Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 284, Decatur, Adams County, 2 December 1948 — Page 1
■Ol No. 284.
tOMMUNISTS CLAIM CAPTURE OF SUCHOW
Kid Police Lnd To See Li Files 'l|ny Withdrawal B|)f Western Powers B[ioison Officials . | )e( . 2 (VPI— Soviet police delayed the j'. ti of the WPStern P ow er s ' lEi offi‘ ers from Berlin city igl jay be demanding to inthe British officer's files and «f King George and Elizabeth. (■ftr'iian police officer at the I 80,-controlled city hall in sector told the British ; Kc Lt. Col 11 p Whiteford, J inspection was ordered by ?p et mayor of eastern BerEbert. ' Ebnrt to come to my office the angry British ofretorted. German policeman later Whiteford that the Rus- ■ > ~ officer would attempt dispute. ■ adjoining offices. American ■0: liaison officers stopped yßfiii their files to await the outt ,i the British-German i ■ I'nited States, Britain and ■.. had ordered their liaison to close their offices in the -■fball to avoid any suggestion ■-.. recomiized the new Comrump government of the Berlin. Bit puppet government held its Bjiwting in the city hall onlv ■ir hours earlier, and claimed -Bji: -tun over all Berlin. Simui-t/Bs’-lv, the regularly-elected 11 Bf government was meeting in Bum Berlin, where it sought I Kttury last September after demonstrators preventmeeting in the city hall. BBfthdrawal of the western liai[■dicers from the city hall will 't^Knr tie last formal link between and wes' German govern'■nia'.he divided city. Bk western Berlin. Col. Frank BWey Atin-tican commandant BWin. questioned whether It ■worthwhile even attempting to . ■ue fear power government in '"" s as Pussia Padici-hß'V’'-ally worth all the effort struggles to get addiIB*' zsreements with Russia past agreements have been as if they never existed'.’" at a press conference. like to return to quadl^fetite government rule in Berlin, is no sense to that if all agreements are broken by they have been in the believe my views are consisthose of my superiors. If incorrect. I assume I will be ■feted" ■ I K Narrow Escape Bw electrocution Dec 2 — Gilbert Gerber o’ fee had a fiarrow escape ]■ electrocution recently while an outlet near his home struck and severed tinhigh tension wires carB? 151 fl vo,,aae Gerber said I and fire flew in all directions I shorts were caused, put■J 1 ”"’ boulevard lights out of ,■? was not harmed, it B| because his spade formground and he was ap- ■?■’ not touching any of the 1 'flF' plrl ®1 the spade at the time. Kember Weather K° ,m est On Record ■m ’■ Bee 2 — The month of 1 BJ^ sler - set a new record 1 ■’•wording to H M. Reusser. weather observer : ■T 'nunvm reading during the 1 2’ degrees, the highest B^. 11 on record here. The pre■J* ’as 22 in 1913 and 1923 ' ■ * i r,Be mean temperature for 1 B*' W1 * tJie ,hird warm ' ' average for November : ■“ Reusser started keeping < ■ Rainfall forth» month ' above normal with 4.13 ) -a trace of snow was I HP’*- «■ — I • ■ «MI WEATHER lu 1 c,# “tly. occasional ““'’t *’ , t f extreme Hw Jnd southeast ■ tfenie port’©"* Bs»/ ® fl ' T,ew hat warmer to- , 1 B
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER IN ADAMS COUNTY
Record Show Price For Champion Steer Grand Champ Nets $10.75 Per Pound Chicago, Dec. 2. —(UP)— Old IGold, an Aberdeen Angus steer which cost its owner only $175 last year, today was auctioned at a record show price of $10.75 a pound at the International Livestock exposition. The steer, selected as grand champion of the show Tuesday, weighed 1.200 pounds and brought its owners an auction price of $12.900. The owners are C. E. Yoder & Sons. Muscatine, la., commercial stock raisers. > With prizes, the animal brought the owners about $20,000. The successful bidder was the Pfaelzer Brothers firm, representing Glenn H. McCarthy, millionaire oil man. McCarthy wanted the steer for the opening of the Shamrock hotel at Houston, Tex., next spring. The previous record per pound price paid for the champion steer at the International Exposition was $10.50, in 1946. Last year's champion, shown by Claude Milwee of Ft. Cobb, Okla, brought $8 a pound at auction. The Yoders, father and two sons, grinned as veteran auctioneer Col. Roy G. Johnson, 49. Belton, Mo., the price up by jumps of a quarter to a dollar. Johnson join- ! ed in the applause after he made j his successful appeal for "why not 1 a new record price of $19.75 a j pound" Texo, the reserve grand chanti pion steer, a Hereford which weighed 1.290 pounds, sold for $4 a pound, also a new record here for the reserve champion. It also was purchased by the Pfaelzers for the i (Shamrock hotel. Former record | was #jl-25 a pound. Texo was owned by 56 Four-H ! dub boys and girls of Pecos coun- ! ty, Tex. Previously he had sold j for $2 a pound at the Texas State fair, but the buyers refused to have the animal killed and gave it back 1 to the club for further showings. Cleo Yoder, who held Old Gold during the auction, admitted that he had expected a possible $3 a pound high for his animal. Several observers at the show had believed that the price might be held down ' by the fact that the owners of the. grand champion animal were a commercial stock firm, rather than a youth or a farm club organization. • "I'm mighty pleased at the price," said Cleo, "but I'm sorry to | see him go." He and his brother Carrol said their father would de- I cide what to do with the prize and, | sale money. The auction ring was jammed < with buyers and spectators for the I 1 sale, a crowning event of the big 1 1 annual farm show here. t 1 Highest price ever paid for an; 1 animal at a livestock show was the; $42,000 given at the American ■ Royal in Kansas City a few years I agb when two rival stockmen got ’ into the bidding and wouldn't quit. I Before this year's show today's ( record prices, it was believed that 1 sales totals might be under those j I of last year. j ’ However, new high prices al-1 ready had been recorded for breed- 1 ing cattle sales in the current 1 <Tur» 1® Pare Two> ■( |< Mrs. Jacob Yoder f Is Taken By Death ; * Funeral Services Friday Afternoon ' 1 I Mrs. Katie Moser Yoder. 66. wife 1 of Jacob J. Yoder, died Wednesday 1 at her home west of Berne. Death, < attributed to a cerebral hetnor- ; rhage, followed an illness of 1! days. Born near Berne April 23, 1882. she was a daughter of John S. and j Christina Steiner-Moser. She was a member of the West Missionary church. Surviving are the husband: five J sons. Aaron Yoder of Decatur, 1 Felix of near Decatur. Paul. Daniel > and Jerome, all of Linn Grove; two I daughters. Mrs. Lois Zuercher of < Linn Grove and Miss Esther Yoder. ? at home: 12 grandchildren: and 1 four sisters. Mrs. Barbara Maryatt s of Hollywood. Cal.. Mrs Joe 1 Schindler and Mrs. Harve Egley; of Berne, and Mrs. Myrtle Dyson f of Wells county. ! Funeral services will be held at a 2 p.tn. Friday at the West Mission- 1 arv church, the Rev Oscar A. .1 Eicher officiating. Burial will be; t in the MRE cemetery. <1
Key Proposal For Palestine Peace Refused Unexpected Vote By UN Committee Is Blow To Proposal Paris. Dec. 2—(UP)—The United Nations political committee today turned down a key proposal of an Anglo-American plan for working out permanent peace in Palestine —a proposal looking to an exchange of territory between Israel and the Arabs. An unexpected political committee vote which tore at the vitals of the Anglo-American scheme came after the UN security council had heard a United States plea for admission of Israel to full UN membership at once. The committee first voted tentatively to set up a three-nation UN conciliation commission in Palestine, as proposed by Great Britain and endorsed by the United States. Then it voted 25 to 22 against a c'ause calling for "certain modifications” of the boundaries of the state of Israel and the Arab part of Palestine. The British, with American backing, wanted the commission empoweder to persuade Israel to give the Negev desert of South Palestine to the Arabs in return for western Galilee, the latter won by the Jews in the Palestine war. The defeat of that section of the British resolution appeared to smash the Anglo-American strategy for negotiating a modification of the partition plan voted by the general assembly a year ago. After the vote, Dean Rusk of the United States asked for an immediate adjournment. The request presumably stemmed from a desire to map new strategy. The adjournment move won easily. Thus the committee left the Palestine issue hanging. Eleven paragraphs of the British conciliation resolution had been adopted provisionally. About 20 paragraphs remained to be acted upon. 1 Barring some unexpected turnabout in the political committee, the end product of the Palestine debate seemed likely to he a threenation conciliation commission to (Turn To Page Elaht) Four Men Elected C. Os C. Directors Directors To Take Office January 1 Wilbur Petrie. Earl Caston. R. C. Ehinger and Stewart McMillen have been elected to the hoard of directors of the Decatur Chamber of Commerce, to succeed Herman Krueckeberg. C. D. Ehinger. J. K Gunther and John Halterman Election judges John Stults. Har-1 ley Lehman and Elmo Smith announced the results late Wednesday after counting the ballots mailed in by Chamber of Commerce members. The new directors were chosen from eight candidates nominated by a committee composed of Roy, Mumma. Raymond Kohne and John Barth. The nominations were an nounced November 17. Mr. Petrie and Mr. Caston were ejected as directors at large. Mr Ehinger will represent the retail division and Mr. McMillen the manufacturing division. Their term of office will be three years, beginning January 1. To Induct Six Into Army December 10 Six Adams coun'y men will he inducted into the army December 16. local selective service officials have announced. They are Jerome Heimann. Decatur route 4; James L. Armstrong. Geneva route 2: | Charles Raush. Decatur route 1: Nile Lough. 1227 Madison street; Eugene Miller. 6«1 West Monroe street: and Charles Ray. 197 North Thirteenth street. II was also dis< losed that classi fications will soon be made for fathers, veterans and other deferable men in the draft age brackets. Previously only single non veterans were classified. Classification of the deferred 25-year-olds is now un> demy. *
Decatur, Indiana Thursday, December 2, 1948
Ends Long Flight From China w ? iii MSB 'MOI ~ * ”'3 TIRED AT THE END of her four-day flight from Nanking to seek aid for Nationalist China. Madame Chiang Kai-Shek is met at Washington airport by Mrs. George C. Marshall, wife of the U. S. Secretary of State. She will be guest of the Marshalls at their Leesburg, Va. home.
Consolidation 01 Schools Favored Township Trustees In Recommendation Indianapolis. Dec. 2 — (UP) , The Indiana state association of township trustees today recommended that city and county schools be combined under one board of education. (William S. Nisbet, Vermillion county, president of the association, said the proposal goes one step further than one recently made by the state school study commission. The latter recommended only the consolidation of rural districts outside Indiana cities. The associa ion. meeting in 13 separate conventions here, also reconimended a three cent increase in the state gas tax and also increases in license fees for motor vehicles. Leaton Day. Lebanon. president of the Indiana ’ county highway supervisors' association. said rural highway pro- ! grams were at a “s andstill” because of la< k of funds. Another proposal was for a lengthened term for county treasurers. William Hall, Rockville, vice-president of the Indiana county treasurers a-sociation. said taxpayers are paying a "terrific price" for merely “educating” ■ county treasurers ujider the present two-year two-term system. I Hall said that treasurers only (Turn To l’n«sr Twoi
18 Hoosiers, 14 Ohio Men Among Reppert Students
Hoosiers dominate the student population of the Reppert school of- auctioneering, which this week began its w inter semester. Eighteen , Indiana men are registered in the I class of 105. Next highest state representation is Ohio, with 14 Buckeyes in tbe present class. Following are the names and addresses of the students: Adkins. Roy 8.. Lynnville. Tenn. Bishop. Ralph W.. Colorado Springs. Colo.; Byrne. John T. latkeville. Minn.: Bast. Kenneth. Tallula. Illinois; Bartell, clarence. Concord. Mich.; Buchanan. Geo. Kent. Ohio: Dale S. Bemis-. Corunna. Mich.; Berry. Denzil J.. Bellefontaine. Ohio; Bridges. Abner. Lakeland. Ga.. Bridges. W J.. Lakeland. Ga ; Beard. Don G.. Pierceton. Ind : Brooks, rd. Fuq iny Springs. N. C . Collier. G. W. Baytown. Tex. Chat field. A. B. Montrose. Iowa: Cald well. John F., Zanesville. Ohio: Crume. Roy L.. Kokomo. Ind.: Caldwell. Loyd. Perk Lincolnton. N. CDoggett. M. Burford. Connersville. Tenn : Davis. Harold A.. Musca tine. Iowa; DeVault. Columbus. Ohio; Darling. E. R.. Warsaw. Ohio; Dayton. D. K. S<Mix Falls. S. D.: Drenan. Eual E.. Cowiche. Wash.: Espensen. K. L.. Mayersville. Miss : Evans. Russell P... Warsaw. Ind.: Franklin. Glei. G-ass Range. Mont; Foy. Jerry 8.. Millard. Neb.; 'Furrow. J. H.. Loudon. Tenn ; Furlong. Harvey A.. Ban Claire. Wis Ford. Lara. Isal>e. Kan.; Grnwell. Or» al J.. Downey. Calif I Hanson. Roy W.. Des Lacs. N. D;
Shelbyville Lodge Looted By Thieves Shelbyville, Ind.. Dec. 2 — (UP)— Slate police today sought bandits who they said dynamited a safe at the Eagles lodge here and escaped with more than $1,300. Lodge secretary Earl Neu reported the theft yesterday and state ’ police deteclives Price Cox and El- . mer Cord began an investigation . immediately. Neu said tlie theft , must have occurred during the early morning hours. i Struck Hospital Is Back In Operation New Help Obtained To Run Hospital i ' Martinsville. Ind.. Dec 2-(UP) —A baby was horn in Morgan ' county hospital today to the first patient admitted after the superintendent and 22 other employes walked out three days ago. For two full days, the 35 beds in the hospital serving three conn 'les were vacant. But Mrs. Kathleen Frisehe. the new acting sup erintendent. hired new help to re- . place many of the resigned nurses and maintenance workers yester- ■ day and the hospital slowly re- ■ turned to normal. Mrs. Charles Davis of Martins ■ ville was admitted late last night to the maternity ward. At 1:15 ’ a. m.. she gave birth to a son. (Tmmi T» Pase Elitbl)
Hotz, Robert H. Kewanee, ill.; Hein. Earl F.. Reardon, Wash.: Howell. John C. Hawk Point. Mo.: Hop. Jacoii. Jr. Luverne. Minn.; Howland. Lawson. Cambridge. Id aho; Hoblet. Kenneth. R. No. 1 Rockford. Ohio; Hoppe. Fritz. Co eur D'Alene. Idaho: Jaskson. Carl D.. Springville. Ind.; Johnson. Theo M. Lewisville. Minn. Kelly. I.eo C. Copenish. Mich.: Krehbiel. Marvin I).. McPherson, Kan.; Kipp. Don. Riverton. Wyo.: Landwehr. Irvin. Ahkinson. Ill.: Legg. Neibert. Cambridge. Idaho: Long. C. D.. Dayton. Ohio: Lindsey. Earl E.. Franklin. Ohio; Lewis. Tommy. Conway Ark : Lipp. Vaughn. Ossian. Ind ; Leiter, Eu gene G.. Bremen. Ind. Maples. Ernest. Fair Grove. Mo.: Mader. Richard A.. Oslioto. Wyo.: Matthews. Clarence "Hank". Anton. Tex.; Moore, Maynard "Terry." Sabina. Ohio; Michael, Ed R. Fre mon’. Neb.: Martin. Ellis E. Salem. Ind.; Miller. Albert P Hicks ville. Ohio; Mullen. Harold D. Georgetown. Ky.; Miller. Melvin L. Hanska. Minn. McCord. W. C- Okolona. Miss.: McCain. L T.. What Cheer. lowa Newlon. Gordon. Spencer. S. D.; Ness. Geo.. Jr.. Huntington, Ind . O'Neill. John. Bel Air. Md O'Neill. Ernest. Denfield. Ontario. Canada; Ogle. Dennis D.. Princeton. Mo.; Ponton. John L. Frederick. Md.: Piestrak. Emil S.. Kinston. N. C Richatxison. J Lawrence. Nan (Tara To I’sgr Eight I
Northern Outpost For Nationalist Forces Is Reported Taken By Reds
Democrat Propose i Bonus Cooperation G. 0. P. Unenthused On Bi-Partisan Plan Indianapolis, Dec. 2 — (UP) — Hoosier Republicans today were expected to take an unenthusiastic view of a Democratic proposal to make the soldier::' bonus question a non-politlcal issue. Democratic leaders said they would propose to GOP legislative leaders today that the bonus over- . whelmingly approved by Hoosier < voters he worked out in a bi-par-tisan manner. Two groups hearted liy Demo- ' cratic Lt. Gov.-elect John Watkins and Republican senate leader John Van Ness were scheduled to meet to talk over committee appoint- ' ments. Also on hand will be house sneaker Robert Heller and house : Republican minority floor leader W. O. Hughes of Fort Wayne. Tip-off on the GOP attitude came when the Republican sen- j ators voted in caucus to introduce i the party-s own bonus bill at the ■ start of the general assembly. ) Republicans were expected to 1 frown on any cooperative plan ■ 1 that would let them share responsibility for any financing project. | although they wouldn't mind shar-i ing credit for starting the bonus through the legislative mill. The Democratic platform flatly promised a bonus. The Democratic proposal was | announced yesterday after legis- i lative caucuses by Watkins. But while he was talking about party cooperation, veteran Democratic legislator Walter Vermillion, sen- ( ate minority leader, piped up with | "one thing we won’t do. that's go along with a sales tax." The voters who approved pay-' ment of a bonus also chose a sales J tax as the method of financing. Several lb publican spokesmen said it appeared the Democratic offer to take the bonus out of politics had a string attached to i' i already. "The Republicans may as well I I know one time as another." said Vermillion, "that we are never (Turn To I’liite k'vea. Terrorism Charged To Truck Co. Head Charge Thugs Hired To Beat Competitors Chicago. Dec. 2 —(UP)— The owner of a trucking company was sought today on charges of hiring | thugs to beat up competitors in an I attempt to terrorize them out of business Gary. Ind. police charged Elmer Sims, owner of the Sims Motor Transport Lines, Chicago, in three ' warrants with malicious mayhem, conspiracy to commit assault, and battery with intent to kill Gary officials said Earl Harris. - 27. confessed that Sims hired him as a “goon" to beat up at least three of Sims' competitors. Police said Harris alleged that Sims offered him ssoo to "beat up a man." Authorities said Harris told them ■ 'hat he and James Clifton, or Clay ton. also hired by Sims, went to the office of Norbert McCue, presi dent of the Steel Dispatch Co.. Gary, last spring, and that Clifton threw lye in McCue's face. McCue was blinded temporarily, and suffered the loss of 96 percent of the vision of one eye. "He tSints) told me I would have to get a bat. a brick, or anything that would beat his (McCue'si brains out. break his legs or hones, and put him in a hospital messed up real had." Harris said in a police statement He said Sims also offered him $2"" for each week I the victim was hospitalized Police said Harris charged that t Sims also hired him to beat up Emil Dust, head of the Dust Motor I Service, and William C. Bint, operator of the Enterprise Transfer 1 Co. b<jth Chicago firms. Neither 1 i wm attacked, however. i I
Coal Miners May Seek Six Hour Work Day Leader Indicates Shorter Work Day Will Be Requested Washington. Dec. 2 — (UP) An official of the United Mine work ers indicated today John L. Lewis' next contract proposal to the soft coal industry may include a request for a six-hour work day. The official, Wiliam Blizzard, president of mine workers district 17. said the union "hopes to be aide" to get a shorter work day in the next bargaining conferences. The union's present contract with soft coal industry expires June 30. but either party may reopen it on 3(t day's notice. The current contract provides for an eight-hour work day and a 40hour work week. Blizzard told delegates tn the 15th annual conference on labor i legislation that his union feels the I 40-hour week is "too long in a lot of industries, particularly in coal . mining.’’ He made his remarks as the conference prepared to vote on a resolution approving the 40-hmtr week. | "It is not logical to handicap our 1 irreat labor movement by going on record for a work week we think is too long," Blizzard told the dele ' gates. "It would be very helpful to all unions if this conference would go |on record for a six-hour work day and a 30-hour work week." Tlie delegates, sent here by the governors of 15 states to discuss , labor legislation, modified their res olution at Blizzard’s request. The conference did not come out for a ' "it-hotir week, bu it did go on reI cord in favor of "encouraging a shorter work week." Geyer Resigns As Wayne Pump Leader Fort Wayne. In i.. Dec. 2 (I'l’l Charles E Franks, former exe iittive vice president and general, manager of the Wayne Pump Co. ' here, today took over as president following the resignation of Ben F I Geyer. Geyer, formerly of Plymouth, re I signed last night effective imined lately, after II years as head of the firm. He will remain as chairman ol the board of directors and said inwill continue to devote Ids full time to tlie business of the company Flanks. native of Kendallville, has been with the firm since 192:1 Juvenile Thieves Under Arrest Here 18 Year Old Girl Faces Trial Today Kathryn Johnson. 18. of 1I"3 West Madison street, was to be arraigned in city court this after noon and four enmpanions. aged 12 to 16. are to be called into juvenile court shortly, on petty larceny charges. The five were arrested Wednes day night by sheriff Herman Bow man after allegedly stealing man hide covers and an electric transformer. The manhole covers are valued at $8 each Two of the youths are from Willshire. <l. and the other three live in Decatur Sheriff Bowman said the young sters operated in a Model A Ford loaded their haul onto an attached trailer and sold it to the Decatur Iron and Metal Works. The thefts were alleged to hare taken place lasi Saturday night, and the youths were jailed last night pending arraignment. Charges of receiving stolen pro perty could be filed against the jnnk yard which purchased the haul, although it could not be learned whether such action was planned by authorities.
Price Four Cents
Nationalist Troops Smash Communists At Suhsien; Forcing Some Withdrawal Nanking. Dee. 2 — (UP) — The Communists today claimed the capture of Suchow. outflanked northern outpost of Generalissmo Chiang Kai-Shek’s capital of Nanking. A Communist radio broadcast from north Shensi described Suchow, 180 miles north of Nanking, as "the most important Kuomintang (nationalist) mili'ary base north of the Yangtz river." A nationalist government spokes- , j man said Suchow has lost its military importance the usual statement preceding announcement of the loss of an important city. The reported loss of Suchow was ' | partly offset, however, by government reports that its forces have caught the Communists south of j Suchow in the jaws of a pincers and i forced them to fall back across the I I Huai river above Pengpu. 1"7 miles north of Nanking. Government, sources • admitted that part of the nationalist armies on the Suchow front had turned south to spring a trap on the ComJ munists north of Pengpu. However, ■ they denied that nationalist forces intended to evacuate Suchow. > 1 ' I The Communist broadcast said Jone division of Chiang's “personal system troops" otherwise unexplained went over to the Communists last Monday after being encircled south of Suchow. It made I no mention, however, of nationalist forces left in the citv. I , The broadcast said Communist ‘ | forces completed the capture of I Suchow yesterday 21 days after , | they began their offensive against I the city, . I Although Suchow is an important railway junction, no trains have | passed through the city for week) i because the Communists cut th* tracks north, south, east and west Jof the city. The nationalist garri- . son has been supplied largely by air. Telephoned reports from PengI I pu. 105 mill's northwest of Nanking. said thq hulk of 10)1,660 Com- ' munists spearheading the CommonI ist drive had been forced to withdraw northward across the Hui river to meet the nationalist attack ion Suhsien. These reports said tlie Communists also gave up their attempt to surounded and immobilize Pengpu. last nationalist stronghold on tlie road tn Nanking Tlie threat to ‘ Pengpu was considered removed for the time being i The nationalist attack was made . by forces from Suchow. 76 miles northwest of Suhsien Suchow was , reported virtually abandoned yes- . terday. with only a small garrison It ft behind under orders to hold out as long as possible. Suhsien. 5)1 miles north of Pengpu. is being used hy the Communists as a base for their attack toward Nanking Reports from Pengpu said tlie nationalists broke through a Communist scret-ning force at Chiakow. west of Suhsien. and had opened a direct assault on Suhsien. Sueliow a walled city by passed by the Communists in their drive on Nanking, was reported placed under a strict 21 hour curfew to : prevent rice riots that broke out as- ■ ter the main defending force man lied south. I Repo ts reaching Nanking said > street fights broke out and shops were looted when hungry civilians (Turn To I'aiE*- Kight I Monroeviiie Doctor Reported Recovering Dr HE. Stineman. well known [ Monroeville physician, is recovering from a heart attack which he . suffered while on a deer hunting trip in Canada He is " patient at I St. Joseph's !• :n;a|. Blind River. Ont. With tour other Monroeville cit- . i’ens. Dr. Stineman went to Blind . Liver, and while at the dinner table in a hi-nti tg lodge suffered the attack on Nor 19 He was remtn'hd to the hospital and Mrs. Stineman was called to his I edside. I>r C.C. Ravi of this city received word that Dr Stineman pro'ia'e ly would he able to return home next week.
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