Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 178, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1945 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Accidental Deaths In State Total Five Three Traffic, Two Drowning Victims By United Pres* Three persons died I** Indiana as a result ot injuries received in traffic accidents ami iw<> others drowned during the weekend. At Marion, Harold L. Curtis. 17, drowned Sunday while swimming In Lake Wanna. Deputies from sheriff Lora Tuckett's office recovered the body. Robert Orwiek, 14, Corydon, was drowned when a car he was driving overturned in a pond a short distance from Corydon. Two persons were struck l>y cars in Indianapolis and a Gary railroad policeman was killed in a head-on collision at Michigan City. Clifford C. Smith, 47, was struck by a car in Indianapolis and died enroute to a hospital Sunday morning. Clyde Miller, 61. Indianapolis, died Sunday from injuries received Saturday when he was struck by an automobile at an Indianap-1 olis intersection. William J. Filan, 54, the policeman, was killed instantly when his car struck one driven by Nathan Rubenstein, Chicago attorney, a mile south of Michigan City Saturday afternoon. Rubenstein's wife and two children were injured slightly. ——o it is up to us to keep the windows of our soul so clean that the light of hope and joy can shine in. o Striking while tile iron is hot Is all right, but too many men strike while the head it hot.

RHEUMATICS must have SLEEP and REST Tr» lu»t one or two t»a»poonful» of the liquid William* RUX Compound in a »!•«• of warm or cold w.ter after•the evemna meal . . Rux, an internal medication, map act to aoothc the muxculxr aches, ao you. too. may jet restful sleep and awake refreshed. feeline like yourself, a* thousands of Rheumatic. Neuritic and Neuralgia sufferers testify. Many may not need RUX during the daytime. Txk« only Get your bottle of Williams RUX compound today fn»m your druggist SMITH DRUG CO.

PUBLIC SALE HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE Tuesday, July 31 445 Mercer Ave., 6:00 P. M. 2-plece Wicker Suite: 2 Leather Hockers; 1 Stand; 2 Floor Lamps; Mantle Clock; Bookcase and volume of books; 1 End Table; 1 Pedestai' 7x9 Rug; 1 Library Table; Dining Room Table and 6 chairs; Wood Bed, Springs and Mattress; Dresser; Metal Bed, Springs and Mattress; 1 Commode; 2 Stands; Large Plate Mirror; 1 Clock Regulator- « Ladder Back Chairs; Music Cabinet; Good Sewing Machine; 4-pieee Breakfast Set; Gas Stove; Electric Washing Machine; 1 Drop Leaf Table; Lawn Mower; Odd Chairs; Fruit Cans; Dishes; Cooking Utensils; and many numerous articles. TERMS—CASH. LYDIA SHAMP, Owner Harry Daniels—Auct. Ziii Bryce Daniels —Clerk. I PUBLIC SALE S HOUSEHOLD GOODS As we are leaving the city, will sell all our household furniture at public auction, McConnell apartments, 228' /2 N. 3rd st, Decatur. EVENING SALE—6:OO P. M. Thursday, August s Duncan Phyfe Divan, pre-war built, bought new 6 mo. ago; 2 Barrel Back fireside Chairs, new; Duman-Phyfe Coffee Table; Beautiful Tiltback Blue Frieze Lounge Chair with Ottoman; Upholstered Occasional chair; Bigelow Best Quality Dusty Rose Shadow Pattern 9x15 Rug and Pad; Knee Hole Desk and Ladder back chair; 2 Throw Rugs; Leatherette Ottoman; Brown Axminster 9x12 Rug and pad; Walnut Gateleg Table; Bookcase. 4 section: Copper lined Smoker Cabinet: Fireplace Screen. Andirons and tools; Three-way Indirect White Floor Lamp; Bridge Lamp: . Mirror 34x39; Sheridan, Tulip wood Dining Room Suite, like new; Apex Cabinet Electric Radio, first class; Good 12” Oscillating Gilbert Electric Fan; Four Poster Bed. Mattress and Dressing Table; Cedar Chest; Burl Walnut Bedroom Suite, bed, springs and innersprlng mattress, dressing table and stool; Chest of Drawers; G. E. Electric Range Cook Stove; q E 6 ft. Electric Refrigerator; 2 Chrome Kitchen Chairs; 1 Inlaid Top Card Table and 4 Simmons Folding Chairs; 1 Plain Card Table and Top cover; Wheeler & Wilsoa Sewing Machine, good; 1 two-finger Bowling Ball, 12 Sliding Window Screens; Porch Glider with new waterproof cushions; 1 pair of Pillows; some Cooking Utensils; Electric Waffle Iron: Electric Grill,; Kitchen Ceiling Light Fixture, and miscellaneous articles not listed. This is a fine lot of furniture, most of it is like new. TERMS—CASH. I LAMOILLE FOGLE, Owner ■ Roy S. Johnson—Auct. Melvin Leichty—Auct.

WORLDCHARTER (Continued From Page One) Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, *R„ Mich., said he believed the question could be settled by writing into the bill the terms under which the delegate shall function. He proposed that the delegate be empowered to vote for the use of force only under direction of the president and that the president simultaneously notify congress of his instructions. The size and character of the force in question will not he decided until later. The charter provides that member nations shall make such forces available through subsequent agreements with the security council after needs have been determined by a combined military staff. There may be an attempt to write in stipulations that American troops remain under purely American control and limit their use to the western hemisphere. Finally, there is the question of whether such agreements with the council should be regarded as treaties requiring a two-third vote of the senate for ratification. o

BIG THREE ARE | (Continued From Page One) Although Mr. Truman opposes secret deals, it was believed likely that the big three's decisions in military matters would become known only as they take effect iu the months to come. Outside this category, however, the president was expected to tell all in his report to the nation. Rosenman probably will accompany the president back to the United Slates and in the course of the trip assist him in the preparation of his report. The adviser arrived in Potsdam several days ago and already has informed Mr. Truman on latest trends in the United States. Details of the progress of the big three conference were more obscuix than ever. Official announcements made known only that the conference was continuing and that the for < ign secretaries of the three countries met yesterday. (Radio Luxembourg said a Polish delegation arrived in Potsdam yesterday, leading to speculation that Poland's western boundaries were being discussed.) 0 Anna Marie Hahn, the Cincinnati poison slayer, is the only woman ever to be put to death in the Ohio electric chair.

FSA Activities In Indiana Reported Thu Adams county farm security administration committee, composed of Henry Rumple, route 2, Herne; Edward L. Arnold, route 2, Decatur, and Alfred Rauch, route 1 Decatur, has received from the Indiana FSA office at Lafayette a summary report of the activities of the farm security administration borrowers, employes, and farmer committeemen in Indiana during the war period of the last and one-half years. This report to the 92 farmer advisory committees by E. H. Shideler, state FSA director, indicates the following FA achievements iu Indiana since Pearl Harbor: Rehabilitated 6,4*12 farm families from borrowers into the paidup clashCollected repayments on operating loans totaling $4,140,966. Made new operating Tbans during the same period of $4,864,869 to increase war food production. Made special floor restoration loans to farmers in six different counties where major flood losses Were incurred. Made 219 farm-purchase loans to tenant farmer families so that they could be graduated into the farm-ownership group. Further graduated 53 tenant-purchase families to holders of clear-title deeds by collecting in full the farm purchase price. This last achievement is considered especially noteworthy because these loans were set up on a 40-year repayment schedule at the time they were made, and none of the 53 who have paid in full made their original contract prior to the 1938 year crop. Made farm operating loans to 36 returned, veterans of World War 11, and farm ownership loans to two others, in order that these servicemen could return to farming after their discharge. Followed rigid hold-the-liue policies against land price inflation by refusing to make loans for the purchase of farms at prices greater than their long time agricultural values.

Trained and maintained county committees for certifying agricultural loans under the G 1. bill of rights, Maintained educational and planning services for FSA borrowers as well as collections in every county throughout the state despite the fact that FSA In the state worked with approximately 15 percent less employes than immediately before Pearl Harbor, and has lost many of its trained agricultural personnel to the armed forces. More than 40 FSA employes in the state have been inducted into military services. FSA borrowers throughout the state have materially increased their food production despite wartime handicaps such as fewer and older pieces of equipment and frequently without limestone and fertilizers they needed for peak production. Many FSA borrowers in the state have won awards offered by their communities or counties for production increases. Os even greater satisfaction than any of the above, according to Director Shideler, is the fact that the FSA borrowers, on the average. have greatly increased their security on the land, their incomes, and their net worth. They have improved their Living standards, assumed greater responsibility toward the community, and are .participating more actively in community activities. The FSA office for Adams county is at Room 8, K. ot C. Building, Decatur. A. Leigh Bowen >s the head of the office and is the FSA supervisor for this territory.

PLEDGES (Continued From Page One) want to be "coddled,” Mr. Truman called the soldiers “a lot more levelheaded than some peope who represent them,” He reminded American troops of their postwar duty to the nation, saying that the duties of a soldier and a civilian parallel. He declined to discuse the Big Three conference with reporter Sgt. Ernest Leiser, because he wished to report directly to the American nation upon returning to Washington. Mr. Truman, returned to the i question of rehiring, veterans and said that if employers did not cooperate there was government machinery to make them. He added, i however, that it wa« still "up to 'the individual” as to whether he found work. o— ———— Mishawaka Mother Pies Os kni-uries South Bend, Ind., JJuly 30—• (UP)—Mim. Fred Ogden, 2», Mish-' awaka, died today of injuries suffered in an automobile accident July 22, which killed Robert E. Cunningham. 21, Mishawaka, discharged war veteran. Mrs. Ogden was the mother of three, children. Robert J. Burke. 25, Plymouth, was released under $2,00 bond in connection with the accident.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA.

Browder Ousted As Communist Leader Break With Truman Administration Seen Washington, July 30— (UP) — American communists are under new management today and preparing to renew their class warfare here at home just a<s soon as Japan is licked. Next expected development is an open break with the Truman administration. z A three-day convention of the communist political association ended Saturday night in New York. The communists announced yesterday that they had deposed Earl Browder, their long time leader, and had put William Z. Foster at the head of affairs. Foster is a,

■How SMART PEOPLE AND JACK BENNY LATCH ON 10 THEIR MONEY U. - Smart people hang on to their money by buying War Bonds • —and holding them. Jack Benny does, too. But don’t let that stop you. Buy some anyway. All high-class people do this. For example, I do. Lowlifes like Benny imitate us upper-crust denizens by buying Bonds just so they can get their picture in the Police ' .< Gazette. aV J Among polite circles, it is no The boys coming back from : ' a “ eßt wa Y in ths world to And don’t think because your considered de rigeur to and Okinawa probabiy ' F * make extra money is to let those Aunt Cracklethroat's tea leaves trip up the waiter or cash in your won’t lope up to you breathlessly and War Bonds accumulate interest. You spelled “rat’’ last. Sunday that the War Bonds In these circles, in which dangle a medal around your neck for get back 133% on your 1 original in- end of this war is in sight. It’s not Benny is considered a square, it is buying War Bonds, but you can bet vestment in ten years. So let all your even within swooning distance. So also deemed a trifle gauche— that’s hog your bottom Jap yen they won’t give spare cash snooze away in War Bonds. make like Benny and pinch that Latin for sloppy—to dunk your feet you the water cure, either. They know If you must tuck something under penny. Or, as the farsighted zo° in the finger bowl. When Benny finds the importance of Bonds—they buy your mattress, try your mother-in-law. keeper said to the careless elephant this out, he’ll probably be so embar- enough every month themselves to keeper, “Till V-J day, hoard that rassed he’ll ‘break down and start make Benny’s toupee turn green. « . hay!” Then, keep hoarding till th® wearing shoes Bonds mature. WAR BONDS ...1b HAVE AND To HOLD •*• ■ ‘ This Advertisement Sponsored in Honor of Adams County’s Fighting Men by The Decatur Casting Co. The First State Bank Burk Elevator Co. LANKENAU’S Light Gray Iron Casting* Local Bond Issuing Agsnt Coal—Seed—Grain The Boston Store Kraft Cheese Company The Schafer Company The Krick-Tyndall C®. Central Soya Company, I* Manufacturers of Dairy Product* Manufacturers & Jobbers Drain Tile—Hollow Building Tl|e, Livestock Food* , Cal E. Peterson Stucky & Co., Monroe Bag Service, Inc. Clothier Complete Home Furn|shln«a North Second St. *■ ? • This is an official U. S. Treasury advertisement—prepared under the auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising

veteran claaa war maker. They also announced the death of the CPA and the re-birth of the communist party—a political organization. The party went out of the Political business in May, 1944 under Browder’s leadership and turned itself into an “association’.. At that time it announced a program pf cooperation with private enterprise and the capitalistic society which distinguishes the economy of the United States. Foster protested at the time and now after 14 months has reversed the 1944 de vision. All of this was accomplished by aid of a bitter denunciation of Browder and his policies written by Jacques Duclos, a French communiat leader, who recently returned to Paris from Moscow. Browder is being sent by the communists to a spiritual Siberia, although his party membership evidently was not cancelled. This change in the direction of communist thinking is the third spec-

tacular reversal of the party line in four years iFrom the moment of the outbreak of the war in September, 193®, until June, 1941 American communiats conducted an agreestive and bitter campaign ot parades, demonstrations and strikes against American aid to Great Britain and, later, production for our own national defense. For « s before Hitler’s unexpected invasion of the Soviet Union on June 21, 1911, communiet-inspired demonstrators had been picketing the White House in protest against the “imperialist war.” Their banners contained such slogans as “the Yanks are not coming.” 'When word came that midnight of the German blow at Russia almost immediately the communist party line here became 16® percent anti-Hitler and 100 percent pro-war. They whooped it up for an all-out national, effort to lick fascism. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

EMPIRESTATE (Continued From Page One) two gaping holes torn in the north and south sides ot the building. Parts of the plane still in the building were dismantled and removed. , , The other identified dead weie. Paul W. Dearing, 35, North Quarrytown, N. Y.; Margaret Mullen, 33, Hoboken, N. J.J Patricia OCo'nnor,- 21, New York; Jean Sozzi, 40, Brooklyn, N. Y.; and’Mary Lou Taylor, 19, New York. Ten persons were hospitalized with injuries, today. Betty Lou Oliver, 20, and Joseph Fountain, 47, both of New York, were in critical conditions from burns. A 500-mile network of pipe was installed in the cement of TVA’s Fontana Dam in North Carolina. Water pouring continuously through this network will cool the cement in two to three years instead of the 50 years normally required.

MONDAY, JULY 30,

ANNUAL 4-H SHOW I (Continued From p a g ( q n#) I Indianapolis in The 4-H club livestock tent J be located just east of th e 7] orium. Entries in the rabbit U are due by 9 a .m. Thursday judging to be completed by n 1 Thursday afternoon, the buy/jl the tractor maintenance Pr( , T will present a demonstration All entries in the pig aiMl calves exhibits are to be in 1 by 9:30 a.m. Friday. The pig’s be judged before noon and J judging of dairy calves win i ffi J diately follow the pig club jmuJ The public is invited to ss« J exhibits in the auditorium 21 time Thursday or Friday. ’ 0 __ I ° —— . I Public Auction Tonight 6 J Household goods. U Houser, 322 N. 4th St. O — : Trade in a Good Town _