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Cumberland Sunday Times from Cumberland, Maryland • Page 28

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Cumberland, Maryland
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Page:
28
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TWENTY-EIGHT SUNDAY TIMES, CU5IBERLAND, MX, SUNDAY. MAY 7, 1944 Nazis In Italyj Show Evidence; Frot Of New Fears! Oak I Proposed Withholding Tax To Be Effective January 1 1ILO Delegates! police i Un Aazi Unions from Page i) i to the station from West Side hotel. Bloodstains OB Mattress A check of the hoi-el revealed "Mr. and Mrs. Joan Lopes" i checked out Sunday.

Brietzke said Consider Kerrj President Asks For Keynoter led New Fan oo jFoi Heal cei Manv Miles Washington, May 8 Ctuter the i salary deductions so as to the! wu siflspiificaiion bill that was tax liability, follows: I IUUCT ou- -unuav HI hU a Fight To Set As Move until After Evacuate Civilians From TT Hfi r- 'u j.icurcMriiiuuvt»:sam Hamdian. a handy man thi Ho Stri 2 MJ P' SS SaTt 1 hu Win Fight To Set Aside thatte tbond plosions Heard For toe faffi mattress in the room JETi for millions-of persons earning; exemption; persons; 2 $5.000 and less. Married person, ao children: The eKiJcal table forih Elife' Married, wisa one chiJd; 4-Two! new withholding rates, ad justed i children; children; War Fro. ton ber i i has b. under i as, a Marc; By NOLAND NORGGARD Aliaed Headquarters, Naples.

May; fro present wage and'Pour children; children) Amount of Tax To Be Withheld 81234 2.10 20 0 0 0 230 -40 0 0 0 oa the couple teft and that all the sheets (had beea removed from the bed. Arthur -McCord. the cab driver, Euro-i 53 a aiaB hailed his cab about 2 Democrats! ILderrfaetrwai For Lend-Lease Sentenced June 5 Also Wants Reappropri ation of $7,188,893,000 for Fiscal Year Beginning Next July High hono: was i liter Stebn. seines He -jo fc Th: irmy -ncrtt hat sight text he he een A fleet of perhaps 730 1 Weekly Wage American Flying Fortresses To Liberators heavily protected 11 fighters rammed home destructive's 12 bombing attacks against Jive key is 13 Romanian communications centers'5 14 ia daylight today, expanding the is 15 Mediterranean air campaign 16 against Nazi Romania into a 17 scaJs offensive. 'j ig At the same time the theater came more strongly inte the i 20 war spotlight with reports to Allied i 21 headquarters that the Germans had'? 22 carried out a mass exodus of Italian I 23 Civilians from a strip 20 miles deep i 34 beyond the Fifth Army's main front 25 In Southern Italy.

is 26 These reports on the first an-j Eiversary of the Allied armies' drive down the Medjerda valley in I Tunisia which resulted in the failp of Tunis on Hay 7, 1943 wasj 3i evidence of the Germans' increasing; fears that the Allies were preparing; another push. Earlier 34 In the week official reports saic 35 heavy, unexplained explosions were 3i heard from the vicinity of Forma 5 37 on the western end of the front 3S possibly indicated esemy de- 3S struction of installations and stores. 3 40 Way Through Enemy Screen i 41 12 13 14 15 17 18 19 5 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 $31 32 33 iS 42 43 In today's ambitious air drive into Romania the American bombers lighters battered their way i and through screens of enemy intercep- 1 tors and bombed five vital rail yards, all on the main routes from Bucharest over which the Germans supplies front. to the southern Russian i 5 rl 51 52 vho Initial reports said hundreds 53 irrn; snd Fr. Mem ligh! iaug Mr of bombs hit target areas 54 the yards at Brasov, 80 miles north 55 of Bucharest: Pitesti, 70 miles 1 5 55 northwest of Bucharest; 57 120 miles west of Bucharest: Cam- 58 pina, 20 miles north of Ploesti.

59 Tumu Severin, at the iron gate go the Danube 85 miles northwest ofU Craiova. An undisclosed number of enemy 6 6 interceptors were destroyed by theU gg bombers and their escort. First Prolonsed Raid for Romania 15 70 18 72 This was the first time P.omania[ 74 had been subjected to round-the-i. 75 clock bombing by a substantial por- i 7g tion of the air armadas massed Italian bases. Yesterday American i 3 "heavies" hit the Ploesti oil refin- i cries and rail yards! Last night 1 RAP Wellingtons and Halifaxes at-! tacked refineries at Campina.

Ke-i connaissance photographs showed an enormous fire raging at Ploesti followtag yesterday's attack. Rail I. OR yards were battered heavily and tanks and oil cars were ini flames. Another sharp blow had been struck Germany's oil sup-! BB 03 on blow Turnu Severin i came while that important rail and aircraft center was still reeling! from an attack yesterday. The raids today and last night; foUcrered up Friday's daring attacks I which broke the Pescara dam Italy.

if 50 Headquarters disclosed that i American-fauilt Kitsyhawks and! I Mustangs, piloted By Australian and 1 South African airmen, did the era-! 35 35 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 4E 47 48 49 50 51 $52 53 54 55 56 57 58 53 60 82 64 66 68 70 5 72 74 76 78 80 32 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 SiOO $105 $110 5115 S120 S125 $130 S135 $140 $145 S150 $160 S170 $180 S190 S200 2.50 2.70 2.SO 3.10 3.30 350 3.70 4.00 4.20 4.40 4.60 4.S0 5.00 5J20 5.40 5.50 5.30 6.00 520 6.40 6.60 6.90 7.10 7.30 7.50 7.70 730 8.10 8.30 8.50 8.70 9.00 9.20 9.40 9.60 9.90 in tn. 10.30 10.50 10.80 11.00 11.20 11.40 11.70 1150 12.10 12.30 12.70 13.10 13.60 14.00 14.50 1450 15.40 15.80 16.30 16.70 17.20 17.60 18.10 18.50 19.00 19.40 1950 20.30 20.80 21.20 22.00 23.10 24.30 25.40 26 JO 27.60 28.30 29.90 31.00 32.10 33.80 36.10 3830 40.60 42.80 .60 .30 1.00 1.29 1.40 1.60 1.80 2.00 2.20 2.40 2.70 2.90 3.10 3.30 3.50 3.70 2.00 4.10 4.30 4.50 4.70 4.90 5.30 5.60 6.00 6.20 6.40 6.60 6,80 7.00 120 7.40 7.60 7.30 8.00 8J20 8.40 3.70 8.90 9.10 9.30 9.50 3.80 10.00 10.20 10.60 11.00 11.50 11.90 22.40 12.80 13.30 13.70 a2.40 14.60 15.10 15.50 16.00 16.40 16.90 17.30 17.80 13.20 13.70 19.10 13.90 21.00 22.10 23.30 24.40 25.50 26.60 27.80 28.90 30.00 31.70 34.00 36.20 38.50 40.70 5 0 0 6 0 0 .10 -JO .10 S) 20 .30 .30 .50 .70 SKI 1.10 1.40 1.60 Philadelphia, May 6 delegates to the International i 6 Sunday in the loop, was driven 1 Labor Conference vron a fight 0 tie hotel, got the trunk, and was 7 to set aside consideration here of! ltaien to the station. He was ac- OJhow to reconstitute free un-! companied by a boy 13 or 14 01 ions in Germany after the war. McCord added. Post To Be Made Soon After Roosevelt's Re- turn to Washington By JACK BELL Washington, May 6 Selec- convention i Jacob Drucker, 38, alleged "finger- for Murder, lac, -sill be sentenced during the June 5 term of Sullivan Comity Court on his second degree murder conviction in the, 1937 ice-pick flaying: of Walter Sage, Brooklyn' loan broker.

The verdict, returned yesterday a jury which deliberated four 2.20 2.40 2.60 2.80 3.00 3.40 3.60 3.30 4.00 4.20 4.50 4.70 4.90 5.10 5.30 5.50 5.70 5.90 6.10 6.30 650 6.70 6.30 7.10 7.40 7.60 7.80 8.00 3.20 8.50 8.90 9.30 3.80 10.20 10.70 11.10 11.60 12.00 12.50 12.90 13.40 13.80 14.30 14.70 15.20 15.60 15.10 16.50 17.00 17.80 1850 20.00 21.10 22.30 23.40 24.50 25.60 26.30 27.90 29.60 31.80 34.10 36.30 38.60 23.50 tacked refineries at Campina, and 25.80ion Friday American heavyweights 23.00 i had hit oil refineries and ma tic dive-bombing job on the! Over the withholding will bei children: S37.50 for married couple rail Fires still were raging at dam which seat 22 5 per cent of the .10 .10 .10 .20 .20 20 .20 ,30 .30 .30 ,40 .40 .40 30 .50 50 .60 .70 1.10 1.30 1.50 1.70 150 2.10 2.30 2.50 2.70 250 3.20 3.40 3.60 3.80 4.00 4.20 4.40 4.60 4-80 5.00 5.20 5.40 5.60 5.80 6.10 6.30 6.60 7.00 7.40 7.80 820 8.60 9.10 9J50 9.90 10.40 1C.SO 11.30 11.70 12.20 12.60 13.10 13.50 14.00 14.40 1450 15.70 16.80 1750 19.00 20.20 21.30 22.40 23.50 24.70 25.80 27.50 29.70 32.00 3450 36.50 .10 .10 .10 .20 .20 .20 -20 30 .30 .30 30 .40 .40 .40 .50 .50 JO .50 .60 .60 .60 .60 .70 .70 .80 .80 .80 .80 .80 .90 1.00 1.20 1.40 1.60 1.90 2.10 230 250 2.70 250 3.10 3.30 3.50 3.70 350 4.10 4.30 4.60 5.10 5.50 550 630 6.70 7.10 7.50 3.00 8.40 8.80 920 9.60 10.10 10.50 11.00 11.40 1150 12.30 12.80 13.50 14.70 15.80 1550 18.00 1920 20.30 21.40 22.50 23.70 25.40 27.60 29.90 32.10 34.40 .10 .10 .10 20 .20 ,20 30 .30 30 .40 .40 .40 .50 -50 ,50 .60 .60 .60 .60 .70 .70 .70 .30 .80 .80 .80 J96 50 50 50 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.10 1.10 1.10 120 1.40 1.60 1.80 2.00 220 2.40 2.70 3.10 3.60 4.00_ 4.40 4.80 5.20 5.60 6.00 6.40 650 730 7.70 8.10 8.50 350 9.30 9.80 1020 10.60 11.40 12.60 13.70 14.80 1550 17.10 1320 1930 20.40 21.60 2320 2550 27.70 30.00 3220 .10 .10 .10 20 20 20 20 30 30 30 30 .40 .40 .40 50 .50 50 50 .60 .60 .60 .60 .70 .70 .70 .80 SO .80 .90 .90 50 50 1.00 1.00 1.00 LOO 1.10 1.10 1.10 120 120 120 120 1.30 1.30 130 1.40 1.40 1.60 2.00 250 2.90 3-SO 3.70 4.10 4.50 450 5.40 5.80 620 6.60 7.00 7.40 7.80 8.30 8.70 9.40 10.40 11.60 12.70 13.80 14.90 16.10 1720 18.30 19.40 21.10 23.10 26.60 37.90 30.10 .10 The vote came after several em- -lOjohatie speeches to the effect that the German people are not sepa- .20 from their government- and 1 by a boy about 13 years old. The Boy With Man and Trunk Charles R. Heniff, the express clerk, said the man was 50 i must therefore bear responsibility sent the trunk C.OJD,, and told for the war. him he intended to follow Uy bus. 20 British, Norwegian, Polish, Czech i Another to the bizarre case 30 1 French and United States 35 a towel founo ta tbe 30 stood together on the propos- i Dearins the name of a anan to cefer action.

votes were cast by Robert J. Watt. United States labor dele- South State street, near where haa gate, and Percy Clarey, Australian Police seized a dishwasher, who, Lt. Breiuke said, formerly resided at this hotel with two sisters named "Lopez." Breitzke said the man .60 .60 .60 .70 .70 i .70 Germany must not bear some punishment, he is living in a fool's paradise." I Citrine challenged the right of i neutral governments here to assist fin shaping the policy for handling ex-enemy territory. Both he and Sir Frederics Leggett, British gov- eminent delegate, insisted that no gfl policy concerning Germany can well ibe made hers since the Soviet XTn- ion is not represented.

Watt challenged the Idea that "a whole people" may be indicted aJas "cruel" Citrine interrupted with Mr. Watt say the Japs are When Watt failed to answer the question directly, Citrine restated it and Watt said, "yes, the Japs are cruel. Nazis are cruel." Watt had questioned whether any he ever used Lopez, the officer added, Heniff said the man was not same person who brought in the trunk. Manner of Death Mystery The manner of the woman's death also remained a mystery. In Las Angeles, Frank Webb, county autopsy surgeon, said a partial postmortem examination disclosed the woman did not die of a bullet or stab wound.

Further tests, which may require several days, vail be taken to determine whether she died of strangulation. The dishwasher will be detained 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.10 1.10 i JQ nation might not as Germany 120 120 120 120 1.30 130 1.40 1.401 them. Let us observe the simple (Christian doctrine principle, 'Vengeance comes before The move.to take consideration of has under given circumstances. Leggett replied, "I consider Mr. Watt's statement not quite fair.

I can conceive of no circumstances under which my nation would have committed the atrocities the Germans have, and. mind you, there Germans to commit 1.50 150 1.60 1.60 1.70 1.80 220 2.60 3.00 3.40 3.80 4.30 4.70 5.10 550 550 6.30 6.70 750 850 950 the subjects out of the hands of this conference was initiated by Leggett, who proposed that the committee refer the question to the governing body of ILO. In-effect. It means this conference will "not bring out any resolutions on the subject. Selected Him (Continued from Page i) tacks the day before, TT.

S. Plying Portresses and Liberators struck these rail targets: Brasov, 80 miles north of the Romanian capital of Bucharest; Pitesti, 70 miles northwest of Bucharest; Craiova, 120 miles west of the capi- 10.60 tal; Campina, 20 miles north of the 11.70 oil city on Ploesti, and Turnu- 12.80 Severin, at the iron gate of the 13.90 Danube river 65 miles northwest- 15.10 of Craiova near the Yugoslav fron- 1620 tier. 1730 Refineries In Campina Hit 19.00 In the pre-dawn darkness RAF 21.30 Wellingtons and Halifaxes had. at- Meanwhile, a wide search was under way for a cafe entertainer, one of the sisters with whom, police said, the man formerly resided at the hotel. Corpse Corresponds With.

Missing Illinois Woman Los Angeles, May detectives, today telegraphed police that the description of a woman's body found in a trunk here yesterday corresponds in almost all respects with a woman missing in the Illinois city. The Chicago officers did not disclose the name of the missing They said she weighed 156 pounds, according to their description, while the dead woman here weighed about 135 pounds. Dr. Frank Webb, county autopsy surgeon, announced today that a to Washington and party leaders were reported today to be considering Gov. Robert S.

Kerr of Oklahoma, among others, for the post. The 47-year-old Oklahoma governor conferred with National Chairman Robert E. Hannegan here this week and told reporters that while he was "not an applicant for recognition" be would be glad to undertake any campaign task the party leadership assigns to hire. Others Under Consideration Kerr was one of several under consideration, including Senate Democratic Leader Barkley (Ky), who keynoted the 1932 and 1936 conventions. Ambassador to Chile Claude Powers, "the 1928 keynoter, and Chairman Truman (D-Mo) of the Senate's war investigating committee.

There has beea talk also of Truman as permanent chairman of the convention, a post that most party members expect to go to a member of congress if governor is chosen 1 for the keynote address. TIO-I Hancegan is understood to be inj i us er Crippled School Teacher Preyed on Man's 10 days of testimony, carries a minimum sentence of 20 years to life. He was indicted on a first degree murder count. Plans for disposition of four other Sullivan county indictments for first degree murder still pending against Drucker have not been announced by District Attorney Benjamin Newberg. They accused him of the deaths of Hyman Yuran in 1940, Irving Ashkenas in By WILLIAM T.

PEACOCK Washington, May 6 (ff) $3,450570,000 new appropriation for Lead-Lease was asked by Presided! Soosevelt today together with appropriation of unspent funds to I make S7.188393.000 available in tht fiscal year beginning nest July l. The amount would raise to about 428.000,000,000, the total for lend, lease since the program was started. The new fund was asked for Industrial products required for tit production of planes, tanks, and other war supplies In and Maurice (Frenchy) Carrilot 1939. Drucker. who been sought for three years, was arrested In Wilmington, Del, last December by special agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Delaware police.

He was extradited to New York state at the request of GOT. Thomas E. Dewey. Man Confesses Slaying in 1905 search of a new personality for the keynoter and. Kerr apparently fills this bill.

The tall, graying Oklahoma governor, national committeeman from his state, is an ardent advocate of a fourth term for President Boose He is a World War veteran and a past state commander of the American Legioa. Impressed by GOP Accent The Democrats have been to- pressed with the accent tha -K partial examination of the body disclosed that the victim did not die of a. bullet or stab wound, nor was there any indication that an abortion had caused her death. He said investigators will make a chemical examination to determine whether she might have been killed by poison or strangulation. He said this would require several days, The body, packed in salt, was discovered at a railway express agency office in a trunk shipped here from Chicago by a men who gave the name of John Lopez as sender and consignee.

AUied Plans (Continued from Page i) leans have placed on governors in iieir convention lineup. Gov. Earl Warren of California will keynote the GOP meeting. factor, Kerr comes from a state that might be considered in the doubtful column in the presidential election, although the governor himself is confident that President Roosevelt can carry It. Farfry leaders indicated that the President will be asked to make the final decision on the temporary and permanent chairmen, although an arrangements committee to be named by Hannegan wall make the formal choice.

Although some were inclined to believe the President's action in this matter might give some indications of his attitude toward a fourth term, about which he has been silent, party leaders said Mr. Roosevelt's wishes naturally would be acceded to regardless of whether he is a candidate. Ponape Battered By U. S. Bombers Mind for Years Fairmont, W.

May The sister of a 28-year-old crippled school teacher who was slain 39 years ago at the little hamlet of Hoalt, will come before a Marion county grand jury May 11 to tell the details of her brother's death. Mrs. Ada Smith Sargent of near Morgantown was located after Sheriff ML R. Calhoun of St Helen's reported that A. J.

Pritehard, 73, confessed to the slaying of Walter i O. Smith, the school teacher who punished his son. Pritehard said he changed his name from Benjamin Franklin Mayle and went to the St. Helen's area several years after Smith's death on November 16, 1905, the sheriff stated. Calhoun quoted Pritehard as de- reqaired to the rations of their soldiers workers, and related services." Military and naval supplies directly to America's Allies drawn from the accounts of tin War and Navy departments.

The when request arrived at a new demands were tiai voiced at the capital for more la. formation on lend-lease op'erationj. Congress Wants Information Senator EUender (D-La) 'Congress and the people are en-1 titled to more facts than they havt I been about the extent ace! nature of reverse aid to us." Asking establishment noi? national policy with respect TO I final lend-lease settlements, Ellen-1 der said "unless do, we may find I ourselves owing our at tiaj end of the war instead of their owing us." He noted that recent reponj said the United States had extended $21,794,237,819 worth of lend-lease I aid up to March 15, and had re-1 ceived $2,129,151,000 worth of erse lend-lease. In addition to the direct appro-j priation for lend-lease, Mr. Roose-j velt asked: elating that the slaying preyed on his mind leading him.

to make the confession. Besides airs. Sargent, two other sisters were found. They -sere Mrs. Almeda Anderson, also of near Morgantown, and Mrs.

Retta Hayes of Wilmington, Del $4,209,000 for expenses treasury and agriculture of thi1 depart-1 ments for procurement of lead-leas supplies and services. 588,299,000 Paid Back Authority to use $88,299,000 rs-j ceived as a result of lend-leaal operations. It was explained thai I this money was received chiefijj from foreign governments in. pay-1 Lesinski Visit (Continued from Page i) gave no hint as to what he thought I the actual events might be 10 received more than $35,000,000 The American, whose trip 01 Ol food fuel and has aroused criticism in the United! reverse lend-lease in January ment of lend-lease aid or from salij of reverse lend-lease commodities. I It is in addition to the more than two billion dollars worth of reveraj lead-lease supplies and servical furnished American forces.

$20,881.000 for operations of thj foreign economic administration. This agency, among other duties, supervises lend-lease. A report from, the Foreign Economic Administration during the daj said American armed forces States, declared also that Stalin 'really wants a strong, independent democratic Poland," and that "he has no intention of meddling and About aviation A i A1IJ mLdlLlUlI Oi 'lUctiQilnE Seventh Airforce Liber-1 in the internal affairs of ators Drop 87 Tons Explosives TT. S. Pacific Fleet Headquarters, which thus far has confronted the! pearl Harbor, May 6 war partnership, makes it likely it Alm Afr Force Liberators dropped child; S35.50, with two chil- waters roaring down on German 520 3 90 or Prisons without jdren; $33.40, three chilren: $31.30, this communications and defense anj exemption; $41.80 for single per- if our children; It was the first announcement ofi £On: S39.70 for married couple, no jdren.

the use of P-51 Mustangs in theater. 16 Allied Planes Lost Friday In Its widespread operations S29.10, five chil- jHun Commentator Berlin Looks fmm tj 3 (Continued from Page (Continued from Page Mediterranean Air Force flaw 1.980 5 iRTSsion wiu depend on battles pects to completing the Ledo con- offensive flights Friday, losing ig! beirTCen the invasion forces andjnections with China months ahead heavy bombers and eight other air-j ge (GenEan) reserves." i schedule. craft and destroying 11 German-) Ronlmei Pictured German soldiery planes. "las "armed with new weapons" anoj Maj. Gen.

John K. Cannon, com- rcady for the utmo sn ci as- mander of the U. S. 12th Air Force, in a German broadcast that' vividly described the great 6 AUies would coffle up 3 Sa lj maDy Bruam Conned by Air Tjn- plishments of the Allied air offen-i a srve in Italy. He said the orraea Un- had not moved a sins'- through! Capt Balfour train from the Pisa-Rimini line "to! AUied aeria! ofrensiTe tha front since March 24 He told' Under Way Ls ta effect itself the how the Allies' incessant bombing I beginnia of of llns and rail yards had minimized i -surely," said Balfour in a speech, i referring to the most recent U.

S. bomber assault oa the German the Germans' repair efforts created a serious bottleneck. Cannon posed an unusual military One qufistion tha situation the air force calling on of airope con the ground for Tice versa. that comes our armies make the Hun use up and our job win be to prevent Secretary Stimson at Washington implied that during the week, had the Japanese army in upper Burma been concentrated jjorthwird against SiilwelTs forces, he said, instead of on the collapsed invasion of India. Stil- weil's problems would have been bring together Prime Minister Churchill.

President Roosevelt and Premier Stalin for another confer- of ose-third of Ger- i ence. many's the Yank arrmenj A first hand report of the corn- stnick their latest five-way blow. From Britain. Australian and New Zealand Mosquitos attacked inland targets ia northern France during the day without loss. One German fighter was shot dovm.

mission's progress was carried back to Washington by Edward R. Stet- tinius. American under-secretary of state. It was also understood that the State Department and President Roosevelt were collecting from high- RAP operations the placed American'sources detailed Trere confined to mine-laying in en- information on the Russian emy waters, accomplished without loss. Governments Musi Approve Speculation of the new meeting Late Friday RAF Mitchells and of the three powers was strength- Bostons and Typhoon nghter-bomb- ers attacked rail yards at Hazebrouck and MottevUle in northern France, and patrolling Mosquitos shot up two enemy planes in an attack on the Mont Da Marsan airfield near the French scsthsrn coast materially increased.

With TO raiks above Spain. men ed Berlin the other morning." He said that "destruction through- of oc- carried out from getting more," he said. can operate without supplies. the Anzio beachhead there! 6 I33 OCO On make several minor ground Greatest Militar I on the continent more secure and! I the path from the coast to Berlin vance. 'more direct.

lies and Japanese alike engaged in supply cutting forays, he added, "the pay-off to the victor should be large." Nor was there any doubt in hk mind ivho the victor would be. Stilwell's operations have never He is close to this primary objective, Myitkyina, and there is no longer any formidable Japanese reserve force In northwestern Burma where the monsoon 'oothold i 155 are light by comparison and Royally Rates to stall tils continued ad- (Continued from Pare Gestapo Kounis Up French Speaking at Coventry, Lt Archibald Edward Nye, vice-chief of! (Continued from Page i) confidence had its birth in the Imperial general staff, told Brit-j Their training will stress instruc- CI Ch OPS ihs of sreat events which will call i present prohibition against frater- faith and fortitude," nization with rar prisoners will not JSZ en a that whatever hwtWUps apply between Ambers of the and captured 243.000 have to bear, one thing at and 87 tons of bombs on Ponape Island Thursday, three days after that explosion-battered satellite of Truk had been raked by a protracted battleship shelling, Adm. Chester W. Mimitz announced today. Apparently highly satisfied with his trip.

Father Orlemanski praised the Russians as "a wonderful people" and Stalin and Foreign Commissar Molotov as "great He conferred rith the two lesders at the Kremlin for two hours Thursday and said "the results were beyond my expectation." His first visit with Stalin was April 28. Priest Holds It Vital Autocratic The priest himself appeared to i nt L'j- LUUilV. Army Liberators, making the 67th announced land based bombing strike at Ponape since Feb. 14, concentrated on Ponape town and dock areas. Many large' fires and explosions were observed.

Ponape, 440 miles east of the ened by the fact' that the commission's decision must be approved by the individual governments, and a get-together might eliminate time- consuming delays in threeway exchanges between Washington, don and Moscow. Once accord has been reached, reliable sources felt, its terms would be handed over to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower for administration in the British-American sphere of military influence and to Russian" military commander in the Soviet zone. Although details have not been'' 15 nds central Caroline Island bastion of Truk, was heavily hit Monday by carrier bombers and shelled by battle ships under command-of Vice Adm.

W. A. Lee. Truk itself, worked over by carrier planes a two-day attack ast week-end, was hit by Army Liberators before dawn Friday. It was the 22nd land-based raid from Stalin's attitude toward the Catholic church as the most important outcome of the second meeting, and he cited as evidence of this attitude the fact that five priests were serving as chaplains at the headquarters of the Polish army at Sumy, which he visited.

Informed that an American congressman, Rep. Lesinski CD-Mich) had referred to him as a traitor to the church and the principles of Americanism, Father Orlemanski shrugged his shoulders in an at-! tltude of indifference. "I wonder what the Polish people are saying was gasoline, and other roleum products. The two-month volume of reverjs lend-lease was equal to half the I amount received in all of 1943 and! was roughly equal to the entire 18421 volume. No Extra Oranges London uniformed hotel messenger approached the manager mjii uccu of the only retail fruit store in Cov-jdivulged it is anticipated that the central Pacific on the Japanese naval base.

Antiaircraft gun era- placements and coastal batteries were, hit by 47 tons of bombs- Thursday in a combination Army, Navy and Marine attack on isolated remarked. Father Orlemanski addressed the people of Poland in Polish over the Moscow radio yesterday as "fellow countrymen." Giving assurance of Stalin's attitude toward the fu- Beared 2 appeared to Russians Sink (Continued from Page i) destroyers, minesweepers, torpedo boats and several dozen transport! totaling more than 100,000 tons. Most of these vessels sank in tas Black Sea on the Axis sea lanes from the Crimea to Romania, said the review. Theb roadcast Moscow buHetic recorded by the Soviet monitor here said Russian planes Thursday ansj Thursday night sank one xansport and two patrol launches and seriously damaged two oilier! enemy transports in the Black Enemy Connvoy Routed West of Sevastopol Soviet motor 1 orpedo boats routed an enemy convoy and scored direct torpedo hiti! sank three transports ling 8,000 tons and two high speed landing barges, the bulletin said. Sixty-two enemy planes were des-1 troyed on all fronts during Moscow said.

The steady sinking on Axis res-1 cue and supply ships off tare of the priest said his ent Garden market. like the King's orange ration," he began. "Which king?" asked the manager. plan covers such points as complete! military occupation of enemy territory, supervision of control over industries with a long-time ban against armament production, tem- A4LUOU1CUU ptOUUUHOU ICm- Kmg George of Greece," the iporary disposition of German-seized territory and methods for bringing messenger replied, and got one pound of oranges the King was entitled to oa his ordinary ration book, to justice those responsible for aggression. Dejected, Half-Starved Japs Surrendering To U.

S. Troops clear-the final result will military personnel. jinal crushing attack be in doubt we will! Ida began at 3 a. m. on May you the victory you all so Advanced Allied Headquarters, Sunday, stockade holds 155 prisoners and wear easily uni- last year, after armored division jently desire.

shifted from the Eighth Army front I In France, the Paris radio said I to the First Army, and the Gestapo, in a mass identity! continue to be paid the Second Corps switched in secrecy had rounded up more tliani prfisent rates of ay However, a the north to drive against Bizerte. ja million Parisians for questioning portion of this wil1 aid Sn cash Within 3fi hours the Allied drive at least 200,000 for "vary-! and the remainder in post exchange had crushed the German resistance, ing periods," and ssndine 10,000 to! collpons instead of tlr Bizerte and Tunis were camps. From 'Nortli' being paid 5n COU RS with Allied troops. I Africa, the Algiers radio warned the -t 'i On that solid, foundation of trl- French against fresh German leaf- urnphs by Allied arms, Eisenhower let campaigns attempting to incite began planning for the invasion, premature revolt in France. The Algiers radio told the people of Marseille that Gestapo and Vichy from England, assembling armies weapons.

On year ago Allied armies freed "intend to' declare one continent of the enemy, and to- 'state of siege in Marseille," and they are preparing to free "French patriots to make entire sum at present. The amount not psid in cash may be credited to the individual's account with the treasury of the U. S. If he desires. As of April 1, this year, there were 50,136 Italian prisoners of war mopl Japanese operation3 rar from soldiers, defeated in the Hollandia American air and area of Dutch New Guinea, are sur- rendering to their American conquerors in greater numbers than in any other Southwest Pacific campaign.

U. S. airmen continue to blast their airfields in that general reg- I ion. a this country, the war department Advices from the headquarters of General Douglas A. MacArthur indicate that many of the Japanese have discarded their earlier fanatical "suicide rather than capture" theory and are 'voluntarily In previous campaigns few Japanese gave up.

Hundreds killed oth themselves rather than fall into The service units nre not expected (enemy hands. The picture has itn.i«^>. -tut; pmtuit; iUSO OOIilOaruCu H.I3U 5 I to reach that total, however. changed. Today the HoUandia enemy shore batteries.

sea raiders maintained their relentless campaign Lifting of Gag I own aim was to help Polish work- iers "to keep pace with- the "We are Slavs," he said. "Allied, Poland and Russia will become the greatest power in the east, Friendship with Germany is excluded. Russia is our nearest neighbor, Let us live in friend- Exemplion from Britishj sM 3 amity." Diplomatic Censorship Termed Necessary of Algiers, May 6 Ths French Committee of-National Liberation today asked for exemption from British diplomatic censorship, say- Most Definite Comment The statement of Stalin's attitude toward Poland and the Catholic Church was the most definite comment on this much-discussed topic which had yet been made public by anyone-having Stalin's ear. "Unquestionably," Father Orle- it could not "usefully" continue man ski said in the formal state- Joseph Pierre Koenig's Uent, "Marshal Stalin is a friend conversations in London with of the Polish strategy of reducing without too costly frontal assaults! oa that natural fortress where it believed 25,000 German and manian troops are trapped but re-s sisting fiercely from caves dug the coastal cliffs. Russians Steadily Amassing German broadcasts said the Rus sians meanwhUe were steadily amassing men and equipment 031 a broad front fram central Poland in the Kowel area, 170 miles southeast of Warsaw, down to the middle jj Romanian front near -lasi.

Naa bombers werec jurying out rear-lina attacks on Russian bases in an effort disrupt this Soviet prepar- atlon for a fresh to bi said British restrictions on the of extermination against of diplomatic reprssen- airSelds in the regions around Hoi- landia. The Saturday headquart- inter-AHied coinmarid over the ad-j this historic future ministration of liberated French events will prove that he is very territory. i friendly disposed towards the Ro- The committee statement Catholic Church. 111 also make timed erha with Allied assaults ers communiqu? told of air smashes against airdromes, bivouac and supply areas, and other enemy, installations of the Scouten islands, in the Wakde-Sarml area, in New Ireland, British New Guinea, and New Britain. Night prowling American torpedo patrol boats swept In on the We- wak area, along the north New Guinea coast cast of Hollandia.

On successive nights they sank four bwges and damaged seven. They also bombarded and silenced three prevented it from Andre LeTnxjuer as its chief civilian delegate for'liberated territories to London for similar conversations. Koenig and Le Troquer are the committee's military and civil commissioners for liberated territories. In. another protest against censorship, but censorship in this case imposed by the French themselves, the French provisional consultative assembly's information and press commission voted to protest to Information commissioner Henri Bonnet against the political censorship of the North African press, a mission spokesman said.

"He really wants a strong, independent. Democratic Poland to protect herself against future aggres- -sors. He has no intention of meddling in the internal affairs of Poland. All he asks for is a friendly Poland. "As to religion, the religion of our forefathers shall be the religion on the western rim of Europe.

Axis radio commentators located the heaiest fighting in Romanist yesterday as along the north-souti road between Harlau and Frumos. Thel alter city Is 30 west of the menaced rail city ofj lasi. (Continued from Page i) nation would lead to the of the Polish people, and Marsha! 'centralized control of education is Stalin will not tolerate any transgression in this regard." The Soviet press did not carry the priest's statement, but it published the text of the radio speech lie made to the people of Poland. It did not include the phrase that Stalin is "very friendly, disposed" toward the church. Washington with its far-reachiriS 1 possibilities.

"To impose on our Maryland edu- catlonal system control from Washington would serve no useful pose, and not only would increa administrative costs, but would actually hinder effective administrs- tion" O'Conor concluded..

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About Cumberland Sunday Times Archive

Pages Available:
33,125
Years Available:
1932-1977