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The Troy Record from Troy, New York • Page 19

Publication:
The Troy Recordi
Location:
Troy, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

memo, MORNING, DECEMBER 1944; AcMevement K. asent. presided nigtot at' ogritni at Castletosj. easbJeaJft' warfc ciotfcisg projects. Miss Doris Hyde ws saistness were issued to PisyUis Leasa of tie CsstJe led by ilrs J4ary of.

the Cascte J'ualors. lad by Mss. M-s. George PrljSS, ionore-i Barbara. Sayder.

EJna Reiekert, SJeanor MorseE, JJascy Kelly aftd Pear! Brsysasn. Siiteb Sisters 4-H Club reeeiviag awards were Peters, EUsos- Associated (Continued from One.) AP, closed arjromests -witii declaj-atioa ijsat outeoaw of) is awaited with ia-f ieresi-- $ot ealy bus te tie to Reds Tighten from fcad reached within of A'-istsias borde- Cfeared. 35 tria. and Berfla through Stockholm daisied ualtt Marshal Maximilian (Balkan arasy already 'the Drava ic.ta tie A Swiss broadcast claimed Uafc through the ridor ail the way to te eiriy jwess- to i casse SB for 'frequent tioalag by the Jtssiicee JsisS earlier srg-usaeat butt the foasd sout Eera INK 9OWKE0 BYFLAK 0VEK GJERMAXV--A blazing Liberator JwtBber of the U. 5.

15l3i Air Force comes apart aad rolls ovec'oato its back alter be jag alt by anti-aircraft ire an attack oa Blecahaajaier. Geriaaay. Crew members were aoi accounted lor. ia KuMiaa R'ssaiaa advcee titty that fortress 38 TOWJB Captured a surge of pa-er tiat ia --paasieky Soviet tanks leJis. Beriia" Afsssy carty the.

opposite corce Warner aro tat faow. tried aad to A three-judge special Xew York! i Federal District Coesi decided the! AP Get. 6. ts-43. by This a vtrdlct la -this it was oa doeiiiaeats aad oral was to" this C.

Y. 0, Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at by the Justice c. B. A.

gym, Albany. More Department. i TO ADDRESS SAIiY--Rev. Daaiel A. Ijord, of St.

Louis. catioaalSv recognised leader of youth, will address a youth rally sponsored by the said Wast. South assorted tht JTeaiple tt aad Hadrian's fia Official can unite for a aiajjlar program oa 12 at the Municipal HaiLl by By 2 to 1 the court ttaa 1,200 chooi Xazi Tssr.e so ecenjy report, 'which with tasks and I tar: reaction tae British press. Jfcntfiu being made available to Tbe JSaneheswr Guardian Jtwarda be made by Samuel 8Jefaiaeguas brofee out aiser satpers. disabled veieraos aci! reiurauf: the "rude." To county agent and ilrijof the militia of the with the tlie orksiiirt Post.

Smacks of acts wsich cover their issu-1 Taayer. Civiia jjrticitJua.j£ in ScjiugiiH- coke's first achievement program be the Counsellors Boys' Club, led byJSrnesc Htsmstreet: Schaghticoke on a tmCSvIoad at were explained last nijght byi Eo-h r-u-a papers accuses! ttred troops wounding another. ire dawn, killing: one iod 'Gilbert ri- A. Sharpy national of -short meaories," with re- a talk before a joint Girls' Club led by, A SUer-Tian taafe was seat to Rev panels A- Kelley Wanko and Alrlj ia a Chapter. D.

A. and Auxiliary. Waters with Mw lr and chafged; their Hall rooms. winders or the controversy over DarSsn case ia North Africa- Waters with Mrs Speaee- Searles a 1 tueir Hartzioay Hall rooms. British geoeraUy ua- Sevta and the lte Scatleri I Sharpe.

who also'serves as is- that a crisU leader with haif a bursts of for the D. A.I i 1 een In drafting a pot At tomorrow ilrs. Th a y-j a i up floor by floor. at Albany, described the various deaJJ cower will or'-arize a junior 4-H ClubJ Bnash sowser was KUfed oy: phases of his work aad pointed at ijrs. Edward bu et 0 llea le the laws that are being be hostess for the the building.

A Elas soldier lay on the roof- Quan- jtities of grenades, aai- to assist, not only the disabled bui, ajl returniag He cited the State Education tries. Eden was ready, too. A query frO3i Laborite Ivor Thoaiaa as to whether the British goveranaeat's views were being- modified ia view of the Aaierican aa applicsat for aieasberahip to compete whh aa AP njeaiber in the Saaie JocaJity and (moraing or be into con- i is upon the 1 QliGifasf'ship The court ruled, however. AP did not' or dominate" news-1 gathering. i Answering Justice Douglas' qufeS- tion.

Rugs said the AP did not I deny that it was eagaged in iater- 1 I5fle3 of State commerce and did not deny that Its read as the gov-L w- 4 ft i ernaient co.n:eB(is do. C. A. IMnee Qlti atiTo Redecorate Rooms facts to show that some- and college yovth, priests, broth- 1 aod sisters are--expected to thc rapsta! aaci o- nesi- this i t. IsSaod directly iaiuniUon and riHea were strewn vocational training prograai: us- of 1e Aaiericaa- position drew Oti'S i about the building, but most of the! employment insurance; ti-orkmen's fr lhe Fftrei -Secretary ine defenders apparently escaped.

compensation: civil service; and 1 5 res dcse: (Continued front 1'age One.) British troops are establishing i the various benefits 'available can 58 1 1115 P. Witherow. president of the 1 control over the center of Athens the discharged veterans. tfers re revi the very Blaw-Kaox Co, Piit5burr. dtcl3tr-i de working out in coacen- the chapter accepted five Hew! Vft Vft (trie rings.

Sniping continued m-f jnenibe.r* last night, four of Thomas will do the job." occasional bigger thumps "VVitherow added, however, "one grenades and machineguas. throughout the cjty, saw servJee during'World War IL 5 00 "withOraw I Ktvo-ttt- trfim Yr H. Sickles. John A. Gabor- the surest ways to keep war workers on the job is for them to know that postwar jobs are being planned for theoi." Wttherow declared an N.

A. 31. survey showed employment of 55 million "a possibility." HAM reliiiei to disband ila militia brought OH the crisis, in which Britain has supported the shaken" government of Premier George Papaadreou. The point at which the main Athens-Piraeus road enters the scene of continuous A. survey has laid thfc spectre of a prolonged transition fi hu Bmtsh lroopa a ered period of With- casUa Ues OCCUr a f- ta mS 1 said.

Paul Hoffman, head of the Committee for Economic Development, group a top postwar of businessmen. planning declared that job plenty must continue as industry's planning goal while war assignments are being met around the Acropolis, and around the ancient, restored stadium two- thirds of a mile to the southeast on the opposite side of the highway. British parachute troops relieved besieged policemen of one precinct station house near the main rail-? way station. Three rumbled sU. and Louis S.

Mixrozak. A joint report on the progress being made by the cheer committee, distributing gifts hospitalized veterans in the area. was received at the meeting, presided over by Sol 3f. Brafman.j commander. The organizations ted to increase the amount of money alloted ior this purpose and to make csash presents rather than gifts.

The chapter also voted a ntribution to the Knights of Columbus Christmas fund. gracefully" and admit that "a blunder has been made." Hoffman, who said he spoke t( police reluctance of peace needs at a. ses- a nearby headquarters The sion devoted to war, said industry would be falling down on its Job If it failed to prepare adequately for peace. He reiterated his belief police clambered aboard the tanks, Motor Corps Aids Transportation of Surgical Dressings Kingston Rabbi Protests Carols in Schoolrooms' The of the surgical dressings unit of the Rensselaer County Branch of the American Red Cross in producing 2.326,000 surgical dressings in two and a half was described by Miss Madeleine Henry chairman of the unit, in ad- dressiag a meeting of the Red Kingston Cot--Singing of Cross Motor Corps at corps head- mas cerols in Kingston public schools "will be continued" a quarters last night. Henry paid tribute to the i UE; a -but snipers hit some as thej were; Motor Corps for transporting the i ocr the board of education said! driven to a safer i materials for the dressings as welt iadustry must expand after tha icar to meet job goals.

Jobs for 54,000 Goal of State's Postwar Plans Albany York State's postwar public works program will provide jobs for 54.000 persons, the State Highway Chapter of the Associated General Contractors was told yesterday. Holden A. executive secretary of the State Public Work Postwar Planning Commission, addressing the chapter's I9th annual (nesting, said many thousands more jobs would be provided "by projects to be carried but by municipalities and counties. Municipalities alone, he stated, are planning to spend S225.000.000 on bridges. heavy Party.

-whose opposition to the construction, on side- present Greek government flared AArt into a series of disorders Sunday. Daring the night the, K. F. dropped parachute flares over the countryside around Athens while reconhoitering for converging Elas forces. Sporadic small arms flre broke the stillness throughout the night in the capital.

Ko American troops are involved in the Athens fighting. A Soatiag population of between sixty and one naiuJred American servicemen The EA.M called a stHkp in the last night following a Rabbi's pro- 33 the finished products, at a i. Pelbponnesian town of disarmed newly-recruited national militiamen there. But the" British commander at Patras recovered the without a shot being- fired. A British communique Issued yesterday morning said: defiance of all orders both from the Greek government and Maj.

Gen. R. M. Scobe, Elas troops continued to advance toward the center of Athens, overwhelming police posts and evea firing oa British troops oa guard duty. "British and Greek regular forces have now gone iatb action in support of the civil power." One British officer was killed and an enlisted man wag wounded as snipers in the Plakka District opened fire befort dawn on the truckload of troops passing along the main Piraeus road.

Bias reinforcements xvere reported eh route to the city from provinces. The Elas form the ftghting branch of the left-wing (National Liberation Front ant test against "religious instruction" in the schools. Clarence Rowland declined fur- over by 31rs. Clyde W. Heer, Motor Corps chairnaan.

Volunteer, "workers operating ther comment pending completion tinder conditions of meticulous of a study of the matter by a I cleanliness in headquarters sup- special committee to which he was appointed. The committee is expected to re- plied by the Manufacturers Bank, of Troy and in branches ia Cohoes, a in and port today on a. letter sent the! dress- board Novembec 29 by Rabbi i ings in July. Harold Englander. who objected to Eleven, kinds of dressings are walks and 525,000,000 on parks and jjlaygTounds.

H. E. Foreman of Washington, managing director of the Associated General Contractors, said jiew York "is far ahead of other states" in postwar construction planning; "We must avert a condition ia this state in which discharged defense workers and in. other ttates wouid flood here for work after the war. We must do all we can to the end that each state mil are here, inclading members of the Save a program big enough to pro- Transport Command, aircraft per- VIde work its own people.

Uonael and officers attached to the Area Residents Gain Civil Seryke Ratings relief organization- Scobie. British commander of Allied forces in Greece, said it might be necessary to inforw I ish and American authorities in the teaching of the Christmas story and the staging of Christ- coos carols in the public school system. The board of directors of Congregation Aaavath Israel announced yesterday Rabbi Englander bed submitted his resignation Tuesday night and that the board would made by the Red- Cross under conditions of cleanliness which require operators to wear uniforms and veils, and to omit fingernail polish as a possible source of in- fectiou. Nationally, the American Red Cross has contracted to provide 100,000,000 surgical dressings a present it at the meeting of the I month. From its 3,000 work congregation Sunday.

the organization, supplies 90 per of all'dressings used, the re- old dean of the Greek Liberal Par- ty. declared Tuesday that Prime Minister Churchill. through in-i in structions 'to British Athens, haj vetoed replacing mJer Georg-e Papandreou in A Members of the Motor Corps last planned a refresher course in Aid. discussed a course in military drill and planned course in miiiiarv- arui ana government change that might have a pattv to be held solved the crisis wbicn came intoi. A the open Sunday -vrith a series of disorders Papandreou offered Tuesday to resign of a coalition inet under Sophoulis.

liberal leader said all political factions bad asked to form Groups Unite For Postwar lob Rights Washington thirty a nenv government, even leftists women's a i a organizations leaders expressing their willingness have agreed to campaign jointly to serve uader him "in order equitable employment of prevent further deterioration of the women in postwar era. EJtuation and bloodshed." Hiss Frieda Miller, women's ish house and told me that, according to the latest instructions received from the British Premier, 'any change "in the present head of the ilary Hughes of Troy -of soon, tbat the port of government is impossibleV the Civil Service applicants who qualified in the examination for chief clerk ia certification division of Civil Service Department Her niarfe was 92.5. Margaret of topped tvould be uaable to handle scheduled relief shipments -because of the EAM strike. "Therefore," Sophoulis said, "further discussion is needless." hear tMs outstanding Some years bsck Faiher Lord cro spoke before, aad enterjaiaed a packed audience at Music Hull under the auspices of the Catholic Forum. Large delegations are expected to attend from Cathaik- Central High and par- frofts aaothtr to; coast -ip I'rsc; t'seosirasrd S-A-edish reports 'Barii- declared Shat- the Weniv niach: -a-oule for every io sou.

'rt2 Csepe! to the rivers Third Artiiy through nrore ihan lib i ti5H-ns Tuejfd-av ja ad; vaseri of to IS kiilins laiar? 2X0 Axis rear guards land another 750. The Xas: -wtre- breaking Russian sssauit and Moscow s-ndi- that the hac a.ba=- I coned plau to -vase Delta FI Sorority SchHuies Dance Final 5 have completed at Cownsuniiy Cester by Psi -Sorority. Chapter; the dance at the Justice Roberts, alluding to tfee summary judgment, asked, "isn't impact on a competitor question of fact?" Then Roberts went on so remark, whether the AP could meet the terms of the lower court's decree by simply arraotincing- tirat would tables ar.d chair sic vein be tof- by the iJusic Makers. iy Beck and Bnizeaiaa, aai tr.e:r consists of Ada L-evine. P.Q4a!y»j Schwebel.

ve-rly Stoctster toaiorrow to determine ways and fP erate stand the 31-tcile cor- attractive with paint brush arid' needle. Designs will be discussed for the' Kepojft Xear Border. i Russians said a steady 3ow balcony walls, and color schemes German reserves was will be selected for reflnishing I drained off froai tie Italian and admit ho more members. Chief Justice Stone asked at one point whether it would be illegal; The -Connivers sre recreational room on front? -er. e.Tar: 5iem plaaninsr a tbe Red Army sweep toward Aus- the second I ARIJEX la "THAT'S MY BABY" -I "THE OF FORTY THICVES" under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, nights as if a group of manufacturers got to- aim Casey gether and exchanged credit information among themselves, but would not furnish it to outsiders.

K.ugg replied that such an arrangement would be all right. 'if that is not a violation, how is It different, than, this Stone asked. floor that will be used on dance 1 a diversion. Miss and John Waldo are committee chairmen. Canadian Draft Vole Expected Late Today Ottawa tP Party leaders agreed last night to up debate on Canada's conscription crisis and vote today on the government's motion of confidence in its new policy to draft 16,000 man.

to meet i a reinforcement. needs abroa-d. The government is; expected to win with a comfortable majority on the main motion after several votes on expressing- various party views. IPrime Minister W. L- Mackenzie King, in announcing; the decision to the House of Commons, declared it -was agreed that the dabate "should not be unduly prolonged" it might have "an uji- settling effect throughout the country." LAST T01SS TONIGHT itTtt.IAJtl BEXUEC SUSAX HAYWAR0 "THE HAIRY ALSO TOM COXWAV ytOSA.

MAKIS "THE FALCON IN MEXICO" RIVOLI 'THE LODGER" Mrrle Oterim and Cctirtc 'The Aimzing Mr. Forrest" Edward Morton and Otte Krujer CARTOOX TODAY MAkCMCT QURtS tOiUt O'BlIH-LlfiHWN'lflMNfi KAY KYSER end ANN M1LLIR CAROLINE BLUES" AMILY CASINO "GREENWICH VILLAGE" Ameche-- Vtvlin Btln 'TUNISIAN VICTORY" WATEKV1.1ET TONIGHT "SHOW BUSINESS" E0BEB DAVIS Also SELECTED SHOKT3 STATE TOX1TE 'See Here, PvL Hargrove' ROBERT WAX.KEK "WATERFRONT" The Show of a 1,000 Wonders in Color! JOH.V USTOAY "LAURA" "MY PAL, WOIF" FRIDAY At 9:30 A.M. Before any action was possible. bureau director Of the DepartiheBt bxr.vever, SophouUs contittued, "Brit- i of Ijabor. announced yesterday that Leaper called at labor, management, professional, religious, welfare and Kegro groups had approved a blueprint for such employment at a conference here Tuesday.

The blueprint calls for inclusion of competent, isfonaed women on 1 state municipal postwar planning 1 He declared he had 'turned down bodies. Scobifc has declared the Elas i a British request that he support guilty of mutiny. Its members are! Papandrexju because "if I support- the iist of 12 qualifying- for clerk in the Albany office of tfte, De-i partment of Agriculture aad Mar-' kets with a mark of 905. Veronica' Cos of Cocoes iva3 third tvHi S8J. Caroline ilafcair of Kensselaer second in the list of those! qualifying for clerk the Office oft the fidueatioB Department 90, per aii'd- Eilcsn Uorari of East was third, qualifying for senior stftaographer the Departrne.it of Taxation and pi- a mark of 38A'.

technically under his command. ed Papartdreou I would be support- Theniistokles Sophoulis. S3-year-! ing Miss Miller said she expects Women's chances for employment to diminish the moment civilian production again predominates. Stephentotvn Mr. and Mrs.

Roy D. Rose of Keorelttm recently x-isited rela Mrs. Rose's mother Mrs. BBrilJio Sasby, accompanied them home, wijfere she will remain Jor the winter. CLAM BAKE EVERT EXCEFT Ba.ket KriMler.

Swwit. aaA VthHe Cent, KnM mai BoUez, CUun Broth 1.50 A Basket GBOfCB 'MEttt KANE'S TAVERN SEOOT ST. raoNc TKOI MONTY WOOLLEY JUNE HAVER DJCK BAYMES TODAY AT 10 fl. JAMES CRAIG EDW.ARNOLD QU1NN WHJTNaf RQStNStOOM ami Mftropoliten Optra Staff n. IIONAKD WARREN BUNCHE A I I A A I 0 A A native with iuii tides by fcr DAMON JUVYON MISS BOBBY SOCKS wUh Bob Crosby Lynn BUY BONDS HOW! Get.

That Extra BonJ Mere! TODAY FREE MOVIE DAY For Anyone Purchosinsj A'War Bond At This Theatre MIT "WHER STRANGERS MARRY" OfAN MGGtR HUHTSt TODAY FREE MOVIE DAY For Purchawnj a War Bond at Thij Thaatre MOTION PiCTyRE ACH1EMENT1 JENIFER JONES man VISCIST -WCE IEE i ass oats COWER -teKtesiqr HENRY KIN6 A A EVE. Adult 78c--Child, 40c Adult FiATURl SMOWH AT.

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About The Troy Record Archive

Pages Available:
259,031
Years Available:
1943-1977