Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 119, Decatur, Adams County, 20 May 1947 — Page 3

Ray. 201 1947

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MFTTj> ‘la** "’ ”"* M ' m the church Kock ■ xl sorority *lll hav.- a HB* ,„,• Wednesday even- ■*' ,<l"<k ■- ’>•" Elks ■ „ nl sorority will have a |E^, ty >hi evening at six H,. meeting <>f ""• !-•<««»» will he held at eight p "'ln- '*"■ l ‘ , ‘ |B of the rnion Township <h>h '*re r.-'|iiexted to evening at seven k It ’he hottie of Mr* H\|urris h>r rehearsal for nigh’. ~~ bERSONAIS *" " ** BLner 'lae- "I ’he Geneva ■T/ led hy K <). Hunt, MT jn j others of the staff. Ktr'ed !'■’'» a '"P Wa " h ■n (• A here they visited K,,,.. „f interest They also |V a t Grttyeburg and Fort eg K line <>’ Decatur. route ■, fined fl an.! costs for K it Bluffton. <>ilte of route four K r hnbt'it.:! m Bluff'on ye»l S.( Hrutinekratf. formerly Hi ur »ho hue employed K, field- I’aytoii. <)., for the Kovars will leave Tuesday Canada. a lo re she will to -pecial work at an Umd-: civil service. Miss ha- been in governKork for the last five yea re K ria ce license was issued Kiiitun last week to Miss K Sorine <>f Pleasant Mill*. p Brown of Decatur. ■biK Blown and daughter of Mfton. Fla - a:e visiting with here. Courtney of this city, K. a- Indiana university, it* - Udr-nts recently in- ■ - Skull and Crescent, hon- ! y for sophomore Mgd men lie is a member Phi Epsilon social frateryoung son of Dr. Palmer Eicher of Oklaokla. formerly of De ■h iieli'-s a monthly neigh■our New Line / / / / / / I 111 111 f 1 R Mt llli jfw / f ■ Uy Ba \x\ ' v - ykJII 'jK i Mr 5 ■ V f |S \V\ ♦ .x Bl f/TxyXxxvZr Kg f I [Y.;»X\\\>A kP !Wsj92oß I'/l/kjOB SIZES ■' If ■ -t ?— ■**;*•» fltatff* R?” 'ha counts! An l K slams f r()ln nwk tire you wonderful ■ * '-l>. ml,I a H()f , hO . r ”' •'- 1 l’"l ■* f«lten» give., p ,. r ;,. ( . t fltt ■ lU. ,i t < "tnplete. iilusK ( hart allows you ■Hl'"’? ron "' s ln •*««» 12KV' “«• 32. 34. 38. 38. K l ■“* IS requires 3 r ,| M ■V^ STYF,,ve c *nta in K 11, * Psitarn to Decatur ra ' p »‘!ern Dept., 16S ■ihta. »; Chicago 80, 111. ■Uom» Y « LR NAMg - AD SIZE AND STYLE whrut u * a* 0 ™ brings you ■ »f’h k arUB Sprln < Pattern Bn f 6, new ®mKo-mw lt.\-*’* rj ' one - Panted ■hr •** 11 • FREE patl «aati Sacque and

CLUB CALENDAR •oclety Deadline, 11 A. M. Phones 1000 — 1001 Tuesdsy Council of church women tea, Methodist church. 2:30 pm. Decatur Garden club, Mrs. Harold Owens, 2:30 pm. C. L. of C. pot-)uck dinner, c. l of C hall, 6:15 p.m. Jxiyal Daughter class of Bethany Evangelical C. B. church. Mrs. Frank Lynch. 7:30 pm. V. F. W. auxiliary, hall. 7:30 pm. Garden club, postponed. Kum Join-1 s Class, Bethany Evangelical t’nlted Brethren Church Social Rooms, 7:30 p.m. Tri Kappa mother's party Elks. 6:30 p m. Wednesday Decatur Home Economic club. Mrs L. E. Archlxdd. 1:45 p.m. St. Mary's Township Home Economics club. Pleasant Mills high school, 1:30 pm. Phoebe Bible class of Zion Evangelical and Reformed thurch, Mrs. Dullae Goldner, 7:30 p m. Monmouth Merrymnids, Monmouth school, 1:30 p.m. Lutheran Walther league, 8 p.m. Psi lota XI sorority. Elks home. 8 p m. 1 nureoay So Cha Rea. Mrs. Dick Ehlnger. 7:30 p.m. Women of Moose. Moose home. 8 p.m., executive meeting. 7:30 pm. Stater! meeting of Eastern Star, Muonic, 7:30 p.m. St. Paul Ladies Aid society, Mns. Floyd Arnold, ail day. Ruralistlc Study club, Mrs. Amelia Miller, 8 p.m. Union Township Woman's club, Mrs. George Morrle, 7:30 pm Friday Pocahontas lodge, Red Men hall. 8 p.m. Imgion auxiliary social meeting. Legion. 8 p.m. liorhood paper. Copies of the paper have lieen recelvrd by friends in Decatur. It carries neighborhood news and advertising, and is edited and printed by young Phillip. It Is called "The 21st Street News." Mrs. L. E. Snyder, of near Wren, O-, brought this office a branch of blossoms from a Washington cherry tree (formerly known ae Japanaae cherry trees) which is blossoming In full force on the Snyder lawn. The nee. whloh has thousands of pink blossoms, is one of the few of he species In the middlewest. Ens Ralph Scott is spending a few daye in Decatur enroute to the home of his parents in Clinton. lowa. The Scotts formerly resided ' here. George Wemhoff. veteran monument dealer, today observed his 74th birthday. George has been on the Job altout sixty years now and Ahis morning, as usual, reported at hU place of business at six am. and spent a busy day. Mr. ami Mrs. Ben F. Shroyer and Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark Maydin and daughters, Susan and Melissa, attended the Shroyer reunion Sunday, held in Maplewood, (). Tommy Steury, 4. son of Mr and Mrs. Calvin Steury, unde went a tonsilectomy this morning. A delegation from Kekionga lodge 65. Knight* of Pythias, will go to New Haven tonight to attend initiation ceremonies to be staged by that lodge Mrs L. Gray Paddock. Mrs. Dee Fry back, M s. W F. Wlnnes and Mm. W A. Redmond attended the annual mothers and daughters banquet. given by the Fort Wayne alumnae chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha, national college sorority, on Monday evening. o Tip on Fruit Juices 'Mercedes. Tex. (t’P)-If you don't like orange-grapefruit juice, just add a few drops of lemon, advises C. P. Melton, Texas' "lemon king.” ” One per cent lemon juice gives orange-grapefruit juice a personality,” Melton said. “It brings out the tang." SwMibi -1 ■Hk | MODEL Corky Kelly wears a new polka dot blouse that promises to become quite popular. It is made of cotton batiste and has self straps. It is topped by a shirred ofl-the-shoul-der ruffle I international)

|•‘ 1 } rL Ncws I

Admitted: Thonme Steury. 63:1 Mercer avenue; Albert Lehrman. 222 North First street; Ivan Barkley, Monroeville; Billie Wayne Tester, Geneva; David Woods, route 5. Admitted and dismissed: Richpud Rae Behl, Butler, Pa Dismissed: .1-rome Minnich, Bryant; Norman McCullum, Geneva; Arthur McCullum, GenevaJohn A. Swarts, Berne 0

I arrivals I

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Manning, of (.Geneva, u e parents of a baby boy, born at 5:17 p.m. Monday ut the tdanw county memorial hospital. He weighed 8 pound-'. 5 ounces atid has not been named. A baby daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bultemeior, rout.- I. this morning at 8:25 am. at the local hospital. She Weighed . pounds, 15 ounces. o TABOR ASSAILS H onflmiril friHH Pag? || insistence that the NLRB be in < reused from three to seven members. But they were expected to remain adamant In their demand for a dearly defined separation in the boarl's prose I cuting and Judicial functions. Proposals to give the ( LRB the Job of "policing” labor unions against communist Infill ration also were likely to revoke lengthy discussion. , Many Republicans agreed that it was up to the federal government to help provide better medical .are for low-income groups But they thought they had a better answer than Mr. Truman's plan for ly.-pald medical care. Chairman Robert A Taft. R. 0.. of the senate labor and pub lie welfare committee, said his group would begin hearings this week on a Republican sponsored bill to expand facilities for medical anl dental care through federal aid to the states. How ever, Taft said he doubted it would get final congressional approval this year. A group of Democrats headed bv Sen. James E Murray of Mon t.-na served notice they would push the president's health insurance plan. They will introduce legislation patterned on the recommendations that Mr Truman made in a message to congress yesterday. o To skin a fish fast, dip ft first into boiling water for a few minutes, advises Atlantic Coast Fisheries research laboratories. ■» 1•. w. 1 IN CHARGE of the radio shack aboard the Norwegian liner Roseville, Lylie Smith does an on-the-job pose as the ship docks in Los Angeles. (International)

- ft 1 . so I ; f : <■ ~ l 2fr K . i in GREENVILLE S. C., where 31 men are on trial for the lynching of Willie Earle. Solicitor Robert A. Aahmore (left) and R Watte are proaecutora, charging the defendanta killed the Negro in retaliation for hia alleged flaying of a cab driver. (lattroatioaalk

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA’

Ask Press Freedom Parley Nexl Spring Europe Suggested As Conference Site Lake Success. N. Y,. May 20 (I'l’l At the suggestion of its Russian member, the I'nited Nations sitl.commission on freedom rY Information today ask.-d the United Nations to hold the long-plan-ned world conference on freedom of the press next spring In Europe J. M. Lomakin, a former Russian journalist and now consul general at New York for the Soviet Union, suggested Europe as the conference site because the people of Europe would be aide to watch the sear. ll I for greater freedom of informa- i tion. and non-Ehnopeans woubl be able to see how this freedom I has been broadened in Europe since the defeat of Nazlism. The United States. Britain and' France already have submitted to the sub-commission their proposals for the agenda of the world press conference. All of them are aimed at knocking down censor ship and other barriers to the free, collection and dissemination of In-1 formation. The British proposed »n inter national treaty to guarantee the' rfrhts of foreign correspondents R. J. Crulkshank, member of the board of the London News Chronicle and British member of the siitw-ommisslon. proposed a treaty, and suggested that it give all, foreign correspondents equal privileges. His plan left the way open for a country to favor its own citizens over correspondents from other countries. Crulkshank. acting as an Individual. proposed that each country guarantee foreign correspondents in its territories: "1. The widest and freest possible exchange of news and opinions without censorship to either incoming or outgoing news and comment; "2. The widest possible measure of access to news to bona fide correspondents and news agencies of whatever nationality; "3 The extension to such correspondents without discrimination of all reasonable facilities to trave’ and reside in the territories of all governments undertaking to observe these rights and the right fretly to carry on their activity; "4. The freest and widest possible opportunities for the distrlir''' M n BEATRICE FACE, 13, smiles at Newington. Coon., home for crippled children where doctors removed cupful of bone chips from her hip and fused five vertebrae to correct her curved spine. Balance of bone chips have been stored in the bone bank and will be used to fuse five additional vertebrae when Beatrice's first fusion is healed, (International)

SPOKESMAN FOR THE ARAB Higher Committee of the Holy Land. Henry Cattan (arrow) is shown as he appeared before the Politic .1 and Security Committee of the U. N. General Assembly at Lake Success, N. Y. He asked that Jewish immigration to Palestine be halted and called the Balfour Declaration of 1917. in which the British Government recognized the Jewish national home, "the root of ail the Rouble.” (International) : .

; bution of news by bona fide news services without discrimination within the territories concerned; "5. Access to available commun- ! ication facilities to bona fide corre ’ spondents and news agencies withj out discrimination as to nationality” Wisconsin Senate Passes Strike Ban . — Madison. Wls., May 20 —(UP) Wisconsin moved toward outlawling strikes against public utilities today as a measure making such I walkouts unlawful went to the houM after state senate passage The senate last nigh* approved. : 17 to 12. a bill which would make arbitration compulsory if labor and management could not reach an agreement through negotiation or - conciliation. The measure covers strikes against concerns handling gas, ele< tricity, telephones, transporta- , tion and other similar public utili--1 ties. o Trade In a Good town Decatur

Need We repair and clean all makes of furnaces. Beet I Furnace materials —trained workmen. All costs based on Repairs? actual materials used and labor. Phone us now. M’like way Tripl-ife was installed" Williamson Heater Company Our Williamson Trip! de Furnace keeps the borne well heated and the temperature m kept even. We have hot water on hand at any time of day and enjoy having that convenience The installers of our Williamson Tripbile Furnace were very hard workers, courteous, and did their work very accurately." S >"» ./ Chr'.terine Wrobel. Indiana Monthly Poymostt To Suit WILLIAMSON HAUGK 1 TRIPLIFE FURNACE Heating & Appliances up Decaf Ur, Indiana t , , — ,1 „ I—fowl \ ||rY Mwi ' I ■ 11 11 IHI - 'I ||b r i ’’Ty »g,9 5 \ \ 11 te 10 manipulated stripes An d cool, cool Jerwlle give ♦hit summer casual an out-of-the’ ordinary look. IX7X NIBLICK & CO. lime mW toeurte

— — MARSHALL MAKES «< oHtlHHrd rrom I‘ngr I) cure was less appeal to passion and prejudice by the ministers themselves. Marshall replied that was his thought. Marshall also revealed that the state department, under his di I tection. Is fidlowing develop- ’ ments In China very closely and trying desperately to find some way to help China economically in a manner that could be Justi-t fled with congress and the Amer-1 lean public. This statement was made in | answer to a question whether the United States was considering early release of the $500,000,000 earmarked by the export import bank as a loan to China. This 1 1 loan has lieen held up until ' - China puts her house in or ler. o_ .. Brownie Troop 10 Picnic Thursday Members of Mrs B andyberry’s ’I Brownie troop 10 are asked to

meet in front of the Lincoln achool Thumday afternoon at 2 o'clock, from which place (hey will leave for a picnic. Memhara are request ed to bring their applications for i the Brownie day camp. o ■——— Vincennes Dentist Heads Association Indianapolis, May 20 —(UP) — Dr William Bogie of Vincennes was Installed as president of the Indiana dental association at the final Imeiness session of the group's 9(uh annual convention today. He sut ceeded Dr. George E. Guse, Rushville. Miss Margaret Magnuson of M Porte, yesterday addressed the stale dental assistant’* association of which she Is president. It is meeting In conjunction with the dental group

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PAGE THREE

LYNCH TRIAL H uNdaxrU tram l‘«a«- I* < offee.” The perspiring prosecutor leaned over the jury box and naked: "Don't things like thl*. turn your stomach, gentlemen?” Culbertson denounced the entry Into the rase of the federal bureau of Investigation, whose agents had helped take confessions from 26 of the defendant* on which the state had based It* prosecution "Could it be that they hope to use this trial to get votes up north," Culbertson said. Before his reprimand from Judge Martin, the CIO union lawyer began his arguments by telling the jury that "this I* a southern trial."