Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 68, Decatur, Adams County, 21 March 1951 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SCREEN ACTOR _ (Co«Y tuned From; Pace One» to the Communist party by a man Darned Davidson in Hollywood. He said did not remember the man s name or what position
I. I will again be in my office Saturday, March 24 for regular appointments. < Ben Duke, M. D.
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he held in the party. He said he had no idea where Davidson livpd or what his occupation was. h Farmer Is Injured When Butted By Bull Crawfordsville, Ind., March 21. —(UP) —Charles Rush, 50 Montgomery county farmer, was in Culver hospital with several broken ribs today after being butted by a bull fye 'U'as trying to, chain tb its stall.
Oscar E. Burry Dies — I 1 ' ' v V -■ ' ■ ' ’ '\r Tuesday Afternoon Funeral Services Set For Thursday Oscar E. Burry, 74, retired Hartford township farmer, died Tuesday aftenoon at the Adams county memorial hospital, where he had been a patient three months. He had been ill for two years. ' ( Born in Switzerland May 4, 1876, he was a son of Christian and Barbara Roth-Burry, married, both wives preceded him in death. Surviving are two sons, Alton of San Diegot Calif., and Vitos B. of Pennville; eight daughters, Mrs. Leroy M elick of Hartford City), Mrs. C. V. Smith, Mrs. Elmer Andierson, Mrs. Ralph Pattit, Mrs. B. J. Pearson and Mrs. Lee Rutledge, all of Fort Wayne, , Miss Barbara Burry of Berne and Clem Willimdn of Hartford township; 23 grandr children and 12 great-grandchildr-ren. Five brothers and four sisters preceded him in death. Funeral services will be held at 2p. m. Thursday at the First Mennonite church in Berner The Rev. O. A. Krehbiel and the Rev. OscdT Eicher officiating. Burial will be in the (Evangelical Mennonlte cemetary. The body was removed to the Yager funeral home, where frerids may call after 7 o'clobk this evening. No Marked Change In Vandenberg Condition Grabd Rapids, Mich., March 21. —(UP) — Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, R., Mich., was resting “relatively comfortably,” but no marked change has been noted in his condition, his physician said today. Dr. A. B. Smith said 4he republican fqrelgn affairs caiefton, who will be 67 years old tomorrow, still was in serious condition in his struggle to recover from a series of operations. , ’| x ’
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Television Cuts Down Theater Attendance Detroit, March 21. —(UP)-— Irving Goldberg, spokesman for a grbup of theater owners, predicted today that television will clofte 50 percent of Detroit’s movie nouses within two years. Goldberg told the common council that attendance has been cut in half already. “The' Kelfauver crime hearings have been murder,” he said. \ Woman's Body Is Found Under Auto j Indianapolis, March 21.—(UP)— Police today investigated the death of Delethea Nicholas, 35, whose body was found under a car in the garage of her home here last night. Her husbandwho .found the body, told state'police Mrs. Nicholas was ill and had attempted suicide several times. The ignition was turned on but the motor of the car had quit running. ALLEGED BOSS From Pn*e On*) gave the latd> Franklin D. Roosevelt hig first presidential nomina-
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tion. ' But Costello denied vehemently that he had been in Chicago “with .Hines” or that he had been there ? himself in connection with the convention or with Tammany’s all-out drive to prevent Mr. Roosevelt getting the nomination. It “just happened” that he and Hines were both there at the sdm_elime. Hdlley revived Costello’s previous testimony at the current com-, mitte hearing and also at executive committee sessions •— under-
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scoring contradictions that pointed -.toward perjury action. He also reviewed Costello’s early life to demonstrate he was a bootlegger before he became a citizen. Co'smentioned no bootlegging actlvities in his citizenship application. i \ Earlitr, , the committee gently nudged Gov. Thoma J E. pewey toward the witness chair. \ > It also heard former mayor William O'Dwyer branded as the actual bos of Tammany Hall, dur-
ing the period it had close connections with gangland. ? Then the committee re-called itg star, but reluctant witness, underworld leader Frank Costello. . Sen.- Estes Kefauver, D., Tenn., the chairman, repeated the committee’s invitation to’ New York’s governor and two-time Republican presidential nominee to testify. He hinted courteously as the day’s session began that it was Dewey who was “leaving matters up in the air.” He \referred to
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, \ 1961
wide-open gambling at Saratoga Springs, a Spa | near New York’s capita) at Albany, and the pardon Dewey granted to gangster Charles “Lucky” Luciano so' he could be deported to Italy. Perhaps the governor would like to go to Washington where the conrtnittee begins hearings next week and appear before p, Keafauver suggested, pointing out the committee made it a practice of'never “summoning or ordering governors to’ come, down.”
