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Cumberland Evening Times from Cumberland, Maryland • Page 2

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Cumberland, Maryland
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TWO EVENING TIMES, CUMBERLAND, MONDAY, FEB. 22,1943 $542,753 TAXES BY S. BUREAU Troops Roll flock Into Kharkov Listed Among Others Receiving Rebates From Internal Revenue Department Last Year ALL PAID IN ERROR Majority of Refunds Made to Estates In Baltimore and Elsewhere in Maryland Washington. Feb. 22.

(JV- A federal income tax refund of $542,723 i to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was listed today with the following tax refunds made by the Bureau of Internal Revenue during the fiscal year ended last June 30 In tliej FEDERALWORK NOT PARADISE FOR EVADERS Committee Outlines Policy Governing Deferment of Federal Employes SUGGESTS LIMIT Report Says Thousands uld If Overlapping Functions "Were Eliminated Russian and'their horse-drawn funs move down street in Kharkov to the caption of this photo radioed from Moscow to New York. The Russians recaptured the strategic city from the RESTAURANTS ALSO HIT BY RATIONING tate. 'estate! Germans fr the most important victories of the winter campaign. Us. S3.522; Harry Adler, Baltimore, estate taxes, si.793; Bank of Ocean City, Ocean City.

income tax, Sir Arthur Bcnn, estate, Baltimore Trust Building (now" O'Sullivan build- ing.i, estate taxes, $4,543. Black and Decker Manufactur- income. Victor 0. Bleede, estate, (215 Charles CaUmsville, estate taxes, 13.514; Chesapeake and Potomac. Wwluiwwn Feb.

22.. Telephone company of Baltimore. tope to eke out. their food income. S3.703; Coastwise Petro- eatj out severa Urncs leurn Company, Baltimore, sales Will Be Limited to Same Percentage of Canned Goods As Individual Consumer will limited to sft percentage of can- and 0 85 1 and Estate Ma S.

Dohmc, estate. Baltimore. estate taxes Ethel Adams i ned Dunning. Baltimore, income, as individual consumers 259f Henry A. B.

Dunning, In. other words, resUuranU wiU No l. (Maryland Trust Building) et something-less than 50 percent Baltimore, income. trust the amount tney have been us- 0 2. J16.991; trust.

ln S- sxacfe smoust has not been Trust No. 4, Trust No. 5. but will be announced shortly. $16742 said, and restaurants will goj Eastern Shore Public Service under rationing March 1 along with Company- Salisbury, income, ho Fidelity and Guaranty Fire Cor- i OPA will make no effort, however, Wearing Slacks At Maryland Is Restricted College Park, Feb.

22 students at the University of Maryland may wear slacks and ski pants, but with certain limitations. Dean of Women Adele Stamp Issued the following announcement after an outbreak of slacks on the during the recent cold weather: "Gym suits, slacks, riding habits, overalls, snow suits, shorts, should be worn only when it is a regulation requirement but not to academic classes, on buses, or traveling from Washington or in public places." tBERGONZOLl BEHEYED TO BE IN WASHINGTON LaGuardia Broadcast to "Italy Indicates Other Fascist Military Leaders In U. S. New tork, Feb. 22.

short- wave broadcast to Italy by Mayor F. H. LaGuardia appears to indicate that General Annibale (Electric Whiskers) Bergonzoii, Italian general captured by the British, and eight other formerly high Italian military leaders are in this country mayor'disclosed in vbroadr cast to the Italian people yesterday that he had talked with the officers and said that to his eyes they "presented a group of, frustratec and hopeless men who were once leaders in their corps." He did not say where he had met them. (On Feb. 5' the Italian newspaper Imperative that this, strategically Popolo OTtalian reported that located India should be a unified Gen.

Bergonzoii, former commander of the Italian Black Shirt Corps as BalOmor esUte 'Frankfort Distilleries, of the food supplies potential enemies of the Allied Haiti- 1 permitted them. 52,589. Hafrerstown Company Gets Refund Funkhouser Company, Hagers- iowji, Income. Robert Oar- rett. Baltimore, income Louis W.

Gu'nby, Salisbury, income. Andrew J. Harper INDIAN ISSUE BECOMES ONE OF THE MAM CRISES OF ALLIESK SOCIALITE TO WED CHILDHOOD FRIEND (Continued from i) (peace. More than that she must be jthe shock-absorber if rifts by any chance should appear the- Al-j 'lied structure in the Orient. i i 3.

As to the urgency of a set-; jtleinent. of the Indian differences Mrs advs Hopkins Whitnev there can be no question.The wayi 1 see it there are three cogent rea-! Becomes Bride of Corp. Jo- for haste; siah Marvel, Today First, India is a house diveded Tl a alr 1 Jj devel ped Pnitimm-i. Income S572Q- Henrvi Indian Problem has ceased to be itself. While the authorities! Wilmington, Feb.

22. -Baltimore, income. A nnaA "'Mrs. Gladys Hopkins Whitney, Ardmore, socialite, and Corp. Josiah Marvel, prominent Wilmington attorney, will be marriec here today, Mrs.

Whitney disclosed last night. The couple have been C. Hilken, estate, Baltimore, estate! taxes. Edwin B. tttate.

Baltimore, estate taxes. the cause Unlted Naticms 020. assured me they had things well in hand, they also said there was a continuance of the disturbances We can go further without ex- which stemmed from the collapse Francis M. Jtncfe, truat. Balti- and say that repre- more.

income, $2.015: Mathilde one the major crises con- Johnston, trust, Baltimore, income, fronting the Allies. A Ray Katz, estate, Income, Amelia Marsburg, This, of course means it has become interwoven with the destiny of estate. Baltimore, estate taxes, of our own country. Thaw tatend684: Abraham Miller, estate, Balti-lf not merely a more, income. Peter flne fi gf speech.

Amenca 'destiny isn to be dealt with in light phrases. Therefore, you are entitled the truth. So I shall try all the salient facts of the Cripps negotiations last sum- Without unity in this friends since childhood. the Allies must approach the coming offensive against Japan with great uneasiness. Secondly, this land where the great majority of the some 400.000,- No" details of the wedding plans were announced.

Mrs. Whitney would say only that it will be "aboui noon" and that a few relatives anc close Wends will be present. How- Moller, estate, Hagerstown, estate taxes, Charles Neubert, estate. Baltimore, estate taxes, 414; Oldtyffie Distillers, Cedar- hurst, distilled spirits, $2,100: Over represent brook Company, Baltimore, wna distilled spirits, $2,812. Estate Gets 53,113 000 people always are hungry is up ever, it was reported the ceremony to to of one of the most complicated controversies in history.

Right here I want to pay tribute Inc. Baltimore, distilled spirits, Marv Cromwell Riggs, estate. Haiti- j'rossed the m.ghty reaches India, cial hre my reseach. I crtp- th officials here estate taxes, John Robertson, estate, Baltimore, estate taxes. Louise Gail Schmeis-i' estate, Baltimore, estate an Joseph P.

Sellers, estate, the great Indian leaders Nowhere did I encounter One memorable conversation I Baltimore, estate taxes, I had was with the viceroy, Lord Southeastern Industrial Bankers who is one of Britain Baltimore, income outstandig personalities I ga? company. $2752- 'George Weews Williams, mv estate. Baltimore, estate rases. S2.933: Clarence C. Whiting, estate, he WM most helpful.

that no word of his should However. I can -say that Baltimore, estate tuxes. $2,210, I will admit now thai I hurled nationalist anti-British charges at CHINESE AGAIN HURL him until by good rights he should such circumstances the effects might BACK JAPS IN have called the guard and had me thrown out. Yet he continued to answer me, and when the time of I my audience was up he voluntarily Third Attempt by it twenty minutes despite In A. Many to Sahveen River Halted Then when I had concluded my study in India.

I into-the Chungking, Feb. 22. Chinese 1 0 Etice of the censor at New Delhi troops have halted the third Jap-1 anc a id down perhaps 150,000 words anese attempt in as many daysj notes and printed materiaT up- against an unusual food shortage. This is likely to come to a head in is scheduled for 1 p. m.

to be followed by a luncheon for intimates March or April, which-is between at the home of Marvel's mother crop seasons and, therefore, the per- Mrs. Mary Jackson Marvel, o' iod of greatest snortage. Greenville, and that Maj Many observers in India Hopkins, now stationed at this situation as even more serious will give his sister in mar- than the political The greatest anxiety, however, re- Mrs. Whitney was divorced from lates to the possibility of the food and political situations combining to provide fuel for a conflagration which might be hard to stop. Third, Mohandas Gandhi's hunger has injected a new and highly dangerous element into the controversy.

There is grave danger that he will die, for his 73 years old and his 90 pounds of skin and bones have been so tortured with previous strikes that he lacks the stamina to stand much more. Should Gandhi pass out under easily be catastrophic. You have to know your India to realize how great an influence is wielded by this diminutive ascetic who. right or wrong, certainly is one of the outstanding leaders of his time. iTomorrow: The man Ganhl).

Cornelius Vanderbilt (Sonny) Whitney in Florida in 1941. She was custody of their daughter, Gall, now awarded custody of their daughter Gall, now three years old. A noted sportswoman and rider Mrs. Whitney is the daughter the late Mark Hopkins, Philadelphia, and Mrs. Heckscher, of Villanova, Pa.

Marvel has been stationed a the army air forces basic training center af Atlantic City, N. J- since his. induction last year. A Yale University and Harvard law schoo he had served as Delaware secretary of state and state Dem9cratk: chairman, and was de feated by only 700 votes In the 1940 gubernatorial election. to cross the Satween river and LIGHT EARTHQUAKE SHAKES NORTH UTAH! on which I intended to base these FRAIL GHANDI WEATHERS HIS FASTING CRISIS ncse High Command jwterday.

The Japanese, on the west side of the river, which runs northward trom Burma into China, reached iiangyungkai Feb. 2, but there they tfcre' halted and suffered many the Chi-1 Believe me there were some notes there which would make any cen-j Washington, Feb 22 (P). Work vital to the wtr effort or necessary for essential civilian government functions should be the test for the draft deferment of federal workers, a committee has recommended. The committee, named by President Roosevelt Dec. 15 to outline a policy governing the deferment of federal employes, reported that the government service "is not a draft evaders' paradise as has been loosely charged." Committee members are Paul 'Big Inch' Cuff Across Pennsylvania TYDINGSJAF1 ASK PROBE 01 WAR SPERDII Will Demand ThorouJ Accounting for Expendi.J tures on President's Sc-1 cret War Projects EXPIRES JUNE 30 Plan Seen As SnowballinJ Movement to -Legislative Authority ivd'n-Roosevelt Bellamy, editor of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, chairman; Eric Johnston, president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, and Orway Tead, member of the New York City Board of Higher Education.

Many Could Be Released The report declared that thou-j sands of men on the federal payroll could be released to the armed forces If overlapping government functions were eliminated and deferments limited to those in essential Jobs. Each federal Cutting into the western riopes of the AUeghenies In Pennsylvania, the "big Inch'' oil pipe line heads for the oil-thirsty eastern seaboard. This section is part of'the pipe line running from Texas to Norris City, and thence eastward. LIBERTY SHIP NAMED FOR CIVIL WAR LEADER Henry L. Benning to Be Launched Today; Georgian Was Confederate General agency should establish committee to pass on deferment requests, the report said.

The present system provides for the agencies to submit requests for deferment to the President for approval. Twenty-six percent of the federal male employes of draft age have entered the armed services, the report said, while less than two percent have been deferred on accu- pational grounds. Certificmte Recommended The committee recommended the issuance of a "certificate of honorable deferment for essential war employment" for workers in public and private employment who are occupationally deferred on an employer's application. The War Department, meanwhile, stopped acceptance of applications fir Officer Candidate Schools from 3-A draft reglstrants: Appllcations now on file will be completed. The department said the 15,000 men on the Volunteer Officer Candidate list represent a 10- month supply under present quotas.

Baltimore, Feb. 22 Ship Henry L. Benning, named in honor of the Confederate general who earned the sobriquet of "Old Rock" during the Civil War, will be launched late today at the Bethlehem-Fairfield Shipyards. STATE SOLONS ENTER SECOND HALF SESSION (Continued from Page i) Work of the Legislative Council, which had 200 bills ready for introduction when the session opened, came in for special praise from O'Conor, who said the group's, efforts had facilitated greatly legislature's progress. "There can be no question now in any person's mind, I feel confident, but that the Legislative Council has fully justified the predictions made for it when I first proposed it during my 1938 campaign," he declared.

The Governor voiced the hope that "this 1943 session will, set an all-time record by finishing its important business the last hour? so as to avoid the confusion and last-minute jam which has been known heretofore." Point Values Of Canned Foods strengthen their hold on the Burma art i les. I asked that this be ccn-j No arnage Immediately Re-j Continued from Page i) road, China's already broken and scaled so that I line ro the outside world, the Chl-iiake homc wit me. ported from Tremors; Other and one-haU hours well into th Earthquakes Recorded i night. Today is his day of sitence "He appears to be comfortable Salt Lake ld mwe cheerfui The heart te sor's hair curl, and yet the only de- leteci was two sentences, and this was done after the ceasor had asked my permission. Thus I came away from India The Chinese communi-jat tj ie cll of January with the WBS i goodwill of both officialdom and ln a Indian leaders, despite the na- sndjt ur( the explosive package which eastjj carried.

Having made sweeping assertions In northern KlangfU province, in regarding the vital importance of the area north of Shankai. the Jap-1 the Indian crisis, and the urgency of anese have been frustrated in anj sc it In the immediate future, attempt to encircle and smash my next duty is to state the prc- it was announced. for such conclusions. Shorn quo The Japanese, it announced, have made, irains thnist town Mamienkivnn heavy fighting Is progressing of that town. The ern Utah was jarred by a light I earthquake this morning.

Bingham.j location of the famed Utah open- cut copper mines, was reported shaken but no damage was reported immediately. His Release Called For Appeals continued to pour in from all parts of India, meanwhile, for the release of Gandhi, who has been under tention since last August Salt Lake City and surrounding i his all-Indian Congress Party cities and towns felt the tremors began civil disobedience cara- whlch began about 8:25 a. MWT.jpaign aganst British rule. He began and continued for seven or fast to protest against the re- seconds, of the victory. Lord Linlith- igow.

to release him unconditionally. At Bombay, members of the Progressive party, which Is the main opposition in the Council of State Weston, Feb. 22 Ai "very strong" earthquake, believed to have originated near Mexico City, NO AI Dim, A NT1C enemy Allied military buses. i This huge subcontinent is the wedge which has divided the Axis from the Japs, was recorded on the Weston CollcEe! (the upper house of the central leg- jtslature), walked out of the eham- Mbcr as a "protest again tremor started at 5:21:03 a. cy of the government.

communique she Chinese-'! of details they are these: before conversing col-j India not only is the arsenal (seismograph today. i and carried out a the Orient, but strategically it is; Rev. Michael J. Ahem said cr as a "protest against the po- chim movement, and pie- one of the most ewentlal of all the nre snndwtchina the Washington, Feb. 22 are the point values of the most common cans under the new rationing system, which will begin March 1.

The ration for March is 48 points per person (families may pool their points). rolnt Vegetables Values Peas llD.Moz. Corn I 4oz Tomatoes Il; 03. Aspansus 1 Benns 3 oz Spinach 1 Peaches ss. 1 14oz.

Sliced-- pineapple 1 1 Th. 4 m. rrn 1 01, Grapefruit Prutt Cocktr.il Juices and Soups Grapefruit 3 Tomato 2 oz. -2 Tomato 1 07- m. or 2 10 Vi oz.

15 6 SMOKERS WILL RECEIVE SHARE OF CIGARETTES (Continued from Page i) taming goodwill of native popula tions and for trading purposes." Among the restricted products required' In the manufacture of cigarettes are sugar, glycerine, and dlethylene glycol, all of which are essential war materials. Manufacturers have been experimenting with substitutes for glycerine, but none has proved of great value as a hygroscopic agent. Despite re- when he was 21 and became known as an ardent secessionist. His record as a field officer and as brgiadier general of the Southern Army was distinguished. Fort Benning, one of the larger army training camps, also was named in his honor.

The vessel is to be sponsored by Benning's great-great granddaughter, Miss Ann Aston Thoron, 15, of (2900 N. Street. N. Washington. The ship took 41 days to construct and will be the ninety-sixth ship to be launched from the shipyards.

Benning was born in Columbia, I strictions on ingredients, however in 1814, was admitted to the bar the WFB said, manufacturers have maintained and glycerine has been partly replaced with glycol propelene, apple syrup and other substitutes. Quality "Real Factor 1 The "real factor" in quality of, cigarettes, however, the board added, has been the quality of the tobacco itself, since aging for two or three years, and blending is necessary to bring out the flavor aroma, mellowness and sweetness of cigarettes. As a result of this process, stocks of flue cured, burley and Marylanc tobacco used in cigarettes 'as of October 1, 1942, totaled about RED ARMY SWEEPS TO WITHIN 34 MILES OF DNIEPER RIVER (Continued from Ptge i) Washington, Feb. 22. gress may turn a spotlight on nl Denditures from a special XX) fund granted to Presid Roosevelt for secret war projeci as part of a snowballing movemtJ to recapture legislative delegated to the executive in last few days.

The President's authority to this fund will expire next June; at least Jjwo legislators, ators and R-Ohio), said they intended to mand a thorough accounting of penditures before considering at attempt to renew it. Tydlnfs Against Blankets "As a member of the Senate propriations committee," Tydic; told reporters, "I am going to inst that a searching investigation made of every proposed expcnditm and that Congress be fully Inforrr.j of the facts in regard to all which has been spent for secret public funds in the past. I making blanket approprii tions." Taft said he thought that in dition to asking for more inform; tion on confidential expenditure. Congress ought to eliminate use of the emergency appropriate as a "revolving fund." Original Fund Reimbursed In 1940, Congress gave Preside Roosevelt an appropriation of $1K 000,000 and contract authority like amount for emergency expa dltures which he might be calk upon to make is carrying out defense'and. later the war progran From time to time the funds reimbursed until total approprii tions reached 000,000 pounds, compared with 2,300,000,000 a year before.

Of the total on hand October 1942, about 1,400,000,000 was flue cured. 703,000,000 pounds was burley, and 57,000,000 pounds was Maryland, in addition to stocks in the ALLIES BLAST AXIS BASES IN MANY SECTOR (Continued from Page i) vessel was blown up and a small ship set on fire, it was announct None of the Allied planes was in in these operations. German garrisons! hands of dealers and east-central areas ers, the 1942 crop of cigarette, type tobaccos was only slightly under annual average of the 1930's. Production of the three types in 1942 totaled 1,200,000,000 pounds, including 824,000,000 pounds of flue cured, 361,000,000 pounds of burley and 31,000.000 pounds of Maryland. Domestic consumption of cigarettes reached an all-time high of approximately 236,000,000,000 cigarettes in 1942, an increase of 14 per cent over 1941, the previous record.

While the figure did not include cigarettes shipped abroad for the United States armed forces, it was estimated that about 25 per cent of domestic consumption was by the armed forces. Gain of Over 1941 Before the first World War cigarettes accounted for only a small percentage of total tobacco consumption, while now it accounts for about 80 per cent. Per capital consumption of cigarettes last year was nearly 50 times what it was in 1900, when it was only about 35 cigarettes per person. In 1942, it had reached an all-time high of about 1,680, a gain of about 15 per cent over 1941. The WPB said the industry had been able to meet the increased demand last year without great difficulty, despite the wartime restrictions- of necessary ingredients.

Approximately 90 per cent of the cigarette plants are located in Virginia, North Carolina and Kentucky. Produces 1,200 Per Minute The highly mechanized nature of closing around remaining in the east-central areas of the Donets "coal country. Elsewhere the. Donets basin, bitter fighting-, again was reported south of Kramatorsk, where a Soviet pincer was thrust toward the industrial center of Stalino. In this area a large German tank force was repulsed as it tried to regain lost, ground and the fighting, the Russians said, was extremely violent with the Germans Buffering heavy losses.

A Soviet special communique Saturday night announced the taking of Pavlograd and Krasnograd, major rail junctions. Both captured cities are on tributaries of the Dnieper and then seizure of their railways had severed all German communications between Kharkov and the Donets basin regions. The victorious Soviet forces continued fighting' westward without time to rest or count their war trophies, the Russians said. Other cities southwest and south of Kranograd also were reported to have fallen to the troops as they cleared Kharkov province of enemy forces. Thus, on the eye of the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Red army.

Soviet troops had gained at Krasnograd a point 410 miles west of Stalingrad, and were today in the 96th day of the Russian winter offensive that began last Nov. 19. 5 Russian troops in the Krasnoar- meisk sector, north of Stalino in the Donats basin, dealt out heavy punishment to a German tank force that managed to smash into the Soviet lines, the Russian midday com- jraunique said. The Russians announced they continued their push west of Rostov and that more towns were captured southwest of Voroshilovgrad, in the the industry is illustrated, the WPB said, by the fact that one machine alone has a producing capacity of 1,200 cigarettes a minutes. Although the volume of imported tobacco leaf is relatively small compared with domestic production, the small amount used in blending is important to the industry while Japan's Airdromes At Buin-Faisi Set Afii Allied Headquarters in Austral Feb.

22 Allied, bombers, af; plastering Japanese airdromes in i Buin-Faisi area of the North Sol mons with 23 tons of bombs Sate day, returned yesterday with other load and started fires visit for 50 miles, an Allied said today. At least two Japanese planes the ground were destroyed, a was demolished and other, builciin: damaged, it was announced. heavy anti-aircraft fire, all the Al lied planes returned safely to the: base. Other heavy bombers attacked it town of Ambon and shipping in harbor of this enemy base in Netherlands East Indies and down two of six Japanese plaw which attempted to intercept, is others probably were shot down. if.

communique said. Japanese planes attacked the Bur. area of New Guinea for the ic time since the fall of that region; American and Australian troop The communique described the tacks as "nuisance raids" and they caused neither damage casualties. Donets basin; and west of Krasno- commonly referred to as "Turkish" dar, in the Caucasus Kuban valley, i tobacco, it includes all the aromatic Juice Soups Washington, Feb. 22 Here's the householder's schedule for food rationing: North of Kursk, in the campaign which has Orel as its objective, the war bulletin said that 800 Germans were killed as hurried reinforcements were thrown into one sector, and that in another Soviet mobile ui.it, 1 captured several towns and way.

Today: Registration begins and (took possession of a strategic hlgh- eontinues all week throughout na-' tion. Take Consumer Declaration" and No. 1 ration books to school houses, to get No. 2 ration books. Again the Russian communique omitted mention of the forces west lasted three hours.

He said it orig-j conference of Indian political inated about 3.300 mllfts southwest leaders assembled In New Delhi yes- of terday and cabled Prcmlc Minister Clip from newspaper table of "point values" to guide future shopping. All week: Don't try to buy, because grocers are forbidden to sell, of Kharkov which threaten to drive 1943. Into the Dnieper valley. types which come from Turkey and Greece and to a lesser extent from Italy nnd the Soviet Union. On October 1, 1942, stocks of Turkish tobacco in the United States amounted to about 84,000,000 pounds, approximately two years' supply, and in addition, the WPB said, applications had been approved for importation of a large supply during At Cleveland nn earthquake of Churchill asking Gnntihi's release.

I any canned fruits, vegetables, fish, SINKINGS WEEK 1 It is one of the major bases, mayjmedium intensity was recorded on There was no hint, however, of be the major base, for Initial Allied the John Carroll University selsmo-j an change in the position taken operations against the Japs when graph, Father Joseph S. Jolint rc-by neutral canto flilpinttler hw been rendered impoten t.j ported. He sftld the shock was about is meat, soups, baby food, or frozen or dried varieties of the same. You can Nn Allied or announced as sunk by the en- eniv in the Western Atlantic from India that the a mighty battering ram across 2.500 miles away Meanwhile In New York, two i Gandhi himself is equally able to the government. A spokesman buy anything else In the store, in- "praeUcally no one has taken eluding bread, milk, cereals (including canned baby cereals), soap, cheere, fresh and vegetables.

the obvious course of suggesting that represrnhnc the first ycven-; HIP BRV of Bengal aRftinst Japanese-! earthquakes were recorded by theisnvp his own life by cnrilnR the fresh ment, paper products, etc SCHOOLS TO BE PAID BACK FOR OIL USEDj PHOTOGRAPHER DIES TRYING TO SAVE WIFE Woahington, Feb. 22 Schools in the 17 Eastern states which are short of fuel oil will be paid back for oil used this week in connection with registration for food rationing. 1 Pittsburgh, Feb. 22 C. (Jack) Wettergrecn, 37, Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph news photographer, was burned to death yesterday trying to save his wife from the second flood of their blazing home In Mc- Cftndless Township.

dny prriocl MUCP Pearl Harbor Burma. iPorclhnm University seismograph. 1 fast, on! to in those waters. Thai buck floor to China mast be I Rev Joseph Lynch reported. Monday, March buying The Office of Price Admlnlstra-; Mrs.

Wettergrecn escaped with Only four such were of-1 rcopeneti so that supplies mAy pour in the three prev- iuiroueh It for the annihilation of He said two severe shocks, Prehistoric Europe is believed to vegetables by the point rationing proxlinotely 2.500 miles from New! have been virtually nt peace for Sale of canned mcnt and canned, frozen and dried fruits and tion said today the schools will rc- ks The AwociHted Press i the 1 on the continent, jYork, were recorded shortly after 6 600 years before 1,200 B. About t) stfvi) at fiU nn-. Past-war of the Idfalsin, m. the first at 6:22.30 sndj the time that iron the Atlantic Charter the second nt 6:38.30. were fish still prohibited (probably be resumed at end of month a.i ra- i tinned items with meat.) ceive additlonnl coupons If their present ration is not sufficient to heat buildings used for refitotrfttlon.

Schools may obtain coupons by applying to local rationing: boards. wrist and back injuries by leaping from a bedroom In which she was trapped. The Wettcrgreens' two children. Jack, 11, and Janet, 6, were LARGEST SUB U.S. NAVY SUNKINSO.PACIF1) (Continued from Page i) "The only report on the was from an army reconnalssant plane which first reported an enoir.

convoy attacking a submarine later reported Jap destroyers si ing and sinking it. The plane reported that the Argonaut pedoed an enemy destroyer. Depth Charge Brings Bow I'p "As we reconstruct it from i reports, the Argonaut had cepted the convoy, torpedoed destroyer, was attacked with charges and its bow broke xxx and circling Jap de: pumped shells into destroying i "Revenge for the sinking ol Argonaut was very rapid, AnotK American submarine, two later, closer to Rabaul, made attack which was a masterpicc It found the convoy reinforced, with six destroyer? i air escort x. "The attacking submarine trated the destroyer screen sank the two biggest ships convoy." The Argonaut's commandir.c fleer was Lieut. Commander Reeves Pierce.

Executive officer' R. W. Robertson, Portsmouth. and a survivor of the subma: Squalus which sank off Portsnn 1 in May, 1939, with a loss of 26 l' vt The Argonaut, sixth submarine announced as lost in war and the fourth lost by operations in the Pacific, was a mine-layer but later fitted with new engines to the lilsh speed of fleet subnmr" The submersible was on patrol in the Pacific when the war M- and then carrin! visiting their Rrnndparents at operations which lansbcc, W. VA.

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About Cumberland Evening Times Archive

Pages Available:
213,052
Years Available:
1894-1977