Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 273, Decatur, Adams County, 19 November 1947 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

” ,L- . «TT|f Mina Reppert Will Probated in Court „ The will ot .the late Mina C. Reppert was probated Wednesday in Adams circuit court here. The v. ill provides first inr the payment of all debts and expenses and the erection of a tombstone to cost not more than S6OO. It gives *l*soo each to the following nephews and j nieces: Alma Fruchte, Della Koi-1 ter. Alta Kruetzman, Raymond Koi-1 ter, Rosa Scherry, Edna Jaberg, Elmer and Alvin Beineke, Elmer, Edward and Clarence Kolmetten, Ida and Selma Fruchte. Household goods ami a city property are bequeathed to a son. William: a farm to a son, Clarence, and the rest to be sold and given as follows: one-half to the son, Clart nee, one-sixth to the Salem Evangelical and Reformed church, the child's home of the church at Fort

■■ljrLy ■ ZINER S HOME APPLIANCES 147 So. Second St. Phone 939 C fas 5 ways in this SPECIAL WASHER J \JU IF\ / Z d 3 A /Ils A . A 4 Gen»roui allowance I fl ■' i! / A* 38® on y° ur machine *_ /</ —* ’1 | ill ill liliu helps pay for your hI/I jl.llU new "do-every- / yfl/fMCtBr / — — ._ Hill lUllft thing” Bendix! -s' j '■ ? ■ z »-j ■ ■llli iHltltß Phone today In j " MG, -41 111 ,o *’ nt ' <>ut h° w 111 \ . — Vil) small the down /11 ■ AvnWx' ' 1 i ~a- \ \ \ payment can be if HllWaaJ*. ——. V J\\ you turn in your |f\\ z ' XA ' Z '• - z I I• , old-timer now. g ' ! *^l!'***’! — ■ .Z/3|. Soap savings add up to $lO per year with the thrifty Bendix! • Important hot water savings. Ordinary half-the-job washers too ... thanks to Bendix may wear "bargain” price tags, "Tumble-Action.” but cost a lot more in the long Clothesare"dunked”hundreds run. of times in and out of a small juarontond b, amount of hot suds... the thrift- \t™ d Ho ““ ke «pijt/ test way to get clothes cleanest. • Save wear and tear on clothed No agitator in the Bendix! No rubbing, scrubbing and twisting . . ."Tumble-Action” | 'wMli is gentle action, assuring long i s' • nrrn life to the daintiest fabrics. ; (• tjjsjaMßS ! h I MHI • Save work! The Bendix does it I; / | all. . . washes, triple-rinses, t damp-drys automatically! I All you do is set the dial and *-T!®ar i add soap. The Bendix does the j X. i issWWjlls washing beautifully even when j j j you’re not there. | | 1| | ||&g||||| BENDIX PHONt TODAY FOR A TRADE-IN OFFER ON YOUR OLD W'SHfR ~, TAKE 15 MONTHS TO PAY FOR YOUR NEW BENDIX , I SIN GE 18 7 4 I—7 V ’

Wayne, the church home for the aged at Upper Sandusky. O. and the i hui'Ch s Mission house; one-third to tlii" nephews and nieces and-.Atß’l-la Yost, Otto, Hubert and Edwin Miller, Amanda Schultz, Laurine Doeflinger. Milton Scherry. Alma Eckrote, Marie Cowans, Marcella Cook, Harriet Cowan. Lewis Litterer and Theodore Heller. o Man Is Fined For Reckless Driving John Schultz, of near Decatur. [ c hanged his plea of not guilty to one of guilty before justice of peace Floyd B. Hunter late Tuesday and was fined $1 and costs on a reckless driving charge. His case had been set for trial yesterday after his first plea was entered. Police charged his car struck two parked cars on Third street Sunday night.

jU. S. Again Assails " Romania Government B I Deemed Unnecessary To Answer Charges *] Washington, Nov. 19 —(UP)— The United States again assailed "the unrepresentative character" of the communist-dim-inated regime in Romania and t - the methods by which is came to power. ( In a note to Romania the Unit- , ed States said it “deems it un- , necessary and to answer recent Romanian charges > that this government conspired . to overthrow the present Roman-ian-regime "by force and vio- - lence.” f . The alleged conspiracy was brought out recently during the trial of Juliu Maniu, Romanian anti-communist leader, and other members of his national peasant party. Romania charged that American army officers and diplomatic representatives were involved in the alleged plot. "The government of the United States has taken note of these accusations, not only as to .their substance but also as to their character and as to the manner in which they have been put forward. which in itself affords eloquent commentary on their political motiviation and insincerity." the note said. 4 The United States government deems it unnecessary and inappropriate to dignify by specific refutation charges prtsented in this fashion which falsely insinu- ' ate that the government of the United States through its representatives has advocated or lentsupport to a contemplated attempt at overturning the Romanian government by force.” The note pointed out that the

b® iHiEiisiM BOwjlllW^ 1 '*' M WBI ■ ■-^ — - *^7va vub \ |E R~' • f^'u^ain<T ne '" \ B WH®*. ’«* *3r \ 1 lull (*••* ;.<« a »ri> v> \)-»*j&* to *«“ V^S^>^| wfep^SS£m»^j”Sl’ ll *Sl Xtna 2 - 10 ® V^eak®l > s u-\ BHa»%? i—>**g \ *' n ■.<- sp ei .tb" l ll* 1 1 t j|L~2Z£»SS»!Sw»»>tt ni iw>s3w JjE »'Ay v ' iVt '> ~e c ac ' i V. ’ ,re>i'-\ Your Choice on Easy Terms—Come In HAUGKS When waiting is necessary Waiting certainly can be tough at times. While we’re proud of rhe progress made in *®BEy y our expansion program, we J\ w °uld like to complete the job ’ ! in a hurry. The main thing j slowing us up is the continued l ac k °f central office equipment V ( necessary before we can install new telephones. Meanwhile, we’re W 4 o expanding service S * with all possible speed —for we know how imJ'^ > \ P ortant te^e_ <> p h ° ne serv_ ice is to everyone - w ’ CITIZENS TELEPHONE CO-

DECATUR JJAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

—■ I ■■ —■ I. .11l United States as h signatory to the Romanian armistice has "for 'legitimate purposes” maintained liaison with representatives of all major elements in Romania. It said that such associations "have been known to all and have properly been questioned by none.” “The United States has never J condoned the unrepresentative character of the present Romanian government nor the methods by which it attained and has perpetuated its authority,” the note stated. It said this government has done everything in its power to assist Romania in obtaining a broad representative government responsive to the will of its people. o Knox County Sheriff Heads Association Indianapolis. Nov. 19 —( UP) — Sheriff Francis Thomas of Knox county today was the new president of the Indiana Sheriffs’ association. He was’ elected to succeed Jay F. Watson. Tippecanoe county. Other officers chosen at the organization’s convention here were sheriff W. Pete Anthony, Delaware county, first vice-president; sheriff L. B. Clayton, Lake county, second vice-president; and Clifton L. Small, former Howard county sheriff, secretary-treasurer. o $60,000 Fire At Logansport Today Logansport, Ind.. Nov. 19 —(UP) A $60,000 fire accompanied by several explosions destroyed a garage and its contents today. The included 10 combines, two school buses, a tractor, two automobiles, seven oil furnaces, two home freezing units, and three automatic borne laundries. Firemen from Twelve Mile and Royal Center helped the Logansport department fight the blaze.

Files Petition For i Recount At Attica f Attica. Ind., Nov. 19 —(UP) — 3 George Feuerjstein, Democratic 1 nominee for mayor of Attica, filed , a petition for a recount of ballots cast in the Nov. 4 city election in connection with his loss by a 30r vote margin. Feuerstein was defeated by Carroll Wallace, the Republican nom--3 inee, 938 to 908. He filed the recount petition yesterday in Foun- ? tain circuit court, charging voting irregularities — particularly in 5 connection with absentee ballots. > _______o _____ 1 The tin plate industry was esf tablished in America in 1891 large- - ly for the production of tin cans for food packing. Baked Goods-Chicken Noodle soup sale, Saturday, November 22, Zion Evangelical and Reformed church basement and Goodyear Service. * o SAYS MEYERS (Continued from Page 1) he was drafted in the army in 1942, and and additional $15,000-p-year "executive salary" which was kicked back to Meyers. 2. Maj. Gen. Junius P. Jones, aitforce inspector, said an anoytnous letter accusing Meyers of wartime profiteering was placed in a file classified "secret.” He said he considered the,letter to be the “selfdiscrediting” work of a crackpot reformer, and for that reason it was pigeonholed. . • i 0 UN STRIKES AT i (Continued rrom Page 1) ! finding "a more moderate and j rational approach” to the use of | the big power voting privilege in the UN security council. Leaders of the western powers’ fight for some action on the veto issue recognized that any actual modification of the UN charter or any private big power agreement on limiting the veto’s scope would be impossible unless all five powers got together. Dulles suggested, however, that a year-long study by the "little assembly” and a committee representing the security council eventually might bring Russia into a meeting of minds wil-h the other great powers which, except for two French vetoes, never have used the right in the security council. The Arab plan for Palestine was presented to the 57-nation Palestine committee of the UN i general assembly in advance of the completed Russo-American plan for dividing Palestine into Arab and Jewish states under supervision of a United Nations commission. Worked out in private by the UN’s six Arab states and the moslem state of Pakistan, the Arab blueprint demanded: 1. Termination of Great Brit-j ain’s Palestine mandate and withdrawal of all British forces within one year. 2. Recognition of Palestine as a unified independent state. 3. Stoppage of all immigration of Jews to the holy land. 4. An appeal to the international court of justice on the legality of the UN general assembly’s right to determine Palestine’s future. 0 CAPITAL'S MURDER (Continued from Page 1) continued their relentless questioning of the negro in the belief he might also confess the "Marigold murder” of Mrs. Mabel Merrifield, 68-year-old club leader. Mrs. Merrifield was slain with a knife in her south side home 13 days before the Burney slaying. Watts denied consistently that he killed Mrs. Merrifield, but route records of the city truck he drove showed he was in the neighborhood of her home Oct. 30, the day she was killed. Authorities said he had hinted he knew something about the slaying. Hours after the Burney slaying confession early yesterday, police took Watts to the Burney home where he reenacted the crime. Watts confessed a few hours after Governor Gates ordered extra state police protection for Marion county areas beyond the city limits. Today, state police supt. Robert Rossow had a letter from BUI ID U P RED B 100» TO GET MORE STttMTH If your blood LACKS IRON! Tou girls and women who suffer so from simple anemia that you’re pale, weak, "dragged out”—this may be due to lack of blood-iron. So try Lydia E. Pinkham’s TABLETS—one of the best home ways to build up red blood —in such cases. Pinkham’s Tablets are one of the greatest bloodiron tonics you can buy! Buy them at any drugstore. Worth trying! Lydia E. Pinkham's 7ABICTS

I Gates commendtag 4> inl 011 tlie organization’s efficiflßCy in breaking the case. MARSHALL SAYS (Continued rrom Page T> ■ nomously and with calcu.ated purpose villified and distorted American motives in foreign affairs. he was talking about Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, among others, and the two top Russians accredited to the United Nations, Andrei Vishinsky and Andrei Gromyko. "These opponents of recovery,” Marshall said, “charge the United States with imperialistic design., aggressive purposes, and finally with a desire to provoke a third | wor d war. “I wish to state emphatically that there is no truth whatsoever in these charges, and I add that those who make them are fully aware of that fact.” Scorning communist charges of imperialism. Marshall cited the record showing that we have annexed no territory. Both Great Britain and the United States have been reducing the area of their sovereignty, he said, while Russia has gone the other wav. “The Soviet Union has in effect considerably expanded her frontiers.” he added. “Sine' 1939 she has de facto (in fact) annexed territory comprising an area of more than 280.000 square miles with a population of some 22,000.000 persons.”

— < ■ - ■ - —— — — _ ' MB L the Electric Range . with the ■ 3 ■ j / H ’ I ■ PRESTELINE. LET’S DROP /* / AND SEE LT AT ft 7* — , , —————— WE ANNOUNCE II > AN IMPROVEMENT II k Xju in our il ■L service II Mb I L" '''.l*, _ • 5 18W I - K In keeping with our aggressive policy of improvement, we have secured the agen y I a line of paints and varnishes, which, through rigid tests, have proved to be of P I worth. Now we have a complete stock of "STYLE TESTED Lowe Brothers I PAINTS AND VARNISHES I We are confident that our customers will wel- well known authority on rotot hr I come this move on our part. Stocking this line importance is the fact t, an di ie ® I of fine painting and decorating materials means paint colors are SI'Ll I that in addition to offering highest quality prod- perfect accord with the j ns pect w> : I ucts we are now able to obtain for you decorative We invite you to visit °u f we j| entset vi« I plans and painting suggestions prepared by a stock, and take advantage »■1 A BIG SALE OF PAINT This sale includes every can of paint we now decorating you may be J I have in our stock, except our new Lowe Brothers Remember —all our disc. on ], I line. Prices are greatly reduced and this is a fine included in this sale, anc t I opportunity to secure paint at a most economical until the stock is gone. - price for any exterior or interior painting yid advantage of this special sa e. STUCKY & CO. MONROE, INDIANA

TRADEINDECwJ WH I>•»»-»»»I Ijd 2 BUCKLE \ h «’j »T| ( KI'IIBEIIS I 1,5 J ALSO Youth and Boy’s *5» **«■ 3 and 4 Buckle Arctics , in() Lane Shoe Store

WEDNESDAY Novr, F *«l)