Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania • Page 15

Publication:
The Daily Courieri
Location:
Connellsville, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THLHSPAY. THE DAILY COURIER, CQNNEUSVILLf, PA. PAGE FIFTEEN- Communism Brings Russians Only Broken Promises By PHIL NEWSOM DPI Foreign Newt Analyst of comparison, States. the United the Soviet chemical industry in the next seven years. Two hundred new chemical plants are to be built and 500 existing ones rebuilt.

But, again typical of the GBTsmu scunooK The War for the Union 1861-65 in Picture! For'the of the 15 So- viet republics, living on broken viet five, seven and 20-year promises, it has been a tragedy. am s- the announcement, For Khrushchev, first secretary ok no notlce of ast failure I of the Communist party since "Unprecedented" Plan I 1953 and premier since 1958, it Tne Kiuubehuv announce-, has been an example of personal ment called the new plan "un-i indstructibility. percedented" and, among other! For example: i toinfis. called for the production i On July 30, 1951, the Soviet' 1 97( of 3 5 t0 1 1 0 9 Communist party announced its of lastlKSfand ynthetlc sins third program, a milestone in a Jum of S1X times the history of communism. resent leve The first program had been! was the fact that the drawn up in 1903 and called for pie-m-the-sky program of 1961 "the overthrow of the Czarist ca more than 5 million autocracy" and the "establish- lons of plastics and synthetic ment of the dictatorship of the.

resins 197 I proletariat." "Socialist Society" The second program, drawn Khrushchev made special note of the claim that since the' death, of Josef Stalin 10 years up by Lenin in 1919, had for Soviet production of meat goal the "building of a Socialist 1 and milk has more than dou- society." The third, drawn up Khrushchev, declared: "In the current decade (1961- bled and the production of eggs under tripled. But he omitted to note, that most of this gain camel from the small private plots al-, 1970) the Soviet Union will sur-' lotted to Soviet peasants for pass the strongest and richest! their own use. capitalist country, the United! He also failed to note that States, in production per head while production wa increas- of population; the people's so was the Soviet popula- standard of living and their cul-, tion at the rate of 3.5 million tural and technical standards, per year, will improve substantially With space accomplish- hard physical work will disap- ments in mind) there is no dis pear position to discount Soviet lech- This week before 6,000 mem- mcal ability Ratheri U-S- ex bers of the Soviet leadership in perts are inclined to attribute the Kremlin Hall of Congresses, Soviet a ji ures to too much Khrushchev gave his accounting naste and too little planning. of failure. jj jt eas to see why Typically, his accounting con- JQ.

tained no note of personal fail- on lire nor of the fact that as he personally guided the destiny of Soviet agriculture he has seen first mechanization as the cure- Firemen Elect. all for the ills of Soviet produc- No. 301 "Dearest Mother. I am latt with my letter this week-- jny poor, poor occupy my time very much--I go every day, te. sometimes nights," Walter Whitman wrote from Washington, aome 10 days after the battle of Chancellorsville.

Hundreds of the Union wounded had been transported by wagon, railroad car and river craft into the capital city. Whitman had cut name to Walt in the bylines on sketches and poetry he wrote for papers on his native Long Island, in New Orleans and New York, before the war. He was one of the volunteer nurses in Washington military hospitals at the same time as another writer who was to become famous after the war: Louisa May Alcott WhttMan had a clerkship in a government department occupying his other time in Washington and providing 1 his livelihood. The first edition of "Leaves of Grass," the work on which Whitman's future fame was to rest, had been in print eight vears in 1863, but Whitman "still" had to gain recognition as a literary artist. Numerous letters he sent to his mother and friends during tht war did not evidence the quality of writing he was to cultivate and to inject eventually into "Leaves of Grass" through many revisions.

The Whitman wartime letters were filled with such passages as "Mother, if you was here a couple of days, you would cry your eyes out. I find I have to restrain myself and keep my composure I succeed pretty welL" Day to day notea in his journals are similarly revealing of the man beneath the poet placed upon a pedestal later. --CLARK KIMVAIKD CHRISTMAS Distributed by Kicc TeaturM i ui Khrushchev, beset by problems rnlhir 1 1 cu al tion, then the opening of the virgin lands and now, finally, the massive use of fertilizer. every side has need tor UNIONTOWN Mark Murphy has been elected president Quaker Group Sends Five on Exchange Tour of U.S., Russia PHILADELPHIA (UPI) --The American Friends Service Committee revealed here that two young Russians and three Americans had spent three weeks in traveling seminars under a quietly conducted inter- The Quaker organization said Russians Gennadiy Pavlovich Eliseyev, an engineer, and Alexander Krivopalov, a journalist, concluded their three week visit to the United States during the of Union Hose Paul Atkin-jpast weekend. son president of Keystone Fire Constance Curry of Atlanta, To bring this about he an- Co.

and Roger A. McGary pres- Sherry Hessler, Cincinnati, nounced a crash program to! ident of Chief Williams Hook and Eldon Kenworthy, a Yale I student, spent three weeks in more than triple the output of'Ladder Co. Russia earlier. The participants visited about half a dozen cities in Uie two countries, met with college students, high school teachers, representatives of labor and industry, and news men and women in off-the-record seminars. The experiment was planned to widen and broaden the traveling aspect of a program of reciprocal projects carried oj since 1960 by the committee and the U.S.S.R.

Committee of Youth Organizations. In the two earlier projects, a group of young people met at Leningrad in 1960, and anothf- group met at Poughkeepsie, in 1961 for three weeks of intensive discussions, followed by limited travel and discussions in selected communities. make stock out of the bones and use for barley soup. When you have a leg of lamb boned and rolled for a roast, I $1.00 Deposit reserves your gift 121 N. Pittsburg St.

CO. Of CONNtLUSVILtt 'OTTT A Holiday Gift Boxed "Connellsville's Greatest Store" TOWEL ENSEMBLES 5-PC. Holiday Special Printed Towel Set 5 Piece Set Includes: 1 long stemmed artificial rose 2 guest towels 2 wash cloths A Famous Maker, quality decorative ensemble at a very special price and just in time for decorating or gifting. Available in a beautiful array of colors. SET Single Ring 4-Pc.

Towel Set Attractively Gift Boxed And Only SO-99 4-Pc. Set Includes: Heavy quality bath towel 2 Matching face towels Brass ring Decorative colors include white-pink, green, blue, lavender, Buy Today! For Yourself Gifts for Others! Domestics Dept. Street Floor PC. Embroidered BATH TOWEL SET 6-Pc. Pastel Printed CANNON TOWEL SET And Only 3.99 Complete Set And Only Complete Set Personalized Mt including 2 bath toweli with contrail- ing borderi.

2 matching cloths. Aswrttd colon. Big thirsty terry includes 2 2 3 towels, 2 fuce towels. Rainbow of colors. 7-Inch Fury POWER SAWS 17.95 Fury SABRE SAWS Vi-lnch Fury DRILLS 6.69 3 Fury DRILLS 9.29 4 8 Ft.

Interior PLYWOOD 3.49 4.49 (Surfaced Ont Side) 2.49 Vj-lnch Bernz-O-Matic REFILL CYLINDERS 95c Luon Plywood Paneling V-Grooved, Pre-Finished 4 8 Ft. Sheet XMAS TREE HOLDER 89c Manufacturing and -Builders Supply TARRS PLANT (Old Brewery Site) 7-2357 Mt. Pleasant Store (652 Main St.) Ki 7-3331 Tsrrs Plant Open Saturday till 4:30 P.M..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Daily Courier Archive

Pages Available:
290,588
Years Available:
1902-1977