Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 29, Decatur, Adams County, 4 February 1948 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

HF ' wM I- <* iM I t9m| ■ I Wt» ■? ' HHs a i JSk pk_J!r ■ ffljSgggßßßfc '. Q %'3?L \ ' • ®iiiL> 'WMe z ■ Illlllllll|| i ' “* ■•—" i LOS ANGELES Attorney Joseph Scott, representing Irish-Ameri-can organizations, tells the Senate foreign relations committee that his group protests spending "a single dollar of American taxpayers’ money to Britain while the government at 10 Downing street persists in the insane division of Ireland." (International} o—i Trade In a Good Town — Decatur

SALE CALENDAR FED. s—lra5 —Ira Overholt, 1 mile south and % mile east of Elgin, Ohio or 6 miles northeast of Mendon, Ohio or 7 miles west of Spencerville, Ohio. Complete closing out sale. Roy & Ned Johnson and Melvin Liechty, Auctioneers. FEB. 6 —Sam J. Schwartz, general farm sale. 3 miles north of Berne and % mile east. 10:30 a. m. Roy & Ned Johnson, Melvin E. Liechty, Auctioneers. FEB. 7 —Ro I. Fisher, 8 miles southwest of Fort Wayne or 3 miles •'st of Fort Wayne on U. S. Road No. 24 to Times hen 5 miles west on Covington road to end of paven south on Hamilton road to first farm. Closing Roy & Ned Johnson and Melvin Liechty. aucts. FEB. 10—t Mcßride. 1% miles north of Willshire. Ohio on . 49, thence east 1% miles or miles south of W u state road 49 thence 1% miles east or 7 miles west of onio City. 80 acre farm and personal property. T. D. Schieferstein, auctioneer. FEB. 11—J. F. Merriman Estate. Personal property. 5V 2 miles East, miles north of Berne. Jeff Liechty. auctioneer. FEB. 12—Doyt K. Clouse, general farm sale, 1 mile south of Ohio City, then west - Merle Knittie. Van Wert, 0., auctioneer. lEB. 12—Chas. Bilter & Son, 6 miles west and 1% miles north of Celina, Ohio; 4 miles east and 5 miles south of Chattanooga, Ohio or % mile north of Durbin. General closing out sale. Roy & Ned Johnson and Melvin Liechty, Aucts. FEB. 13—Elmer Garwood. 6 miles east of Decatur on U. S. 224 and mile north on state line or 3 miles west of Middlebury, Ohio on U. S. 224 and % mile north on state line. General closing out sale. Roy & Ned Johnson. Aucts. FEB. 14—Isaac Wagner, 616 Cleveland St.. Decatur, Ind. Complete line of Household Goods. Midwest Realty Auction Co., J. F Sanmann, Auct. FEB. 14—Jones & Byer. 2 miles east of Willshire. Ohio on U. S. road No. 33. Complete closing out sale. Roy & Ned Johnson and Melvin Liechty, auctioneers. FEB. 17—Henry Gressley, 326 Sherman St., Wabash. Ind. 5 Room Modern Home, Grocery Store Building and Complete Grocery Business. Midwest Realty Auction Co., J. F. Sanmann. Auctioneer. FEB. 18—Heirs of the Lutes Estate, 3 miles South and 2’miles East of Portland. Well Improved 160 Acre Farm. Midwest Realty Auction Co., J. F. Sanmann, Auct. FEB. 21 —Mary Rodenbeck. 8 miles Northwest of Angola, Ind. Well Improved 180 Acre Farm, and complete line of Household „„„ „ Goods. Midwest Realty Auction Co., J. F. Sanmann, Auct. FEB. 21—United Brethren Church. Willshire, Ohio. Church building. Suman Bros.. Frank Dellinger, auctioneers. FEB. 23—John Mohr at the southeast corporation of Van Wert, Ohio on the Jennings Road. General farm sale. Roy Johnson and Merle Knittie, Auctioneers. Public Auction On my farm located 3 miles north of Berne on U. S. 27 and % mile east or 3 miles south and y 2 mile west of Monroe, Ind on Friday, Feb. 6, 1948 Starting at 10:30 — CATTLE — Durham and Guernsey cow 6 yrs. old, due to freshen in April; Durham and Guernsey cow 9 yrs. old. due to freshen soon; Durham cow 8 yrs. old, milking 5 gal.; Durham cow 5 yrs. old, due soon; Guernsey cow 6 yrs. old, will be fresh soon; Guernsey cow 9 yrs. old, pasture bred; Durham cow 6 yrs. old, milking 6 gal.; Guernsey cow 6 yrs., milking 5 gal.; Durham cow 5 yrs. old. milking 6 gal.; Holstein cow 4 yrs. old, milking 4 gal., pasture bred. — HORSES — Sorrel mare 3 yrs. old, sound, good worker; Sorrel gelding 3 yrs. old, sound, good worker; Sorrel gelding 6 yrs. old, sound, good worker; Sorrel gelding 10 yrs. old, good worker; Driving horse 2 yrs. Old, sound. — HOGS — Hampshire sow with 11 pigs; Hampshire sow with 8 pigs; Hampshire sow with 6 pigs; Hampshire sow due to farrow by day of sale; Hampshire sow due to farrow soon; Hampshire gilt; 2 open shire gilts; Feeding Shoats; Hampshire Boar, 2 yrs. old. POULTRY AND EQUIPMENT 500 head of Parks R. O. P. sired Barred Rock pullets, laying good. Green Gable brooder house, like new. 4 brooder bouses in good repair. Feeders and fountains. FEED AND GRAIN 400 bu. yellow corn; 200 bu. Columbia oats, good for seed; 5 bn. little red clover seed; 8 tons good clover hay; 6 tons timothy hay. — IMPLEMENTS — Ridine king plow; C. B & Q. corn planter; Hoosier 8 hoe grain driP ■ and hay ladder; gravel bed; low wheeled wagon; land rolh ot roller; John Deere binder 8 ft. cut; McCormick binder 6 f section spring tooth harrow; 2 section spring tooth harrow; du . potato digger; 2 sleighs; bob sled. Some I ’..'.d Goods. Also about 30 cords of wood. TERMS—Ca Sam J. Schwartz OWNER Roy & Ned Johnson, Auctioneers Melvin E. Liechty, Auctioneer E. w. Baumgartner, Clerk Lunch will be served. 2 4

I Suspends Sentence Os Drunken Driver Pleasant Mills Man Is Fined By Mayor Albert J. Davison, 35, Pleasant Mills, was fined $25 and costs and sentenced to serve 30 days in jail by Mayor John M. Doan in city court this morning when he pleaded guilty, to a drunken driving count. The sentence was suspended by the court. His drivers license — a limited permit — was ordered revoked for a period of six months. Prosecutor Myles F. Parrish charged that this was the second time Davison had been arrested on such a charge within a period of about one year. He had been driving with the limited permit since the previous suspension. Officer Hoy Chilcote arrested Davison about 8:20 o’clock last night at Court and Second streets, after his car struck a truck, driven by Ralph Hobbs, 23, 1209 North Second street, Decatur. Hobbs signed the affidavit against the defendant. Officer Chilcote reported that Davison drove “through” the stop sign enroute east on Court street and directly into the truck, enroute north on Second street, without attempting to turn either way on the dead end street. He was lodged in jail until time of his arraignment this morning. OH— —— Kansas City and St. Louis, Mo., are two of the largest railroad centers in the U. S.

Jr ’ Ml w.. MAIMED WAR VETS at Chicago’s Vaughans’ hospital watch Walter Baskovich, who lost a leg in. childhood, give high jumping demonstration. A member of the University of Chicago Acrotheater, Baskovich tells paraplegic vets, "If 1 can do it, so can you.” (International Soundphoto)

Indianapolis Man Slain By Ex-Wife Divorcee Arrested On Murder Charge — Indianapolis, Feb. 4 —(UP) — Harvey Samuel Broglin, 35, was shot to death early today and a well-to-do east side divorcee was arrested shortly afterward to face a charge of murder. Mrs. Jeannette Weaver Oder, 46.

. told police that “I shot him.” Her former husband’s body was found in a blood-covered snow bank in a . neighbor’s front yard. A bullet had severed his jugular • vein. The woman said she and Brog1 lin had several drinks in bars in ‘ Indianapolis and suburban Beech ( Grove yesterday. j “Then he called me on the telephone about 1 o’clock this morning,” she said in a statement to police. “I told him I would not see him but he insisted and said he was coming out anyway. I W’as afraid of him by the sound of his voice.” The divorcee said'that she then called her brother, Windsor Weaver, and told him her former husband was coming over. Weaver quoted Mrs. Oder as saying she was going to kill the man. He said he told her not to do anything drastic, but to call the police. “It will be too late when the police get here,” he quoted his sister as saying before she hung up. Mrs. Oder told police she found that her pistol was jammed and that she oiled both the gun and the ammunition. “Then I went to the back door and fired one test shot and found that it was working all right,” she said.

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

She told police that as Broglin walked up the front steps she opened the door and (fired three shots directly at him. She told police she then called her brother, who in turn called police. Authorities found the dead man on the snow in an adjoining yard. Broglin, a bartender, was divorced by Mrs. Oder two years ago. She later married Edward Oder and a suit for divorce from her second husband is pending in Marion county superior court, 0 Erie Railroad To Use More Diesels

Adding again to its rapidly growing fleet of diesel-electric locomot- , ives, the Erie railroad has placed orders for four more 6000 horsepower, four-unit freight locomotives and 13 switching locomotives, R. E. Woodruff, president, announced today. The 17 diesels are estimated to cost about $3,700,000 with delivery expected early in 1949. Two of the giant road engines will be used in freight service between Jersey City. N. J., and Buffalo, N. Y., and two between Hornell, N. Y„ and Marion, O. 0 Italian General . . Election Date Set Rome, Feb. 4 —(UP) — Premier Alcide De Gasperi announced today that the next Italian general election will be held Sunday, April 18. The date will be made formal by an election decree to be issued by the cabinet tomorrow. To be elected are 577 deputies and 344 senators. The new parlia ment will hold its first meeting May 8. The new president will be elected by both houses May 10 and immediately, afterward De Gasperi’s government automatically will resign. o Trade In a Good Town —Decatur

National Airlines Pilots On Strike Strikers Charge Aircraft Unsafe Miami, Fla., Feb. 4 — (UP) — A strike of 145 AFL airline pilots grounded all 22 planes of National Airlines today. The pilots charged the aircraft were not maintained with proper regard to safety. The airline’s mechanics walked out three weeks ago in support of a strike by clerical and station employes who struck Jan. 24.

The last scheduled flight of the company arrived at Newark, N. J., airport at 11:15 p.m. yesterday and the pilots said they wouldn’t take up any more planes until grievances were settled. In Chicago, David L. Behncke, president of the air lines pilot association (AFL), said the walkout wag called after two “almost unanimous strike votes.” He said the votes climaxed two years of poor pilot - management relations. A spokesman for the airline, which operates between New York, New Orleans and the Florida resort area, said the strike “was calculated to do as much damage to the company as possible by intimating the planes are not ease. Behncke well knows this is an untruth. The CAA inspects and approves for flight every craft that goes on the line.” Behncke said the strike stemmed from two principal causes: “Increasing apprehension on the part of the pilots about flying planes whose safety aspects standpoint of jnaintenance, were open to serious and alarming doubt,” and an unsettled grievance over the discharge of a pilot more than two years ago. The union and the company have been operating under a truce since Nov. 12, 1947, in order to give the national mediation board a chance to settle the latter grievance. The pilots said no wage dispute was involved in the strike. National Airlines spokesmen said it was “the foulest strike the pilots ever pulled.” They described it as “a smokescreen for the real motives.” “The principal reason is the more than two-year-old discharge of a pilot who was found responsible for an accident,” a spokesman said. “He was found so by every investigating body up to the, CAA. The pilots have been trying to force us to re-hire him and are now taking an advantage of an issue they are afraid to submit to arbitration.” o — Baer Field Maneuvers Planned February 14 The 72nd troop carrier squadron of the air reserve will hold its initial air manuevers February 14 at Baer Field as a part of the program being planned for national security week in Fort Wayne. A mock invasion of Baer Field itself is planned with the 72nd to practice forming in flights and dropping paratroops and equipment. No actual drops will be made with the emphasis on getting the perfect timing needed in this type of mission. A problem for the squadron mock drop will be given the unit by Major Walter J. Milowski, unit instructor. The squadron, is commanded by Major George P. Tarr Jr., of Fort Wayne. — o Two Teen-Agers Held For Carrying Guns Terre Haute, Ind., Feb. 4 — (UP) — Police today held two teen-age Danville, 111., boys for Illinois authorities after the lads were arrested for carrying two pistols and 1,200 rounds of ammunition. Charles Douglas, 17, and Charles Neolock, 15, were picked up on suspicion as they hiked through Terre Haute wearing parts of army uniforms and -with packs on their backs. They carried the pistole and ammunition in the knapsacks.

HOUSE AND SENATE (Continued rrorn Page 1) on a “hard-headed business basis.” There’s no room in the vast undertaking for either politics or sentimentality, the chamber said. President Earl O. Shreve said that as the foreign aid plan looks on paper, the administration is giving itself too big a safety margin” in its request for $6,-1 800,000.000 to get the program

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underway. And he expressed the belief that too many scarce commodities are ticketed for shipment abroad. Meat Rationing—The full senate banking committee appeared disposed to bury the Flanders standby meat rationing bill which was killed by a subcommittee yesterday. a pou or tne 13-memiter j hanking committee showed that 1 seven members opposed or were

WEDNESDAY. FEn RUAItY (

,o FRITZ KUHN ’ Kuhn was from the U. S. in Sept M and worked for a while ' meh chemical P i ant al l scheduled to be tried 1 of having been a ward‘M the Nazi party. d M