Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 47, Number 218, Decatur, Adams County, 16 September 1949 — Page 7
SEPTEMBER 16. 194#
Scholar May j e Appointed Judge | fediol Judgeship lnT|iird District w.rtifllt ' s ‘l' ! 1,1 1,1,1 ii iL'»> Juril ’’ wa * W..-. .7-1 DANCING EVERY SAT. I NIGHT RO®l* and AltF. V.F. W. HALL ■: 12:00 Joi' ( ALL and H s orchestra f a (H u 'l!il! Brandyberry. KIBERS ONLY! IJ 1(1
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Mono to be President Truman's choice for a federal circuit court judge hip in the third <li-'ri • The third judicial district nilbta < .New Jersey. I’enn-yivanri I>< la ware and the Virgin Islandlla'tie was a f> d< ral distiict judge I in the islands from 11*37 to 11*310 and ha j been governor there -ince 1946 He io listed in Who's Who as a vice president of the National Lawyers Guild. The house unAmerican activities committee in lull cited the lawyers guild as a "communistoperated front organization' de ' signed to serve the interests of the i communist party In the I'nitid States. The committee nam'd lla*tie at that time a a guild offi< ial The national lawyers guild has • faithfully followed the line of the communist party on numerous i«ues.' the committee said, "and ha« proven Itself an important bulwark in defense of that party, its memb< rs and organizations " The committee report named Hustle as an associate of several oth<r organizations held to be communist dominated or communist fronts One of these was the in ternational labor d'f«n ->■ Ha“tie has rrceived much political recognition by the Room velt ami Truman administrations His
Indianapolis Man Killed By Gunshot Imli.inapol .S< pi lit 11 pi Hari McKane. 22. Indianapolis, died today of a aunsh'it wound he received earl; Sunday morniu.' i’olii e aid M< Kam- was shot by William H Lyons, 37, who *a being held on a < h u ge of assault and battery with intent to kill —— — Boy Scout Troop 61 In Weekly Meeting R' tary Bov Scout troop 61 held its weekly meeting at the fire station Thursday evening, Plans were made for the coming fall program out master Kenneth Secaur announced that officers for the coming year will be elected at the next meeting Thursday. September 22 He also added that all scouts not present for that meet ing will not be registered for the coming year nomination to a federal bench just below the supreme court would b< counted a factor in the mighty cont« t now underway among all politi al parties for votes in 1950 and L'.‘.2 A southern filibuster blocked Mi Tinman s overall civil rights program at the beginning of the pr«-ci t < ongres.il,pal -■ - -ion The administration may make one more effort before adjournment to get action on legislation to outlaw lynching or poll taxi s The inability of a Inmocratic pr> id* nt and Democratic congr'--to make g ><>d on the civil rightpledge in the I!HS Democratic platform is politically embarrassing The nomination of one or more negi •- to newly created fed- > ral jadrships would be good polite The negro vote is large •nouca to b» a potintia! balance of pow.r in any hravilv industrializ'd stat' you might mention. Republican national committeeman Perry W Howatd. Mi-'iv ippi. hinis' If a negro told hi' fellow members whi n tin y met her' last month that the Republican party had io v< r won the Whi'e House «in <■ e northern negroes desirttd the party and would n» v< r win it until Hu y came back Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
DECATCR DAILT DEMOCRAT, DECATTR, INDIANA
L&,. if . 4 W| Iwßv M ■■ J jjr WES ■« ENGAGEMENT of King Phumipoi A-’ulet of Siam and Sinkit Kltiyakara, daughter of Siamese ambassador to London, is officially tnnounced from Bangkok. The i rouple kt shown taking in the tights at Lausanne, Switzerland, where the king is a law student and his fiancee attends finishing school. (Internttionil) Mexico Celebrates 139th Anniversary Mexico < itv, Sept Hl ' ("Pt Mexico celebrated the 139th an- , nl.'r-sry of its declaration of in , dependent * today with festivities and parades throughout th" nation Some 30 00'1 federal troojw were to parade through downtown M> x (co City in a show of the coun trj - modern military might The Lost Colony of Roanoke in , N’. C is still a mystery in our I history
; SfeMaiMßßl WANT A DRY COAT? Sind lour coat or jacket and we will treat it to shed showers like new. We are Exclusive agents for “CRAVENETTE” WATER REPELLENTS kHLVS DRY CLEANING ; 127 N. fHli Phone 117 HBBW3-®iCTTO IWMWVWWVUVMAAAA.VMAB TH2NA OF IT! (hi lightning stroke is all it takes to destroy your valuable livestock and buildings. I>o you feel you should take this chance when protection from lightning is so inexpensive? I. I*. L IMPROVED LIGHTNING ' RODS give you this protection. Call your local | representative. Ashbauchcr’s Tin Shop Established 1915 Heating • Roofing - Spouting Metal Work Phone 719
Four Allied Soldiers Escape Soviet Jail Charge Starvation, Beatings In Prison Berlin. Sept. 16 il'l’i An | American soldier and three British servicemen broke out of a soviet sector jail while the Russians were < hanging the guard and escaped to western Berlin today The four men told western pow er offb lais that th" Russians had ' fed them " starvation" rations. | beaten them, placed them In ice box rooms and poured hot and cold water on them. But an official American announcement said Pvt. John J Sienkiewrcz. Baltimore M d , ( ‘"showed fatigue and a generally I weakened condition but did not i seem unduly undernourished'' after his 10 month* in Soviet-run prisons The three Britishers now fancourt martials in connection with several armed robberies in Berlin Sienkiewrcz was picked up in a Soviet ector elevated railway station In November. 11*46. Th«- Rus sians refused to return him to I' S custody on the grounds that he was a I* dish citizen, not an American Maj. J A Hixon. American mil , Itary police officer said at the hospital where Sienkiewrcz Is in- ' derroing treatment. 'We have heard of hard treatment given by the Soviets but this is the hardest •we have over heard of Perhaps it is a I ft exaggerated." Sienkiewrcz said a Russian gen oral had slapped him as a liar for saying the army hospital in Ber lin was located "right across the i street from Fuddy s tavern” and a Russian soldpr had mad" a pass at him with a bayonet for asking i for a inati h. Slenkiewr z, a 26 year-old Pacific war veteran, said it w is his third
WHY THE MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILROAD STRIKE? Over twenty years ago, the Congress of the ™ . Hie unions ignore agreements or laws. United States passed the Railway Labor Act. Vtm f lhe laii Hhich It was hailed by union leaders as a model ,re Tlicrc are five w.ivs under the Railway for the settlement of labor disputes. 1 —Decision by National Railroad AdTuk L«ADBM of the Brotherhood of day’s pay for le« than a day < v rk.orfor just men tB ’■ Locomotive Engineer*, Brotherhood payments for acrvic. performed I,v Ml.ers of Locomotive Firemen and Enginrmen. who were fully paid for the work d< nc. Order of Railway Conductors, and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trammen on the President TtUntan's Board Mireouri Pacific lUdroad have refused to r, ,„L , i , avail themselvro of the peaceful means Condemns Strike I he M- -’in I a. me Radroad has been provided by thia Act for Battling their die- . . .. ~ , h. ent.rely wdling to have thes.-<hre * Im. TTimr insist tliat tiny be tlie sole There is n established legal method for putei settled in accordance with tiw re umpire oTtheir owm’duputro over the h -" dll "K tll! T u “* •’«*»*“« * r,l a quirementa of the Rrdwai I d-r t f t eta ten contract* —just at ui< re is mien a R.-g.irdlcrw of thia fact, the union leaders meaning o con a method of settling any contract dispute have shut down that railroad. There it No Need for Strikes * h " h v™ mn > h y ourd “‘! v ' ,fe The President <»f tne I mteu stat* up- Innocent Bystanders Suffer With all ot the available methods for the a Fact Finding Hoard to invest iinterpretation of contracts, lliere it no Kat|( alM j ( |„. Missouri Pacific dis- SMSSts ana narunnipx need for . strike or even •threat of a r . rX)r( «<i. , n part, as an . a ,„, ut 50W v , r . , irrn , f . n .trike, but the leader, of there railroad fo | lowg: conductors and trammen on the Mi-re.i.r, unions have ignored tlie ordinary pro- „ cedurw established by law snd insist upon «... it is *ith a deep sense es regret ihal »e 1 icific I hey are known as opemtm ■mpornng their own mtsrproUtionsof thc-.r *• *«<•* «• "**’ * fc< * •*, "’** a ‘ M ‘ «• m ‘*‘ h * *’* Pod " r den h arenes inrontritahk Io u» that a ail emploves on the nation s rai'roads. hut C °2l raC v 2, , ? ean *2 " -J" 1 *ir ii eeerrive Mrike -hould orenr on one o( the their striiu* action has reeultiHl in the loan l' e W V *rLi? > P t ’'’J*'* *2ir * natkiii■< major transportation kyMrm*. sMh of work to 22.. MM) other emploves of tl.c ..liaaoun 1 aafic They nwy stop rolling g(1 UMir , 3Bl| hltf(i , h ,p. Ifc ,t . ou i.i MlhHouri |» ac ifi<-. In addition, thi v liav, On ‘V ny U ? e 77* n < V foflsw.ta view es the faei ih.t the Kailnaj i|n|M inconvenience and hard tbs Uubwh Railroad waa forced tn di*- Übar Art proudr* an orderly. < nt and . . . .. . ‘ H . ax . . amp upon the public and the coruniututMTS continue operation for several daya under complete remedy for the fair and ju*t m*!- . w . . . • u < arrved bv that railroad, suniiar circumaUncea. dement ot ihe in depute, (erictaaef*ofthr eharartrf ht-rr under diM’U’uoon Ku.iway Lat»or Act waa Hhat Are These Strikes About? meso numerous and ofsurhfreMuemorrur- to protect the public against just such Hlrente on all railroad* that the general adop. U miptions ot commerce. Throe strikes and strike threats are not tlon o f ( hc pohrv pursued b> the erianha- If the«c men »UI not eompli o,th lhe pr<,>,. about wage ratre or hours. They result Uom in this rare auuld soon resell in the mobs of the taw for the settlement of «urh from disputes over the meaning of exist romplete nullification of the Hallway Labor dispsire. then all thinking Imrnrans muM fare ing contracts. They COW claims for a full Art - • • qaeation. H bat w the neat alep. ■ - '■.si- ,rx
was taken to the Soviet zone »own| I was tak'-n to th'- oi t >.o t-.wi, •of Oranienburg after hi- arre-t .r d there was <piestiom d tons'.nit v i for 16 days and nights by in. • | ranking soviet officers Two Men Are Fined By Justice Os Peace Two mtn wen fund Wedm lav by Justice of the peace Floyd Hui:' er aftt r being arr'sted earlier in the week by police and -henff Het man Bowman Viment Parker lift Grant "net ! was fimd and co-ts by /r. ■ I
/hSgksl ' r ” J I " 1 1 ■ II tii * z 1 T aw ■ V iy Z J BOTTLE (.AS AS LOW AS 6-9 S I (IB i.lts. HAUGKS Heating & Appliances
• Hunter for Improper registration I .-1,- - had loin driving ms an » r doo w■" a A' W loi K 11 - 11-' t- it. it. • in .virtg to in-catur om and n< half ycat - aeo The other man Hi win Franz. Munro« ville | had b« • n am - • d fol failin' to ■ p at tin- Lak' road and I S
I MAM AG WASHERS — N ATI RAL OR BOTTLE GAS STO\ ES — AI»MIR \L REI RKiERATORS — GENES A CABINETS — — CASH OR TERMS — James Kitchen — 428 Mcßarnes St. DURING MY ABSENCE ALL SALES AND SERVICE WILL BE HANDLED BY Korih Side Appliance Store 916 N 13»t St. on 27 Phone 5644 <HI3 LIFE OF OUPS IS JUST A SNORT Have ><m dreamed of tractors -- BUT 50 MANY 1 FOUKS ( ;.nd farm implement', that MAKE- IT A NIGHTMARE. uII meet your every need .. . *7/ — i ~re "iibin the —reach of vour budget? Come to the GERBER MOSER IM Y I’LLMLM ( fora dream come line. Our large 'lock of A!lih-( halmers / , J equipment cannot he excelled. Make ’elections, al once. w *. . Your \-( Dealer
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l.lehw'iy 224 H' wa fined fl and i . ' ? .Lilting *l2 2'i. Th' Ln:ve,ity of I’itt.-burgh s 12Ct, 'athedral of Learning if .ad -Ut ill to- Il'Ual style of loll'..- ..Hiding' would ii'.wd the II a >-s o' land .•uiruund.nz tinitruiturc
