Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 284, Decatur, Adams County, 3 December 1947 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
k ■ ■ ■■«. ■■■!■ r»ir I .nil. • -'.■ . * '' ' • '" \- * '£ss§&! IS *"*■ %< x. : st«- • • Firemen carry one of victims from burning institution. OF 60 HOMELESS MEN housed in a Philadelphia Volunteers of America dormitory over the organization’s workshop, five are dead
Predicts Russia To Occupy Holy Land High Army Source Makes Prediction Washington, Pec. 3. —(UP) —j A high army source predicted to- | day that Russia, using bloodshed I in Palestine as an excuse, will oc-! cupy the Holy Land with troops in a matter of months. “Then,” he added, “she’ll be ‘ established on the Mediterranean, and nobody will be able to get her j out.” This officer, who prererred to j speak anonymously, said the whole subject of Palestinian strife and •f’-s«€!g'g - s g‘J S»e ; , 2'« f Z’<'€’€ ! C«’e'€’<«’4
M s w « s Halterman ! I Shoe Store ifjBSIW j W®lt ? - x r '■ \ I s Presents < r <A - 1 y '—* I LIPPER IJffTS I * X A A—- — v m bp From oldsters to youngsters—everyone loves £ slippers. It’s a practical gift—yet a luxury of '• comfort too. Please everyone this Yuletide, HA give slippers to all! /z g » // X IK&\ * y // / /H « S' <,■%, / U n J ../ &* £ « V & \ "fa’- -nr iyr JK I // JF i life M / 1 *« y / . JWBB f' 5 i-Mfc *” I ■ I ? \ I B I - '••< f 1 * ** “Romeos” and Zipper Front House Slippers. 1 * 'a 5 -jxy jt T ’J - :/ : W« S * -X- -X Y%» f HALTERMAN Rr ! l SHOE STORE j g i, g A ’»3i3i3l3i3i3s>.3i3^Si>3;>s.3i»t?2.a»3i»3i»9i?i»at*3l**9l***fc*****>»********>’*> 3h>!9iS,3ilS! * :>l? ' s,2 ’* 2 ' S!
|DONUTS|
j possible Soviet intervention is now under study by the army general staff. “It s one of the principal topics jof discussion upstairs,” he said. | This disclosure coincided with a house foreign affairs committee re- j port that Soviet troops far outnumber all others in that part of! I the world. x In southern Russia alone are I 480,000 Russian soldiers. A mili- | tary source said Soviet forces now I concentrated near Turkey and Iran j I could occupy Palestine almost overnight. Airborne troops could get there in a matter of hours. As the army source saw tjie mid-1 ; die eastern situation, “Russia has outplayed us badly from a diplomatic angle.” He emphasized that f lie was expressing his individual ■ opinion. The upshot of U. S. diplomatic conduct in Palestine, he said, I has been “a bad rift between the
I It’s Fun to Dunk, ’em j in Coffee and Milk. | Take Home A Dozen. J
~'' '""WIW If -y ™ sM ibf B ' ir il ■ w-' •■■- _ I ■R|p o ft? /i 4T ‘ O .OJP&m O:F ; W?g'i * J 1 i C IMS? «. Quaker City firemen battle blaze in volunteers' shop. ' ■ end more than a score burned or injured in a flash fire that completely destroyed the interior of the institute. (Intemation:!)
British and us.” This rift has j widened to the point where “it has taken all reason out of our actions in the Palestine question.” “We have antaganized the Arabs, and the Russians have made capital out of it,” he continued. 0 MOVE TODAY TO (Continue)’ rrnm Page 1) faces. Police in riot trucks and mobile guards were held in reserve in side streets on both the right j and left banks of the Seine j around the assembly. Barricades were stacked up along the famous Rue Royale, j which leads from the Madeleine j to the Place De La Concorde and across the Pont De La Concorde Ito the assembly. All traffic was detoured from a wide area around
ISTOCKSDALES’ \ Donut Shop j
I® 6. DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
i the assembly, and all streets were cleared. For the first time since the communist demonstrations started, the guardsmen and police were wearing steel helmets and were prepared for the most rigorous eventualities. Although sabotage was increasing. there also was a slow but steady growth of a movement of the strikers back to work. It already had made considerable inroads on the walkout of 2.000,000 workers. 0 _ i Movie Is Shown At Lions Club Meeting 3 i i A movie, depicting the various j ]»tases of the cash register production industry, was shown Tues- ' day evening by Lawrence Anspaugh ' during the weekly meeting of the Decatur Lions club at the Knights of Pythias home. 1' W. F. Beery spoke briefly concerning Lionism and R. E. Mumma, membership chairman, delivered a short address, stressing the importance of attendance. Now members inducted during the meeting were Dick South of the South-Bud Corp., 1 Preble; Ralph Burke, of the Kraft Foods company, and Herman von Gunten of the Central Soya company. o URGES HOUSE (Continued from Page 1) ed services subcommittee planned to quizz 30,000 army and navy officers drawing tax-free disability pay as to how they're getting along —- physically and financially. The subcommitte is considering whether disability retirements should be subject to annual review. Rollback — Robert R. Nathan, former deputy ‘director of the office of war mabilization, said congress ought to authorize a 20 to 25 percent rollback of food prices. He told the senate banking committee it could be done with federal subsidies. Meanwhile, congressmen of both major parties agreed that a newly announced CIO drive for wage inct%ases next year heightened the need for price stabilization action. ’ Si 818 jr f H jllL \ ■ Mhrt % • n Wii • WEB SIB QiOwSiS Wai ‘ JR S'" z / \JI : OmME z Z JlB .os&.s,<»x ILLINOIS' Senator Scott W. Lucas i wins in a newspaper preference poll of the U. S. Senate Democrats for party’s vice presidential nominee in 1948. {lnternational)
Siamese Twins Born To Bedford Couple Baby Boys Joined At Top Os Skulls Indianapolis, Dec. 3. —(UP) Doctors said today that no attempt will be made to separate two baby boys, believed to be the only Siamese twins ever born joined together at the top of their skulls. The twins were born Saturday to a Bedford, Ind., couple but the nature of the birth was not disclosed until last night. The Bedford physician who delivered them by Caesarian section said the babies have "a common head above the hairline and the top of the two skulls are continuous.” He asked that his name be withheld. The twins were rushed to James Whitcomb Riley children's hospital here shortly after they were born. Dr. Donald Casely, director of the Indiana University medical center. said the infants appeared “not particularly sturdy but they cry and eat and move their fingers and toes.” “They apparently have common brain tissue which reduces any chance for survival even though they appear pekfectly normal otherwise,” Casely said. “Their chances are not good according to statistics on Siamese twins but they may have a fair chance to live.” He said they were “responding to nourishment.” No attempt will be made to separate them, he said, because their apparently common brain would make the operation “futile.” The twins have “not lost any ground" since being brought here, he said. They lay today on a single crib head-to-head with their feet extending in opposite directions. The physician who attended at their birth said an abnormal birth had been expected because X-rays disclosed unusual head growth and pre-natal examinations showed the babies were side by side with their heads and necks inclined toward each other. He said Siamese twins occur “about once in every 5,000,000 births but this type is even more unusal.” He said no record of any similar Siamese twins had been found by Riley Hospital physicians. News of the twins’ birth was withheld until last night, he said, to give doctors time to study the case. The twins were born to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Speer. Speer is an accountant at the Crane Naval Ammunition depot near Bedford. Another child born to the couple died at birth several years ago. The mother was reported recovering at the Bedford hospital. 0 Thanks are justly due for things got without purchase. — Ovid. SiS NO PROBLEM FOR YOUR FORD When you get this 1. Complete Chassis Lubrication 2. Change Oil—s Quarts 3. Spray Springs 4. Change Rear Axle and Transmission Lubricant 5. Refill Shock Absorbers 6. Check Water in Battery 7. Flush Radiator 8. Repack Front Wheels Oxfy *5.95 SEE YOUR FORD DEALER Brant Motors, Inc. Third & Monroe Phone 606
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