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The Gazette and Daily from York, Pennsylvania • Page 2

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York, Pennsylvania
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2
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THE GAZETTE AND DAILY, YORK, MORNING, JANUARY 15, 1942. 1800NamesAdded To U.S. Blacklist Latest List Of Axis-Aiders Issued By State Department Contains Name Of Axel Wenner-Cren, Swedish Industrialist North York High Students Thrifty i i I I KupilS bave CpZ Un- i ni, I Af der Plan In Operation At School The sum of $278.07 has been collected in the savings fund pro- ject which has been in operation at the North York High school for the past 13 weeks. Each Tues- day, the 116 students in the club make their payments to their re- spective home room teacher and Argentine People And Govt. At Ri0 dc Janoiro- Jan- 14.

Nearly deliberately staged by the Govern- every Pan American conference in ment itself in order to pretend to recent years has had its Argentine put it down. prima donna wh0 has Uft the 2. Rigging the elections in BUe- Vr11 just asihf; choruf nos Aire Prov'nce last month to of 21 Republics was ready to shout prevent the dominant Radical party hurrah for Hemisphere harmony, from gaining further strength in This one promises to be no excep- the Congress. Then, to prevent tion. protests against such rigging, the The first Pan American confer- Conservative government declared ence this reporter attended, at a state of siege.

Havana in 1928, was disrupted 3. Banning a pro-U. demon- when the Argentine Ambassador stration after Japan had provoked packed his trunks because Calvin war. The Radicals through their BorOUgh School Directors Meet Standinq Committees For 1942 Appointed At Meetina Of West York wr vve5T TorK Board Charles E. Gross, president of tno West York School board, ap- pointed standing committees for 1942 at a meetinE oi tne board last ni8nt- They fUw: Teacher, Manges, H.

Wesley Dr. Haas Orders School District To Reinstate Librarian (By The Associated Prraa) Harrisburg, Jan. 14. Dr. Francis B.

Haas, superintendent of public instruction ruled today directors of the Dunmore borough school district, Lackawanna county, exceeded their authority in dismissing Helen C. Hines and directed her reinstatement. Miss Hines was employed as a librarian in 1936 but was dismissed July 8. 1941, when the board abolished the librarian's department on instructions from the public instruction department. Dr.

Haas held the board could have suspended the librarian but under the teachers' tenure law had no authority to dismiss her. Mentally III Man Transferred From Jail To Hospital The mentally ill young man who was removed from his apartment room Monday in the city ambulance to the York county jail, has been taken to a state hospital in North Carolina. The parents of the young man came to York and arranged with Jail Warden Joseph McClain and Constable G. C. Zimmerman to remove the patient to the hospital.

The mother of the man, and the man's wife, who was with him in York when he became suddenly ill, accompanied the two York cdunty officers on the auto trip to the Carolina hospital. They left Tuesday morning and the York officers returned home yesterday afternoon. It was stated the removal was on order of a North Carolina court. The man had been taken to the county jail here by city police on the advice of Dr. W.

H. Horning, 1417 West Market street, a county physician. Russian Gains Necessarily Slow But Nevertheless 32,800 Square Miles Have Been Wrested From Germans; "Inches May Be More Important Strategically Than Hundreds Of Thousands Of Square Miles," Says Kirke Simpson Klrke L. Simpson. AfMtMrf War Analyst) Compared with Germany's aeven-league-boot strides into Russia to overrun seven of the 16 Soviet republics, revitalized Red armies are as yet only inching their way westward again.

But those inches may be more important strategically than all the hundreds of thousands of square miles of Russian territM-y still in German hands. A Russian estimate credits the Red counter drive with having wrested 32,800 square miles from the Germans and thei" allies. That figure is substantially only 10 Dercent of the irround lost in pro-U. S. Accion Argentina, laid the money is deposited in a bank.

Club membership is not compul- sory and depositors can secure tlsennaJ1' wnaasin ana Ar- thur B. Cadv: buildine grounds, H. Wesley Eisenhart, Penn building; E. C. Joseph, Shelly building; Herman Gentzler, high school; finance, Earl Wilda-sin, Arthur B.

Cady, E. C. Joseph and Herman Gentzler; sinking fund, Charles E. Gross, Catherine Manges and Herman Gentzler, and athletic council, Charles E. Gross.

A discussion was held concerning a commencement speaker for this year's graduating class. The board granted the Brigadier club the right to use the high school gymnatorium for a dance. Prof. A. H.

Martin, supervising principal, reported that the state directors' meeting will be held at Harrisburg in February. Prof. Martin and Miss Catherine Manges were designated to represent the board at this meeting. H. Van Adams, treasurer, gave this report; Cash on hand, receipts, 363.74; total, S22.623.71: disbursements, 718.21, leaving a balance cash on hand of $12,905.50.

The board authorized repairs to an adding tneir money at any time, mis is reru, was Kept waning Dy tem-the second year that the project peramental Argentine Foreign has been in operation at the Minister Cantillo, who took a cou-school. pie of weeks off at a mountain Sew For Red Cross resort in Chile, refusing to go near A number of women of the bor- a telephone to O.K. the last act of ough gathered in St. Peter's Lu- the conference, theran church yesterday to par- Today, the gentleman scheduled ticipate in sewing clothing for to do the prima donna act on be-York chapter, American Red half of Argentina is new Foreign Cross. Mrs.

Walter G. Eisenhart, Minister Enrique Ruiz-Guinazu. who is in charge of the women, Ruiz-Guinazu is to South America announced last evening that the what Col. Lindbergh and Senator sewing group will meet each Wed- Wheeler were to the U. S.

A. be-nesday afternoon at 2 o'clock in fore Pearl Harbor only much the church. Mrs. Eisenhart stated more so. that if any resident in the bor- He is married to a German, has ough has a sewing machine not very definite sympathies with in use, the group would be glad Spanish Dictator Franco, has to make use of it.

spent a large part of his life as a This program was presented in diplomat in Europe, and believes the North York High school yes- that Argentina's future must lock-terday during the junior assemb- step with Europe, not with the ly period: Vocal selections, Robert U.S.A. Fox, James Nicholas, Harry Glad- It was Foreign. Minister Ruiz-felter and Norma Jean Fulton; Guinazu who tossed the neat little quiz, Rodney Gladfelter, James bombshell into the Rio de Janeiro Nicholas, Audrey Zeigler, June preliminaries last week by an-Dressel and Rita Wiles. The pro- nouncing to the world that Argen-gram was arranged by R. B.

Sher- tina could not agree to any allegi-ker, a member of the faculty. ances or "measures of pre-bellig- About 15 members of -the La- erency" at Rio. dies' auxiliary of the Liberty Fire No Argentine Meat company plan to attend a meet- Some people attribute Argen-ing of the York County auxiliary tina's lack of cooperation with the this evening in Hanover. United States to the fact that Hold Air Raid Test every time President Roosevelt the great Russian retreat to the Leningrad-Moscow-Rostov front. Yet its loss confronts Hitler with portents of defeat for the first time.

The Axis-Finnish incursions at its peak had swept across western Russia from the Black sea to the Baltic like a locust plague. It engulfed Russian buffer states like Moldavia (Bessarabia), Russian-occupied Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Esthonia and the Karelo-Finnish republic, born of the Rus- machine. nracing a nine-point Din or per- various peace proposals. Mrs. Robert Knupp was elected sonal rights" and proposing a Spain, Portugal and their pos- as a substitute teacher.

At the universal 40-hour week for all sessions account for more than present time she is filling the labor was sent to Congress today half of the total names on the of Luke Sauder, who has by President Roosevelt. It was "blacklist." joined the United States air corp. drafted by the National Resources Bills amounting to $7,558.24 were Planning board as an outline of Mysterious Figure ordered paid. Attending were: the "rights and opportunities we As friend of such personages as Charles E. Gross, Herman Gentz- in the United States want for our- the Duke and Duchess of Windsor ler, Arthur B.

Cady, Catherine selves and for our children now and Greta Garbo and because of ir.g.-s. E. C. Joseph, Earl Wilda- and when this war is over." the frequent comings and goings of sin, Paul Z. Kistler and Prof.

A. "They go beyond the political his yacht the Southern Cross, the H. Martin. forms and freedoms for which our fabulously rich Axel Wenner-Gren Entertains W. M.

8. ancestors fought and which they has popped into the news inter-Mrs. Eugene Hafer. 361 Atlan- handed on to us." the report ex- mittently through the past 28 tic avenue, was RMtCM mem- plained, "because we live in a months of wartime, bers of the Mary Baer Women new word in whjch the central The first occasion was when his society of St. James problerns arjse from new pres- yacht rescued 150 persons from Lutheran church, recently.

At- sures of power, production and the British Liner Athenia, which tending were: Graj MT, population, which our forefathers was sunk in the North Atlantic on Kat hrvn Mil er. ad Lineman, e. A test of all air raid wardens proposes buying a few cans of of Sector 7, which includes that tinned beef, Senator O'Mahoney of section from the 1200-block to the Wyoming or Senator Connally of 1500-block of North George and Texas lashes out against Argen-adjacent streets, was held last tine meat. Or even when we evening with all wardens station- undertake to admit Argentine ed at their posts. The men were meat from the remote Island of in charge of the chief air raid Terra del Fuego, the tip end of warden, Joe Eisenhart, who was the country where hoof and mouth assisted by the supervisor of Zone disease does not exist, the Ameri-6, Richard Yost.

Warden Eisen- can Livestock Association yells to hart reported that the test proved high heaven. successful. However, the real fact Is that 1 neariy aii of the tnmea, the hacrory; bay hertile Land Ukraine and White Russia. i i The aggregate area of those bnOUld be Used rOT Russian subdivisions is in excess of 323,000 square miles. Though rarmmg they represent only a minor frac- By The Associated Pret tion of Russia's total territory, Lancaster, Jan.

14. which aggregated nearly 9,000,000 Aroused farmers and business men square miles at the outbreak of from northern Lancaster county the war, some 60.000,000 of Rus- banded together tonight in an "at-sia's 183,000,000 inhabitants lived tempt to convince the govern-within them. They contain, too, ment" that their fertile farm lands the world's greatest "bread-bask- should not be the site of a pro-et," the Ukraine, vast natural and posed mammoth powder manu-industrial resources and, more iacturing plant, important than all, the communi- More than 100 representatives cations keys to Russian western from Elizabethtown, Mount Joy, defenses centering in the Moscow Lancaster and surrounding towns rail and road hub. embraced in the 11,520 acres which Viewed from that communica- the government is said to want, tions angle, the 10 percent terri- named a committee to go to torial recovery by Russia takes Washington "immediately to show on a meaning out of all propor- the government that the land tion to its size. It sets the whole should be devoted to farming.

Hitler Russian "crusade" concept "It is not a matter of patriot-tottering, ism," said H. N. Nissly, Mount Threaten Supply Rout Joy, who was elected chairman of For across the 300-mile wide the committee. "It is purely a Moscow front from the upper question of using valuable farm Volga to the Oka, the Russians land for less valuable purposes." have broken or gravely threaten His sentiments were echoed by every essential Nazi supply route a score more farmers who attend-east of the Dnieper valley. North ed the meeting in the Mouny Joy of th Volga to.

he Volkhov they High, school. similarly threaten vital junction "Our committee will go to cogs like Pskov and Nevel, sus- Washington and stay there until taining the whole German north- we have this thing ironed out," em front from Smolensk to the Nissly said. Baltic before Leningrad. Farm Agent On Committee Southward, the reported Rus- The farmers and business men sfan encirclement of Orel and Red present placed County Farm Agent army stabs within close range of F. S.

Bucher on the list of corn-Kharkov are undermining the mitteemen and sought the aid of German flank in upper Donets John R. Light, state secretary of basin. agriculture. The fall of those cities would According to statistics presented shatter further the indicated Ger- at the meeting the area concerneo man winter holding front, already forms a quadrangle skirling the breached in the center, far in the towns of Marietta, Mount Joy, rear of the Mozhaisk bulge, be- Elizabethtown and Bainbndge. tween Vyazma and Bryansk.

The 186 farms Involved have a Red army surges have already real estate value of 2.304,000, it freed the great Moscow road-rail was announced and the yearly hub again for effective Russian yield of farm producls on the basis use in shuffling forces from front of figures compiled by Bucher, is to front. They have reopened 51, 139.601.7.1. On the basis of 1940 census WtHH tit rtlnllT Ifnlmpuft jftr about 1.200 persons would be rison to join in the offensive, forced to move and the towns of They have ended indefinitely Nazi Lobata and Stacktown would be hopes of early access to oil in razed. the Caucasus. Sone of the farmers present All of that with only a 10 per- Wednesday night had been ap- cent recovery of territory.

It proached by any government proves again the modern military relative to selling any land, nc nlthouzh a number said that engi- Washington, Jan. 14. The State department tonight added 1,800 names to its blacklist of firms and individuals and among them was Axel Wenner-Gren, Swedish industrialist with world-wide interests. The list consists of persons the department deems "to be acting for the benefit" of Axis powers or citizens and persons to whom the export of various goods is deemed to be detrimental to United States defense. The assets of persons on tne ust are irozen.

Wenner-Gren's name was on the list under the headings Peru and Mexico, in both of which countries he has interests. List Expanded Tonight's list extends this form of economic warfare for th first timo to territories outside the western hemisphere. On the list are firms and individuals in Portu- sal and her Pssessions' sPain and her Sweden, Switzer- land and Turkey. Wenner-Gren came into the war news shortly after the outbreak of hostilities in 1939 when his yacht rescued some of the survivors from the torpedoed British vessel Athenia. Subsequently his name was mentioned in connection with France' declared war on Germany.

EE deemed to be acting for the bene- fit of the Axis. Nevertheless, Wenner-Gren him- has been a and lndis- "'tV He is known as a multi-milhon- aire aweaisn ana ec- 1 Pf on of famous persons ownei of the wide-raneimr vacht and keeper of a mansion at Nassau, xne Panamas. For Air Corps SerVICt Vacancies exist at the present time in the United States Army Air corps at Biloxi. and Jefferson barracks. according to tne local recruiting station.

Ai- th tnose who enlist here wjU th(, Unlted States Tnev wjll be unassigned. 1 CLOTHING NOT STOLEN W. E. Doll, 524 South Duke street, employed by Formprest Cleaners, North George street, reported to Dolice clothing was stolen from one of the company's delivery trucks yesterday after- noon. Police later said they were advised the clothing was not stolen but had ben placed in an- other delivery truck of the com- pany.

police court Randolph Smith. 38, and Wil- ham B. Heiser, 39. were arraigned disorderly conduct. Both were fnnnt holnllv rfrnnU and Ivint? in the snow, according to the tes- Smith was given 24 hours In the city prison.

Heiser was given a 10-day suspended sentence. Nine-Point Program To Speed Output Of War Material (By The Anociat! Ptm) Detroit. Jan. 14. A nine-point program to speed Am.rira'.

war nrndiietinn output was announced to- night by Cyrus Ching. chair- 1 man of the new OPM Auto-motive Management and La- bor Subcommittee, following an all-day conference here. I Details will be worked out later, but Chine said all 1 representatives agreed upon these points: 1 The seven-dsy week with a swing shift. 2 Upgrading program to meet skilled labor require-; ments. 3 Training program for production workers.

4 Survey of labor potentials, men and women, by industrial communities. 5 Migration of labor. 6 Agency or means for Interchange of methods and processes so all war-time production factories may have the benefit of the moat improved production techniques. 7 Plans to assist in speeds-machine-tool manufacture and plans to simplify or streamline new machines for war production 8 Cataloguing of critical machinery to make the jobs find the machines 9 Planning of the tooling program on an industry-wide basis. Coohdge and Charles E.

Hughes wouldn't O.K. a customs union, And the last conference at Lima, Understand thai thiv is just play ing politics. Furthermore the great bulk of the Argentine people are 99 per cent with us. Perhaps we have Adolf Hitler to thank for it. hut the U.

S. A. was never so popular Argentina as it is touay. xou wouin ininK tnar Roosevelt was the President of Argentina, judging by his popular- itv in Buenos Aires. laging oy nis popular- Aires.

among the Argentine itv in Buenos Aires. But this is among the Argentine people not with the Government, Ie mo HOT tno i.overnmeni. The Government represents the c.im- into jwiu-t through the re olution of 1930 and have been using Tammany methods to keep Anti-t'. S. Records Therefore.

i Minister Ruiz-Guinazu is not out of step with his Government when he bucks the U.S.A.. Brazil, and other anti-Axis countries. line is the recent record of the ultra-reac- tionary Argentine Government 1- A "subversive plot" In the Argentine Air Corps was reported September. Government op- ponents now charge the "plot" was I IV VI TV UIpil Automobiles Shipped Af- tPr Todav Will Co IntO Stockpile And Probably None Will Be Offered For Ip Fven Under Ration- nq, For At Least A Year WashingtorXriL-Plans for in dealers' car- ZL niirhout the country were todav bv Price Admin- istrator Leon Henderson. I shinned bv manu- will Teo 0 'J er'd rotaU none Vetored cars will be offered gLJgLgg1 -JSZZZ Vast vear will he allowed to add a urenS and SSSSitSy a the price of each whon jt fjnally js gold.

Ki1 system, now A production of automobiles is exnected to aop aner Jan. iq nrau u- mS tho antnmnhiie industrv mass production of military ttW to shuttin down. With ,,0000 of thep 81ted for the stnck a total of abt)Ut wj, avallable for ration- ing. including about 450,000 now in the hands of dealers. The OPM instructed automobile manufacturers today not to ship additional cars to dealers unless they agree to the stockpile rules.

These forbid sale of a car in the supply without government per- mission, require the dealers to make tires and tubes on stored cars available for sale elsewhere government request, and pro- niit sac of tne automobiles at excessive prices. Testifying before a House com- mittee on small business during the day, Henderson hinted that there were no present plans to ration used cars, although orders 'er ready "if it becomes neces- sary." plans for a Dublic tribute tn Rnn. en, Dut tne government outlawed (Continued on Page Twelve) See Argentina Arizona Students Want Teachers To Be Realistic (By The Associated Press) Tucson, Jan. 14. University of Arizona professors "keep teaching petty details" in the midst of a war emergency, the Wildcat, student publication, said editorially today.

"Professors must use their experience and understanding prepare students to live in a world totally different from their fathers," the article said. "We often wish there was less brilliance and more reason among the faculty students are crying for concepts, not little technicalities and it is often the lesser lights (on the faculty) without spectacular scholastic records and a flock of initials after their names that really teach the students something about living Asks More Funds For Health Needs Dr. James C. Townsend SayS Pennsylvania Should To Spend On The Hy- giene Of Its 4,000,000 Workers (By The Associated Press) Harrisburc Jan 14-Pennsvl- Jan. n.

rwnrayj Vania has only three cents a day to spend on the hygiene of each 0f hTi VoV) and This h.lH ho evrv.ndrd to at least 0f should five cpn should be expanded to at leas fjVe cents, ItuTe state Health Institute was told Si.ite Hea nstitute was tO( today. lire coiawii siArvuuy in h' blitzkrieg on the well being of thousands of these said ir. James o. i im nsreiiu, ihvuiwi director of the U. S.

Public Health Service. "in such a situation, we can predict appalling increases in in- dustrial disability, increases which we cannot afford. We have a war t0 win The federal government pro- vWes $147,300 a year for the Commonwealth's Industrial Hy- gjene bureau, Dr. Townsend said, adding: Cents Per Person "This divides into little more protPCt your 4.000,000 workers inree cenis per pvisun. might be asked wnetner tne citizens of Pennsylvania ought not to raise that figure to say a nickel per person." He said gaps in production lines now are beine filled by older men, women and youths, who "do not have the work habits nor the strength of able-bodied men called institute for more than 2l physicians, dentists, ers, was opened by Dr.

A. H. Stpwnrt utatp secretary of health. secretary of health, who said that Pennsyivama now ons to combat the tiu ana pneu- monls that sPreaa aeain lnt lasTtI war- nnnn 9VMimai haJ amon of 'T secreftar' the conference to study ways ProtocLin! he, Publ'c disease which if ignored can do re damage than all the plots sabotcurs and tralt0rS' PEDESTRIAN STRUCK A nedestrian aooarentlv escaped P. nr.

W- Knfn 7 nVWk vesterdav "rur i VT, wlZ r. rl 7 the driver told police his car man uhn ran into its natd from between moving cars, ne hig identitv or to be taken to a The car West Philadelnhia ui Tuesday afternoon from Com- merce street near Albemarle street, was found abandoned at 4:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon at the Lafean coal vard, West King street and the Pennsylvania railroad. Later, City Detective One Gosnell picked up a 16-year- old colored youth, who he aaid. admitted taking the car. The youth was being held at the City hall prison.

AI'TOS COLLIDE Slight damage resulted when a car driven by George Strine. IT West Maple street, crashed into the rear of another car which had stopped for a traffic light at King and George streets at 7:45 o'clock last night Patrolman W. E. the other driver waa George E. Lmig, York R.

D. 1. 40-Hour Week For Labor Proposed President RoOSevel m- bendS I LOngresS (Nine- Point Bill Of roiru Din UT rersonai Rights" When Present War Is Over; To Plan For Full Fmnlnvmpnt l-UII tmpiOymeni (By The Associated Press i Washington. Jan. 14.

-A blue- Prnt for post-war America em- President Roosevelt, in his iet- national purpose and with demo- cratic participation in planning by all of as." The board, established in 1939, ls the office of the federal g( v- i i i. S-ernmental action intended for the public welfare. Frederic A. 'V rf 'chairman; uu- nmiuem, i tiiaunHui, Charles E. Merriam of Chicago, ice chairman, and George 'nird mDer.

The board declared that every Minimi iiae uie 11111 10 work and the right to security that unemployment should be banished, Employment ployment it said, and for main- 000 000 or $60,000,000,000 again." If appropriate action is taken now, it asserted, "there is no ne- a post-war collapse." The report predicted that within two or three years, under the war effort, "every available person will ho at thus ending un- employment among the physically and mentally fit. The "ine-point declaration of folows: 1 The right to work, usefully and creatively, through the pro- ductive years. Jrh" gSJft and amenities of life in exchange for work ideas thrift and other clothing!" shelter and medicai 4lThe right to security, with want, dependency, sickness, unem- pi0Vment acd accident. 5" The right to live in a sys- tern of tree enterprise, rree rrom compulsory labor, irresponsible priva power, arbitrary public SuthoriiyV and unregulated mon- opolies. 6-The right to come and go.

t0 speak or silent, free froVn political po- lice. 7The right to equality before -hp law. with equal access to jus- 8 The right to education, for work, for citizenship and for per- enna) prmvth nnH hnnninpc The richt to rest recreation and adventure, the opportunity to enjoy an 'ane part in an ad- 11 111 Another Payleu Harnsbure Jan 14. The 1.600 employes of the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation will have another payless payday to- morrow, but Director Frank L. Shallow said tonight he thought the funds would be delayed only a lew days.

The Bureaus workers several times in the past have been caught in the middle of a dispute between the State and the Federal Social Security board, which holds the purse strings. MACHINE STOLEN Police received a report yester- dy tna; the 193? model Chevro- jet coach owned by Pauline A. Brandt, 327 East King street, was at 2.50 a. from Duke ed black, displayed license 90-BL- J. I I I 1 1 1 Proposed Powder Plant Opposed Farmers And Business Men Of Northern Lancaster County Name Committee To Co To Washington To Protest Building Of Mammoth Daylight- Saving Bill Washington.

Jan. 14. The Senate passed today a compromise version of davlieht saving legisla- tion and sent it to the House for action. The measure would provide for an automatic advance of 1 hour 1 nine ill an ury 20 days after the bill be- Car, Hit By Truck, Crashes Into Houses ine pai iv nas open promoted to the position of manaeer Concord factory show-room Morris Remler. present manager, has been transferred to Nor- Ioik' va- wnerc ne win occupy the rxisition of district manaeer of the Concord Factory show- has no meaning except for what neers, surveyors and appraisers that ground contains in resources were "looking over the farms, or means of communication be- The area representatives point-bind the fighting fronts.

That 10 ed out. embraces sever.tl historic percent Russian recovery has set churches, including Donegal Pres-Hitler's whole war concept sway- byterian and the famous Witness ing dangerously despite his grip on large slices of Russian terri- tory Senate Passes New Edmund SenfL. ad last evening that all air raid and p0St wardens of that section of tho borough south of the railroad have been requested to attend a meeting tomorrow evening at i IVr.n evm- nonm Thf meeiintf is eonsiaer- tnu be assigned to their posts. o-orM Brennaman. 1263 Wesl Market, street is a medical patient at, tne vvts oiue a as fair last evenuur.

fi and graphic arts was re- unied last evening with sessions n. -h seiiool l.UKe lie, on. art mmaviat "1 the high school, is in charge of the class. xne semi-monthly meeting of the West York Exchange club will Township Board In Busy Session Snrinfflnarrlpn ajr SlOners hlect UTTicers AT RpnrnaniTatinn Meetina' reorganization meeting, Board's 'Solicitor Urged A nil To Take Active Part In Alleoed Public Nuisance r.a named 'at the rcor- ikn Cnnns. Township commissioners Kine hoUse.

Elected were: Presid. nt, Gor- don Campbell, re-elected secre- tary, Horace muuioti Attorney Horace G. Ports; engi- neer, Thomas A. Monk. high- W7 superintendent, Frank B.

Hirschner; chief of police, I. C. Korman; sergeant of police, Sam- uel A. Baublitz, and fire chief, Eb Tn following department heads were appointed: Finance, John H. Thomas; highvvay.

Andrew Beck, public sale y. KOoertp. rre. niiblic works. E.

D. Benedict sel for George Baublitz, nlainliff in a suit charting Ralph E. Ensminger with operating a tUTStey win a pumic nuisaiiLv mrr jITl. the commissioners and asked that they authorize their solicitor to mz' behalf. tho Pp9 lerrone ever since Ensminger's arrest by Health Officer C.

Korman. Oct. 27. Squire Lecrone said he will hand down a decision Monday. The garbage contract was let to the Charles Fischer company at the bid of $4,115 for one year beginning Feb.

Organic and in- organic garbage will each be cal- lected once a week and organic garbage will be collected twice a week during July. August and September. W. S. Mitzel.

Sr Windsor Park, was elected a member of the health board for five years Lancer Grants To Fire Co- Appropriations to each of the three township fire companies were increased $400. making the annual appropriation to each fire (Gontinued cm Page Twelve) Sm Timtuhip Board United Brethren church as part of the evangelistic services which have been conducted the past two weeks. The guest speaker will be Rev. J. Stuart Glenn, pastor of Bethany U.

B. church. Red Lion, The series of services will close omorrow evening, uast evening, Ladics' night was observed and the speaker was Rev. B.F.Emen- Mt Wolf. Mt.

Wolf. The Library club of the North York High school at a recent Dl'K men SCnoo ai a recen meeting discussed plans to spend Vw.CJ in then- -uiy lor the bovs new serving in 'he U. S. Army, This committee has been named "iK most effectively for the soldiers' benefrt: Elsie Davis, Loretta Hinkle. Betty Strine.

Doris Kep- ner and Emma Witmer. Girl Scout troon No. 10 will meet this evening in St Peter's Lutheran church Miss Mav Senft, scout advisor will be in charge The Intermediate Christian En- deavor society of the Fifth Unit- ed Brethren church will hold a skating partv Wednesday evening, Jan. 28, in the White Rose arena. The society Will also conduct a nine, Jan.

80. Peter's Lutheran church, recently elected were: President, Henry Everhart; secretary, C. Frank Heiland; trdkurer, Edward Cramer: librarian, Charles Rauhauser; flower fund treasurer, James Han-nigan; teacher, Percy Brehm. and assistant, Harvey Jacoby. Air Raid Wardens Of Zone 2 Being Trained The first air raid warden ing class in Zone No.

2. headquarters at the Friendship ire company, held Tuesday evening under the supervision of Kenneth C. Shanaman, zone air iaio. waraen. Discussions were held on the general policy, the organizational set-up.

Individual problems of air raid wardens, the importance of getting necessary information to the public and the process of sur- veying and plotting of the indi- vidual post areas. About 30 per- sons attended. Members of the raid warden ira ning tiass wm of pyw HWi ich cl-ies on the duties of the air raid warden 10 hours of first aid mstruct'on. The next class will be held Tuesday evening at the Friendship rire nouse ai nine kjm aim ector maps rfl be drawn up and completed. Volunteers are needed 1 few sectors.

Mr Shanaman yesterday, including the area streets and Mate ana snermar, streets, which tt Sector tour, ana from Pine to Broad street north of Market street, which is Sector two- TAKEN TO HOSPITAL William Fullerton. 432 South Court avenue, was conveyed to the York hospital for treatment yesterday morning in a police car manned by Patrolman John Hess, tl CONVICT ESCAPE Houston. Jan. 14. Twenty-one long term convicts es- raped from Eastham State prison farm tonight by crawling thmugh a dormitory" window from which bars had been sawed.

(MMmM wttTi. tv EI Radio PhnnnTph ife'A? 7ZS5mrrZ Eut BS bum. Ad, Bogus 50c Piece Passed On Yorker A counterfeit 50-cent piece was passed on a local businessman yesterday morning at 7 o'clock, according to a report filed a' DO re h. r. t)V I.

ItV Lr- tective Orie Gosnell. The report did not state who was the victim, a the square. The bogus coin was de- Dwellings at 902 and 904 East OLD PAPERS STOLEN' Kmg street were damaged slightly Theft of old newspapers Tuesday when an automobile mounted the night from a garage at the rear of sidewalk and crashed into them at 321 South Penn street, was investi- 45 oeleeJi yesterday morning, gated yesterday by Patrolman R. Patrolmen Rutter and Bush said H. Shank and F.

E. Sheffer. tne ear was driven by Lewis M. Officers reported entrance was Klunk 1001 Roosevelt avenue, gained by forcing a door. Officers reported Mr.

Klunk's car HOLDING BILL PASSED dai ll)48Wp sTrwti Washington. Jan 14, (Mh Pau, Djeh, York Senate approved today a compro- RD 3 mise version of the $450,000,000 Mr Dieh as defense housmg bill ins hc wal unable to bring the JUS truck to a stop in time because of passed by both houses in different Thp the orm needs final House approval was to send it to the White House. car damaged ab0ut the front It would authorize expenditure of S300.000 .000 for housing and $150,000,000 for community facili- MADE MANAGER ties in areas where a shortage has Lou Cedar, who has been con-been created by an influx of de- nected with various mens cloth-fense workers. ing establishments in York for 1 fhouidr Th 1 dt'TSre 2sS nS 15 sti Bmi 1 nuking your rhUdrtc inenuily (let nt trif bu; defnUb Wrar P.r i h.p'ill bebmi.ht.

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About The Gazette and Daily Archive

Pages Available:
359,182
Years Available:
1933-1970