Jack Pickering Here Archbishop Mooney Urges Month of Prayer for a Just Peace Archbishop Edward J. Mooney today called upon 800,000 Catholics parishes, to the end that we may achieve victory for the establish- At that time, Archbishop Mooney said: in the Detroit archdiocese to join with the Catholic world during the ment of a just and lasting peace,” the archbishop stated. “1 deem it our pastoral duty to make our people conscious of th« and in preceding years,” the archbishop pointed out. “His Holiness month of May in prayers to the Blessed Virgin Mary for attainment “A* need and power of a prayer front at home in support of our defenders will invoke the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary for the needs early and just peace. who man the battle fronts around the world where the fate of of an of humanity and for the attainment of a just peace.” our Now Acting on directions of His Holiness. Pope Pius XII, Archbishop Reminding the pastors of the Pope’s explicit desire for the prayers country and of Christian civilization stands in the balance. Mooney directed a letter to pastors of the archdiocese which will be of Archbishop Mooney declared that “especially in the “Our country Is now' engaged in a world-wide conflict which, o« 7 children. > SOtCE A CERTAIN Dee. read this Sunday at all masses. souls, the testimony of heart-rending facts, Is fateful for the this department pleading of these innocent rising in mighty chorus before the defense of CifXthifiWltimitir were made known in a message Cardinal blessings inalienable human rights and fateful, too, for the essential bn «k* D«i"tl» KOOUH (Blue Mampii ME IT, CHEE*K, FATS (Red stamp*) B'.'# i’ll v. h. j . o k*tni* ton * •you to a Iwmd In , C n for buy May „ ...... E —Valid to 31 V™ u May especially the America’* greatest finan- H. .I—Valid to 31. r Valid May 2 to Mav 11. SI OVK O Valid May 9 to May 3t f) ° w n * ° u n undertaking, the sec- StIW 1 cial Stamp 12 —Flv» to May .11 H—Valid May Id to May 31. tJ ones and the ond war loan. Act today! GAMOIJSt J—-Valid May 23 to May 31. g the , saving* DETROITm^fiMES that War inenn A-Coupnn V ttr rmpP' jv || places IV— Radons to Ma 21. Mump 24 One pound to Mav JO. close Having of soldier and sailor ~ ;i ’ FI El. Oil. SHOES S Coupon on* Stemp pair |BH| enough sn you live* pin* postwar anti- 4—ll k* t< ?*;.¦’ .I°. 17 —On* to June 14. to inflation backlog. THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1943 PAGE 25 Save Your Tin Cant for Collection May 22 |||||Ba^^^^^B |B|||B ( i ¦’!(¦! ! A DETROIT ENGINEER LEAVING ON HIS LAST RUN (iols Ills •lap to Keep BiBIB ¦ OPA Rules Out Rails Discount c u s t o m ers MR. ri< RJiRINC* pimply nf money, the atmosphere has Promise to Mother changed. Fun for fun * sake isn t Hoarding fashionable any more and even Shoe jgflßß. I*L ODT Threat of the lads who have landed mil- ¦ >¦: lion dollar contracts don t break loose with the celebrations that such events would have touched for Customers ITravel Ration off two years ago. * # • Shoe boarding Is out, the OPA So Immediate rationing of rail- the The playboys who were l is ruled today. road travel seen by G. A. Kelly, backbone *of Detroit s case lay vice president Society are gone, most of lhem Shoe dealers cannot hold or , of the Pullman Co.. in uniform. One of the stories away shoes for customers beyond “The educational campaign to making the rounds concerns the end of the period in which a reduce unnecessary travel by the Goldman, who used to Jrving current shoe stamp is valid unless public has been completely suc- stir things up at the London receive cessful, some too Chophouse. they a stamp in advance. In instances people were ordering successful,” Now, he's in Africa, but a let- Some sev- the transportation ter from him, a few days ago, eral years supply of shoes held for executive, in Detroit last night lump sugar that them, *| told about some according to Clarence M. to speak at a meeting of railroad army in Was served jn mM Day, district rationing executive. office employes, said. Africa. He got a lump still ”Thi* practice If continued "I’m the wrapped in the London Chop- sure warning by ODT house wrapper. would decrease the number of Director Eastman that rationing shoe* available to the general was in the offing unless travel the lump sugar. It seems, All public.” Day said. were cut down Is only a part of went to the army because it Concurrently, the home, people OPA declared the educational campaign.” ships better. Rack | that the test on house slippers and granulated stories NO use and tell as to whether they are PLAN KNOWN the odd places that the imoccasins about i rationed is now whether the shoe* Kelly said Eastman's office had lump sugar show* up. designed • $ a were or were not to be made a number of preliminary worn gay blade* are indoors. studios, trying to find a workable Replacing the Ballet slippers are also excluded scheme of custom- of travel rationing but, so an entirely pew crop rationing n», men with thicker from under this pro- far as the railroads knew, had not grayer vision. yet found middle*, and any free spender, i one. “It's the toughest day*. I* identified a* "a rationing theae job Imaginable. toot and die man.’* whether or | No one has yet dared to say, not It'* m. j for instance, that soldiers going on leave and rela- I'n fortunately, *ome nf these May Deadline i tives Visiting soldiers to say haired gentlemen cause gray good-by are on the playboys nonessential more trouble than travel. I rationing did and one mail re d hotel consider of ever travel unnecessary, impractical, shortly that "»lwn remarked File by and To Phntn Time* B*sff Phot Menus ctsrt.ir impossible to police.” or four drinks, < they get three The educational tber'ra harder to handle than MRS. WILLIAM SMITH AND DAUGHTER, MARGARET campaign during - eating the .. Ow’ner* of place* drunken woman.” bi vwHUiillß • 5- werf Christmas holidays was so evert a And . . . , . . William, warned today hy son a Marine, kept his pledge effective that many trains pre- that's the supreme Insult. Thnto hy Tim*» Staff I’hotorr*^her OPA that onl> * * pared to days remain until the May 1 do business remained idle r• VIRGINIA.ROW AND JANE \VAISLINGTON WALTER WALLIXGTON I'hree on side tracks as < Flamboyant parties arc gnnr^ for filing copy the public stayed 'deadline one of each Detroit Marine Also away in droves, Kelly revealed. average paid by . , . , , check ihe Engineer Wallington getting a send-off from his three granddaughters . |"nenu in 4 J use from April to April ! Cuat)Pmer* is noticeably larger in with their local ration hoard. Captures Flag After INDUSTRIAL NEED •Ptvi people who used to take know, arc teetotalers when T !ioy Boarding houses, private clubs, “It is and like it are. in many Years; Killing Sniper in Tree one thing in which the •beer With Record Perfect, arc on active duty. Retires After 41 tourist and summer camps and people are co-operating rase*, buying Mumms or Lan- college fully, •'Then. I'm going fishing—tip residential halls and fra- even amazingly. They under- *on champagne at sls if and He Pilots Mercury Plans to Take Drink ternity Smith, it our Northern Michigan iot- houses are required to file Marino Cpl William L. stand the need of trains for When they can find It—one their meat and drink prices with case in His Final Run tage. on First Day Off .21, vowed when he left home that tremendous troop and supply customer bought a whole the OPA a? well as restaurants, of Mumm’s in one place "just so MISS JOB he would “get a Jap. Mom.” and movements.” WILL taverns, soda fountains, hotels With less have it in case I want it figure today in a letter home he re- equipment than In I’ll By VERA BROWN “Looking hack, a 70 in September. I it is and all other eating places, sometime.” but they try to keep it’* hern counted how he had kept his 1917. the railroads are doing the good About my record, all time for me to quit.” j Eating places must keep on file .biggest such spending quiet. i After 11 years. Walter F Wall- life. pledge and capturod a silk Japa- job in history. Kelly told • • • for OPA inspection two copies mgton has ofyned his last throttle I ran %a> in I’ve been lucky. You Wallington hauled soldiers all of nese fUig in the bargain. 1 several hundred Detroit ticket fight their daily menus beginning April Likewise, the society faces are know, we engineer* wind during the war. The captured flag which was agents, reservation agents, and waved his last signal, last ,10. If no menus are used of ¥ They feel that It doesn't and weather, hurricane**, miow* lists enclosed in ihp letter hangs today traffic directors at the meeting. absent. j He ha< made hi« last run and who “I u**ed to like to hear my dad the servings and prices charged look right to go in for free storm* and m«torl*t* won’t over the ratlin in the family home. “And we’re going to carry on « PPK tell about hauling Jhe hovn lmc« must he filed by the owner intending. Anyway. nxM of them the New York Central engineer Mop. In the old dav*. when von in-! 2224 Fourteenth. through to victory even If w« whittle, < stead, the OPA explained. ire genuinely hard at work these with the perfect record i* tnda> pulled the the hor*e and in ivil War time*.. That spans William, who wrote from Guad- have no replacement of existing buggy halted. Not motor car**. doesn't it ?” equipment." he . Cays. retired. history, alcanal where the Sixth Marine said. They trv t« heat you out. That'* “The iTwo years ago nothing 4 mi) SPEC I XL Corps fought, said: soldier today average* m it was Yesterday, w.th his three pretty what give* me the*>e gray hairs. six four smart ”1 got my Jap nut of a tree train rides before his train- "to have three or granddaughters looking on. Wall- “I suppose I'll miss the job. This war. \\ allingtnn has been Recreational School ing is parties in a single not 75 yards from where we had completed,” he explained. debutante mgton climbed briskly into ihe I came Into the service here driving the swank Cupid's Special day, costing perhaps $5,000 each. dug in for the night, and I cap- j cab of the hig locomotive w ith when I was a kid of 17, worked which takes the girls and pretty FRILLS DISAPPEAR the parties have almost Will Open Tonight ? tured the flag on one of our Now. which was to out the In baggage room. young wives, the mothers, to HHNHr bHHH disappeared ? he take the My dad over drives. Frills like upholstery are going 0 0 0 crack Mercury to Chicago. Foi was an old M. C. R. R. man. a Chicago to sec their soldiers and Registration at the recreation CTL. WILLIAM L. SMITH ’’Those yellow snakes are not fast. Kelly declared, while the two years he has piloted that mil- conductor. I always wanted to sailots at Camp Grant and at training short-handed war . . . you Outlving places, true, took a school for worker* , . . a man of his word what would rail fighters. All industry concen- each day. be an engineer. Great tonight on licking when gas rationing came lion-dollar train, Lakes. will open at the Rackham they do is fight from anihush or trates such essentials as a safe Chewing one gift • hut nearly all of them are on of his “It took me 10 years so get Bigwigs of the N* Y. C. were Memorial Building. snipe from trees.” i>et of trucks under a car. in. cigars, the old engineer said, Unionist to Speak Mill operating, from the demo- lean- Into the cab. That’s where I down to wave go<>d-hy to Walling- Sponsored jointly hv the LAW- The proud mother. Mrs. William Some relief of crowded facilities out : Palm Reach to the nnt- ing of his cah window wanted to t*e. I remember, a* a ton and to the throe beauteous CIO, the University of Michigan “F'rom tho Church to Lnbor and Smith said that William enlisted will he obtained by building cars cratic going watch granddaughters. po-democi a 1 ic Club Royale. “What am I to do? kid. I used to the trains Jane 19, Virginia extension service and the Wayne Why” will he the topic of a lec- in February, 19*11. exclusively for troop transporta- Well, the first thing tomorrow. chug through old fork Town, I*. and Dona 17. He lives with County Defense Council, the pur- ture at \£ p Monday tion. he Some report that customers 15 ni. in the He was graduated from Western said. I'm going to take a drink. Ju*t where I was horn. That was them and their mother Mrs. Wal- pose of the school is to create per- Central hy Lloyd Jones, High Details for are arriving by street car. YMCA T. School. The Smiths have a contract with the • • was going he ter at • j one.” when I knew I to Wallington Jr , 1077 Radc- sonnel for a 24-hour-a-day recrca- president of Murray Local No. 2. three other hoys, all younger and Pullman Co. to build several thou- Railroad men. In ca-e you don't an engineer, some day. I'll he macher Ition program. *, daughter. such The cleaners* ban on dress UAW-CIO. 'a Margaret sand cars have been worked clothes Is pretty much excess out, Kelly asserted. baggage. Even last fall, the After the meeting here. Kelly night spot*, left for Chicago for the launching dressiest of the the •> of Statler Terrace Room. had The Song of Bernadette Book-of-the-Month ILLUSTRATIONS^?HAROLD IFOS^*® the first ship ever built bv the hardly a black tie, let alone a Pullman Co. white one, on Its opening night. “I hope It floats.” he smiled. • • • Nearly every place is hammer- ing at its customers to buy war Hamtramck Teachers bonds and the Wonder Rar is at the moment trying to sell enough bonds to get a hnmhing plane Postpone Their Strike named ‘Detroit Wonder Rar.” Although of from the board education I Two AWVS members In- has refused their wage dian Village, Dorothy Lawrence and con- Mrs. P. Ward, have sold tract demands. Hamtramck teach- and A. ers today agreed to 598,900 worth in a single week postpone their proposed strike at least until ((cash cost, not maturity value) Monday. they think they’ll get the ‘¦Jmdbomber. The demands of the 215 teach- • • • • ers will be reconsidered at a hoard meeting Monday. »¦ fitoenrt places have quit giving Vincent S. Sad- low ski, board president, said. v ffaowa but still have hands, al- though Frank flagon and Sam [lKlbart say that the Detroit of Musician* lists *6OO tnember* who have left for Bright Sayings

if***.} tetio play lit hands at of Children ttork in factories hy day. Bernadette raced the "What Beaten bin fo# only one thing. "You shall see her, my lambi" he said. to grotto. an honorl" Peyramala jeered. With this broom, I'll sweep you out!'* wary of at The Times is publishing «uch are Jobs hsrried parent* were no moreVic- Freed thuv from parental restraint, Bernadette raced Bernadette arrived. Hesitantly she approached the huge, words lud been ¦ trhirb they might lose a finger. spoken and the commission executed. remarks and paving SI for each * * cevful than the police commissioner and the im- rraight to the grotto. The lady was there, and she forbidding figure. “I am ,” she Nonsense’ the dean cried, published. B* BERNADETTE'S ’ jumping to his feet. “Tell from beckoned to Bernadette. “Please to the priests. she Hammered. $1 !r Worst of all Is the help situa- perial prosecutor in their efforts to keep th* girl go your lady that the dean of is not accustomed Today s goes to Mrs. Ray. *aid, “and tell them a chapel is to be built here “What an honor!” Peyramale mond Stiekradf, ! tlon, even the snootiest places the grotto of Massahielle. ..Softly jeered. “The latest celeb- to accept commissions from unknown ladies' Do you Rochester. Her and abject plea.*, Berna- she added, “Let procession* come hither.” come* to call!” He turned and strode young daughter was told to “enjoy l beaorting to calling the Howard To her father’! d»r« threat* rity into the house. underv’and?” He picked up a hig broom from the cor- few* moments later th* lady had vanished. Walk- Pale and loat. Bernadette the >now this past wmtei a* Street Mission for dishwashers, dette’s onlv anrwer viv “If I see the lady no more I A followed. ner. “Do you see this broom>” he roared. “With thu and one who finally ing homeward, Bernadette pondered the words, “Please In*ide the Peyramale next winter the Stickradt family proprietor, shall die.” The child's ashen-gray face lent inch frighten- house. drew’ up a chair and spreid brooin in my own hands I’ll sweep you out persuaded go to of tht plans to reside in a wanner ell* a waiter to ing emphasis to her words that Papa Soubiroui tiitallv go to the priests.” They seemed to point to none other hit huge form in it. Bernadette grasped her opporturutv temjffe if you dare annoy again.” in his me aver mate. work place, was flahher- drew’ her to him tenderly. “You shall see her. my lamb.” than the dean himself—.Marie Dominique Peyramale. and said quickly: “The lady said to me, ‘Please go to 1 he thunderous tumult overw when the man said con. helmed Benadcrre. Sob* The little girl apparently pua* he said. “1 give you my word! They can lock me up if Bernadette decided to see him at once. the and tell them a chapel i* to be built here out. esrendtngly: priest* bing loudly, she dashed zled asked: ~ Sasted wish, but you shall see her!’’ Pevrtmale was in the garden of the vicarage when .. . She breathed with relief. Thank heaven, the (Continued are to "Well, I’ll work for you. Rut they tomorrow) “Why, th**v going ra- tion the snow, too." •end a cab over for me.” Drawing* eorrriffht. 1941, hr King r*tvr* Syndic***, Inc. T*xt copyright, 1942. by Th* Viklne Tra** Inc. Di«tribu»«t to Kin* Fcatnr** Syndicat* I* cooperation with th* Book-of-the-Month Club, In*. Night life, m Mail your favorite child’* saving short, ha* to Rnghi • Saying* of Children, Th* etonard. * For special 30-page scrapbook in which to save these daily instalments, send 10c to Tht Song of Bernadette Scrapbooks, Detroit Times. i.... Detroit Tunes.