Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 39, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 6 October 1941 — Page 5

H )A v, OCTOBER 6, 1911.

■closes HIfICIW ItßKrah/*rK la‘”’ r > liHll “■■ '' v ' •' 111 S- 4 ' I k ■ IIUK ■ A La-B, i |||||K . 1 "' i|||» K ■ ■k ’ l ' 4 gay h ”' ■ ‘ -• Hn j 11 ,IU ordered L, to PtOtcJt <4-ml*»*l< L, u j- iB .- the i<u:an. of If crsli-- upeiator*. tioi uii. otiipany »uperlin chergt at the plant. L ..- . >:.. oi»'ra'<»r» no*Lj. toy during hot *r»L.,.., o o|la r ini-ti from Li ui,. making pit*. He hn< u had not been di«L. !ra!l -.. red ’o other L. 4 .., rd tu to the norLi • at t!>< end of hot L , ... k *maa. Lj th, u- of hi* inune L wilkoiM "part of a ) M -.,n at the plant ill j tttun I* attempting to Boa »hop '' jou of operation, aS the pa at midnight Saturday k* crew of 13 cram-meu report to work and operthe previou- »lidt refused ivtrtlne. Ima riy 2.9 W men on each UWtmsn Sunday shift* I home ax work gradually ImpOMiWe at 52 open 4 1! Mast Furaayea. Four Uue. aho were affected l extitnsted SO percent of I meh ou three -hift* toI be rent homo unless the •ra'.ors returned to their m,<l the union bad made teeMful effort* to get the to return the relief cranela promise “not to disagaind them la the fuaid the walkout was toeht a itrike because a corna contract provided that .toppaae rhould bwcome 11, tile a be called I Be 1 -ire ll r. s. PAGE ONE) |M Brat J. wto on the • • - :rt, II- nry Mobgs dent ot BNal HRlth iKitn juxtlce and the ~t the J, wish people |

fl A fl Hg H K »Ti MJSMBItWBSWM 11gS * i * fif> f JKa illMl * y> Byrnes (left) and Judice Robert H. Jackwn, newest iybtr»ot Court, poae in their robe* before taking their -*S& of the Mticn'n high«»t court. _ j

with devotion and falthfuluros. Ju* tic,. Hr slide is was one of the great moral Jorcon of our day," Moiisky i •aid "Hetter than anyone he summed up hl* own career when he «ald hl* philosophy of life wan high thinking and »'mple living." Final funeral arrangement* have I not beer, made hut a statement by the family aaid services would be "strictly private” and that admission would be by card only. Ilrandvl* had been hi excellent health for hl* age he would have been *4 on Nov. U since his retirement on Feb 13, 1939. He altd Mrs. Hrandels had just returned last month from Chatham. Maas., where for year* they have spent the summera with their children and grandchildren. Th* heart attack Wedu> »day was not announced until Thursday night when a friend of the family revealed that the former justice* condition was "grave.” Saturday night the family physician announced that death was only a matter of "a few hours ” The early part of his term as a supreme court justice was marked by his famous di»».-nts with bi* close and great friend. Oliver Wendell Holmes Not until after Holme* retirement and death and some IS years after lirand.-ls became a justice did the tide of juridical opinion change, During the last three years of bi* servlcu. 1939 to 1939, Hrandels found himself among the majority and his dissenting opinion* the guilding doctrine of the supreme court. STORM HITS IN (CONTINUBD FROM PAGE (MOD i person* In the Miami area. In September. 933. a han h-atn- killed 15" person* In the Flo-Ida keys. All through the night, refugees | played cards and amused them-1 ■elves otherwise In the Hude county court house, a steel and stone building, safe In any wind Hundredx of others were In hotel* and bushiex* building*, having boarded up the windows of their homes. There were "hurricane" parties In bars and hotel room* throughout the night and in hotel lobbies, groups sat around calmly listening to radio broadcasts. Miami Beach, which boro the brunt of the 1920 storm, was virtually deserted, its residents having made their homes a* secure as ! possible and then taken refuge here. Miami is on the landward side of lilscayne Hay and therefore more protected. Virtually every plate glass window on Flagler street, main thor oughfare of Miami, had been covered with Iroard* Thousand* of stores and home* had their windows similarly protected. Carpenters had been at work since early yesterday. In one downtown offir e building, more than a score of children of ■II age* had the time of their live*. Their parents- weary from putting their homes In order before going downtown — tried vainly to get them to sleep on desks softened by sofa cushion*. Pan American Airways suspended all schedules in and out of the city yesterday afternoon and sent lbw planes here to Havana. Cuba Eastern air line* and National airline* also suspended schedule* and flew their transports to field* out of the hurricane area. • — « TitDVY S COMMON l.ltH'>« • There 1* no apostrophe In possessive pronouns; the cor- I ' rect form is Its. hers, outs. yours, their*. »■ ' ♦

WOMAN KILLER DENIES GUILT Bloomington Newspaperwoman Pleads Not (iuilty Today Hloomlngton. Ind. Oct. < (I'Pi Mrs. Caroline Payne entered ■ plea of "not guilty" when arraign •>d In circuit court today on a first degree murder Indictment charging h»r with the fatal shooting of Charles O Mattingly, and trial was art for November 13. The 43-yrar-old newspaper woman. making her first public appearance since her arrest July k. entered the court loom With Hhetiff K M Baiter add a group of friends. Throughout the hearing she never uttered a word. Hbe was dressed entirely in black with her hat pulled low over her eyes. Her attorney* first a*k<-d circuit judge Donald llogera to quash the murder Indictment Inn the judge Immediately overruled the motion. Then Mrs. Payne entered the "not guilty" plea through the attorney*. The defense lawyers conferred with Judge Kogers and prosecutor Floyd Cook and Nov. 13 was decided upon as the trial date. SAYS SHERIFF BEIT PRISONER Clark County Sheriff Clubs Prisoner Into I neonsciousness Jeffersonville. Ind., Oct. 6. -tt'l’l Attorney Albert Maraud* *aid be would Ole suit for "heavy" damages today or tomorrow against Sheriff Claude Conner* of Clark county, who allegedly beat bi* ■ Hent, James Lancaster, into insensibility with a blackjack last Thursday night in a dispute over a dent'd automobile. Meanwhile. Jeffersonville citiiens were reported "up in arms" over ibe incident and planning to bring , ouster proceeding* against Conners with the state's attorney general. Lancaster. 34 year-old tile contractor, is a former vice-presi-dent of the Indiana Junior Chamber of Commerce and former president of the ‘Jeffersonville junior board of trade. According to Maranda. Conner* beat up Lancaster in a county jail cell and let bitn lie ou the floor in a pool of blood until morning. The contrai tor was removed to the Jeffersonville hospital Friday and his condition was reported improved last night. Conners could not be reached for comment today. Maratida gave this version of the Incident; Kenneth Wilson, Lancaster’s helper in hl* tile work, backed into an auto owned by the sheriffs daughter while attempting to park Lam aster's car late Thursday. The contractor rwported the uitsshap at city jail and waa accosted there by the sheriff. An argument ensued and Conners smashed Laneakler hi the mouth and escorted him to county jail where he refused him the use of the phone to notify his family, lardg- d in a cell, laiucaster beat i on the bar* and demanded to be i set tree, whereupon the sheriff beat him to um-onsciousneM with a blackjack and left him on the floor. Maranda quoted the sheriff as saying Laiu-aster "was trying to escape." He said the ault aginst the sheriff would be levelled al hl* bond. It will be entered hi circuit court. According to the attorney, the Clark county prosecutor, Homer Smith, has said only that he will investigate if be "sees fit." Smith is present president of the Jeffersonville junior board of trade. PRICE CONTROL BILL PLANNED VNOuld Place CeilinfM On Wage*, Rente, Prices, Pro lite M'a-diingtou. Oct ti tl'i'l Hep Albert D. (lore. D. Tenn, prepared for iniioductlon lu the bouse today of a twice control bill placing ceilings on wage*, rents, price* and profits a* a substitute for what bo railed the administration's "Weakkneed. piecemeal” legislation. (loro’s proposal would use the week of October < to 12 as the base jicrlod at which commodity prices, rents and wages would be frosen. He said that sm-h a drastic measure is required because of present Inflationary symptom* that "threaten to develop into a runaway inflation." Gores bill provides; 1. A ceiling ou all salaries, wages and commission* *■ of the base period 2. A catling on th« sal* at | wholesale of ail commodities ’ pro-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

vlded that no celling «hsll be applicable u> an agriculture commodity at a prlcu below parity." 3 All profit* In ricea* of I percent of the cost of performing a national defeuso contract automatically reverts to Ike government. 4. A ceiling Is filed upon all rents for dwelling accommodation* in municipalities at 19,000 or more population. t. Administrative authority would be vested In an office of omergency Inflation control, headed by one administrator appointed by the president and subject u* astute confirmation. WARNS NEED OF POSTER PLANS General Electric President Calls For Planned Couroe New York. Oct. C Warning that unless plans are made now to meet the economic and social perils of the post-war period, the United States will face the dang<-t id a plunge Into stats socialism or worse. Charles E Wilson, president of the General Electric company. urge* In a signed article In The American Magazine that a congress of the American free enterprise system be called immediately to draw blueprint* for future action. "When the wat began Wu bad 10 million unemployed, mounting deficits and a huge national debt." Wilson points out. "The riddle of want in the midst ot plenty had not been solved. Alter the war. If w<- follow a |Hillcy of drift, we shall have ail our prewar headache*. plus some new one*, including a vastly greater national debt. "And we shall be faced by the vlciou* spiral: men laid off in defense factories, hence les* pureha*mg power, hence other factories closing, heme even larger unemployment rolls, greater relief burdens and less taxable Income to sup |H>rt them. People will ask; 'What kind of civilisation I* this, which can give us employment to make gun* and shell* and tank*, but which falls to find job* for u* in peaceful Industry? Private enterprise has failed. It la time for the government to take over farm*, factories and unions, Io produce full blast and to distribute the products of our progress to all'.” To prevent such a development. Wilson proposes a congress ot the American free enterprise system, to tie convened late thl* fall or winter, to act a* a sort of constitutional convention to draw up new, self-impoHed rule* for Industrial and commercial progress, acceptable to the majority of the people. "The congress." he states, "should Include representative* of Industry, ot agriculture, of the labor union*, of finance and commerce. It should Include the boat brains of engineering and management. The general purpose would be Io 'build a reservoir of i-lvillan production, new business, purchasing power, distribution and employ meiii; and to make plan* tor releasing this resefvolr. in increasing volume, when and a* militaty espendliure falls off." Wilaou points out that in the present defense production effort thousands of research men are engaged on new problems, making new discoveries In electronic*, metallurgy, chemistry, synthetics, plastics, aeronautics and a dolen other fields, but he warns that utile** plan* are made now. these

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wartime Inventions will not be tran*lated into new products and now businoaie* In time to cushion the postwar crisis. News Os The World By United Rrsse i 9 —" 1 4 MOSCOW; IWtsxia today claimed a aeries of Important successes on the Ukrainian front against Garman, Rumanian and Hungarian ' forces and secondary victories agalnst the (germane on the Leningrade and central fronts. LONDON; Authoritative British sources said today that the Garmana bad started a huge twopronged drive for Mceeow and were undoubtedly making some progress. MIAMI. Fla.: A hurricane roared Into Miami just In-fore dawn to-

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day blacking out all lights eicept those In the relaUvely small down town bualnexs district. Trees were blown aero** highways and traffic was prohibited ass the storm reached the city, after battering lon mile* of coast. GARY. Ind : A walkout of 13 crane operators today paraly»«-d the world’s largest *teel mill the Gary plant of the (’arnegle-lllluols Steel company- -balling <» furnaces and throwing 13.900 m> n out of work. WASHINGTON: An eminent Catholic spokesman demanded today I hat President Roosevelt Insist upon religious freedom In Russia a* part of any lend haa, bargain colntldciit with the approath of a house vote on assisting the Bovlet union. - oI Trade In a Good Town Decatur

naught Frame and enlarged Hydraulic Brakes. And it’s sfamma-/xiwerw<f for long, trouble-free life, with new Econo-Master Engine* that develop more “fire-power" with minimum use of gas. Come in and see the new Olds B-44, compare it, drive it. You’ll find it offered in five separate senes —two 100 H. P, Sixes and three 110 H. P. Eights. You’ll find it priced lower than you might expect -but far beyond your expectations in styling and all-round quality. DEFENCE CONEB FIRST v w v-'. Old»mobil* is now lutning out high-cab- ( 4 bsr artillery sh*ll- 1 now going into mass **'3o*JQ j w *' production of auto- J rustic «ir plan* cannon. ~

DEMAND RUSSIA CONTINUBD FROM PACK ONO satisfactory to the Catholic church Father Walsh l>»u*'d a statement demanding an end to “shadow holing" on the question of ie||glou> freedom and calling on Mr Roosevelt Indirectly to compel Htallti to make good on constitutional guarantee* He denounced a weekend statement by H A Losovaky. official spokesman for the Novlet union in Moscow. 9* "tantamount to *cotchlllg Pre»hl«nt Roosevelt's hopes that true freedom of religion might Ih- recognised In Russia " Then without directly mentioning the president, Waiab said. "There Is only one voice to be heard from now There Is much potential dynamite In the preseni situation but there I* still much ! confidence tm*. that moral courage, strength and honesty will

PAGE FIVE

rise to meet the ffovlot's uurvmaenable arrogance The eomintssars must be told, not In word* alone, but by deeds, that freedom In Hovlrt Russia Is as Important to civilisation a* It Is In England. Belgium c»erh<’*lovakla. Norway, lloliaiid. laigemlrourg or any other democracy recently assaulted by the Nasi conquerors. “la It unreaaunabhr to dr-maud of the Hovlet trensFlclary of American aid and possibly Aiueth iu bheal that they abandon their private and special hatred of the first of the four freedoms In e*t hange tor iho*<- common liberties whl<h the other <-nibattl<-d demur racb-s are so stoutly maintaining “ We want your money.' Moscow repilea In effect. 'We want your shlpa. we want your tanks and ammunition and we aspect your blwrd if that la- necM*ary. But we Will not permit you lu have a word to *ay respecting the freedoms for which you shall make these sacri- ' flees "

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