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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

0 1' al tin Dim( di Res U. S. Pal OM GUIDE TO FEATURES WEATHER neraFinnal rPr THURSDAY-- warmer. flevirt, Page 12. Burgess ..10 Editorials .111 Sports Comics ...10.

financial 9,111 Teens 22 Crossword 10: Obituaries 12, Theatres .84 Culbertson 22 Radio Deaths Serial Welles ...11 Dr Society .13 BOSTON, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 9, 1947-TWENTY-TWO PAGES TIIREFA CENTS Nikm rnglomd Flplowher r. Copyright 1947 Ely TITC GLOBE 14EWSPABEif CO. 8 L--- Curft Ilummoin gill 1 ,.......1 i11112) Og SorM 0 a 0 THREATENS Bill Expected to Pass Upper Chamber by End of Week IN ANGLO-SOVIET Result Seen Serious Blow to Britain r-. --j '4, ID) I- 4 A 1, 40..., t- i ",4, lf i 'I' e2kt .5 1 ilc I- 1 1 t. 4 4, f- 5 I AV s'''' '4 '1 ir 4i' 4 4.: to i P- 40:) .0, 'fe ''l I .1 1 I eA 't4W Is.

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41 Illtr'- jklocti. jig i--, -k s' 1 -77 Li co WILLIAMS DOUBLES slides safely into second inning of All-Star game yesterday. Waiting for (AP Wirephoto) OFF BRECHEENTed base for. double in fourth at Wrigley Field, Chicago ball is Marty Marion. Doerr Scores Off Sain, American Stars Win, 2-1 Russia Reported Cool to Renewing 'Military Alliance By FREDERICK Kilt Cilictig0 Sun Foreign Service LONDON, July 8The British Cabinet, with Prime Minister Clement Attlee presiding, is understocd at its meeting today to have discussed a new crisis in Anglo-Soviet relations.

Negotiations for an important British-Russian trade agreement are threatening to break down. Their failure' would be a blow to British hopes of saving precious dollars by buying big quantities of cereals and timber from the Soviet The prospect of this deal with Russia, it was thought, would ease Britain's stringent food situation and speed the building of houses to replace bombed homes and abolish slums. Reports reaching the British Cabinet also state that Russia has now grown cool toward the conclusion of the new military alliance. It now looks as though the Anglo-Soviet treaty signed in 1942 nominally would remain in force, though outworn and meaningless. Anglo-Soviet relations have grown cooler in a score of fields.

There have been constant clashes between them in the United Nations. Sharp conflicts in negotiating German, Austrian and satellite peace See BRITISH rage 7 CHARLES RIVER RESCUEPhoto diagram shows how William Robbins (left), toppled from freight car into river. He was rescued by Joseph O'Toole (right). Boy, 8, Rescued in Fall Off Train Into Charles Southern Bloc Expected to Yield to Lewis Today WASHINGTON, July 8 (UP) A country-wide settlement of the day-old soft coal strike began shaping up tonight when a big bloc of southern operators joined their northern and mid-western competitors in accepting a one-year contract raising mine wages and granting John L. Lewis practicPI immunity from the Taft-Hartley labor law.

Lewis, who signed whet he called his "best" contract with the northern and nnidwestern half of the industry earlier today, announced the break in the ranks of the southern mine owners at a meeting of his 200- member U. M. W. policy committee. About half the U.

M. W's 400,000 soft coal miners already had been ordered back to work as a result of the early settlement and Lewis said about one-fourth of the 150,000 southern miners would return to the pits under the later agreements containing the same terms See COAL Page 3 Sidewalks Now Causing Big Squawks 302- 1 1 2 Approval in House Follows Plea by Martin WASHINGTON. July 8 (AP) The Republican-backed 000,000,000 income tax reduction for 49,000,000 taxpayers sailed through the House again today by an overwhelming vote of 302 to 112. This is 26 more than the two-thirds needed to override a second Presidential Veto. Speaker Martin, of Massachusetts.

personally took the floor and asked the body to make its vote so decisive "as to persuade the President that the people should have this delayed justice." Anticipating another Presidential veto, Martin declared the House confronts the fundamental question of whether "Congress shall retain its right to perform its constitutional function of determining what taxes shall be levied on the people." The measure was trisred over to the Senate, where Republican leaders said they hope to rush it again to President Truman's desk before the week ends. Some democratic leaders said another veto is certain. The measure is identical with the one the President returned June 16 as "the wrong kind of tax reduction at the wrong that the effective date has been charged front July 1, 1947, to January 1.1943. See TAXES Pare 3 as a surprise. The street commissioners had approved it following a public hearing at which no protest was made.

The planned widening, recommended by the Traffic Commission to eliminate traffic bottlenecks. will take four feet of the 12-foot sidewalk on each side of that part of Beacon st. The trees have been growing in that four-feet-wide area for more than half a century. See TREES 4 I Romantic NOVA SCOTIA CANADA'S OCEAN PLAYGROUND EASTERN STEAMSHIP LINES Overnight servic from Boston by Ote S. S.

YARMOUTH Monday, Wednesday nd Friday frogs Central Wharf at 4:30 P. E. D. T. Consult your TRAVEL AGENT or EASTERN 40 Centro! Street, Boston Most.

NO PASSPORTS REQUIRED OF U. S. CITIZENS 0 smagemmis a II Belmont Girl Missing at Wilmot, N. H. 100 Search Area Daughter of M.I.T.

Physicist WILMOT, N. 1-1 July 8--A 13-year-old Belmont. girl, of an M. 1. T.

nuclear physicist, was being sought tonight by nearly 1C1) volunteers after she failed to return from a horseback ride yesterday afternoon. The girl is Nadia Ann Evans, daughter of Prof. Robley D. Evans of 283 Marsh Belmont. At his home in Belmont, he said he hoped his daughter, homesick, had decided to return home without notifying anyone.

"We were told," said the father, who was notified she was missing only 15 minutes after he had returnee by plane from England, "that nothing could be gained by our going to New Hampshire. We will stay at our home tonight to await information." Officials of Camp Tabor in Wilmot Center notified State police of the girl's disappearance this morning. A horse she is believed to have ridden from the camp returned without a rider, and a saddle was found just -outside the camp area. A searching party under the direction of State Trooper James Humphrey of Andover was formed immediately as investigators feared that the Massachusetts girl might have been thrown from her horse and lay injured beside one of the numerous trails on the mountain slope that overlooks Pleasant Lake. See GIRL rase 4 Page 4 to Acquire on Aug.

29 Man Falls Into Tub, Hits Faucet, Turns on Water and Drowns Slipping from the edge of a bathtub and striking his head against a faucet, accidentally turning on the water, a 73-yearold South End man, knocked unconscious by the fall. was last night in the overflowing tub. In reconstructing the odd accident, police said Edward Flavin, a roomer on the fourth floor of 354 Columbus apparently was standing on the rim of the bathtub attempting to insert a quarter in the gas meter, when he lost his balance and fell. See TUB Page 4 100 MILE OCEAN CRUISE SAILS DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY THE FASTEST EXCURSION STEAMER ON MASS. BAY CHAWICEY DEPEW from ROYE'S liVIIARF to P110111110ETOVirl LEAVE 10:30 A.

RETURN 11:30 P. M. A Hour Stopover at Provincetown Fars including tax Sun. Holidays $4.00. Children 32.301 Sun.

Holidays $2.50. Tel. HUB. 1000 for further details ME11mmmimmo1 TONIGHT Enjoy a CHARCOAL BROILED STEAK at the ettsikt. ON THE TIER CIE NOTIL 1 I 1 Quincy 1Lawyer Sought lin New York The search for John Say- chairman- 'of -the Quincy Democratic city committee and twice president of the Quincy City Council, who has been missing four days, spread to New York late yesterday following a report 4that the 36- year-old attorney had been seen.

carrying baggage. in the South Station about 4 p. m. Friday. A Quincy woman told police she had seen Savage in the station and had spoken to him.

Boston police had been dragging the Fort Point Channel in the rear of the South Station seeking Savage's body. Dragging operations were begun early in the afternoon near the Summer-st. bridge where See SAVAGE Pare 7 'Transit Authority El for $20,298,000 The Metropolitan Transit Authority yesterday notified the Boston Elevated Railway Company that on Aug. 29 it will pay the railway $20,218,000 for the whole assets. property and franchises of the company as a going concern," thereby placing the utility under full public ownership.

Meeting immediately after Judge Charles C. Cabot in Suffolk Superior Court turned down a request of the Elevated-s private directors for a temporary injunction to block the authority from taking over the El. the five members of the authority fixed the date when it shall assume full control of the railway. See EL, rage SAYS By HY 111.11VITZ CHICAGO, th; Boston ry nr.tt have its subway series ths ut 41,123 customers Ficld today witnessed a Red S7x-EIraves battle which the 14th annual All-Star It went to the Arnerican League, 2 to 1. Ths the t.ghtest ef all clashes.

It 1.vas brought tr, rzther ennelusion th the inning with Cap of the Red and -y of the E-aves as the lEading charactcrs ALL STATt Laze 1G rage 1G ilatITREM. 9. 9 LIT MIX) 1 smw iTOP FLIGHT Comottmentort Meat Molt 1 LEAVES DAILY AT Flows 0 7 or Your TRAVEL AGENT For Reciprvottons on Roo relOkt REALER Js, I a S17.15 us tax 5r gaol; Art or P.401 INStANiD O4 FLYING SAUCERS EXPLAINED I wives get angry with veteran who have riot yet se7ecrel one of our 30 homes NO CASH DOWN. St. lbuttta totem or Es lor 2'7E4 Sr 11.1r foOro le 310i P1511SHER SI ILT-Pk 4,.,...,.

11..304 kv, CALL l''' IC. EAS 4100 or Your TRAVEL AGENT For Ropciprv moons en no. MOW I oak S17.15 us tax 1' 5r agni; 111111417," P.401 INStANiD Ow si A'PLINE i tr--- Cabby Robbed, Shut in Trunk as Pair Hold Up Liquor Store Shoved into the rear trunk of his own cab by two men who already had robbed him of $13, Edward N. Bryson, 35, of Hemenway Back Bay, was taken for a fast. 30-minute ride last night which ended when the pair held up a Charlestown liquor store and escaped with $162, leaving Bryson imprisoned in the locked compartment.

Bryson finally broke through the rear seat of the vehicle, which his kidnapers had abandoned on Walker Charlestown, about 10:30 p. m. He told police at Charlestown Police Station' that two men hailed him at Washington and Laconia South End, about 9:30 and asked to be driven to Neponset When he approached Neponset Circle one of the pair put a gun to his head and told him to stop the car, Bryson declared. See CAB Page 6 'Mysterious Object' Sighted in Air by N. H.

Governor's Son PORTSMOUTH, N. Thomas M. Dale, 26, son of Gov. Char lei M. Dale, and veteran of more than eight years flying, reported tonight at Portsmouth Municipal Airport, that he and a companion, Jere Stetson of Newfield, observed from the air a "mysterious object" traveling "very fast," over Alton at 4:26 p.

m. this afternoon. Both men, veterans of Army and Navy air service during the war, declined to say whether or not it was a flying but both said they "had never seen anything like it" in the air before. See DALE rage 7 Page 7 Army's 'Saucer' Just Weather Balloon Striking his head on a bridge railing as he fell 25 feet from a moving freight train into the Charles River. an 8-year-old Cambridge boy, was saved from possible drowning yesterday afternoon by the quick action of a 14-year-old boy.

William Robbins of 75 Green st. Cambridge, son of Mrs. Gladys Robbins, was held at Cambridge City Hospital last night suffering from a possible fractured skull and immersion. His rescuer was Joseph O'Toole of 14 Andrew Cambridge. O'Toole told police he was sitting on the bank of the river on the Cambridge side near the Boston and Albany trestle bridge which runs under the Cottage Farm Bridge at Memorial Drive, shortly after 2:30, when he saw the boy fall.

"The boy I rescued was sitting on the trestle bridge fishing with another boy," he said. "A freight train came along headed for Boston and when it stopped for a minute on the bridge. the boy ran up to it and started climbing a ladder on the side of a box car." See RESCUE Page 4 FORT WORTH. July 8 (AP)The discovery of a "flying disk" reported by an Army public Nations officer proved a dud today when the object was identified as a weather balloon. Warrant Officer Irving Newton, a forecaster at the Army's 8th Air Force Weather Station here, said the object found near Roswell, N.

was a ray wind target used to determine the direction and velocity of winds at high altitudes. He said there were some 80 weather stations in the United States using is type of balloon and that it could have come from any one of them. "We use them because they can go so much higher than the eye can see," Newton explained. A radar set is employed to follow the balloon and through a process of triangulation the winds aloft are charted, he added. See SAUCERS Page 1 I LEARN RADIO Become Radio Operators or Radio Technicians at Oldast, Largest and Best Equipped Radio School in N.

E. Over 20,000 Alumni. Est. 1919. Call, write or phone Co 91.

010 for catalog. MASS. RADIO SCHOOL, 271 Huntington Boston 15. Lie. by Comm.

of Mass. Dept. of Education. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS Last Spring it was sidewalks. Now it's trees.

City Councilor James C. Bayley last night appealed for the backing of Back Bay residents to save some 50 stately old trees on Beacon st. The trees are scheduled for uprooting when work on a street commission projectto widen the thoroughfare from Embankment road to Dartmouth stgets underway in two weeks. Protests were not long in coming. Ex-Gov.

Channing H. Cox, of 173 Beacon at. declared that "I should be very sad to see those trees torn down. They'll drive almost all of the Beacon-at. residents out of the city." Other residents joined in and to almost all of them, news of the contemplated project came Father 'Can't Believe' Son, 13, Murdered Woman in Ashland Although he had heard his 13-year-old son, Ralph tearfully admit the laundry bag strangulation murder of a neighbor, Mrs.

Dorothy Swenson, 40, last Thursday in her home. 265 Union Ashland, the boy's father, Ralph A. Duchacek, last night insisted, "I cannot believe my son did it. I just cannot believe he would do such a thing." See MURDER rage 7 OLIVE OIL Pastent also offers a wide choicest American wines for FOR TEMPTING SALADS 4- tifL411111k A.vmo.f4,1 '1 l'W9) OLIVE OIL Pastent also offers a wide choicest American wines for your your 7 9-, II 1.., .41 The day.s eventc. and great rnerea views I rrint with neither fear nor favor; Tor coffee-lovers.

"Page One News" Is Ehlers Grade "A Coffee flavor! OLILWISP COff6 Boy, 5, Is Killed by Dump Truck in Jamaica Plain James Neese, 5. one of five small children of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll E. Neese of 94 Call Jamaica Plain, was killed late yesterday afternoon by a five-ton dump truck on South at St.

Joseph near his home. Police said the truck was operated by James J. Powers, 19, See TRUCK rage 6 'The ermine league imea 114.: 7 eua It las ntt "a Illi ii.g hyta rie le 1 Gene Roller. Rollin, Roy. 4 Pre Lake.

anti lieu Balt SAYS: et III be in there betting for new marks. This realty rommigim IL la a thrtllor kinIVONDIERLAND RMan SAYS: OIL ONE IIAN OR6H VISI i IN.113 ITV et 00 IIII GOD- ikol 20 0 II WAYLANDT91 Aliannal 1 POST Tun I' Dalt," 80J1111 Ils i 7:20 'The ragior Irmo Ic 'd lira out again tonight in the featured night race. sw I Rollin, Roy. wit---A-T- It Is Important That 'You order your Globe Advertisements as far in advance of date of publication as is possible. If out of town.

Advertisements for next Sunday's Globe today. Women- don't forget. Keep saving your Fats cnd Grease. i 1 frit EST. 1474 1 Irib 4ab 1 411 bit IN TALY) g-j.

otioe s' assortment of the selection. ''!) 1- Si CV Cale IAILIE 0. OAS Me a I- dik.o.aroufta. ea A adt PASTENE WIWI a SPRITS him. MAst.

IN ITALY) PA WWI a COMPANY assortment of the selection. An i a cirefizr co. 'I' aeise .4 NEEDS NO $UGAR 1, AT tbIle)Z V4-J I 6 4 4.,.... ii.44-1-i ivll tAo praollsweireNt, Itt) AVORED 411E11 I 101 ETD (4zZlm Ottzl2a Save money on your household purchases by patronizing Globe advertisers. To Buy.

Sell. Hire or Rent anything, use the Globe's Wt and Classified column, Advertisements may be ordered at the Globe office or by telephone. Call LArayette 2000. CO, barrow, FINE ITALIAN RECIPE BOOKLET SENT FREE ON REQUEST Wanted a mentally alert man in aaalat manager Ittnmnbile ItiPtleY Must be a merrhandlaer with a 1,11 ty trt atmervtae, Excellent future to the one who qualifies. 409.

GLOBE OFFICE 'It 1111 I.

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Pages Available:
4,495,484
Years Available:
1872-2024