Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 242, Decatur, Adams County, 14 October 1946 — Page 2
Says Soviet Russia Wants A Third War Hopes To Destroy U 5 And Britain Detroit. <»«t n <VPi Soviet Russia w.iiitH >i third World 1 War In the bnpe of destroying tffe United Stales ami Gt eat Britain and establishing a world proletariat dictatorship according to Loiila F Undent former editor tis the Communist Daily Worker Hudatil. a party member who re nouttced Communism. said In an address over radio station Vt IK la*t night that "tin- American Com , inunlxtx are a* mm h a fifth column for Russia a* the quislings
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were tor Naal Germany,” They take their order* from a mail "who la an agent of the Kremlin," he averted lliidenx. now an Instrmtor In Hu- economics department* of the University of Notre I tame mid Fordham University. said Hnasia’s progrim calls first for a "war of nerves" ami them, “when Russia feels Itself able," a third World War I "Tin- destruction of the United States lx the goal of Soviet Russin." he declared lludens said he joined thw Com munist party 10 years ago In the hope that Commiinist* would living ulmhil some desired changes In American democracy but that he wa< "disillusioned” after World War II "I learned at first very reluctI uitly that Soviet Russia Intends to -I- ti ov Hr Ha al <! the I nlted
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States." he said i He charged that there Is ii man. > "who Is an agent of the Kremlin who directs all Communist actlvlti les In the United States.' - He described this man us u formI er head of the Communist Internationals and "still the boss." "This man never show* his face," he added “Communist leaders never see him, bitt they follow Ills orders or suggestions implicitly The average American Communist never heard of him." Hudena said he would disclose this man's name to "any official agencies" but would prefer to do I -o "when I can testify under oath Rttdettz s M id he renounced the Cominuniat party in April. lit 15. after the appearance of an article by Jacques Dueloa. French Communist leader, who advocated a leturn to Marxism and Lentnlain | which calb-d for rule by the proletariat through world revolution I He added that all American Com I mitnists understood the program ' and it was adopted by the KreinI lin This program tails for a "war | of nerves then a world war when | Russia Is ready I .Vlar«hal Stalin tonfirmed this policy last spring when he blamed I the I' S and Britain for hitorna- | tlonal mlaunderstandhigs. lindenz. I said. "I joined the Communist party 1 because I hoped that more demoI entry would come to this connI fry at the end of World War II," he explained "I was disillusioned In my 1« years of experience as a Communist. I found nothing superI tor to what we have in America.” Rtidenx's speech, which orlg hinted in Pittsburgh, followed a year of silence imposed upon him by the Catholic church Oct. in. IMS. after rescinding his excommunication of 30 years previous. He wax excommunicated for mar rylng a divorcee in ISIS. Q.. ... Trade In a Good Town — Decatur Decatur Ins. Agency Established IN7 General Insurance K. C. Bldg. Roam S NOTICE My office will be closed one Week beginning Oct. 1.1. while attending Interstate Medical Association Dr. C. C. Rayl
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
1 *w.’ ' ''' *■vi-; u'' ' * d KBF J*« • ■ ■F tn Ba a 'I FLANS TffAVEIEUS can now purchase Insurance from a vending machine at the Airline* Terminal in New York before they take off on a tlighL Operating the Insuragraph is W. G. Imboden. East Cleveland. 0.. who is shown (top) inserting a quarter. A small window slides open (center) and he fills out the name of the beneficiary. A button is pressed •nd the policy conies out (bottom) while a duplicate remains in the machine. The purchaser then puts the policy in the mail before starting on the flight. Travelers can purchase from $5,000 to $25,000 worth <4 protection at twenty-live cents per $5,000 f/tshmMUionffA
Invite Machinists To Return To AFL c 20,000 Sigrialmen Are Welcomed Back Chicago, <><•<- I♦ <I Pi The American Federation ot Labor laid out a welcome mat today for fiOO.oiiO ma< hlni.t. who bolted the AFL a year ago and announced the re affiliation of almost 2't.000 railway signalmen. President William Green announced the return of th<- hide pendent Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen at the 65th AFL convention here The re-affiliation of the signalmen will swell the AFL .- rank, to a record membership of about 7.171. MW. Tin signalmen left the AFL in 192 M in a jurisdictional nnfon dispute. The welcome handed the mat-hin ists was approved by the convention in a bld for their re affllia tion. It was contained In a supplementary statement to the exe entire council’, report, and said that negotiation, for re-affiliation had heen condui ted “with some success." "We urge the machinists to take steps to return so that they may clean their face Inside the organization We finally state we need and want this union in our own family. The prospect are brighter now for such a reunion." the statement said The statement added, however, that jurisdictional Issues which prompted the withdrawal of the international assoriatfon of machin ists la«t November could be settled only after the machiists rejoin the AFL. In a speech prepared for delivery. Edgar L. Warren, chief of the I!, fl. conciliation service, told the AFL that "certainly during the next year the most important de cisiona for the t'nited States will lie made at the bargaining table ” "These truly are the peace tables of the hmne front," he said He said that the conciliation service had no authority "to dictate terms of any settlement " The AFL has charged, however, that high er government agencies have set aside collective bargaining agree ment. reached with the aid of the conciliation service Warren spoke a. delegates began th*-second week of the convention which will chart a new economic and political cmirse for the AFL. and pmlmldy will demand an end to wage and price controls WHY SUFFER nheumatic, Neuritis. Arthritis. Periodic Pains. Lumbago and all other aches and pains arc quick ly relieved with Alt's Compound W. G. Tablets. Positively .assaulted’ At all drug t>teie«or send 91 to Uni<m I’itJimacal Co.. Bludtuu. Ind. --- - ---
Rob Tovern Safe Os $13,000 Today Ind'.'inapolis. Oct 14 tl’Pi Tw<> bandits tied up a pa iking lot attendant, sledgo • hammered through a twofoo* wall i* ml robbed a la vei n »;:fe ot |13.mm today Police said the robb.-iy ccurred at Uie Capitol Tavern. Clyde Gunnell. night attendant at an adjoining parking lot. was found bound and gagged In a parked ant ' ' mobile In an underground pira'ing 4 pace. Nearby, the bandits had used .. sledge hammer to make an opening in a brick Wall separating the liarking lot trim the tavern The fate, which tavern o* tiers Steve Fotiades and Jordan Jannetides said contained 113.060 in email bills. wim battered open ami papers strewn around the floor — o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur _o — - — SECRECY (Continued from Page 11 this manner. October 21 Is the first day to I mail regular absentee voter ballots; i to civilian voters who will Im- out J , of their precinct on business elec . tion day. , October 27 is the first day fori , an absent voter's ballot to be per-' . sonaliy voted
— -MR.- ''WUU r ■ *> • 73s|SEa«SlFj»Jgt * R„ < ■’OM 3L V afefc * •S a V I Tlßyrx ; wB z a ■> / rlra ' » V ON THI GREIN at St. Andrews ia Scotland, General Dwight 0. EitI enhower shows plenty of form as he follows through after a putt on the famous course. The General. «c« edaapanied by his wife end son. Cspt .T*hn EiseuH ’ «r, «er< gusts of tfce King and Queeu at Balmm al Gastlc (InUrnstwnaU
New Constitution Is Approved By French Result Establishes DeGaulle As Factor pari*. <><t II (tl’i—France had a constitution today for the first tiim- since the liberation. I G.-n Charles dr Gaulle was , atabllsh-d «« a potential politic .il factor despite hix failure to prevent adoption of the document in Sunday's referendum Tim constitution wax adopted by approximately 1.mm.000 votes in balloting marked hy all-time record abstentions from the polls .d ill 2 percent of the registered voters Unofficial returns from metric pidituti Frame. North Africa and almost all of Corsica showed »,- 143.310 for the constitution and I • oM.mi* against. These totals included official figures of tJOS.217 for. s.i'lh.'i-il against in metropolitan France Political observers attributed the strong opposition vote and ..In.tentions largely to De Gaulle's campaign against the 1011.-rtifu* Hon He had warned it would lead to anarchy and then dictatorship. AH three major parties In Prime Minister Georges IlidatiH’s government • so. ialists. communists and (Mipular republicans supported the document. l>e Gaulle's role in the fourth republic may lie clarified in the Not In general elections Many political observers. including strong left-wing supporters, believed many persons who abstained from voting yesterday may give positive support to DeGaulie then De Gaulle won a hatrlxome *u< cess in principle. many observers said, even though he failed to defeat the constitution. I'nder the constitution. France will have a twohouse parliament, with most of the authority vested in the lower house, and a president with limited powers De Gaulle favored a strong presidency
IF THERE WERE A LAW AGAINST PUPE MILK. - -no* ■ 1 < rr THE SUPPLY might not J\ CQUAL the demand “Thank your lucky stars there's no law forbidding it. Here is a Rood pure milk that helps you possess Health and Happiness.”—says Billy Break O’Day. tea? h This Home? WHEN you cheek up. after a fire, will you find your insurance too little to cover the value of your household furnishings? It is better to do the checking now, before the fire—and be sure of insurance sufficient to cover your loss. The Suttles Co Phones: 191 - 35 b Niblick Block Decatnr
10 DIE IN (Continued from Page 1) t . ' r m aiiloninldli o.> rt | - near Hott'i Ih-ntl. Richard S3. Ihmatt killed wh> i hl« n< w«;»ap« r dtllvery truck wux strttil. by a train a' llidiart crossing. Miss Virginia l.vn ilug. Ift. Port lat.d. injured fatally when two automobile collided on n Jay county rond Saturdsy night. '.-■I ;-'riter 21, lltltlfington die i instantly when hi t car crashed Into a concrete u’c.itment at • Culvert ju«t half u mile from hi home around it idniuht Sunday. Paul R flo-tr 34. New Castle, killed Saturday night w'ten his automobile failed to round a ctirvo on a highway near Now Castle. Richard Allen Riff I. 3 year-old son of Mr mol Mrs. Henry Itlffel ol Rochester, killed when an automobile struck him as be ran a i-ros* a road in front of his homo. The car was driven hy B. F McCuen. Warsaw Vernon J Ferguson. M. Evansville killed whi-ii struck by an Beware Coughs from cemiMO ooWt That Hang On CreomulMon relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help looaen and exp. i germ laden phlerm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, Inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to mH you a bottle of Creomulston with the understanding you must like the way it qtflekly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest CoWs, Bronchith
PUBLIC SAM I As I have Hold my farm I will sell at I’tibli. Au.’:.>n O .Marsh farm located 2 miles south of Bluffton. Ind. « . No 1. then 1 mile runt, my entire herd of R.-l- c. r «l an) Cattle. Feed, Implements, etc., on Thursday, Oct. 17, lw Salt Starting at 10:30 A M. Bw 44 ’ , IJ—HKAIV—I.I ABERDEEN-ANGUS CATTLE H Heid lillll-J(T»Y S BLACK CAB 7. Sir. Saum •- iGUejM —Black Cap Judy S Id", bred by T C If. wall. .M.-lvin. Five Registered Angus cowe. bred to ilegi-tered \i.gu- Bit Four lleglatered Angua Helfer*, from I to 6 month- old Twelve head high grade Angus cow- with . .th., y *id« from 4 to 6 month* old. Three high grade Angus heifer*, bred to i;. g.-t- - I Atuu* Ml Four Registered Shorthorn heifers, bred I: . t.. .-!. due to freshen soon. REHOGS K Seventy Ove head feeding shoots, weigh’ from T • HAY AND GRAIN ■ 2’>o Bales of mixed hay; 100 hales of alfalfa .tiv .t!*- ■ timothy hay: So bales -3rd cutting alfalfa hay •<< r<--4 rvri field FARM IMPLEMENTS ■ McCormick-Deering fertillter grain drill 1" '■ rubber tired hay wagon and grain bed <-ombim-d '< Iteere !>99 corn planter with fertilizer att.ii-huv-''.' iik l ' r.*» spreader: dump rake; spring tooth harrow.lon 1 11' 1 - h-’* new; self hog feeder: 12 cedar posts; I nclk <an*. o power lawnmower; many mlacellaneoii- artt. 1.-- no' m'-ntwn MH HOUSEHOLD GOODS J i Coffee table; ottoman; 2 occasional .han-; df -tnwicker chair, 2 lamps: breakfast set and 2 < ’i.itr-. tn* -I> r mattress library table: oval library table . dta’*'-" and 2 mattresses; 2 antique organs and -'"ol- : atci'itt' Taylor Tot; single {.poster bed. springs a.id :n.< ' r ” set ice cream table and chairs; swing ami trapez. -' ■ "t trunks; bundle material: pi< nic table pan loxtk* »“’• doors: draperies, bedspreads, for child’s room .-. .»••• RUGS: Four 9x13 rugs, two are good as n-w "»•’ one 9x17 rug. very good; one 6x9 rng: I rut padUnusual Hand Decorated Furniture ■ Two organs; I ivory green and gold: 1 red. white .in< < radio; 2 round children's play tables; school d<-k - ' < hairs for porch and breakfast room: <loll trunk I kitchen cabinet; Irons, band painted tor <l<s" -top-, t o ‘ Itook eneds; picture frames; the above article. »• by .Mrs Glen O. .Marsh. TBILMS—CASH Lunch Served on Grounds Sale Will !>»■ H> d MELVIN GERBOJ Ellenberger Bros., Auctioneers Farmers A Merchants Bank. Clerk. _ Real Estate Auction! WELL IMPROVED 160 A( RE FARM S Thursday, Oct. 24-1:30 p. »l (i.- I” tlti.r* . -OCATION; I mile Houth of Hoagland Indiana » of Decatpr, Indiana. Or. about 12 miles Routh. »“ p-H-nr-' K DESCRIR t ."tN: Good 6 room house, built-in k ..ej-Aill , X K ment. water softener A NICE HOME. IN ''' Semi-Bank Barn 39x72. concrete floors ami *""" " r corn crib, large granary, chicken hou.e j ( pt |LI ■ ■ running water Brooder house. BLECTRICIM N,td 11« ACRES UNDER CULTIVATION, Iwlance m , A( .n M grass pasture. Well Drained, good outlets, na ™ and is in a fine state ot cultivation desiral'F- ,r IDEALLY LOCATED on a hard surfaced ntad i" •* s»f* ■ proved farming section and only aliout 12 mile* M | TERMS; 15* day of sale. Imlancc upon delivery ■ Emmel E. Harp* 1 J F. Sanmann. Auctioneer H C. W. Kent—Edies Mamtger „ » ■ Sale conducted by MMwest ICculty Auction » ”• J ■ ■ Decatur, Indiana — Phone No- 174- - • ’ 3
vat,can o, “”0 ■l-8. ln ,Oo * fOl until i/W' 1 <• [ R S’iiihhhH | .ul >r . 1,. ~ | n i i<‘-n M-r. ..(■»«, g PUMPHREY ]EWEmp|H 1 Decatur. |< K
