Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 85, Decatur, Adams County, 10 April 1946 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

; ; That New - open your eyes with Its .-^ : -Power—Pick-Up—and Pep!* y r,,m £&ifL. ■ ' ’ ■ lip of your toe* you'll/**/the differ- *” Wl,h *'’•“ Phillip* 66 tank! i i ?* Don’t take our word for it. Drop rJ+A »' ’he big ■ • W K • ' -f - t i up with Phillips"! n ,Rc broad highway . . over , 'sE|KkS? j MMOIWj. .MKAIS ~ the hills... in traffic—you're in for f the biggest hunk of driving satisfact*©® you've had in a long time! A Fl I[ g (11111 II>T *4. *Hi<?H-voiATitrry, high -Al Hr-*’” 4 *— 1 .Kai wJWhH OCTANE, HIGH -POWER-BECAUSE » B7 aTS V PHILLIPS PACKS IT WITH 2’\ A HIGH-VOLATILE --JB VZ U Jggß LIGHT-FR.ACTIONS V X BwBMF ’ ■*■

««aMBWWWO(W» » l !■ ———M Macklin Super Service Madison & Third Sts. 4

AGREEMENT IS H nnflHuril lr«iH l*nnr Onrl vrallzi I vacation plan J* -vribr-d by Gbaun it tin- >»• *' he know# Worker- with uin* >• at - wniorlty will set t w.-.-k >tr al.ll those with 15 years' work will gel three week*. Georg** Hi"'-»*. lab r rilallmi* manas**r (<>•■ th** roii'pany. said that *lti' to th !• iigih if lit-- st i Ik*-

STOCKS • BONDS TRUST SHARES I Bought-Sold-Quoted i Serving Banks, Estates, Formers, Business and Professional Men throughout Northern Indiana Leonard J. Ferug & Co. Ground ricot. Berry if Court St. telephone A-4152 NIMBUS CN CI6H SIOCK tlCIMtt Meabets Nitimi too Securities Oulirs. mo. FORT WAYNE, IND. 2? TAKE CARS OF YOURS WITH xHHSHI mm ■EKS

|H 1,0n ’ , ,a ‘ re * chtoc; ’ • xA* with your hard-to-replace Hoot st Claaoet. Give It only aenulne Hoover Company Service. era tht aulhonut Hoovtr Brunet Aptnci hen, completely equippea with special totn» ant. femsint parts, nurkuauicit.ffuaranttati. axtrtfMla

JSjrsS Jgf Jr jff f **s I NCeW 18 74

Knapp Service • 2nd & Jackson Sts.

it watild Ih* ini|MM>ibl<* for alii Worker* to leturn to the job at the] Mint* time. Employes will Im* :w*k- ' «*«i to omain away. h<* said, until they an r<- alh-d by the company. o — ... SENATEJANKING | • < ■■atlnneil From Ptiar llwi 1 . - • Tot., v. It N (1.. ! <' Ik.tiKlaxs Huck. IL, Del.; ■ , Ilotirkc It Hit kenloitper. IL. la.,

T-paM repaw SPECUU.: MOTO* cleaned, .übricaKd. new carbon brueken metalled •CITATO* w B«U3B BOU eleaood too inbncatod •All reetacM •AC cteaneo COM. SWITCH, all etoetnra.’ cws> nectloM checked •FFfASANCkimpeweO OUANHM EFFICttNCY eotoru; AU at emanagjy lew cost.

Robert Koeneman Preble, Ind. — - - - - - ■ - ,-->**

| and Hugh I! Mitchell. I?.. Wash Against Sena. Taft, McFarland. Hugh Itutler, IL. N.-br.: Arthur Capper, It., Kail., and CapeJ hart. Taft's amendment was defeat- , *d 15 to 3. McFarland a 11 to 7. and Capchart's 15 to 1. o — JAPANESE BALLOT IN — ft oallaurd rruul l*nar Hurt of 2,782 candidates that included I two llmldhint iiuiih and a lluddhlet 1 priest who campaigned on a motorj cycle. Eighty-two women sought | office. o Former Mayor F. 11. lai Guardia . of New York City was raised In , Prescott. Ariz, where he attended ■ public schools while his father, a | bandmaster In the V. 8. Army, was stationed at nearby Fort Whippie. w i x I You'll Say • It's I THE FINEST WAX I YOU EVEX USEDI HAUGH HEATING & Appliances 121 8. 2nd St. Phone 49 /SrasrcswM'x * (NUENAMEL) ■atawitfMMwt y _ _ ■

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Harold Ickes Blasis Fellow Columnists Ex-Cabinet Officer Lists Good And Bad Washington, April 10—(UP! — Former secretary ot interior Harold L. Ickes, the late»t recruit to ' the ranks of newspaper colum [ Uinta, hauled off today and socked ’ a number of his colleagties with .Mime hard word*. He also paid his bluer .respei Is tn Mrs Eleanor Patterson, editor nnd publisher of the Washington Ht.C.l Times-Herald. The capital Is sitting bark In some antlclps linn of acts two and three of the ’ show the old Curmudgeon has ' started Ickes’ article. "Rood and bad Washington newsmen.” Is In the current edition ot the msga(lne "Pageant.” In general. Ickes' charges agaliMt the columnists of whom hr disapproved were either that they do not know what they i write about or that they lie. diredly or Indirectly, In their writ- : Ings. Amons the tied ones, he Hated: Arthur Kiix-k of the New York Times, Marquis Childs. I. F Htone of the newspaper pm. Westbrook Pegler. Pnul R Mallor., Frank It K-nt. Frank C Waldrop of tli«-Timo-Herald. and John O'Donnell of the New York Dally News. flood newsmen In Ickes' Hal were: Drew peatson, Lowell .Mallett. Thomas L Htokea. Ilnymond P. Brandt of the St. Louis Poat-DM-pateh. Huth Finney of the ScrippsHoward Newspapers, Col. Robert H. Allen of the Philadelphia Record. Elisabeth .May Craig, who represents a gioup of New Ena land paper*. Winifred .Mallon of the New York Times. II n W. Gilbert of the Washington Post, Frank I. Weller. Associated PreM, Marshal! .McNeil of the ScrippsHoward Newspapers, Walter Lippmaim and Einest Lindley. likes accompanied his article with a columnists' creed. He said columnists should remember that they are not infallible and that the truth Is not served l»y dogmatlsm. They should make some allowance for error anti rememlier their own human frailty. "Occasionally.” Ickes wrote of lite colleagues, "they might even give the victim the benefit of the

doubt; they might at times assume that all men In public lifo are not tie*PMarlly dishonest or incompetent It is the columnists first duly to Ih- truthful. "They should Im* is.-eful not to give cause tn suspicion that they are tearing down certain men In public life because they are secretly encouraging the ambitions of others from whom they are receiving or expecting furors." This later admonition will arouse among newspapermen and politiclatis a whoop of Im rcdnluus laughter. The old li k was a pretty g ,od cabinet officer and a first rale admlnhtrator and the beat hater who < ver came l-> town. When he hated one of hl. fellow office holders ho hated him over. And there never wa« hereabouts a han diet- fellow than Ickes in slipping to a newspaper pal a d*adly bit of new.i or anecdote with which to sandbag th** other follow. Ickes, however, was only on- of man/ who knew hoW to d>» that. He neither invented nor patented th:* procedure and It flourishes here now, as ever. The capita! antic Jpat w|ih considerable interest what the assafl- • d newspaper men and women may have to say almut Ickes Most of them an- able to defend themselves. That g-xo double for several of them. Including Mrs. Patter son. Ickes and Pegler both write well, mid with geld ink. Mrs. Patterdon can write with either of them and out punch them one oi •wo at a time, iches* article dealt with Mrs. Patterson In her capscity as th** mother of Drew Pearson's first wife. Here. In part, is wbgt he Wrote; "Draw a comporltn j kture mad* from all the inother-in-law jokes you ever have beard and you will have a faint Idea of the sad plight of Drew Pearson Mr. Pearson has the kind of a mother-in-law that prospective husbands have nightmares about. "Pearson'» mothrrdn-law not only has whatever mothers-in-law protarhlally have; she is * also wired for sound and fury. Thin sweet, lovable character Is khown a» Klean-r Medlll (C’lssyi Patterson" • -Mrs. Patterson will so< Jt the old lek for that and ah*- whl sock him In print. And whatever she socks him. it Will hurt more than somewhat. — o—-—- ■ EVANSVILLE SCHOOL ttaepg fkhu v>a»a Pee) until forced to du so. The squabble and strike attracted the attention of officiate of the north central association of secondary schools and ccdkgct who were in the city today coutiuuiug

General Tire Opens Plant At Logansport Logansport, Ind., April 10— tl pi Genera! Tire company officials today announced the opening of a new plant here Monday. They said ll*' persons would Ise employed when the unit went Into full production of rubber gaskets for the refrigeration and automo tlve Industries. Urges Commission Control Atom Energy Legion Committee In Recommendation Indianapolis, April IS—tl’Pl An American Legion fad-finding committee today recommended the complete control ot atomic energy by a presidential commission. In a report to national commander John Rielle here, a committee headed by Perry Rrown. Reaiimount. Tex. suggested control or both civilian and military uses of atomic energy by the special commission Rrown and other committee members concluded a threeday conference with government and military spokesmen in Washington before announcing their recommendations. Rtelle S!ild the report Included a plan for a mlilt ary liaison commoHee made up of representatives of al branches of the armed forces to work with the Piesldentlal commission Thelluison group would serve as n check on the commission In matters of national security, Htelle said the report llidlcgted. Thff fact-finding committee also recommended the passage of legIslatjpn in supiarrt of a plan which would place four equal branches of (he armed forces under a single command. The plun would call for an army. navy, ami air force and a unified group of civiian components. The latter group would include organised reserves, national guard. ROTC, and trainees unde; a possible universal military training program, legion spokesmen salt! Four world war II combat veterans and the chairman of eight Legion committees comprise the fad finding commission, Htelh,said.

MINE WORKERS <Contina»d From Face Ona) health, welfare and safety issues. "So they withdrew until the operators show evidence that they are willing to discuss these tilings, which are just ax Important as wages." the union spokesman said. Th*- operators, or. their part, have accused Lewis of stalling nnd refusal to negotiate Ix-cause he has declined to advance any specific propositions on wages and hours. The union issued a statement ruder Lewis' name addressed to the full wage conference. "For four weeks we have sat with you; we attended when yon fged the hours; w*- departed when weariness affected your Vleasure," la-wig *.aid. "Our effort to resolve tnuiual questions lias been in vain; you have Iwen Intolerant of auggections and impatient of analysis "When we sought surcease from blood-letting, you professed indifference; when we cried aloud for the safety of our numbers, you answered—he content —'twas iilweys ihus'." Lewis said that when th** union emphasized "the important of life" the operators had pleaded "the priority of profits." When •he union complained of undesiraldo surroundings, he salci. the operators replied "hok to the state.’ "You aver that you own the mines." he said. "We suggest that, as yet, you do not own the jteoplo You profess annoyance at our temerity; we condemn your imlieciltty. "You are smug in your complacency; we are abashed by your shamelessness. You prate of your respect Ibiiity: we are shocked at your lack of public morality You scorn the toils, the abstinence and tbe perils of the miners; we withhold approval nt your luxurious mode of life and the nights you apmd in merriment.” Lewin added that the union denounced "the senseless cupidity that withholds from the miners the rewards of honorable and perilous exertion.” The Pawnee nation was the only Indian nation In Nebraska that offered human sacrifices. an Investigation. Dr. (1. F. Franzen, director of the Hoosier sdetlon of the association said his Investigation would not he completed sos sometime. He Indicated an ntilavorable report would bar the Kvansvllle city school system front membership status. Students from non-ac-credltcd schools are required to lake eutruuce maiuluallcraa at many colleges aud uuiversiliee.

Former Convict On Trial For Forgery False Affidavits To Obtain Estate Funds Han Francisco. Apt II id—ft’Pl —The prosecution today to prove that silver-haired Alfred Urnnard Cline forged deeds and made false affidavits to obtain money from the estates of two of four women who died mysteriously In his company. As the forgery and grand theft trial of the former convict went Into It* third day. Cline continued to listen impassively when assistant district attorney Norman Elkington Sketched what purportedly was a picture of the defendant's activities. Ait hough Elkinglon scrupulously avoided use- of the term “murder” in the trial, the district attorney's office currently is laying evidence before the comity grand Jury on other aspects of Cline's activities with the hope of obtaining a murder Indictment. Elkington told the Jury of sev-<-n women and five men yesterday that he- would try to prove* first that Cline slcde and altered a deed to Martinez. Calif., properties Icelonging to Mrs Elizabeth Hunt Lewis, of Oakland. Calif. He would prove he said.-that Mrs. Lewis died while with Cline in Ja< ksonville. Fla. in November. 1943 and that the defendant presented the deed, altered to bis own name, two years later. The prosecution next will prove that Cline made- affidavits for reissue of "lost" stock certificates l» longing tec Mrs. Eva Delora Krebs Cline, Chicago, his third or fourth wife. Elklngton said MFs. Krebs-Cline was believed to have died In Dallas. Tex., under another name many months before. Het estate was worth approximately |3mi.oiai. To prove this. Klkington must also prove that the* woman who died in Dallas. Tex . was really Mis. Alice Carpenter. Bloomington. Ind. widow and that the Mrs, Krebs-Cline who Cline said died in Portland, Ore. last November, really was Mrs. Isabelle Van Atta, of Oakland. Calif. —* o The air-plus-rail service makes it possible for more than 23.000 cities and towns In every corner of the I'nited State* to enjoy the benefits of air express service.

I A ‘ GETTING OUT THAT FISHING TACKLE, or other sporting equipment? Better see us right now about a Sporting Equipment Policy. The most complete insurance you can buy. Covert theft, fire and many other causes of loss. Surprisingly inexpensive. THE SUTTLES CO. Agents Decatur, Ind. Niblick Store Bldg. ffigpe—dte Ufa SesmaMß iiiiiiiiiiii ■ T TO Melt e « HhL ■Lcleah*M CLEANS Aew-fMe, Stn-feat Texelite, Iprtd and other palau •f this type

Santa Fa. N. M. settled in loog, Is the second oldest town in the L'nited States. Over 90 percent of Kentucky is in the watershed of the Ohio River and the entire state lies within the Mississippi River basin I SISSI PAARTY-BACKED K'uallsueS FruM Paar Oae> Stratton rolled up 417,154 votes. In BJH>2 of the state's 9,03 k precincts. Stratton, endorsed by Gov. Dwight H. Green and the Republican organization, was defeated l>y the same group in 1944 when he ran for secretary of state. He was elected congressnign-at-large when he was 30. and two years later he was elected as state treasurer Limited to one term of office by the state constitution, he sought election as secretary of state l>ut -withou party endorsement, ami lost. In the only other statewide v,m teat, a longtime state political veteran. Richard Yates Rowe, of Jackuonville, won the Republican nomination for state treasurer, de feating Stephen A. Day. Evanston, i a former congressman-ai-large. Rowe milled 333,787 votes to Day's 157.732 in 8.034 precincts There were no contests on the I Democratic ticket for any of the state offices. Challengers to Rep. Ralph E. Church. IL. of Evanston, so. the 10th (Chicago North Shore > district GOP nomination, faded in the light vote and the veteran con-; gressinan won without trouble, de ! feating Hugh Riddle, hia closest opponent, by a wide margin. At the opposite end of the state.

NOTICE! I have moled to my new location, 222 South Second street, first door north of former location and will have my regular office hours. Telephone 449. JDr. Roland L. Reppert NOTICE! I will net be responsible for any debts contracted for by anyone but myself. Ralph Dennett

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