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Fitchburg Sentinel from Fitchburg, Massachusetts • Page 6

Location:
Fitchburg, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
6
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FITCHBURQ (MASS.) SENTINEL, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1949 Published Dally. Except Sundiy, By THE SENTINEL PRINTING COMPANY. 808 Main Fitchburg. Mau. TERMS: Delivered locally by carrier.

or UM rtly by Ma US tt Mr year, fl.23 month, ptyabtt In Entered an second-elms matter it fce Postufflct. Fitchburg, Mau. FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1949 Member of UM Prtss The Associated Presi entitled exclusively to the use for republicatlon of the locaj news printed In this r. as well as AP newi dispatcher The Sentinel assumes no flnanctil responilbillty lor typographical trror; In but In luch event will furnish letter staling the to be posted In the store. ere requeMed to notify us Immediately if an error in price Is dUcovered.

If advertiser' desire proofs, fixed positions, or exceeding KO Inches. copy must be In our hands by noon of diy preceding publication. (For The Sentinel Is delivered to principal New York notelt, on order only. bv the Longacre Newspaper Delivery Order rnav be given to mull clerk tf On Sale In New Ym-k: Street and Brosdwray, Hota 47th Street and Broadway, Metaling. Woolworth Building.

On Sale in Boston' Old South Church. Waihlnfton Street. ALMANAC APRIL 22 Sun Rises Seta yard and feels so much at home that it pops proudly from the ground in due season. The yellow lady's-slipper, tenderly removed last summer from-of all middle of cow path at the foot of a moist, rocky hillside, has not yet shown signs of life. But there is still hope, for the yellow lady's-slippers have not yet broken above ground in another garden where they have thrived and bloomed for several years.

Big, pure-white trillium are well up, and in large bud. May-apple! have nosed two inches above ground, but the. shoots are still pale. The showy orchid makes it first spring appearance in the garden, having been transplanted last summer at the same time as the yellow lady's-slipper, and it decides to send up not one shoot alone but five. At first they are tightly curled leaves which gradually unfurl, revealing at this stage of their growth, the hard green flower buds hidden deep within the expanding leaf fold.

fuutHhw Queerest Bird We Ever Saw the winter, and several bloodroot plants are reaching upward, the still tight shoots in some cases having a distinctly bloody hue, although in full season it is the roots that bleed, while the flower is white and the leaves a dull gray-green, In spite of the puppy's scampering New Moon. Anrll 28. 3h, Mj'TM, 1 over their territory, the wild colum- bine are well along in bud. How; Last May 19. 2h.

22m, Evening W. we jj tri ey survive is a matter of fate; for places next to the garden- ARE WE STILL GULLIBLE? step rocks were chosen for these Tneolicht RunnVhou, Red Army bright friends which in their native haunts like to live in shallow soil newspaper, denies that Russian rocks and these rocky i a es Communists are considering an end, the home garden Ke in the to their blockade of the western rec path a puppy's eager climb to zones of Berlin. However, Communist circles in Berlin and eastern Germany have been saying that a lifting of the blockade is pending. Dr. Heinnch Eau.

president of Red German munist a a 5 a i the terrace. A puppy has no appreciation whatever of the delight the rest of the household take in ing the transplanted wildlifigs grow and blossom. Hepatica, of course, has been in blossom for some time. JLbflt irh ha been blossoming yearly in the home services rendered and services received--on a business basis. economic welfare of the Soviet zone jg ar den for at least 10 years is again i their whole territory into demands a 'resumption of trade another season, but old age resistance.

This contem- vriih the western zones. (The appears to have made inroads upon! tha opposition to the Red The railway mail pay case could tJrited States, Britain and France, vitality. Meanwhile, another i invasion from the north will be he settled by June 1 jf the railroads set up counter blockade of the Russian zone after Moscow clamped the blockade on the western areas of Berlin, causina the Nvestern allies to resort to. the highly Successful airlift.) Dr, Rau has been quoted verbatim from a spe ecn to Re in which he urged them to stress economic cooperation between the Russian'and western zones in order to provide the only means of reviving the stagnated trade in the Russian zone for which importation of poods from the west is necessary. According to Dr.

Rau the Communists want western goods, but not western ideas. He advocates a retention of the blockade against truih. while lifting, the restrictions on trade. He also urges that after trade restrictions are removed Communists "try to pain a greater influence upon the west of Germany." The United States and its allies. Britain and France, would be unforgivably gullible if they permitted zones and Russia's unaer any circumstances short of full settle- of all the issues now revolv- about the "cold western allies have placed thfmselves in an exposed position by-insisting-that the productive capacity of western Germany must be increased at almost any cost in or- dej to achieve economic rehabilita- tifi of the whole of western Europe.

Thfey have hurdled disagreements anjjong themselves to present a plan for a western republic of the German people in order to bring about desired increase in production. That gives the Kremlin a motive fofi lifting the blockade. If Politburo believe that the western allfes are so anxious to establish a republic as a step toward greater industrial production in that aria, they can be expected to use that anxiety for their own purposes, possibly by lifting the block-1 ade and thereby forcing the three, western powers into new negotla-i tiotis for a general peace treaty for Germany. bottled gentian, transferred by accident along with a maiden hair fern, is lusty and eager to supplant' older specimen, wViit-h should now be approaching old age security, lacking alas in nature's realm. A lone wild geranium is i sturdy after several years' faithful performance.

rmide by stages. In Hollywood By ERSKLNE JOH.NSON In Washington By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON, April 22--Post- naster Gentnil Jesse M. Donaldson 1 would co-operate on a new cost study for its biggest ami best cus- tomer, which now pays the roads over $200,000.000 a year. I Instead, the railroads seem to be trying to get their 65 per cent in-: to lts new economy. terim without having to i Everything is going down.

their costs, HOLLYWOOD, April 22-- All this town needs now is a i ower -pnced Among New By W. Q. 10QEIS FLIGHT FROM REALITY, by Norman Taylor 'Duell, Sloan Pearce; Quoting a Mayan's defense of his McKEIVNEY ON BRIDGE My WILLIAM It MdUWNKT American Card Authority I was chatting with Elliot Lawrence, the famous young band leader who was voted the most popularj A 1 0 I 7 4 9 2 4 7 4 5 4 addiction to aguardiente, that "a man i band by colleges last year. He told A must sometimes take a rest from his I me that he has played at 200 differ- 2 memory," Taylor considers fascinatingly how countless human beings have been enabled, by various forms of plant life, to sink into forgetfulness. He would prefer to say, "rise" into forgetrulncft, for sees little or no harm in a "flight ffom reality" whether instigated by alcohol, or the products of Indian hemp or the poppy seed As severe as anyone can be toward the abuse of drugs, he nevertheless does not condemn a moderate pinch of this or snuff of that if it's a quick, safe route to Nirvana or never-never land.

One herd or another, or some distillation from it, helps pass away the tire Smith 1 0 9 8 6 2 Dealer 9 I I 53 A I lonely journey, solaces the sub-Arctic natives, inspires Coleridge or Gounod, relaxes the rest of us teatime or cocktail hour. There are unexpectedly good ries about the China Clippers that were Opium Clippers; the religious uses to which early Central Americans and North American Indiana ololiuqui, pey and tobacco; about Arab so fond of his steed that he gives it the opium which he enjoys himself; about the naked men who dash along rows of female hemp plants to collect on their bare skin the sticky substance which becomes charas, about hashish, marihuana, ganja; and about pituri, fly agaric, caapi, kaava, betel, cocoa, coffee and chocolate. The Spartan, the ascetic and the American with his blunt philosophy of do-or-die will frown with displeasure and perhaps anger on this to expect that his defense of a happy limbo may get him out on a lunoo himself. But he deserves much credit for a book about dream land that keeps you wide awake, and fcj the expression of honest with which many disagree. Where the forget-me-nots, (pulled i has bet'un two moves to make the cost from the center of a brook) wore m- ra ji roa( serted in a moist place near the garden wall last spring, and where.

they bloomed, several crowded mcrit hauling-the mail are de- YORK, April 22--Personal palaces are corning up with all kinds to a full new rates of Broadway By MARK BARRON It's as obvious in. Hollywood's drink and be merry department as in film budgets. No longer do you have to arrange a bank loan before going to a night club. Vhe giggle water and caviar So They Say! termined. visible, but whether they are for- get-me-nots or not remains to seen.

clusters of tiny seedlings are TM TM off a New Yorker's of tricks to woo back customers visible, but whether thcv are for-1 Commerce Commission I Television shows are finding that'i 0 since the war boom. i roplv to the American Association onD oi eir si commercial ac- Phil Baffin's "No Cover, No Mini- i Ra ilmn su idiarv, the railway unts are slenderizing salons They mum. No Federal Tax'; has kept the Fern fronds are uncurling on! a i trHI po atlon committee which hnw ps how to uke off lnril Som rset House mrnnme. schedule, and they seem not to have aiks for a 35 cent suffered diminution in number dur- creaso pay on lop of a previously ing the winter except where the. grar 25 per cent raise, the 0 ,1.

puppy ha. beaten through Lster charge, that under Butkr a famou, It read. show the gais how to take off that Somerset House jumping. extra ounce or is a them; which also thp Mail Act of 1916 the minstrel 'man. always led the have att.uned prodigious ICC is without authority to grant when the minstrel troupe height and size in summers SU ch interim increases before full A new sign just appeared in Ruby Dandridge, tlie talented'Preston Sturges' swank Players Negro is the daughter of Restaurant at a turn on the Sun- eating too much have just made their 1949 debut, hearings are concluded.

The Dutchman's-breeches long and thfl fiij The grounds on which the post. his. a i arf don't you try a half of portion at half price. This goes for small towns in the middle west. anything on the menu." Carey, the tight lipped! novie.

star, won a i Purges also assures customers Europe is used up an economic liability. But this (the Pacific) is a virgin region, with unmeasured resources and people who are eager to take advantage of the blessings offered by democracy. President Elpidio Quirino, of the Philippine Republic. The current Soviet hysteria against the so-called Marshall Pisa te the ent colleges for their pronu and social functions. I asked him if he ever got tired of playing the rumba and jump music, and his answer was, "College students don't go for that They, like the old-time melodies andi smooth music." As a matter of fact, he calls his music "Heart-to- Heart Music." This brings to my mind collcfie enthusiasm with which m.iny colic-ge students are playing bridge.

They have their own national tourna-i ment each year now, and I would'club from dummy, win it with bet that not many of them would act- and lead back" the three of cluhfc slip up on the problem presenkd in South will have to win this trick, The opening lead of the four of won in durnmv with the ace, another earts is won in 'lummv with the is led and trumped by declarer, lub ess will lose the whole hand. South South is smart enough to cash the will win. lead back another heart ace of diamonds when he is in with and kill the dummy. i queen of clubs. That would The correct play is to lead a small hold the hand to five-odd.

1 0 7 4 A 1 0 8 5 7 Tournament--N-S vuL South West North Pass Pass Paw 1 Pass 2 4k Pass 2 Pass 3 Pass 4 Opening--V 4 dulls the laborer's pains irij Latin- American mountains, carries the i iU desert traveler comfortably on his if declarer leads the jack wh.ch establishes the whole cl lnm.lv mnrnev th. Am of clubs and takes the finesse, he suit. Declarer will make six unl Boyle's Column MAL BOYLE It is one of the lesser pleasantries of NEW YORK, Api.i 22 i a U. S. Senate controversy around th.

Malmedy massacre trials will pro- 1 i uniform, represents an attempt, In duce one "rtwelcome outcome it part at to enforce ethical stan- will create a new postwar German ard ht actions of men in des- military hero. He is Col. Joachim Peiper, a hanH- perate battle. Whether the German mind can understand the American desire to deal some young former adjutant to SS: out.justice fairly and squarely in tail Chief Heinrich Himmler. imt-sseil-up situation is another mat- This tough-mind.

storm trooper, ter Ccrtainlv it is a sad nfcr KiitenuB uf death, IrTrTaTnTmBrtlkTrorTr" i a a i i i i i i i symbol to many hero-loving Geras Hitler and completely devoted to mans of the war they lost. And from his anti-Christian principles, loom the Allied point of view, he is a dan- ari larger to his countrymen. gerous man for this reason: He isn't' He is the kind of man they the type the German people should to forget ever come to regard as a martyr. A Senate subcommittee is now investigating the army's prosecution of Col. Peiper and 72 other German soldiers.

They were accused of murdering 750 American prisoners and 150 Belgian civilians in the wintry battle of the Bulge in 3944. The American army's quest for Continued from One) long been deeply concerned about the present methods of support operations for potatoes. I also feel justice in this situation has been as, sure that they are not all satisfied confused as was the Battle of the'that a reduction in the support level Bulge itself. But unlike the battle, i would provide a complete solution." has had no decisive impact for good on the German mind. The original trial was held in The department was required, to support prices of the 1948 crop at per cent of parity.

Congress Nazi concentration camp at Dachau, dropped the minimum level to 60 per hardly a scene renowned for for and succeeding years. Of the 73 defendants 43 were i i Here, by New England slates, is en death sentences. But since number of farms eligible for there have been two official invest)-'price supports end the average gallons of the trial. One was mili- amount paid each of these farms for most eloquent testimony to its sue- tary, one was by a civilian commis- surplus potatoes up to Feb. 22: cess.

It has been fresh air in the lungs sion. And in a final review nf the' anrf horse opera star of "Secret Service" and other stage man seal, it seems, is no the railroaHs have refused to 8TM u- i 1 4 1 in t-iKinAct nf iKo nricr- tore went out to r. But casualties among the i i MSIC data in suppottot ineorig-, doaies all grated "displaced persons" of i TM 25 morease, though they hasa Sftrden are few in number. They! ere do so. might have been larger in numbed, Arnue ''P rud ecia if fate had been tempted too much.i^.

postmaster general HI iAis It-ta wise, for tempt to make the pink lady s-shp-, duce thjs evicience i per prefer your garden to its own emeni to ICC quoles chosen place of abode the woods; comcll for th roads com mittee on Young for such attempts are always fatal: ra wav sooner or later to the pink lady's- i ff over 'to guarantee a brimming measure. prouder of the gadget than his ilatest picture. Hollywood Reconnaissance:" Hobby Mart is of liberty, and has driven despair from the souls of men. Sen. Arthur H.

Vnndenberg (R) of Mich. In these matters (taxation and financial relations), as in so many others, the three types of govern- for the common good. President Truman. Connecticut 82 and matter Gen. Lucius D.

Clay reduced 32 and S771 g. 34 the death sentences to six. Of the $2 3.206; Vermont 01 and $7689. other 67 originally convicted, 20 arc averaf under life sentence. 34 servint: short; er prison terms and 13 have been jn freed.

And now a subcommittee per farm se for where yield t. as well as by ical and psychological fear induced by. "mock trials." What other effect can.all this have; Russia is in the ox-cart age as com-1 on many Germans except to mako '17 pared to our automobile age. We heroes to them of Col. Peiper and, One) transportation to the ef ect at lne essen ti a evidence slipper that has been evicted from "consists of payrolls and cal' displaying children's furniture a a a tremendous head start plus, his co-defendants: ic Bomb Project.

'rj ue i Sun" (some- its home. The same disappointment Illations based'thereon at the source as a a or of being a politician so when was an undergraduate at Yale in times "referred to as "Lust in the 1875 he managed to. get himself a is in store for most of those who try to grow fringed gentians in the gar- The den. the post he offered Bill (Hopalong jCassidy) Boyd the role played by said: implication drawn Jack Smith, the CBS singer, dis-j Charles' Bickford. Boyd that if covered you not only run into the character like?" and hazards in your A no-good who gets shot in a wildlings cry out in their own language: "Give me liberty or give me death." of western Germany are opposing the U.

plan for a republic. They, too, are playing upon the west's anxiety. They seek to wring larger concessions from the western allies because they know the west has placed euch a high value on economic rehabilitation of western Germany. The western allies should make twip points clear: 4U attwngly they fever roi (oration of western German pro- dii they will not be pushed en und by the German socialists wHo are already behaving as though it the Americans, French and Erfclish who lost the war and not the Germans. 12) The western powers are no longer so gullible or such easy push- ovirs for Kremlin machinations that thiy will permit the Russians to tale advantage of the west's desire ton increased German industrial production.

Whether the Russian of western Berlin is lifted the Kremlin should be made to. if understand that American, French and British occupation trdpps are in Germany to stay un- tilTiussia begins, to act a responsible member of the society of na- tia is and ends its part of cold on all fronts, 'rom present Indication! that w( uld mean the troops would be in many for a long, long time, TARE THE WtLDLOfOS? 'his is the season of delight or disappointment for the amateur gardener who has been trying his hapd at transplanting wild frAn woods and fields to the backyard. Last year's efforts begin to ghtw results, or failures, in the spring. There's a special kind of thMll in discovering that the wild- liqg once growing on a secluded wtoded ledge, or on the edge of Arovnd the World Background To The News the post office department and the BUUIUU i n. fiuu a a 8 out themselvel vffid calls this The sand dust he inhaled compeiied 'T pay you as much as out vupruoi cans uus fiye Hopalong plctu you make i i i 3 a i for i five Hopalong pictures," said i Seiznick.

defiance of the government. 8 in Ma 1 ef 24' th Ai Guy Lombardo is giving his or-l ICC has been set tor may A week vacation with raiher be a hero to a lot of kids. decision by the ICC is hoped for by che.tr. a two week vwauon Ma uee sign: John Loves 1 If the decision states thatlP a so can go out lor LIIUIS wiui June 1. 11 tne decision suras na thanks," said Boyd.

"I'd Mary (AP Foreign Affairs Analyst) We shall know soon how much ar a a frankly a second interim increase, there 8'vmg them another ive weeks indications that the postmaster gen- 1 vacation so he can compete in majorj New york WM in the 16th row ew or WM BU CArti tuq i rr-TM: Hie tllUiua, ouc aniu, A iicvcj, throw the case into the courts. are considering buying Guy another i a that toss it off by My In the meantime. Postmaster Gen- speed boat or two. WM witn ziigidd: That does eral Donaldson has begun attack on Bee Kalmus, the comely striking-power the Com- this railway mail pay issue on is continuing her chatter, a so loved Barbara comment i.1 A A nn.H rhnrm a hrnken leff. 1 -L- U.J munist armies possess, for their task of crossing the mighty Yangtze river, last formidable barrier between Red China and the Nationalist south, would be Napoleonic If they encountered strong resistance.

Perhaps vte should do better to put the operation, in terms of Nationalist weakness. For it is great, relatively speaking. Already the Communist chief, Mao Tie-Tung, has flung troops across the river at strategic points, spur-, authorized to withhold payment second front. In new legislation submitted to Congress, the post office department has asked for a number of revisions of the railway mail pay act of 1916. One revision would require the railroads to furnish the postmaster general with such information and and charm despite a broken leg.

She has a navy bosun's chair swung jtten alongside her record player and technique? was told someone had continues from there. 'Why, said Barbara, "I know a Alexander Scourby, who plays 0 people who don't even know the role of the black market king in now to work the dials yet the Broadway play, "Detective! Mary Pickford is ready with the Story," was called for jury duty. 'script of the Mary Baker Eddy film- termining proper payment for railway mail transportation. If such information were not furnished, the office department would be iu.dge* seen the ring them on with the cry: "Liberate all China." This resumption of fighting, grim is It is, will clarify the situation faster than would long-drawn-out until the evidence is furnished. Another proposed amendment would give the postmaster general power to file suit for court review of any ICC decision on mail pay talk.

The Nationalists now know rates. The "railroads may now ask that appeasement won't work with, or court review of ICC decisions. the Communists. Peace could be achieved solely on terras. The only way to reach a clear-cut decision is to fight it out.

If the Nationalists carry out the plans which they have been contemplating, we are witnessing the but the post office department can't. Under present schedules--established 20 and 30 years ago--the roads charge the government the fully- drama, said he would excuse Scourby until 1951. she may produce the picture starring herself. Garbo must mean Marie Mahar, the television ac- it about her return to th that, as such, salvation. by," but' also" for" German" Hut TMse sources 'dded Cath- -von r-i-manc whrf ollc church dogma does not mam- even the Germans who' The United Nations has not the liked Nazism are nationalistic on the question of German couraco Some of them have come to regard him as a victim of postwar persecution by the machinery to keep the peace.

But we have overwhelming moral forces which have led to peace in 13 cases in all. We have prevented war in each one. Secretary-General Trygve Lie of the UN. Housing (Continued from Page One) six years. The 810,000 figure is a compromise between the 1,050,000 Mr.

Truman wanted in seven years, and the 600,000 a group of Republican senators wanted in six years. The federal government's share total. Most of it would be met from the rents collected, along with local communitv contributions its "ouS be Jwned Wai victors. And this Is bad. Uiin thiit no one can Heaven except tliroueh the i church.

Reports from Newton, at start of the cast- had said that dismissed instructors had ap- their case to Pope Pius XII, jt Vatican sources that au- in of heresy is en- to local ecclesiastical au- and a Vatican officials Even among some professional American officers there is a reluc-, tant admiration for the soldierly ability of Col. Peiper, the regimental eommander whose men lined up and i shot to death 80 disarmed Americans )uld not concern themselves in a snoury field outside Malmedy. i Wlth the case Whether this was a "massacre" or' a military necessity is of some too, to professional soldiers. For a mored olumns in a breakthrough attack be they German, American, 1 Theater Continued from Page British cr Russian have no means 50 foot screen and sound equiprr i- 1 i bitter. The decision then be in I each r-r i made whether to kill the prisoners! A similar outdoor theater project program, to be met by the federal government and the balance by local communities.

The bill authorizes $1,000,000,000 in federal loans and 000,000 in grants. 'A thrw-paTt fann housing program: 33-year loans at not more than four per cent in- or to let go, knowing the meniwai. lauiitJieu tvo years ago, tut then would be free to warn the en-'had to be abandoned because of tltV swampy condition of the land whert Often in compiando-type traids this', the proposed outdoor theater WM decision must be made, to be tress, says she keeps her name in the Medical Registry as a private nurse because she doesn't know if television is going to last, but she is certain that the demand for nurses will continue indefinitely. Health (Continued from Page One) require doctors to become employes of the government. It will not dis- loaded rate for all mail cars re-1 turb the freedom of doctors and hos- turned empty.

Empty express andipitals to determine the nature ar.d freight cars are of course moved of treatment to be given. It tins year, to be available to owners of self-sustaining farms who are unable to finance ade- 1 Hi. itr iquaie nousing; a similar loan pro- telling friends Kram, along 8 with fJerJ that she's taking only two trunks with her when she sails on the Queen Mary in a few weeks to do "Stage Fright" in England. One trunk will carry dinner dresses contributions for up to 10 years to owners whose farms were not at the time self-sustaining but could be made so; loans and grants would be available for minor improvement she'll wear it the captain's and repair of dwellings on farms without charge to the shipper. will not Interfere with the personal relationship between doctor and pa- beginning of another stretch of But the U.

S. post office depart- Mootbhed and destruction. It is; ment is required cents: per tiemV small comfort to note the historical car-mile for the. movement of its) "Under such a plan, patients will fact that this will be only a further empties. This is double the highest jemain free to choose their own doc- phase of the civil strife that has comparable rate of 26 cents per car- tors, and doctors will remain free to been going on intermittently ever mile charged for the movement of accept or reject patients.

Moreover, since the revolution of 1911, which loaded express cars. (patients, doctors and hospitals will reculted in the overthrow of the i Over the past 20 years it is es- remain free to have their own ar- throne and the establishment of timated that this charge for the rangements for care outride the the republic. movement of empty mail cars hat (government) insurance -system if Informed sources say that under. cost the government about they so choose the guidance of Generalissimo i 000,000. The government's general Chiang Kai-shek the Nationalists accounting office has now recom- have been preparing to inaugurate; mended abolition of the full-rate guerrilla warfare to meet the Red invasion of Central and South China.

fWtnltlslmo's "retirement" has been more fiction than fact. It was maneuver which at once established a "peace front' 1 in the capital to negotiate with the Reds, and gave Chiang a chance to organize payment for movement of empty mail cars. This point reduces the whole bat' (Continutd from Ftgt Ont) John J. O'Neil, member of the tie royal between the government Leominster police force was hospi- and the railroads to ita tallied for several weeks as the re--which are rates. Postmaster Gen- of the accident which happened eral Donaldson--a career man in the at 3 a.

m. while-he was driving home postal service--has been working from work. Scene of the accident was China South of the Yangtze for de-' desperately on all fronts to reduce Merriam avenue WsshinRton which -table every night and the other will carry sea-sickness pills to guarantee her appearance at the captain's table every night. Jane's children will spend early summer with papa Ronald Reagan, and then join Jane for a tour of Europe. Palm Springs Memories postscript: The dude ranch atmosphere at the Thunderbird, so ably managed bv Frank Bogert.

The chef even joins in the fun, singing after- dinner A famous west- ern'star falling off a bicycle while being photographed at the Palms. Owner Joe Blumenfeld. who heids the largest independent theater chain in California, telling me that a San Francisco syndicate has perfected color for television. The low key" lighting at the Doll House-- inspired by movie stars who don't want to be recognized. Flashlights are standard equipment for autograph hounds there.

fense if peace talks failed. It is estimated that at least half of the American population uses taken kindly to your back- The are Mid to have department. waati rites for iihed. $500.000,000 a year deficit of his street. The O'Neil car was demol- some form of coin-operated device which could not be made self-sustaining.

China (Continued from Paft Ont) (British nevy Singapore reported a RAF flying boat tried to make a landing near the Amethyst and was driven away by Red fire. This apparently was a second attempt. A flying boat earlier had landed near the Amethyst and put a doctor aboard.) Three other British men-of-war tried to go to the Amethyst's relief lay at Shanghai wharves, crippled by Communist shell fire. All four had fired back on their attackers. The death toll of the attack by Communist artillery wi four British warships WM believed to be 42.

An estimated 84 were injured but the toll may be higher. Communist casualties were not known. The U. S. naval hospital ship Repose arrived at Shanghai from the western fleet base at Tsingtao and Marine Creature Marine fish 9 It has large dorsal ---13 Proclaim 14 Horse's gait 15 Not (prefix) frighten 18 Consumed 19 Palm lily 2bil 3 Hostelry 4 Behold! 5 Melt together 6 Peruvian Indian 7 Cicatrix ftCemigod 9 Foot (ab.) 10 War god 20 Eating place a observe 22 Iridium (symbol) 23 Preposition 25 One time 27 Asterisk 23 Expires 29 Abraham's home 30 warm wattrs- .31 Concerning 32 Southwest (ab.) 33 Whirled 35 Weary 38 Endure 29 Famous English school 10 Measure of area Distributes 17 Note in Guido'i scale 48 Knock lightly 50 Cirrted 51 Make (suffix) 52 Revise 34 Aardvark 56 Oriental 37 Unnecessary VERTICAL 26 Simpleton 33 Blackboards 12 Cubic 34 Procession 17 Daybreak 36 Wakens (comb, form) 37 Comes in 20 Floods 42 Lead 21 Dressmakers (symbol) 24 Sign of zodiac 43 Horse color 44 Sea etgle 45 Poker stakt 46 Exploit 49 Fastener 51 Follower 53 Till sale (ab 55 Chemical suffix each week.

its facilities were turned over to the 1 1 Seaport in British BruU.

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About Fitchburg Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
317,153
Years Available:
1873-1977