Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 220, Decatur, Adams County, 18 September 1946 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Government Plans New Treason Cases To Try Americans For Aid To Axis Washington. H* pt Ik H i’i Justice* lrpaiim.*nt official* Indi rated today the gov**rnm* nt may b>* ready soon to *• *’k treason in-dlc-tmellt* .igaill-l additional American* who aided the Alia during tha war. They *aid many prison* whose names lialc in Ver In on diac losed are now being lnv«wti«ated for treasonable activities In tier many. Italy and Japan Wien the necessary far's and witnesses tan be gatheie-d. they will be formally prosec iited

The • tlsic lit • of additional a-on ra-e- was disclosed after tin announcement that two men already indicted on the infamous charge ale being brought back here from foimany o stand trial Tiiey ar> Hoberl Beat formerly of Sumter H <’, one-time news- ’ ap. . toix »pondc-n' arid ItoUK la- t'handle- formerly of Halil more. Md In their c ase*, new indictment- la include new facts probably will lie ask'il Fifteen Germans who w.re employee! by the Nazi's t.idio propaganda organization. Itiindfunk. also ale being brought here Io serve a* wi n**-*-s in the trials M tile same lime it was diI losed there was not sufficient c valence to warrant prosiu-ution of treason Indictments against Edw.eid I."o llilaliey. fortiieily •>( Weak, Watery Blood Blamed for Making Men and Women Look and Feel Older THAN THEIt YEHS How do you f»»l at the end of a dsy’ Is that old time pep and drive lacking! Have you cbecki-d-up on your blood •treng'h late.y’ Tho cssnds now re-aa.n-mg flowing good looks sod vitality through the release of vibrant energy to every muscle, fibre cell Every day—every hour—million* of tmy red-biood-cells mutt pour tor'h from the marrow of ; our bones to replace those that are wurn-ou'.. A low blood count mav street you in several ways no appetite underweight in*energy. a gener-d run-down cunmtiun lac k ot resistance to ;i.f<ct,.,n and dise-ae-To get real relief you must keep up vour blood rength Medical a-.thoritlc by analysis of the hlood. lucre by positive proof shown that BUS Tonic I* amazingly effective in building up low blood strength m non-organlc nutritions! anemls Thl is due to the BBS Tonic formula winch contains special and potent activating ingredients Also 888 Tome helps you enjov the food you eat by increasing the gastric digestive juice when It l« non-orvani-eally too little or scantv thus the stomach will have little cause to get balkv with gas bloat and give ol! that sour food taste Don't w*l” Fi.-rgir* your body with rich red-blood hurt on 888 Tome now As vigorous hood surges throughout vour whole body, greater freshness and strength should make you eat better, sleep better, feel better, work better play better have a liett'hy color glow in your skit. firm f!<-h fill out hollow place. Millions of bottle* sold Get a bottle from your drug store BSS Tonic help* Build Sturdy Health

BUY Zotox Kills crab grass, dandelions, plantain, buckhorn, and other common weeds. SI.OO p* bottle BURK ELEVATOR CO.

Try The J • Mirror Inn > • for s : Noon Lunches • ■ SANDWICHES * SALADS I Best of Foods-Expertly Prepared. Drop in tomorrow.

I Olney, 111., find Conatanca Drexel, fonneily of Philadelphia, Pa, They were being held with Beat ami Chandler. The Indictment that named I'.-st mid Chandler also named right .ether Americana. Os these, Kgra Pound. poet, already han hc-c-u (mini Insane mid hospitallz*d by court order here He wad reiurmcl to this country last year for trial. The olliera Included Flederhh Wilhelm Kaltenbac k. formerly of Ihihmim*. lowa, who died in a Soviet prison. ——- o ——— ■ — Rain Forecast To End Warm Weather Warmth To Continue Until The Weekend

r By United Frtaa 1 M dtsc-Kleiiiers rolled up their • »|,..c, r today in unse.i cctiably high 1 Septemlier tc tlipecatiire*. lint the weather man reminded them the warm «i«*ll couldn’t last long Montana had ■> preview of thing* to cunie when enow fill ut Butte | c- uiei. uty ut Miles ('fly dropped I i .'iti degrees Clem, warm weaGn r prevailed j Il 111. luiddleweat. and througboßt ' most f tin- country, however Th< I' S wmither bureau at : i bic.ig.i *ald the uituanal warm .-pell would coirniiie m least until ft.ittinlay. when rain I* lore-cast so: ci.csi of I >e uudd e west Mo-- lemperiitu'cvi it' the plains -'.it*- wi-fi- approximately IS de- • c-s .ci.ciie ti'cnmil ye tc-rd.iy and ihliii buluth Minn, leporled 79 degre. ■: Inu-inational Falls. Minn . oid t hl* ago. *3 d--gt.es. and Pel st *n Mn il 7'l degrees Haiti f**ll on North and South ! Dakota M lli-m.c.ck N I*, the I ■m il II y III! 7'l d»-.*lee< Fair we.ithc-i wa- ceporled breeiuhout Michigan. I'tdi.ina Illinois, Missouri, lowa. M nnesota and ths* mu flu .isle: Il dates Scßttej-ed i.lii raitie fell ci.i Ma imna. Geo. i tCarolina mid Flotilla, but '• op i.c' hi • > ■ mo mal n i SECRETARY OF i ft untlnure! from Page 1) that W.ilUn* was ready to help) t * mm.it Hi* pin- am lot rm ii a iiiissiim mid to nii.'ge-t |n >-untie!. T !•* I,mV U4<l come tu * ll.itlge 011 l ih.liking mi intmii.itlon.il matters. Wallace told the Pres dent He i mplained that the efforts to obtain Id-partisan unity in foreign .iffairs in the I tided States "may have given way too mtn II In Isola lion mamiueiading as Hftrngh real i-m in titeiiimimi.il iitfainc Mum all Wallace warned that .itninii warfare would lie catastroph.< and that the western powers tu their dealings with Russia were leading 'hr world for just that Punliration d the letter nullified t n- anxious campaign year efforts ,of Mr Truman mid riemorratic i;.ii oiial rhairm.c'i l{oh**rt E Han negaii to * alm the l abiliet storm file letter deiuoiwtraled that W..1-

FOLKS ARE MIGHTV HAROUP <HAf LOVE noboo*? but-themselves 1 r J- — m’ I i, r. *v* * * ******** 1 You'll levs the repair service done by HAUCKS. We will be happy to install a new Stokol stoker or Williamson furnace in your house . . all work is guaranteed. See us, today about your heating problems.

State Fair 4-H Champions \ IL Jri .'T IbJI Glen Carson, I’nloh County youth whose Alierdeen Angus gteer Busier" won Hi" Indiaiw alat. fait grand championship, received a cheek fur l.v.Slit for the atiiraa! which was sold in the state fairs an niial i alf t Itih sale Voting Carson, age 17. is shown almve <right t with I Chalies llugl I the Hughes ( urry company. Anderson. The-price wa* Hi a pound tor the ktv.'i pound steer ‘WfU OH ■ ■ * * > > I. ■ m■ ■ £ V ■ Tnint tli*- world * leiotd of I. a ponnl on tin* hoof, th*- grand | • hammon barrow of th. Indiana slate fail s club show brought Robert ; Miller LtGiMiise. it* owner ach< * k for lI.MHt The winning barrow* , Iniris Jersey i* shown above with young Miller, right, and repre-| sentmive* Ot the Stmk A Wetzel company Indianapolis, the buyers * E K Wetzel left ami Frank F. Stark, center, are in the pic ture

Iliu-nn di-mnt iro n M Truman's j foreign politic- «* formulated with the advice us -ecretary of slate, James F Btynes anil Sen Anhui II Viiliileiilwis. It. Mi<'h. began I ‘ i take fuiin numilis ago. Wallace lecomilK tided that the admimsti a lion break iway Hom i'e bi-parti-miii approai li so foreign pulii y and | "reassert the forward looking P<» - tion of ilie Democratic party in International affairs" White House secretary Charier <; Ko*, took full espimslhilliy for publication of the Wallace letter He leai neil two <1 iy* ago that Drew Pears.m had obtained It* text and | would distribute it tin ugh hi< toluilill ITlder pressure from othei : newspapermen. also aware that the I text wa. out. Ito*, alid Wallace di*- ' < muted the matter late yesterday . i Kos. told Wallace he -a* no iea * son why the text should not be made available generally since it would be published in any event. Wallace told hl- publicity office t . let it go. Kos* Informed Mr j Tinman of his conversation with Wallace. The President instantly' objected to publication but by the time Ko»s could reach Wallace, the secretary of commerce »ai<l distribution aready had begun 0 BYRNES SILENT (Continued From Page one) of Trieste. The Bulgarian-Greek front lei battle was .till bottled up in the big four deputies' committee, but, was due for a public airing before J the weekend by the military com mission Russia and her supporters are vigorously supporting Bulgarian claims for part of western Thrace from Green which in turn wants a frontier revision In her own favor. Byrnes wa. understood to have Fred's BARBER SHOP 516 W. Jefferson St. will be open all day THURS. and FRI.

em>> Bßßaßßaaaaßßßßaaaaßaa ■ Be Prepared Saturday ■ ; SEPTEMBER 28 • • üb« se,.<.i Waste Paper Day * I • . ' ■ ■ Have Your Paper Tied Or In Container* B And Out On The Curb ■ REGULAR DRIVE LAST SATURDAY EVERY MONTH B

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

Ladies Entertained By Decatur Lions A ii -wd estimated at 125 person- including tiiemln re of the ' Decatur Lions club, their wives and sweethearts. attended a New Eng . land pieuh dinner at Hanna-Nutt- , man park Tuesday night replacing tlie customary dinner meeting at I the Knights of Pythias bogie. The Melody Raagei s. a |a>pu lai musical organization which ha* gained attention thro.rghaut the , midwest. entertained following the ; dinner. Robert Guy. the club preident. acted as t mat master- W. F. Beery naa In cha'ge of preparing i the meal «« Tom Ahr Elected Senior President Tom Abr was named president of the senior das* of the Decatur junior-senior high school during ' tile anuual election of officers, held Tuesday Other officers are: Ralph Sauer, rice president: DoiMhy Kohler, secretary; Marcella Miller. treasurer Mias Mildred . Worthman was named class spunI sor. informed Greek prime minister Cotistantiue Tsaldaris several days ago that the I'nited States would not support the Greek claim for Bulgarian territory. IB- did say. however that the I'nited States would support a Greek amendment for demilitarisation of the Bulgar ian frontier The prolonged aigument over Trieste ha* turned to the power* of the governor to rule the proposed free zone of Trieste. The Russians want him to Im- a Yugoslav. the British and American* favoi a neutral responsible to the iilted_Nation» security council.

Gas on Stomach — Mauch .ufu<.tUK |M wo e-nack Md bMittoiru. <Ul«i uw.ll, to’to tito th. I.MrU to Mug btolklet. knouc he i •""‘""“‘t' '•U'f Ilk, tto». .'J .Xu Utotlto Brll .a, U.IM, njtofen • Mr or r.rora burn, to to Ito (wkir BMMt btok. 2X

Afl Prepares Vole Index For Election Urging Defeat For 'Labor's Enemies' Wushillgloil. Sept IK—flPl--The AFL is ccmpilifiK a list of cotigiessluiwl voting records to guide Rs members in an attcinp to purge congress of ‘’lalmr s enemies" in U<e Novetulwr elections, It was learned today The guide, in some respects different from the ClO’s purge In dek. make s domestic-issues almost the exclusive basis for the AFLs 7mitt.utAi members to determine which senators und representatives should Ite defeated. The first guides already are In the mails AFL leaders expect to have them in th.* hands of all state and regional offices tn two weeks. AFL president William Green I repared an accompanying letter calling cm AFL affiliates to use* the records "to organize effectively for election of lalwr’s friends to congress." “Vou can do this because the votes of the working men ami woman are sufficiently large to defeat our enemies and elect our friends,” Green wrote. The AFL picked 33 roll calls on domestic issues to measure lb"fitness" of candidstes to return to the house of representatives To judge senators, it listed 14 roll calls, only on*- of which was on ti foreign iwdlc y Issue The records show if the individual congressman cast a balin' "favorable or unfavorable" to the AFL position. They contain n<> endorsement, leaving that up to Im ai and state union offi< lais National AFL headquarters will endorse only in unusual circiim- 1 stances Ho far it has urged re election of Rep Ma'thew M Neely. It, W Va. amt defeat of Hep P. G. Holmes. R . Mass. The ,\FL list differs in this re-1 spect from that compiled by the rival CIO The CIO list counts only 12 Issues in eac h house and the voting records constitute a rational headquarters judgment on whether the individual sohuld be* re-eelcted.

Regular Meeting Os Elks Thursday Night The regular meeting of th* P (). Elk* will lie held Thu.-day evening at * o'clock Al! member* 1 arn a*»kw| to at: Hid — (> GROWING LABOR (Continued From Page Onei 75 percent of the nation's huge merchant fieri Other laluir development*: 1 The Carnegie Illinois Corp sheet and tin mill at Gary. Ind remained closed, with 7.500 production employes idle, as the result of a dispute involving CIO clerical workers. 2. A strike by AFL musicians at 6k hotels in New York and three in Chicago was settled by u compromise wage Increase Id the 15th day of the walkout 3. Hope for settlement of the prolonged strike against AllisChalmers Manufacturing Co In- < reuse 1 when the walkout ended at one of the firm's seven farm machinery plants In the truck strike, two largecarriers. associations which operate alWui three-fourths of the trucks Involved in the dispute said they wotfld not meet the union demands instead, they announced that they would sue the striking AFL teamsters' union for g|ti,f)(M,(ll)O damages The settlement with the other employers wa* made on the liasls of a 17.49 weekly raise and a cwt in weekly hours from 44 to 40 The shipping paralysis was cased almost immediately with the return to work of AFL seamen and longshoremen. At NewYork. 3.<mhi men returned to work aboard 75 ships. There still were 311 ships left unmanned at New York by striking CIO crews however. On the west coast, the shipping strike was intensified instead of relaxed. The CIO extended its picket lines to Include foreign

; New Neptune Outboard S| : motors : ■ Redi-cut Floor Mata-Front ■ B — For— • ■ 35-40 Chev, 35-41 Fords 3742 Okls. 3741 Pontiacs • 39 Buicks 37-39 Plymouths || ■ We Have In Stock ! * l7"‘ kr FlVß—HydrauHc Jacks—While Wheel Rim#- i ■ {allenes -Trouble Umps — Ijtrge (kill Guard* — ! B Rear Floor Mata — Seat Cover* — Cigar Lighter* — . ■ ( u h^.T e ( l ' , " n '* / Bri ‘eket ( , — Chrome Fog Light* - 1 v Hot Water and Caroline Car Heater*. ■ ! Dick Mansfield Motor Sales •!

THE BUiEHMOH WIN Bl * IJi i 11 *LeJK2 ■ *, IdMk in Ew I For smooth, even Power all year 'roundYou've got to hand the prize to Phillips 66!* ( \ for the hf Phillips engineers and sckn- / AU. lists control Phillips 66- ( MJVlNHffig match it to driving icindi- K* ** on ’F° r K rta,< -’ rv ff“-* vnc y x 4 '-* 1 -*'n 1111 l jJyI season of the year! Try this "laboratory-coo- W' f V erollcd” gasoline. See if it ' BA jj doesn't mean smoother operaJj lion in hot weather, quicker \ Mans in cold. Get it at the *• orange-and-black sign of "66’’. ’ PHILLIPS 66 GASOLINE

Macklin Super Service Madinin & Third SU. ■!

ships entering port. Negotiations centered on the west coast. East coast strikers refused to settle until tv Pacific coast settlement had lieen reached 36,000 OF (Continued From Page One) cully, he said. Five thousand Kosher butcher I shops closed In New York, shutting off normal supplies to 2.000.mio cus'omers. Operators said 1 they could not obtain meat ex--1 cept in the black market. In Fort Itodge. la. 60 restaurI ant owners closed their doors to l-rotest DPA's order to roll back j price* ou meals containing meat jto June 3i> levels The owners said they would boycott wholej salers who deliver to one restaurant which refused to close. L. J. Radke, executive secretary of the lowa Restaurant association. said the shutdowns prole ably will spread across Hie state. Waverly. Shell Rock. Cellar Falls and Water Ixki restaurants have voted to close Sept 23 for au "indefinite period" until "some thing Is done." he said, and Oskaloosa cases also plan to close. Restaurants in other cities. Including Chicago. Detroit. Minne- ' a polls and St. lamin, said they may have to close soon. The meat picture was clouded j itill more by reports that there will Ire a shortage of poultry by February. Poultry s'.onw had more poultry than a year ago, but | August chirk production reached ' c new low for the year. MEAT SHORTAGE (Crsttnued from Page 1) supplies." For the present at least, this means tluti only alrout 2b.000.01w I pounds of meat left over from third-quarter allocations under

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tlie ulolcaiion program will be available for export during the rest of lf*4t> o - FALL PRESBYTERIAN (Continued From Page Onei Presbytery, succeeding Rev. Yutidl I Rev David Hutchlnsop was -el-' ed to aerve as the comiattfc- ciiiii man An escuange ot pulpito a:no .. iiiinlstvrs of the Presbytery wa voted for Sunday, January 1!» Di Alexander Sharp.- Indianapo - spike on the re«t »rati in fund .>nd| its progress. Three chuichcxi of lbFort Wayne Preobytery iiave a ready exceeded their quoins '• cimtniltee was named io*prepare a. symposium on "Tlie Chu'di * Siam! On Marriage and Dh'o.ce," whi< will lie presented at the Dec.-m " i meeting. Q AUTHORIZE (Continued From Page One) home Is improved. He contend'd that the walk does not have a ! "float finish" agreed upon by th(ontractor. The matter wa* r»-

& W ll compare THBMIOSEAI for comfort, economy and performance with j ■ anything mHi price clan! 1 S 0 Gives you eummer »cre«n. **"!" L —— ■ (tonn Mth and ywr-round w»«th«» ,r, P r pine •« ona permanent unit! // ' / COivea you year-round rainproof, draft- I ‘ I free ventilation . ~ even dunne (<«*• / . ■ O Change from acraon to storm mA'•] A >' ■ Mcondi-all from -aid. th- boute / , • Permanent woother-tight lit (««"'’ C' IL throughpotented,aH-metaldoeurefr.me I • Protect. again.t Uli K, ' " water accumulation with puOro • Um' m __ poeitive tiil drainage! t fIMvXL • Cuts your fuel bilb up to 30" ■ • Inveetigate THIRMOSEAI. before » v... you buy eny acreen. <* etorm I EASE OtMONSJUAriON •N° j Arnold & W®* ‘* w * lT *

"KDNEsbAY, J

Robert KotJ Prebit. M I

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I Wri-icv * I Bath SuperttiJ 4Li'je if g| Ban Hol I Udi 4 OWj Roy S. Johiuml Auctioneer* L We'll b» ”*3 , n t *e t'a’Wd'* 1 ’’■j at Public SaeerF*! i yeara m tbit C4*S*s We weicoT-e of our recorJ ’* | proud- I Phone I"I >£*l IkVoss IMS- ' ,R *l M-lvm Laichty- W- I Berne. Ind-J