Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 277, Decatur, Adams County, 23 November 1948 — Page 7
I MkqVEMBER 2*, IMB
? IrBATTLE s 11 ■K, !•. a!ltl Su ’ Mg .■■ ■!" B-poDed hMK ' • wo-yiiL’ advance ■’■,‘ l „.. The veins liarIH^ 11 them a,,d p./rao encircled B Kiiles. B|or morse KBrv !- 1 T’ : >ve K®"' l la'tiiig left-wing H|K « r ii>te: preted by ■ML > !1( -: t ;'ier> as the sig■K., ■ .'ecleanin.’ ( ' [o u,b I more temperate than extremist supporters ng . He still was refus■£Jj nr t' to a movement to I —
THIS CHRISTMAS ■live DAD a Lounge Chair are built in ”i~7‘( EBn shop. Available I , Elfolor l.eather, „_j or other ma- sq ■.ith <ke M »l s nip. J x |K styles displayed ' > EMA window across feMhe Hotel. MSSf W-~ |Sh<)>e or 1077 ‘ ®r NOW For Christmas Delivery ■mE FURNITURE ML ii iiiiiiii F[ i
BvHO Al NT |kD DON'T KNOW We appreciate your business MD to be thankful for. To our f V many friends who call upon I I A us f° r Allis-Chalmers farm lift, machinery and Graham Rev. Pl° w > we say || JjUw “HAPPY THANKSGIVING I BA¥ " |T'. ( vwnUMau r(*?u*ti ee' i
IBER-MOSER IMPLEMENT CO. | . U. S. 27-PHONE 2551 ■ ~ DECATUR.INDIANA ’ ■ q>" ... 1 ■" •
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oust Albert J. Fitzgerald, only left I winger among the nine CIO vice! presidents. Walter Reuther, president of the United Automobile workers, and George Baldanzi executive vice president of the Textile workers union, were leading the drive to dump Fitzgerald, who also is president of the United Electrical workers. REPORT MUCH (C'ont. From Page Onel their own dryers, using old coal furnaces and fans set up in storage bins. Some farmers were feeding lowquality moist corn to livestock in an attempt to dispose of it with minimum loss. It was believed that the premature fattening of hogs and cattle would affect the livestock market as farmers ship the finished animals to market earlier than usual. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
■ r f J JwubMml... j " --'‘t’RWx’ .--1/ X - nuWr x / ■UK. j ' jr f/I 8 ,. .. z walk. 111 ; j ML.... »>J |j3SI ■ I i’'Jß '''. 1 W 'W *• ti 'WF ' N jar\wa ; 4 i ”P‘*« PVj A I L »** u' ONE OF THE PROBLEMS of the howling blizzard which swept the plains states—utility poles dragged down by ice-encrusted wires. Telephone line foreman Thomas Hagerty of Freemont, Neb., looks at his job near Hooper, Neb. Ice is an inch or so thick around the wires. (Internationa! Soundphoto) t — ——
Missionaries Speak At Berne This Week Berne, Nov. 23 — (UP) — An array of foreign missionary speakers will be here Wednesday through Sunday at the First Missionary and West Missionary churches for the annual fall missionary convention. The speakers include the Rev. William Cox, from the Hawaiian Islands, the Rev. Chris J. Gerig, district superintendent, the Rev. David Clark, missionary to the Dominican Republic, Miss Lena Gerber, veteran missionary to China, and the Rev. Dale Moser, missionary from Ecuador, South America. Berne Supervisor Os Music Is President Berne, Nov. 23 — (UP) — Freeman Burkhalter, music supervisor in the Berne-French township school, was elected president yesterday of the Northern Indiana school band, orchestra and vocal association. He succeeds Charles Byfield, of Winamac. The annual business meeting of the association was held at Valparaiso. Chupp Funeral At Sturgis Wednesday Berne, Nov. 23 — Rites will be held at fl a.m. Wednesday at Sturgis, Mich., for Mrs. Dan Chupp. 62, who died at her home there la'e Sunday. She was the sister of Mrs. Victor Graber of Berne. Surviving are the husband, se'en children and four sisters, including Mrs. Graber and Mrs. Mary Yoder. Mrs. Rosa Graber and Mrs. Dinah Delegrange. all of Allen county.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Industrial Gains In : Germany Reported i Reports Vain Effort To Exploit Unrest Berlin. Nov. 23 — (UP) — Gen. ■ Lucius D. CJay reported today that ■ the Communist, trade union in the 1 Soviet occupation zone had tried in • vain to exploit labor unrest in west- ■ ern Germany. 1 i In his semi-monthly report to ' Washington, Clay said that when the trade unions in western Germany called a 24-hour strike in protest against the high cost of living, the eastern Communist trade union tried to convene the all-German union congress. The .Communists, according to • the report, believed the time was i ripe for an extension of the strike • plans in the Anglo-American area i Clay also reported new industrial I gains, with steel production in the i Anglo-American area setting a postI war record for the fifth straight i month. The steel output in October rose 7 percent to 610,300 tons —a rate which would make the annual production 7,320,000., The British-licensed DPD News Agency reported that the Russian zone railway system had prepared a secret plan to halt service on he Berlin elevated railway in the western sectors. No date has yet been set, the agency said. However, Taegliche Rundschau, i official German language n l ' aper of the Soviet military administration. said last week that tratfi-- . of all kinds would he halted beween the eastern and western sectors of Berlin after the Dee. 5 munI icipal elections in the city. The elecions have been boycotted by the Russians. Western transport oficials admit ed the Russians could halt operaion of the Soviet-controlled eleI rated railway in the western secI or merely by turning off the railway’s power sources in the eastern sector. But they said a “close catch” was being maintained to irevent transfer of rolling stock to the Soviet sector.
ij ■ " ■■“ , ■ «■ I V; | } ?v L V a V mL K ? i « y: -a* W*<* Jj f ' ‘'’W Jwf||l . \ 1 ‘OjOa.. - f v. Idt&ftEffif * w JmB» • V Wr t ’Vx / v^T x i w \ ft y v-.® But x „jf OR. v£ ’ ? iJf •**»*._ jflr*W ** x , r ■’ ' **w jb wMWW W’t w ■' Jj Mip| CLIMAX OF A WEE-HOURS scene in a New York nitery: Arline Judge looks nonplussed as the man reported to be her next spouse, George Ross. Jr. 4middle!. Jries to disengage her hand from that of an unidentified gallant Ross stalked into the night club while she was i exchanging pleasantries with three youthful escorts. CZateraatiosa/)
DPD reported that Russia secretly is moving railroad equipment from western to eastern Berlin. But western officials discounted the report. They said shipments of such equipment to the east had been no more than normal since American Berlin commtrtidant Col. Frank L. Howley had blocked a Soviet attempt last week to move a large amount of it to their sector. Trade in a Gocd Town — Decatur -•A-- -Mg ■*s-'W * /Z J&. V-/ - • I’ J' ■ *"*«■ - --4 USING HASTILY ARRAYED tassels and an umbrella, chorus girl Anita Arden goes through her act at a New York night club without the elaborate costumes made for the show by its star, Gypsy Rose Lee, who bowed out on opening night, Gypsy, who says she acted on her own, quit her job when the management refused to pay her $7,000 for her costumes and for her re* hearsaltime. (International)
FBI Joins Search ; For Boy's Slayer Former Army Mental Patient Is Sought St. Louis, Nov. 23 — (UP) — I The Federal Bureau of Investiga- J tion today joined the search for a ' 1 former army mental patient charg- I ed with the sex slaying of a 21- 1 month-old boy. J A federal warrant charged Wil- 1 Ham Pollar4, 26, Cincinnati, with J unlawful flight to avoid questioning 1 in the murder of Joseph Nichols, J whose battered body was found in a 1 hotel dresser drawer Saturday. J Authorities concentrated the hunt 1 on highways from St. Louis to Chi- J cago, after picking up (Pollard’s ’ trail at a pumping station north of ■> here. ' The infant’s mother, Mrs. Betty Nichols, 21, Huntington, W. Va.. told a coroner’s jury yesterday that she took Pollard into her home when he showed a letter from her husband, a patient in the same hos-1 • pital where Pollard was treated. . Mrs. Nichols said that in the let-1 ter her husband called Pollard "a 1 very good friend,” and urged her, “to go out of your way to be nice to him.” She described Polard as polite and well-educated. “I was glad my husband had taken up with such a very nice person,’ . she said.. Mrs. Nichols said she left the ■ boy in Pollard’s care Nov. 11 when i she took a younger son to visit > her husband at the veterans hosi pital at Chillicothe, O. She said Pollard was to have ■ brought the boy to Cincinnati Nov. > 14 for another visit with her husband. However, he failed to appear, and she notified police last Monday that her son was missing. Police said Pollard checked in at the American hotel with the boy Thursday night and left the next morning without being seen. The victim’s body was found later. .Mrs. Nichols said that Pollard had been released from the veterans hospital, a neuropsychiatric institution. as cured, in spite of his mother’s protests. A blanket and a gun were the ; Over two-thirds of Florida’s land i area is covered by forests.
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I FREE! FR E E!| K of C DANCE MEMBERS ONLY J Tuesday Nov. 23 | DANCING 9-12 | X TURKEYS 1 ) ) GIVEN AWAY ) ) TRADE IN DECATUR telephone Greeting# A telephone call to a loved one far away can be the sweetest course of your Thanksgiving dinner. It will increase your Thanksgiving happiness and also add to the holiday gaiety of the folks you call. So make it a point on Thanksgiving day to send your greetings the telephone way. CIWEHS TELEPHONE CO.
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