(jp£lom I Ameriška Domovi ima i^SaBK^ssa^. ^nik Ti ^ ^ f 3 c^(^i it g s r ^ r^^issz!^ aM€RICAN in spirit slovcnian 'lAUKEL FORCIGN IN LANGUAGE ONLY MORNING N€WSPAP€R CLEVELAND 3, O., FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 28, 1950 LETO Lil — VOL. LIL SLOVGNIAN MORNING N€WSPAP€R CLEVELAND 3, O., FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 28, 1950 LETO LII —VOL. LIL VESTI SLOVENCI V PORABJU žr- ja v Žireh, je vprašala neka žen-tev spora Tito-Stalin. — Po na- jska, ki je bila med vojno navdu-■slovom “Madžarske oblasti pre- šena partizanka, zakaj je sedaj seljujejo porabske Slovence” tako malo mesa. Mesar ji je od- javlja “Ljudska pravica”: “Zločinsko ravnanje madžar- govoril: “Kaj sprašuješ za mesom, tovarišica, deni v lonec ma- skih oblasti, ki spominja na zlo- lo one svobode, ki si si jo tako čine nemških fašistov, se ni'želela, pa boš imela odlično ju-omejilo samo na pas nad Dona- ho. Za ta res dober nasvet je do-vo in Tiso, marveč se širi ob!bil Demšar od ljudskega sodišča vsem obmej. pasu. Oblasti, ki že “samo” eno leto zapora. Svobo-pred resolucijo Kominforma ni- da pa taka! so imele razumevanja za Porabske Slovence in njihove pravice, so takoj po njeni objavi začele z raznarodovalno politiko in naj-hujšim nasiljem. Kakor pri ostalem delu jugoslovanske manjšine v Madžarski, se je tudi pri Porabskih Slovencih to nasilje stopnjevalo v najhujši j Glede komunizma zločin. Konec junija so madžarski policijski in varnostni organi začeli s preseljevanjem Porabskih Zahteva po višjih mezdah v tovarnah kavčuka Slovencev. Dne 29. junija so iz Slovenskega Porabja izselili 14 slovenskih družin in jih preko Monoštra odpeljali v notranjost: države. To akcijo so izvedli na najsurovejši način . . . Cinizem policijskih oblasti je šel celo tako daleč, da so družine prisilili podpisati izjavo, da so prostovoljno pristale na izselitve. Izseljene družine so lahko odpeljale s seboj 300 kg, živeža in obleke.” Pod naslovom: “Prisilno raz-seijevanje jugoslovanske manjšine” pa poroča “Ljudska pravica”: “Pripadniki jugoslovanske narodne manjšine na Madžarskem, ki živijo na območju Prekmurja, so dobili 5. julija od madžarskih oblasti nalog, naj v 48. urah zapustijo svoje domove in se izselijo iz obmejnega območja. Preden so izdala ta nalog, so sestavila oblastva spiske oseb, ki haj bi se izselile.” TITOVSKA SVOBODA. — Dopisnik iz Gorice nam poroča: Demšarja Vinka, bivšega mesar- je predsednik delavske organizacije izjavil, da ga je treba premagati doma kakor tudi na bojnih frontah. Columbus, O. L. S. Buckmas-ter iz Akrona, predsednik United Rubber Workers of America (CIO unije), je 24. julija zahteval zvišanje mezd za vse delavce v tovarnah kavčuka in avtomobilskih pnevmatik (tajer-jev) ter v vseh pridruženih industrijah. Buckmaster je dejal, da temelji njegova zahteva na osnovi visokega zvišanja proizvodnje ter na ‘pravijj/piK. dobičkih’ teh tovaren v Zed. državah in Kanadi. Hkrati s tem naznanilom je Buckmaster napadel komunizem in vse to, za kar se komunizem poteguje, in dodal, da ga je treba zato premagati doma kakor tudi na bojnih frontah. Iz raznih naselbin f CLCARMfr m] liliji Vremenski prerok pravi: Danes jasno podnevi in ponoči. Jutri deloma oblačno in bolj toplo. Tri na dan Naši čitatelji se bodo spomni-H, kako smo pred par leti zagovarjali obvezno vojaško trenin-go. Rekli smo, da za mladega fanta ni na svetu bolj zdravega kot je vojaško vežbanje. * * * Ne samo za telo je zdrava vojaška treninga, ampak tudi za ttdado srce in dušo. Fant se nauči discipline, samostojnosti, se Uauči ubogati, spozna življenje. Radi tega je naš list zagovarjal °bvezno vojaško treningo. In pa Za to, da bi imela dežela izvež-bano vojaštvo, kar bi nam zdaj, kot vidimo, zelo prav prišlo, na Koreji in drugod. Ideja vojaške treninge je prepadla, ker so Zmagali tisti, ki so si zavezali oči: m mislili, da če oni ne vidijo sovražnika, da tudi sovražnik njih Duhovnik je ne- Icinati, O. kraja je prišel v Calumet leta 1885 in bil pionir te naselbine. SPANGLER, Pa. — Dne 9. julija je za rakom umrl v bolnišnici v Clearfieldu Jacob Kovsca iz Bakertona, star 70 let, rojen v Planini pri Rakeku. V Baker-tonu zapušča ženo Dorotejo, sina Jacoba in hčer Victorio, sina Josepha v armadi pri zračni sili v Muroc Lake, Cah, ter poročeno hčer Mary v Long Beach, Calif. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. — Po dolgi bolezni je 30. junija umrla Mary Udovich, rojena 1 1888 v Dolenji vasi, Istrija. Bila je 18. let v bolnišnici. Tukaj zapušča moža Matta in sestro, drugo sestro v Seattlu, Wash., tretjo pa v starem kraju. CHICAGO, 111. — Johanna Volk in Joseph Jurick sta odšla 21. julija na obisk v stari kraj, in sicer iz New Yorka z letalom. Mrs. Volk gre na Masače pri Podnartu, Gorenjsko, Jurick pa v Dolje pod Ljubljano. Tito si z vso ihto rešuje glavo! Ko so pri koncilu Združenih narodov glasovali, če so Zed. države v pravem, da intervenirajo na Koreji, je hila Jugoslavija edina, ki je glasovala proti temu, da bi Amerika poslala oboroženo silo proti Severni Koreji. Naravno, komunist je komunist in Tito se je hotel s tem prikupiti Mosk vi. — Ampak komunist ne odpušča, ker besede “odpuščanje” ni v komunističnem besednjaku in Titova ponudba za spravo je udarila na gluha ušesa. Še več! Kmalu zatem, ko je Tito na ves glas prosil odpuščanja s tem, da je glasoval za Moskvo, so komunisti ali kominformovci v Pragi organizirali provizorično vlado za Titovino. To se pravi, kadar bo Moskva Tita obesila ali ga kako drugače brcnila na oni svet, bi ta komunistična skupina nastopila vlado v Belgradu. S tem je hotel Stalin pokazati Titu, da zanj ni odpuščanja in da naj se kar najhitreje pripravi za zadnjo uro. Tito je strepetal in ker je videl, da se dedci v Kremlju po nobeni viži ne dajo preprositi za kesanje, je Tito šel in kar čez noc'spremenil svoje mnenje glede vojne na Koreji — poslal je namreč eno svojih bark na pomoč Amerikancem na Koreji. Torej pred nekaj dnevi je Tito še obsojal ameriško vojskovanje na Koreji, zdaj pa sam pomaga krtačiti korejske (in ruske) komuniste. Ampak nikar ne recimo, da “to vse ljubezen st’ri,” ampak to vse stori strah pred dolgo roko strica Jožeta iz Moskve. Naša pripomba! Kakšno barko je Tito poslal na Korejo, ne vemo. . Kaj posebnega najbrž ne, ker jih nima. Upamo, da bo barka (France pravi, da je škaf) prikašljala do Koreje vsaj do božiča, da bo Tito lahko rekel z Amerikanci: “Akra-bolt, pa smo jih naklestili, te komuniste!” Novi grobovi Mary Trček Včeraj je po dolgi bolezni umrla Mary Trček, roj. Leskošek, stanujoča na 1421 E. 32. St. Bila je stara 64 let in rojena pri Planini pri Sevnici, odkoder je prišla semkaj pred 25 leti. Tukaj zapušča moža Franka in hčer Angelo, v stari domovini pa tri sestre: Ivanko, Lizo in Kri Češkoslovaška vlada bo sama vzgajala ’ svoje duhovnike Dunaj. — češka vlada je pod-vzela zdaj svoje prve korake za Razne drobne novice iz Clevelanda in te okolice Festival veteranov— Danes, v petek, soboto in ne- ustanovitev razkolniške cerkve j (jgjjQ na prostorih American v Češkoslovaški, kakor poročajo j Jugoslav Center v Euclidu ve-tukajšnji katoliški cerkveni kro-, festial euclidskih veteranov. _ _____ , gi, ki so proučili nove Piavilni-i nocoj ob 7:30 s plesom. stino. Pogreb bo v pondeljek iz be za šolanje in posvečevanjei y soboto popoldne kontesti za Zakrajškovega pogrebnega za- duhovnikov na dveh teoloških otroke in razne dirke. Ob 8:30 voda v cerkev sv. Vida in od tam na Kalvarijo, čias pogreba še ni določen. MacArthur na korejski fronti; general je frdno prepričan o končni zmagi zaveznikov Zavezniške čete so s silnimi protinapadi vrgle komuniste nazaj in se prebile sedem milj naprej. TOKIO, 27. julija. — General’ MacArthur je danes ;obiskal korejsko fronto, kjer je prebil 12 posteljami ter se z mnogimi raz-govarjal. Na letališču, preden je stopil ur, nakar se je vrnil v Tokio tr-jv letalo za povratni polet, je ge-dno prepričan o končni zmagi]neral izjavil časnikarjem, da ga .zaveznikov. Iz Tokia je odšel poveljnik> zavezniških čet resen in zaskrbljen, vrnil pa se je vedrega obraza in pol zaupanja v zmago. ni nič tako vzradostilo kakor vest, da bo poslala Velika Britanija v Korejo svoje čete. — “Skupno s temi vojaki sem se boril več let in imam največje CALUMET, Mich. — Dne 8. julija je umrl Ivan Kobe star 90 let, rojen v Sinjem vrhu, okraj Črnomelj, Dolenjsko. Iz starega takojšnja in brez dolgih ter težkih naporov,” je rekel. ‘Doživeli bomo nove trpkosti in nove umike, ki so v takem položaju .neizogibni, toda o naši končni .zmagi nisem bil še nikoli v življenju tako trdno prepričan, ka-hor sem zdaj MacArthur se je sestal tudi s predsednikom korejske republike Syngman Rhee-jem, kateremu je zagotovil: “Mi bomo že poskrbeli za vašo deželo..” Pred svojim povratkom iz zaupanje’v njih sposobnost. Koreje je povedal časnikarjem,] “Še vedno vztrajam trdno pri da je po razgovoru s svojimi'svoji trditvi ki sem jo sporočil poveljniki kakor tudi po svojem'pretekli teden predsedniku Tru-lastnem pregledu stanja stvari,Imanu, da je sovražnik v zad-dobil občutje optimizma. “To'njih treh tednih zaigral svojo .seveda ne pomeni, da bo zmaga veliko priliko za zmago.” Dalje je dejal, da se ameriške čete v Koreji dobro borijo, ker “ameriške čete se vedno izvrstno bore. Zračna sila in mornarica sta v vseh ozirih izborni.” TOKIO, 27. julija.—Zavezniške čete so se danes s protinapadi prebile 7 milj naprej, oziroma so za toliko milj potisnile sovražnika nazaj. Naj večji uspeh si je priborila južnokorej-ska prva divizija z dvostročnim Zatem je obiskal ranjence v'napadom severno od Hamchan-neki bolnišnici. Stopal je med ga na centralni fronti. Ohijski duhovnik ubit v Koreji Tokio. — Rev. F. G. Felhoel-ter, vojaški kaplan, je bil umorjen od korejskih komunistov, ko je ostal za umikajočimi se Amerikanci v bitki ob reki Kum, da bi skrbel za trideset Papež Pij XII. o križih in težavah današnjega sveta fakultetah v Pragi in Bratislavi. zvečer v soboto bo izbrana Miss češka \ lada je ukinila vsei Euclid. V nedeljo popoldne bo stare teološke fakultete in se-jnavzo£ governer F. J. Lausche. menišča ter jih nadomestila z bodo srečni, bodo dobi- novimi, na katerih se bo pričelo li: eden Packard Sedan modela s poukom v septembru. Po no- 1950; dvotedenske počitnice v vem pravilniku teh fakultet bo Michiganu; televizijski aparat; bogoslovec že po dveletnih štu- žensko ali moško garderobo. Vse dijah prejel prvo, neke nižje vrste posvečenje, ob koncu četrtega leta študij pa bo ordini-ran in posvečen kot duhovnik. Promoviranec take fakultete Sv. Oče odločno zavrača natolcevanja, da hočeta Cer- v , _ . „ . , kevi in| Vatikan! zanetiti Postane avtomatično svečenik boste v obilnem številu posetili dni bodo svirali najboljši in priznani orkestri. Ker euclidski veterani delujejo in žrtvujejo za razna dobra dela, kakor za Blue j Baby operacije itd., upajo, da nov svetovni požar. Vatikan. — Papež Pij je izjavil, da mu povzroča sedanji svetovni položaj največjo žalost in skrbi, nakar je apeliral na vse katoliške škofije po vsem svetu, naj uvedejo javne molitve za mir. Papežev komentar o težavnem svetovnem položaju je bil izdan v obliki enciklike. Ta enciklika trpko in odločno zavrača lažnive trditve, da si katoliška cerkev in Vatikan prizadevata zanetiti nov svetovni požar. “Ne v davnih časih kakor tudi ne danes ni še nikoli manjkalo ljudi, ki so si hoteli z orožjem v roki podjarmiti narode sveta,” je rekel sv. Oče. “Mi nismo nikoli prenehali s prizadevanji za dosego pravičnega miru. Cerkev hoče z resnico, ne z orožjem, zavojevati človeška srca ter vzgojiti ljudi v pravičnosti in pravem socialnem življenju.” ------o------ Poizvedovalni količek Rada bi izvedela za starše Valentin in Rozalija Kos ter sestro Marijo, poročeno Pozič, ki se nahajajo nekje v Buenos Aires, Argentina. Prosim, da če sami to čitajo, ali če kdo izmed znancev ve za njih naslov, da mi javijo na naslov: Valentina Urbanija, 5920 St. Clair Ave., Cleveland 3, Ohio. nove razkolniške cerkve. Vprašanje pa je, kdo ga bo posvetil? Katoliških škofov, ki bi stali ob strani češke vlade, ni, torej preostanejo samo še škofje ruske pravoslavne cerkve, ki utegnejo vršiti taka posvečenja. Kanada pripravljena za konskripcijo svoje vojne industrije Kanadske tovarne se morejo v najkrajšem času preurediti za proizvodnjo vojnega materiala. Ottawa.—Kanada je pripravljena izvesti konskripcijo svojih industrij, ki izdelujejo mu-nicijo, orožje in oklopna vozila. Vse to naj bi bilo v pomoč ameriškim četam, ki se borijo v Koreji. Uradniki urada za obrambo1 so mnenja, da imajo v zalogah dovolj vojnih potrebščin za kanadske oborožene sile, razen če bi se slednje zapletle v vojno velikega obsega. Avtomobilske tovarne v mestih Windsor, Chatam, London, Hamilton in Toronto so pripravljene, da se nemudoma preure-de za proizvodnjo vojaških vozil. Več municijskih tovaren, ki zdaj počivajo, bi se moglo že tekom enega tedna spraviti v obrat. Ujedinjenje in sodelovanje dveh največjih delavskih organizacij je poslalo nujna dolžnost Pohod komunizma je prisilil organizaciji k skupnemu delu, da se zaščitijo pravice delavstva te dežele in vsega sveta. WASHINGTON. — Predstav- sestane 4. avgusta v Chicagu in niki uj edin j enega CIO in AFL!je imenoval odbor dveh oseb, odbora, to je dveh delavskih or- da izdela pravilnik poslovanja: ganizacij, ki sta bili rivalinji ali za bodočnost. Ti dve osebi sta: tekmovalki, so izjavili, da sta or-' Charles MacGowan, predsednik ganizaciji zdaj tako rekoč pri-^AFL Boiler Makers unije, in, morani k združitvi in ujedinje-J Allan S. Haywood, CIO pednju zaradi svetovnega pohoda'predsednik, komunizma. Maršal Rokossovky poljski armadi London. — Sovjetski maršal Konstantin Rokossovski, ki je zdaj vrhovni poveljnik poljske armade, je pozval armado, naj se potrudi, da doseže čim večjo in učinkovitejšo bojno moč. To je sporočil armadi v svojem dnevnem povelju ob šesti obletnici “osvoboditve Poljske po sovjetski Rdeči armadi.” Dne 25. julija se je odbor konstituiral v' permanentno ali stalno telo ter sklenil formalni sporazum, da bosta poslej Ameriška delavska federacija in CIO ranjencev, ki jih umikajoče se'organizacija skupno delovali na čete niso mogle vzeti s seboj, političnih, zakonodajnih in med-bil doma iz Cin- narodnih poljih. MacGowan je izjavil, da želi ta odbor naglasiti Joredvsem dvoje stvari: ena je prisrčnost, vzorni odnosi in optimizem članov pri prvih dveh sejah, druga pa kakor sledi: “Ob razrvanih svetovnih razmerah in pohodu komunizma čutimo, da če hočemo ohraniti Letala mečejo okrožnice na sovražnika Tokio. — Ameriško letalstvo bombardira severnokorejske čete prav tako s propagando kakor z bombami. Okrožnice, ki jih mečejo ameriški letalci med severnokorejsko vojaštvo, pripovedujejo, kako je ameriška letalska sila prerezala njihove dobave živil in drugih potrebščin. Canberra. — Avstralska vlada je v torek naznanila, da bo> poslala v Korejo na razpolago generalu Mac Arthur ju odrede svoje pehote in topništva. Odbor je sklenil, da se zopet]naše ameriške institucije in za- ščititi delovno ljudstvo te dežele kakor tudi ostalega sveta, je organsko ujedinjenje naših dveh delavskih organizacij ne-obhodno potrebna dolžnost.” Haywood je izjavil, da se V celoti strinja z izjavo svojega tovariša MacGowana. NAJNOVEJŠEVESTI LAKE SUCCESS. — Jacob Malik, sovjetski delegat pri Združenih narodih, je včeraj nenadoma prenehal z bojkotiranjem te ustanove, ko je naznanil, da bo 1. avgusta predsedoval seji Varnostnega sveta. Malik se bo pri Varnostnem svetu lahko poslužil pravice vetiranja. toda v tem slučaju bodo Zed. države kakor tudi druge države zahtevale zasedanje celotne skupščine Zdr. narodov, kjer nima te pravice. TOKIO.—Zdaj se je pričela odločilna bitka v korejski vojni in koreski komunisti so pod-vzeli svoj največji poizkus, da starejo ameriške črte.—Ameriške čete so podvzele svoj najhujši protinapad v tej vojni v vitalnem Yongdong sektorju, toda so bile za spoznanje potisnenc nazaj. ta festival., Prevzem gostilne— Al in Pep Flaisman, dobro poznana v Clevelandu, sta prevzela gostilno od Frank in Mary Kopina na vogalu Highland in Bishop Rd., katero bosta vodila pod imenom “Highland Bishop Tavern.” Al je sin dobro poznane Flaismanove družine, ki imajo svojo gostilno na E. 64. St. in St. Clair Ave.; bil je sedem let v policijski službi v Clevelandu. Njegova žena Pepca pa je hči znane Mihev-čeve družine iz E. 60. St. Prijateljem in znancem se toplo priporočata za poset, vsem bosta prijazno in točno postregla. Tretja obletnica— V sredo bo v cerkvi Brezmadežnega Spočetja ob osmih maša za pokojno Anno Slopko v spomin tretje obletnice njene smrti. Skupno obhajilo— Društvo sv. Ane št. 150 KSKJ bo imelo v nedeljo ob 7:15 pri sv. maši, ki bo darovana v cerkvi sv. Lovrenca za žive in mrtve članice, skupno sv. obhajilo. Poroke— V soboto ob devetih se bosta poročila v cerkvi sv. Vida Miss Josephine Ann Kozel in Mr. Anthony I. Kuhel. Nevesta je hčerka Mrs. Josephine Kozel iž Carl Ave., ženin pa je sin Mrs. Mary Kuhel iz 80. ceste. Poročne obrede s sv. mašo bo opravil nevestin sorodnik Rev. t Louis B. Baznik. Sorodniki in prijatelji so vabljeni k poročni maši. — Isti dan se bosta poročila v cerkvi Marije Vnebovze-te ob 10:30 Miss Ethel Katona in Mr. Stanley Trampuš. Ženin je sin družine Mr. in Mrs. Sebastian Trampuš s Holmes Ave., nevesta pa hčerka Mrs. Elizabeth Katona. Sorodniki in prijatelji so vabljeni k poročni sv. maši. Obilo sreče vsem! Pozdravljajo— Iz Hyde Parka, N. Y., pošiljajo pozdrave svojini prijateljem v Clevelandu Sophie Jerman, Mr. in Mrs. Frank Sober in Jen-ni Planisek iz E. 158. St. Asesment— Tajnica društva Sv. Marije Magdalene št. 162 KSKJ bo pobirala asesment v pondeljek od 6 do 7:30 zvečer v zborovalni dvorani šole sv. Vida (soba št. 2). Članice, ki še niste poravnale svojih obveznosti, ste prošene, da to gotovo storite v pondeljek. # Deveta obletnica— V torek ob 8:30 bo v cerkvi Marije Vnebovzete maša za pokojno Angelo Komin - Dvornik v spomin devete obletnice njene smrti. Ameriška Domovina sssssssaf: a.ara »j i^TnSJ'rffTTVI'^C^^^sss«* 6117 St. Clair Ave. HEnderson 1-0628 Cleveland 3, Ohio Published daily except Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays General Manager and English Editor: Mary Debevec Editor in Chief: Anton Sabec; Mg. Editor: Frank A. Turek: Associate Editor Vinko Lipovec NAROČNINA Za Zed. države $8.50 na leto; za pol leta $5.00; za četrt leta $3.00. v Za Kanado in sploh za dežele izven Zed. držav $10.00 na leto. Za pol leta $6.00. za 3 mesece $3.50. SUBSCRIPTION RATES United States $8.50 per year; $5.00 for 6 months; $3.00 for 3 months. Canada and all other countries outside United States $10 per year. $6 for 6 months, $3.50 for 3 months. JULY 1950 SUN MON TUE WED THU FW SAT 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1112 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 25 26 27 28 29 Entered as second class matter January 6th 1908 at the Post Office at Cleveland, Ohio, under the act ofMarch 3rd 1879. ««g§§5£?»83 No. 147 Fri., July 28, 1950 Kam vodi Stalinova pot? Bogdan Radiča, odlični hrvatski publicist, je objavil v Hrvatskem Glasu, ki izhaja v Kanadi, sledeči članek: Z brutalnim napadom komunistične vojske na Južno Korejo, je stalinizem prešel v novo fazo kolonijalnega in militarističnega imperializma. S tem dogodkom je tako zva-ni revolucionarni ideološki komunizem završil svojo fazo notranjega operiranja za neodvisnost ter je posegel po klasičnih metodah osvajalnega imperializma, ki so se ga že pred njim posluževali Napoleoni, Hitlerji in Mussoliniji, da molčimo o Džingiskanih in Atilih. Stalinov bonapartizem jemlje zdaj razmerje najodvratnejšega imperializma in vojnega manevriranja v odnosih med narodi. Komunizem je kot ideja zavržen; on se je posušil in stvarno ne obstoja več. Stalin mu zdaj daje novo obliko rušenja svobode in neodvisnosti narodov, malih in velikih, potom brutalne in gole sile. Tu leži smisel Stalinovih vojnih operacij v južni Koreji. Tak dogodek je moral povsem logično izzvati odgovor Zedinjenih držav, ki so vedno stale na načelu, da se mora napad odbiti s silo' demokratske zavesti. To pot je predsednik Truman, ta modri “človek iz Missouri,” reagiral naglo, pametno in odločno. Ko se človek spomni, kaj vse so delali angleški in francoski državniki v vprašanju fašistične intervencije v Španiji, Abesiniji, Češkoslovaški in Monako-vem (Muenchen), tedaj' mora nemudoma priznati, da se je ameriška demokracija v resnici nekaj naučila iz naše včerajšnje zgodovine. Ni se prepustila iluzijam in meglenim mednarodnim pogajanjem, temveč je prej kakor v osmih urah odgovorila z energijo, ki je v čast ne samo velikemu narodu, temveč sploh narodu, ki zna ceniti smisel svobode, miru in demokracije. Postopek Amerike je bil dinamičen. Zedinjene države so imele na svoji strani domala vse članice Združenih narodov. Naj značilnejše je bilo to, ker se je tudi Indija strinjala z odlokom Varnostnega sveta in ameriškega predsednika ter se pridružila narodom, ki se bore za mir in svobodo sveta. Onim, ki še niso jasni Titovi postopki, je njegovo negativno glasovanje v Varnostnem svetu lahko odprlo oči. Metanje zavezniških milijonov v Titovo malho ne vodi nikamor, temveč samo ruši edinstvo vseh svobodnih sil, ki se borijo proti komunističnim zavojevalcem. Zdaj je jasno, kakšno politiko vodi Tito in za kakšne cilje. Ampak tudi Tito se ne bo več dolgo vzdržal na konopcu, ki postaja vedno tanjši. Stalin je med tem razgalil vse svoje osnove in cilje. Tudi pri njem se je pojavil sklep vsakega diktatorja. Tudi v njegov mozeg se je zagrizel oni isti črv, ki grize mozeg vseh megalomanov in nasilhikov vseh stoletij. Tudi pri njem se je pojavila želja, da še za svojega življenja ustvari veliki imperij sužnjev, osnovan na nasilju in goli sili. Vse njegove teze o reševanju nacionalnih vprašanj na Balkanu, o osvajanju kmečkih in delavskih mas za svetovno revolucijo, osvobojevanju kolonijalnih narodov v Aziji od tujega gospodstva, vse to se zdaj pretvarja v zelo preprosto stvar: Osvajanje Aeije in Evrope za Stalinov imperializem. Tudi Sralin želi ustvariti Evropsko-azijsko carstvo, da bi ga poleg Džingskana in Atile pominla zgodovina. Jože Dugašvili (Stalin) sanja prav tako o imperiju, kakor je sanjal avstrijski korporal Hitler, čigar podvigov nismo še pozabili. . . Oni, ki je rekel, da je zgodovina učiteljica življenja, se je to pot zmotil. Ljudje se od zgodovine ničesar ne nauče. Nasprotno: oni delajo vprav to, česar bi ne smeli de'ati. Tudi Stalin, ki bi se lahko marsikaj naučil od Hitlerja, ni zapopadel, da se po Hitlerjevi poti pride v smrt. Če taki poizkusi ne bi pomenili trpljenja milijonov in milijonov nedolžnih ljudi, bi jih še mogli zabeležiti v naših blaznih in krvavih kronikah. Toda ti poizkusi pomenjo mojo in vašo usodo, usodo milijonov ljudi. Stalin vodi svet v novo grozo. Tudi Stalin se je prevaral na račun Amerike, kakor se je Hitler. Tudi Hitler je bil vedno uverjen, da se ne bo Amerika nikoli zbudila in da si bo on osvojil svet, dočim bodo ameriški milijonarji počivali v Floridi in Kalifornij. To je tipična pogreška evropskega premotrivanja ameriške čudi. Nihče v Evropi ne razume mentalitete ameriškega naroda. Ameriški narod je narod, ki ga je mogoče izzivati in izzivati petkrat ali desetkrat, toda kadar mu je izzivanja dovolj, tedaj reagira bolj naglo kakor kateri koli drug narod na svetu. Tudi predsednik Truman je rekel, da se marsikaj pretrpi in prenese, toda vsaka stvar ima svoje meje in da Amerika ter Združeni narodi ne morejo več prenašati postopanja kakršnega so bili že toliko časa deležni od strani Sovjetske zveze. Komaj je predsednik Truman izrekel to čustvo, je ime? na svoji strani celokupen in ujedinjen ameriški narod in ž njim vred vse ostale svobodne narode sveta. Iz tega, kar je pozneje nastalo, je razvidno, da se je okoli predsednika Trumana zbralo vse v namenu, da se ohrani ideja svobode, demokracije in pravičnega miru. Stalin je pričel svojo ekspedicijo v soboto popoldne, kakor je pričel svojo tudi avstrijski korporal. Pričel jo je komaj nekaj dni pred največjim ameriškim narodnim praznikom, praznikom ameriške svobode in neodvisnosti, ki so jo izvojevali siromašni ljudje, ki so se postavili po robu angleškemu kralju ter zadali temelje največji demokraciji sveta. Stalin 'si ni mogel izbrati boljšega dne od tega. Ta dežela se je v trenutku zavedla, za kaj gre. Nič niso pomagali Kongresi miru, ne golobice miru, ne apeli, ne manifesti svetovnega komunizma, da ne bi naš narod in z njim vred vsi ostali svobodoljubni narodi ugotovili, kdo prinaša vojno, in kdo mir. Jože Brkač je spustil svoje tanke, da porušijo voljo in svobodo malega korejskega naroda. Komu naj torej zdaj Stalin in njegovi agenti širom sveta še trobijo o osvobodi in o miru? Komunizem mora biti danes vsem jasen in prozoren. To ni gibanje za neodvisnost in svobodo naroda, za enakopravnost narodnih slojev, temveč je to militaristični imperializem najstrašnejše oblike! StaMn ni samo izdal idealov revolucije, če jih je sploh kaj bilo, ■— tem več je vprege! revolucijo v službo svojega imperializma. Imperializem pa je mogoče porušiti samo s silo prebujene demokracije in naroda, ki ve, da ne more biti miru brez svobode. Daši ne verujemo, da bi ameriška operacja v Koreji izzvala svetovno vojno, je vendar jasno, da je komunizem, ki ga vodi Stalin, odprl zdaj novo fazo. Ta‘faza bo obstojala v velikem številu lokalnih vojen, ki jih bodo morali bojevati po vsem svetu po Sovjetih oboroženi komunisti, da bi oslabili demokracijo in osvojili svet za Stalinovo cesarstvo. Koreja je samo uvod mnogih takih Korej v Aziji in Evropi. Demokracija in ves svobodni svet morata dati danes vso podporo Zedinjenim državam, ki so edine v položaju, da s svojimi silami vzpostavijo mir v svetu in da osvobo-de svet iz komunistične 'Sužnosti. Naši jugoslovanski narodi, ki so vsled dvostročnega komunizma dvakrat udarjeni, morejo tudi upati, da bi koncem koncev Stalinov zlom pomenil tudi Titov zlom. Naša generacija, ki je videla zlom Hitlerja in Mussolinija, mora zbrati vse svoje sile in verovati v zlom lažnega in nemoralnega Stalinovega režima in podviga za zasužnjenje vsega sveta. Nikoli ni bilo še toliko možnosti za zlom te groze, kolikor je je danes, da se te nade pretvorijo stvarnost. Kapitulacij in kompromisov ne more biti več! Proti sili se odgovarja samo s silo! In Stalin ve, kaj sila pomeni! Komunizem kot ideja je danes mrtev. Od njega ostaja samo še sila golega imperializma. Napram taki sili pa je demokracija zmerom močnejša in koncem konca zmaguje, ker je to edini stalen zakon zgodovine. I BESEDA IZ NARODA | Potrebno kramljanje New York. — Malo smo preplašeni, ker je vojna na Koreji. Ne zaradi sebe, ker atomske bombe se skoro ne bojimo, ampak zaradi domovine, ker sumimo, da bo prav hitro za Korejo na vrsti. Tam imamo mnogi svoje drage, znance, prijatelje. In kakšna bo zopet ta vojna vihra, ki bo šla preko domovine! Kaj vse bo zopet pomandrano, porušeno, požgano, pobito, odpeljano . . . Toaa čemu se razburjati? Vse je v božjih rokah in božja previdnost pogosto tudi gorje obrne v našo dobro, v našo srečo. Seveda mi smo vajeni gledati vse le z vidika čas-nosti, z vidika tega sveta. Ne moremo in ne moremo razumeti Kristusovih besed: “Moje kraljestvo ni cd tega sveta.” Zato pa le predajmo se brez pridržka božji previdnosti in zaupajmo, da bo ic v naše dobro— časno ali večno—to, kar nas bo doletelo v negotovi bodočnosti. Ne smete pa tega napačno razumeti. Vdati se v,božjo voljo ne pomeni preki ižati roke na prsih in v brezdelju čakati. To bi bilo tisto, čemur mohamedani pravijo kizmet. Hočemo in moramo delati vse, kar je v naši moči, da zlo odvrnemo od sebe in od tistih, ki jim hočemo pomaga*', ki jih hočemo rešiti. Zato kristjani molimo in delamo. To je pravi krščanski aktivizem. V aktivizmu ne smemo zaostajati za komunizmom. Celo to bi mogli trditi, da se glede aktivizma moramo marsikaj učiti od komunistov. Tisto gorečnost, tisto vztrajnost in tisti pogum, ki jih komunisti kažejo dan za dnem za slabo stvar v Službi zla, bi morali kristjani kazati dan za dnem za plemenito stvar v službi dobrega. Vsak v svojem okolju z besedo, vzgledom, ljubeznjivostjo lahko veliko storimo. Odgovorimo si na vprašanje, če smo se vseh priložnosti posiužili in vsak svojo dolžnost storili! Slišim že ugovore: “Nismo vsi za tako delo sposobni. — Kh" munisti svoje ljudi vedno vež- bajo. Nimamo organizacije, ki bi nas vodila, kot vodi komuniste,” Vidite, ti ugovori so pa tehtni in moramo se vsaj nekoliko pri njih pomuditi. ‘Nismo sposobni” mogoče drži pri nekate-nih, ali teh ne bo niti en odstotek, študiran je, vztrajna vaja nam da mnoge sposobnosti. V mladih letih gre z lahkoto, v starejših gre težje, je pa zato vztrajnost večja. Šleva je, kdor si nič ne upa in sam svoji vztra-nosti ne zaupa. Zato moramo pač študirati: brati liste, knjige, brošure. Vsega je na razpolago, če se le zanimamo. Vežbati se tudi moramo s tem, da poskušamo iz svojega doživetja, iz svojih izkušenj razložiti ljudem, s katerimi razgovarjamo, kako odvraten, lažniv in maščevalen je komunizem. Če gre tudi sprva težko, bodimo prepričani, da bo šlo vedno :lažje. Vaja dela mojstra. In čimbolj bomo nači-tani, tem lažje pojde. Ali imamo list, v katerem bi take stvari našli? Seveda ga imamo, toda malo nas je, ki smo nanj naročeni. In še nekateri, ki smo naročeni, ga le slabo in prav površno preletimo. Kateri je ta list? “Ameriška Domovina” ga nazivajo in petkrat na teden ga Vam bodo pošiljali. Potem imamo prvo leto celo brezplačno tednik: Amerikanski Slovenec, ki je glasilo Kranjske Slovenske Katoliške Jednote (KSKJ). Seveda nekaterim se zdi škoda denarja za list. Takemu povemo kar odkrito: Kdor tu varčuje, ta zapravlja. Komunisti svoje, ljudi vežba-jo. To delajo v organizaciji. Komunisti so mojstri v organizaciji. V tem oziru bi se morali v kesanju potrkati na prsi, ker smo katoličani veliko zamudili, in ne vemo, kako bomo mogli dajati odgovor. Pa imamo tako lep vzgled v prvih kristjanih! Komunisti jih posnemajo s svojo podtalnostjo ali underground. Nam seveda ni treba v katakombe in zato smo vse velike prednosti organizacije zelo zanema- rili. Komunizem je vzor, kaj se zmore z organizacijo. Imamo Ligo slov. kaf. Ame-rikancev. Veliko je storila, mnogim pomagala, da smo prišli v Ameriko Upali so mnogi, da jo bodo ravno novi poživili, razširili, okrepili. Vprašajmo se, koliko podružnic smo poklicali v življenje? Koliko je v teh podružnicah kulturnega, narod-no-političnega dela? Koliko ljudi se sestaja na rednih tedenskih sestankih? Koliko dramat-skih, glasbenih prireditev in koliko predavanj, kolio izletov in mladmsih prireditev je bilo organiziranih? Pisali so nam o poslanstvu, ki ga imamo tu v Ameriki. Ali smo kaj mislili na to poslanstvo in kaj smo na-pinvili, da ga vršimo? Bo kdo dejal: “Lahko je kritizirati. Povej, kaj si pa sam napravil.” V podružnici v New Yorku pomagamo in samo to bodi povedano, da more biti ta podružnica vzor vsem drugim. Le nekaj številk. Sestankov je bilo 47, povprečna udeležba 31 članov. Predavanj smo imeli 14. Pevskega zbora nam manjka, tu žal ne moremo nič navesti. Komemoracija za žrtve komunizma se je vršila v krogu novih in je napravila odličen utis. Prireditve so se vršile le tri, toda mi upamo, da se bo naša igralska družina v bodoče na široko razmahnila. Da bi povečali dohodke Lige smo nekajkrat priredili tombolo (bingo), uspeh ni izostal. Davek, zbirke in dohodki od prireditev so prinesli glavni blagajni $1550 dohodka. Ni lepo, da se hvalimo, toda sili nas k temu dejstvo, da bi želeli pos-nemalcev, takih posnemalcev, ki bi nas prekosili. Pozivamo k tekmi, kot to delajo doma komunisti v delu za petletni plan. Veseli bomo, če nas bo katera od podružnic Lige prekosila. Po navedenem bi mogli reči, da je-naš uspeh na organizacijskem in karitativnem področju. Povezali smo nove v živ organizem ligine podružnice in zbrali lepo vsoto v namene Lige od starih in mladih. Dr. J. Basaj. Zahvala za sodelovanje Cleveland, O — Praznovanje 25. letnice Kulturnih vrtov je za nami. Zahtevalo je sodelovanja skupin in posameznikov. Posebna zahvala velja slovenski godbi Društva sv. Jožefa št. 169 KSKJ. Prav gotovo ni majhna žrtev nastopiti v poletni vročini. Naša zahvala velja tudi narodnim nošm in Pevskemu zboru Lira ter Mr. John Mišmašu za snimanje premičnih slik. Omenil bi le še rad odličen in globoko zasnovan govor našega guvernerja Mr. Frank Lausche-ta.” Slovenci smo lahko res ponosni nanj. Kdor se je proslave udeležil, je megel z žalostjo ugotoviti, da smo Slovenci začeli zaostajati za ostalimi narodnostnimi skupinami v živahnosti in v vnemi za sodelovanje pri javnih nastopih. Pogrešamo pri takih prireditvah zlasti naše mladine. Če se bo ta držala v'ozadju, bo naš ugled začel naglo plahneti. Anton Grdina. List edina uteha v tujini Kruta usoda nas je pognala z rodne grude, tujina nam daje skromen kruh V teh bridkih dneh nam je edina uteha slovenska knjiga, če nam po posebni sreči pride v roke, zato smo izredno veseli Ameriške Domovine, ki redno prihaja med nas. Draga nam je, ker je to edini slovenski dnevnik v svobodnem svetu, draga zato, ker nas sproti in natančno poučuje o razmerah v domovini ter utrjuje v nas slovenski in krščanski duh, poseono med našo mladino. Naj Vam ljudi Bog povrne Vašo do- broto in Vas podpira v Vaši borbi za pravico m resnico. Iskreno pozdravljeni Janez Ambrožič, Bottrop, Westfalija, Nemčija. -------o------ Kar za 2 leti plača! Wyandotte, Mich. — Priloženo vam pošiljam $17.00 za na-daljno naročnino na priljubljeni list Ameriško Domovino, da bo kar za dve leti. Obenem se Vam prav iskreno zahvaljujem za točno postrežbo z listom. Ameriška Domovina mi je zares v veliko uteho in kratek čas. Iz tega lista zvem vse slovenske novice in me informira tudi o drugem, kar bi drugače ne zvedel. Zato res najlepša hvala. Pozdravljam vse Slovence po vsej Ameriki in tudi drugod, zlasti pa moje znance v Clevelandu, ki so vsi fest fantje in dekleta. Vaš prijatelj Charles Kohler, p. d. Lončarjev Karol iz Lipe, fara Planina. S Tržaškega, Goriške in Koroške poročajo “Vsi begunci so izdajalci’ Celovec. — Pod naslovom: “Kdor pobegne iz naše države, postane izdajalec”, objavlja “Ljudska pravica” poročilo o razpravi, ki se je vršila pred okrožnim sodiščem v Ljubljani dne 13. julija 1950 zoper nekega Bana Franca, iz Kostanjevice na Dol. in nekega Skopca Srečka iz Ljubljane. Obtožena sta bila, da sta leta 1849 ilegalno prekoračil jugoslovansko - avstrijsko mejo in da sta zaslišana v taborišču za pobege osebe v Firnitzu dala Angležem informacijo o stanju oboroženih sil m drugih državnih tajnosti. Enake informacije sta dala tudi neki drugi špi-onski skupini, katere agent ju je obiskal, ko sta bila še v taborišču. Ta se je zanimal tudi za tovarne in druge industrijske naprave ter jima ponujal za vsako poročilo 30 avstrijskih šilingov. Vabil ju je, da bi šla ponovno v Jugoslavijo in tam zbirala podatke špionskega značaja. Ban ,n Skopec pa sta se vrnila v Jugoslavijo, ker so jima “presedale razmere na delu in v taborišču.” ’ Obsojena sta bila: Ban Franc na 5 let in Skopec Srečko na 4 leta. “Ljudska pravica” zaključuje svoje poročilo takole: “Vsak, ki pobegne v inozemstvo, postane izdajalec, kajti nihče ne Jnore ostati v inozemstvu prikrit tamkaj šnim oblastem, ki ga takoj temeljito zaslišijo o špionskih podatkih iz naše države, nato pa izročijo še v kremplje pobeglih vojnih zločincev. Zato naša ljudska sodišča tako ostro kaznujejo vsak poskus pobega preko meje ter pomoč pri takih pobegih, ker se iz vsakega pobega nujno rodi izdajstvo, ki je najtežji zločin zoper ljudstvo in državo.” Slučaj obeh obsojencev je silno interesanten. Tri dejstva padejo takoj v oči: 1) Obsojenca sta se sama prostovoljno vrnila v Jugoslavijo, ker so jima postale “razmere v taborišču in pri delu neznosne in so jima presedale”. To je edinstven primer, da se je nek begunec vrnil v Jugoslavijo, ker vsak ve, kako hude kazni prejmejo oni, si so ujeti na meji, ker so sami poizkusili pobegniti iz Jugoslavije. 2) Kazen obeh je primeroma nizka, saj sta “izdala Angležem in agentom neke obveščevalne službe” podatke o stanju oboroženih sil in druge državne tajnosti. Za ta deklit je bila v Jugoslaviji običajna kazen smrti ali v saj 20 letne ječe. 3) Obsojenca sta pobegnila vsak zase, vrnila pa sta se skupno. Ta dejstva govorijo zato, da sta bila obtoženca poslana od jugoslovanske obveščevalne službe pod “krinko begunstva” v inozemstvo, da ugotovita prilike v begunskem taborišču v Firnitzu, zasledujeta jugoslo-vansKe emigrante in se povežeta z onimi, ki vodijo “obveščevalno službo.” Ker je bila baš v času njunega bivanja v inozemstvu zajeta na meji skupina, ki je od leta la48 — junija 1950 pošiljala agente v Jugoslavijo, je verjetno, da sta bila oba ob-! toženca tista, ki sta te agente pošiljala v roke OZNI oz. KNO-Juna meji. Poročilo notranjega ministrstva o zajetju one skupine je bilo objavljeno dne 12. junija 1950. Oba obsojenca pa sta se tudi junija morala vrniti v Jugoslavijo, ker je bila razprava 13. julija. Vrnrla sta se torej, ko sta posel opravila oz. ko so jima postala tla v inozemstvu prevroča. Da se zabriše sledi njunega špionskega delovanja, je bila potrebna razprava, ki naj ju prikaže kot izdajalca. Omembe vredna je tudi okol-nost da sta imela oba obtoženca pred pobegom prilično dobre službe. Poročilo v “Ljudski pravici” pravi, da je imel Ban Franc 3500 Din, Skopec Srečko pa celo 7000 Din plače na mesec. Tičke, kot sta omenjena dva, mi na Koroškem prav dobro poznamo, ljudje se jih ogibljejo kot kuge. -------c------- Pa jim povej! Proti kmetu, ki dela na jugoslovanski strani v vinogradu blizu meje, pribeži ves upehan zajček, ki hoče kar mimo. Kmet mu zakliče: “Kam pa tako bežiš?” ’ Zajec: ‘Gori imajo mobilizacijo konj.” ’ Kmet: “Saj ti vendar nisi konj.” Zajec: “Pa jim povej!” in smukne čez mejo. ------o------- — Saharin, ki ga vporabljamo mesto sladkorja za slajenje kave ali čaja, so prvič pripravili za trg leta 1879. KADAR BI POTREBOVALI prvovrstno odpremi j en sprevod za katerega koli člana vaše družine, ali morda bolniški ali ambulantni voz vam nudimo točno in zanesljivo postrežbo v 2 zavodih: 1053 E. 62 St. in 17010 Lake Shore Blvd. Za hitro postrežbo rabite naš glavni telefon: HEnderson 1-2088 Naša postrežba na razpolago noč in dan! ANTON GRDINAin SINOVI QlŽ£jom Ju. /ak e r i$k a Domovi im/1 No Boys Are Bad k i a rj it i t ~jtkyi i g «M€raCAN IN SPIRIT FOR€IGN IN LANGUAGE ONLY SLOVENIAN MORNING NEWSPAPER Slovenian Colony Here Is Background of Novel HE THE FATHER, by Frank Mlakar. Harper, 313 pp. $3. Reviewed by JOSEPH ZELE Publicantion of this book seemingly indicates that Harper’s has nominated Cleveland’s Frank Mlakar to inherit the immigrant trade formerly catered to by Louis Adamic. Although Mlakar left Collin-Wood about a decade ago, he nevertheless reverted to our Slovenian colony for his materials. At least Slovenians on St. Clair ,Ave. will easily identify the American locale. For Cuyahoga City is actually Cleveland. Chicken Village is a literat translation of ‘Kurje Vas,” the little community around Lake ourt at E. 55th St. and the New York Central tracks. This community was wiped out by the disastrous Eiast Ohio Gas plant explosion in 1941. The wire mill, of course, is that of the American Steel & Wire Co. at E. 53rd and Lakeside. St. Liza-Veta’s probably is St. Vitus Church on Glass Ave., and E. 61st St. The use of these materials in howise detracts ;rom the novel but father bolsters it and gives it an air of authenticity. Briefly, Osip Urincevjch and Lenka 7'erta steal the meager savings of old man Princevich and flee to America from the poverty of Gobelje, in the old Austro-Hunga-fian empire. They settle among Slovenians in Cuyahoga City, and Prosper . But the memory of their theft haunts Osip and Lenka and cheats them of happiness in their marri age. Moreover, their son Rudy'1 helps to alienate the wife from the i husband. A crisis in bootlegging disrupts the home. Osip leaves his wife and son and returns to his birthplace, now a part of Yugoslavia. There he faces the fury of the villagers, and of his three brothers, who demand expiation of his crime. The peasant scene in the village church is as inexorable and shocking as a chapter from Dostoevski. Mlakar has molded the everyday lives of his people into a powerful coherent drama. He has caught the spirit of the old gas house district, the railroad tracks and the lake shore before the Memorial Drive was built. The curious sensations, the futility, confusion and depspair of the immigrants all are there. Technically, the plot has flaws, one of which is that the fate of Lenka and her son Rudy are left suspended in air after Osip has returned to Gobelye. At times, too, the author dips quite unnecessarily into a vein of vulgarity, apparently in an effort to achieve realism. Nevertheless, Frank Mlakar has written an impressive , first novel and contributes ■ a worthy new talent to the body of American fiction. JOSEPH ZELLE is on the technical staff of Station WERE. He is the .uanslatof cf an English version of the well-known Slovenian work, ‘Under a Free Sun,” by F. S. Finžgar. Ameriška Domovina CONDENSED NEWS FROM OUR HOME FRONT Cleveland, Ohio The well - known ■Mr. and Mrs. John Rožance of Lucknow Ave. their son, Victor and his wife, left last week towards Chicago, Detroit, Kansas City, Where they will visit relatives. They will Visit Yellowstone Park ahd expect to return in a couple of weeks. • • • MB Silver Wedding an-hiversary was celebrat-ed on July 13th by Mr. arid Mrs. John and An-ba Keglovich of' 3551 E. 30 St. Congratulations: • • • wmm Mr. and Mrs. John Kozane of 1178 Babbitt Kd., and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Modic of 1217 E. Lr St., left for Dayton Leach, Florida, to visit triends. • • • scaa A visitor at our of-Lce was the Very Rev. Gregory Rozman. With him was Rev. Aloysi-bs Z:tko of Santa Ro-Sa> California, who had c°hiG here to attend *he Golden Jubilee of Kev. Anton Merkun of Larberton, O. ® * » asm Taken to Charity Hospital last week was Josephine Suhadolnik of 505 E. 149 St. We Wish her a speedy re- COV-3l*y • • • «m Greetings arraived rom New York sent V Airs. Kosic and her Son> Rudolph. They are Visiting their son and I'other, James. Mrs. Kpsic also reports that b® became grandmo-her for the fifth time. The grand opening M 'Hill Top Tavern” 0°x place last Satur-aaV at 4100 Broadway, £omer of Dille Ave. he owners are Mrs. rank Stokar and Mrs. Lelen Vidergar. Krem Kirkland Lake, bt- .greetings were Sebt by Julia Winter bhd her husband and T°m the Clevelanders, and Mrs. John wenta ana daughter, * rances, of E. 74 St. -Visiting in Dayton, Vonaing, were Mr. bbd Mrs. John Piane-r and family, from here they send greet-£r.gs to all their Mrs. Rose L. Erste sends greetings to all her friends from Grand Rapids, Ohio, where she is spending her vacation. « c BBS A card from Yellowstone Park tells us that John E. Lokar and his family are having a grand time down there. • • • ■■n To beautiful Colorado foi a vacation went Stanley Zakrajšek of 1142 E. 76 St., and Elmer Kuhar of 5811 Bonna Ave. «• to> w HS'T'l Mt. Clemens, Mich.—-When Vincent 'M. Dunn lays down the law to his wife, Betty Jane, she throws it right back at him. The Dunn’s received their law degrees together, and both are in practice. a • a dr Augusta, Maine. — A woman nimrod bagged the biggest deer shot in Maine during 1949. Mrs. Merle Dwyer of Orient used only a single shot to set the record — a 12-point 358-pound buck. • a « nasa Chillicothe, 111. — The Fred Gauwitz family has been picking lemons off the same tree for 23 years. They tote the tree and the tub it’s rooted in down to the basement each November and up to the yard each May. a a a ksbb Hillsboro, Tex. — John Vlahakos has been dogged by bad luck so much, that he decided to take fate in his own hands. Now he has a fine, well-fed collection of stray black cats. • • • mias Knoxville, Tenn. — Court spectators laughed when the name True Blue -was called. However, Blue, who was facing a traffic charge, just smiled. His grin widened when the charge was dismissed True Blue’s name remained unblemished. Manhattan Beach, Cal. — Gary Thompson, 3, is a hero. He’s given full credit for saving the life of Mark Geary, 3, w h o toppled into a 25-ft. deep dry well. Gary ran home, fast, and told his mother. A fire department rescue squad did the rest. we* snaa Ivanhoe, Minn. — Mrs. Virgil Dorn was appointed Lincoln County Sheriff to fill the unexpired term of her late husband. Her first official act was to appoint Erwin Johnson a fulltime deputy sheriff to do ‘the rough work” and ‘‘tote the guns.” • • • am Mexico City. — Redoubled efforts will be made this year to increase the immigration of German, Italian and Autrian displaced persons to work as laborers and technicians on 'Mexico’s collective farms. • • • nm Atlanta, Ga. — Paul Lee Miller, booked for impersonating an officer, told police that he felt entitled to wear a badge because he was once “almost elected sheriff” in Oak Ridge, Tenn. • • a mm Milwaukee, Wis. — Manager Brumm of the Ritz Theatre announced that on Monday evenings, to be known henceforth as ‘Dignity Nights”,, people who insist on eating peanuts, popcorn or candy during the show will be asked to sit in a special section. • • • am Knoxville, Tenn. — A Knoxville man was charged by his wife with knocking her teeth out. “I pulled her teeth out because my hand was in her momh and she was biting me,” the defendant said. ■ • • wmm San Francisco, Calif, given a $10 fine for — Harry Truman was bumping into an auto while in a drunken state. Harry Truman is 60 years old and is no relative of President Truman. • » •» wmm Home from the hospital is Mary Ferkul of 1156 E. 74 St., who at this time would like to express her thanks to all her friends for their visits, flowers and cards. St. Vitus Church Bazaairp Carnival Sponsored by ST. VITUS CATHOLIC WAR VETERANS AUGUST 4-5-6 Friday • Saturday - Sunday Afternoon and Evening KIDDIE RIDES - REFRESHMENTS - DANCING ON AN OUTDOOR DANCE FLOOR TO LIVE POLKA MUSIC - GAMES - AMUSEMENTS ST. VITUS SCHOOL GROUNDS 62ND AND GLASS AVE. Gov. lausche Asks For Courage in Crisis LINCOLN’S BI ST IS UNVEILED IN CULTURAL GARDENS “This is no time for politics as usual.” Gov. Frank J- Lausche said Saturday at dedication ceremonies for the Abraham Lincoln Shrine in the Cultural Gardens at E. 99th Street and Superior Ave. N. E. Pleading for the subordination of pclitical partisanship in the present national crisis, Lausche said: ‘Like Lincoln, we must face unflinchingly the task Fate has set before us.” In an attack on the hoarders and price gougers, he said: ‘Although no shortages exist, greedy persons are already exacting every penny available from the nation’s emer-genc/.’ The unveiling of the bronze bust of Lincoln in the American Garden was a part of the Cultural Gardens’ 25th anniversary celebration program this week. Originated by Peter Witt Fund for the memorial was ori-nated more than 10 years ago by Peter Witt, former city councilman and civic leader and a devoted admirer of Lincoln. After Witt’s death two years ago, the fund was completed by a city appropriation. The b^ist was unveiled by Witt’s grandaughter, Miss Sally Cumins, 16080 Glynn Rd., E. Cleveland. Some Changes at the American Home As editor James Debevec has now accepted the position of editor cf Glas SDZ, additional help was necessary in our office and some changes were made as follows General Manager and English Editor: Mary Debevec; Editor-in-Chiei: Anton Sabec; Managing Editor: Frank A. Turek; Associate Editor: Vinko Lipovec. Wedding Bells Josenhine Ann Kozel, daughter of Mrs. Josephine Kozel, 6304 Carl Ave., will be married Saturday, July 29th, to Mr. Anthony I. Kuhel, son of Mrs. Mary Kuhel of 3512 E. 80 St. The wedding mass will be at 9 o’clock in St. Vitus Church and will be officiated by Rev. Louis Baznik, cousin of the bride. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the mass. Catholic War Vets Hold Bazaar-Carnival Dear Parishioners and Friends: On Friday, Saturday and Sunday afternoon and evening, August 4, 5 and 6, the Catholic War Veterans of Si. Vitus wul re-inaugurate a much, awaited event on the St. Vitus School grounas, the annual Bazaar. In the past, as you well know, the Bazaar has been one of the greatest undertakings of the year. This year the C.W.V., exercising the initiative and leadership that is characteristci of this new young organization, again put its foot forward and is co-sponsoring this event. The event this year is going to be a combination Bazaar and Carnival featuring rides for the kiddies, dancing on an outdoor dance floor to live polka music, refreshment^ to satisfy the palates of all, games to amuse the whole family —in short, not a thing has been overlooked in this three-day extravaganza. The C. W. V. of St. Vitus has devoted months of planning, work, ingenuity, expense and time to outclass and out-show anything that has ever been presented in the school yard. However, without the help and support of the parishioners and friends our work will be fruitless. In a sense, the entire parish is one family existing for the spiritual welfare of all its members. The C.W.V. is an integral unit of the parish, composed of sons, relatives and friends of people you know. When you, the parishioners and friends of St. Vitus, support us in our efforts you are not only supporting the parish church but also the functions of the C.W.V. whose motto, “For Gor and Country”, is fundamental to all our endeavors. The Catholic War Veterans, al-1 though being a young organization,! has already made itself known to the entire parish by the stirring Memorial Day services that were held in behalf of our comrades who gave their lives for us by our welfare programs to aid our less fortunate comrades and other pro-gram^, that we have projected for the future. Would it be asking too much as a member of our family to come and support your Mother Church and your C.W.V.? We sincerely hope you can attend and by attending to ths family closeness that should permeate each of us. The sooner we tealize that when we help another, we are indirectly helping the entire family and thereby contributing to the unity and integrity which makes family life wholesome. Hoping to see you' on Aug. 4, 5 and 6, we remain, FOR GOD AND COUNTRY, Catholic War Veterans, St. Vitus Post 1655 Christ the King Society To Hold Picnic Sunday All KSKJ members and their friends are cordially invited to attend the picnic on Sun., July 30, which will be sponsored by the Christ the King Society, No. 226 KSKJ. It will be held at Zgonc’s Farm Chardon and Eddy Rds. Foi those who will drive out, signs will be posted along the way. For more information call our president Ulrich Lube, EX 1-5344, our secretary Mary Zupancich, EX-1-4767, or the undersigned. One and all are invited. There will be music for your listening and oancing pleasure and plenty of refreshments, both liquid and solid. Don’t forget tne date, Sunday, July 30th, at Zgonc’s Farm. Josephine Trunk, vice-pres. Phone: EN 1-7625 Did you ever hear of the story of the youngest bank robber in the annals of American crime? Leader of a gang of young hoodlums in a gulfport Texas town, he was a bqy just eight and one-half years old. When he soloed a bank job, rifling the till of a Texa? bank, he was arrested. He could have been sent to jail for life. Instead, he was sent to Father Flanagan’s Boys Town out on the Nebraska prairies. The most beloved clergyman of our times, known for his faith in the goodness of boys the world calls bad, told the story at a convention of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. For that junior gangster and confessed bank robber turned out to be a pretty tough customer at Boys Town. He broke every rule in the book. The kid from Texas was so bad an influence on the other boys at Boys Town that Father Flanagan was just about ready to give up. Then, one day, the little Texan came to Father Flanagan to ask, “Father, why do the other boys go to chapel?” “The other boys go to chapel to pray,” said the kindly man in black, telling the little fellow about the power of a sincere prayer, the faith in brotherhood among men and fatherhood of the Lord. “Father,” whispered the little tough guy, “I think I’d like to pray too.” Then Father Flanagan knew that he had found his boy. Deep beneath the hard-boiled exterior of a little rebel, he had found the heart and soul of a frightened little boy who didn’t realy want to be bad. “There is no such thing as a bad boy,” said Father Flanagan, over and over again, until it became the touchstone of his philosophy for handling young folks. Boys, like adults, are conditioned by the influences around them. But responsibility for waywardness goes to such bad influences, not to the boys who are shaped by them. And love and faith and understanding go a long way in reclaiming any lad who has started off wrong. That faith Father Flanagan never abandoned in the life journey that started in Roscommon, Ireland, and ended in the rubble of postwar Berlin. ST. VUGS HOLS MIIKl ^ekhj ~Revleuyj ST. VITUS POST CATHOLIC WAR VETS FlaismaiTs Take Over Tavern The Highland-Bishop Tavern in Highland Heights, has just been takefi over by Al & Pep Flais-man, popular young couple from Cleveland^ Al being formerly in the police department 7 years and Pep very popular in social life. Watch for the grand opening. Slovenian Golf Tourney There is still time to get in the Slovenian Golf Tournament which will be held Sunday, July 30th at Lost Nation Golf Course. First Prize is the Gov. Frank J. Lausche trophy. Scratch and Handicap in all the classes A,B O. and Ladies.. Everyone has a chance — all Slovenians are welcome. We would like to have some out-of-town golfers form Girard, Lorain, or South Side and E. 80th St. From Barberton we have 16 entries, 12 men and 4 ladies. Send entries to Mike Zlate, 662 E. 140 St., MU 1-9160 or evenings MU 1-8430 or you just come out to the Golf Course anytime from 7 a.m. to i:30 p.m. Spectators are welcome. There will be refreshments, too. BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Tony Zakrajšek, well known funeral director, are the happy parents of a baby girl, born last Saturday in Lutheran Hospital. The young mother is the former Josephine Petrie. Wedding Bells Saturday, July 29th at 10:30 a.m. at St. Mary’s Church, the marriage of Miss Ethel Katona and Mr. Stanley Trampuš will be celebrated. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Trampuš of 15626 Holmeg Ave., and the bride is the daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Katona. Fiends and relatives are invited to attend the Mass. Ou Saturday, August 5th, in St. Christine’s Church at 9 a. m. Miss Alice Vogrin of Arbor Ave., Euclid. O., will be married to Mr. Edward Dragolicli, son of the well-known family cf Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dragolich of Brazil Road. Being married at St. J erome’s Church, Saturday, August 5th at 10:30 o’clock are Miss Mary Pauline Sever of 15301 Ridpath Ave., and Mr. Norman Anthony Fuerst, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Fuerst of 14931 Shore Acres Drive. FOR GOD FOR COUNTRY FOR HOME SUNDAY COMMUNION On Sunday, July 30, the Catholic War Veterans of St. Vitus will attend the 8:00 o’clock Mass and receive Communion in a body. All members should make a sincere effort and try to be present. Attendance at this function has not been whai it should be. Our Bazaar and Carnival is coming up and this is a good way to ask God’s help and guidance for success. On Tuesday, Aug. 1st, all members of the Catholic War Veterans of St. Vitus are urged to be present at our club rooms in the school. Time is getting short and we need help to assemble the stands and various other things. Most of the work has been, done but we can not stop now. Every member is urged to be there. Only thru the unity of the whole organization will we achieve complete success. ANTONIO CIMPERMAN Historian FAREWELL SCUIAL The St. Vitus Parishioners are invited to attend a ‘Farewell Social” to be held on Sunday, July 30, at 8-00 p.m. in the St. Vitus School Hall in honor of Father Baraga who is leaving on a Holy Year Tour. A Buffet Supper will be served. The above is being sponsored by the St. Vitus Parish Organizations. Sodality New« ‘On a picnic we will go, ’cause it’s summer time you know, and we love to spend our Sundays in the park.” These words of a current hit tune seem especially appropriate for us Juniors Sodalists, for we did spend last July 16th on a farm, if not in a park! Yessiree, two Sundays ago, the Juniors, by invitation of the gracious Seniors, had the time of their lives at De-beveo.’s Farm in Madison, Ohio. At about 10:00 the bus left old St. Vitus grounds and we were on our way! The ride there was spent between singing our lungs out and reading the latest in Donald Duck. (Courtesy of Jack Omersa and Mary Lou Avsec, who brought along enough reading material to supply us comfortably for the rest of the day.) Upon arrival we immediately sat down to eat what remained of our lunches after they had been bounced oft our heads a few times, having been foolish enough to put them on top of the bus, where they were so stationarily settled, especially when we hit a. bump! We next ventured into the wild unknown of the woods behind the farm house. What a time we had! Being “city slickers” we had no idea of how to scale, a cliff that seemed to us to be perfectly vertical. Thru a mess of wet leaves, mud, rotten deadwood, and treacherous looking locks, we finally emerged singing ‘It’s the good old city lor me!” The Seniors and a few Juniors (Nettie Naglic, Joanie Zak, Florence Miklavič, Barbara Prosek and Dolores Paik) . . must have had feminine intuition of what it was like, for they stayed comfort’qaly on their blankets, and only stopped to look up and laugh upon our disheveled appearance. “To the lake” was the next cry heard, and tho we had not as yet recovered from our first exploit, we packed our bathing suits, and trudged on, only to discover we had m go down the same hill we had so laboriuosly come up, in order to get to good old Grand River. But ‘never say die” is our motto, and, feeling like many Florence Nightingales’ entering the Crimean Was, we slid rather than climbed down. The water was cold, as Polly Poklar and Julie Mlakar discovered after they had been ducked in it; courtesy of fr. Baraga,, Larry Per, Mary Paiuso and Connie Trunk. Madeleme Grdina got all wet too, trying to play ball in the river with rolled up shorts! Mary Lou Avsec, Lil upancic, Molly Mlakar, Darlene Smole, Marylin Zakrajšek ,and Carol Modic were pleasant by-standers not having brought along their bathing suits. They surprised everyone later by announcing that they had scaled the big hill seven times! Yeeks! Jackie Omersa lost her bathing shoe on the bottom somewhere. Carol Fink declared herself ready for lifeguarding, having accomplished the feat of teaching both Jackie Omersa and Mitzi Arko how to float. Connie Trunk astonished everyone by waltzing to “Down by the Old Mill Stream” in the water. Margie Per caused a few laughs when she discovered Ole Sol had played a trick on her by burning her La spots instead of all over! A spot on the thign, streak on the calf; that’s Margie! All of Gerry Hrovat’s girl friends she had brought along got together and taught her how to float. Miry, Mugsy and Beverly declared they were plumb tuckered out after that! After sunning ourselves awhile, we went back up to join the games. Egg throwing, marshmellows on a string and bail were among them. Our evening ended with a weiner roast, coffee, pop, cake and whatever else you wanted to eat. We were finally all settled in the bus and on our way back home. We want to thank all the Seniors for the wonderful time we had, and we’ie sorry for all our noisiness nad rowdiness. Girls will be girls, you know! JEANNE JUNIOR Farmers Planting Roses for Fences Fails Creek, Pa. — Farms in this area will be a lot more pleasant to look at this year. Almost 50 mile.-, of live fiowerbearing fences will be planted. That will require 250,000 multi fJora rose plants which will be set out one foot apart on line fences and field boundaries. The farmers say the primary purpose is soil conservation, not beauty. They say another factor which is making the ilower-bearing fences more and more popular is that they will last for years and will provide shelter for birds, rabbits and ether small game. Polka Poppa WHI Be Featured Al Euclid Vets Carnival Hipp Shows “Cariboo Trail” Action, historical fare is promised by the Hippodrome Theatre with its next announced attraction, ‘THE CARIBOO TRAIL” due to open on August 2nd. Starring Randolph Scott with George “Gabby” Hayes as co-star, and filmed in the naturally hued tints of Cinecolor, “CARIBOO TRAIL” represents another major outdoor drama from Nat Holt. Holt’s policy is to invest his offering with as much of the sheer spectacle and breath-taking beauty of the great outdoors as possible. He feels audiences of western-laid films expect this. In “THE CARIBOO TRAIL” the veteran producer has admitted his attempt to outdo himself. When actual .ocation shooting in the British Columbian Cariboo country proved unfeasible, Holt settled on similar country along the Continental Divide in the Colorado Rockies for principal shooting. The drama Holt staged in front Ces Somrack" 'Resid'ence'^at When the Euclid Veteran’s Club East 185th-Montfcrey Service, Dre-stages its Fourth Annual Festival nik’s L and K Service and Euclid-at the Slovenian Society Home Race. Grounds (American Yugoslav Center) Friday, Saturday and Sunday, July 28, 29 and 30, Collin-wood’s Kenny Bass will be celebrating an anniversary and homecoming. Last year’s great event sponsored by the Euclid Veteran’s gave Kenny a great boost in his radio work. Especially in going so far to become known as Cleveland’s ‘“Polka Poppa” from his wide association with Station WSRS. So well received was his initial appearance from the Festival Grounds in 1949, that the Vets, Kenny and WSRS, along with com-mecial sponsors, have worked out 6 shows direct irom the Festival Grounds for this year. Tonight, July 28th, the Official Opening of the Festival with a giant Street Dance, will find Bass at the WSRS mike along with Pete Sokaeh and his Orchestra. Chester Budn/ and his rapidly rising Polka Bana hit the airwaves with Ken at 9:30. Then Saturday morning, (July 29) as part of his ‘anniversary party”, Kenny will present his Polka Disc Sho w from the main stage 10:30 a. m to 12:00 noon. During this time, request tunes will be played and fun seekers interviewed as they look over the Vet’s Fourth Festival. Being kiddies Day, Ken will have a great deal to talk about with the younger set. Another record show at 3:35 p.m. on Saturday and then Johnny Vadnal from 8:00 to 8:30 over WSRS from the Festival. Sunday afternoon, the Family Station is turning over the 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. spot to the Veteran’s and Kenny as a friendly gesture to a grand group of fellows. During that hour, Ken will appear with Jim Doney ,the man that gave a most welcome helping hand in solving the problems confronting a “rookie” mike man. Ken’s no rookie today, only because he has had confidence in himself and accepted advice from the more experienced radio men with whom he v. orks. That hour on Sunday, July 30, will find Doney introducing Frank J. Lausche, Governor of Ohio. Later in the evening Ken will round out his “homecoming and anniversary”, chattering with Johnny Pecon and his Polka Kings as a climax to the Festival. A life - long resident of the Northeast area, Kenny has been musically inclined since early teen days He started off as a guitarist, later took up the bass which served as a sort of stepping stone in his rise to a radio announcer and Cleveland's most popular Polka Disc Jockey. A graduate ot Collinwood High he served with Uncle Sam’s Navy, receiving his discharge from the service in 1945. although his musical career was curtailed somewhat while a ‘gob,” he didn’t waste time in striking the right Feathers”. The chorus of trained voices numbers about VO, some of them from the Bell Telephone, Czech and Jewish Singing Societies; the enlarged orchestra of 24 includes members of the Cleveland Symphony Crchestra. The stage sets are designed and created by Gerard L. Gentile, and dances are arranged by Eleonore Buchla. DEATH NOTICES Bolon, John — Husband of Mary, fathe' of Joseph, stepfather of the following in Cleveland: Sam Pa-pesh Mary Zupančič, Anna Tusek, Eva Verderbar, Angela Ledenican, and in New York: John Papesh. Residence in Midvale, Ohio. Ebeiwein, Frank — Husband of Anna ( nee Blai, formerly Lukach-ko), »father of Angela Gribbons (Grebenc), Mane Paynich, Raymond, stepfather of John, Joseph, Harry Lukachko, William Globokar, Anna Svete, Margaret, Josephine. (Former residence on Arbor Ave.)) Late residence at 740 Main St., Madison, O. Geromi, John, Jr. Son of John and Mary (nee Rupar), brother of Ann Trebar, Mary Jane, Diane. Residnece at 1059 E. 67 St. Jaksetic, Mike.--Brother of Frank, Thomas, (in Pa.) Katherine, Johanna, Joseph, John, Matt (in Europe). Residence in Kane, Pa. Kapudja, Gus — Husband of Theresa, father of Gus (father of j aged to get in, despite Lou’s insisting that the blinds should be drawn and closed all tne time. More about that argument later. But the biggbst attraction, I think, were the two big windows, from whence a full view of the door to the Administration Building was possible. Lots oi interesting things went on around the door of Du Bourg Hall. Lots of interesting things went on along Grand Ave., and we had a lovely view of the entire block from West Pine Blvd. to Lmdell Blvd. We used to hang out the windows every evening at about five and watch the traffic jam, where the drivers would get caught at a red light at West Pine, then they would line up for miles before the light changed. As soon as the light turned green, they would dive forward madly, only to get caught at the ted light at Lindell. However, here was the rub, there wasn’t enough room on the block for all the miles of jammed traffic to move the Past West Pine, so about thirteen cars weald fill the block, and the rest of them would have to stay at West Pine. By the time the Lindell light turned green, the W. Pine light was green again, so about half of the cars that had originally been lined up at West Pine woula have to sit there thru two red lights. We, watching from above could almost hear what the drivers were thinking!!! On Saturday mornings, we would lars in the red, by enforcing economies. B/ the way, in connection with | this ‘horrendous deficit spending” Wall Street bankers talk about in their clubs the deficit this year wouid have been three, hundred million dollars except for the G.I. GERTRUDE SORSEK Cor. of Wade Park and Addison Charles & Olga Slapnik FLOWER SHOP FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS C026 St. Clair Ave.—EX 1-2134 Larchmont Rd. of these scenic highlights is one of both a cattle drive and a gold rush. In the fabulous wilderness country known as the Cariboo, some of the most rugged mountain and woodland country on the continent, Holt has uncovered a previously untold epic of the Pacific Northwest. It depicts the conflict between those The President of the University who seek to exploit a land for gold , came in about four-fifteen, the day and those who believe in the land ‘ that we held operi house, and, in and the wonders it can produce, for surplice and white stole, read the the lasting wealtn it can provide a “house - blessing” prayers, and nation. Randolph Scott, pre-eminently the favorite among movie fans ad- a rS" Vetek\v teV6T Tho?ias’! stand by the windows and watch +w^a „-f 11*16 wedding parties going in and out of the College Church, across the street on the corner. Even the maid would come in to watch. I remember one Saturday, when someone she knew was getting married, and sne came into our room to watch. I wa?n’t in at the time, and when I came in and found her, she asked my permission to stay until the wedding party was in. “Sure,” I said.” “You know,” she went on, “when I Was thinking of a good place from where to watch the wedding, the first thing I mought was “Wally’s room’. This is the best place in the house to watch the other side of the street from.” “I know,” I said, laughing, “and I think the rest of the floor does too.’” On Sundays, we would sit with the windmys discreetly closed, and laugn at the Clemens Hall boys as they ran into each other all day. The early-Mass-goers, coming back from breakfast, would meet the late - Mass - goers; these, coming back, would com 3 across the early lunchers, etc, all day, with the late-lunchers, early - afternoon-snack eaters, late-afternoon-snack eaters, early-dinner eaters, late-dinner eat- ther of Pauline, Josephine, Milan. Residence at JOY, 1 Lindbergh Ave. Mahnič, Frank — Husband of Stephanie (nee Ban), father of Harold. Resident at 10306 Reno Ave. Sternen, Albin A. — Husband of Dorothy, father of Albin Jr., Carol, son of Robert and Frances (nee Jurjavcic), brother of Edward, Frances Debelak, Gladys Nosse, Margaret Inman, Helen Sirna, Josephine Lappin. Residence at Mentor, O. Velikaz, Mary (nee Bencina) — Wife of Albert, mother of Albert Jr., Mrs. Antonia Struna of Joliet, 111., sister of Johanna of W. Va. Residence at 1007 E. 64 St. Volcansek, Frank — Husband of Anna (nee Champa), father of Mary Lou, brother of Michael, Fran- 1467 THE FRIENDLY FLORIST Flowers For All Occasions insurance refund to veterans of two 1454 Addison Road EN 1-3295 billion eight hundred million dollars. This Korean fighting will be costly in money and in lives and our i expenditures for our armed forces will be much higher during the current fiscal year. OF TRANSCENDENT IMPORTANCE It is evident that expenditures for 3ur Armed Forces must be in- j creased. It is a fact that there must be a slash — a cutting to the bone — of all non-military Federal, expen-ditux es. This is imperative— of the utmost importance. NEW STATES If this Congress remains in session until August 31st as now appears ^imintniiiDHiiiiiiiiioiiiiinniiaiwiwiiiiuiimiiiiiioiiiiimiig 1 YOU CAN’T MATCH A 1FRJGIDAIRE j a Buy the Best, buy a I FRIGIDAIRE I NORWOOD I jAPPLIANCE& FURNITURE! 1 6202 ST. CLAIR AVE. 1 5 iuiiiniC3miiiimiir3iiiiuiimiaimimriur3i!i)immiC3iiiinnmii< NOTICE You can pay Gas, Water, Electric and Telephone bills every day at tne office of: M1HALJEV1CH BROS. COMPANY 6424 ST. CLAIR AVENUE With our Special Money Orders you can pay all other bills, such as doctors, probable, there are likely hospitals, rents, stores, etc. to be two new slates, Alaska and Hawaii. The Senate Interior Committee has already approved the House passed bill granting statehood to these territories. Boyd Accuses Ferguson Chapter Three and a Half K0LLEGE KAPERS with Isabel water. He also went down the halls ’ ers> eai'ly-evening snack boys, late-sprinkled our munge with holy! evdning-snack beys, ar.d, incident- water on both floors, and sprinkled dieted to westerns, has the pivotal j the rest of the house that way. role of a cattle man, with the per-rennial favorite Gabby Hayes as his sidekick. Edwin L. Marin directed “THE CARIBOO TRAIL,” Harry Howard serving as Associate Producer. The screenplay was written by Frank Gruber from a story by John Rhodes Sturdy, and the film is being released by Twentieth Century-Fox. “THE CARIBOO TRAIL” opens at the Hippodrome Theatre, August 2nd 1950. Cain Park Theatre We had been warned, of course, to take down any washing that might be hanging on the portable racks around the place, and that we had to have our rooms in order, and ready to be judged for the prettiest. Lou and I were hoping that they would start on the third floor, near our room, because the afternoon sun was just peeping in when they started, and the pink looked chereful and the green looked pleasant and the tan looked warm and cozy. This made the whole room inviting, but if they came up later, I was afraid that the sun would be gone and the green would look sour and the pink would look dull and the tan would look drab. Combining the comic Czech folktale with the beautiful Smetana music, ‘THE BARTERED BRIDE*’ is presented as this summer’s final production at Cain Park Theatre, August 1 thru 12, omitting Sunday . JustoUr luck (wouldn’t you know and Monday. lt?^! Father F. and Father Luke, The hilarious story of life in the w^° were the 'udges, both started 1850 s in a Bohemian village fol- on tne second floor, (on opposite lows the difficulties of Kozal, a an(t then went up the back marriage - broker, in arranging a waY^ (they met somewhere in the betrothal between the peasant girl, and came down the third Marenka, and the son of a wealthy j^oor hsU towaras the front, mak-landowner. om room second last! -By the Vernon Hammond, Director of ^rne ^ was Lv- ‘ thirty, and the the American Opera Co., comes sun was Sone- from Philadelphia to be Musical We dld Set ?ome compliments, Director of “Bride”, and brings though’ Father Luke liked the; note after becoming a civy once! with him his own translation of slnk’ and he also liked the catty-1 again He joined Jimmy KozeTs the story from the original. The' cornef beds facing the door. “So1 Umc. in Aj, then later became as-1 entire production is under the di- you can come in< and whoosh! just sociated with Pete Sokaeh and section of Dr. Benno Frank, whose! fal1 ri§kt onf° fke bed?” Father1 Eddie Habat and the “Tune-mix- j spectacular ‘Midsummer ’Night’s i Bannon’who waj everY bit as hand* ! ers.” Up until that time, Kenny Dream” opened the Cain Theatre ' some as Lou bad said> was in while ' was known as Pete but ‘Uncle Nick” ! season this year. | we bad son>e sunshine left, and! Maiovit changed all that. He1 Beverly Dame, recently seen in! he 3aid we did a very neat job on couldn’t see two. members of an the New York company of “The tke cecorating- He liked the sink orchestra answenng to Pete — so J Medium”, will leave for Rome to skirr> too- it occame Kenny Bass. “Uncle make a moving picture of that play j There was another compensation after she completes the leading role I f°r n°f winning the prize. Our of Marenka, William Boehm takes r°om was still the best room in the a two-week leave of absence from house, even if the judges didn’t singing at the Alpine Village to Hunk so. At least, it was the best ally, boys just out to pick up their dates I know that doesn’t sound abnormal, for most healthy American boys eat 7 or 8 times a day, but it was the way they met rather than the fact that they met, that was funny to watch. I accuse my fellow Democrat, State Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson, of playing politics with the proposed Ohio Turnpike. Ferguson has refused to honor highway department vouchers to pay engineers surveying the Turnpike. The Turnpike law provides that the State Highway Department shall pay for preliminary surveys, until the Turnpike Commission can issue bonds and obtain its own funds. I agree with Highway Director Kauer that Attorney General Duffy should cite Ferguson for contempt of court for defying the Ohio Supreme Court order. Ferguson has neglected to concern himself with the law and his actions are designed to gain publicity for his campaign for the U. S. Senate. So now I ass:, shall one man stand in the way of the wishes of the people as expressed by the Ohio Legislature, the Governor, and the Ohio Supreme Court? As chairman of the Senate Highway Committee, 1 want to emphasize that Fergusc n’s refusal to honor the vouchers continued after the ba?rvXMdthea?esatnofththe0group Stat6 Supreme Court upheld the le- stopped to watch The other would reply with a cuff on the ear. Then a small battle would ensue, (not very rough, of course, since they had their Sunday clothes on) which the others would watch for a minute or two, and then hastily stop, ere ^he Jebbies came out. The Jebbies were interesting to watch too, as they went in and out, and we used to make a game of picking out who was who without looking too colsely. The idea was to see if you could tell by the way he walks, or carries himself, rather than by looking at his face.' So, you see, our big windows were the features of the room and we used them to the full Love, ISABEL Nick' ’was a real radio pal to Kenny and when ‘Nick” signed off his Slovenian Hour on WSRS, Bass filled in. Today Kenny averages eight shows per week ever WSRS, many of them originating from various entertainment .-.pots in Greater Cleveland. But Ken isn’t the only member of the family in the musical spotlight. Sisters Helen and Carol, are giving brother something to talk about with their tuneful renditions over the air-waves and on records. They will be on hand when Ken celebrates his 3-day homecoming to Euclid and first “success” anniversary over the WSRS air lanes from the Euclid Vets Festival, July 28, 29 and 30th. Commercial sponsors lined up for the three big broadcast days, include: Lakeland Motors, Shyne, enact the comedy role of Vashek. Regular Cain Park Theatre audiences will remember him in “Vagabond King”, “Knickerbocker Holiday”, “Of Thee 1 Sing”, and many other musicals. Kezal will be played by Phillip MacGregor, a concert artist of great ability, who has performed this same role under the baton of Bor’s Goldovsky at the Berkshire Mus;c Festival. Other members of the cast include Rhita Worth, last seen in the Cain Park production of - New Moon”, Irene Beamer, who alternated with Zel-ma George as the Medium at Ka-ramu Theatre last winter, and Max Wittman, star of the Playhouse for the purposes for which I wanted it You see, i didn’t want just a place to stick my bed and keep my clothes. I wanted a place where the rest of the girls in the dorm would like to congregate for a gab I test once in a while. For this, my room was ideal, probably in a large measure because it was the biggest on the floor. It was big enough to hold ten or twelve people without too much crowding, despite the beds and the dresses. Most of the other rooms were full when the beds and dressers were in. We had left-over space. Besides this, the room had plenty of window space for the late after STRAIGHT FROM WASHINGTON show, “Hope is the Thing With noon sunshine, which I always man- . By STEPHEN M. YOUNG Ohio (Jonsressman-at-Lart* Washington. — Your government has been paying out solely because of Communist aggression, Soviet Union cold war tactics, infiltration and unprovoked attacks m various parts of Europe and Asia more money each day than the combined government outlay during the Civil War, Spanish-American War and World War 1. Ye’, there are those who claim it would be simple to balance the budget, presently 3-1/10 billion dol- gality of the pa; ments. Ferguson’s original action in refusing the payments caused the question to be brought before the Supreme Court a few months ago. The Turnpike bill, passed by overwhelming majority in the De-mociatic-controlled House and Senate is a progressive move to supply a great Ohio highway need. Governor Frank Lausche gave the bill L's whole-hearted support. After four years of deliberation, the people of Ohio thru their legislature demanded the building ol this highway. Ferguson, and Ferguson alone has be«’h resposible for the delay of the construction of the Ohio Turnpike. Ferguson has been hindering the progress by putting his own selfish interests over and above the welfare of the people. -------0------- Lifetime of Service Mansfield, O. Howard B. Dirlam, 94, has hung up a record of service in one job for ail comers to shoot at. He is beginning his 72d year as secretary, of the Mansfield Building and Loan Association. Office hours: 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. GALE FLORAL and GIFT SHOPPE “YOUR SLOVENIAN FLORIST” WEDDINGS — FUNERALS CORSAGES — GIFTS — BOUQUETS 317 East 156 St. — KE - 1 - 4717 Free Delivery. FRANK RICH, Prop. 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