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Intelligencer Journal from Lancaster, Pennsylvania • 3

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Lancaster, Pennsylvania
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3
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U.S. PROTESTS ON NEW PLANE ATTACK Vienna-(P)-A second attack by Soviet planes on U. S. transport aircraft was disclosed with another protest to Russian authorities by Gen. Mark W.

Clark. The attacks came a day apartlast Monday the Tulle, airport, 1 and on Easter Sunday Linz, Austria. Clark already had protested concerning the when four Soviet fired Monday, off the wings of a but no reply has received. Clarks headquarters announced Wednesday that four Russian fighters closed in on a C-47 flying between Vienna and Munich Sunday, and two of the Russians, fired at the American ship. transport, carrying only its crew, was not hit.

The American plane was on a regularly scheduled flight, was on time, and was within the corridor prescribed by the Russians for flyfrom Tulln airport outside Vienna to Linz. officials said. There were four attacks in all against the ship, the first just east of Linz and another over Linz itself, although Linz is within the American zone except for a portion of the city north of the Danube. The Soviet fighters came so close that the crewmen could read the numbers 99 and 54 on the aircraft. FREE PRESS VITAL TO MANKIND, FORREST SAYS Louisville, Ky.

(AP) Freedom press a "vital right of mankind," Wilbur S. Forrest, president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, said here Wedin addressing, the national convention Women's Action Committee for victory and lasting peace. Forrest advocated world freedom of information as an antidote to secret diplomacy and power politics and told of the world tour made last year by a committee of American editors. which he headed, surveying press freedom or the lack of it in all parts of the world At present, he told more than 200 vention, delegates and American visitors editors at there Cole: voting their efforts to obtaining a free press provision in the basic law of the United Nations to be drawn up by the U. N.

Assembly in September. To put an end to secret treaties and undercover diplomacy, Forrest declared, free access to information and uncensored circulation of news are essential. $36,082 LIQUOR LOSS Harrisburg (AP) The commonwealth suffered "a total loss" of $36,082 in the breakage of 739 bottles of various types and brands of liquors sent to the declaim department of the State Liquor Control Board's Philadelphia warehouse, Auditor General G. reported Wednesday. SHOP THE CHILDRENS SHOP FOR A COMPLETE SELECTION WASHABLE OVERALLS 131 N.

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Miller Co. Hull-Houghton Drug Co. YESTERDAY AND TODAY IN THE LIVES OF FAMOUS FOLK Fritz Kreisler read music before words and holds the position "supreme" among violin artists. Yet he has one thing in common with innumerable junior musicians the world over he hates to practice! The aversion goes back to his childhood in Vienna, where his father, an eminent physician, started him toward the musical achievements he had always dreamed of for himself. Kreisler was born on Feb.

2, 1875. At four, he made a violin out of a cigar box; at seven, gave his first concert and was accepted by the Vienna Conservatory, in spite of the fact that its minimum age requirement was 14. At 10, young Fritz was sent to the Paris Conservatory where he surprised everyone by winning the Premier Grand Prix in competition with musicians at least 10 years older. America's first introduction to this violinist and composer was in 1888 when the then 13-yearto Vienna, he was refused the second violin post the Vienna old boy made a concert tour with Pianist Moritz a Rosenthal. Returning Philharmonic, so his father enrolled him to study medical cawrithe reer.

At 17, young Kreisler tossed medicine aside, said painting was his goal, and studied and painted several years in Paris and Rome, living on oranges and water for the most part to save money. When the 20-year mark rolled around, Kreisler returned to Austria for required peace-time military service and became a captain in the Army. After his discharge, he took up the violin again, making his second debut in Berlin in 1891. Kreisler's exquisite artistry was recognized and acclaimed in his U. S.

tour of 1901-03, during which he married Harriet Lies of New York. Recalled to Austria and active military duty in the First World War, Kreisler was wounded and discharged, after which he wrote "Four Weeks in the Trenches," and toured America again to raise funds for Austria. Less popular when the U. S. joined the Allies.

Kreisler nevertheless was acclaimed again when he returned to Carnegie Hall in 1919. The "Kreisler hoax" was discovered in 1935 when Fritz Kreisler was proved to be the sole author of a number of popular compositions published, for 30 years as arrangements from classical masters. In Kreisler became an American citizen. He has always preferred to live in the land where he made his first success. (International) Put New Life In U.

S. Diplomatic Corps -Any diplomatic corps eventually knocked out by former GI's This opinion comes to you 1 through the courtesy of Edward C. Acheson. He has studied the stuffed shirt, its cause and its cure. Acheson announced Wednesday starting July 1, George Washington University will have a twocourse for veterans who yearn to be diplomats.

Those who qualify will have their expenses paid by the government under the GI Bill of Rights. As director of this school, Acheson has interviewed men who plan to enroll. His verdict: A new diplomatic day is dawning. "You can tell the difference just by talking to them," Acheson told a reporter. "Before the war we helped a private school here to tutor fledgling diplomats.

Many of these came from swanky eastern schools. "Nice kids, of course, but after 18 months in the diplomatic service something happened. They began to get stuffy, especially around the collar." And the new crop? "Older, for one thing," said Acheson. "But more important, most of them are down-to-earth fellows. Many are from the middlewest.

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Stone Thursday, interrupting his vacation cruise for A few hours. The presidential yacht Williamsburg, cruising Wednesday in Chesapeake will put in at Quantico, Thursday. From there the President will motor to the for the service at the Washington Cathedral at 2 p. m. (EST) returning afterwards to his yacht.

With Mr. Truman will be Admiral William D. Leahy, his chief of staff. Brig. Gen.

Harry M. Vaughan and Capt. Clark Clifford, his military and naval aides. The President will stop briefly at the White House on his way to the cathedral to be joined by Mrs. Truman and their daughter, Margaret.

The Williamsburg picked up mail Wednesday morning at Cape Charles, where it had anchored Tuesday night, and headed north 1 across Chesapeake Bay into the Potomac River. Its anchorage for Wednesday night is near Upper Cedar Point, 18 miles from Quantico. During the day the President spent several hours working on official papers, the first to reach him during his absence from the el White House. FUNERAL SERVICES In Washington, it was announced that Stone will be buried in Rock Creek Cemetery there. The funeral will conducted by the Rev.

Fleming James, dean of School of Theology of the University of the South, Sewanee. assisted by the Right Rev. Angus Dun, Episcopal Bishop of Washington, and the Very Rev. John W. Suter, dean of the cathe- dral.

Pallbearers will be from the Suprege Court guard, as is customary, and present and retired justices will be honorary bearers. Speaker Rayburn Wednesday appointed these six members of the House Judiciary Committee to attend funeral: Representatives Tolan Kefauver, Hancock Tena Cravens Michener (D- and Gwynn (R-Iowa). COMMITTEE PREPARES TO FIGHT SERVICE MERGER Washington (P) The Senate Naval Committee maneuvered into position Wednesday to write an adverse report on the Army-Navy unification bill if it sees fit. It asked that the bill, already approved by the Military Committee, be referred to it for study. Chairman Thomas (D-Utah) of the Committee and DemocraMilitary, Barkley (Ky) readily agreed.

Barkley told reporters that the move "probably will produce less friction" than if the controversial measure is brought directly to the floor. He it should cause "no undue delay." Chairman Walsh (D-Mass), of the Naval Committee and some other members have opposed any plan which would deprive the Navy of direct representation in the cabinet. RELEASE FRITZ KUHN FROM INTERNMENT CAMP Frankfurt, Germany- -Fritz Kuhn, former leader of the German-American Bund who now is broken in health and spirit, will be released from a German internment camp Thursday. Kuhn, deported from the United States last September, is "an unknown figure in Germany" and is not considered a threat to American occupation troops here, U. Army headquarters said.

He is expected to join his wife and two children in Munich. Kuhn frequently has said the Bund was a "fiasco." He has been in jail since 1939. After completing a year sentence for embezzlement of Bund funds, he was interned at Crystal City, Texas, and lost his American citizenship a year later. COURT MARTIAL FINDS BRITISH OFFICERS GUILTY Portsmouth, England--(P) -Fifteen junior officers of the Royal Navy who refused to sail from New York Jan. 30 on grounds that they had not been given suitable accommodations were ordered dismissed from the service Wednesday night by an Admiralty court martial.

The men were found guilty of conduct unbecoming officers, of improperly leaving their ship in New and of willful disobedience. I'M SO GLAD TO GET OUT OF DRAB COLORS INTO THE NEW SPRING SHADES! THE SPRING TOILETRIES AT MOSEMANN'S DRUG STORE MAKE SPRING CLOTHES EVEN MORE BECOMING! Evening $2.25 Yankee Clover $1.00 Follow Me $2.00 Tuya $4.50 TOILET Nonchalant $1.00 Gemey $1.50 Yankee Clover $1.00 Tuya $2.50 BODY Evening In Paris $1.00 Vida-Ray. $1.00 Coty's $1.00 Pinaud's Apple Blossom 79c Federal Tax Talcum Powders, Deodorants Shampoos, Lotions We Give and Redeem Green Stamps Charles B. OSEMANN PHARMACIST -25-27 N. Prince GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty TO WEE AMERICA COMET WAR BRIDES jae; 4.26 146, Chicago Times, "Probably a coincidence, inspector, but our passenger list has 10 Mrs.

Joe Doakes of Lancaster, Pennsylvania!" Rehabilitate Hundreds Of "Bad Egg" Army Prisoners New Cumberland, prisoners at the Army's New racks, once shunted aside as proving they can be good soldiers. A selected staff of officers and men helps them to a fresh start as soldiers and citizens. Jim Blank, we'll him, finally it had legs come wouldn't to the move point, though when his brain told him to advance into battle. A court-martial called. it desertion in the face of the and Jim got a life term.

Joe Doakes fell into bad company, got drunk, held up a British army truck in India, and robbed the years. A discharge -went along with the prison sentences. But Blank, Doakes, and hundreds of others like them, are being salvaged for return to duty at New Cumberland and 14 other "D.B.'s" across the country. Their doublebarreled mission: to rehabilitate offenders against military law, and to see that they work out their sentences. of the 1,300 men under confinement at the medium ity installation live behind high wire fences.

They wear brown uniforms, easily distinguished from the Army's khaki and olive drab. Inside the wire, life is the same as in any standard military post. The barracks are the same. There are bars no bars except in hundred military Cumberland disciplinary eggs," are dead-set now on a separate, one-story concrete detention block. The few hundred who have passed screening tests and been found likely candidates for live apart from the rest, outside the compound.

There's no restraining wire. They're known by name, instead of number. They wear the same uniform as any other soldier. They have the privilege of saluting. They publish their own weekly paper.

Members of the "honor company" undergo an intensive eight-week course of basic training reminiscent of recruit days: drill, manual of arms, weapons, instruction, range firing, chemical warfare, personal hygiene, map reading, and all the rest of it. It's no snap, but the prestige and advantages are enough to keep the privileged men "on the ball." Only one out of 11 in the second graduating class, and one out of 88 who started with the third, backslid to general prison routine before finishing the course. DIEHM MEETS GOP CHIEFS Republican County Chairman G. Graybill Diehm was in Philadelphia Wednesday conferring with state Republican leaders, including State Chairman M. Harvey Taylor.

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17c 12 oz. box RECEIVED REGULARLY I CRISCO 3 lb. jar DUZ Large THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1946-3 REPORT PURGE OF JAP BANK HEADS Washington (A) Rep. Rankin (D-Miss) announced Wednesday he will ask the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities to investigate the CIO Political Action Committee which he termed "a Communist front movement." In a statement, Rankin also called for removal of Henry A. Wallace as Secretary of Commerce.

asserting that Wallace "seems to be hand-in-glove" with the PAC. Investigators working for the House committeine already are "checking PAC, he said. adding that "indications are that this outfit is getting instructions from behind the "iron curtain." The iron curtain is a term that has been applied to Russian censorship. Rankin's statement said "one of the best things that could happen to President Truman's administration would be for him to remove Henry A. Wallace as Secretary of Commerce.

"Wallace's speech to the PAC comintern in California, and his other attacks on Democratic members of Congress, together with his support a Communist candidate for Congress in New York a few weeks ago, sought to be sufficient notice to everyone that he is doing the Truman administration infinitely more harm than good." Rankin did not name the candidate he said Wallace supported. In New York, a spokesman for the PAC said the group had no official comment on Rankin's announcement. He added that the PAC had been investigated in 1944 by both, House and Senate committees campaign expenditures and given "a clean bill of health." BLAMES TB FOR 4,000 DEATHS IN STATE YEARLY Harrisburg Tuberculosis causes about 4.000 deaths annually in Pennsylvania, C. L. Newcomb, of the National Tuberculosis Association, said Wednesday.

Newcomb, director of the association's Christmas Seal Sale, termed tuberculosis "a preventable disease" and said in an address to the Pennsylvania Tuberculosis Society that 500,000 Americans are suffering from it. He placed the death toll throughout the nation at 50.000 from the disease last year. Charles Kurtzhale, director the Philadelphia Tuberculosis and Health Association, was chairman of the session at which the annual round program was discussed. Christmas seal sale and, the A number of representatives of the Rossmere Sanitorium and the Tuberculosis Society of Lancaster county are attending sessions of the conference. Those who will be preesnt at days include Miss Edna Hoffa.

sessions on one or more, of the Mrs. Ruth Schmidt, Miss Thelma Hart, Mrs. Frances, Dickey, Miss I. Mary Herr, Mary Long and Dr. M.

K. Spillman. KIDNAP PREMIER'S KIN London- (P) -The Hilversum, Netherlands, radio said Wednesday night that the brother of Premier Sutan Sjahrir of the unrecognized Indonesian Republic had kidnaped in Sumatra by Indonesian Extremists and that Sjahrir had asked Britnsh authorities to assist in the capture of the kidnapers. The daily weather map of the United States was first published by the government in 1871. Permanents $5.00 and up Louise Beauty Shoppe N.

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HOLLOW GROUND RAZOR BLADES 20 Tokyo-(P)-A purge of high officials of the Bank of Japan was reported Wednesday night by Kyodo News Agency. Hit the ouster based on General MacArthur's Jan. 4 purge directive were Eikichi Araki, the bank's governor, and an undisclosed number of other officials found "undesirable" under terms of the directive. Kyodo said the finance ministry would name a new governor tomorrow, and added that it was understood Hisato Ichimada. head of the bank's Osaka branch, would get the appointment.

Japanese political leaders continued to wrestle with the task of forming a coalition government to succeed the resigned Shidehara. cabinet a task complicated by the purge threat hanging over one of the principal candidates for the premiership. The political negotiations were further complicated by a demand from the Social Democratic Party that the premier be chosen from its ranks. Without assurance of the premiership and other offices the party would decline to join the coalition, its secretarygeneral, Tetsu Katayama, said. However, Ichiro Kawano, Liberal Party whip, after a talk with Katayama he still believed the two parties could get together.

REDS AID FINNS nish transport facilities. Heard in Chicago Munser, sales representative of Armstrong, telling folks about the fame of Lancaster and also about the good food served at the famous Village restaurant. -The Moscow radio said Wednesday night had agreed to sell Finland 100,000 tons with grain, fertilizer and also and to to supply improve Finland Fin- stuffed shirts in Uncle Sam's may have their stuffiness hustling into the foreign service. Until they went overseas, they never thought of diplomacy. "If this trend continues.

our entire diplomatic corps will get a lift. Heaven knows, it can use one." Of course, you've heard of Acheson's brother, Dean. the Undersecretary of State. Edward disclosed the Acheson boys have a peck of name trouble. "Foreign diplomats." he, said.

"think my brother's first name is an honorary title. So they call him 'Dean' when they first meet him, and using first names just isn't done in diplomatic circles, you knothien here I am as director of this school. Well, people who like to spread on a little flattery call me 'Dean That makes me my brother. "Confusing, isn't it?" CHAPLIN FILES APPEAL ON FATHER JUDGMENT Los Angeles (AP) The appeal of Charlie Chaplin and of old Carol Ann Berry from perior Court judgment a year ago holding the comedian is the father of child. born to Joan Berry.

his protege, was submitted State District Court of Appeal here Wednesday, without argument. Millikan, Chaplin's attorney, told the court his client did object to a $5,000 award of attorney fees for the baby's lawyer, Joseph Scott, but to the $75 a week support for the child. only The that child's of attorney the Is appealing part which the trial court fixed support at $75 a week and attorneys' fees at $5,000. Chaplin is appealing the portions which declared him the child's father and awarded her $75 a week support. McMINN INDUSTRIES GIVEN ROAD CONTRACT Harrisburg--A $240,587.61 contract widening and resurfacing 6.25 miles of pavement on Route 350 in South Philipsburg Borough has been awarded to McMinn's Industries.

of Lancaster, by the State Highway Department. Poland has exported 100.000 tons of cement to the Soviet Union in six months. Jamar Tamar Persua SEER Memum BEER amar BEER "FLAVORITE" Distributed by ZECH BOTTLING WORKS 14-16 N. Charlotte St. Lancaster, Pa.

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jar PRUNE JUICE Red Cheek APPLE JUICE qt. jar 29c DRIED APRICOTS Whole Unpitted lb. 45c Dehydrated LIME 10 lb. bag 19c SCOOP 1 lb. box Staley CUBE STARCH LIMITED SUPPLY I CAMAY 3.

cakes OXYDOL Large Wherever you go, there's a Busken to take you gala in color, with real leather soles and buoyant platforms in the California nethod. So modestly priced you can get several pairs for every sports, play and leisure need. $2.95 U.S. Pat. Off.

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Pages Available:
1,160,216
Years Available:
1864-2008