AFRICAN IN SPIRIT POR€IGH IN LANGUAGE ONLY SLOV6NIAN MORNING N€WSPAP€R NO. 40 CLEVELAND 3. O., FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 26, 1954 ŠTEV- LIV —VOL. LIV Trije Slovenci ubiti v avtomobilskih nesrečah; dva izmed teh sla bila novonaseljenca Ironija usode je hotela, da je vozil avtomobil, ki je smrtno zadel protikomunistična Slovenca, bivši—Titov vojak. Na zapadni strani mesta pa je bila smrtno povožena Slovenka Mrs. šeme. četrtek, je pri tem pa je bilo to, da je bila v fant pribrzel skozi rdečo luč. — Če bi se bil pred lučjo ustavil, kot bi se moral, bi ne bilo te nesreče. Razgled po Euclidu MICHAEL J. BOICH councilman 3. varde poročevalec CLEVELAND. — V zjutraj okoli dveh. sta Clevelandu do smrti povožena dva Slovenca, novonaseljenca; ironija usode je hotela, da je tudi voznik avtomobila, ki ju je povozil, prišel komaj pred tremi leti tudi iz Jugoslavije. Mrtva sta: VICTOR POGAČAR, 44 let star, ki je bil na mestu ubit, ko je stopal preko 55. ceste in Marquette St. Pogačar je stanoval na 6424 Spilker Ave. JOSEPH SLAK, 42 let star in stanujoč na 1193 E. 60 St., ki jei umrl deset minut po prevozu v St. Vincent Charity bolnišnico. Na zapadni strani mesta, na Lorain Ave. in W. 130 St., pa je bila ubita od avtomobila Mrs. Susan šeme, stanujoča na 3616 W. 130 St. Pogačar in Slak sta prebila več let v nemških koncentracijskih taboriščih. Oba sta si želela priti in živeti v Ameriki, dokler se jima je končno želja izpolnila. Pogačar je prišel v to deželo pred petimi leti, Slak pa pred dvemi. Ko sta hotela preko ceste, po vsej priliki nista videla avtomobila, ki je drvel proti njima. Avtomobil, ki ju je ubil, je vozil 29-letni Robert Krainovich s 1548 E. 49 St, ki je bil kot Titov vojak (partizan) v bojih ranjen, ž njim sta bila v avtomobilu dva tovariša - delavca; vsi skupaj so bili na poti domov iz Fisher Body tovarne v Euclidu. Krainovich je dejal, da sta se nenadoma pojavila v temi dva človeka pred njegovim avtomobilom. Hotel je zavreti voz in obrniti avto, toda bilo je že prepozno. Pogačar je bil vržen ob stran. Slaka pa. je vlekel avto 30 čevljev daleč. — Policija je Kraino-vicha po zaslišanju izpustila. , WASHINGTON. — Rečeno Glede smrtno ponesrečenih jej da je W1 armadni tajnik Ste_ rojakov Victorja Pogačarja in veniS na mog začuden, ko je sli-Josepha Slaka nam poroča Mr. | »a)^ da nekateri tolmačiti ter prikazati njegov sestanek s EUCLID. — Mestna zbornica je odobrila najem posojila v vsoti $150,000 za upravne izdatke. Posojilo je bilo odobreno v pričakovanju davčnih kolekcij. Zbornica je tudi razpravlala o zemljiščih oz. parcelah za domove v velikosti 60 čevljev. Kaj več bo tozadevno odločeno na seji meseca marca. župan Kenneth Sims in administracijski direktor Michael Spino delujeta zdaj na programu za prekritje asfaltnih cest v Euclidu. število cest, ki se jih bo preasf alti ralo, bo odvisno od tozadevnih razpoložljivih denarnih sredstev. Stevens pravi, da si McCarthy ne more lastiti zmage Armadni tajnik Stevens menda ne bo šel brezbrižno mimo te zadeve. — Kaj bo storil, ni znano. Anton Grdina naknadno še sledeče: Oba sta bila samska in člana Društva Priesv. Srca Jezusovega. Za življenja sta bila velika prijatelja, zato bosta imela tudi skupen pogreb, ki bo jutri, v soboto, iz Grdinovega pogrebnega zavodda v cerkev sv. Vida ob desetih in od tam na pokopališče Kalvarijo, kjer bosta pokopana v skunem grobu. Na domu na W. 130 St. pa je Anton šeme tiho pripravljal zajtrk zase in za svojega sina, 36 let starega Williama. — Drug njegov sin Frank, ki je star 38 senatorjem McCarthy jem kot senatorjevo zmago in njegov — (Stevensov) poraz. Nek vir, ki noče biti imenovan, je izjavil, da je rekel Stevens po reakciji, ki jo je izzval njegov sestanek s senatorjem, da s tem sestankom “ni bilo slu-ženo najboljšim interesom dežele.” Isti vir ve povedati, da tajnik Stevens ne čuti, da je kapituliral pred senatorjem, ki mu je Obljubil, da se v bodoče ne bo poniževalo in žalilo častnikov tekom zasliševanj. “Za to ob Pojasnilo državnega tajnika Dullesa EGIFTSKI NAGUIB JE ODSTOPIL Hotel je imeti avtokratsko diktatorsko oblast, katere mu Revolucionarni svet ni hotel dovoliti. Državni tajnik Dulles je pojasnil ameriškemu ljudstvu potek in rezultate berlinske konference, kjer je bil Molotov prisiljen pokazati karte sovjetske igre. - Sklep za konferenco v Ženevi je bil storjen z odprtimi očmi. Dullesov govor je oddajal radio Glas Amerike v 33 jezikih v komunistične in nekomunistične države sveta. WASHINGTON.. — Državni smo bili izmanevrirani v Berli-tajnik Dulles je v sredo zvečer nu.” povedal po radiu in televiziji a- meriškemu ljudstvu, da bo Rde-KAIRO. Egipt. — Mohamed ča Kitajska poklicana na odgo- Naguib, “železni mož” in pred- vor ‘za svoja dejanja pred fo- sednik Egipta, je pred štirimi rum javnega mnenja” na ženev- dnevi podal ostavko na svoj položaj, ker mu ni bila dovoljena “absolutna diktatorska oblast”. Uradno poročilo je zdaj prlvi- ski konferenci. Dulles je odločno pobil kot ne-osnovane govorice, da je v sporazumu za ženevsko konferenco, komunisti bodo sedeli na tej konferenci zato, ker se bo na njej razpravljalo o miru v Koreji in Indokini. krat naznanilo, da generel Na- ki se bo pričela 26. aprila, vse-guib ni bil leta 1952 dejanski v o- kovano tudi diplomatsko prizna-ditelj državnega udara, radi ka- nje Rdeče Kitajske. Kitajski ter ega je moral kralj Farouk v izgnanstvo. Pravi voditelj tega udara, pravi uradno poročilo, je bil Gamal Abdel Nasser, ki je nasledil Naguibu kot premier in predsednik Revolucionar, koncila. Mesto predsednika bo ostalo izpraznjeno, dickler se ne bodo vršile nove volitve. Vsi sedanji ministri ostanejo, Nasser pa bo nadomestil Naguiba. Poročilo dalje naznanja, da je Naguib podal ostavko na vse svoje ipcložaje, katero je koncil sprejel. Resigniral je, ker mu Mr. Dulles je rekel, da je dosegla mesec dni trajajoča konferenca z Molotovom dva rezultata, ki bosta izvajala velik vpliv na bodočnost”. Molotov je bil prisiljen, pokazati “roko Sovjetije v Evropi, da so lahko vsi videli, da Sovjetija to, kar ima v svoji pesti, trdo drži in da hoče pograbiti še več, če mogoče.” “Moja pozicija glede Kitajske je bila jasno očrtana, tako da ni moglo biti nikakega nesporazuma o njej,” je rekel Mr. Dulles. Berlinscka konferenca je do- Razne drobne norice iz Clevelanda in te okolice Ostro je ukoril vse kritike, ki j kazala zapadnim zun. ministrom pravijo, da boi navzočnost Kitaj-j in vsemu svetu, da so vse mehke ctev v Ženevi privedla do prizna- besede Sovjetije v njeni zunanji nja njihovega režima. Ne bodo prišli po čast “Takšna kritika hoče pripisati komunistom uspeh, katerega niso mogli doseči v Berlinu,” je rekel državni tajnik. V svojem govoru ki ga je oddajal tudi “Glas Amerike politiki, ki jih slišimo po Stalinovi smrti, navadna farsa in utvara, — je rekel Dulles. Nato je Dulles povedal, da so pogoji za ženevsko konferenco isti kot pogoji, na katere je že prej pristal korejski predsednik Rhee, čigar vlada je zdaj izjavi- je bila odklonjena oblast, o kateri pravi koncil, da bi “vrgla da ponekod v tej deželi nekoli-deželo nazaj v avtokracijo.” | ko konfuzije o tem, kaj se je Nasser, ki je bil uradno Nagu- P^v za prav v Berlinu zgodilo. komunistične in nekomunistične la, da pomeni ženevska konferen-dežele, je Dulles priznal, da via- ca zmago za Sovjete. ibov podpredsednik, je dovolil Naguibu prevzem vodstva Revolucionarnega koncila, to pa je šlo slednjemu tako v glavo, da si je pričel prilaščati vse zasluge za državni udar in vso moč, naznanja komunike. Naguib,je resigniral, ko mu je Revoluc. svet odrekel pravico vetiranja njegovih (Svetovih) odlokov, pravico imenovanja in. odstavljanja ministrov in pravico poviševanja armadnih častnikov. Poznejša poročila naznanjajo-, da je bil Naguib postavljen pod hišni zapor. Ostanimo budni! “Jaz ne zametujem v celoti i-deje, da si Sovjetska zveza dejansko želi miru v Aziji. Mi u-pamo tako in bomo kmalu videli, kako in kaj. Medtem pa ostanimo' budni in čuječi! “Nobenega vzroka pa ni, da bi Odsotnost azijskih “nevtralcev” Dulles je poudaril, da ne bo na tej azijski konferenci nikakih “nevtralcev”, ki jih je hotela imeti Sovjetija. “V Berlinu smo uravnali vse te stvari’', je rekel Mr. Dulles. “Sporazumeli -smo' se, da se bo konferenca vršila v Ženevi, kar smo že davno predlagali, in da bo njena kompozicija ali sestava odklanjali mirne razgovore iz natančno taka, kakor so jo pred-strahu, da bomo izmanevrirani. lagale Združene države, Južna ob mirovni mizi. Noben infer-1 Koreja in organizacija Združe-miran -opazovalec ne misli, da1 nih narodov.” svoji kontroverzi z armadnim tajnikom Stevensonom popolno zmago. Po razgovoru s senatorjem McCarthyjem je tajnik let, živi na 14100 Gramatan Ave.. ij,uk0 so bile na mestu koncesi-Zene, s katero je bil Anton Šeme' poročen 40 let, ni bilo več. . . Ko je namreč izstopila zvečer iz busa na W. 130. cesti ter pričela stopati preko ceste, jo je za-^el avtomobil, katerega je vozil hek mladenič, kije bil komaj ne-^aj nad 16 let star. Še žalosne- je od moje strani,” je baje rekel tajnik Stevens. Bistroumen fant FORT HOOD, Tex. Revolta armade v Siriji; - raseg radijske postaje Armada je revoltirala proti ‘‘ljudskemu rablju”, generalu in predsedniku Adibu Shisheklyju. BEIRUT, Libanon. — Dne 25. februarja je rebelirala armada ter zasegla radijsko postajo v Aleppo, ki je drugo največje mesto v Siriji. Revolucionarji so pozvali vso deželo, naj se pri-' stopiti pred odborom, naj eno-druži njihovemu uporu proti stavno ignorirata poziv), “ljudskemu rablju,” predsedni- Sen. McCarthy je v svojem sporu z armadnim tajnikom Stevensom izvojeval popolno zmago WASHINGTON. — Senator časnikarjev, katerim je senator McCarthy je izvojeval v sredo v Munidt prebral sledeče: “Memorandum sporazuma. Na konferenci, na kateri so bili navzoči armadni tajnik Stevens in senatorji McCarthy, Dir- Dr. M. Krek govori— V soboto, 27. fabruarja, ob 8:15 zvečer bo -govoril v Knausovi dvorani nad North American Bank dr. Miha Krek o slovenskih narodnih stvareh. Vsi vabljeni. Tečaj slovenskega jezika— Tu rojeni Slovenci, ki bi se želeli udeleževati tečaja slovenskega jezika za odrasle, naj pridejo- nocoj ob osmih v šolo sv. Vida. Slovenska šola v Collimvoodu— Vodstvo šole sporoča staršem otrok, da bo pouk na slovenski šoli ob sobotah od 27. februarja dalje dopoldne od 9. do 10. u-re in ne več popoldne. Darila— Darila, ki bodo razdeljena med udeležence koncerta dne 6. marca zvečer v šolski dvorani sv. Vida ob priliki otvoritve umetniške razstave kiparja F. Goršeta, so razstavljena v izložbi optika M. Slaka na 1123 Norwood Rd. Odsoten— Michael Telich, znani zastopnik “Canada Sun Life” je od da-( nes za nekaj časa odsoten. Kdor bi želel govoriti z njim o poslovnih zadevah, naj pokliče njegov urad, kjer ga zastopa sin John. Tel. CH 1-7877. Plesna veselita— Društvo sv. Cirila in Metoda št. 18 SDZ ima v soboto zvečer v SND na St. Clair Ave., plesno veselico v počastitev 40-le-tnice svojega obstoja. — Igra Kenny Bass orkester. Petindvajseta obletnica— V ponedeljek ob sedmih bo v cerkvi sv. Kristine sv. maša za pokojno Terezijo Zalokar v spomin 25. obletnice njene smrti. V bolnišnici— Mrs. Angela Zibert, 21141 Gol-ler Ave., je v Euclid Glenville Krofi— V soboto po 3. uri popoldne bodo v šoli sv. Vida naprodaj krofi. Važna seja— Društvo sv. Marije Magdalene št. 162 KSKJ ima v ponedeljek, 1. marca, v sobi št. 4 šole sv. Vida redno sejo ob 7:30 zvečer. Po seji prigrizek in zabava. Asesmpnt bo tajnica pobirala od šestih dalje. 'Članstvo je vabljeno. K molitvi— Nocoj ob osmih naj pridejo člani in članice društva Presv. Srca Jezusovega št. 172 KSKJ v Grdinov pogrebni zavod na E. 62 St., da se poslovijo od svojih dveh sobratov, Jože Slakarja in Viktorja Pogačarja, ki sta bila ubita od avtomobila. Pogreb bo jutri, to je v soboto, s sv. mašo ob desetih v cerkvi sv. Vida. Vsi, ki se bodo udeležili pogreba, naj bodo v Grdinovem pogrebnem zavodu najkasneje ob 9.30. Oni, ki imajo avtomobile, so prošeni, naj pridejo z njimi. Vaja Korotana— Vaja mešanega zbora bo v soboto v Slov. pisarni. Začetek točno ob pol sedmih zvečer. ------o----- Slovenska pisarna 6116 Glass Ave., Cleveland, O. Telefoni £X 1-9717 OPOZORILO: Slovenska pisarna bo v soboto dopoldne.zaprta. Odprta bo popoldne od 2 do 7 zvečer. VAJA za igro Kaplan Klemen bo v ponedeljek ob pol osmih na odru v Slovenskem narodnem domu in sicer za tretje in četrto dejanje. — Režiser. SMRT DVEH NOVONASEL-JENCEV: V četrtek sta našla nesrečno smrt pod avtomobi- bolnišnici, soba št. 522. Obiski so lom Jože Slak in Viktor Poga- dobncdošli. Druga obletnica— V nedeljo ob desetih bo v cer-kvi sv. Vida sv. maša za pokoj- čar. Pogreb obeh, ki nimata tod nobenih svojih ljudi, bo v soboto ob desetih dopoldne iz cerkve sv. Vida na Kalvarijo. nega Antona Marticic v spomin Prav je, da se obeh nesrečnikov Stevens preklical svoj nastop. kens, Mundt in Potter, pred njegovim preiskovalim od-, sklenjen sporazum za borom, ki po vsej priliki ni bil memorandum: več potreben. Armadni tajnik se je uklonil McCarthy ju in obljubil, da ho naročil armadnim je bil sledeči 1. Med armadnim departmen- tom in senatnim odborom je bil v .. , . , ... „ dosežen popolni sporazum o po- častnikom, da morajo bit. na ^ ^ in i2korminjenja razpolago temu odboru za komun.stov kjer koli sevanja, kadar koli b. Jih odbor ^ se jih 0(ikrije zaloti. poklical. (Pred tem je namreč tajnik Stevens naročil dvema generaloma, ki bi morala na- SHOW Vremensh prerok pravi: Danes in ponoči večinoma o-^aeno in mrzlo. Nek vo- "iJUdSKemu raiDlju," preusemu- R0ka Bele hiše jaški novinec je moral zpolniti ku gen. Adibu Shisheklyju. Tukaj se vzdržujejo govorice, uradno listino, kakršno mora1 Poročila naznanjajo, da hite iz da sta imela predsednik Eisen- da da preiskovalnemu izpolniti vsak rekrut. Ko je pri- Damaska vojaške čete, ki jih je hower in podpredsednik Nixon na razpolago imena vseh onih, šel do vprašanja, kjer bi moral poslal predsednik, proti središ- svoje roke vmes, da je prišlo do ki so bili v zvezi s povišanjem in 2. Med nami je bil dosežen po-polen sporazum, da bo, armada ukazala generalu - inšpektorju, da nadaljuje s preiskavo komunizma v Pteressovem slučaju in odboru druge obletnice njegove smrti. Posebna ugodnost— Bohar’s Beauty Salon, 6407 St. Clair Ave. je do 15. marca podaljšal kodranje po izredni znižani ceni. Več v loglasu! Razprodaja se nadaljuje— Norwood Appliance & Furniture je podaljšala razprodajo pohištva in raznih potrebščin za dom. Podrobnosti v oglasnem delu lista. K molitvi— Članice Podružnice št. 32- SŽZ so vabljene noocj ob sedmih v želetov pogrebni zavod na East 152 St. k molitvi za umrlo Kati Straus, v soboto pa k njenemu pogrebu. Dopolnilo— V poročilu smrti Jennie Kunste! je pomotoma izpadlo ime njenega zadnjega soproga — Robert. Prva obletnica— V soboto ob 7:15 bo v cerkvi sv. Vida sv. maša za pok. Martina Fabjančič v spomin prve obletnice njegove smrti. navesti, kdo so njegovi starši, je zapisal: “Oče in mati”. Ustreljeni jetnik SPEIGNER, Ala. — Dvajset let stari kaznjenec Ronald Coleman iz Birminghama je bil us- čem revolte. Radio naznanja, da so uporniki zasedli celotno pristanišklo, sporazuma med senatorjem Mc- častnim odpustom majorja Pe- Carthyjem in armadnim tajnikom Stevensom. Sporazum je mesto Aleppo; voditelji uporni-j bil posledica tajnega sestanka kov pravijo, da imajo kontrolo na Kapitolskem griču, katerega j armadni tajnik Stevens izjavil, nad celotnim delom severne Si- so se udeležili Stevens in repub- da bo general razpoložljiv. ressa. 3. če odbor sklene, da pokliče na pričevanje gen. Zwickerja, je rije. Predsednik Shishekly se je treljen na begu, ko je hotel pre- polastil oblasti pred dvema leto-plezati zid jetnišnice. ma. likanski člani McCarthyjevegal odbora. Po dve uri trajajoči se- 4. V očigled tega sporazuma in memoranduma, je bilo zasli- ji so se odprla vrata dvorane, ševanje, ki se je imelo vršiti na-pred katero je čakalo kakih 501 slednjega dne, preklicano.” spominjamo v molitvi in vsi, ki morejo, naj se po možnosti udeleže pogreba. Težko je marsikdaj videti pogrebe ljudi, ki nikogar niso imeli in gredo tudi na svojo zadnjo pot sami. Prosimo zlasti novonaseljen-ce, ki imajo svoje avtomobile in se bodo pogreba udeležžili, da nudijo prostor tudi tistim, ki nimajo svojih vozil. -----o------ Požar v Painesville, O. PAINESVILLE, O. — Tukaj je, požar uničil knjigarno Russell’s Book Store. Mlada mamica FRANKLIN. — Mrs. Jud An Buckner, ki je stara nekaj nad 13 let, je porodila 5 funtov težko hčerko. ------o---- Smrt v čeških taboriščih DUNAJ. — V silnem mrazu, ki je pritisnil v Evropi zadnje dni, je pomrlo po čeških taboriščih stotine ljudi. NAJNOVEJŠE VESTI WASHINGTON. — Armadni) tajnik Stevens je dejal, da ni res, da bi kapituliral pred senatorjem McCarthyjem in dodal, da ne bo nikoli dovolil, da bi kdor koli ali kateri koli odbor poniževal častnike in drugo armadno osebje. VATIKAN. — Papežu Piju se je njegovo zdravstveno stanje zopet dokaj poslabšalo. BEIRUT, Libanon. — Adib Shishekly, predsednik in diktator Sirije, proti kateremu se je uprla armada, je podal o-stavko in zbežal iz dežele. WASHINGTON. — Državni department je ukazal poljskim konzulatom v New Yorku, Chicagu in Detroitu, da imajo zapreti svoja vrata in prenehati s poslovanjem. /tnERi^M Domovina 8117 Zit. Vivlt &vv. liEnderson 1--C6I88 Cleveland 3, Ohio Pub.lisiied d^ily except Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays Qcuerai Manager and Editor: Maiy Debevec NAEOCNINA Za Zod. države $10.00 ua lato; za pol leta $6.00; za četrt leta $4.00. Za Kanado in sploh za dežele izven Zed. držav $12.00 na leto. Za pol leta $7.00, za 3 mesece $4.00. SUBSCRIPTION RATES United States $10.00 per year; $6.00 for 6 months; $4.00 for 3 months. Canada and all other countries outside United States $12.00 per year; $7 for 6 months; $4 for 3 months. Entered as second class matter January 6th, 1903 at the Post Office nt Cleveland, Ohio, under the act of March 3rd, 1879. domovini, med temi ko so za njo vsi drugi izdajalci in “glas- Gospa dekletu, ki je iskala j niki najbolj pokvarjenega slovenstva.” ;službo: “Povej mi, zakaj si pu-j Dokler bedo vodili Slov. izseljensko matico ljudje Se-; stila službo tam, kjer si bila?” | liškarjevega kova in dokler bo ta imela za svoj glavni cilj' Dekle: “‘če mi vi poveste, za-; izvažati v zamejstvo Titov komunizem in z njim zastrupljati |kaj vas je vaša prejšnja dekla poštene demokratske Slovence, ne maramo imeti z njo no- pustila.” bene zveze. Odsvetujemo jo tudi vsem svojim rojakom. Ko je zavladal v Nemčiji Hitler, je ustanovil organizacijo, katere namen je bil širiti hitlerizem med nemškimi izseljenci. Ko je prišlo nato do vojne z Nemčijo, so države, ki so se borile proti njej, spravile na varno vse ljudi, ki so imeli kakršnokoli zvezo s hitlerjansko organizacijo v tujini. To omenjamo samo za to, da bi se kdo v bodočnosti zaradi svojega sedanjega delovanja ne kesal. Ne pozabimo, da Amerika komunizma ne mara, pa naj bo ta moskovskega ali Titovskega kova! No. 40 Fri., Feb. 26, 1954 Post je tu. Post je čas pokore, zdeva.” Pa se je res ta teden na- katero1 zamoremo delati s postem,, kopičilo toliko reči, ki morajo ;z molitijo, z bolj voljnim prena-biti dovršene in ki zahtevajo po-jšanjem naših nadlog in težav, pa zornost od moje strani, da sem,tudi s tem, da dajemo vbogajme že resno mislil povedati uredni-ku: Iz Newburga to rajžo nič. Pa mi je prišlo na misel, da bi se morda urednik na skrivnem čehlal in veselil. No, tega pa tudi nisem hotel. Zato sem kar v in to iz tega kar sebi pritrgamo. Ne pozabite misijonov v tem času. Vzdrževanje od mesnih jedil, je tudi pokora. Popolno vzdrževanje je vsak petek skozi celo nedeljo večer začel’ ikavsati, da,leto, na pepelnično sredo, Veli-spravim skup vsaj nekaj, s če- ko soboto do opoldne, dan pred mer bo urednik imel posla, da pripravi in prepiše iz kranjske Šprahe na slovenski jezik. Evo ti “newburakih novic.” * * * Pa nimava samo jaz in urednik A. D. trubel. Ravno oni dan sem čital, da je že Noa imel svoje probleme. n. p. takrat, ko se je baje slon na barki pritožil, da je tako velik ropot v drugem nadstropju nad slonom, da ne more spati. Noa je šel pogledat in, ali veste, kaj je našel? Nak, ne veste. Noa je našel stonogo (centipede), ki si je čevlje izzu-vala. Ubogi slon! * * * Birma je bila naznanjena iz škofijskega urada za 11. marec o polosmih zvečer. Ob istem času isti popoldan & tudi vizitaci-ja. Kaj je to? To je pregledovanje po škofu samem vseh cerkvenih reči, kot tabernakelj, vse okrog oltarja, vse po zakristijah, Vnebovzetjem (14. avgusta) in dan pred Božičem. Kvatrne srede in sobote, kakor tudi srede in sobote o postnem času smemo jesti meso pri glavnem obedu. « * * žena se krega: “Tako si pa siten, da te nobena vaga ne vzdigne. Prav gotovio' sem bila nora, da sem te vzela.” Mož: “Da. A jaz sem te takrat tako rad imel, da tega nisem opazil.” * * * Nihče se ni oglasil, da bi povedal, kje je -sv. Jožef pokopan. Morda pa je res, kar pravi legenda, da je sv. Jožef vstal iz groba takrat, ko je Kristus vstal in je “mnogo teles svetnikov, ki so zaspali, vstalo in po- Njegovem vstajenju so šli iz grobov in prišli sveto mesto ter se prikazali mnogim.” Tako pravi ,sv. Matej. Zdaj je pa vprašanje, ali so ti, ki slo po farovžu in sploh vsega, kar je j vstali iz grobov, šli nazaj v gro-, .v 1 -■ - bove, ali pa so šli z Jezusom v nebesa? Kaj mislite vi drugi? Bogu je vse mogoče. Nekaj pripomb k ciljem in delu Slovenske izseljenske matice Koncem januarja je imela pred nekaj leti ustanovljena Slovenska izseljenska matica v Ljubljani svoj redni občni zbor. Voditelji matice so ob tej priliki poročali o ciljih in delu te za izseljence dokaj pomembne organizacije. Predsednik Slov. izseljeniške matice znani Tone Seliškar je opisal stanje slovenskega izseljeništva. Po njegovem ne moremo danes več govoriti o 350,000 pravih slovenskih izseljencih, temveč o. znatno manjšem številu. Ponekod je že polovica ali celo več izseljencev utonila v tujem morju. “Toda dokler je še kaj sledu slovenske krvi v tujini, je naša dolžnost, da bi matični narod pošiljal tja iz svoje bogate kulturne dediščine svojo rodojlubno pomoč ... za te slovenske izseljence je bila ustanovljena Slovenska izseljenska matica . . .” je dejal T. Seliškar. Kakšna je po Seliškarjevih mislih slovenska kulturna dediščina in v čem naj bo rodoljubna pomoč domovine izseljencem, nam najlepše povedo tele njegove besede; “Slovenski izseljenci so pod vplivom strupenega pisanja tistega dela slovenskih izseljeniških listov, ki zločinsko potvarjajo resnico o naših razmerah z namenom, da bi, se zrušila pri nas sedanja družbena ureditev in da bi Jugoslaviji spet zavladali kralji, bankirji, fabrikanti in cerkev. Ti glasniki najbolj pokvarjenega slovenstva v tujini zlasti izkoriščajo verski čut naših izseljencev in prikazujejo zato v svojih spisih razmere v Jugoslaviji kot deželo samih antikristov in zločincev.” Komunista Toneta Seliškarja jezi, da Slovenci v tujini ne odobravamo komunističnega nasilja v svoji rodni domovini, jezi ga, da smo protestirali in protestiramo proti množičnim umorom nedolžnih ljudi, ki so jih storili komunisti v času državljanske vojne in neposredno po njej — naj omenimo samo onih enajst tisoč domobrancev, ki so jih koncem maja 1945 izročili titovcem Angleži in so jih nato komunistični krvniki brez vsakega zaslišanja in sodnega procesa postrelili ter pometali v množične grobove in kraške jame •— komunista Toneta Seliškarja in njegove gospodarje jezi, da Slovenci v svobodni tujini razkrivamo svetu njihove zločine in laži. Prav lahko razumemo njegovo divjo jezo na nas, ki smo svetu razkrili resnico o “Osvobodilni fronti” in njenem “osvobodilnem delu,’ o komunističnem “rodoljubju” in o “‘ljudski demokraciji,” o “svobodi vere in Cerkve,” o “napredku in blagostanju v Titovem raju” in seveda tudi o vedno se ponavljajoči “suši.” Tonetova onemogla jeza nam je prav posebno razumljiva, če pomislimo na dejstvo, da smo to resnico razkrili večinoma z izvlečki iz pisanja komunističnih pisunov, delno celo iz njegovega lastnega. Razmere v stari domovini so nam dobro znane iz neštetih poročil, ki prihajajo vsak dan iz Jugoslavije, toda ta poročila so za trdovratne Titove zagovornike premalo “verodostojna,” tem moramo vedno postreči s poročili v komunističnih listih, ki izhajajo v Ljubljani ali v kakem drugem kraju Jugoslavije. Teh poročil niti Tone ne more ovreči. Če bi jih hotel, bi se moral zaplesti v hud spor s Kardeljem, Pijadom, Vukmanovičem in celo samim Titom; pri svojih poročilih o razmerah v Jugoslaviji se namreč največkrat sklicujemo na njihove govore in izjave. Kadar pa ti visoki “tovariši” govore, Tone previdno molči. Tene Seliškar in njegovi sodelavci v Slovenski izseljeniški matici prav dobro vedo, da slovenski izseljeniški listi ne potvarjajo resnice, kadar pišejo o razmerah v stari domovini — izjema so le listi, ki priobčujejo njegove dopise in pisma in zagovarjajo delo titovcev, — zadel pa je žebelj na glavo, ko je dejal, da pišemo z namenom, da bi se zrušila tamkajšnja družabna ureditev. Tega nismo nikoli tajili. Poudarjamo danes, kot smo poudarili že neštetokrat, da smo proti komunizmu vedno in povsod, pa naj se pojavi v kakršnikoli obliki. Tito je sam ponovno izjavil, da je komunist, čemu mu tega ne bi verjeli? Mi svoj narod doma in njegove želje dobro poznamo, zato vemo, da on komunizma ne mara. ne Titovega ’ne kremeljskega. Narod komunistično nasilje le težko prenaša in se ga želi znebiti za vsako ceno. Kot zvesti njegovi sinovi mu hočemo pri tem prizadevanju pomagati. To smatramo za svojo človeško dolžnost, pa naj je to Tonetu Seliškarju in drugim titovcem prav ali ne! Debelo pa se je predsednik Slov. izseljeniške matice zlagal, ko je trdil, da delajo slovenski izseljenci na tem, da: pa biti n. p. stari oče, stara mati, bi v Jugoslaviji spet “zavladali kralji, bankirji, fabrikanti j brati in sestre etc. in cerkev.” ; 4. Botri iz nedomače fare mo- V kolikor se mi zavzemamo za naš narod doma, pa naj rajo imeti skazilo, da so res prak-bo to v Titovini, v Avstriji, na Tržaškem ali v Italiji, mu Tični katoliki. Boternisamopri- hočemo pomagati le do svobode, ki mu po vseh božjih in na- ča pri birmi, marveč ima tudi ravnih pravicah gre. Kako si bo svoje razmere v svobodi dolžnost, da svojemu birmancu uredil, je pa njegova Stvar. | daje dober zgled. Ta je več vre- Ob koncu svojega poročila Tone Seliškar hinavsko po-den kot pa zlata ura. udarja, da je “Matici vsak rojak samo Slovenec in nič dru-; * * * ge?a.” Zelo bi nas zanimalo, ko bi nam razložil, kako sprav-1 V Združenih državah je 207 Jja to v sklad z zgoraj navedenim zmerjanjem in podtika- krematorijev. Vsako leto je več moli in tudi ne samo delaj, njem. Iz vsega njegovega poročila sledi jasno, da je Matici takih, ki hočejo biti po smrti se-jli in delaj, pa boš zmagal. Slovenec samo oni, ki se strinja s sedanjim položajem v žgani. Morda zato, da bi se do * * * Nekdo pravi: “Več bo koristilo duši pokojnega, če zmoliš vsak teden en rožni venec zanj, kot venec rož, ki bi mu jih položil na grob.” Tako je. Živim rože, mrtvim rožne vence. Začel bom tipkati, tčie bom pa sodnega dne že ohladili, tudi zdelal, je pa drugo vprašanje. Gorenjci pravijo: “Vsak ne Berite v Amerikamskemu Slovencu “DUHOVNE MISLI.” Boste videli, kako preproste pa zelo poučne so te “MISLI.” To je seme božje besede. * * * PODLISTEK Ljudje pravijo, da fante, ki gre Lanska (Zbira Vera K.) Zadnjič smo _se menile o sporih v zakonih in med zakonci. Ljudje, ki so to vprašanje preiskavah, so ugotovili, da je med pari, ki so poročeni v cerkvi manj sporov kot med zakonci, ki _ _ so sklenili zakonsko zvezo samo pozno zvečer domov, zato žvižga precj sodnikom. Prav tako je bi-da strahove odganja. Tudi jaz ; ]0 ugotovljeno, da lastni dom na sem morda zakričal nekaj zato,, zmanjšanj e napetosti v zakonu ker sem se bal. Zato mi je Pa, ugodne- vpliva, da prinaša neko takoj odleglo, ko se je Father ; duševno m materialno sigurnost. Edwin zbudil in hudo zaspano jyjencja je prav Sigurnost ali dejal “Hwazamerrr?” j £e hočete občutje varnosti, ne to- “Nekdo hoče v soboi. že dalj ■ jjho gmotne okte duševne je, kar časa poskuša s ključi.” j žene pričakujemo od svojih m ampak tudi telesna utruje-movine. Pokojnik je bil doma v ; no,st. Če imamo torej z možem Veliki Račni pri Kopanju, odko- i “razpravo” o kaki bolj kočljivi der je prišel v Ely I. 1909. Dve zadevi, je najboljše, da izberemo, leti kasneje mu je sledila še že- za razgovor čas, ko je mož spro-na Uršula. Delal je v rudniku ščen in d:Dbre volje, vse do svoje upokojitve'. Zapu-; Me smo po navadi najbolj vz-šča ženo, dva sina, dve hčeri in nemirjene pri kuhi in peki, mož-10 vnukov. ; je so pa najbolj utrujeni in slabe V bolnišnici je umrl v starosti razpoloženi, ko se vrnejo z dela 77 let Anton Sajovic iz cerkljan-.in čakajo na večerjo. To je za ske fare na Gorenjskem. Tu ni zapustil nobenih sorodnikov. Reserve rudarska družba gradi 200 stanovanjskih hišic za svoje delavce v Babbit, 18 milj južno Od Ely. Nova naselbina naj bi se v nekaj letih pomnožila na 4,000 stanovalcev. Hiše grade prav za prav v Biwabiku, pa jih nato dovažajo v Babbit. J. Peshel. spor naj nevarnejši trenutek. Če se tega, dejstva zavedamo, se bomo izognile prenekateri nepri-jetniosti. j Kot vidimo:, pride skoro pri Vseh zakoncih kdaj do kake napetosti, če že ne do prepira, to1 nas torej ne sme prehudo skrbeti. Paziti se moramo, da izberemo za razgovor z možem ugoden, čas, ko1 ta ni preveč utrujen, lačen ali pa duševno, oziroma te- Dr. Val. MersOl: Sišnenje ¥ glavi (Nadaljevanje) Če bolnik toži, da mu šumi V enem ali obeh ušesih, mora zdravnik seveda predvsem misliti, da je uho samo vzrok temu pojavu, kar je večkrat res. Največkrat je zunanji sluhovod na eni strani ali pa na obeh, zamašen radi ušesnega masla ali voska, katerega proizvajajo posebne male žleze v zunanjem sluhovodu. Navadno je v sluhovodu le majhna količina masla, ki popolnoma zadošča za namen, kateremu služi: da bi bila povr-’iha bobniča in kože v sluhovodu nastna in gladka, če pa se ražnje kakšna bolezen bobniča ali sluhovoda, tedaj proizvajajo žleze večinoma, več masla še dolgo časa po prestanem vnetju. Poleg sega je mnogo ljudi, katere iz' “aznih razlogov srbi v sluhovodu, pa praskajo dotično mesto z raznimi bolj ali — manj ostrimi oredmeti: zobotrebec, žveplenka. svinčnik, pero, žebelj itd. Radi tega' se žleze razdražijo in proizvajajo' več ušesnega maslu kot, je potrebno. Tako povečano kodeina masla se razširi po celem sluhovodu, tako da je bobnič pon ocinoma pokrit in oddeljen od sunanjega zraka. Dotična oseba rajprej slabše sliši, nato pa ji začne šumeti po ušesu. Ljudje, katerim šumi po ušesih, večkrat sami z večjimi ali nanj širni predmeti poizkušajo; odstraniti - ušesno maslo, kar jim oa navadno ne uspe. Nasprotno, kadi dolgotrajnega praskanja si oodisi poranijo kožo sluhovoda bodisi potiskajo do tedaj na rah-'o nabrano maslo proti bobniču, ako da se bolj trdno, prilega in iotiena oseba začne še manj slišati. Končno' je le potrebno iti k zdravniku. Ta z ušesnim cgle-lalom hitro ugotovi, kaj je vzrok poslabšanemu sluhu, in s po-nečjo posebne ušesne brizge odstrani ušesno maslo, nakar pregleda podrobno bobnič, ki navadno ni bolan. Če je tudi sluhovod na drugi strani zamašen, e tam ponovi isti postopek. Bolnik je seveda vesel, da je tako hitro prenehal biti gluh. Pred odhodom navadno svetuje zdravnik bolniku, naj skuša preprečiti ponovno zbiranje večje količine ušesnega masla: Naj po umivanju zunanjega ušesa dobro posuši uhelj in zunanji ušesni kanal, pravtako naj pazi pri kopanju, da ne pride voda do bobniča; če pa že pride, naj jo z delom robca posuši. Sploh naj pazi, da bo zunanji sluhoved suh. Naj se ne praska po sluhovodu, če opaj zi kakšno ušesno bolezen, naj gre k zdravniku. (Dalje sledi.) Dr, Josip Gruden: Zgodovina slovenskega naroda H. Doba državnega absolutizma in centralizacije Od Ferdinanda II. do Leopolda II. (1619-1792) 2.—Leopold I. in njegovi ministri. — Grofija Istra. — Prva vojna s Turki. V Devin mu je prišel nasproti poslanec tržaškega magistrata, baron Aleksander de Fin Rinogobrojnimi krasnimi ladija-mi. Pridružil se mu je tudi grof Peter Zrinski, v čigar la diji se je ctesar Leopold odpeljal v Trst. Pri Grljanu je sto pil na kopno, da bi v samostanu pri minoritih opravil molitev. Nato se je nadaljevala vožnja v prejšnem redu med neprestanim grmenjem topov. Od nabrežja v Trstu je bil daleč v morje napravljen most, da bi lahko stopil iz ladje. Na velikem molu je pozdravila cesarja mestna posadka, pri mestnih vratih po občinski odbor z mnogoštevilnim plemstvom, ki mu le izročil na srebrnem'krožniku mestne ključe. Pod krasnim nebom, katerega je nosilo osem plemičev, je šel cesar na to v sijajnem izprevodu čez Veliki trg v stolno cerkev, kjer ga je sprejel tržaški škof Marenzi in ?apel “Te Deum”. Prva dva večera je bilo mesto krasno razsvetljeno. Poklo nitev se je vršila 27. septembra. Cesar Leopold je sprejel, na krasnem prestolu sedeč, tržaški magistrat, mestne sveto-valce in mnogo drugih imenitnih meščanov. Najprej je ve-li’ki kancelar naznanil, da hoče Njegovo Veličanstvo spoštovati Vse pravice in milosti, ki so jih njegovi predniki mestu podelili. Na to prebere tajnik prisego, katero so vsi navzoči za njim Sovorili. Baron de Fin je v dolgem govoru izražal vdanost fiaesta. Svečanost se je končala s sijajnim obedom. Po ves teden trajajočem bivanju v Trstu zapusti cesar mesto h oktobra in obišče na povratku v Ljubljano še žrebčarijo v Lipici, ki je bila dve leti prej u-stanovljena. Dne 4. oktobra se ie mudil v samostanu Bistra in le tamošnjemu priorju Ciriani-podelil naslov prelata. V Ljubljani je bil iznova slovesno EPrejet; dne 8. oktobra pa je ^'ez Krašnjo in Trojane odpoto-VaI na Dunaj. Leto 1660. je torej za Sloven-Ce zato zanimivo, ker jih je obijal njihov vladar, kateremu Samemu so mogli po staroda-Vtli navadi priseči zvestobo in vdanost. Ta sreča jim že mno-§° let ni bila dana, Goričanom Celo nikdar poprej, ker so se vselej poklanjali le cesarskim Namestnikom. Le še enkrat so Se pozneje ponovili vsi ti sijajni PNzori in sicer 1. 1728., ko je Jadnji moški Habsburžan Karol Prvi je grof Ivan Vajkard Au ersperg. Rodil se je leta 1615. iz starejše panoge kranjskega plemiškega rodu in bil dalj časa vzgojitelj Ferdinanda IV. L. 1653. je dobil v posest graščino Weis, naslednje leto pa šle-ski graščini Munsterbergin Frankenstein, zato se je imenoval “vojvoda munsterberški” L. 1655. je postavil prvi tajni svetnik, torej prvi minister, ki je zastopal vlado v notranjih in zunanjih stvareh. Ferdinand, III. ga je visoko cenil, še više njegov gojenec Ferdinand IV. Stanovi “Notranje Avstrije” so želeli imeti mogočnega moža za pokrovitelja, ker je dobro poznal potrebe vseh treh dežel in jih mogel uspešno zagovarjati. Štajerska in Koroška sta najprej sklenili, da naprosita Au-[ ersperga za ‘“patrona in pokro-S primi srce moje v dar, vitelje” obeh dežel in sta mu v da bi vedno majka bila, i Lasallski glasovi in odmevi | (PiSe Matevž Iz “Sunny Spot City-a”) La Salle, 111. — Rojstnega, kra- šemu narodu doma prostost in ja ne moreš pozabiti, tudi, če bi; svoboda. Kajti pod komunizmom si prizadeval, da ga pozabiš. Kri svobode ni! ni voda. Sin slovenske zemlje si! j — Sredi januarja se je vršila Kot tak si Slovan in spadaš v ve- na Oglesby — “South of the likobnojno družino Slovanov. V |River” letna seja tamkajšne First tvoji krvi je seme slovanstva in National Banke. Poročilo o tej tega izbrisati ne moreš. Bodi po- sejj je dokaj zanimivo. Pove, da nosen kar si. član si dobrega in je banka od svoje ustanovitve mehkega rodu, ki mu je dal Bog^ n. februarja 1940 akoro podese-zlato srce in mehko dušo. Za- +,oriia SVoje premoženje. Kon-hvali Boga, da si član tega rodu |cem leta 1941 je izkazvalo finan. ' .’. ^nv3£a bremena nimaš na £no poročilo te banke vsega sku-svoji duši, da si moril ljudi dru-,pajj t0 je vloge in kapital $243 gih rodov, kakor so to delali kr- ^ ooO.OO. Letos pa izkazuje porovo,loki Turki, Germani in za re-, čil0 skupnega premoženja in ob-~-n boj bojazljivi Lahi Italijani! j veznosti $2,692,000.00. Zelo visok Ob spominu na svojo lepo do-^ p0ras^ za to. primerona malo me-movinio. in na svoj rod ti zapoje';sta v direktoriju te banke je duša in srce z Dr. Jakobom Raz-jtuc[i naš rojak Slovenec Mr. lag tisto Slovencem vedno do- Louis Gregorich Sr., ki biva na padljivo pesem: “Bodi zdrava, domovina, mili moj slovenski kraj! Ti prekrasna, ti edina meni si zemeljski raj! Tuje šege, tuje ljudstvo so prijat’lji, bratje ne, Slava le, slovansko čutstvo moje veseli srce. Primi pozdrav, zemlja mila, ta namen ponudili 4000 oziroma 2500 goldinarjev na leto. V Ljubljanskem deželnem zboru je deželni podmaršal grof Blagaj poročal o tem sklepu sosednjih dežel in predlagal, naj bi jih tudi Kranjska posnemala. Stanovi so sklenili dovoliti Auerspergu do- smrti 3000 goldinarjev na leto, “kjer ga dežela še bolj potrebuje in mu jie posebno hvalo dolžna”. Cesar Leopold je Auerspergu pustil mesto prvega ministra, vendar ga ni toliko upošteval, kakor ministra Porcio in Lobkovica. Po smrti svojega brata, grofa Volka Engelberta Turjaškega, kranjskega .deželnega glavarja, je ’knez podedoval Kočevje in Žužemberk. — V politiki je Auersperg nasprotoval Porciji m Lobkovicu. Ko jie francoski kralj Ludovik Columbia Ave., tam kjer je bil nekoč starim rojakom znani Crocketville. Banke in posojilnice so zelo važne gospodarske ustanove. Odkar je zadnja depresija v slavnih Hooverjevih časih pripeljala deželo na rob gospodarskega propada in je deželo otel pred propadom pokojni Franiklin Roosevelt, so širom dežele zrastle zvezne in državne posojilnice in hranilnice. Nekateri pravijo tem ustanovam stavbinskega društva. A ker zadnja leta sprejemajo vlo- takega poskušali. Kako daleč so uspeli mi ni znano. Seveda takrat ni bilo denarja med ljudmi, kakor ga je danes. Ljudje so takrat služili po $1. do $1.25 na dan, kaj bo to? Vsak mošnjiček je bil dovolj velik za banko. Danes, ko so visoke plače in ko je dosti denarja v prometu je pa drugače. Sposobnih ljudi menda nam tudi ne manjka, če je bil naš rojak dober za župana, če so naši možje sposobni za al-dermane (mestne svetovalce) in za druge razne odgovorne urade, bi ja bili tudi za vodstvo hranilnice in posojilnice. Tako misli seveda Matevž, kako drugi to pa ne vem. Zapišem le kar jaz mislim. — Predpustni čas je čas porok — tako smo rekli v starem kraju. V januarju se je poročila Miss Charlotte Margarette Luši-na, hčerka slovenske družine Mr. in Mrs. Henry Lušina, ki bivajo na, 1875 — Hennepin Street. Poročila se je s ženinom Edwardom Kowalvzyk (izgovori Kovalčik) iz Peru, 111. Poročne obrede je izvršil Rev. Michael Železnikar župnik fare sv. Roka. Bilo srečno! Pozdrav vsem pa še drugič kaj. nepozabljena nikdar!” , , .. . ... 'ge na obresti m pogojujejo na Škoda je, da je naša lepa do-'prve vknjižbe, so to bolj hranil- movina, (ne po lastni krivdi!) nice in posojilnice. Na vloge da- zopet zakovana v suženjske ve- jejo ljudem višje obresti kakor rige tiste miselnosti, ki je hinav- banke ali upa investiranje v dru- ško oznanjevala demokracijo in ge načine. Zato so onim, ki hra- svobodo! Dragi čitatelj, neglede nijo v korist, kakor onim, ki si kaj je tvoje prepričanje, eno si izposojujejo denar na hiše in po- zapomni če moreš? Komunizem sestva. Najvažnejše je pa to, da ni še nikdar nikogar osvobodil so vloge zavarovane potom po- — razen lopovov, da so prišli na sebne zvezne zavarovalninske '“T', ^ ,irri. .... . . dan, se vsedli narodu na vrat in korporacije. To, da je denar ma- ^-cai‘ u' 1 Pe J1 aro nazaj ga zdaj vodijo na suženjskih ve- Uh ljudi, ki ga težko zaslužijo, ‘ ,araZ1‘ 1 °Pravi nal a °- az rigsh. Kaj je sodobna Slovenija, zavarovan, je tudi zasluga po- med te(m str^e> Sjapodu tvoja lepa domovina- sužnja v bojnega Roosevelta. Koliko so P" mi>sl J" '>otem masevTal' Gos‘ Titovem komunističnem haremu, se pred Rooseveltom menili za j P0 J .JN zelo prijazen m ker nima ... a.- j • • i • ministranta, bo vesel, ce mu Titovi komunisti jo vodijo na varnost tvojega denarja om, ki svojih verigah, zraven pa pojo, so sedeli v vladi? Nič. Roose-da so jo osvobodili. Kje in ka- velt se pa je. Dejanja so, ki go-ko? In z vstrajnim opevanjem, vore in na te se je treba ozirati, kalko so prinesli domovini osvo- Večkrat sem že mislil, kako je A EWBURSKE NOVICE (Nadaljevanje z 2. strani) dejal. “Poglejva, kje je kak garaž.” Kmalu sva stala ob garaži. A kaj, ko pa še ni nikogar tukaj. K sreči je cev za zrak od zunaj. Napolnila sva kolo in šla pogledat, če je katoliška cerkev v tem mestu. Bila je. Stepi! sem v zakristijo in tam našel župnika ki se je pravkar oblačil za mašo. Predstavil sem se mu in pokazal “celebret,” to je dovoljenje od mojega škofa da smem maševati. Stopil sem ven ter rekel strežem, če tebe še ne bo nazaj, bo pa on meni stregel.” “Dobro” je dejal Father Edwin. “Pa pazite, da ne boste KOPALNA OBLEKA Z ROKAVI? — Zgleda, da se vračamo v čas pred pol stoletja, ko so kopalne obleke pokrivale skoro celo telo. Slika nam predstavlja zamisel nove kopalne obleke s kratkimi nabranimi rokavi in hlačnicami. jjp' February 21 to 28 »roNJOifo er / T SFONSOMD BT THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF CHRISTIANS ANO JEWS MALI OGLASI ^ L sprejemal poklonitve v No-anji Avstriji. Potem pa je za )'edno pneminul zunanji blesk ,eN stanovskih slavnosti, kakor i. Ze davno preje preminul po-^ki pomen, ki so ga imele v '■ L1 16. stoletju. ^a Leopoldove vlade je imel oblast v rokah cesarjev taj-svet, katerega smemo pri-^erJati sedanjemu ministrstvu. aJvišji dvorni mojster je bil 1 tajni svetnik ali ministrski Nlh Lo. boditev in svobodo uspavajo še to, da se v naši naselbini nismo preve behind the wheel, I t0 w^n'-s same route, carrying 1 started the engine and h g y pald executive Oakland, Calif. — A customer walked into the Val Strough Chevrolet Co., asked to see the newest models, tied a rope around a i chose a two-door se-rafter and swung to | dan, said: “This looks the floor level He 1 like what I want,” got drugs and a safe, but took two books: Childbirth Without Fear and Obstetrical Techniques. • • m mam Memphis, Tenn. — The Commercial Appeal carried this classified ad: “date must be sacrficed . . Owner had ulcerated stomach. Must sell at once . . .” v • • DSHD Chicago, 111. —When his estranged wife charged him with desertion and sued for separate maintenance, Geo. Layton, 71, told the court that she had plenty of money and got a court order requiring her to pay him $25 a week. • • • MMM Los Angeles, Calif.— Walter Clements was jailed on a burglary charge after he stole a pair of pants from a parked car. He took them to the Grigley Park Cleaners, where owner Tsunakichi Mi-yagshina saw his son’s name stamped inside and called police. • * * mum New York, N. Y. —.. The Studio Bookshop mailed out a list of 200 ‘new books of interest to all law enforcement officers” including Dr. S. J. Wilker’s book ‘Your Feet Are Killing You.” Addison Rd, YMGA-YWGA Courses A great variety of classes are starting Mar. 1st in the Informal Shrot Courses program at the Addison Road YMCA-YWCA, 1418 Addison Rd. Classes in hobbies, sports, and industrial subjects are among those offered once-a-week for an 8-week period. Courses are designed to create new leisure time activities where students will find real enjoyment in meeting new friends, learning new skills, and developing new interests. Fees range from $5.00 to $12.00 and enrollment is open to men and women over 18. Registrations are being taken now. Those enrolling in two or more classes may choose a “bonus” course from among several specified. Three daytime classes are offered to fit the schedule of the housewife: Cake Decorating, Millinery and Dressmaking - Speedsewing. Craft and hobby classes include Woodworking, Leathercraft, Ceramics, Upholstering, Photography, and Gardening. Fisherman’s School, Life Saving and Golf are offered in the sports area. Ballroom Dancing, Visits with Interesting People, and Successful Money Management are offered in the social line. Of interest to industrial leaders are Introduction to Fore-manship and Time and Motion Study. Well-known instructors will teach these classes, each an expert in his field. A brochure describing the courses will be mailed upon request at the Addison Rd. Y, HE 2-1616. If you put $100 in the bank at compound interest and left it' there for 100 years, it wouldn’t! do you much good. SHORTS on SWRW By JIM DEBEVEC All-Star Game to Net City $5,000.00: The City Board of Control authorized a contract recently renting the Stadium for the All-Star baseball game, to be played here July 13th. With the Cleveland Baseball Club acting as agent for Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick, the board agreed to rent the Stadium for $10,000 for the big event. The city will realize about $5,000 after costs for cleaning and providing a technical staff are deducted, but it will net $5,000 from concession receipts. Sports Show Here 3 Days Yet: The Arena’s Midwest Sports Show which opened Tuesday will be here 3 days yet, tonight, Saturday and Sunday. The state exhibit includes the longest indoor sportsmen’s show stream, native Ohio wildlife and fish. The exhibitors present the newest in fishing tackle, hunting equipment, boats, marine accessories, trailers, sports clothing, and other supplies for the hunter, fisherman and general vacationist. Pennant Race Over Already For Milwaukee: The Milwaukee Braves are taking no chances — they’ve reserved County Stadium for the World Series next fall. A calendar hanging in the County Park commission office lists all dates the National League baseball club will use the stadium in 1954. Included are the 10 days from Sept. 27 to Oct. 6. — The World Series period. The Braves rent the stadium from the county for $1,000 annually. The $25,000 Tourney: Carling’s Open golf tournament will be played at Manakiki July ISIS. ... Satchel Paige: Ageless baseball hurler • released by Baltimore has joined the Harlem Globetrotters basketball troupe as an entertainer. On the Wing: Memphis, Tenn. — Walton Lep-sey, Jr., didn’t fire a shot, but he' got his quail just the same. He said the flying bird hit the barrel of his gun and broke its neck. More Trades Planned by Hank: Hank Greenberg recently promised more action ahead after announcing that the Indians have acquired Outfielder Dave Philiey from the Athletics for Rookie Pitchers Leroy Wheat and Bill Upton. According to both clubs no cash was involved. “There are other deala we expect to complete before the season opens” said Hank Greenberg. Dates For Pinspotters Set: Dates for more installations of AMF Automatic Pinspotters have been set . . They will go into Ma- Isišeresfed in Sports? A meeting of all interested in the re-organization of the Inter-Lodge League will be held Tues., Mar. 2nd, in the Grdina Recreation Club room at 6017 St. Clair. Movies of the Inter-Lodge 75-car parade taken over 15 years ago will be shown; also the highlights of the athletic outdoor events. Movies — 7:30 sharp — Meeting at 8 p.m. Purpose of the meeting will be to help outline a plan for the younger fellows in softball and basketball. The old-timers are asked to assist in the promotion of this program thru their respective organizations, and use their influence in obtaining facilities. The adults will also discuss hn inter - organization bowling league in which they can participate. Everyone interested in this project is invited to attend! March 2nd, Grdina Recreation Club room, 6017 St. Clair Ave. Movies — 7:30 p.m. Meeting —- 8 p.m. “HEINIE” MARTIN ANTONČIČ THEEUCLIDŠČENE By MICHAEL BOICH Councilman of Ward 3 Euclid Council approved borrowing $150,000 for operating expenses in anticipation of Tax collections. A request was made for the drawing of legislation, making the lapse of a year’s time mandatory before Zoning requests once acted upon could be offered again for consideration by the Council. Council also considered 60 foot lots for homes. Some action to be taken at the March 1st meeting. A Program is being worked out by Administrator Director Michael Spino and Mayor Kenneth Sims, for re-topping asphalt streets in Euclid. The number of streets to be re-topped, will be decided upon, according to the financial condition of funds. si vnos now name Pre-Lenten Social The Pre-Lenten Social, which is being held this coming Sun., Feb. 28th, is a complete ‘sell-out!” Every table in the house has been reserved. Our Master of Ceremonies, John Kovacic, will introduce such ‘stars” as: Josephine Petrovčič, Edward Kenik, Emily Mahne, Tony Podobnik, Frances Centa, Edward Bra-dach, Radio Quartet, etc. Musical accompaniment by Mrs. Vera Slejko and Miss Jean Lav-rich. The program, under the direction of the well known Anton Schubel. Music for your “‘dancing pleasures” will be furnished by the Me-lo-Tones, featuring Matt Mlinar and his accordion. ATTENTION All Pre-Lenten Social .Workers are kindly asked to come to the School Hall at 7 o’clock, Sunday evening. Our Lady’s SodaUf— Cur monthly Sodality Meeting will be Tues., Mar. 2, at 8. Refreshments will be served after the meeting. PUB. CHAIRMAN ... JUNIOR SODALITY The monthly meeting of the Junior Sodality which was scheduler for March 2, 1954 is postponed till Mar. 9, 1954. This is due to the Shrove Tuesday Social which will be held on March 2, 1954, by the Catholic Youth Organization of St. Vitus Parish. However our monthly group Mass and Communion will be on the first Sunday of the month, that is, March 7, 1954. Your-Susie-on-the-Spot Reporter it’s time to hit the sack, — This is your ole uncle Jasbo saying — “Goodnight Miss Rozinava Potica,” — wherever you are. ROVING ROSCOE St. Vitus Hen’s Bowling League February 19, 1954 Three shutout victories were on the menu. Two series ended evenly while the third was a 3-1 victor. “Cookie” Kovacic of Norwood Men’s Shop had the highest game 245 and best series 613. Among the teams, the Chas. & Olga Slapnik Florists, the top team of our loop, had the highest game — 953 — and best series — 2715. Only seven more sessions are on tab and the fight, for positions is now in full swing. Catholic War Vets No. 2 blanked the Brodnick Bros, for all four points. Frank Kromar 244 and 559 and Vance Baškovič 234-556 were the big noises for the victors. Brodnick Bros 809 659 793 2261 Cath. War Vets-2 861 808 896 2565 Catholic War Vets No. 1 and Norwood Men’s Shop split with 2 points apiece. Joe Grdina 478 led for the Vets and Willie Kovacic 613 for the Men. Cath. War Vets-1 809 860 885 2551 Nor. Men’s Shop 828 745 934 2507 JUNIOR JOURNAL iovies at Norwood Library You are invited to enjoy a film journey of South America at Norwood Branch Library, 6405 Superior Ave., on Friday evening, Feb. 26 at 8 o’clock when we shall present Round South America by Air, a trip by Pan-American World Airways “Clipper” to many of the well known vacation and resort spots on both the East and West coasts of South America. Children may come with adults. dison Square on Mar. 8th and into Parma Lanes on Mar. 29. The pinspotters have been set in 185 Street Lanes since last year. Did They Bring Them Home?: The British Bible Society gave each member of the Hungarian soccer team that beat the British in London, some weeks ago, a copy of the Bible printed in Hungarian —which should have provided fuel for a gala Communistic book-burning soiree back home in Budapest. Weather Won’t Stop Home BuiSders He re 20 packages of cigarettes, 10 bars of candy and $110 in cash. New York, N. Y. — A candy store on busy 14th St, was held up. The insurance company was notified and an adjuster called at the store the next day to figure out exactly how much had been taken. While he was going over the books, who should pop in but the gunman to empty the till again and give the adjuster a little extra work to do. • • • , Rochester, Minn. — Municipal Judge Irving Eckholdt fined his landlord, Desmond Hunt $10 for driving after his driver’s li- drove off. Hartford, Conn. — position . Miami, Fla. — When T , 0 . FBI agents nabbed Mrs. Joseph Gazik got hinlj Essex Robinson a divorce after testify- ask^d what he ing that when her husband had collected was charged with, learned .. x ^ . , he was wanted for 40 cats m their home draft exdaim_ she asked him to choose between her and the cats, got a quick answer: “Get out.” Madison, Wis. — After Diane Nelson confessed she had stolen $12,215 to buy gifts for her boy friend, Albert Hanson, the judge put her on five years’ probation and sentenced Hanson to one to eight years. • • • am Bethel, Conn. — A burglar broke into Dr. cense expired. Hunt, | Albert J. Trimmer’s of-former city attorney, fice, ignored valuable ed: “Oh, is that it? I heard you were after me, so I hurried right down and paid that overdue bill at the clothing store . . .” • • » mm Mrs. Julia Bokar of 6615 Edna Ave., celebrated her 70th birthday on Feb. 14. Congratulations and here’s to many more birthdays! • • • mm* Greetings to all her friends were sent by Mrs. Maria Hochevar, who has been visiting in Joliet and Lemont. • • • mm In preparation for a house warming celebration that will draw more than 200,000 guests, the Home Builders Association of Greater Cleveland will build two full sized three-bedroom houses Indoors within a period of ten days in the Homeland Section of the annual Cleveland Home and Flower Show at Cleveland Public Hall, March 6 through 14. The house on the left was designed by architect Alfred W Harris and is sponsored by the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce. The AIA house on the right was designed by Anthony S. Ciresi who was chosen for this, job by the show committee of the American Institute of Architects, Cleveland Chapter. The Home Builders house will be constructed of brick. Both houses will be completely furnished, the AIA house by Garth Andrew of Bath, Ohio and the Home Builders house by the May Company’s interior decorating department. The Homeland Section of the Home and Flower Show is to be landscaped by Henry Free and in addition to flowering gardens, there will be a swimming pool to delight the show visitors. The main arena of Public Hall will again be a breathtaking spectacle of floral gardens built around the theme of “Springtime in the Berk-shires,” with an old water wheel mill In operation and an authentic Ohio blacksmith shop of grandfather’s day all against a 100-foot woodland scene featuring soring flowers in full bloom. Hold on to your hats, ‘cause there is a rip snortin’, mad cap week coming up. First of all, there is a dance-being held this Sunday at St. Mary’s in Collinwood, and secondly, the Mother’s Club is sponsoring a dance for all parish teenagers on Tuesday. All of the cool, crazy, mixed-up kids who received invitations for the dance at St. Mary’s, are to meet in front of the school building, this Sunday at p.m. Transportation will be provided thru generosity of various fellows from the neighborhood, who have volunteered the use of their limousines. PRE-LENTEN Have you looked at the calendar recently? If you have, you probably would have noticed that Lent is just around the corner. Well, the Mothers’ Club realizes that you guys and gals perform your Lenten penances with such strict self-denial, that you avoid all dances during Lent. So, in order to keep your dancing feet in check ’till Easter Sunday, the mothers are sponsoring one last big blowout this Tuesday. Now this isn’t just an ordinary dance, no sir-e-e-e-. This is going to go down in St. Vitus History as the first “Smorgasbord Dance”. Yes, you read right, it’s a Smorgasbord dance. This, as you probably already know, means that there will be all kinds of food stuffs and goodies to eat. The Dance starts at 7:30, but if you really want to have terrific meal, I advise you to be there before 7:30. For the benefit of Yocko, the doors will open at 7 p.m. Music will be by the Green Light Trio. This is the orchestra which, thru persistent effort has finally achieved the Glenn Miller “SOUND”. Don’t forget to get your dancing shoes repaired for Sunday and Tuesday. ROCOE’S ROVINGS Cathdral Latin is holding a dance this Saturday at Fosters Ballroom, which is .easily located on Winde-mere Ave. and Euclid Ave. Music by the Rhythmaires . . . Receiving his discharge from the Army on Feb. 28, will be 1st Lt. Anthony Stanič. The four Feathers are waiting for him . . RECORD of the Week: “The Book” bv Dick Lee . . QUESTION of the Week: What’s j ‘Twinkles” . . Rumor has it that Ivan Rasputan is going to grow in the sides on his hair. This columnist believes if is a lost cause ... A television program which, is something very off-beat and relaxing is The Dave Garrowav Show on WNBK Saturdays at 8:30 .... The Eagles have a meeting this; Sunday at 6 p.m. in the club room, don’t forget! ... If you are planning on going to a downtown show this week, make sure vou see “The Glenn Miller Story.” It’s the most-est, to say the leastest. Oh, — that — English . . — Be titanic; be like — Oh, forget it! . . Well, Clover Dairy and Cimperman Market also played the Alfonso and Gaston act by splitting evenly. Frank Plivelich 545 for the milkmen and Stan Merhar of the Grocers 209-203-557 paced their teams. Clover Dairy 869 858 858 2585 Cimperman Mkt. 806 874 876 2556 Mezic Insurance bounced back with a shutout victory over A1 & Ann’s Tavern. Paul Delic 225-573 paced the Insurance Agents to victory. Meqic Insurance 910 866 899 2675 A1 & Ann’s Tavern 863 829 866 2558 Hecker Tavern took three point, from Double Eagle Bottling Co. F Sands 577 led the winners. Hecker Tav. 867 804 780 245 Double Eagle 896 746 734 237 Chas. arid Olga Slapnik Florist protected their first place lead b, whitewashing Deutsch’s Taverr Joe Jaklič led the winners with 227 204-589. C-0 Slapnik 953 859 903 2715 Deutsch Tav. 848 853 841 Standings Feb. 18, 1954 2542 Teams W L Pts. C & O Slapnik 48 27 64 Mezic Insurance 43% 31% 58% Cimperman Mkt. 43 32 56 Double Eagle 42 33 53 Nor. Men’s Shop 39 36 52 , Clover Dairy 39% 35% 51% Deutsch’s Tav. 35 40 48 Hecker Tavern 34% 40% 47% C. V. W. No. 2 32 43 46 A1 & Ann Tavern 31 44 43 C. V. W. No. 1 32 43 42 Brodnick Bros. 28% 46% 40% Schedule for March 4, 1954 ALLEYS I- 2: Chas. & Olga Slapnik vs. Cin perman Markets. 3-4: Catholic War Vets No. 2 v Clover Dairy. 5-6: Catholic War Vets No. 1 v Mezic Insurance. 7-8: Deutsch Tavern vs. Brodnic Bros. 9-10: Hecker Tavern vs. A1 ar Ann’s Tavern. II- 12: Norwood Men’s Shop v Double Eagle Bottling Co. -------o------ LUSTROUS AND LADYLIKE Dress by Frank Stan START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT in this lovely gown of lustrous Avlsco acetate trimmed with a crisp cowl collar of white organ-zine. . . . Perfect for party or dress occasions all through spring . . . you’ll find it a welcomed addition to any basic wardrobe. Red Gross and Giviš iefense Work Rand in Rand Number one target should atomic warfare strike our country. The Greater Cleveland Red Cross Chapter has a major role in Civil Defense planning of our community. Responsible for welfare services of Civil Defense, Red Cross is training workers in more than 100 emergency shelters strategically located throughout the community. Frank A. Uniack, Chairman of the Red Cross Disaster Services is shown at a C. D. Zone map with John Pokorny, Cleveland’s C. D. Director. ------------o------------- ilri isoit Gampaign Mrs. Alvin Karlinger, will serve these leaders will obtain chairmen as Campaign Chairman for the in each group who will organize Northeast District in the city-wide , teams of workers. About 3,000 Neighborhood Appeal for the Camp , Girl Scout volunteer workers aiS1 Development Fund of the Cleve- | expected to participate in the neigh-land Girl Scout Council, it was an- | borhood campaign. Pounced by Mrs. Joseph Vasek and By ringing doorbells, the volun- Hariai Year Stamp It has been suggested that a personal letter be written to this POSTMASTER GENERAL, asking him to consider a MARIAN COMMEMORATIVE STAMP for next Mother’s Day, 1954. The Mariam# Affiliation Service is happy to pass on this suggestion and encourage^ YOU to write this letter as sooh a possible. , HASTE is very important for the success of this project because it takes a great deal of time to gdt a new stamp into circulation. Get OTHERS to write too: relatives, friends, acquantainces, eveh strangers. STAMPS have been successfully sponsored by other groups in our country. Every Christian, will be interested in having the WORLD’S GREATEST MOTHER honored in this way. American Catholics should consider this labor of love during this MARIAN YEAR. A famous Madonna painting with the words: “Mary, the Mother of Christ” is recommended for this stamp. Write to: The Hon. Arthur Summerfield Postmaster General Washington, D. C. Sample Letter: May I suggest that a stamp be issued next May honoring MART, the Mother of - Christ, the world’s greatest Mother. Mary symbolizes the sublimity of women and honoring her on Moth er’s Day would be honoring the dignity of Motherhood in its highest perfection. Your consideration of this mat ter when formulating the stamp program for 1954 would be deeply appreciated. Mrs. Elroy G. Schroeder, Co-Chairmen. The appeal for funds to finance teer workers hope to secure enough contributions to finance the purchase of the new Macedonia camp more camping facilities will be j site with its two lakes, lodge, and made in every neighborhood and | big barn, and to construct a dining community served by the Cleve- I hall and kitchen to serve 150, wa-land Girl Scout Council from Mar. 12-31. The goal is $200,000. The Special Gifts phase of the campaign has already brought $70,-000 into the fund. A total of $275,000 is needed to buy land and erect buildings to permit more girls to have the valuable experience of living, learning, and playing in a Girl Scout Camp. At present 65 per cent of Cleveland’s Girl Scouts cannot go to camp because there is no room for them. There are 15,000' Girl Scouts in Greater Cleveland today, but their resident camp facilities are the same as they were 15 years ago ^vhen there were only 3,626 Girl Scouts in the area. To relieve this situation, the Cle-veland Girl Scout Council has ter-sewage system, six camp-areas, six shelter houses, water-iront, caretaker’s house and shop, office building and cook’s cabin on the wooded areas. Plans also call iew Gouncilman club’s eighth anniversary. After a short period with General Electric, Tony joined the engineering staff of the City of Euclid. Here he became acquainted with the functions of the department as well as other departments. When the Memorial Day Association of Euclid was formed, he became an active member and two years ago chairmaned the annual Memorial Day event. A member of the Euclid Democratic Club, he has also participated in numerous civic and welfare projects. He was employed for some time by F. A. Thomas and Associates, ily that they were her own bills , A tip on tactfullness is this story she owed to people about town, and | the late Alexander Wooll- that she knew they were worthless;cott- After a ow n a *g because she had not paid any of ln a midwestern ci y, a woman them in the last two years and did )went up t° speak to the fame<* morist. The womans grandchil- not intend to pay any of them. dren were grown and she freely admitted to having passed 70. “I was encouraged to speak to you,’’ she said, “because you said you loved old ladies.” “Yes,” replied Woollcott gallantly, “I do. But I also like them your age.” There is an old story about a . , . ,, , ■ ■ I Kentucky mountaineer who rush- engmeers, but recently joined the . J i Ye - er ■ mu__________ ed into his cabin saying, Maw. staff of Neff ana Thomas, wno are. j u f I Maw! I ve learned how to write! “What’d you write, Paw?” “I don’t know, Maw”, the It has also been suggested that you write to your Representative in Congress, asking him to take a special interest in this project. Be sure to make this letter a personal one, too. ANTHONY J. SUSTARSIC Taking his seat for the first time among the members of Euclid’s City Council last week was Anthony J. Sustarsic, 28, veteran of World War II and well known among that city’s Slovenians. Tony weathered the initial session without incident and accepted, the congratulations of his colleagues. The popular young veteran was appointed to fill the council seat left vacant last fall by the death of Jame^ P. Bailey, councilman-at large! Making the announcement of the appointment was Mayor Kenneth J. Sims. Sustarsic was well received by the council members as well as the leaders of the Coalition group. He is now one of four councilmen-at-large. His appointment was hailed by hundreds of young veterans who have purchased homes in Euclid. They have joined with him in many-veteran activities and know he is familiar with their problems. 'One of the youngest men ever to serve in Council in the city of Euclid, Tony is a life-long resident of Euclid and comes from an old Slovenian family. His parents came to America from Yugoslavia in 1910 and like j other immigrants, they came looking for “streets paved -with gold”. What fie feew Aijoiit Akoho! In a frank discussion of “What We Know About Alcohol, ’ Dr. John i jns^eacj they found mud roads and H. Nichols, head of the departmeni, j-.ar(j work, but still enjoyed their engaged in engineering work Willowick and on sections of the Ohio Turnpike. Tony is married to the former Helen Paisa and they reside at 309 East 227nd St., with a duaghter Judy, 2, and a son, Jerry, 4. Death Rotises Grill, Margaret — New born daughter of Valentine and Stana (nee Mršnik) of 1280 E. 168 St. Jandt, Carl — Husband of Anna (nee Miller), father of Alfred, Emma, Herman, Elizabeth, Laura, brother of Mrs. Emma Schuck. Residence at 14117 Sylvia Ave. Jarm, Anna (nee . Per at) — Wife of Frank, mother of Dr. Frank, Mrs. Mildred Kaiser, sister of James Perat. Residence at 450 E. 156 St. Kovach, Anton — Father of An- j ton, Louis, Frank, Joseph, Jose- j phine Bobak. Residence at 20206 Cchickasaw Ave. Kunstel, Johanna (nee Bartol)— Mother of John, Frances Mramor, Frank, Mary Aird. Residence at 19805 Muskoka Ave. Macek, Andrew — Husband of Laura, brother of Mrs. Angela Jeras, Mrs. Mary Obad, son of Macek family (of 15810 Trafalgar Ave.) Residence in • Painesville, O. Osolin, Louis — Husband of Victoria (nee Zaller), father of Dorothy Lauther, Carl, Robert, Richard. Residence at 841 .E 216 St. Pintar, Anna (nee Žnidaršič) —• Mother of Anna Erste, Josephine Levstik, Joseph,-Zora Boječ. Residence at 1218 E. 172 St. mountaineer answered, crestfallen. “Ain’t learned to read yet” Sf®¥£niaii School for Mulls 18) Slovenian School for Adults Adults, interested in learning Slovenian, are requested to come tonight, Friday, at 8 p. m. to St. Vitus School. of Neurology and Psychiatry at St. Luke’s Hospital, will present the for building at Camp Julia CroweL medical facts on this current prob four shelter houses, a winterized cabin, central shower house, and a second waterfront on the upper lake. “The Girl Scouts are a Community Fund agency, but not a penny of Community Fund money is used for the Scout camping program.” according to Mrs. Alvin Karlinger, District Chairman. “Campers’ fees pay part of the operating costs and income from the annual Cookie Sale pays the balance. This campaign is for capital funds for the purchase of property and the con- Munched a Camp Development štruction of additional buildings. Program. A new, 108-acre camp «^11 of us who have had experi-site has been purchased in Macedo-1 ence wjth the Girl Scout program ^ia township and additional faci-!know that camping is a laboratory iities will be built at Camp Julia !0t democracy for our girls,” Mrs. Growell in West Richfield. j Alvin Karlinger added. “That is Both camps will be used thruout j why we have adopted as our cam-the year, for two-week camping pe- paign slogan — Girl Scouts — riods in the summer and for week-ei}d and troop camping the other 'thite months. Mrs. Alvin Karlinger is enlisting campaign chairmen in the neigh- lem of great importance on So-hio’s “Prescription for Living” television program Sunday afternoon, Feb. 28, at 4:30 p.m. Dr. Nichols is assistant clinica! professor of Neurology at Western Reserve School of Medicine and is medical director at Windsor Hos-spital. Presented by The Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) in cooperation with the-Cleveland Health Museum and the Academy of Medicine, and with Warren Guthrie again acting as the program’s moderator, this television health show may be seen on: WEWS Channel 8 in Cleveland, Good Citizens Now and Always.” -o-------------------------- Judge: “Are you guilty?” Prisoner: “I haven’t heard horhood areas in this district and the evidence yet. Wedding Dells Saturday, Feb. 27th, at 9 a. m football player. He had visions of going to college and . even of playing professional football. His schooling at Dyke Spencerian College was interrupted by a call to the U. S. Army. After leaving the States with the boys in khaki, Tony was stationed for a spell in England. W’hile on the British Isle he was afforded an, opportunity to carry on his love a wedding ceremony will take place i 0f football an became a member new homeland as they brought up Tony, the youngest, following Lucille (Mrs. John Korencic), Joseph and Edward. Mr. Sustarsic passed away 19 years ago following a short illness. He had been employed by the New York Central Railroad. Tony’s school here' started at Roosevelt thru the eighth grade received this answer: ‘My wife says then he went to Euclid Central | she is not 65^and never will be.” High. Here Tony became interest- * * * . , , - , , , A woman appeared m a Mmne- ed m sports and was a top notch , -1 sota tax office with a return on which there was a deduction of iiseeiie Tax Gollecting Ms Insnan Isiieresf An income-tax consultant, uncertain as to whether a client^ wife was entitled to double exemption for being 65 years old or over, wrote the hušb’atf(f’’asking' for information. After some delay he Let us slaow you tixe (^Jioioer Q0eJJing e£int . .‘Y, created by cQtgtncy I Maturauy. fhe/re Important to yotil That'« wHy w* wont vog ?o se» the» invitation* for ycunetf. And pioaM don’t tat thot c^tiy look mislead you . . . ths maple I* tn th* mokinpW tl»**» invitations! Fesi that tine, sharp raised tattofinp. it’s done by a very special process! Feel the creamy quality at the papers! Check the perfect form of these invitation* with people who really knowt Come Ini We w»!l be happy te show you the "Flower Weddtwp Um." Prtctd m Iowa* W /er $7M 100 for 910S0 with doubt* ooootapeo and (tuna* Select from 4S dUtinctiv* p opere Tad IT rifles of lettering. FINE PRINTING . . PROMPT SERVICE American Home Publishing Co, in St. Vitus Church uniting in mar riage Miss Stephanie Žnidaršič, daughter of Anton Žnidaršič, 5814 Bonna Ave., and Mr. Anthony Sajovic, son of Mrs. Mary Sajovic, 1003 E. 66th Place. PATHer KNOWS BEST — Freddie Lindstrom, former National League great, w o was honored at the 36th Annual Old Timers’ Baseball Association Banquet, recently, gives some ^amond “tips-off-the-block” to his sons. They are (left to right) Charles, 17 who shower, promise with the American Legion team last season; Fred Jr., who is m the Air Force, and J^ndy, 20, who’s slated for a tryout with the Philadelphia Phillies this year. of the base grid team. In part Tony realized his desire to play “pro ball” because half of the members of the base team were exprofessionals. His team won acclaim thru the European Theatre of Operations and Tony was considered a wonderful prospect for college and professional competition. As a member of the 3rd Armored Division he was caught in the Battle of the Bulge. A German 88 surprised him — as a result, he now gets around extraordinarily well on an artificial limb. It was one of 11 serious wounds the purple hearted soldier received in over 2 yeais of wrar service. The service incurred injury and loss of one leg failed to dim his interest in sports. Following his discharge in 1945, he returned to Euclid and immediately adjusted himself to a new way of life. Baa leg and all, he used to visit his old. j school athletic field and invariably would grab a football and start tossing it like “a pro”. He played baseball and bowled and when questioned1 about his war injury he would say “it could have been worse.” Tony was one of six disabled vet who founded the Euclid Vqteralis Club. At first the exservicemen held their meetings at the Slovenian Hall on Recher Ave. Four-yea rs ago Tony was one of a group that aided the Vets in establishing their new home on 16 acres of ground on East 260th St. He waž president of the organization in 1952 and two weeks ago was one of six men presented awards as the Euclid Vets celebrated the $500 for bad debts. When that item was questioned, she replied haught* 6117 St. Clair Avenue HE 1-0628 He Never Reads the Ads 1|š£lSlfr He can’t afford to own a television set... an automobile ... or any of the other wonderful products that make life pleasant. Evidently he’s one of the few people who don’t want them enough to work to get them. So he doesn’t take the risk of reading advertising. The logic of advertising’s value isn’t hard to understand Mass production does two things: it creates useful products at popular prices and provides high wages so people can afford to buy them. Advertising helps sell the products to people—and that keeps the production lines and the jobs going. Advertising has long since proved that it is the fastest and lowest cost way of carrying the news of products to millions of people overnight, stimuiating the desire to buy, supplying the factories with orders. Our hobo friend's income, as well as yours, depends directly or indirectly upon the ability of advertising to move products from assembly lines to users, because consumer desire means consumer demand and that’s what keeps America prosperous. Prepared by the Cleveland Advertising Club Lodge SS. Op! mi iefhodšiis Ho. S8 SDZ THE slovenian national home 40th Anniversary Dance SATBBMY. W88BY 21, 1854 6417 St. Clair Ave. 8:00 P.M. ? Admission 75c NžlSiC KGIffijf BfiSS 811(1 HlS OfCHCSlrd This and That from Washington *By Congressman Prances P. Bolton- was EORGE WASHINGTON. Let us pause a moment for Monday George Washington’s Birthday! In 1732 was born the man whose vision, whose faith, whose fortitude and whose strength of character brought the colonies through a revolution and built them into a nation. ’ Oh, yes, there were other stalwarts but except for Wash- Mrs. Bolton ington they would not have had a country to build. It was his greatness that carried the thirteen colonies through to victory. It was his influence that guided the creation of the system of government which this nation adopted. And in his two terms as President he welded together many varying ideologies and put this nation on the road to greatness which it now travels. It is very difficult to point to any one event in George Washington’s life and say, “This is responsible for his immortality in America.” He was not a dramatic speaker. With his rags-and-tat-ters army, he never won a battle in the sense of having vanquished his foe. As President he was villi-fied and insulted. Nor did he create any policy which became known as Washington’s policy. But like the simple, beautiful, towering monument that has been raised to him here in Washington, D. C., his character dominated the course of American life through the most critical period in our history. Let us turn to him in our hearts reaching towards his strength, his faith, his indomitable courage, that we in our turn may face the future undaunted and unafraid. IIAALE NURSES. After several li-l efforts to meet the desires of the Army, Navy and Air Force, I introduced a new male nurse bill this week. It would make possible the commissioning of qualified men in a nurse reserve corps of all three branches, instead of in the Army alone as my previous bill proposed. My latest reports from the Defense Department indicated that its report to the House Armed Services Committee will be favorable. 1. President Eisenhower’s recommendations for putting the Post Office Department more nearly on a paying basis, the House Post Office Committee approved a bill to increase rates, most of them to take effect next January 1st. The bill would: 1) Provide for a four-cent stamp on non-local first class mail—on the first ounce only. 2) Raise the cost of air mail to seven cents an ounce. 3) Increase by 30% the rates for out-of-county newspapers with large advertising content, over a three-year period. 4) Raise third class rates for circulars, medicines, merchandise and other similar mailings. 5) Raise the minimum charge for publications of some nonprofit organizations (except religious ones) which are sent outside the country. Comment of American Siovenians on Treaty with Austria By a SLOVENIAN - AMERICAN American-Slovenians are deeply concerned, with the Big Four Parley in Berlin. As Americans we are deeply concerned with the future of our country that depends also on the renewal of Freedom in the countries behind the iron curtain, where President Roosevelt’s promise to establish the traditional four democratic liberties including the freedom from fear did not come true. Communist criminals no matter whether they bear names like fetalin, Malenkov, Vishinsky, or Tito brought conditions in these countries babk to ancient barbarism. The United States and the entire Free World assumed a great responsibility by signing the Treaty of Yalta, that delivered freedom-loving peoples to the most ruthless tyranny in the history of mankind. Believing in democracy in political I -worifl » life, we ask all the American offi- | jn “It calls itself a people’s democracy, but it suppresses every human right to the whim of the state.” “It appeals to the hungry and hopeless with offers of bread and security, but exacts a terrible price in bloodshed and torture.” ... “Communism has robbed the individual of the right to call his soul his own. Once the Iron Curtain descends upon him, he becomes a pawn of the state. He loses all his inalienable rights. He may be deprived of life, liberty and property without due process of law. At any moment and for any reason, an individual, a family, a community and all they have work ed for and struggled for thruout their existence may be rubbed ou by order of the state, which pro claims only one basic law — the law of the jungle, the law that the end justifies the means.” “This is Communism. This is tyranny at its worst. This is the edge of the sword which is now brandished over the civilized cials to recall the words of free regard to the tyrannical na- ture of Communism, we ask our Amer ican labor spoken by George | government to guarantee the right Meany, President of the AFL, at the Convention of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions in Stockholm, Sweden, July 4, 1953: “When subjected to scientific analysis, Communism is exposed as not a new idea but a throwback to ancient barbarism.’ ’ ‘It professes a people’s revolution, but in every case it has established an oligarchy which rules the people by force and by terror.” ‘It promises liberation, but it delivers humanity into the bonds of complete slavery.” to asylum to the people who escaped from the Red tyrants, even if those tryrants are called our Al- lies, as it is in the case of Tito. In that decisive hour of history it is the duty of the United States and all the governments of the Free World to prevent any refusal of asylum as it did happen in 1945, ■^yhen the Allied Armed Forces in Europe sent people to their death under the slogan of repatriation. Furthermore, it is of our grave concern to guarantee national rights to small nations and minority groups endangered to be overrun or educated in other than native languages. Siovenian-Amer-icans raised their voices in protest against the unfortunate promise of cur government to deliver the Free Territory of Trieste to Italy instead1 proclaiming the national and democratic rights to the people on the very border of the iron curtain and prepare the way to a United Europe on the base of recognition of the national rights to all the national groups. It seemed to us and, to all the freedoom loving Americans that on the Territory of Trieste the solemn guarantee of independence would have been the best solution to achieve peace and justice on that small strip of the Adriatic CQgst. Just as we did protest against the delivery of the Free Territory of Trieste to Italy, we raise our voices in demand of three important provisions that have to be included in any treaty which our government will sign with the Republic of Austria. 1. Austria has to agree never to unite with Germany. Any unifi fication with Germany would bo considered by the Slovenians as a threat to their very existence because of the century old German plan of reaching the Adriatic. 2. Austria has to guarantee national rights to the Slovenians in Southern Carinthia as well as to die Croats in the province of Bur-genland by the establishment and support of equal educational oppor-unities in their ..native ..language which should again become the official language for offices and the public. We demand that guarantee, for in the very recent time the provincial government of Carinthia proposed to shorten the territory with bilingual elementary education for a half. The Slovenians in Carinthia, numbering about 100,000 suffered enormous sacrifices and persecution during the Nazi occupation and should be protected by international treaties from any attempts of germanization within Austria. Just as the Austrians raised their voices to protect the German minority in South Tyrol in Italy, the Slovenians will stand up for the protection of their language to prevent any future germanization of Carinthia, the cradle of the Slove-1 nian nation in the past. In con- j nection with that provision, we de- : mand the American supervision of the ERP funds granted to Austria, for Southern part of Carinthia did | not receive an equal share with the German-speaking part of the province. 3. The Austrian government has j, War I two plays: “Naša kri” (Our to guarantee the right of political | Blood), dealing with the French, asylum to refugees who escaped or | occupation of Slovenia and proving j will escape from Communist tyrannies. WTe demand that guarantee, because in the very recent time the Austrian Socialist Party, which became very friendly toward Titoism, in its press frequently attacked refugees from Yugoslavia demanding their forced repatriation. Similarly different Austrian politicians, not mentioning the Communists only, promised in their speeches to the public to get rid of refugees as soon as the Armed Forces of the Western Allies would be withdrawn. Since the UN made no satisfactory provision for emigration of refugees, it is quite clear that the Austrians had a forced repatriation in their mind: There is also the danger that the Communist neighbors would demand a forced repatriation or that Austria would agree to it to achieve economic relations with the countries under the Communist tyranny. We ask all our readers as well as Slovenian societies and fraternal organizations in the United States to make known our demands regarding* the Treaty with Austria to our Senators and Congressmen. iodern Slovenian Literature By E. A. KOVACIC (Continued) The next period of literary activity, Fran S. Finžgar devoted to study and to writing of shorter stories. Among them were the most important the autobiographical description of his youth “Študent naj bo”, (He Shall be a Student), the short beautiful description of a hunting “Na petelina” (The Hunt of the Rooster), and a short story “Sama” (Alone), devoted to a lonely teacher in the country. Besides, he wrote a realistic novel ‘Dekla Ančka” (Maid Ann). Finžgar’s dramatic creations became the most popular Slovenian plays, altho they lack the artistic value of his novels. Beside ‘Divji lovec”, he wrote before World HOW MANY KEYS DO YOU HAVE? Do you have a key to your own home, car, and maybe one to a summer cottage or cabin? If you just dream about these goals, you’ll find that steady saving is the surest way to reach them. You’re invited to open an insurad savings account here with a convenient amount. Accounts Insured to $10,000.00 MW / n/ Current IJ I y' U/ Rate on IVI /o /Q Savings m Electric Dryer Sales in ‘'Best Location’ Top Nation for Second Consecutive Year ON YOUR SAVINGS A WE WELCOME YOUR SAVINGS that the resisting force of the Slovenians is based on the soil, and “Veriga” (The Chain), in which he condemned the unnecessary quarrels among peasants. After World War I, he published another drama “Razvalina življenja” (The Ruin of Life) showing the de cay of family life in the country. During World War I, Finžgar described the echoes of the war in the immediate hinterland omitting any sensasationalism in short stories: ‘Prerokovana”, (The Prophesiz-ed), “Boji” (Fighting), and “Prerokba zore”, (Prophesy of Dawn). Due to the Austrian censorship, the author was not able to finish the last one and started to write another story “Kronika gospoda Urbana” (Urban’s Chronicle), describing the evils of the war with the Napoleonic Wars as a background. The end of the Austrian Empire found an echo in Finžgar’s short story “Polom” (Collapse). After World War I, Finžgar devoted the most of his time to the “Družba sv. Mohorja”, for he became the editor of its publications. For the oldest publishing company he wrote also four more short stories: ‘Beli ženin” (White Bride- groom), ‘Strici” (Uncles), “Gospod Hudournik” (Mr. Torrent), etc. The latter being a humoristic description of a retired clerk on summer vacation in the mountains. Finžgar became an outstanding Slovenian writer. His plays belong to the best Slovenian popular dramatic works, altho the writer reached his climax in the realistic novel. At present, the author is living in the city of Ljubljana being the greatest living Slovenian Rudolfih Knific Agency Complete Insurance Service Our companies are rated A-pius Auto and fire rates given over phone. IV 1-7540 820 E. 185th St. writer. Next Week: ....“Modern Slovenian Literature:” Ksaver Meško.” ..................... Clip and save for your scrapbook on the history of your ancestors.) in a give them, something?” “Yes,” he replied. “Let’s give them Aunt Gertrude.” A mother, pointing to a photo-newspaper, said to her little boy: “Those little boys are-orphans. They have no mother or father, and no Aunt Gertrude. Would you like to. - i , €sSf w^aT WW#m1I NATION AW »AfETY COUNCII, FOR “GIFTS THAT ADVERTISE” CALL PAULICH Specialty Co. Advertising Novelties • Matches Calendars • Anniversary - Convention and Opening Favors Executive and Business Gifts “ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW and DIFFERENT” Office and Showroom 15813 Waterloo Road IV 1-6300 GL 1-7697 ‘DRY CLEANING THAT SATISFIES” ALSO DYEING - PRESSING REPAIRING Acme Dry Cleaning & Dyeing Go. «372 E. 152 St. GL 1-5374; Rich's Auto Body Shop OVER 25 YEARS . . . I yjt Rendering Distinctive—Dignified Service that everyone can afford. We make mo prices—with us your selection—your choice determines what you wish to spend. Whether your budget is $150 or more, you alone determine the cost. For over a quarter of a century we have strived to ’ build a Reputation Based on Courtesy, Attentiveness and Fair Dealing—with the satisfaction of having served sincerely. We enjoy the reputation and pride—the public acclamation of our being amongst Cleveland’s Finest and Best Equipped Funeral Establishments. CALL WITH CONFIDENCE AND PRIDE IN THE BEST, THE COST WILL BE NO MORE Louis Ferfolia Futteral Home i LOUIS L. FERFOLIA DONALD L. FERFOLIA MRS. L. L. FERFOLIA, Licensed Lady Ass’t. f/. 9116 Union Ave. at E. 93rd St. Tel.: MI 1-7420 COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE Painting - Motor Service Ignition - Brake Service 1078-80 East 64th Street Tel. HE 1-9231 — HE 1-4*47 1 Charles & Olga Slapnik FLOWER SHOP FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS 6026 St. Clair Ave.—EX 1-2134 KM your future through your } SUN LIFE REPRESENTATIVE MICHAEL & JOHN R. TELICH 2121 N. B. C. Bldg. CH 1-7877 NOTICE You can pay Gas, Water, Electric and Telephone bills every day at the office of MIHALJEVICH BROS. CO. MM1Q fHMAl BOOSJT IHSUKAJin COSf OMIlOi 6424 ST. CLAIR AVE. j With our Special Money Orders yon can pay all other bills, such as doctors, hospitals, rents, stores, etc. Office Hours: 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. EXTENDED TO MARCH 15 PERMANENTS — Complete An electric washer-dryer team means washday at a matinee! 0 k-XvXl ST. CLAIM uni Homemakers in “The Best Location in the Nation” bought more electric clothes dryers last year than ever before. j So many, in fact, that Cleveland-Northeast Ohio topped the nationwide list in dryer sales-per-thousand-customers for the second consecutive year when compared with market areas served by electric companies with 200,000 or more customers. New electric dryers—13,500 of them—went to work in the homes of 31 out of every 1000 Illuminating Company customers in ’53. Today, more than 44,000 units provide flameless electric clothes drying in the Cleveland Northeast-Ohio area. A look at the national picture shows dryer buyers are choosing electric dryers 3 to 1 over other types. What woman doesn’t want an appliance that gives her a permanent reprieve from the “washday wearies” for only five cents a day! Carry work saving a logical step further, combine the dryer with an automatic washer and electric dry team can save Mrs. Homemaker 10 hours a week. Small wonder the ladies are trading drudgery for leisure! Another 12,000 kitchen-wise Cleveland-area women bought flameless electric ranges last year. Besides being the cleanest, coolest. most modern way to prepare food, electric ranges cook a complete meal for about two cents. It’s a champion work saver, too. Put dinner in the oven, set the automatic timer to start and stop cooking whenever you want—then give yourself the afternoon off. Add an electric dishwasher and food freezer to your electric ^ Felpaiy Special Reg. $10.00 .50 Bohar's Beauty Salon 6407 St. Clair Avenue (Slov. Natl. Home) HE 1-5296 ry range and refrigerator and you can cut food preparation, shopping and dishwashing time by 14 more hours a week. Working together in laundry and kitchen, these seven tireless electric servants alone can save you up to 24 hours a week. Think of it—three full eight-hour days of extra time for all the things you enjoy doing. Best of all the cost is low. You can operate any of these appliances for a few cents a day. Remember—the more electricity you ironer and this triple-threat laun- use. the less it costs per jiniU^^ CHICKEN DINNER MERRYMAKER'S CAFE 4814 SUPERIOR AVENUE Saturday, February 27, 1954 MUSIC and ENTERTAINMENT Make Reservations Early Call EN 1-9395 or EN 1-5495 BUKOVNIK STUDIO MASTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings - Families - Portraits - Children 762 E. 185th Street IVanhoe 1-1797 Open Daily — 9-8 p.m. Sundays 10-3 p.m. Identification Photos — Copies From Old Photographs A. 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