Control ..
S5.95
10 for 59c
Texas Pink Meats and Extrci
Large Fancy Grapefruit
MAINE POTATOES
I 1 0 0 lb s a c k ................................... 4g
5 0 lb-
.................................$1 39
P * * .......................................
.65
SEED POTATOES
Certified C ob b lers.....................$3 3»
100 lb. sacks
Certified Green M ts....................$3 38
and others
California Oranges,
Lemons,
Lettuce, Celery, Cabbage, etc.
HAGER 'S
DEPENDABLE QUALITY
IN THE NAR R OWS AT LOVER S LEAP
Open until 8
On
Automobiles,
Approvea Lite Insurance
Policies. M ortgages * Secu rities
COMMER CIAL
SAVINGS BANK
Cumberland. Maryland
iTTOT
JEWELER S
. $9 95 2 6 - A
Marvin $edroom Cooler, Ventilating
-----
Fan that fits in Bedroom Window
like a Window Screen
$9 95
Five Piece Kitchen Set, Very
Sturdy, at only ...................... $14.95
Motorola Farm R adio ............. $35.75
Feed, Grain, Supplies
No
m atter
w hat
your
feeding
problem«
'’. V ita lity Feeds M sv help you «clve
them.
W e c a rry the com plete line.
Bridges & Wilson
M t
Savag e
Md
33S1
3-A— Auto Gloat
Gla ss Insta lled roTüîn
BEER M A N AUTO WR ECKER S|$3 Bait.mor* s»
153 Wineow St
Phone 2271)
PAWN BR OKER S
Quick Confidential Loans On All
Articles of Valu*
H K A P Q U A R T E R fi F O R D IA M O N D »
Large Stock of Unredeemed
Pledges For Sal* Including
WATCHES
•
JEWELR Y
LUGGAGE • GUNS
H IG H E 81 PKiUfet- P A ID PO R O L D O O L D
Open W eek-D ays to 5 P M.
Saturdays until 6 P M
C A 1FB AO — Udder
badly «wollen, caked.
D a n g e r of c h ro n ic
I condition. U D D ER O IE
u«ed.
W olf Furniture Co.
Cumberland. Md
3 DAYS IA T IR — Bog i,
now normal. uDDtR oiE
B a lt im o r e
S t .
worked like magic! Cow
—
SPOR TS GO O D S
R e s u l t s L z u a r a n t e e d o r
DrowwLl**
n/r
*
No
w h ,t sport you enjoy, you can
v o u o i e Y o u r M o n e y B a c k get Just the right equipm ent at W a rd s at
N ow you can help prevent aertoua trouble and '*rW
‘° W
PnCeS’
^
the
lR ,Pst
ln * o l f i
lf>*« at calving time. An am anng new product. c!ub?t-
baspbal*
«loves,
bats.
etc.
.
.
!
h*# lw n discovered at Dawn- j Fishing equipm ent, outboard motors, hunt-
' fmmtmr k I.T *
re,,rvM ‘lan Kr ™ u» raked beg ing and cam ping equipm ent.
m u c h s c k in e r "
¿ r * u; r
; s
t I
Z oT olT Z ,
Montgomery Word & Co.
UDDKR Ol! ta made by a new. scientific formula. L t , n . 1ti
'
j containing irradiated lanolin and other hiahlv
B a lt im o r e b t .
C u m b e r la n d
.
1 — _
> '__-
v
" *
4— R epairs, Service Station«
W O TR IN G 'S
BODY
SHOP
Auto *
Truck
R eflu ishing
Fender At Body R epairing
122 W SECOND ST
PHONE 4984
M O N E Y !
Ph on * 3770 j
*n* rpdlpnt»- It kives powerful 3 w ay
help I. R elieves the congestion. 2. R educe«
era re-order and say: “ Udderole is the best I
ever used. C an t afford to be w ithout it.” The
8-oz. tin costs only $1.00.
R ADIATOR SER VICE
R O D IN O
-
R E P A IR IN G
R E C O R IN G - R E V E R S E F L U S H IN G
NYCUM SHELL SER VICE STATION
G EO R G E * UNION STS.
PHONE 4009
ON A R IT C L E b •*pn,nK «nd inflam m atio n. 3. F.g h ts infection.
O F V A L U E
° " yOUr V.aluablp first c a lf heifers. Farm -
—Unredeemed Merchandise—
• BAR GAINS IN LUGGAGE •
DOU»l® MONEY-9 ACK GUAR ANTEE
Cumb erla nd Lo a n Co .
43
N
M e c h a n ic
3 t
P h o n e
4786
1!?*^ P ° rt ,on to D nwnwocKl Fa rm s, A m enia.
---------------------------------- -------- ------
N . \ ., and receive not $1.00. but $ 2.00— double
vlR F A R M E R
You w a n t the h ig h e st price*
y° urm oney h-0*- Y o u c a n ’t lew e.aotry Udderole.
obtainable at
your sale.
You
m ay cm- i
S o ld a n d r e c o m m a n d a J U
ploy the best auctioneer
but he cannot
o m m o n a e d b y
coax
com petitive
bids
from
an
emptv I
barn-iot. you must have a C R O W D
Let
P F T Q M H P
a
rim es-News For Sale ad th a t reaches
O M W r
more than JO 000 fam ilies d aily bring s i
crowd—and higher bidsjto your sale.
I
144 N. Mechanic Sf.
BO YS' & GIR LS'
BICYCLES
See Wards New Line of Post-War
Streamlined Bicycles.
Bicycles.
Balloon Tires, Torpedo-Type
Headlight, chain guard
COMPLETE $39.9 5
Montgomery Ward & Co.
157 Baltimore St.
I K » T A S T E R a r t *
P R O T E IN S
K a s c o A il Mash check Starter
w ith Bio P R O T E IN S » a jrrot ew
feed . . . proved best for hfe and
grow th by thousands o f Kasco
chicks in actual feeding tests.
Bio P R O T E IN S are your ass up.
ance o f protein quality. T h e y
wee a »cep beyond erode pro
tein. O r d e r K a s c o A il M asb
f hick Starter today!
ALLEGANY FEED AND GR AIN CO.
Cumberland jKnox St.
Phone 2199
Cumberland
T W E N T Y -S IX
T H E C U M B E R L A N D N EW S,
C U M B E R L A N D , M D.,
FR ID A Y ,
A P R IL 4,
1947
Funeral Dime tare
2—
A u t o m o t iv e
••DOOR C hrysler trd a n 1935 model, fine
condition, Phone F rostburg 215.
1039 M HH) 1 '3 ton truck. 2 speed axle.
8 25 tire s 0700. Phone 4674.
We hove available ell of
Hu finest equipment ct no
added cost.
F U N E R A L
•a d
Ambulance Service
Pboa* 1454
509 Decatur
FUNERAL SERVICE
Cumberland.
Frostburg
Both Phone* OI
With restriction* lifted, metal
casket* and vaults era afoul
available for those who prefer
thai*.
Far All Faiths
W a provida
bomalilta comforts
la a modem conveth
t - - r t I----
•army toe a too
f u n e r a l b e m a .
1940 PLYMOUTH. 2-door 8 e d sn ; 1940 L a
Salle.
2-door club coupe,
5 passenger.
514 Ridgewood Ave. Phone 2B63-M.
1838 PLYM OUTH, radio, h eater, like new.
D avis
Service
S tatio n .
V irginia
Ave.
P h o n e 2833, a tte r 6 p. rn., Phone 958-J.
'.939 DODGE coach,
radio, h eater.
Fine
condition. P h o n r 104-J, L o n a c o n i n g .
Shaw a S ta tio n , Moscow.
1941
I UEVROLET
Special
Deluxe
Town
Sedan,
R adio
H eater,
New
Rubber,
I
O w ner, Phone F rostburg 563-J.
EILER CHEVROLET, IN C
CHEVROLET
SALES As SERVICE
S it IS. M echanic
Phone 143
I —
A u t o m o t ive
TASH FOR YOUR CAR
W ETZEL’S ESSO STATION
PARK Ai UNION STS.
2—
A u t o m o t iv e
MACK
passenger
Re truck p arts.
bus.
New
and
Phone S58-W-3.
used
NASH
SERVICE
and
PARTS
Wa Specialise tm Baintmf
Body mud Fonda* Work
The M-G-K Motor Company
231 G lenn St
Phono 230b
FUN I KAL t i A V lC l'
m s H ts a a a * a tv .
i « M i i i t a N i
T O W I N G
• Day or Night •
PHONE 395
Taylor Motor Co.
IMMEDIATE/
C-A-S-H
For Your Car
H IG H EST PRICES P A ID
Reliable Rotors Co.
George Si Harrison St*.
Phone ti
Ii rom ere lino hie to drnro Im. phono mod
a representative will call at faut homo
• IN SIST O N •
G E N U IN E FO RD PA RT S
IM aer!'soma email detail* thai M M
w tilj
attend
th*
aiisngcmrnta
at
ai
Funeral.
T h* Burden can ba appreciably lessened j
In
th e
h a n d s of
a
com petent
F uneral
D .rector. C all . . .
GEORGE FUNERAL HOME
Green* at S. Smollwool
Phono 78
Cash-For-Your
CAR
ir Motor Co.
Tayloi
fit N Mechanic
r n
Buys 'Em High
Sells 'Em Low
Cumberland Motor Sales
Id Wineow St.. Opp. A B F
Phono 4531
Open Even int*
Attention!
FORD OWNERS
Wards have Rebuilt Motors for
V-8s, every moving part replaced
or made like new
New pistons.
rings, valves, camshaft gears, main
and connecting rod bearings.
Im
mediate allowance for old m otor...
1937 Ford $117.95, exchange, 1938
Ford $122.95, exchange, 1939-40-41
85-90 hp. $127 95, exchange. 1939-40-
41 IOO hp. $132.95. exchange.
Montgomery Ward & Co.
157 Baltimore St.
Cumberland
j&
z m m m m m
d B B m m m HuHmaHiiy
ass. ■ •-
ST. GEORGE MOTOR CO.
"Your Friendly Ford Dealer"
S. George St., Cumberland, Fhona 580
Iii Memorial*
In loving m em ory of our d e ar eon and
b a ther. Jam es
'B illy)
Hill,
who |'M>i*r(l
aw a y one year ago today. April 4. 1946.
SPRING is HERE
M-O-T-O-R-S
P ut T our C ar In T une w ith a G u aran te ed
REBUILT MOTOR
Removed St Installed
by I*><■«I G arages.
AU P art* Ar W ork G u aran teed
CASH or TERMS — 48 Hr. SERVICE
AU M ake A- Model Truck* At Car*
FORDS $95 if Motor is Rebuttable
Y > . were a loping b ro th er and a loving Motor Rebuilders
O ti only loaned you to us till you w ert
t rn em y-one
Ho why ahould our tear* tn sorrow flow.
V ussr God recall* HU own,
F or th a t ta w hat He did. d ear h eart,
W hen He took you from our home.
MOTHER AND BROTHER
In loving m em ory of our eon and b ro th
er
C lifford I Pud I Neal, who died • year*
ago April 4Lh 1941
Could I b ut have
one gift from Ood,
Son. I would oak
for you.
To ll*# again thoae happy hours
I used Lo spend w ith you
T h lonesome here w ithout you
And nod th e w eary way,
For life Is not the sam e to u*
P iner th e day you w ent aw ay.
Sadly ml**ed by hta m other and ender,
MRS MARGARET M. LOVE,
ODESSA NEAL.______________
255 N. Centre St
Phone 4782
CENTRAL MOTOR MART
"The Home of Good Clean Used Card"
WE BUY. SELL A TRADE
TELEPHONE CUMBERLAND 4SS7
Large Lat S. Centra st Williams St.
Frantz Oldsmobile
Oldsmobile Salot-Sonrteo AR Makes
Rady, Pandas end Rod inter Service
in Bedford ar.
We're Buying Cars
Trade or Buy N ow !
KAISER or FRAZER
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
ROTOTILLER
All Use Tractor .
Bank Terms
FLETCHER MOTOR
SALES & SERVICE
118 8. MECHANIC BT. PHONE 2087
ayi-yiy * <
A
. J k
2— Automotive
G -- «ei tor spring! T rade your old trac -
tora, cars. truck* for th e new 4 in I
R evolutionary Jeep
Let us d em onstrate
how you can ta r e 75% of your present
coats
w ith
th* new
Willy*
equipm ent
line
Call 105-J-4. Penn-M ar M otor Co..
W Ilya
sale*
St
Service.
C orriganville.
Md
3-14-tf
JS3S yv»RD !*» ton truck, long wheel base
1935 Chevrolet two door sedan. Propat'*
O ar ag e. Valley Road
1940
PACKARD
"•*'
four
door
sedan,;
radio and h eater, fine condition.
Pen-
M ar M otor Co., Phone 195-J4.
19*1 BUICK Special aedanet. radio, h eater.
Excellent. *1495. Box 407-B
c-o Tlm ea-
Newa
19 0 CHEVROLET radio and beater. S800
.* pply ISO N. M echanic St. , th ird floor.
or call 4561-J betw een 5 and 7 p. rn.
ISG PLYMOUTH 5 passenger coupe. Fully
equipped
A -l condition. 173 W. M ain.
F rostburg. Phone 643-M.
W ANTED—1*39 Plymouth, S65oTT940 Ply
m outh
*750;
business
coupe
or
four
door. W rite Box 409-B c-o Tim es-N ew s.
194:
PLYMOUTH 4-door;
1941 C hevrolet
4-door; 1946 H udson 2-door; 1937 Ford
P an el; 1934 C hevrolet 4-door; 1935 Ford
4-door
new
m otor.
W o ttin g ’*
Body
Shop, 122 W. Second S t Phone 4984
1837 STUDEBAKER ‘a to n pick-up tru ck
Can be seen a fte r 5 p. rn. Jo h n Crouse.
Slanesvtlle, W. Va.
I
DUMP TRUCKS, large and small, E. P.
Price. Phone Frostburg 119.
OB TODAY I
VAN METER'S AUTO MART
SO Thorne* Si.
Fbong 4047
SNT MAKS OB MODEL
JOHNSON'S
AUTO EXCHANGE
Top Cash Brices Boid Fat Your Ct
in a contr* ss
THOMPSON BUICK
• S A U S • s h i v t o
•
a c c —
n w f ti
a WASH • SIM ONIS
*29 N Mechanic St
fksN 1478
SALES HUDSON SER V I C I
Jenkins & Schriver
Motor Co.
133 8 Mechanic S t
Phona 13
REBUILT ENGINES
Guaranteed: Ford, Chevrolet, Plymouth
and Dodge Engines
COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICE
CRANKSHAFTS
RFGROUND
Cosgrove Auto Machine Shop
252 N. Centre St.
Phone 887
1936 FORD deluxe tudor. Phone 1015-W.
International Harvester
Authorised
Dealer
Motor
Trucks
Farm Tractors St M achinery
LIGHT TRUCK A IMPLEMENT CO.
915 6 CENTRE ST
PHONE 3639
Q U L I C K ’ C
^ A U T O E X C H A N G E
BUY • SELL - TRADE
Used But Not Abused Cars
305 S. Centre St.
Phone 1444
REO Trucks & Buses
PACKARD
RAUPACH'S GARAGE
Bow A N. Mechanic Sts.
Phone 4160
1941 K ton panel GMC 38,000 miles
Will sell or trade on pick-up truck.
330 Virginia Ave.
SALES A SERVICE
Genuine Packard Farts &
Accessories
Fort Cumberland Motor*
LOOK!
LOOK!
LOOK!
TOPS IN
USED CARS
46 Olds Sdn. Hyd . R. H
42 Cher. 2 Dr. Town Sdn, R. H.
42 DeSota 4 Dr., Fluid Dr.. R. H.
41 Cadillac 61' Sedanex, Hyd., R. H.
41 Mercury 2 Dr. Sedan
41 Chev. Master Dix. 4 Dr. R. H.
41 Plymouth 4 Dr.. H.
41 DeSoto, 4 Dr., H.
41 Chev. Spec. Deluxe, 4 Dr., R. H.
41 Chev. Master Deluxe, 2 Dr., H.
41 Hudson 2 Dr. Town Sdn., R. H.
41 Olds 4 Dr. Sdn. 78, R. H.
41 Buick Spec. 4 Dr. Sdn., R. H.
IO Dodge 4 Dr. Sdn., R. H.
40 Buick Super Clb. Cpa.
40 Ford Dix. Club Cpa.
41 Plymouth 7 pass., Spec. Dix.
39 Chrysler Royal 4 Dr. R. H.
39 Plymouth 2 Dr. Sedan, H.
39 Dodge, 4 Dr. Sdn., H.
36 Pontiac 4 Dr. Sedan, H.
34 Plymouth Dix. 2-Dr.
SEE A L L T H E REST
T H E N STOP HERE
T O SEE TH E BEST
BABB
MOTOR SALES
22 Wineow St.
Phona 4818
Directly Opposite Community Market
Ben Frants, Mgr.
Ty Tyler. Asst. Mgr.
361 Frederick St.
Phone 2665
EASTER SPECIALS
1939 Buick Sedan .. . $945
1939 Oldsmobile Sedan,
fully equipped . . $895
1937 Chev. Town Sedan $495
1937 Packard 2-door,
one o w n e r
$525
1937 Dodge, runs good $395
1936 Chevrolet Standard
2 - d o o r ............. $465
1936 ford Convertible
sedan, new top,
radio & heater . . $545
1932 Chevrolet 6-wheel
coupe, has all
good 600:16 tires $325
VAN METER
AUTO MART
open evenings
§8 Thomas St.
Phone 4647
Hare's Used Cars
A W ritten G uarantee With Every Car
Still Buying! Topping All Offers
219 S. M ECH AN IC ST.
PHONE 4397
STEINLA
M O T O R CO., Inc.
Can Presently Supply A
MACK TRUCK
To Fit Your W ork — Also
Reliable Service And Barts
For America's Top Line of Trucks
C. A. Smith — Service Manager
Sea Us At
218 S. Mechanic St.
Phone 2550
i
Forget Costly Repairs,
Replace with
New Dodge • Plymouth
M O T O R S
TIM E PAYMENTS
Can Ba Arranged
Gurley Brothers
DODGE - PLYMOUTH
SALES - SERVICE
123 S. Liberty St.
Phone 258
1939 BUICK S piels) tw o door sedan. In
quire F atrgo Ekso S tatio n .
BEST USED CAR BUYS
IN TOWN . . .
'47 Chev. 2-door Fleetmaster
'46 Dodge, custom. 4-door
'42 Buick super convertible
'42 Plymouth 2-door
'41 Chev. 2 door
'41 Dodge 4-door
two '40 Dodge 4-doors
'39 Plymouth 4-door
'39 Plymouth 2-door
'40 Hudson 4-door sedan
SPECIAL . . . '32 Ford Coupe
Model I
........................... $175
'41 Ford Truck, I 1 a ton,
2 speed rear end, big tires
'40 Ford Truck, 11 a ton
l f E C C E l I
MOTOR COMPANY
832-38-40 N. Mechanic
Phone 2560
3-A— Auto C lou
AUTO TOPS
BUILT AND
REPAIRED
Fender A Body Work, Painting
STRONG AUTO SALES
W illiam* Road
Phone 1194-M
16— Monty lo Lorn
OSTER'S
> BODY AND
PAINT
SHOP
COMPLETE PAINT JOBS
Leslie "Red" Oster, Located at
RUP Si EO S_______ 507 HENDERSON AVB.
AUTO RADIATOR SERVICE
M A N T — 30 POTOMAC ST — EVENINGS
GENERAL REPAIRS
Service on Ail Car* - Call For. Deliver
BUD A ID 'S AUTO SERVICE
507 Henderson Avo.
Phono 3744
Money I
Money!
CENTRE STREET
LOAN COMPANY
26— f t Salt
Pianos
to $450.
Some famous makes
Seifert's Furniture & Piono*
13-17 Frederick S t.
R e c o n d itio n e d fr o m $125 s p e n c e r individually d**ign*d atyi* and
health support*. A llata A..am ong Lucas.
Phone IS22-M
IO N Centre St
I COLMAN In stan t gasoline table top ran g -
Phone 719-J-4 a fte r 4 p
rn
Phone 4 3 9 2 .J COM PLETE bathroom outfits and fix -
QUALITY GEMS A WATCHES
lures. used. Phone 1.164-J
OUTSIDE House P ain t, gin** w hite
$4 77
in 5 gal. can*. B uilder * P ain t A Supply,
121 N
C en /re Bt.
FORDS
REPAIRED BY
FORD EXPERTS
Estim ates o iv en - All W ork G u aran teed
BITTNER'S GARAGE
15 Harrison St.
Fhona 2091 -J
R
ADIATOR8 — REMOVED
EPAIRED - RECORED
EVERSE FLUSHED
SCHADEL RADIATOR SERVICE
N. Mechanic at Valley
Fhona 500
9— Baby Chicks
500
USED CARS
WANTED
IMMEDIATELY
We
T-O-P
All Offers
Prices
Don't Stop Us
We Pay Cash
All Makes and Models
ELCAR
— SALES —
Headquarters for Trading
O PP
PO ST O FFICE
PHONE 344
"The Home of Good Used Cars"
America's Toughest Truck
Early deliveries can be made
on Models from
14,000 to
47,000 lbs. gross.
It will pay anyone buying a truck
to look over Reo specifications as
to chassis, weight, etc. The highway
departments through the various
states are cracking down on over
loads.
RAUPACH'S
GARAGE
& N. Mechomc Sts.
HARY CHICKS thousand* weekly. O. • -
w
Va
Approvrd Pullorum Controlled.
W rite
for
free
catalogue
and
prices.
RHODES HATCHERY. Box 125 PETERS
BURG^ W Va.. Phone 145
2-15-4mos.
U
8
and
state
approved
—
Pullorum
Tested Baby Chicks
Will have chicks In
•oon
Leave your order now at
ALLEGANY FEED A ND GRAIN CO.
Knox St.
Fhona 2199
Cumberland
S-25-tf
16-A— Financing
M U CH
goats.
2
m ilking,
J
kids;
good
stock, reasonable. Phone 202J-J.
COAL COOKING stove and o a t com s:n a
tion coal and ( a a range. Phone ltr-ll.
1-19-ti
AIRCRAFT
for sale,
plane* licensed,
in
good condition
Phone 4092-W
___________________________ 1-4-31*
ONE horse, ex tra good leader. • yrs. e d.
1554 lbs Also plow* and one horse mow
ing m achine. Oeorg* H. Johnson. S h aft
i n t e r n a t i o n a l - tra c to r
MMR£
saw fram e. Phone 4220-R.
5 % MORTGAGE MONEY I KASTER B unnies for sale
For Hepair* Ai Im provem ents, to Build or OAK
Buy. to R efinance M ortgage. More Money
lf W arned. R educing Paym ents
Box 303-B, c / o Times-News
17— For Rent
FOR RENT
5,000 Square Feet Space Ault able
for Storage or Wholesale. Will Rent
all or part. Elevator Service.
LAZARUS 4 TREIBER
28 N. Liberty St.
Fhona 3270
22— Fun* it had
ROOM for ren t, gentlem an. 604 M aryland
Ave.
SLEEPING
room,
suitable
for
2
ladles
cen trally located. 137 N. C entre.
gentlem en
Bow
Phone 4160
TRUCKS TRUCKS
TRUCKS
1942 Ford P/z-T L W. Chas.
& Cob. IOO H P.
1941 Ford Tractor & Trailer
1940 M ack IO Wheel Dump
FROFIT W ITH 3-STAR CHICKS
Ward s 3-6tar chicks lay more eggs,
mature faster because they ore di
rect decendants of pedigreed-aired
flocks! Parents are U. S. Approved,
pullorum-tested!
IOO
as-hatched
$16.50.
MONTGOMERY W ARD & CO.
157 BALTIMORE ST. CUMBERLAND, MD.
2 - 6 - t i
SLEEPING
room ,
tw in
beds,
p referred. 514 G reene St.
2 LIG H T housekeeping, room*, junk, frigid-
aire. *15 week. 33 N. Lee St.
lavatory.
LIVING
room,
bedroom
w ith
G entlem an, 19 W ashington St
SLEEPING* room for gentlem an. 30 N Lib
e rty St.. Apt. B - l
25— Rooms with towrd
IO —
R e a lit y F o rlo rn
CAGE
SCHOOL OF
BEAUTY CULTURE
15 South Contra Street
VETERANS TRA IN IN G APPROVED
TELEPHONE 571-J
BEAUTY
CULTURE
Veteran'* Training Appro vt 4
LEARN!
GEORGIA'S ACADEMY
OF BEAUTY CULTURE
164 N. Mechanic St
Phone 4079
11 —
B u s in e s s O p p o r t u n it ie s
Highly
profitable
m trrhandiM iig
a
com m odity
In
universal
dem and
w ith
equipm ent. Non com petitive and sen sa
tional In its sales appeal. No experience
necessary.
Racked
by full cooperation
of an old established firm .
W rite Box
411-R C-o T im e*-N r»s
13—
C o o l F o r Solo
Good Cool 75°b Lump
Prompt Delivery, Phooo
HOM KRA IT
O e * a
lum py
to o l.
T reated
cloke*. & A. B alnea, Phono ITOW .
8 -M I
1941 Chev. Cob. over Engine, »jsoo
i n v e s t m e n t
>
i i i
y -,
a
-
>
p erm an en t
buvinrs*
L.W. Chos. & Cob
1940 Chev. Refrigerator Body
1939 G M C. L.W. Cattle
Body
1940 Dodge Steel Dump
1941 Ford 1-T Pick Up (Like
1939 Int. Va J Pick Up
1936 G.M.C. L.W. Flat Bed
1936 Dodge Vi-T Panel
1935 Ford V i-T Panel
Also The Following Cars
1942 Olds. Club Sedan Hyd.
R H .
1941 Olds 8 Hyd 4 Door
Sedan R.H.
1941 Pontiac 6 Sedan Cpe.
R H .
1941 Pontiac A Door Sedan
R H .
1941
1941
1941
H O M E C O O K IN G
Come A bring your guests, enjoy your
Easter dinner A meet your friends at
Mrs. Boyer'* private dining roam.
Phone 1754-J
Phone 2132-11
C olnnadr
*30.
O ak
S tairw ay,
rail
and b an ister *25. 1107 M aryland Ave.
SCREEN DOORS
screen window*, g alv an
ized screen wire. L iberty H ardw are.
BAW mill, w ith pow er u n it; 2 'a ton OMC
truck.
1442 m odel;
1941
A llts-C halm ers
dozer;
ga.soline
pow ered
ch ain
saw
Phone 810-W-3
BIX re sta u ra n t booths, com plete.
R
L W agner. H yndm an. Pa
W rite
7 FT
DeLUXE electric refrig erato r. E l a
in e h a ir d ry er
414 Md
Ave.
HEATING stove, com bination stove. sm e3
gas stove, 2-burner gas plate. 2-bur-.ee
oil stove.
Phiieo radio, bed davenport,
tab le and chairs, bed*, large w hat-not.
7 piece
an tiq u e horsehair living
room
suite,
odd dishes and stiver plat*.
3S
M assachusetts Ave.,
between
IO a
a
end 3 p. rn., or eel! 3400-MX
KHER ll col
producer
i and calf. Tested,
and good
Al Penned D ehaven Md
4 OC KIU farm h o lies, on* 44
in
pony,
m ining broke. Apply G eorge H. Dontua,
ital tsars Md
im ) a
box a*
SVANS long range shooting gallery. Com
plete w ith m oving targ ets, e x tra p arts,
etc
E n terp rise
A m usem ent,
124
N
C entre.
2 WORREL horses. 1400 lbs
each. 7 ira,
old
I bay horse. USO lo*.. 4 era. aid.
John
Deere
corn
planter.
Iv e
raw.
Phone
70
Frostburg,
after
4
p
m ,
276-J-4. Cumberland.
SPO TTED saddle m ar*. 4 yrs
eld
Veep
a ttrac tiv e
Phone 274-J-4
IOO KUSHEL Sm>*g» potatoes suitable for
seed
Harry
Krtm.
Salisbury,
Pe..
A.
D. No. I.
4
DOORS.
Apt. I.
2-4X4-4,
323
B altim ore A ve.
LUMBER, from 12 room houj-r. p artly to rn
down. Jam es W. C uster. Blaine. W
Va
LIG H T w eight gabardine »uit. size 37-R.
sport coat, sise 36. Phone 659-J.
RUDD gas h o t water heater, 323 Banat
Axe . Apt
I
HGT PO INT electric re frig e rato r; B engal
g as range,
th erm o sta tic even;
h itch es
cabinet. Phone 147i-W.
KELVIN ATOR, good aa new.
St
Apply a fte r 4.
1009 Bedford k v e r o r k e N S . Richard FUy. U nion G rot*
Road
Phone 394-W -l or 277*.
ONE NEW 42” sink. never connected; one
kitchen table and ch airs. 615 Yale Bt.
FRESH eggs for E aster. 721 Lafayette Avo.
any time.
IO PIECE H ougenot W alnut D ining Room c r n c u r n N
*"
« ITI
»—
Suite. Privately owned
E x c e lle n tc o n d i-! * 7 ? 5 -w -?
lion. Phone 1539
..
BLACK "Lily A nn” Suit. Brown coat, size
14. Phone 3769-R.
WENTLING
RADIO
SALIS
SAWMILL com plete w ith m otor. Set and .COM PLETE LINE, WELL KNOWSt MA
op eratin g . C heap. O.
W esternport, Md
W. Ross. Box 207.
FI HE WOOD.
F u rn itu re R epairing. Screen
Doors, W indow Hcreens, M oulding. Lawn
C hairs
Phone 1114-W
• Radios
• Combinations
107 BEDFORD ST.
PHO N! I
EVERGREENS,
MAPLE.
FR U IT
TREES
Savage G ardens, Mt. Savage Road
IT’S SM ART to be corseted In Am ar! Form
Foundations. G eorgia Bykes. 2026.
2 6 - F o r S s l t M j w
M m
i —
COAL HEATING stove, hestrnla, and one
»ld* oven ga* range. Phone 1497-M.
HOUSE
PAINT
$2 50
gallon
W igfleld*
W allpaper Shop. IO Humbird Bt. Phone
3609.
3 sam ple C hesterfield coats, sties
20. 918 95 807 M aryland Ave
*. l l
ORAY C O —Used furniture bought,
sold
exchanged.
Antiques.
Rear
133
Polk.
Phone I815-J.
REG1HTKRED
Cocker
and
Springer
Spaniel
puppies.
Harold
Meek.
Vale
Sum m it. Md
SPECIA L!—Sew ing
M achines,
all
m akes,
ad ju sted
In
your
home.
$ | OO.
Phone
454(1.
(•AS range w ith side oven, in good shape.
Phone 106 a lte r 6 p. in
3J6 B altim ore
Avenue.
W INCHESTER pum p gun. 2 sets of drum *. I
w ardrobe tru n k
Phone 1606-K
AUTOMOBILE Insurance to m eet Financial
Responsibility Law 115 20. Glenn W atson
Phone IIL ______________________ t-9 -tf-T
24 HOUR service on hem stitching, button
holes, covered buttons, buckles and belts
Binger Sewing Center. 79 N Centre Bt
Phone 394
8 -J-tf
VENETIAN BLINDS
Columbia,
Steal— Installed
Immediately
BUILDERS PAINT A SUPPLY
121 ft. CENTRE BT.
PHONE ISI
Plastic
Shower
Ensembles
Home Furnishing Corp.
128 Bedford Sr.
Pboaa 1941-A
Your Cream i i Good
Now — BICYCLES — Used
Com plete Line Accessor!** A P arte. W agon
Ai
Scooter
W heels
R etired.
G uaranteed
R epairs. AU M akes. W hizzer Bike M otors.
VET S BICYCLE SALIS A SERVICE
30 Queen City Pavem ent
Phone 1950-R
LARGE heatrola end on* large coal heat
ing stove. Phone 1497-M
11-21-tf
SAVE MONEY!
Tbe Bait in New Furniture
— UNDER THE BRICE —
Max a F u rn itu re
47 V irginia Ave
JU ST received: C arload of bedroom and
living
room
suites;
sewing
m achines,
b re ak fast sets, kitchen cabinet*
in n e r
spring m attresses and Conguleum rugs
REINHARTS, 17 BALTIMORE ST.
The Beoples Furniture Store
FILL GROUND—CALL 4588
FILL DIRT
for Iola af Potomac Fork.
WHI
lo Cresaptown ar Bawling
R. C. ROBESON
Phone 421-R
886-W-5
JOE JOHNE COAL
PHONE 3135
MT. SAVAGE
OFFICE
FURNITURE
Immediate Delivery!
GUARANTEED
Good
Coal.
Prompt
de
livery. Roy Klrchner. Phona 1657-J.
Desks, Steel or Wood
Wards .
.
. New!
PORTABLE
WASHERS
Now Avowable far:
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
Ideal far Everyday Laundry
Fur BOM*
$32.95
SANDERS - EDGERS Montgomery Word & Co
I 157 Bftltimora St.
C uisbirliB i
For Rent, Phone 158
BUILDERS
PAINT
I
SUPPLY
Washer Parts and Service
Wringer Rolls, All Makes
BULES APPLIANCE JI SFH VICE
ISE N. Cfentr* a t
Phona B a
GUARANTEED
ashes
John
burg 3531
Berlin
H Doh
coal,
wood
end
Phone Welters-
3-2-tt
PENNSYLVANIA
stoker
and
nut
coal.
Georges
Creek
Big
Vein
Mine
Run.
Phone 2949-W.
W. r . W hRiner. 313
Emily St.
6-24-tf
GENERAL Hauling—C oal prompt delivery.
D. C
Baker. *00 Shades Lana. Phone
3*34-11.
* -li-t!
Chev. 2 Door Sedan R H. I •#f,w
PRON*
FARM
IMPLEMENTS
De Lav al M ilkers dr S e p arato rs
.
A l
.
_
COLLINS MOTOR SALES
Chairs, Aluminum or Wood laltimore Pika
Fhona 822 J
Steel, 4-drawer Files
Steel, 2-drawer Files
Dazor Desk Lamps
Steel Security Boxes
Steel Card Index Files
CASE
WASHER SERVICE
ALL MAKES WRINGER
ROLLS— PARTS
SKELLEY APFUANCE A SERVICE
536 Pin* Ava.
Phona 4421
PREMIER DUPLEX
NEW EQUIPMENT IN STOCK
I No. 4 Parquhar m w rn ill w ith
M f RP
die el power unit. I No
ta Parquhar aew -
mili with 54 HP die**! power unit, Mall
a*wa, sw inging cut-off aawt far sawmill*,
garden
tractors
and
equipment,
f a r m
wagons on
rubber, plow*,
dim harrow*,
cultivator* mowers, nod other equipment.
USED EQUIPMENT IN STOCK
HD-IO Allts-Chalmers
tractor w ith
M R-
dozer,
model
8
Allis-Chalm ers
truer ne
with
bulldozer,
model
M
AUia-Cfcelmers
tractors. I General tractor w ith cultivator.
75 HP Buda diesel power unit. Cee* and
Soda so HP gas power unit#, b u ild a b le
hey
loaders,
plows,
end cultivator* A*
equipment can be seen al th*
FARM EQUIPMENT CO
3 a E. Mom St.
Somerset Pe.
J *
Ply. 2 Door Sedon H.
Ford 2 Door Sedan R H.
1940 Buick Special 5 Pass.
Cpe. R H.
1940 Ply. 2 Door Sedan H.
1940 Ford Cpe. R H.
1940 Ford 2 Door Sedan R H.
1939 Buick Special A Door
Sedan R H.
1938 Pontiac 5 Pass. Cpe. H.
1938 Ford Cpe H.
1936 Chev. 2 Door Sedan H.
C E N T R A L
MOTOR MART
Largest Used Car Lat in Town
S. Centre & W illiam s Sts.
W e Buy, Sell and Trade
Phone 4887
Scrnonort Boavortfalt Stoker
WETZEL - CONSUMERS COAL
' r ? Speed-O-Print Duplicators VACUUM CLEAN£* **us * service BANANAS
BANANAS
Q I Q
r
r
SERVICE A PA RT* ON ALL MAKE*
^
O P A IR P A n iM O
D u D l i c a t i n a S u d d I i b s
104 I
Liberty St
Phone 1722
Tractor trailer load to sell
$
A r e M io rt«». T i m , F a it *
t00iIi ATLAS
Flu* Tax
WETZEL'S ESSO
TIRES $13.20
PARK St UNION STB
Penney tram *
S to k n and
OKO RO BB C u m
OERMAN R SHANK
Phene SM
Duplicating Supplies
W L S rS J f*
! Pencil Sharpeners
W
I S S
W
MRe a | R u b b e r B a n d j
Beaverdale Pa Pm Stoker A Not Cm l
P tangy Ivon ie tan af Mina
ti B W AKEM AN
PHONE 339 W-4
GUARANTEED Coni, Slab wood and baut
ta*. Henry Boch. Lava)* Phone 3*33-vt
SOMERSET COUNTY'S reliable COOL Roy
Wet mer. ML S avate 2137
12-17-tf-N
Clites Boti Big Vein
Oil Emoted Pm Stake* PH. 1590
KE88ELL'8 Berlin c o a l resuming business
Im m ediate deliveriea Phone 3155-J
BERLIN'S GUARANTEED BIG VEIN COAL
$6.00. BEAVERDALE PEA STOKER.
OIL TREATED.
PHONE 3715-W
BERLIN coal. guaranteed. $6.50 ton. Wood.
General Hauling
Phone 4851-J
1-18-tf
PELTEN‘8
good
crude
Somerset
coal,
prompt delivery Phone 1173-W
3-7-311
I
ton
delivery,
47.00
COAL—48.50
ton.
Phone 1737-M.
I S —
C le c trlc W o r k , P ix t v re t
ELECTRIC WORK
MOTOR
repairing,
wiring
and
fixtures.
Q ueen City
E lectric C o , IM Frederick
S t Phone 117
Cumberland Office
Supply Co.
17 N Liberty St.
Phone 176
w
* r* r j r j r * r M
j r . W
M
EASTER SPECIALS
Mens dress hats.
Special $395.
Men s white and colored dress shirts
$2.95 Sc $3.50. Men s dress oxfords,
browns and blacks. 20 styles to pick
from $4.95 to $8 95.
Boys’ dress
oxfords, measured to fit your feet
$3.95, $4.95. Jk $5.95. Men’s Melbroke I
ties, wrinkle-proof as advertised iii
Life $100
THE HUB
AUTHORIZED
SALES A SERVICE
W ringer Roll A ll W ash ers 8 lb bag
CUMBERLAND MAYTAG
35 N. Mechanic
Phone 2672
by the b u n ch ..................$1.49 to $2 50
also by the pound
ORANGES
Florida sweet and juicy
20 lb bag ....................................$1 48
Baldwin & Betsy Ross
SPINET PIANOS
See These Beautiful Piano*
EXPERT TUNING SERVICE
MILLENSON'S
317 Virginia Ava.
j P C d & e m
e
Bumper Kind
Army and Navy Goods *
V a i l *
T j r VPU* 6 R O C C R Y ZTORcM
AT WOLFS
19 N. Centre St.
Man's and Boys* Wear
Texas Seedless Grapefruit
IO for 59c
Texas Pink Meats and Extra
Large Fancy Grapefruit
MAINE POTATOES
IOO lb s a c k ....................................S3 49
50 ID. sack ..................................si 89
P e r k
...............................................................65
SEED POTATOES
Certified Cobblers....................... $3 88
IOO lb. sacks
Certified Green Mt*.................... S3 BB
and other*
California Oranges, Lemons,
Lettuce, Celery, Cabbage, etc.
HAGER'S
WHEELS and RIMS
B. F. Goodrich
159 N Centre St.
Phone 611
AUTO PARTS
Safety Glass — Cyl. Heart*
Sealed Beam Adapter Kit*
Spring* A Leafs
Shacks A Knees
MuHlars — Axle Shafts
Ignition Parts — Bearings
Hub Caps — Carburetors
Contrefort — Heater*
Radiator Grilles
Beerman Auto Wreckers
PHONE 2270
153 W INEOW ST
16— Money To Loon
MUZIK HEW PRODUCT, „ r k _ r
Step-On Kitchen Garbage Can
Can Save You Up to $27.OO Glide-O-Matic
Electric
Iron
LOANS! LOANS I
EachTimeaCowFreshen,JZT& £
Fon that fits in Bedroom Window
$595
DEPENDABLE QUALITY
IN THE NARROWS AT LOVERS LEAP
Open until $
$9.95 26-A— Food, Groin, SoppHos
o n Auiomubiivs. Approved LU* insurance
Pollcisa M ortgage! At Securities
COMMERCIAL
SAVINGS BANK
C u m b e r e d . M orylond
s n
p p
like a Window Screen
Five Piece Kitchen Set, Very
Sturdy, at only ................... $14.95 Mi Savage
Motorola Farm Radio ........... $35.75
No
m atter
w hat
your feeding
praoiem g
, q A . ! m *T la . V itality Feeds Mav help you ac:va
SV.vo them .
W'e ta rry th* com plete lin n
Bridges & W ilson
Md
Phan* t a i
3-A— Auto GIo*h
STH IU*
VOO WAH
Glass Installed
B E E R M A N A U T O W R E C K ER S
153 Wineow S t
P bon* 237C
4— Itepoirt, Service Stations
WOTRING'S
BODY
SHOP
Auto O
Truck Refinishing
Pender At Body Repairing
122 W. SECOND ST
PHONE 4984
JEWELERS
PAW N BROKERS
Quick Confidential Loans O b AB
Articles af ValM
HEADQUARTER* POH DIA M ON D!
Large Stock of Unredeemed
Pledges For Solo Including
WATCHES
•
JEWELRY
LUGGAGE • GUNS
tilO H ESri P R IC K PAID POH OLD GOLD
Open Week-Days to B P IL
Saturdays until • P. Ii.
13 Baltimore St.
Phona 1770
C A I P S A O — U d d e r
b a d ly sw ollen, catted.
I D a n g e r a f c h r o n i c
I co n d itio n . U D D E R O l l
Wolf Furniture Co.
3 DAVI IAT!*—Bag i«
now normal. UDDEROIE B a ltim o r e S t
w orked Ilk * m agic! C ow
—
______
in production.
Cumberland. Md
Results Guaranteed or
SPORTS GOODS
V I G O R O U S
LIFE
MONEY!
O N A R IT C L B 8
O P V A L U !
— Unredeemed Merchond
I BARGAINS IN LUGGAGE
s s
\ r
m m
b o
_ ■ N o m a t t e r w h a t a p o r t y o u e n j o y , y o u c a n
Double I OUr ndoney Back s e t J u s t t h e r i g h t e q u i p m e n t a t W a r d s a t
M a w wa. ,
.
n e w
lo w
p r i c e s !
S e c
t h e
l a t e s t
In
g o l f I
n o w you can help prevent arn oui trouble and
^
I
lorn a t calving tim e. An amazing new product. 1 C,Ub*’
b*w b * 11
f t ^ e s .
hat*, etc
.
.
U D D K RO LB. ha* been discovered at Dawn-
F i b b i n g e q u i p m e n t , oulfe. nrd m<>tuis
h u n t-
wood Farm*. It relieve* dangerous raked bog mg and cam ping equipm ent
feater, better. Y our cows go into production
M U C H SO O N ER. You m ake up to $27.00
mer* on each cow.
Montgomery Ward & Co. rn
157 Bttlt,morc 8t
Cumberland 1
effective ingredients. It gives powerful J way I
I
help. I. Relieves th e congestion. 2. Reduce*
R
O
Y
?
JC A
l D I Q
•welling and inflam mation. J. Fight* infection. !
■ **
h * W
i A
b w
U*e it on your valuable first calf heifers. Farm
era reo rd e r and say: ” Udder ole ia the hest _
ever used. C an’t afford to be w ithout it." Th*
4-0*. tm costs only $1.00.
r n *
Itimberland Loan Co.
i - !
B I C Y C L E S
41 N. Mac ban la SS
RADIATOR SERVICE
RODINO
-
REPAIRIN G
RECORING - REVERSE FLUfc’HlNO
NYCUM SHELL SERVICE STATION
GEORGE At UNION STS.
PHONE 6009
dR FARMER
Yon w ant the highest price*
obtainable at your sale
You may em
ploy the best auctioneer
but he cannot
coax
com petitive
bids from
an
em pty
barn-iot. you m ust have a CROWD
Let
a rim e s-News For Sale ad th a t reaches
m ore th a n JO OOO fam ilies dally bring a
crow d—and higher bidsJ .o your sale.
DOUMI MONCY-4ACK GU AR ANTE!
If UDDEROLE doesn't do all we claim, if you
feel you can afford to part with it—return tin-
Fhona 4765 UJ*?! Portlon to Dawnwrmd Farms, Amenia,
N .Y ., and receive not $1.00, but $2.00—double
your money back. You can't lose, so try Udder de.
Sold and recom m ended b y
PET SHOP
144 N. Mechomc St.
See Wards New Line of Post-War
Streamlined Bicycles.
Bicycles.
Balloon Tires, Torpedo-Type
Headlight, chain guard
COMPLETE $39.95
Montgomery Ward & Co.
157 Baltimore St.
S T U T Z ! a t t
$ iO PROTEINS
K isco AM K a rt R ick Sartor
with Btu PROTEINS i i i peeuem
feed .. .proved hest Foe file mod
growth by thousands of Kisco
chicks im actos! f t s d i f test*
Ste PROTEINS ira yon* assn*
•nee of protein quality. They
ore a step beyond erode pro
tein. O rder K isco AM Mash
Chick Starter today!
ALLEGANY FEED AND GRAIN CO.
Cumberland t Knox St.
Phone 2199
Cumberland
4
26-À— Feed, Grain, Supplies
JO— Building Suppléa«
¿mm
-H.
s
Stickell's &
Park Pollard
F E E D S
Chicken, Hog, Dairy, Horse
and Rabbit Feeds . . . A t
Reasonable Prices
Open Evenings 'Till 8
HAGER S at Lover's Leap
26-B— Frozen Foods, Service
L U M B E R
New unfinished framing
Phone 275-W-6
NOW IN STOCK
THE
C U M B E R L A N D
N E W S ,
C U M B E R L A N D ,
M D ,
FR ID A Y ,
A P R IL
4,
19 47
33— Help W onted M ole
¡41— Moving, Storage
47— Real Estate For Sale
I 47— Real Estate tor Sale
51— W anted To
Buy
C W EN TY -SEV FN
U N M A R R IED , middle-aged man. sober and JO H N A P P E L transfer, local and long dis- I C AN S E L L vour n ro w riv
rima in n .n
dependable, to live at camp on South
lance moving Agents for CJrayvan Line,.
Real E .fu le
Phone 3M B
S U M M E R cottage w ith acre of «round on;
Branch year round. W rite P. O. Box 8 69 .'
'
1
rnone .100 »
Cumberland
Inc. Phone 162 J.
I he South Branch. Phone 2152.
Sewer Pipe
Septic Tanks
• Drain Tile
McKAIG'S
201 S. Centre St.
Cumberland, Md
--------
M O VIN G TO- From Ball ¡more
B A K E R
Apply
19 Laing Avc. or Phone
moving—hauling J
!
J19 6-J.
V1. 1?________________ —
• Flue Lining MARRIp;n
Also local C H O IC E Lots and Acreage. Potomac Park
the fine.st lots In the Johnson
F. Ti» lg« Phone 388.
man on dairy farm. Machine A l
a
milking W . it Johnson, Box " 4, Cumber- ,
land. Phone 1752-J or 4734-J-3.
-Neon Signs, Service
C O N C RETE
WARDS
Hove Vacancies
SEPTIC TANKS
D E L IV E R E D and PLA C ED
P IL E
B R O S
B U R IA L
V A U LT
S E R V IC E
10 W . Elder St..
Phone 3867-W
Building Materials
M a d e to O rder
LOCKERS
FROZEN
FOOD
FA ST - FR E E Z IN O S E R V IC I
Th« Cumberland let & Cold Storage
351-3 FREDERICK ST
PHONE 2
For several experienced salesgirls
for work in the following depart
ments:
• Shoes
• Hardware
• Houseweor
• Ladies' Accessories
Only those with previous experience
will be considered.
Manufacture, Erection & Repair
Neon Cold Cothodc Interior Lighting
Hare's Neon Service
PUONJE 37«J
near Celanese Phone M cGraw 200R-R.
2 ID E A L building lots on plat ol Home
wood Addition, above Qrecnpofnt. Priced
very reasonably. Phone 2000-J.
NEW' Mone house, six roomt», two baths»,
and garage, on lot 113 x 140 ft. Com
plete $12.800
On Rraddock Road, In Al
legan y Qrove. Ask lor Zellers», or Phone
3992-H.
130 N
M EC H A N IC RT
IN STOCK
• Window Frames
• Door Frames
________
%A/
o
/-*
• Frommg
. sheo.h.ng Montgomery W ard & Co.
42— Painting, Papcrhanging
W A LLS.
PA P E R ,
woodwork,
c l e a n e d ,
painted.
Phone
1925-R.
IN TSRIO R -Ex terio r
pa In tin«.
G et
estl-
matea now for spring. Francis M attingly
Phone 1883-W
Heights section. Second lot from Brook
field
Ave.
towards
town
on
Oldtown
Road. 70x80. Price. $1295 with all paving
leln.s
paid
Apply
408
Virginia
Ave., I
«rack days before 6 p
m
LO T
45x130x57- .St
M ary’s Ave
Beautiful
building alte 8 K S.M Phone 478 1-J-l
LfK fA TED at Carpleiiler s Addition Ridge
ley, W .
Va.
1
5-room bungalow,
2 3 -
room eottages, and 10 lot-
Price on ap
plication, Ed lSrtrtck. Ridgeley, W. Va.
W - A - N - T- E- D
FURNITURE
STOVES
Al l epany Furniture Co.
526 Virginia Avc.
Phone 4187
53— W anted To Rent
V ETER A N
and
wife
want
unfurnished
apartment.
South
Cumberland.
Phor.«
1*51-ML
S-13-31t
V ETER A N , wife
deairs 3 - 4 Room U n fu r
nished Apartment. Phone 1446-M.
¡LO C A TED on E v ltt’a Creek —2 four room
camps, one acre of ground, 2 mile» froui
city.
6 ROOM brick. West Hide, possession at
once. $5250.00
T O U R IS T Camp, gas station, grocery— 12
miles east ol Romney on Route 50.
134 A C R E farm, good buildings— 12 miles
irom Ridgeley.
J E W E L L Ar H UTTO N
Ridgeley, W . Va.
Phons 1549
or
10J3-W RO O FIN G ,
spouting,
metal
work. W arm
157 Baltimore St.
Cumberland
2 7 — Fuel O il
MAN
- FUEL o n . -
# Stove O il
« Keroaent
Q U E E N C IT Y O IL C O
Stan dard O il Dlst.
Phone 3286
28 A — F lo riiti
Funeral
Flowers I »
BOPP'S
Baltimore St
Rhone 2382
• Germon Siding
a Brick Siding
• Flooring— Oak. Pine
• Roofing
Delivery Anywheref
PENNSYLVANIA LUMBER & POST CO.
Hyndman. Pa.
Phone Hyndmon 13 with several year*» experience in the
Retail Shoe Business. Man selected
must be between the ages of 25 to
45, capable of assuming complete
management of oui Shoe Depart
ment.
CARLOAD
Just Received
Reinforcing Bars
STEEL - DEFORMED
Ye" to 1V4"— A ll Lengths
Cement Products Co.
405-11 Henderson Av«.
Phone 1565
PA IN TIN G , Exterior and Interior. For best
result! call W ilbert. 2655.
3-12-lmo
W A L L P A P E R
cleaned,
Interior
painting.
Phone 2517-R
Katiafactton
guaranteed.
P A P E R H A N G IN G W A N TED
PH O N E 105-W-4
IN T E R IO R At Exterior
painting. General
Repairing At Roofing. R ay Bittner. Phone
4152-R.
S P E C IA L IZ E D wallpaper cleaning and ali
sorti* of houKecleaning. Phone 2166-R,
WALLPAPER
I It ’s Wards
for better
wallpaper.
jOver 300 patterns to choose from.
; »‘Some washable, some embossed.
Excellent salary and
bonus with
From 10c to S3 00 single roll
chance for advancement.
48 — Rooting, Spouting
R O O FIN G ,
spouting,
sheet
metal
work
W arm air heating, air conditioning con
version gas burners. Free estimates. Call
Twigg 4598 or 29 8 5-J.
If You Have
Furniture for Sale
Call
Price's Furniture Exchange
Reliable Used Furniture Dealers
120 N. Centre St.
Phone 2732-W
53 A — W onted To Trade
W A N T to
trade
30-30
Winchester
rtf!*,
new on model A car or light truck
24
Bedford Bt , after $ p
m
54— Situations W anted
P R A C T IC A L
NUItHEJS
xnd
housekeepers
available.
Trl-Btatn
Employment
Com
mission. licensed. Phon« 1861-M
N E W 5 room Spanish style house, bath,
garage, warm air heat. Located on corn
er of Utah and Michigan Ave. Im m ed
iate possession
Phone 4598.
T W O farm.’-, fi mile
north of Oldtown, or»
Oldtown-Flln' v i e Road. Houses, barns
and
all
tiro
aiv
outbuildings.
Apply
111 South S t , Cumberland.
W ill buy single or double dwellings In city
or outlying districts.
Immediate cash act-j
tlements.
Lazarus & Treiber
28 N. Liberty St.
Phone 3270
LOTS,
acreage, Braddock Road, develop
ing section, near city.
Terms.
C lay
ton. 1879-M.
3-2-tf
8 ROOM frame house, located corner Park
St. and Central ^ve. Thone 1038-W after
« p. m.
air heating. Alex Schute, 2258.
Fully Guaranteed Roofs
installed with
Borrctt Roofing Material
Any type roof— finished |obf
B IL L Y P U R L IN S U L A T IO N
A N D R O O FIN G CO.
Phone 2497________________P O. Boi 1195
49-A — Typewriters, Service
YOU CAN turn the task o! attic or base
ment cleaning Into a profitable adven
ture If you salvage the things you don’t
YO UN G
working
couple
desire
3
or
3
room furnished apartment. Phone 2580-R.
F IR E destroyed
home- Woman
and
five
children In need of small house. Phone
183» between 9 and 5 p. m.
want and offer them for sale through th e , VF7TERAN badly needs » or « room boose
For Bale ada
«
Phone 304-M.
G R IN A N D BEA R IT
By Lickty
G U A R A N T E E D repairs, aU makes adding
machines, typewriters. Cumberland Busi
ness Service
Phone 3687
2-9-tf
EASTER FLOWERS
- Z IM M ER LY 'S-
129 Elder St.
PHO NE 29 67-W
28 — Furnace«, Heating
STOKER SERVICE, ALL MAKES
DAY OR NIGHT
GROVE STOKER SERVICE
L J. Grove
Phone 735-W-4
HOME OWNERS
LET US PLACE YOUR
ORDER N O W FOR A
SUNFLO
HOT WATER
HEATING PLANT
A N D INSURE YOURSELF
OF A W A RM HOM E
NEXT W INTER
free Estimate — N o Obl i gation
SUN HEATING CO.
28 N. Liberty St.
Phon« 3270
AVAILABLE!
Locust Posts
Fence Palings
Grape Arbor Strips
Now is the time to repair
that Fence or Arbor
SOUTH CUMBERLAND
PLAN IN G MILL CO.
Queen St. at 6 & 0 R R
Phone 2918
Montgomery W a rd & Co.
157 Baltimore at.
Cu mb erlan d
Montgomery »Ward & Co. l<iU 67Tpr
L0<’ m- n m b a , ‘
157 Baltimore fcit.
Cumberland
r e a l e s t a t e bought,
«old.
exchanged"
Glen Watson, 213 Virginia Ave.
2-8-tf
43-A— Professional Services
37— M usical Merchandise
IN S T R U C TIO N
On
All
Instruments
Faculty of F.xpert Teachers
S T E W A R T M U S IC H O U SE
¡14 Greene St.
Phone
1234
A U C TIO N EE R
Floyd P. Grace
Phone 8 68 -J-4
PRIVATE
DETECTIVE
All Types of Investigations Including
Domestic — Strictly Conftdential
24 Hour Phone Service
TRI-STATE
DETECTIVE
SERVICE
1*14 Liberty Trust Bldg.
New 1947
I —
-------------- -
Phone 2161
~m turra $ ester*
R C.A. Victor
RADIO-
PHONOGRAPH
CLASSICAL and
POPULAR
RECORDINGS
Remodeling or Building?
Pianti, Blueprint« orné
Specification»
GEORGE C ROEDER
Allegan* lue
/n Maryland the Solution is:
BO W LIN G GREEN
Four Room Modern Bungalow Hae Mod
ern Bath And Kitrher». Garage in Baee-
ment. Large Corner Lot. $7000 00.
BEDFORD STREET
Modern
Fight
Room
House W ith Steam
Heat, Bath, Large Lot. $9500 00.
139 ACRE FARM
Located at the Foot of Polish Mountain,
One
Mile From M ate
Highway, is Thla
139
Acre
Farm
W ith Six
Room
Houee,
Barn , Outbuildings. $2500 00.
HOWARD M SPIKER
20 South Centre St., Phone 2676
50— Upholstering
UPHOLSTERING
BRODE BROTHERS
Furniture Repairs and Recovering
110 H E N R Y ST.
P lIO N E 889
51— W anted To Bay
W E PA Y from $18 to $25 for your Idle
Singer Sewing Machine. Singer’s Hewing
Center, 78 N. Centre »t. Phone 39 4
6 -l-tf-T
WANTED-- Rabbi ta 4 pounds up. Shober’
Restaurant. Phone 925.
1-20-tf-T
IC E refrigerator. Phone 1645-MX.
CO UPE, ’38 or ’39. not convertible. State
condition
and
price.
P.
O.
Box
175,
Barton, Md.
A S *
My f eon M r wax u«1nf* the Mmn-gavlnsr tamme to* form ttmfc
be filled out in 5 minutes—I sot 5 years for ovasfons!**
30— Building Supplio«
■m
' W %M>,
■ v
CORNER
CHINA CASES
Glazed Doors Above
Panelled Doors Below
PRICE $40
Medicine Cabinets
Beautiful and Practical
PRICE $14 50
OAK FLOORING
Lower Grades Only
BUCHAN AN LUMBER CO.
549 N. C E N T R E ST
PH O N E 1270
C U M B ER LA N D , MD
31— Help W anted
MUSIC SHOP, Inc. c l a y d e t e c t iv e a g e n c y
L _
Commercial Bank Bldg., P. O. Box 11
5 S. Liberty St.
---
PLAYERS RECORDS
•
Used Records 15c Each
•
ENTERPRISE AMUSEMENT CO
126 N. Centre St.
Phone 3833
Phone 3230 Phone Cumberland 324, Evenings 4057-W •.
—
—
Personal
Civil,
Crim inal,
Industrie
U
RADIOS, i Investigations,
Domestic
Cases.
Missing
AI R IIM l p*r*on!*.
Patrol
Service
for
Properties
A LouM i 30 YEARS
STR|CTLy CONFIDENTIAL
3-2-1 wk.
USED RECORDS 15c each - 2 for 25c
Ail Late Numbers
Supreme Amusement Co.
12 Bedford Bt.
Phone $4
__________Open Evenings Until 9
★ RECORD MART ★
243 Vo. Ave near 3rd.
Phone 3922
• RECORDS. PLAYERS
• RADIOS
• MUSICAL B0X£ S
• ALBUMS, Eet.
Juke Box Sales
PHOTO-COPY
C A L L E D
N EW A U SED
N O R M A N DEE
photostats
BLUEPRINTS
Black & W hite Prints
S. P. Hendricks
24 Queen City Pavement
PHONE 2088 W
S U R V E Y IN G
8 1
g r e f n e
s t r j b i
PH O N E 1040-M
C A R L A. LO W Registered
301 N Centre St.
Phone 800
O A K
K IL N
dned
flooring,
tongue
and
grooved
end matched, ah grades, lim it
ed Quantity, delivery anywhere. Penna,
Lumber A Post Co. Inc., Hyndman, Pa
Phone Hyndman 13.
RO O TIN G 2
3 and 4 -ply—Shingles, $4.71
* 0
Liberty Hardware Co.
^ .E E ~ 1 » T IM A T Es T^Cellobriek. Inauibrlck
Phnteota
3$
months
to
pay.
Phone
3500-J___________________________________ _____
Year Around Home com fort
IN S U L A T E
Perfection Biown Kock Wool
B IL L Y P U R L IN SU LA TIO N CO.
Rhone 2497
P O Box 1195
SH O R T order and ateam table cook Apply j
Queen C ity Hotel.
38 — Lost and Found
STA TE O P M A RYLA N D
S T A T E E M PLO Y M E N T
C O M M ISSIO N ER
22 L IG H T S T , B A L T O -2. MD.
PERMANENT POSITIONS
INSURING FUTURE SECURITY
AUTOM ATIC INCREASES
IN SALARY
LIBERAL VACATION AND
SICK LEAVE AND
RETIREMENT BENEFITS
Application» must bp mailed not
P ur
Ir h
Diemeter
Round
Drain
Tile
1ht^*r th a n A p ril 15, 1947 In f ill th e
In.med.al» DeiHery
Cumberland Hale* Co
lit. Savage Refractories C o . M l. tievage,
Md
Phone Ml
Savage 3571
LOST- In M cCrory’s. 8 ult In Rosenbaum*«
package.
Mrs.
Gerald Clayton, Bex 2
Cresaptown. Reward.
DRAIN TILE
CEMENT BLOCKS
R
« *n
Panai
Paca 2«c,
Limestone
20«
F O B
Plont
Phone 2664 W-1
CRESAPTOWN
BLOCK
PLANT
LO ST:
Lady’s
brown
pocketbook,
by
Memorial Hospital. Saturday night. Call
Springfield, W . V t , 142-F-52. Reward.
LOHT
Brown leather billfold. In Strand
theatre,
Tuesday
evening
Contained
leave papers. Finger keep currency. W il
liam Louis Ralth
Phone 1531.
L O ST flunday—sum of money and 2 rings
Liberal reward
Phone 209 -J.
LO ST
Large shopping bag full of mer
chandise in M urphy’s. Return to M ur
p h y s or 10 Rutaw Place.
39— MisccDafieou»
ACCOUNTING
• Bookkeeping Service
• Audit«
M ARVIN J. KAPLON
28 N. Liberty St.
Phone 3270, 3320 W
43-B— Photography
P l l M
Q
EASTMAN, ANSCO
r l L f V I D
GAVERT. UNIVEX
Movie A
Roll
* At
1» mm.
Kodachrome
CHANEY'S CIGAR STORE
Centre & Fredrick Streets
INSULATE! ^
Blowing Method— Frew Kriimetee
L
& Y
PLUM BING CO
Pmto Md
Phone Cumberland 1528 W
following VHCHiirie« hi
Uie ßtatc
»ervice:
Superintendent, Mental
Diseate Hospital II ..........$5320 6650
Superintendent, Mental
_________
Disease Hospital III .......... 4820*6025
D. L.
Tichnell
réfrigération
service,
W D OWENS COMMIS S IONER
m,kM phon* lM4*J ,r 1M
BLO C K
I jA Y IN G
cement
work.
M cKinney.
810
Ashland
Ave.
2380-W.
W.
A.
Phone
all
Hew
INSULATED BRICK
INSULATED STO NE
SID IN G
We Bell the Mete rials or Install
the Complete Job.
3 Years To Pay!
W RITE BOX 398 B e o TIMES NEW S
S TA TE O F M A RYLA N D
S T A T E E M PLO Y M E N T
C O M M ISSIO N ER
22 L IG H T ST , BALTO -2. MI).
PERMANENT POSITIONS
INSURING FUTURE SECURITY
AUTOM ATIC INCREASES
IN SALARY
LIBERAL VACATION AND
SICK LEAVE AND
RETIREMENT BENEFITS
F U R N IT U R E
Repaired,
rcflnlshed
Any
condition.
48
Blocker
Bt ,
Ridgeley,
2«7#-M
3-18 -lmo
W K R E P A IR all m ake s of sewing machines
Singer B* wing Center. Phone 394
C A R P E N T E R W O R K —G E N E R A !, R E P A IR S
Roofing repairs. Phone 4209-W.
Films -- Finishing
SA W Y ER VIEW M A STERS
S
E R A
J. K
DEAN D E L IV E R Y S E R V IC E
Light Hauling.
Phone 1009
C O N C RETE and masonry contracting. Call
Geoige C. Roeder. Allegany Inn.
W A RM ERS repaired,
any make. Also re
pairs on electric irons, sweepers. Phone
591-J.
Taylor Made
Door Frames,
Window Frame* with ffash
TAYLOR LUMBER CO.
H P o tre n a r 8 1
Applications must
he mailed
not G E N E R A L repair*!, carpentry work. Phone
* *
,.
.
,,
,
j 327-J-2 or 327 *-3,
later than April 15, 1947 to fill thr I --------------------------------
Heavy Hauling
Excavating
Powei Shovels A Dozers
RIGGING
W INCHES
CRANES
G C Scnsabaugh, Inc.
Phones 1322 or 2422
following
vacancies in
the ¿State
service:
Messenger ..............................$1300 1625;
Pnncipol Clerk ................... 2000 2500 i
Reception Clerk ..................... 1600 2000
Statistical Clerk ................... 1600 2000
JO H N S- MANVILLE
Roofing, Siding Insulation
• Concrete Blocks
• Feody Mised Concrete
THE CUMBERLAND
CEMENT & SUPPLY CO.
Rear 419 No Centre Street— Phone 2525
Statistician I I ......................... 2300 2875
Phon« 3377
statistician I ........................ 2800 3500
Stenographer Secretary
2200 2750
Salaries to be announced loter
for the following classée
Supervisor, Multiple Switchboard
Labor Market Analyst
Asst. Labor Market Analyst
Interviewer I
Interviewer II
Manager III
Monoger IV
W D OWKNS. C O M M ISSIO N ER
MNSELBBK
Roofing Shingles
36 months to pay
J. J. Grabenstein
401 Columbio St
Phone 108 W
W h en In N eed Of A
POWER
LIGHT PLANT
Come To W ard's
W e hare the following
alzea av ailab le for
D E L IV E R Y IM M E D IA T E L Y
! 000 Won, 115 volt a c..............$325 00
2 000 Watt, 115 volt o c. . . . .
463 00
1000 Wott, 115 volt a e.
519 00
ABOVE PRICES F O B
W « con foke your order
fo* any
site
you need
M O N TG O M ER Y W A R D & CO
»*■ bo.mnoi« ¿»t. Cuaitwri-iia, Md.
Power Shovels
and Bulldozers
• E X C A V A T IN G
• G R A D IN G
• TR EN C H D IG G IN G
Tru«k*,
Pump«.
Air
Cnmprnmnr»
and
D rills For Rock Ex vacating
Fill Ground and Top Boll
Baughm an Contracting, Inc.
Phone 4588
Your Kodak Store
35 N. Liberty St.
4040-W
44— Piano Tuning
PIA N O TU N IN O and
repairing. Helfert’r
Furnitur» and Planoa. Phon* *36.
tl-21-tf-M
45— Plumbing, Refrigeration
REFRIGERATION REPAIRS
t
All Makes — Commercial — Domestic
SCHURG'S REFRIGERATION SERVICE
Irlcphonr 1541 W
45-A— Printing, Signs
3 2 —
Help W anted Female
FLO O R
maids.
Apply
Memorial Hospital.
Mr,
Newberry.
W E L D I N G
All typos Acetylene and Arc
Machine Repairs Ac Machine Work
Anything
#
Anyplace
SEE OUR
LINE OF
Wedding Invitation*, etc. — Ruling
THE
COMMERCIAL
PRESS
CO.
Harrison A S. Centre
Phone 72
46— Radios, Service
Radio Repairs
— Guarantee
CAPITOL
P R I N T I N G
EXPKRIFNCED waitress wantrd
M utt ap- H & S. HcOtinq & Plumbinq Co
Baltimore Ave.
ply in person. Queen City Holel.
,
.
.
, _
,
'
---------------------
Authorized Dealers in
Guaranteed Service —
ELECTRONICS
COM PANY
Phone 1225
E X P E R IE N C E D
woman
for
«rinding
in
finishing room
Only experienced person
need
apply.
Cumberland
Olas*
Co ,
I*a Vaia
Aireo Gases and Equipment
128 Polk Street
Phone 2040
WOMAN
for
general
housework.
Good
wage
Live in
Phone 3136-J
W H I'If lady as housekeeper, live in
pie-
ferablv age around 30. all convenience».
Reference
reipilreci
Box
408-B,
e-o
Tlmea-Ne**,
W OMAN rook, at night
apply in person
Buck’s R'stM urant, Baltim ore Pike,
WATTHJUSS
wanted
apply
Ooldea
OaU
Reslauranl, 17 H. Centre 81,
W OM AN
to
3993-W
40— M etal Wcotherstrippiitg
Van's Radio Shop
PHONE 3566
15 HARRISON
Authorized ZENIT H Service
A M , W O R K - P A R T S G U A R A N T E E D
B
I
G
S
I
S
T
E
R
THE O L D B L A I0 H O M E ? T IF V O J lL BE
YES, I CAN TELL YOU t - ;--T S O G O O D .'
h O W TO F IN D
d -j î , '
£ t . »
u e {
MOW, WHAT C A N ME W A N T IN TH ECE0
WHY, N O O O C Y S BEEN BACK IN TMEPE
F O P Y E A C S ' j ^
'
WE OLD HOME HAS BEEN LOCKED
AND D ESEP TED FO P S O LONG
Car»
for
children.
Phone
J 3 —
Help W onted M ala
"W E DEFY l i f t ELEM EN1S**
D EFIA N C E
w e a t h e rs t ri p CO
Frederick C Han.-
Phone 2063
CHAMBLRLIN
Zinc
Weot heist ripping
and
Steel
Combination
Storm
Windows
with
the
new
Plastic
Screening.
FREt
ESTIMATES
PHONF
4355
RADIO SERVICE
STANDARD CO.
NTKC lA l.IZ K D PH O N O G RA PH
8 K R V IC »
77 N Centre St.
Phone 4001
EXPERT
C A R W A SH C R
and
Janitor.
Good
salary
piu* eommtaaions. Thmnpkon Buick Co
«39 N
Mechanic HI
Phon« 1470
.MAN
for
gardening
and
outside
work
W 111»
It
>99 H < o
I Ini»» New*.
,»et< 1 a m , a n g le , free
.
Living
expense*
and
transportation
furnished
Paid
weekly.
Must be neat.
Whit» only. Men >elerted muat he pre-
Pared In leave » iih nje Friday. Bee Mr.
Hawkins. Port Cumberland Hotel, 11 a
m
to J p. m. Friday only. Don t phone.
41— Moving, Storogo
RADIO
SERVICE
PICK UP &
E D C E
DELIVERY
rKtt
City's Best Service Equipment
NATIONAL RADIO LABORATORIES
Phone 1009
Rear 34 Virginia Ave.
~ WENTLING
RADIO SALES
PROMPT and EXPERT REPAIRS
On All Makes Rodios
__
.
U A LI, F G R AND D E L IV E R
216 Charles St.
Phone 1599' 107 Bedford St.
Phone 1600
Local Moving
Baggage Transfer
PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE
Cloyd L. Chaney
u
I
C
K
T
R
A
C
Y
THE CU M BERLAN D NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
1947
fW ENTY-3€VEN
-----------------------------------------------------
2 6 A — f w d , G r o i n , S u p p l i e s
iO —
B u i ld in g S u p p l i —
3 3 —
H e l p W o n t e d M o l o
41— Moving, Storoge
47— Rcol Estate For Sole
47— Reel Estate tor Sole
Stickell's &
Park Pollard
FEEDS
Chicken, Hog, Dairy, Horse
and Rabbit Feeds . . . At
Reasonable Prices
Open (tunings 'Till t
HAGER'S at Lover's Leap
26 i
Fro sen Foods. Service
I .UM BKR
(few. untiim hed framing
Phone 275-W-6
NOW IN STOCK
O Sewer Pipe
O Septic Tanks
O Drain Tile
McKAIG'S
201 S. Centre St.
Cumberland, Md
UNMARRIED, middle-aged man. sober and JOHN APPEL transfer, local and lone dis- I C AN HELL your property. Opt* Anorn. SUMMER cottage with acre of ground on
dependable, to live at camp on South!
lance moving Agents for Grayvau Lines ,
Real E tate. Phone 36*9
the South Braiirh Phone 2152
Branch year round. Write P. O. Box *69.
Inc. Phone 1623,
.
—
— -
Cumberland
BAKER
Apply
j m - j .
Flue Lining MARRIED man on dairy farm
Machine
milking VV it Johnson. Box 74, Cumber*
land. Phone 1752-J or 4734-J-3.
19 Lh mg Ave. or Phone
moving—hauling J F T»i;i; Phone 3ftft.
LOCKERS
FROZEN
FOOD
PAST-PREEZlItO SERVI CB
Tim Cumberland lea 4 Cold Storage
351 -3 FREDERICK ST
PHONE 2
...............Mill—
—
—
—
—
»
27— Fool OB______________
- FUEL O II -
O Stove OII
# Serum#
QUEEN CITY OIL CO.
Standard Oil Diet.
Phone SSM
CONCRETE
SEPTIC TANKS
DELIVERED and PLACED
PILE
BROB
BURIAL VAULT SERVICE
IO W. Elder St.
Phone 3H67-W
Building Materials
M ade to Order
IN STOCK
O Window Frames
O Door Frames
O Framing
O Sheathing
• German Siding
f Brick Siding
• Flooring— Oak, Pint
# Roofing
Delivery Anywhere.'
PENNSYLVANIA LUMBER 4 POST CO.
Hyndman. Pa.
Phono Hyndman 13
WARDS
Have Vacancies
MOVING TO- Prom Baltimore. Alao local CHOICE Lots and Acreage. Potomac Park OF?.*
St VS
near Celanesr Phone McGraw 200ft-R
” ,*ht*
‘ction Second lot (tom Btook-
____________________________I
field
Ave.
toward*
town
on
Oldtown
ll tiw if w .1^.
, .
„
Road. 70x90. Prier. $129.% with all paving
a i a
k ln n n r :
c
;
* 1 DEAL building i t
on plat nl Home-
im -,
paid
Apply
409
Vuginia
Ave.
S L A " 11 WCOtS S i g n s , S e tV IC i
w>x»d Addition. slime U rtm potnl. Priced
week (tnis before It
very reasonably. Phone 2000-J.
—
----- --- ---------------
p.
For .several experienced salesgirls
for work in the following depart
ments:
• Shoes
• H ard w are
• Houseweor
• Ladies' Accessories
(Only those with previous experience
1 will be considered.
Montgomery Ward & Co.
157 Baltim ore St.
Cum berland
Monufocture, Erection 4 Repair
Neon Cold Cathode Interior Lighting
Hare's Neon Service
U P N MECHANIC Bl________ PHONS 370
HEW stone home,
aik roo im. two
bath*. 65x130*1*
M a p ra Av- Beautiful
and garage, on lot 113 g 140 ft.
Com-
building atte. *925 00 Photic 4751-J-l.
plate $12 SOO On Braddock It ’.til
in AI- , n ~Zmri. . -
lcgwtiv Grove. Ask lur Zellers, or
Phone LOCATKD at Carptcntei a Addition. Ridge-
3992-H
Icy, W. Va
I 5-room bungalow. 2 3-
_ ___ —
■
I
room cottages, and IO lot* Price on ap-
LOCATED on Evil Cs Creek * 2 four room —
ramps, one acre of ground. 2 miles from
- ---------
ft lh k »M brick, VV**.si Hide. possession at 4 8 —
R o o f in g , S p o u t in g
once
S52&0(K)
;
____________
TOURIST Camp. gas station, grocery—12
mile-, rant of Romney on Route IVO
ROOFING, spouting, sheet
metal work
134 ACRE farm. good buildings—12 miles
Warm air heating air conditioning con
front Ridgeley.
I version gas burners Eta* estimates. Call
JEWELL Ai HUTTON
I
Twigg 459S or 29S5-J.
Phono 154* R ,d,r,ey' c' ' ‘ V*
10J3-W ROOTING, spouting
metal work. Warm
42— Pointing, Paperhanging
WALLS.
PAPER,
woodwork,
a I e a n e d.
painted. Phone 1925-R
IN I’MHIOK-Lxtrrior
painting.
Gel
esti
mates now for spring. Francis Mattingly
Phone 1*83-W
S I —
W a n t e d T o B u y
W-A-N-T-E-D
FURNITURE
STOVES
Allegany Furniture Co.
576 Virginia Ava.
Fhona 4187
53— Wonted To Bent
VETERAN
and
wife
want
enfants
apartment.
South
Cumberland.
Fhona
h m m .
M M M
VETERAN, wife deair* J - 4 Room Cr.fwe-
B ti had Apartment, Phone 1444-M
53-A— Wonted To Trode
lf You Have
Furniture for Sale
Coll
Price's Furniture Exchange
R c lia b ia
U se d
Furniture
D ea lers
Free estim ates C all I
N . C e n tra St.
Fhona 27J2-W
WANT to
trade
IO I i
W inchester
r1f!a.
new on model A car or light trac t
24
Redford tv
after l p m
3 4 — S i t u a t i o n s W o n t e d
PRACTICAL
N t’IUiBJB
and
hoi
available. Trl-fKat* Rmplovmewi C
mls aon. Ilrenaetl. Phone IMI -54
YOUNG working couple deair* 2 or 2
room furnished apartm ent Phone 2SS0-R.
PAINTING, Exterior and Interior For best
results call Wilbert, 2655.
3-12-lmo
MAN
Funaral
Flower*
I
BOFFS
r5 Baltimore St
2581
EASTER FLOWERS
—ZIMMERIY'S—
129 Elder St.
PHONE 2967-W
^ A A N P ^ v v v s / v v v v y v y v s / v v
2 B — F u m o c o s , H o o t t n f
STOKER SERVICE. A U MAKIS
DAY OR NIGHT
GROVE STOKER SERVICE
L A G r m
n o w 735-W -4
CARLOAD
Just Received
Reinforcing Bars
STEEL • DEFORMED
Va" to I Va" — All Lengths
Cement Products Co.
405-11 Henderson Ava.
Fhona 1565
HOMEOWNERS
LET US PLACE YOUR
ORDER NOW FOR A
SUNFLO
HOT WATER
HEATING PLANT
AND INSURE YOURSELF
OF A WARM HOME
NEXT WINTER
Fraa fstrmeta — Ha Obligation
i SUN HEATING CO.
28 N. Liberty St.
Phono 3270
t id in g
AVAILABLE!
Locust Posts
Fence Palings
Grape Arbor Strips
Now it tho tim* to repoir
that fence or Arbor
SOUTH CUMBERLAND
PLANING MILL CO.
Q m m St. at I
I 0It. t. Phons K i t
With several years experience in the
Retail Shoe Busine**. Man selected
must be between the ages of 25 to
45. capable of assuming complete
management of our Shoe Depart
ment.
Excellent salary and bonus with
chance for advancement.
Montgomery Ward & Co.
157 Baltimore St.
Cumberland
WALLPAPER cleaned.
Interior painting.
Phone 2517-R
Benefaction guaranteed
PAPER HANGING WANTED
PHONE 105-W-4
INTERIOR A Exterior painting. General
Repairing A Roofing. Ray Butner. Phone
4152-R.
SPECIALIZED wallpaper cleaning and all
torte of housecleaning. Phone 2l**-R.
WALLPAPER
NEW 5 room Spanish xlyle house, beth,
garage, aurin air heat. ideated on corn
er of Utah and Michigan Ave. Immed
iate possession
Phone 459*.
TWO farm*. «
Old to* n-Flli
and
all
tier’
111 South Bl
north of Oldtown. on
’••i e Road. House*, barn*
outbuildings.
Apply
Cum berland.
Will buy single or double dwelling* In city
or outlying districts.
Immediate cash set
tlements.
Lazarus & Trailer
l l N Liberty St.
Kune 3270
LOTS. acreage. Braddock Road, develop
ing section, near city.
Terms.
Clay
ton. 1S79-M
3-2-tf
It’s Wards for better wallpaper.
Over 300 patterns to choose from
Some washable, some embossed.
From 10c to $3.00 tingle r o
l l ______
Montgomery-Word & Co.
*• “
r‘
157 Baltimore St.
Cumberland
real fatate bought, sold. exchanged
Glen
Watson, 213 Virginia Ava
3-l-tf
9 ROOM frame house, located corner Park
At and Central ^v*. Phone 103H-W after
ft P rn
air heating Alex Rchute, 2258
Fully Guaranteed Roofs
installed with
B arrett R o o fin g M a te ria l
Any type roof— finished lobs
BILLY PURL INSU LATIO N
A N D ROOFING CO.
Phone 2497_______________P. 0 . Box 1195
49-A— Typewriters, Service
YOU CAN turn the task ot attle or base
ment cleaning Into a profitable adven
ture II you salvage the things you don’t
want and offer them for sale through the VETERAN badly need* * or * room
for Sale ads
‘
Phone 304-ll
Pf HE destroyed home-W oman and five
children In need of small house. Phone
1*31 between * and I p rn
GRIN A N D SEAR IT
I M * y
GOAR ANTEED repairs, all m akes adding
machines, typewriters. Cumberland Bust-'
ness Service
Phone 3**7
2-9-tf
4 3 - A —
P r o fe s s io n a l S e rv ic e s
37— Musical Merchandise
INSTRUCTION
On Al) Instrum ents
Faculty of Expert Teachers
STEW ART M U SIC HOUSE
114 Grata* St.
n o w 1214
bet*
CORNER
CHINA CASES
Glazed Doors Above
Panelled Doors Below
PRICE $40
Medicine Cabinets
Beautiful and Practical
PRICE 514 50
OAK FLOORING
Lower Grades Only
BUCHANAN LUMBER CO.
549 N. CENTRE ST
PHONE 1270
CUMBERLAND. MD.
31— Help Wonted
New 1947
R.C.A. Victor
RADIO-
PHONOGRAPH
CLASSICAL aid
POPULAR
RECORDINGS
AUCTIONEER
Floyd P. Grace
Phone ft ft*-J-4
PRIVATE DETECTIVE
All Types of Investigations Including
Domestic — Strictly C onfidential
24 Hour Phone Bendee
TRI STATE DETECTIVE SERVICE
814 Liberty Trust Bldg.
Phono 21*1
MUSIC SHOP, Inc.
5 S. Liberty St.
Phone 3230
Remodeling or Building?
BlmM
Blaienrlnle smA
r ic*we, ■ m eprvers w e
Spoof tcottaea
GEORGI C ROEDER
Allotee* I n
RECORD
R e ^ A
D
H
C
RADIOS,
PLAYERS K
C
W
K
U
B
ALBUMS
e
Used Records 15c Each
•
ENTERPRISE AMUSEMENT CO
126 PL Contra St.
Phono 3833
USED RECORDS I Sc each - 2 for 25c
All Leto Numbers
Supreme Amusement Co.
t i Bedford St.
Phono *4
Open B ranlngs Until •
OAK
KILN
dried
flooring,
tongue
and
grooved end m atched, alt grades, lim it
ed quantity, delivery anywhere. Penna.
Lumber A Poet Co. Inc., Hyndman, Pa.
Phone Hyndman 13._____________________
BOOTING 2. 3 end 4-ply—Shingles. *4.7*
eg
Liberty Hardware Co.______________
TREK ESTIMATES
Cellobriek. Inftulbrlck.
Flinted*.
36
m onths
to
pay.
Phone
3 500-J_____________________________
Year Around Home f^omfort
INSULATE
Perfection Blown Rock Wool
BILLY PURL INSULATION CO.
Phone 2497
P O Bo* 1195
SHORT order and steam table cook. Apply
Queen City Hotel.
DRAIN TILE
Four Inch Diam eter
Round
Drain Tile
Im m ediate Delivery
Cumberland Hales Co
Mi
Savage R efractories C o. MI. Savage.
Md
Phone Mf
Savage 3571
CEMENT BLOCKS
It
* A Panel
Para 24c. Limestone 20<
FOB
Plant
Phone 2664 W-1
CRESAPTOWN BLOCK PLANT
INSULATE!
ROCK
W OOL
Hew Blowing Method—Free Estimate*
L A Y PLUMBING CO. .
Pinto. Md.
Phone Cumberland 1528-W
STATE O F MARYLAND
STATE EMPLOYMENT
COM M ISSIONER
22 LIO H T S T . BALTO.-2. MD.
PERMANENT POSITIONS
INSURING FUTURE SECURITY
AUTOMATIC INCREASES
IN SAURY
LIBERAL VACATION AND
SICK LEAVE AND
RETIREMENT IINEFITS
Applications m ust be m ailed not
later th an April IS, 1947 to fill the
following vacancies
In th e S tate
aervlce:
Superintendent, Men tot
Due ase Hospital ll . . . . . . .$5320-6650
Superintendent, Mentol
Disease Hospital III
4820-6025
W D. OWENS. COM M ISSIONER
★ RECORD MART ★
243 Va. Av* near 3rd.
Piton* 3922
• RECORDS. P U Y E R S
• RADIOS
• MUSICAL B0X£$
• ALBUMS, let.
Juke Box Sales
NEW A USED
N O R M A N DEE
301 N. Centre St.
Piton* 800
38— Lott and Found
LOST- In McCrory'*. Suit In Rosenbaum’s
package. Mrs. Gerald Clayton, Box 2.
Cresaptown. Reward.
LOST:
Lady's
brown
pocketbook,
by
Memorial Hospital, Saturday night. Call
Springfield. W
Va
142-F-52 Reward.
LOST: Brown leather billfold, In S trand
theatre.
Tuesday
evening.
Contained
leave papers. Finger keep currency. WU-
liam Louis R alth. Phone 1531.
In Maryland tho Solution it:
CLAY DETECTIVE A G EN C Y
Commercial Bank Bldg., P. O. Box l l
Phono Cumberland 324, iveningx 4057-W
Persona)
Civil.
Crim inal,
Industrie
Investigations.
Domestic
Cases.
Miming
Persons.
Patrol
Service
for
Properties
30 YEARS
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
3-2-1 Wk.
SO— Upholstering
BOWLING GREEN
Pour Room Modern Bungalow Ha* Mod
ern Bath And Kitchen
G arage in Base
m ent. Large Corner Lot. *7000 00.
BEDFORD STREIT
Modern Eight Room House W ith Steam
Heat, Bath. Large Lot. 99500 OO.
139 ACRE FARM
Located at th* Foot of Polish M ountain.
One Mile From Hist* Highway, la This
139 Acre Farm
W ith Six
Room House.
B arn, Outbuildings. $2500 OO.
HOW ARD M. SPIKER,
20 South Contr* St., Piton* 2676
UPHOLSTERING
BRODE BROTHERS
Furnitur* Repair* and Recovering
HO HENRY ST
PHONS 999
51— Wawtad To Bog
WE FAY from *19 to *25 for your idle I
Binger Sewing Machine. Hinger s Hewing
Center, 79 N. Centre St. Phono 394
•-I-tf-T
WANTED— Rabbits 4 pounds up. Shober'
R estaurant. Phone 925.
1-20-tf-T
ICE refrigerator. Phone 1945-MX.
COUPE. '3* or *39. not convertible
State
condition
and
price.
P. O.
Bo*
178.
Barton. Md
"My t foil Me was tieing th o Mmn-snvlnff ta rom * ton farm OMI
bf filled out in 5 m inutes— I got 6 years for •Panton*!'*
PR OOA0LY T M M MG
WATCHED. AtOVC ALL.!
MUSTN'T MUtotV.X MUST
TAKI MN HMC. WALK $10*
LY DOWN TUI HOAC JU T
W CJL0
PHOTO-COPY
CALLED
"photostats'
BLUEPRINTS
Black & White Prints
S. P. Hendricks
24 Queen City Pavement
PHONE 2088 W
SURVEYING #1 GREENE
STREET
v C I U N O
PHONE 1040-lf
CARL A LOW R eentered
ACCOUNTING
• Bookkeeping Service
• Audit*
M ARVIN J. KAPLON
28 N. Liberty St.
Phono 3270, 3320 W
43 B— Phafagraplij
FILMS
EASTMAN, ANSCO
GA VERT, UNIVEX
Movie A
Roll—* A I* mm. Kodaohrom*
CHANEY S CIGAR STORE
C*ntra 6 Frederick Street*
LOST Sunday—*um of money and 2 rings
Liberal rew ard. Phone 309-J.
LOST
Large shopping bag full of m er
chandise In M urphy’s. Return to Mur-
phy’s or IO Eutaw Place.
STATE O F MARYLAND
8TA TE EMPLOYMENT
COM M ISSIONER
22 LIO H T S T . SALTO -2. MD.
PERMANENT POSITIONS
INSURING FUTURE SECURITY
AU TOM ATIC INCREASES
IN SALARY
LIBERAL VACATIO N AN D
SICK LEAVE AND
RETIREMENT BENEFITS
Applications m ust be m ailed not
later th a n April 15, 1947 to fill the
following vacancies in
the S tate
service:
Messenger
....................................................................$1300-1625
Principal Clerk ................. 2000 2500
Reception C le rk ................. 1600-2000
TAYLOR LUMBER CO.
Im ™
m Potomac H I
Phone 3377 Ste tint ic ion I ........................... 2800 3500
Stenographer Secretary
2200 27SO
INSULATED BRICK
INSULATED STONE
SIDING
We Sell the M aterial* or Install
the Complete Job.
3 Years To Pay!
WRITE BOX 398-8 c o TIMES NEWS
Taylor Made
Door Fram es,
W indow Fram es a ith flash
39 - M lic*Rflm pg9
BLOCK
LAYING
cement
work.
W
A
McKinney.
HIO
Ashland
Ave.
Phone
238ft-W.
D. L. Tichnell refrigeration
service,
all
make*. Phone 1584-J or 1502-R.
FURNITURE
Repaired,
refinished
Any
condition.
49
Blocker
Bt.,
Ridgeley,
2679-M
3-18-loin
WK REPAIR all make* of sewing machine*
Singer Sewing Center. Phone 394
CARPENTER WORK—GENERAL REPAIRS
Roofing repairs. Phone 4209-W.
Films -• Finishing
SAWYER VIEWMASTERS
H S
MERA
O P - a d
J.
H
DEAN DELIVERY SERVICB
Light Hauling. Phone 1009
CONCRETE and masonry contracting. Call
George C. Roedrr. Allegany Inn.
WASHERS repaired, any make. Also re
pairs on electric Irons, sweepers. Phone
591-J
Your Kodak Store
35 N. liberty St. 4040-W
iono Tuning
GENERAL repairs, carpentry
327-J-2 or 327-J-3.
rork. Phone
JOHNS -MANVILLE
Roofing, Siding Insulation
• Concrete Blocks
• Ready Mixed Concrete
THE CUMBERLAND
CEMENT A SUPPLY CO.
I m «1* Na C a am Slraat— fkaaa 2 5 2 5
111
— —
1 Manager IV
Sa/onei ta he announcod lotor
tor tho following daises
Supervisor, Multiple Switchboard
Lobar Market Analyst
Asst. Labor Market Analyst
Interviewer I
Interviewer ll
Rooting Shingles
36 months to pay
J. J. Grabenstein
401 Columbia St
Phone 108 W
W h e r T l r T N e e d O f A
POWER
LIGHT PLANT
Com# To Word's
We have th* following
size* available for
DELIVERY IMMEDIATELY
W D, OWENS, COM M ISSIONER
Heavy Hauling
Excavating
Power Shovel* & Dozers
RIGGING
W INCHES
CRANES
G C Sensabaugh, Inc.
Phones 1322 or 2422
Power Shovels
and Bulldozers
# EXC AV ATTI NO
• (SHADING
• TRENCH DIGOINO
Truck*.
Pumps.
Air
Compressors
and
Drills For Rock Ex vacating
Fill Oround and Top Boll
Baughman Contracting, Inc
Phone 4588
FIANO TUN INO and repairing. Belfort’*
Furniture and Pianos. Phone *36.
11-21-tf-h
45— Plumbing, Refrigeration
REFRIGERATION REPAIRS
All M okes — C om m ercial — Domestic
SCHURG'S REFRIGERATION SERVICE
Telephone 3S41-W
45-A— Printing, Signs
SEE OUR
LINE OF
Wedding Invitations, eta. — Kulm*
THE COMM ERCIAL
PRESS CO.
Mormon & S. Centre
Phone 72
PRI NTI NG
46— Radio*, Bervie#
32— H#lp Wanted Pi iwbIi
FLOOR
maids
Apply
Memorial Hospital.
Mr.
Newberry.
EX PKH I PNC ED waitress wanted. Must ap
ply in person. Queen City Hotel.
EXPERIENCED
woman
for
grinding
In
fliiishtrig room Only experienced person
need
apply.
Cumberland
Ola**
Co .
I wa Vale
W E L D I N G
All types Acetylene and Are
M achine R epairs Ae M achine Work
A nything
#
Anyplace
H.& S. Heating & Plumbing Co. IQS Baltimore Ave.
Authorized Dealers in
Airco Gases and Equipment
128 Polk S treet
Pi lone 2040
Radio Repairs
— Guaranteed Service —
CAPITOL ■SK T
Phone 1225
OLO BL AIP HOME? ! IF VOL) LL BE
, I CAN TELL YOU X ~^X SO GOCO.*
THE
YES
HOW TO FINO IT.*
NOW, WHAT CAN HE WANT IN THESE?
WHY, NOOOCXS BEEN BACK IN THERE.» ■
FOR YEARS.'
-
—
■
THE OLO HOME HAS BEEN LOCKED UP
ANO DESERTED FOP SO LONG IT S
KNOWN AS THE
Van's Radio Shop
IjOOO W att, 115 volt a. c.
2000 Wfltt. I l l rail a. c ....
1,000 Watt. H S volt i t
...
ABOVE PRICES P O I
We con toke your order
tot mnr size roo
$32500
463 00
519.00
WOMAN
tor
general
housework,
wsgr
Ltvr in
Phone .ItSILJ
Good 40— Motel W — thar»t ripping
PHONE 3566
IS HARRISON
Authorizod ZENITH Service
AM. WORK - PARTS GUARANTEED
WHITE lady as housekeejier, live in, pre-1
let shiv agr around .TO. all convenience!
Reference
m ildred
Bo*
401- B.
c-o
Tlmea-New*.
WOMAN conk. at night, apply in person
Buck's H ■>' nut ant. Baltimore Pike.
WAfTREHH
a anted
apply
Golden
R estaurant. 17 8. C entre Bt.
WOMAN
3992 -W
O s ie
to
Car*
for
children.
Phone
S3— H#lp Wanted M ilt
CARWABHER and
Janitor,
flood
salary
plus commissions
Thompson Buick C o,
429 N
Mechanic Bt
Phone 1470.
MAN
tor
gardening
and
outside
work.
Writ* Ho* .199 It c-o Tlmes-News.
"WE OEFY THE ELEMENTS?
DEFIANCE W EA THERSTRIP CO
Pradirtc* C. Hama_________________Phong 3083
CHAMBERLIN
Zinc
W*oth*rxt ripping
m d
Comhiaotioa
Storm
Windows
the
new
Aloetic
Screening.
|
FREI ESTIMATES
’ HON* 43551
RADIO SERVICE
STANDARD CO.
NTKCIAI.IZKD PHONOGRAPH hkRVIO*
77 N
Centre St.
Phone 4001
EXPERT
4 1 —
M o v i n g , S t e r e g e
MONTGOMERY W ARD & CO
1*7 B aiu in or* SU Cum berland, M d.
i
S YOUNO .veterans, single, free to travel.
Living
expense*
and
transportation
furnished
Paid weekly. Must be neat.
White only. Men selected must tie pre
pared to leave with me Friday. Bee Mr.
Hawkins
Foil Cumberland Hotel, ll a.
a lo J p. rn. Friday only. Don I phone.
Local Moving
Baggage Transfer
PICKUP 4 DELIVERY SERVICE
Cloyd L Chaney
RADIO
SERVICE
PICK UP &
e p e e
DELIVERY
r K C C
City's Best Service Equipment
NATIONAL RADIO LABORATORIES
Piton* 1009
R*ar 34 Virginia Av*.
216 Cheries St.
WENTLING
RADIO SALES
PROMPT and EXPERT REPAIRS
On All Make* Radios
CAU. POR AND DELIVER
Phono 1599 107 Bedford St.
IT
Phone 1600
TWENTY-EIGHT
THE CUMBERLAND
NEWS,
CUMBERLAND,
MD.,
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4 ,
1 94 7
Three County Mines Are ^ Veterans Want
County Lots On
Closed By
300 Miners Made
Idle By Action
7 hree la r^e co a l o pera tio ns
in Alleg a ny co unty , emplo y ing
a b o ut 3 0 0 miners a nd pro duc
ir^ a ro und 1 5 0 0 to 20 0 0 to ns
o í co a l da ily were included in
t h e “ sa fety shut-do wn o rder”
o f Secreta ry o f Interio r Krug ,
relea sed y esterda y .
The
W avn esburg Min es of the
Georges Creek Coal Com pan y lo
cated at Lon acon in g, employ in g over
130 min er* an d prod ucin g 700 ton *
of coa] a d ay 1* the Wiry eat of the
three operation s on the “close-d own ’’
ord er.
Two operation s of the Con soli
d ated Purl
Com pan y ,
employ in g
•bout 170 men an d prod ucin g over
900 ton » d aily were also n amed .
They are Min e No. 10, located at
Fckhart employ in g about 130 men
•n d m in in g aroun d 700 ton s d aily ;
an d Min e No. 3 a t Hoffman , pro
d ucin g aroun d 250 ton * d ully , with
•0 1«» ft© men employ ed
lrt» pe< lor*» Ijp rm w Sui |irln r
George* Creek Coal Com pan y has
offices in C um berlan d an d head
quarter* of Con solid ated Fuel Com
pan y is at Frost burg
O ther opera
of both com pan ies were n ot af
State Police Plan
Communications Aid
S tate Police an n oun ced last
n ight th a t they will provid e
all assistan ce passible when an
emergen cy e x i s t s requirin g
com m un ication s in the even t
of a telephon e com m un ica
tion s failure.
Cpl. C. A. Disn ey , of the
LaVale barracks of th e S tate
Police, said th a t should em er
gen cy com m un ication s be re
quired a t an y given tim e an d
poin t,
the
person s
in volved
should d isplay a w hite flag
which can be m ad e from an
old sheet, or towel, etc*.
S tate Police cars on patrol
will be* in structed to be on the
particular alert for this sign al
an d if it is observed will pro
vid e such assistan ce as is pos
sible, he ad d ed .
The w hite flag, accord in g to
Cpl Disn ey , will be recogn ized
as a perm an en t stan d ard d is
tress sign al.
Work Stoppage Ended
Holland Street
At M t. Savage Plant
A total of 32 veteran s have filed
requests w ith the Board of Coun ty
Commission ers for the purchase of
lots on Hollan d Street, it was re
vealed
y esterd ay
a t
the
regular
board meetin g.
An en ablin g act was passed by
the legislature. C harles N. W ilkin
son , Jr., presid en t of the board ex
plain ed , perm ittin g th e coun ty toj
set up a plan to sell this lan d for|
home con struction .
Quarterly Postal
Receipts Show
52,000 Increase
G reater use of m etered machin es
The act was in trod uced in the
locaI fir™s was listed y esterd ay
G en eral Assembly , he said , after by postal officials as on e of the fac-
W illiam R. Carscad en , an o ffic e rj^ rs ir>
the in crease of approx i-
of the V eteran s N on -Profit Housin g m ately $ 2.000 of jx istal receipts at
C orporation , appeared b e f o r e th r
Cum berlan d Past Office for
board ,
askin g
th a t
this lan d
beithe M arch quarter as com pared
to
m ad e available for home build in g
Contract Of Brick
Workers Extended
of
At th a t time. C arscad en ex plain ed
V> the commission ers th a t the Vet
eran * Housin g G roup has plan s for
the sam e period last y eai
Receipt* totaled $ 71.763.33, as com
pared to the 1946 M arch quarter
total
of
$ (¡¡*,« 03.95.
Record
for
d evelopin g the section as a mod el ! ^r,)SS receipts in an y M arch quar
ti on >
fecied by th r ord er, it was In d icai-
•a.
D istrict m in e in spectors of M ary
lan d were con tacted an d they said
they kn ew oi n o serious safety viola
tlon * at an y of these operation * an d
pressed
some
surprise at the
min e* listed
The shut-d ow n ord er
l* of course a fed eral ord er, an d the
state in spector» *» e n ot in volved in
aiiv wav
Fed eral in spector*
make |>er iod ic
In spection » of min es in tills coun ty
as well a* other jmrt* of tiii* d ls-
f ct, workin g out of Fairm on t, W
Va.
Recommen d s!ion * m ad e by
t'< m have gen erally been complied
with, operators an d local In spectors
in d icated .
gen erally kn own th a t there
Louis Bromfield
To Address Local
Service Clubs
It
>~h be« n a fire in the Hoffman Min e
for n early a cen tury , but Hue fire
t a> alway s been kept un d er con trol,
an d un til n ow it has n ot been foun d
o bjectio na ble.
It was learn ed there have been
c m plain ts about air in the W ay n es-
burg m in e as well as the E ckhart
operation , but con d ition s were d e
scribed by m in ers as “n ot as bad
a* aome other operation s.”
M in ers Are Puzzled
W hen told th a t the W ay n esburg
operation was shut d own by the
fed eral ord er on e m in er commen ted ,
“I can 't un d erstan d th at. It's really
on e of our best min es an d the m in
ors there are all ex perien ced work
men .
The m an agem en t has gen
erally d on e a pretty fair job in ob
servin g safety regulation s "
A n other m in er also commen ted
th ai the
Kckhart
an d
Hoffman
m in es have been kept in reason ably
""*■ con d ition , an d
the
accid en t
ter was n et in 1945. when heavy
overseas m ailin g of packages an d
airn riil letters to servicem en boost
ed th e total to $ 87,972.
M etered m achin es in the M arch
quarter this y ear provid ed an ln -
crase of $ 3,300 over 194« reven ues
d urin g the sam e period from th a t
ce
» Sale of
• i am p
l»i ought
Hie Veteran * N on -Profit H ousin g!*70®;17 ,es* th n n |M the
quar
ter but th a t d ecrease was more than
com m un ity , an d requested the right
to buy th e en tire tract.
In the m ean tim e, a total of 32
veteran s have applied for th e right
to purchase the lan d , an d com
m ission ers n ow plan to m ake pro-
virlon * for sellin g ft for n ew home*,
un d er some satisfactory an d work
able pro g ra m
Conservation Meeting
Planned On May 27
safe
rale at all three of the closed ope
ration * has been low.
Coal
m in ers an d
own ers
alike
(Co n tin u ed o n Pa g e a . Co l. s)
Power Sprayer
Arrives For Use
In Fly Control
A n ew large power spray er, for
u © in this coun ty ha* arrived , an d
member* of the Allegan y Coun ty
Farm Bureau. spon sors of the spray
in g project have selected William
lo a r, r hslrm an , Theod ore fitegm aier
an d W ii John son a* a com m ittee
to set up « fx >llt y an d proced ure oí
operat ion
A solicitation of all d airy m en In
the section is to be mad e
so a
*i bed ule can be set up, R alph F
McHen ry , coun ty farm agen t ex
plain ed y esterd ay .
Plan * are bein g m ad e so actual
operation of the spray er can lirgin
» l>>ut the mid d le of n ex t m on th,
M Hen ry said , ex plain in g th a t it I*
to be used for fly con trol on d airy
farm* etc He staled th a t a te n ta
tive sched ule of rate* ha* been set
up to charge each user
$ 3 for the
trip to hir farm an d 15 cen t* a gal
lon for all spray used .
T h r ten tative plan con fid e* Die
m e of the *|>ray to barn * an d other
build in g.*, because It i* d ifficult to
©;>rrate such a large spray in g m a
chin e mi a small scale,
M cHen ry said it may be possible
to use the m achin e for Japan ese
BeeUe an d Elm Ijeaf Beetle con trol
In section s where there are large
n umber* of tree* ami shrubs, but It
will be im practical to use it on in
d ivid ual
trees,
vegetable
gard en *,
tfiruh* e tc . where the**» are isolated
The m achin e 1* n ot available for
use with an y thin g ex cept DI>T, an d
for the presen t, at least. McHen ry
•aid , it w ill be u*ed alm ost ex clus
ively for d airy barn * an d other farm
build in gs.
A d em on straUon of the m achin e
1«
bein g plan n ed , an d
the Farm
Bureau plan s to meet n ex t week to
furth er throe arran gem en t*
F urth er plan * for the appearan ce
here May 27 ol Louis Bromfield , n ot
ed author an d well kn own con serva
tion ist. were an n oun ced y esterd ay
by Harold W Sm ith, secretary of the
Cham ber of Commerce.
Prim arily
Bromfield ,
author
of
m an y books an d organ izer of the
Frien d s of the Lan d , a con serva
tion group, will come to Cum berlan d
I© ad d ress a public m eetin g on con
servation in Allegan y High School
aud itorium .
At n oon , however, he will ad
d ress a join t m eetin g of C um ber
lan d service clubs an d In the afte r
n oon he will in spect soil con serva
tion activities in Allegan y an d G ar
rett coun ties.
Bromfield , prior to th e n ight ad
d ress, will be a guest at d in n er at
the Ali G han S hrin e C oun try Club
which will be atten d ed by d irectors
of the C ham ber of Commerce, agn
culture
com m itteem en an d other
guests.
Amon g th e con servation ists cx
pected to atten d th e m eetin g a t the
high school are Russell Lord , Bel
Air, ed itor of “T he Lan d ,” publi
cation of the Frien d s of the Lan d ;
Dr. H. C. By rd , presid en t of the
Un iversity of M ary lan d ; Dr. T. B
Sy mon , d irector of the agriculture
ex ten sion service of th e Un iversity
of M ary lan d ;
H. C. Buckin gham ,
actin g
state
forester,
an d
other
fierson * in terested in con servation
in M ary lan d an d n eighborin g West
Virgin ia an d Pen n sy lvan ia.
Bromfield
was first approached
about two y ear* ago to participate
In the Con servation Forum held here
in November 1945, but was un able
t© atten d because of other com m it
men t*.
He resid es on a 790-acre
farm n ear Man sfield . Ohio.
John D. Liebau is chairm an of
tiie C. of O. agriculture com m ittee
C orporation will d iscuss the propo
sition at a m eetin g ton ight, accord
in g to W illiam B. O rn d orff, who
ex plain ed th a t the group has com
pleted Its plan * an d Is prepared to
begin con struction on
houses for
veteran s as soon a* lan d Is avail
able.
T he Housin g G roup plan s to build
houses in un it* of
10 i n r i i v id un l
d wellin gs a t a tim e, an d has m ad e
arran gem en t* to get m aterial
as
n eed ed to com plete the project with
as little cost an d d elay as possible
Prelim in ary work has alread y been
d on e for the con struction of a mod el
home
for d isplay
to the
public,
O rd n orff said , an d actual con struc
tion 1* to *tart w ithin a few d ay s.
T he Hollan d Street, tra c t In clud es
34 lot* with a fron tage of 50 feet
each, an d 32 in d ivid ual application s
have been filed , in ad d ition to the
request of th e V eteran s Housin g
C orporation , which rc
veteran s alread y reglsti
Those w*ho subm itted letters to
the commission ers y esterd ay in clud e,
John F. S chaid t III, 24 W ashin gton
S treet; Earl E. Davis, 820 M aple
wood Lan e; C harles F. Shum aker,
41 Race S treet; Jaseph W. Hogan ,
324 Beall S treet; John F. Palm er,
431 C hestn ut S treet; an d Jo h n E.
Rosen m erkle, 217 G len n S treet.
offset by the In crease in m etered
reven ue, officials said .
O th er
factors
in
the
in crease
were
listed
as greater box ren ts,
which showed n n in crease of ap
jprox im ately $100, an d larger rcve
n ues from han d lin g of secon d class
mail.
Although the d em an d for
post office box es is gren t. on ly a
very limited n um ber of sm all box es
is available a t presen t, it was s ta t
er!.
C an cellation s of mall d urin g flie
period totaled
1.496.033,
ex clud in g
mall han d led a t S tation A on Vir
gin ia Aven ue an d m eter mailin gs,
represen tin g
an in crease of 7,(Mio
over the M arch quarter total last
y ear.
Officials poin ted out th a t the un
certain ty ol appropriation s for the
Pr» st Office
D epartm en t
probably
preven t the local office from
will
•presen ts 120 PXpfirKUn * its services, in clud in g the
¿red .
n eed ed
ex ten sion
of
rural
mall
routes, but presen t services will n ot
be affected .
First Presbyterian Plans
Easter Music Selections
Musical selection * to !>e presen t
ed at Easter services .Sun d ay m orn
in g at First
Presby terian C hurch
are as follows;
At the 9 a. m. service, John 0.
Orid ley , organ ist, an d Miss Max in e
Con rad , pian ist, will play the d uet,
“Crown Hin i with M an y T hom s.”
The Jun ior choir will sin g “Sprin g
Tid e“ an d the sen ior choir will sin g
“By Early M orn in g Light.”
O rid ley ’*
offertory
» election
at
both services will iw* B ach’s “Air
for O .Strin g,” an d the organ p re
lud e for the secon d service a t 11 a.
m. will lie the H allelujah Chorus
from
H an d el’s
o r a t o r i o ,
‘"The
M essiah.” The sen ior choir will sin g
"By Early M orn in g Light” at the
secon d service, an d "Alleluia, Christ
I* Risen ”
B. And 0. Man's
Hand Is Injured
H arry Hoblitzell, 24, 221 Carroll
Street, was treated in Allegan y Hos
pital y esterd ay aftern oon for a right
han d in jury . He told attaches he
was in jured
when
an 85 poun d
weight fell upon his han d as he was
workin g at th e B. an d O. m achin e
shops. He was able to leave the hos
pital after a cast was applied .
Also treated in Allegan y y esterd ay
aftern oon were Miss Jan e H arris,
« 4. 417 C en tral Aven ue, after she
ran a n eed le in to the mid d le fin ger
of her right han d , an d M arvin F
Ross, 26. Wiley Ford . W Va., who
said a piece of glass pierced his
han d Saturd ay .
A 19 -y ear-old tx ry escaped In jury
when a truck S tate Police said was
operated by Navy Lt. Com m an d er
W alter N. Hed rick. R oute 5, this
city , struck his bicy cle on Route 220
a t Bowlin g G reen W ed n esd ay a fte r
n oon .
Trooper T hom as O. B arton Id en
tified the boy as Jon Rosen berger.
Route « , an d sn id the m ishap took
place when the lad m ad e a left turn
In fron t of the truck. No charges
were preferred .
Orn a Ritchie, 19, Old town . was
treated in M emorial Hospital last
n ight after he cut the little fin ger of
his left han d with a butcher kn ife.
See's Father Sits
On House Rostrum
CHURCHES, PUBLIC
OFFICES TO MARK
GOOD FRIDAY HERE
Speech Correction
Lessons Started
W. G. Beier Elected
Governor Of Moose
William
G
Belcr, Green e
S treet grocer, was elected gov
ern or of Cum berlan d
Lod ge
No 271. Loy al Ord er of Mon a©,
d efeatin g the I n c um b e n t
Fran k J Davis, who was seek-
n r his Mx th on mcrutiv© term.
A total of 205 mem bers cast
f * 1
in the Iiot 1 y con tested
• « tlon , with Davis bein g d e-
* fed by more than a two-to-
on e vote.
Ern est B T r e a t led the
ticket to be re-elected secre-
U n
Charles E P e t t i e wa*
eierted jun ior govern or n n d
*
vf
et j Clark wa* chosen
t re« * in er
H a m F lain n on w*» « elect
ed prelate;
A rthur F. Row©
w a* chosen three-y ear trus
tee;
Fran k
C.
Trozzo
was
n am ed trustee for on e y ear
an d
Joseph
L
Wolfe
was
e!e< fi d altern ate to the su
preme lod ge con ven tion
lir e n ewly elected officer*
will be in stalled at a special
ceremon y April
17. an d will
avum e their d uties May 1.
Fifteen coun ty child ren . In clud
in g n in e child ren of pre-school age,
with
speech
d ifficulties
received
th eir first lesson In speech correc
tion y esterd ay a t head quarters of
Allegan y Coun ty 1-eugue for C rip
pled C hild ren Irom
Miss
R. Jean
Forbes, who assumed her d uties here
Tuesd ay as speech correction ist lor
the league.
¿Screen in g of child ren with speech
d ifficulties will be completed tod ay ,
an d a regular clin ic sched ule will la*
put in to operation n ex t week. Miss
Forbes said .
Paren ts will la* given
in struction s
In
con tin uin g
the
speech lesson * a t home, in ad d ition
to lesson s twice a week for each
child at league head quarters.
Coal Production In
Increases
County
In 194« . an estim ated 962,511 ton s
of coal was prod uced in Allegan y
Coun ty , an in crease of n early 8,000
ton * over the 1945 output accord in g
to a report prepared by the M ary
lan d Bureau of Min e*,
S trip m in in g in G a rrett Coun ty
prod uced 193,664 more ton * of coal
In 1946 than in 1945, with the total
am oun t of coal min ed am oun tin g to
1.003.(¡81
in
1941» as compared to
824,627 the previous y ear.
On the other han d , prod uction of
fire clay in Allegan y Coun ty d e-
cre used to on ly 44.298 ton s In 194«
us com pared 0 » 50,773 ton s in 1945
Fire
clay
prod uction
showed
an
In c lease of 20,000 ton s in G a rrett
Coun ty last y ear, however, with a
total prod uction of 27,977 ton s as
compared to the 1945 total of 7,261.
Good Frid ay , a legal holid ay In
M ary lan d , will be observed here to
d ay with *i>eeial church services an d
with ban ks an d aome puMic offices
closed all d ay .
Easter vacation s began In Cum
berlan d schools y esterd ay an d In
some cases will n ot en d un til n ex t
Thursd ay . Public schools d ismissed
a t 1 p. m. y esterd ay an d classes will
resume Tuesd ay m orn in g. St. P a t
rick’s will n ot sta rt un til Thursd ay ,
while SS. P eter an d Paul, U rsultn e
an d St. M ary 's will resume on W ed
n esd ay .
W hile a sm all n um ber of m er
chan ts will close their « tores in ob
servan ce of Good Frid ay , there has
been n o con certed action in th a t
d irection an d
others will rem ain
open .
T he Court House will be closed
all d ay an d City Hall will rem ain
open on ly un til n oon . T rial Magis
trates Court an d Police C ourt will
be closed un til S aturd ay m orn in g.
Good Frid ay services will la* held
In m ost Cum berlan d churches with
a three-hour service on the Seven
Word s of C hrist to lie held In C en
tre S treet M ethod ist Church
1>e-
gin n ln g a t n oon . Special music will
be provid ed a t virtually all services
An un usual hon or w*as accord ed
Amos E. See, 77-y ear-old fath er of
Delegate C harles M. See, when he
w en t to An n apolis on the last d ay
of the Legislature to accom pan y his
son back to Cum berlan d .
M on d ay n ight th e eld er Mr. See
wen t to the S tate House to atten d
the fin al session of th e House of
Delegates an d was in trod uced an d
in vited to th e rostrum by Speaker
Ferd in an d Svbert.
Delegate See an d Delegate Horn ce
P. W hitw orth, Jr., chairm an of the
Allegan y Coun ty d elegation , accom
pan ied the form er’s fath er to the
rostrum where he sat an d observed
the last half hour of the proceed
in gs.
On their own In itiative, the m em
bers of the House stood an d ac
cord ed the eld er Mr. Si p an ovation
when h<* was In trod uced . Delegate
See, w'ho i* still at a loss to kn ow
how Speaker Sy toert kn ew of his
fa th e r’« presen ce, savs hi* father
received “quite a th rill” from the
ex perien ce on his first visit to the
Legislature.
Followin g th e session ,
Delegate
an d Mrs. See. th eir n ephew, G len n
K. Davis, an d th e eld er Mr. See
atten d ed a d in n er a t Carvel Hall
with
the other m em bers of the
coun ty d elegation
W ed n esd ay n ight th e eld er Mr.
See, a retired Baltim ore an d Ohio
R ailroad forem an , who lives at 23
Fifth Street, was presen ted with a
50-y ear m em bership pin by Coun cil
49, Jun ior O rd er of U n ited American
M echan ics.
The three-d ay work stoppage
145 employ es of the Mt. Savage re
fractories
plan t
en d ed
y esterd ay
aftern oon when an agreem en t was
reached between the com pan y an d
Local
193.
U n ited
Con struction
W orkers, to ex ten d th e old con tract
with th e in clusion of three n ew
stipulation s.
The stoppage began Tuesd ay when
the men failed to report for work
because of the lack of a con tract,
accord in g to David W atkin s, in ter
n ation al represen tative of the un ion .
W alter Blan k, plan t m an ager, said
the stoppage was d ue to m isin ter
pretation by un ion officials of on e
clause in the com pan y ’s proposal.
W atkin s said last n ight th a t the
men are read y to return to work
"right n ow." but both he an d Blan k
said they will n ot work tod ay In ob
servan ce of Good Frid ay . Prod uction
will resum e Saturd ay .
T hree Stipulation *
New stipulation s ex ten d in g
the
<»1<I eon tm et which ran from April I,
1946, to m id n ight M arch 31, 1947,
follow:
1. Pay workers at the m in e the
sa me rate as lh al paid by Big Hav-
age R efractories at Allegan y .
2. Make retroactive to April 1 an y
in crease in wages given to the re
fractory In d ustry after th e steel in
d ustry sets a wage pattern .
This
clause applies to first quality fire
brick on ly .
3. Give a wage In crease com par
able to th a t given to the build in g
brick an d d rain tile In d ustry in th*
local area, when an d if auch in
creases in wages take place
Accord in g to W atkin s the stipu
lation s agreed to ex ten d t he old con
tract for a period n ot to ex ceed 15
d ay s after the Big Savage R etrac-
tories an d lt* organ ization , lo cal
190, U n ited C on struction Workers,
con sum m ate an d sign a n ew agree
m en t.
W atkin s said there was n o mia-
un d erst an d in g Mon d ay to cause the
work stoppage but ad d ed th a t the
com pan y m ad e a proposal th e em
plo y es could n ot accept. The com
pan y m ad e the men an offer T ues
d ay in his absen ce, W atkin s said ,
an d it was refused . On W ed n esd ay ,
however, an un d erstan d in g was a r
rived a t an d the proposal was sub
m itted
to the un ion m em bership
y esterd ay
an d
accepted ,
W atkin s
ad d ed .
B lan k said th e M t. Savage re
fractories plan t operates en tirely on
a con tract basis, th a t is, each task
perform ed is on a per piece basis.
He
ad d ed
th a t
other
refractory
plan ts in th e area are on an hourly
base of $ 1.05 per hour, allowin g the
employ e take home pay of $ 8.40 per
d ay or $ 42 per week.
W ith the con tract sy stem In oper
ation a t Mt. Savage. Blan k said ,
D. John Markey
Will Speak At
VFW Installation
Kelly Employes Agree
To End Work Stoppage
Post And Auxiliary
Plan Join! Program
D. John M arkey of Fred erick, vet
eran of three wars an d a member
of Hen ry H art Past No. 1411, Vet
eran s of Foreign W ars, will be guest
sn eaker a t the in stallation of offi
cers of the local VFW post an d its
Lad ies
Aux iliary , Saturd ay ,
April
12. a t 7:30 p. m. in the Queen City
Hotel ballroom.
Post Com m an d er Ray m on d Rey
n old s, At the regular m eetin g of the
organ ization last n ight an n oun ced
th a t m embers, their husban d * an d
wives an d social m em bers may a t
ten d the Join t in stallation .
Thom as B. Fin an . Jr. local a tto r
n ey an d veteran of World W ar II.
will lie m aster of cerem on ies an d
will presen t Gen . Markey .
Lifetim e M ilitary Kerord
Well kn own here. Markey In re-
membered as a can d id ate last fall
for U n ited Stale* Sen ate, run n in g
again *I H erbert It O ’Con or, an d I« -
in g d efeated bv a n arrow margin ,
which lie still con test*.
He has been a m em ber of th r loc
al VFW ix ist for som etim e an d has
often been a visitor here. As a y outh
of 16, he ran away from home an d
en listed in the Army to serve in the
Son n igh Am erican W ar. He later a t
ten d ed th e U n iversity of M ary lan d
where he was a football star, an d
after
leavin g school
return ed
to
Fred erick.
Mn rkoy became In terested In the
N ation al G uard an d
In
1916. he
served on the Mex ican bord er as a,
m ajor In the First M ary lan d In -1
fan try . IJc was active in th r organ
ization or the 29th Division
an d
com m an d ed the 112th M achin e G un
B attalion attached to the 115th In
fan try . an d saw action In
Fran ce In
World W ar T.
W hen he return ed he was a lieu
ten an t, colon el an d ex ecutive officer
of the 115th In fan try . As the G uard
Whs reorgan ized , he became com
m an d in g officer of the 1st M ary lan d
Regim en t, N ation al G uard with the
ran k of colon el, an d served with the
G uard between wars.
Floor Show Plan n ed
W hen the G uard was mobilized
Just prior to World W ar II, Col.
M arkey wen t with the 1st Regim en t,
Quarterly Conference
Time Is Advanced
T he
Q uarterly C on feren ce
of
the
Cum berlan d
Circuit
M ethod ist C hurch, sched uled
to
be held ton ight
at 7:30
o'clock in Melvin M ethod ist
C hurch, has been ad van ced
to 7 o’clock. Rev. Jaseph W.
Youn g, pastor, an n oun ced last
n ight.
Rev. Mr. Youn g said it will
be
n ecessary
to
sta rt
the
service at 7 o’clock d ue to Dr.
W. F W right, d istrict super
in ten d en t.
havin g
to leave
C um berlan d a t 9 o'clock to
n ight.
The service will open
with special d evotion al* based
on "Seven Word s of C hrist on
the Cross” after which
the
busin ess session of the quart
erly con feren ce will be held .
Union Says Grievance
Will Be Presented
The
Kelly -Sprin gfield
Tire
Com pany reported at 11:39 last
n ight th a t the turn out of third
shift workers was “very good ”
an d
estim ated
th a t about 90
per cen t of the 700 od d employ es
on the shift reported for d utv.
Boston Estate
Trustees Sued
For $90,000
Bank Charges Loss
Of Funds In Action
A
d am age
suit for $ 90.000 w¡us
d ocketed In Circuit Court
y eMer-
d ay again st Aleck » Sloan an d Percy
•Sloan , formerly of Lon acon ln g, an d
the U n ited
State*
Fid elity an d
G uaran ty Com pan y of Baltim ore,
by T he ¿4 ta te of M ary lan d tor the
use of the Secon d Nation al Ban k,
trustee of the ©state of Thom as E.
B< mton .
An im m ed iate resum ption of work
at the Kelly -Sprin gfield Tire Com
pan y was pred icted last n ight by A.
E. John son , presid en t of Local 26,
IJn ittx t Rubber. Cork, Lin oleum an d
Plastic W orkers of America, CIO,
who said m em bers of the un ion vot
ed un an im ously to return to work
so th a t the grievan ce which led to
¡he
un authorized
work
stoppage
Tuesd ay m ight be processed in the
proper m an n er.
No Bivsen tin g Vote«
John son « aid there was n ot a d is
sen tin g vote when the question was
placed before the members at a
m eetin g held at 7 30 p m in Tex tile
Mall in oix ier to accom m od ate the
overflow crowd
Un ion official*, he wild , ex plain ed
thoroughly to the m em bership th a t
the officers can n ot han d le griev
an ces un til work 1* resumed .
John son said the woman who was
d ischarged
for refusin g work as
sign ed to her in the bead room has
a
grievan ce but said the m atter
should have been han d led tn the
regular m an n er as provid ed in the
con tract.
He poin ted out th a t the un ion has
recourse to arbitration in virtually
all d ispute* upon which the co m
pan y an d un ion can n ot agree The
two cases subm itted to arbitration
have resulted in victories for thr
un ion , he ad d ed
An y ho|w* on the part of com pan y
ami un ion officials for the resum p-
tion of n orm al prod uction sched ule*
y esterd ay was blasted
by secon d
shift workers who again refused tc
re-en ter the plan t un til the grtev-
Charle*
7,
Heskett, coun sel
for i,n rr w b,rh 1# ,d
the un authorized
the plain tiff, alleges that, the Sloan s
ms trustee* of the Boston estate,
have failed to give an accoun tin g of
fun d s,
Percy Sloan , has been em
ploy ed In Baltim ore in recen t y ears
an d
Aleck Sloan n ow resid es in
Frostburg.
Will Probated In 1929
Boston , a prom in en t Lon aron in g
when lt was combin ed w ith the 5th
»
*« “
ago an d his will was ad m itted to
to comprise the 115th Regim en t. He
became com m an d er of th e 115th.
but when th e age-in -grad e rule was
established an d he was d eclared
over age for combat, he was sen t to
Comp Pickett as camp com m an d er.Ir
,l" e ^ ' r™ u
w# » r» -» tiroH cn ma tin .o u» ..
„
Uoui t lequired the trusties to fui-
probate in April, 1929, in the O r
p h an s’ C ourt here. The Sloan s were
n am ed trustees of his estate, un d er
the term s of the will.
tim e later as a
He retired some
brigad ier gen et a I
Jo h n Pike, chairm an of the in
stallation com m ittee said last n ight
th a t a d an ce will follow the in stalla-
work stoppage was settled .
Prod uction ln rrra.se*
T7ie un ion presid en t reported at
3:30 p. m. th a t few employ es re
ported for work. A check of several
d epartm en ts, he said , showed on lv
about 10 per cen t of the force at
work.
John son said the workers reported
they would n ot go back to work un
til the com pan y rein stated the girl
whose d ischarge led to th e walkout
in the bead room Tuesd ay a fte r
n oon .
Prod uction on the first shift y es
terd ay was better th an W ed n es
d ay
an d
plan t
officials
had
re
take hom e pay ran ges from $ 10 to tIon with music by th e Diplomats.
Commissioners Get
Orphans' Court Budget
for
The O rphan s C ourt bud get
1947-48. was presen ted to the C oun
ty Commission ers y esterd ay by A
C harles Stew art, register of Wills,
In prcparatIon of th e coun ty levy
list to I*» completed by April 15
T he bud get show* $ 3.744 a* the
am oun t n eed ed for salaries for the
three Jud ge* un til April 1. 1948. an d
a total of $ 1,133.42 for various of
fice ex pen ses such as In d ex in g re
cord in g etc.
Somerville Nicholson , sitjiervisor of
assessmen t*, recom m en d ed a red uc
tion In the assessm en t of Jen n ie an d
Joseph Yaksetich for property at
139-141 Win cow street, from $ 1.900
to $ 1.425, a t the request qf the prop
erty own ers.
The commission er* met y esterd ay ,
in -a*-m uch as the Court House Is
closed all d ay tod ay .
$ 12 per seven -hour d ay or from $ 60
to $ 72 per week.
“W ith such a sy stem we n eed n o
five cen ts an hour bon us to keep
men on th e job. The job Itself is
attractive en ough to elim in ate e n
tirely
all
absen teeism
from
the
plan t.
We have little or n o labor
trouble, an d the pre.sen t stoppage
was d ue to a m isun d erstan d in g as
stated before. Un ion represen tatives
an d officers were soon read y to
sign an agreem en t after they th o r
oughly un d erstood
the com pan y ’»
term s.”
L abor B ate
W atkin s d eclared th a t piece-work
rates paid at the n on -un ion Un ion
Fire Brick Com pan y plan t at Je n
n in gs “are n ot com parable” to the
higher rates a t th e un ion plan ts at
Mt. Savage an d Allegan y .
He said the recen tly an n oun ced
In crease to $ 1 an hour at the J e n
n in gs plan t is the labor rate A fivc-
cen ts an hour bon us also was in
clud ed at Jen n in gs for regular re
portin g to work, accord in g to a
com pan y an n oun cem en t.
W atkin s said the Jen n in gs plan t
in creased wages in an effort to keep
its employ es from Join in g a un ion .
The Good Frid ay holid ay at the
Mt. » Savage plan t, stem* from an
accid en t a n um ber of y ears ago In
which an employ e was killed , W at
kin s said he was in form ed .
Em
ploy es have n ot worked on Good
Frid ay sin ce th a t time, he ad d ed
Pupils of M ary K -tthery n Stcck-
m an ’s stud io will presen t a half-
hour floor show.
Fifteen veteran s of World W ar II
were ad m itted to post m em bership
last n ight, brin gin g the total to
1,890, for the curren t y ear.
News Briefs
Holben Leaves Estate
To His Widow And Son
The will of Calvin
A. Holben .
Frostburg In suran ce agen t who d ied
March 14. was Bird for probate in
Orphan s* C ourt y esterd ay .
He bequeathed his In terest In the
M etzger an d Holben In suran ce firm
to his son R ichard Holben , with a
provision th a t he pay a t least $ 20
weekly to his wid ow, Mrs. Floren ce
Holben . 'The son also receives an
autom obile an d th e balan ce of the
en tate Is left to the wid ow.
Drawn May 4. 1940. the will was
witn essed by Beatrice E. R ight, an d
Noel Spelr Cook. Richard Holben
wa* n am ed ex ecutor of the estate.
Odd Fellows Will
Observe Anniversary
The
128th
an n iversary celebra
tion of the O ld er of Od d Fellows
National Guard Must Be Enlisted
To Full Strength Major Declares
Dickey Wants 100 Men
For Two Local Units
| W ith .Selective Service en d ed , an d
the Army n o lon ger able to d raft
men , it Ls more
im portan t
than
ever, that N ation al G uard an d other
reserve un its of the n atio n ’s mill
Stolen Car Found
T he autom obile of Ray mon d J
». 109 East First » Street, stolen
lictwecn 10
7 u. m
will be held , un d er the auspices of j ♦ ,.v i.„ huiu n r»
#..n
♦
» V
U „ c w
n
No
5»
iííü l,
.
..ïî; ?" Ihckey , com m an d in g officer of the
May 2
The celebration will I*
held a t 8 o'clock. In the O ld Fel
lows temple, South M echan ic street.
T he program will be open ed with
a pray er by a local m in ister an d
will in clud e an ad d ress by a gucM
speaker from Baltim ore an d a mUN-
1* **1 program Earl C un n in gham will
presid e a* gen eral chairm an .
Mein lHT* of tlie RelH*kah otgan l-
zatioim will also participate, an d l>c
In charge of the social hour an d
serve refreshm en ts.
Visitors from other lod ges of the
area an d the public are in vited .
Assistin g
in
arran gem en t*
wd th
Mr C un n in gham are By ron Bon e-
|>. m. W ed n esd ay an d !brake an d Ray mon d Drake of Chos-
y esterd ay from it* parkin g en Frien d s Lod ge; Robert Youn g
l-i!l'r2L 1„ P|l rl$ ,f.tr<^!.'uW“ recover« | CI'» 1*!
Hill
Lod ur;
Mrs. Aiin i,
y esterd ay by City Police on C en tral Diehl an d Mr*
Aven ue.
Ibekah*.
Lan y Welsh, Re
First
Battalion .
First
Regimen t.
M ary lan d N ation al G uard said hust
n ight..
'Two local un its of the n ew N a
tion al G uard are bein g formed here,
an d the un its have alread y lx <en
recogn ized by the W ar D epartm en t.
M ajor Dickey ex pluin ed . A total of
300 men are n eed ed to fill the re-
qulrem en t* of these two organ iza
tion s.
In head quarters Compan y , he d e
clared , there are vacan cies for com
peten t
ty pists, clerks, com m un ica
tion s men , m echan ics an d m otor
d rivers, n s well as other m ilitary
occupation *. In Compan y C, the local
rifle un it, riflem en , m achin e gun
n ers,
in structors,
com m un ication s
men , an d specialists of all kin d s an
n eed ed .
Un d er the G uard set-up, mem-
Ihmn d rill on ce each wi» ek. n n d for
the presen t at
least,
both
local
un it* d rill a t the S tate Armory a t 7
p. m. each
W ed n esd ay . For two
hours d rill, each m em ber receives
a full d ay base pay as follows:
Private. $ 2 50; private. First Class,
$ 2.66; Corporal, an d Tec-5, $
3.00;
.Sergean t an d Tee-4, $ 3 33*
Staff
Sergean t an d Tec-3, $ 3 83; Techn ical
Sergean t, $ 4 50;
n n d
M aster an d
First Bergen n t, $ 5.50.
In ad d ition to this pay , which each
man receives every three m on ths in
a check from
the Un ited
Treasury for the d rills he atten d s,
un iform s an d equipm en t are fur-
n lahed without charge. Each m em
ber of the G uard
ha*
the free
use of the Armory an y tim e, an d has
use of all facilities there, In clud in g,
gy m n asium ,
showers
club
rooms,
rifle ran ge, etc.
Dickey said that an y men , over
18 y ears of age, who w an t to spen d
on e n ight a week, learn in g a n ew
trad e or speciality , or who w an t to
retain the ratin g they held at tim e
of d ischarge from the Army , an d
still m ake some ex tra mon ey , should
go to the Armory W ed n esd ay n ight
between 7 an d 10 p. m. for an in
terview, Over HR) men are n eed ed ,
an d there are still a n um ber of
ratin gs ojien to those qualified .
Ten more ton s of w astepaper were
collected y esterd ay , boostin g to a
total of 45 ton s the am oun t collected
thus far In the m on thly cam paign
T he collection tod ay will cover all
section s south of Old town Road .
Robert Jacob W elsen mfiler,
362
Bed ford Street, has en listed in the
V-G in active n aval reserve as sea
m an first class for four y ears. He
is a veteran of 26 m on ths’ previous
Navy service, with d uty in the Pa-
clflc theater.
Nin e posters en tered In n con test
at C arver High School In oliaervaucc
of Negro H ealth Week were Jud ged
y esterd ay
aftern oon
by
John
L
W ellin gton an d are n ow on d isplay
n t th e H ealth D epartm en t office In
the Public Safety build in g.
Passover services will be held In
H er Chay im Tem ple ton ight s ta rt
in g at 7 o’clock when a service will
be held In the m ain temple. At 7:30
ton ight the Con gregation al
Seiler
Will be held with Rabbi Maurice
Fcuer in charge. Rabbi Feucr will
also preach at the Passover m orn in g
services to la» held in th e Tem ple
vestry
S aturd ay
m orn in g
a t
10
o’clock.
S tua rt A
Mon roe, d i r e c t o r of
pen sion
trusts
for
th<
Lite Assuran ce Society of New York,
will d iscuss “ Busin ess In suran ce an d
the Life U n d erw riter” a t the d in n er
m eetin g n ex t Tuesd ay a t 6:15 p. m.
a t C en tral YMCA of the Life U n
d e w r iters’ A saoc 1 a tlon .
Kn y H arter. Allegan y High School
sen ior, was n am ed “Easter Bun n y
G irl” in a con test spon sored by the
Alcohi M irror, .school paper. R un -
n ersup
were
P atty
Bowie,
Helen
T routm an
an d Doris Davis. The
w in n er was selected on the basts of
person ality , popularity an d a ttra c
tiven ess.
Tiie V eteran s N on -Profit Hous
in g Corporation will meet at 7:30
o’clock ton ight at Peoples Ban k, ac
cord in g
to
W illiam
B. O rn d orff,
presid en t.
n ish bon d of $ 90.000. accord in g to m arked
th at prod uction on th a t
the d eclaration , an d Heskett alleges jd ay surpassed th a t of a week ago
th a t they failed to accoun t lor the
mon ey in the estate an d failed to
obey the Court ord er.
T he attorn ey also charged that,
as a result of the alleged failure ol
the Sloan s to comply w ith the ord er,
“there has been great loss to the
prin cipal an d in come of the trust
estate of Thom as E. Boston ."
Tim lier
Dispute
Aired
A hearin g w’n s
held
y esterd ay
la forc Chief Jud ge W illiam A. Blis
ter in th e in jun ction action filed
by Virschel J. H am pton an d his
wife,
Mrs.
Era
Mac
H am pton ,
again st Don ald Perd ew an d Victor
Perd ew, in a d ispute over a tim ber
tract.
Jud ge B uster ruled th at the d e
fen d an t* shall be restrain ed from]
en terin g the H am pton lan d , but will
be allowed to con tin ue operation of
their saw mill, which a survey or
testified is located on the Perd ew
property .
’Hie petition ers,
represen ted
bv
when illn ess cut in to the ran Jc? of
the tire workers.
Kelly officials con firmed th e pro
d uction figures on the first shift but
said the turn out on the 3 to 11 p.
m. shift would n ot ex ceed 30 per
)ite of tiie small workin g
force on the secon d an d third shift*
d urin g th e past two d ay s, about 5C
per
cen t
prod uction
lias
beer
achieved , the com pan y said .
UMPIRE REINSTATES
KELLY WORKER AFTER
MONTH' S SUSPENSION
Assertin g th a t the Kefiy -fln rirsg.
field T ire Com pan y ’s
d isciplin ary
action In d ischargin g Robert Lon g
was ex cessive, Jam es ,M. Porter, J r ,
Pittsburgh, ruled a on e m on th sus
p en sio n "sufficient
d isciplin ary
tion " an d
Morris Baron , said they purchased i“ “ "I1
« n a d irected the compan y
a/im . nt
I to rein state I» on g a.*
375 acres of lan d in the Twiggtown
•section last Septem ber 10, an d a l
leged th a t the Perd ew* have eu-
of April 2.
l©n g wa* d ischarged on M arch 2,
1947, tx » rn u*© of an alleged assault
tered their property , cut d own tree* ®,K" ln ilt * thlrd *shift forem an at the
an d caused them con sid erable d am
age.
William
R. Carscad en
an d
W
Earle Cobey , attorn ey s for the d e
fen d an ts, showed th a t the saw mill
ls on the ad join in g Perd ew lan d ,
an d Asserted th a t the Hampton *
Kelly plan t, accord in g to the stip u
lation of the issue .submitted M arch
26 for arbitration . The question wa%
ion w hether or n ot the pen alty lm -
j posed on Lon g was too severe.
The assault was d en ied by th«
un ion on the basis th a t there was
sought d am ages “greater th an the n o P&y *ical con tact wtth the fore-
value cd ¡til th eir properly .**
m:,n wlfb malicious in ten t on the
part of lo n g a firem an in the pow,-*r
house.
Porter, who was assign ed a* the
the
con tract
between
Ruboer C>>:k I..\-
!
to
oleum an d Plastic W orkers of Am er
ica, CIO, sn d the Kelly Compan y ,
Wed d ed Eight Weeks
M arried
two m on ths, Ray m on d
C harles I ©beck, this city , has filed i umpire* in
for on absolute d ivorce from Mrs
a n on -resid en t of M ary lan d
Mrs. O ra Love Nin e, has d ocketed
Equitable
for d ivorce from Norwall E Nin e
Chief Jud ge W illiam A
H uster
sign ed a d ecree gran tin g
d ivo rce to
William
H.
M arvin an d Althea
Louise M arvin .
She was given the
right to resum e her m aid en n am e.
Perry .
BIRTHS
Kitzmiller Legion
To Hold Initiation
M oun tain Iflstrict American Le-
Rion d egree team will go to Kltz-
m tller Sun d ay for an in itiation of
a n um ber of n ew m embers of Wil-
son -Fld ler Past No. 113, American
Legion , D i s t r i c t Vice-Comm an d er
Fam uel A G raham an n oun ced y es
terd ay .
T he occasion will m ark th e 30th
an n iversary of the Un ited S tates
en try in to World W ar I, an d will be
featured by the presen tation of a
Bron ze S ta r Med al aw ard to Ru-
gen e Ray of Kitzm iller, veteran ol
gla res W o rld
W a r
, ,
b y
C ftp t
Th o m a s
Stafford , this city .
T he ceremon y will be con d ucted
at 2 p. m. In the K itzm iller grad e
school build in g, an d will la* open
to the public.
Mr. an d Mrs. Robert Pan cake, 325
Arch Street, an n oun ce th e birth of
a son in Memorial Hospital T h urs
d ay n ight.
A son was born to Mr an d » Mr*
M orris Beachy , G ran tsvllle in Me
m orial Hospital T hursd ay n ight
Dr an d Mrs. S O. W ebun an , .655
G reen e Street, an n oun ce the birth
of a son , T hursd ay m orn in g in Me
morial Hospital.
agreed w ith the compan y th at m an
agemen t Ls respon sible for the d i
rection of the workin g force of the
plan t.
In hi* aw ard he .said . “T he d isci
plin ary action in d ischargin g Mr
Robert Lon g was ex cessive an d sus
pen sion for on e m on th is held to b«
appropriate d isciplin ary action . Ac
cord in gly , the com pan y is d irected
to rein state Mr Lon g on April 2
j un d er the con d ition s of em ploy m en t
which wa.s attain ed a t the tim t of
d ischarge, M arch 2 1947 ”
Denial Society Plans
Meeting Wednesday
151
I>r. Ed ward
C
Dobb» s,
of the
Un iversity
of
M ary lan d
Den t*.
School staff, will d iscuss “Pen icillin
.
I‘u'd It» Application to D en tistry ," at
Jar. an d Mrs Sam uel P T urn er, a d in n er m eetin g of the Allegan v-
Trioma* Street, an n oun ce the G a rrett
Coun ty
Den tal
Society
birth of a d aughter T hursd ay after- sched uled for W ed n esd ay
April
9
n oon in Allegan y Hospital.
jat 6:15 p. m. at the Cum berlan d
A d aughter was lx >rn Thursd ay Coun try Club,
aftern oon In Allegan y Hospital to
l>r. Dobhs will show slid es to 11-
Mi
an d Mrs John Joseph Lan d er, lust rate his talk.
A short busin es«
779 Fay ette Street.
session will be held .
The meetin g
Mr an d Mrs Ed ward B erm an . 12 will m ark the official vLsit of Dr. G.
C harlestow n S treet, Lon acon in g, an - W
< ;.i \
« 1
Baltim ore, presid en t of
M ary lan d S tate D en tal Aj
n oun oe
th e
M rth of a d aughter
W ed n esd ay in Memorial Hospital.
A son wa* born to Mr. an d Mrs
Howard K rlper, Route 2,
Thursd ay m orn in g
in
Hospital.
O aklan d .
Mem orial
the
Ion , who will give a brief talk.
'» ocia-
H I - P O C K E T S
Kiwanis Members
Hear Easter Program
Seek Missing Woman
City Police have been asked to
be on th e lookout for Mrs. Gold ie
Cook, 32. wife of H earter Cook, 26
Roberts Street, who, they said , left
home W ed n esd ay n ight to go to the
movies an d failed to return . She
was d esert tax i as liein g five feet
live in ches tall, weighin g 175 poun d s IOpl<
an d red -haired . O fficers said she
T he Foster season wa.s fittin gly
observed
by the Cum berlan d
Ki-
ilan i* Club at Its weekly m eetin g
held y esterd ay In Centra l YMCA
with two local m in isters participat
in g In the program
Rev. William A. Risen berger, pas
tor
of
the
First.
Presby terian
Church, spoke on the subject “The
M ean in g
of
Im m ortality ," while
Rev. Jam es A
Richard s, pastor of
the First M ethod ist C hurch, san g
two solos, "Commun ion Hy m n .” by
an d "Before (be Croas” bi
1 IF T H IS IS A T R U t
DIARY, SHE SU R E PAYS
H ER N EW SPA PER BO Y
REGULARLY
wa* wearin g a black coat when » he
left home.
La Farge.
the pian o
husban d .
Mr*
Richard *
play ed
accom pan im en t for her
t
TWENTY-EIGHT
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD.,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,
1947
Three County Mines Are
Closed By Krug's Order
300 Miners Made
Idle By Action
Three larjre coal operations
in Allegany county, employing
about 300 miners and produc
ing around 1500 to 2000 tons
of coal daily were included in
the “safety shut-down order”
of Secretary of Interior Krug,
released yesterday.
Th* Waynesburg Mine* of the
George* Creek Coal Company lo
cated at Lonaconing, employing over
130 miner* and producing 700 tons
of coal a day ta the largest of the
three operations on the “close-down"
order.
Two operations of the Consoli
dated Fuel
Company,
employing
about 170 men and producing over
900 tons daily were also named.
They are Mine No. IO, located at
Eckhart, employing about 130 men
and mining around 700 tons daily;
and Mine No. S at Hoffman, pro
ducing around 260 tons daily, with
OO to 60 men employed
Inspectors Express Surprise
Oeorges Creek Coal Company has
Office* in Cumberland and head
quarters of Consolidated Fuel Com
pany is at Frost burg.
O ther opera
tions of both companies were not af
fected by the order, it was indicat
ed.
District mine inspectors of M ary
land were contacted and they said
they knew of no serious safety viola
tions at any of these operations and
expressed
som e
surm ise at the
mine* bs ted.
The shut-down order
is of course a federal order, and the
state inspector* are not involved in
anv way
Federal Inspector* make periodic
inflections of mines In Ult* county
as well as other parts of Uils dis
trict, working out of Fairm ont, W
Va,
Recommendation* made by
them have generally been compiled
with, operators and local inspectors
indicated.
It is generally known th at there
ha been a fire in the Hoffman Mine
for nearly a century, but the fire
has always been Refit under control,
and until now it ha* not been found
objectionable.
It was learned there have been
complaint* about air in the Waynes
burg mine as well as the Eckhart
operation, but conditions were de
scribed by m iners as “not ms bad
as some other operations.”
Miners Are P onied
W hen told th a t the Waynesburg
operation was shut down by the
federal order one m iner commented,
~I can't understand that. I t’s really
one of our best mines and the m in
ers tliere are all experienced work
men.
The management has gen
erally done a pretty fair Job in ob-
aervtng safety regulations."
Another miner also commented
th at the
Eckhart
and
Hoffman
mine* have been kept in reasonably
safe condition, and
the
accident
rate at all three of the closed ope
ration* has been low.
Coal miners and owners alike
(Continued on Pogo a, Col. $)
Power Sprayer
Arrives For Use
In Fly Control
Slate Police Plan
Communications Aid
State Police announced last
night th at they will provide
all assistance possible when an
emergency e x i s t s requiring
communications In the event
of a telephone communica
tions failure.
Cpl. C. A. Disney, of the
LaVale barracks of the State
Police, said th a t should emer
gency communications be re
quired a t any given time and
point, the persons involved
should display a white flag
which can be made from an
old sheet or towel, etc.
Htate Police ears on patrol
will be instructed to be on the
particular alert for this signal
and if It is observed will pro
vide such assistance as is pos
sible, he added.
The white flag, according to
Cpl. Disney, will be recognized
a* a perm anent standard dis
tress signal.
32 Veterans Want
County lots On
Holland Sheet
A total of 32 veterans have filed
requests with the Board of County
Commissioners for the purchase of
lots on Holland Street, it was re
vealed
yesterday
a t
the
regular
board meeting.
An enabling act was passed by
the legislature, Charles N. W ilkin
son, Jr., president of the board ex
plained. perm itting the county to
set up a plan to sell this land for
home construction.
Work Stoppage Ended
At Mt. Savage Plant
Quarterly Postal
Receipts Show
$2,000 Increase
G reater use of metered machines
The act "was "introduced ta the ^ local firms was listed yesterday
by postal officials as one of the fac-
Louis Bromfleld
To Address Local
Service Clubs
Conservation Meeting
Planned On May 27
Further plans for tho appearance
here May 27 of Louts Bromfleld, not
ed author and well known connerva-
tlontat, were announced yesterday
by Harold W Bmith. secretary of the
Chamber of Commerce.
Primarily
Bromfleld, author of
many books and organiser of the
Friends of the Land, a conserva
tion group, will come to Cumberland
to address a public meeting on con
servation In Allegany High School
auditorium.
At noon, however, he will ad
dress a joint meeting of Cumber
land service clubs and in the after
noon he will inspect soil conserva
tion activities in Allegany and G ar
rett counties.
Bromfleld, prior to the night ad
dress, will be a guest a t dinner at
the All C han Shrine Country Club
which will be attended by directors
of the Chamber of Commerce, agri
culture
committeemen and other
guests.
Among the conservationists ex
pected to attend the meeting a t the
high school are Russell Lord, Bel
Air. editor of “The Land,” publi
cation of the Friends of the Land;
Dr. H. C. Byrd, president of the
University of M aryland; Dr. T. B
Symon. director of the agriculture
extension service of the University
of M aryland; H. C. Buckingham,
acting
state forester, and other
persons interested In conservation
in Maryland and neighboring West
Virginia and Pennsylvania.
Bromfleld was first approached
about two years ago to participate
In the Conservation Forum held here
In November 1945, but was unable
to attend because of other commit
ments.
He resides on a 700-acre
farm near Mansfield, Ohio.
John D. Llebau Is chairm an of
th* C. of O. agriculture committee.
General Assembly, he said, after
William R. Carscaden, an officer
of the Veterans Non-Profit Housing
Corporation, appeared b e f o r e the
board, asking th at this land be
made available for home building.
At th at time, Carscaden ex pin i nee!
the commissioner* th at the Vet
eran* Housing Group has plans for
developing the section as a model
community, and requested the right
to buy the entire tract.
In the meantime, a total of 32
veterans have applied for the right
to purchase the land, and com
missioner* now plan to make pro-
virion* for selling It. for new homes,
under som e satisfactory and work
able program.
Tile Veterans Non-Profit Housing
Corporation will discuss the propo
sition at a meeting tonight, accord
ing to William B. Orndorff, who
explained th at the group has com
pleted its plans and is prepared to
begin construction on houses for
veterans as soon as land is avail
able.
The Housing Group plans to build
houses in units of IO I n d I v idual
dwellings at a time, and has made
arrangem ents to get m aterial as
needed to complete the project with
as little cost and delay as |K*stble
Preliminary work has already been
done for the construction of a model
home for display to the public,
Ordnorff said, and actual construe
tlon Is to start within a few days.
The Holland Street tract Includes
34 lots with a frontage of 50 feet
each. and 32 Individual applications
have been filed, In addition to the
A new large power sprayer, for
wee in this county has arrived, and
member* of th# Allegany County
Farm Bureau, sponsor* of the spray
ing project have selected William
Tour, chairman. Theodore Btegmaler
and W ll Johnson as a committee
to set up a polic y and procedure of
operation.
A solicitation of all dairymen in
tl»e section is to be made, so a
schedule can be set up, Ralph F
McHenry, county farm agent ex
plained yesterday.
Plan* are being made so actual
operation of the sprayer can begin
about the middle of next month.
Mf Henry said, explaining th at It la
to be used for fly control on dairy
farm s etc He stated th at a ten ta
tive schedule of rates has been set
up, to charge each user $3 for the
trip to his farm and 16 cents a gal
lon for all spray used.
The tentative plan confides the
use of the spray to bam s and other
buildings, because it is difficult to
operate such a large spraying m a
chine on a small scale.
McHenry saki It may be possible
to use the machine for Japanese
Beetle and Elm Leaf Beetle control
in sections where there are large
numbers of trees and shrubs, but it
will be impractical to use It on in
dividual
trees, vegetable gardens,
riirub* etc., where these are isolated
The machine is not available for
use with anything except DDT, and
for the present, at least. McHenry
said. it will be used almost exclus
lrely for dairy bam s and other farm
buildings.
A demonstration of the machine
Is bring planned, and the Farm
Bureau plans to meet next week to
further these arrangem ents
W. 6. Beier Elected
Governor Of Moose
William O, Beier. Greene
Street grocer, was elected gov
ernor of Cumberland Lodge
No 271, Loyal Order of Moose,
defeating the i n c u m b e n t
Prank J Davis, who was seek
ing hts sixth consecutive term.
A to ta l of 205 members cast
ba 11 uts In the hotly contested
* ret ion, with Davta being de
te n t^ bv more than ii two-to-
onc vote.
Ernest B T r e a t led the
ticket to be re-elected secre-
ta n Charles E, P e t t i e was
elected Junior governor and
.silvester J Clark wa* chosen
treasurer
H am F Lannon was cleft
ed pielate; Arthur F. Row#
aas chosen three-year trus
tee;
Frank
C. Tro ran
wa*
named truM** for one year
and
Joseph
L.
Wolfe
was
elected alternate to the su
preme lodge convention
H ie newly elected officers
will br installed at a special
ceremony April 17. and will
onetime their duties May I.
request of the V eteran. Housing expanding IU a rrie re . including the
Corporation, which represents
veterans already registered.
Those who submitted letters to
the commissioners yesterday Include,
John F. Sehnidt III, 24 W ashington
Street; Earl E. Davis, 820 M aple
wood Lane; Charles F. Shumaker,
41 R aw Street; Joseph W. Hogan,
324 Beall Street; John F. Palmer,
431 Chestnut Street; and John E.
Rosenmerkle, 217 Glenn Street.
Firs! Presbyterian Plans
Easier Music Selections
Musical selections to be present
ed at Easter service* Sunday m orn
ing at First Presbyterian Church
are as follows;
At the 9 a. rn. service. John 8.
Gridley, organist, and Miss Maxine
Conrad, pianist, will play the duet.
Crown Him with Many Thom s."
The Junior choir will sing "Spring
Tide" and the senior choir will ting
“By Early Morning Light."
Oridley’s
offertory
selection
at
both services will be Bach's "Air
for G String." and the organ pre
lude for the second service a t ll a.
rn. will be the Hallelujah Chorus
from
Handel’s o r a t o r i o , "The
Messiah." The senior choir will sing
"By Early Morning Light" a t the
second service, and "Alleluia, Christ
Is Risen "
B. And 0. Man’s
Hand Is Injured
Harry Hoblltzell, 24 221 Carroll
Street, was treated in Allegany Hos
pital yesterday afternoon for a right
hand injury. He told attaches he
was injured when an 85 pound
weight fell upon his hand as he was
working at the B. and O. machine
shops. He was able to leave the hos
pital after a cast was applied.
Also treated in Allegany yesterday
afternoon were Miss Jane Harris,
84, 417 Central Avenue, after she
ran a needle into the middle Anger
of her right hand, and Marvin F
Ross. 26, Wiley Ford. W. Va., who
said a piece of glass pierced his
hand Saturday.
A 10-year-old boy escaped injury
when a truck State Police said was
operated by Navy Lt. Commander
W alter N. Hedrick, Route 6, this
city, struck his bicycle on Route 220
at Bowling Green Wednesday after
noon.
Trooper Thom as G. Barton Iden
tified the boy as Jon Rosenberger,
Route 6, and said the mishap took
place when the lad made a left turn
In front of the truck. No charges
were preferred.
Oma Ritchie, 19. Oldtown. was
treated In Memorial Hospital last
night after he cut the little Anger of
his left hand with a butcher knife.
Speech Correction
Lessons Started
Fifteen county children, includ
ing nine children of pre-school age,
with
speech
difficulties
received
their first lesson In speech correc
tion yesterday a t headquarters of
Allegany County League for Crip
pled Children from Miss R. Jean
Forbes, who assumed her duties here
Tuesday as speech correction!*! for
the league.
Screening of children with speech
difficulties will be completed today,
and a regular clinic sc hedule will tie
put into o|M*raHon next week. Miss
Forbes said.
Parents will be given
instructions
in
continuing
the
speech lessons a t home, In addition
to lessons twice a week for each
child at league headquarters.
Coal Production In
County Increases
In 1946, an estimated 962,511 tons
of coal was produced In Allegany
County, an Increase of nearly 8.000
tons over the 1945 output according
to a report prepared by the M ary
land Bureau of Mines.
Strip mining in G arrett County
produced 103,884 more tons of coal
In 1046 titan in 1945. with the total
amount of coal mined amounting to
1.003,681
In
1048 as compared to
824,827 the previous year.
On the other hand, production of
Are clay in Allegany County de
creased to only 44.208 tons In 1048
as compared to 50,773 tons In 1945.
Fire clay production
showed
at)
Increase of 20,000 ton* In G arrett
County last year, however, with a
tx>t al production of 27,077 ton* as
compared to the 1945 total of 7,261.
Stolen (ar Found
T7ie automobile of Raymond J.
HtnUh, loo East Fir*t Street. stolen
between IO p. in. Wednesday and
7 a. rn. yesterday from its parking
place on Park afreet, was recovered
yesterday by City Police on Central
Avenue.
Contract Of Brick
Workers Extended
The three-day work stoppage of
145 employes of the Mt. Savage re
fractories
plant
ended
yesterday
afternoon when an agreement was
reached between the company and
Local
193,
United
Construction
Workers, to extend the old contract
with the inclusion of three new
stipulations.
The stoppage began Tuesday when
the men failed to report for work
because of the lack of a contract,
according to David W atkins, inter
national repre.sentative of the union.
W alter Blank, plant manager, raid
the stoppage wa* due to m isinter
pretation by union official* of one
clause In the company’s proposal.
W atkins said last night th at the
men are ready to return to work
"rtght now." but brith lie and Blank
said they will not work today In ob
servance of Good Friday. Production
will resume Saturday.
Three Stipulations
New stipulations extending the
old contract which roil from April I.
1046. to midnight March 31, 1047
follow.
1. Pay workers at the mine the
same rate as That paid by Big Hay
age Refractories at Allegany.
2. Make retroactive to April I any
increase in wages given to the re
fractory industry after the steel in
dustry set* a wage pattern.
This
clause applies to first quality lire
brick only.
3. Give a wage Increase compar
ab le to t h a t given to th e b u ild in g
brick and drain tile Industry in the
local a re a , w h en and lf su c h In
cre ase s Iii wage* ta k e place
According to W atkins tile stipu
lations agreed to extend the old con
tract for a |>ertod not. to exceed 15
days after the Big Savage Refrac
tories and Its organization, Ixtcal
IOO. United Construction Workers,
consummate and sign a new agree
ment.
W atkins said there wa* no mis
understand tug Monday to cause the
work stoppage but added th at the
company made a proposal the em-
ploVe.v could not accept. The com
pany made the men an offer Tues
day In his absence, W atkins raid
and it wa* refused. On Wednesday
however, an understanding was a r
rived at and the proposal was sub
mitted to the union membership
yesterday
and
accepted, W atkins
added.
Blank said the Mt. Savage re
fractories plant operates entirely on
s m
____
_ . . a contract basis, th at Is, each task
Am OK
T7 v flr TS?
. Performed is on a per piece basis,
iv w a r a r w
l l I ?
I
P He
added
th at
other refractory
^ e n he plants in the area are on an hourly
D. John Marker
Will Speak Al
VFW Installation
tors in the increase of approxi
mately $2,000 of postal receipts at
the
Cumberland
Post
Office for
the March quarter as compared to
the same period last year.
Receipts totaled $71,763.33, as com
pared to the 1046 March quarter
total of
$69,803.95.
Record
for
gross receipts In any March quar
ter was set In 1945. when heavy
overseas mailing of packages and
airm ail letters to servicemen boost
ed the total to $87,972.
Metered m achines In the March
quarter this year provided an in-
cra.se of $3,300 over RHO revenues
during Uir same pci hut I nan th at
source
Hale of stamps brought.
$788.17 less than in the 1046 quar
ter but th at decrease was more than
offset by Ute Increase in metered
revenue, official* said.
O ther
factors
In
the
Increase
were
listed
as greater boy rents,
which showed an Increase of ap
proximately $100, and larger reve
nue* from handling of second class
mail.
Although the demand for
post office boxes is great, only a
very limited number of small boxes
Is available a t present, It was sta t
ed.
Cancellation* of mall during the
liertnd totaled
1.41*8.033.
excluding
mall handled at Station A on Vir
ginia Avenue and meter mailings,
representing an Increase of 7.000
over the March quarter total last
year.
Officials pointed out that the un
certainty of appropriations for the
Post Office Department
probably
will prevent the local office from
needed
extension of
rural
mall
route*, but present service* will not
be affected.
See’s Father Sits
On House Rostrum
Kelly Employes Agree
To End Work Stoppage
Post And Auxiliary
Plan Joint Program
D. John Markey of Frederick, vet
eran of three wars and a member
of Henry H art Post No. 1411, Vet
erans of Foreign Wars, will be guest
sneaker at the installation of offi
cers of the local VFW post and its
Ladies Auxillary. Saturday, April
12. at 7:30 p. m. In the Queen City
Hotel ballroom.
Post Commander Raymond Rey
nolds. nt the regular meeting of the
organization last night announced
th at members, their husbands and
wives and social member* may a t
tend the joint Installation.
Thomas B. Ftnan, Jr. local attor-
nev and veteran of World War ll.
will tie m aster of ceremonies and
will present Gen Markey.
Lifetime Military Record
Well known here. Markey I* re -1
membered a* a candidate last fall
for United States Hr na Ie, running
against Herbert It. O'Conor. and tie
ing defeated bv m narrow margin.
which tie still contests,
He has bren a member of the loc
al VFW poet for sometime and has
often been a visitor here. As a youth
of 16. he ran away from home and
enlisted in the Army to serve in the
Hunnish American War. He later a t
tended the University of Maryland
where he was a football star, and
after leaving school returned
to
Frederick
Markey became Interested in the
National Guard and In 1016, he
served on the Mexican border as n
major In the First Maryland In
fantry. Re was active in the organ
ization of the 20th Division, ami
commanded the 112th Machine Gun
Battalion attached to the 115th In
fantry. and saw action In France In
World W ar I.
When he returned he wa* a lieu
tenant colonel and executive officer
Quarterly Conference
Time Is Advanced
The
Quarterly Conference
of the Cumberland
Circuit
Methodist Church, scheduled
to
be held tonight
at 7:30
o'clock in Melvin Methodist
Church, has been advanced
to 7 o’clock. Rev. Joseph W.
Young, pastor, announced last
night.
Rev. Mr. Young said it will
be necessary
to
start
the
service at 7 o’clock due to Dr.
W. F. Wright, district super
intendent.
having
to leave
Cumberland at 9 o'clock to
night
Tile service will open
with sjieclal devotional* based
on “Seven Words of Christ oil
Hie Cross" After which the
business session of the quart
erly conference will be held.
Boston Estate
Trustees Sued
For $90,OM
Bank Charges Loss
Of Funds In Adion
A
damage
Ault for $90 000 aas
docketed tit Circuit Court yester
day against Aleck Sloan and Percy
Sloan, formerly of Lonaconing, and
ttie United
Htate*
Fidelity and
Guaranty Company of Baltimore.
by The .State of M arlan d for the
use of the Second National Bank,
trustee of the estate of Thomas E
Bouton.
. . .
.
.
..
_
,
Charles Z. Heskelt. counsel for
of ttie* ll. th Infantry. A* the Guard
plaintiff, alleges that the Sloans
wa* reorganized, he b r in ie com -
tnistr<* of thr fusion estate,
manding officer of the 1st.M arylandj jlilve
to give an accounting of
Regiment. National Ouard with th e,f„n(j„
Percy Sloan, has bren em
ployed In Baltimore In recent year*
and
Aleck Sloan now resides iii
went to Annapolis on the last day
-
. . .
.
. - base of $1.05 per hour, allowing the
Z
f &
l t t a Z
S S F
* ' 1" WS
- V of * 4 0 per
Monday night the elder Mr. See day or $42 per week.
W ith the contract system In oper-
I? ‘ “ '" I
tan at Mt. Savage. Blank .said.
the final session of the House of
Delegates and was introduced and
Invited to the rostrum by Speaker
Ferdinand 8ybert.
Delegate 8ee and Delegate Horace
P. W hitworth, Jr., chairm an of the
Allegaify County delegation, accom
panied Hie form er’s father to tl\e
rostrum where he sat and observed
the last half hour of the proceed
ings.
On their own Initiative, the mem
bers of th# Hous# stood and ac
corded the elder Mr. Hee an ovation
when h* was introduced. Delegate
Hee. who is still at a loss to know
how S|ieaker Rybert knew of his
father’* presence. *av* lit* father
received “quite a thrill" from the
experience on hla first visit to tile
Legislature.
Following the session. Delegate
and Mrs. See. their nephew. Glenn
K. Davis, and the elder Mr. See
attended a dinner at Carvel Hall
with Hie other members of the
county delegation
Wednesday night the elder Mr.
See. a retired Baltimore arid Ohio
Railroad foreman, who lives at 23
Fifth Street, was presented with a
50-year membership pin by Council
49. Junior Order of United American
Mechanics.
rank of colonel, and served with the
Guard between wars.
Floor Show Planned
When the Guard was mobilized
Just prior to World W ar II, Col.
Frostburg.
Will Probated In 1029
Baston, a prominent Lonaconing
MMkey went with th* IM R e c e n t .blu,nci*'man; died nearly 20 years
Union Soys Grievance
Will Be Presented
Th#
KeHy-Sprtngflrld
Tire
Company reported at 11:3$ last
j
night that the turnout of third
shift worker* wa* "very good"
and estimated that about 99
per rent of the 70# odd employes
on the shift reported for duty.
An immediate resumption of work
at the KeUy-Springfteld Tire Com
pany was predicted last night by A.
IE. Johnson, president of Local 26.
United Rubber, Cork. Linoleum and
Plastic Worker* of America. CIO.
who said member* of the union vot
ed unanimously to return to work
so th at the grievance which led to
| the
unauthorized
work
stoppage
Tuesday might be processed in th#
proper manner.
No Dissenting Vote*
Johnson said there wa* not a dis
senting vote when the question was
placed before the members at a
meeting held at 7 30 p rn In Textile
Hull in order to accommodate th#
overflow crowd
Union offieinls, he said. explained
thoroughly to tile membership that
the officers rannot handle griev
ance* until work is resumed
Johnson said the woman who wa*
discharged for refusing work as
signed to her in the bead room. ha*
a grievance but said the m atter
should have been handled in the
regular m anner as provided In th#
contract.
He pointed out that the union has
recourse to arbitration in virtually
all disputes upon which the com
pany and union cannot agree The
two cases submitted to arbitration
have resulted in victories for th*
union, he added
Any hop# on Uie part of company
anil union official* for th# resum p
tion of normal production schedule*
yesterday was blasted by •econc*
shift workers who again refused Ic
re-enter tile plant until the griev
ance which led to the unauthorized
work stoppage wa* settled.
Production Increase*
The union president reported ut
3 30 p. rn. th at few employes re
ported for work. A check of several
departm ents, he said, showed only
about IO per cent of the force at
work.
Johnson said the workers reported
they would not go back to work un-
when it was combined with the 5th
to comprise the 115th Regiment. He
became commander of the 115th,
but when the age-in-grade rule was
established and he was declared
over age for combat, he was sent to
Camp Pickett as camp commander.
ago and his will was admitted to) ll*
company reinstated the girl
probate in April, 1929, in the Or
phons’ Court here. The Sloans were
named trustees of his estate, under
the term s of the will.
In 1930, judges of the Circuit
Court required the trustees to fur
whose discharge led to the walkout
in the bead room Tuesday after
noon.
Production on the first shift yes
terday was better than Wednes
day and plant officials had re-
He retired some time later as a nLsh bond of $90,000. according to 'm arked th at production on th at
brigadier general.
| the declaration, and He.skett alleges ^
surpassed th at of a week a*co
John Fike, chairm an of the in
stallation committee said last night
th at a dance will follow tile inst alia-
CHURCHES, PUBLIC
OFFICES TO MARK
GOOD FRIDAY HERE
Oood Friday, a legal holiday In
M aryland, will be observed here to
day with special church services and
with banks and aome public offices
closed all day.
Easter vacations began in Cum
berland schools yesterday and in
some cases will not end until next
Thursday. Public schools dismissed
at I p. rn. yesterday and classes will
resume Tuesday morning. St. P at
rick’s will not start until Thursday,
while 88. Peter and Paul, Ursullne
m d St. M ary’s will resume on Wed
nesday.
While a small num ber of m er
chants will close their stores in ob
servance of Good Friday, there has
been no concerted action in th at
direction and others will remain
open.
The Court House will be closed
all day mid City Hall will remain
open only until noon. Trial Magis
trates Court and Police Court will
be closed until Saturday morning.
Oood Friday services will be held
In most Cumberland churches with
a three-hour service on the Seven
Word* of Christ to be held In Cen
ti# Street Methodist Church be
ginning a t noon. Special music will
be provided a t virtually all services.
Odd Fellows Will
Observe Anniversary
The 128th anniversary txdebra-
tlon of the Order of Odd Fellows
will be held, under the auspices of
the Chosen Friends Lodge No. 34
and Chajiel HIU Lodge, No. 53, on
May 2
Tile celebration will be
held at 8 o’clock, iii tile Odd Fel
lows temple. South Mechanic street.
The program will be opened with
a prayer by a local m inister and
will include ail address by a guest
jqieftker from Baltimore and a mus
ical program. Fail Cunningham will
preside as general chairman.
Member* of the Reliekitli organi
zations wlU also participate, and tie
In charge of the social hour and
serve refreshments.
Visitors from other lodges of the
area sud the public are invited.
Assisting In arrangem ents with
Mr Cufintngbum are Byron Bonr-
brake and Raymond Drake of Chos
en Friend* trudge; Rotten Young,
Chapel
Hill
Lodge;
Mrs. Anna
Diehl »nd Mrs. Larry Welsh, Re-
bekahs.
Commissioners Get
Orphans' Court Budget
The Orphans Court budget for
1947-48, wa* presented to the Coun
ty Commissioners yesterday by A.
Charles Stewart, register of Wills.
In preparation of the county levy
list to be completed by April 15.
The budget shows $3,744 as tile
amount needed for salaries for the
three Judges until April I, 1048, and
a total of $1,133.42 for various of
fice expenses such as indexing, re
cording etc.
Somerville Nicholson, supervisor of
assessments, recommended a reduc
tion In the assessment of Jennie and
Joseph Yaksetlch for property at
139-141 Wlneow street, from $1,900
to $1,425, st the request of the prop
erty owners
The commissioners met yesterday,
in-as-m uch as the Court House Is
closed all day today.
Pupils of Mary Katheryn Steck-
tnan’s studio will present a half
hour floor show.
Fifteen veterans of World W ar II
were admitted to post membership
last night, bringing the total to
1,890, for the current year.
News Briefs
take home pay ranges from $10 to ^ on F ith music by the Diplomats.
$12 lier seven-hour day or from $60
to $72 per week.
W ith such a system we need no
five cents an hour bonus to keep
men on the Job. The Job Itself to
attractive enough to eliminate en
tirely
all
absenteeism
from
the
plant. We have little or no labor
trouble, and the present stoppage
wa* due to a m isunderstanding as
stated before. Union representatives
and officers were soon ready to
Rign an agreement after they thor
oughly understood the company’s
term*.'*
labor Rate
W atkins declared th at piece-work
rates paid at the non-union Union
Fire Brick Company plant at Jen
nings “are not comparable" to the
higher rates at the union plants at
Mt. Savage and Allegany.
He said the recently announced
increase to $1 an hour at the Jen
nings plant I* the labor rate. A ftve-
cents an hour bonus also was In
cluded at Jennlng* for regular re
porting to work, according to a
company announcement.
W atkins said the Jennings plant
increased wages in an effort to keep
its employe* from Joining a union.
The Good Friday holiday at the
Mt. Savage plant stems from an
accident a number of years ago in
which sn employe wa* killed, W at
kins said he was Informed.
Em
ploye* have not worked on Oood
Friday since th at time. he added.
th at they failed to account for the * hPn
rut lnto
ranks af
monev in the estate and failed to tllp nrp worker*.
obey the Court order.
TTie attorney also charged
that
Kelly officials confirmed the pro
duction figure* on the first shift but
as a result of tile alleged failu re ot 'w,lfl IP* turnout on the I to ll p.
rn. shift would not exceed 30 per
cent. In spite of the small working
force on the second and third shifts
during the past two days, about 5C
per
cent
production
ha*
beet
achieved, the company said.
Holben Leaves Estate
To His Widow And Son
Ten more tons of wastepaper were
collected yesterday, boosting to a
total of 45 tons Hie amount collected
thus far In Hie monthly campaign
T hr collection today will cover all
sections south of Oldtown Road.
Robert Jacob Welsenmtller, 382
B u fo rd Street, has enlisted In the
V-6 Inactive naval reserve as sea
man first class for four years. He
Is a veteran of 26 m onths’ previous
Navy service, with duty in the P a
cific theater.
Nine posters entered in a contest
at Carver High School in observance
of Negro Health Week were Judged
yesterday
afternoon
bv
John
L.
Wellington and are now on display
at the Health Departm ent office In
the Public Safety building.
Passover services will be held In
B er Chay im Temple tonight sta rt
ing at 7 o’clock when a service will
br held in the main temple. At 7 30
tonight the Congregational Seder
Will be held with Rabbi Maurice
Feuer in charge. Rabbi Pinier will
a’so preach at the Passover morning
services to be held in the Temple
vestry
Saturday
morning
at
IO
o'clock
Stuart A. Monroe, d i r e c t o r cif
pension trusts for
the Equitable
Life Assurance Soc iety of New York.
will discuss “Busine** Insurance and
the Life Underwriter" at the dinner
the Sloans to comply with the order.
“there has been great loss to the
principal and income of the trust
estate of Thomas E. Boston.”
Timber Dispute Aired
A hearing was
held
yesterday
before Chief Judge William A. Mus
ter in the injunction action filed
by Virschel J. Hampton and his
wife,
Mrs.
Era
Mar
Hampton,
against Donald Perdew mid Victor
Perdew. in a dispute over a timber
tract.
Judge Muster ruled Uiat the de
fendant* "ball be restrained from
Asserting th at the Kelly-flprtng-
ruler nit the Hampton land. but will
com pony* duciplm .rr
lie allowed to roid lo u r o f
Ilio n ot
ln dlarharKln* Robert lorn*
T 111-. !ih,<'h , t * " v7 or * •"
.tames M. Porter. Jr .
testified is located on the Perdew
UMPIRE REINSTATES
KEILY WORKER AFTER
MONTH'S SUSPENSION
Pittsburgh, ruled a one m onth #us-
p e n s i o n "sufficient
disciplinary
action” and directed th# company
property.
'Hi# petit loners, represented bv
Morn* Baron **kl they purchased j
j r i n .t t ^ ’ I ™ a* of April 2
375 acres of land In the Twtggtown1
K
section Inst September IO. and al
leged th at Hie Perdew* have ru
ining wa* discharged on March 3.
1047. because of an allege*! assault
tried their properly, ru t down tree*
* l,hlrd *h ‘f« for," n“ •»
, ......_.*
Kellv plant, according to the stipu
lation of the bum# submitted March
Carscaden and
W * h>r <>rl>ltratlon The qur«tlon wa,
on whether or not the penalty inl
and caused them considerable dam
age.
William
R.
Earle Cobey. attorneys for the de ,
, _ _
.
fondants, showed th at the saw mill
° n
^ WR*
severe.^
is on the adjoining Perdew land,
^
denied bv
and asserted th at Hie Hampton* un*OIi
basis that there was
sought damage* “greater than th e . D® _
*
J 5 * !
value of all their property."
th«
Wedded Eight Week*
Married
two montlia, Raymond
Charles lx»beek, tilts city. ha* filed
for an absolute divorce from Mrs
Patricia Helen Lebcck, said to
a non-resident of Maryland.
man with malicious intent on the
part of Irong a fireman In the pow?r
bouse
Porter, who was assigned as the
umpire
in
the contract between
Local 28. United Rubber. Cork. Lm -
be j oleum and Plastic Workers of Amer
ica. CIO, sod the Kelly Company,
Mrs. O rs Live Nine, has docketed agreed with Hie company that man-
The will of Calvin A. Holben.
Frostburg insurance agent who died
March 14, was filed for probate in
Orphans* Court yesterday.
,
^
Ile bequeathed hla Intereat In t h . T tV " * T
7
P,m
Metzger and Holben Insurance firm a,
f ’
. ^
to his son Richard Holben. with t dew rltera Awaiclat ton.
provision th at h r pay at leaat »2o;
H ,,rt,r. Allegany High School
weekly to hla widow. Mr*. Florence
*•« n*m''d
K,,s,rr1
Holben. The son abo receive* a n( <»hl
In a eohte.st »,»,.u.ore,l by the
automobile and the balance of the Alrohl Mirror, school pa,* r. Run-
nersup were Putty Bowie, Helen
Troutm an and Doris Davis. The
estate Is left to the widow.
Drawn May 4, 1940. the will was
witnessed by Beatrice E. Hight, and
Noel Spelr Cook. Richard Holben
was named executor of the estate.
National Guard Must Be Enlisted
To Full Strength Major Declares
cult for divorce from Norwall E Nine
Chief Judge William A. Muster
signed a decree granting divorce to
William
H.
Marvin and Althea
Louise Marvin.
She wa* given the
right to resume her maiden name.
Perry.
BIRTHS I
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pancake, 325
winner was selected on the basis of
r,,ct. announce th# birth of
personality, popularity and attrac- * *°n ^ Memorial Hospital rhurs-
liveness
v
The Veteran* Non-Profit Horn-
A ; ' r ' V ‘,\
bor" U ,,M; „ “'I'1
Inq Corporation will meet at 7 IM MnrrU- B™' hv- OranLsvllle In Me-
o’clock tonight at Peoples Bank. ac
cording to
president.
William
B. Orndorff.
Dickey Wants IOO Men
For Two Local Units
"W ith Selective .Service ended, and
the Army no longer able to draft
men. It is more im portant than
ever, that National Guard and other
reserve unit* of the nation’* mili
tary be built up to full strength as
rapidly a* jwiaslble," Major Howard
Dickey, commanding officer of the
First
Battalion,
First
Regiment,
Maryland National Guard raid lust
night..
Two local units of the new Na
tional Guard ar# being formed here.
and the units have already been
recognized by the W ar Department,
Major Dickey explained A total of
300 men are needed to fill the re
quirements of these two organiza
tions.
In headquarters Company, he de
clared. there are vacancies for com
petent typists, clerks, cnmnnintca-
tions men. mechanics and motor
drivers, os well as other military
occupations. In Company C, Hie local
rifle unit, riflemen, machine gun-
Kitimiller Legion
To Hold Initiation
tiers drill once each week, and for
the present at least, both local
units drill at the State Armory a t 7
p. rn. each Wednesday. For two
hours drill, each member receives
a full day base pay as follows;
Private. $2 50; Private. First Class.
$2 88; Cor (Sira I, and Tec-5. $3 00;
Sergeant and Tec-4, $3 33;
Staff
Sergeant and Tec-3. $3 83; Technical
Sergeant. $4 50;
and Master and
First Sergeant, $5 50.
In addition to tilts pay. which each! Bronze ~ St ai
man receives every three m onths iii; ,..n
* of
a check from the United States world
Treasury for the drills he attends,
uniforms and equipment are fur
nished without charge. Each mem
ber of the Guard has the free
use of the Armory anytime, and has
UM1 of all facilities there. Including,
gymnasium, showers, club rooms,
rifle range, etc.
Dickey said that any men. over
18 years of agr, who want to iqicnd
one night a week, learning a new
trade or *|>eciRllty, or who want to
retain the rating they held at time
of disc ii arg# from the Army, and
still make some extra money, should
go to the Armory Wednesday night
M ountain District American Le
gion degree team will go to Kitz
miller Sunday for an initiation of
a number of new members of Wil-
S'ln-Fldler Post No. 113. American
Legion. D i s t r let Vice-Commundrr
Samuel A. Graham announced yes
terday.
H ie occasion will mark the 30th
anniversary of the United States
entry Into World War I, and will br4
featured by the presentation of «
Medal award to Ku-
Kltzmiller, veteran ol
W ar II, by Capt. Thom as
Stafford, tilts city.
The ceremony will be conducted
at 2 p. rn. in the Kitzmiller grade
school building, and will lie open
to Hic public.
moi tai Hospital Thursday night
Dr and Mrs 8 (I Weismun. 555
Greene Street, announce the Dirt Ii
of a son. Thursday morning in Me
morial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs Samuel p Turner.
151 Thomas Street
announce the
agement Is responsible for th# d i
rection of the working force of the
plant.
In his award h# said, "The disci
plinary action in discharging Mr
Robert Long was excessive and sus-
pension for one month is held to be
appropriate disciplinary action Ac
cordingly, the company is directed
to reinstate Mr Long on April 2
under the conditions of employment
which was attained at the tim# of
discharge. March 2 1947 "
Dental Society Plans
Meeting Wednesday
Dr. Edward
C. Dobbs,
of the
University
of
Maryland
Lento.
School staff, will chs* ass “Penicillin
and It* Application to Dentistry," at
a dinner meeting of the Allegany-
Garrett
County
Dental
Society
birth of a daughter Thursday after-(scheduled for Wednesday, April 9
noon in Allegany Hospital.
at 6 15 p. rn. at the Cumberland
A daughter was born Thursday
afternoon in Allegany Hospital to
Country Club
Dr. Dobbs will show slides to U-
Mr. and Mrs John Joseph Lander, lust rate his talk
A short busmen#
779 Fayette Street.
session will be held.
The meeting
Mr and Mrs Edward Beeman. 12 will mark the official visit of Dr. O.
Charlestown Street. lonaeontng, an- W Gayer. Baltimore, president of
HOU nee
the
birth of a daughter ll,r Maryland State Dental Assocta-
Wednesday in Memorial Hospital
A son was born to Mr and Mrs
Howard Helper, Route 2, Oakland.
Thursday morning
in
Memorial
Hospital.
liers,
instructors, communications between 7 and IO p. rn for an lu
men, and specialists of all kind* are
needed,
Under the G uard set-up, mem -
ter view. Over IOO men are needed.
and there ore still a number of
rating* open to those qualified.
Seek Missing Woman
City Police have been asked to
be on the lookout for Mrs. Ookite
Cook. 32. wife of H eurtrr C<*»k. 26
Roberts Street, who. they said. left
home Wednesday night to go to Hie Rev
movies and failed to return. Stic the
Kiwanis Members
Hear Easier Program
Tile Faster season was fittingly
observed Ivy the Cuinlierland Kl-
nanls Club ut its weekly meeting
held yesterday 111 Central YMCA
with two local ministers participat
ing In the program
Rev. William A. Elsenberger, pas
tor
of
the
First
Presbyterian
Church, spoke on the subject ’"Hie
Meaning
of
Immortality,"
while
James A Richard*, pastor of
First Methodist Church, sang
ion. who will give a brief talk.
H I - P O C K ET S
was described as tieing five feet two solos. “Communion ll Mini." bv
five inches tall, weighing 175 pound*
and red-haired. Officers said she
was wearing a black coat when all#
left home.
Ollie and “Before the Cross'* by
lAiFarge.
Mrs
Richard*
played
th# piano accompaniment for her
husband.