Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 78, Decatur, Adams County, 2 April 1951 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

A tllir A / -k» '■««■ Dunbar /- W~ /■ %• ' Pv * NNINC »U«AU Jl •■- ■ w<iwi v ■ r ... 441,6 "' , *i — n ——TJ , |— iiipmi«piMl -i V Tfrjig DUNBAR has a first floor that I .inonrw <x l H C !..„ .j I’*’ consists of two bedrooms, bath, living I! "o-.cxß<9 I H—P £0x859 * 1 ■■■■■■■■ room and combination kitchen-dinette. I n ■,~ I 2 Future expansion is taken care of on al ; "3" ;fe 'f~l mnw the second floor where two additional FTTsT '" uH'IuIWT HT 1 bedrooms can be finished; There' is a O H M.M aJSXuIIJIIIuZX a ’ fuU basement and an attached, front © <x oflitoGß I drive-in, garage with a flat deck and «• I ‘Sc" >l'-0x25'0 | wood rail. jf *> . ’ LivincJQfn La | 1 ij * || ..r . la'-OMl'-O ■ i I Wardrobe closets are used in all bedI ’ I roon,s - Men cabinets on both floors and I v L* I coat closets for each entrance. ] \i_. ■ *■ - - J I ' u.■tewcssaMh M>M I The kitchen cabinets are Arranged --■■■ »| on opposite walls in one end of the • f i n s t • f uoon-Puon- kitchen. The range and the refrigerat- .• '-j. . dr are on the inside and the sink is placed under the window. B—l 1 « \ 1 ~£, ,—1 aeoQQom I— ■■/.—_ Jr"*"" ' ' Plans for thia house calls for frame jpg O l G*B'-« I construction, siding, asphalt shingles, \ *—i*. 1, • I ’ ■' . 1 double glazed > picture window, covered I f - ’•"THrnTrnTCr"’ entrance in front and concrete steps, acoooom I un l rrr r° _ , \ iHGxiOiO I n V*' I '’ «*» | Dimensions of the Dunbar are 46 feet .. ! by 28 feet. Floor area is 893 square i'Xrf >■* • '' 4 I f®«t. Cubage \ totals 20,093 cubic feet, « tt » c not counting garage. -—• f f ,\ j | „ .*' '■• | ./'fl .For furhter information about THE DUNBAR, write the Small blouse Plaii--OEGicn ,Q'i62 a ning Bdreau, St;-/Cloud„ Minn. «« c ono-ruoon e u An- >! I- —— — b i ; O , ' ; Li —; -

< ; ! _ .h House Opens Debate Tuesday Over Draft Allow Deferments For Top Students Wash'. Ag'on. April 2.—(UP)- — A 'member of ti e house armed services comniittee said , t.oday that draft dircb(oi Lewis B. Hershey broke his werd by' not extending the new dra.t deferment test tohigh School graduates ‘ not yet in I ' college. \ • , Rep. - W. Sterling Cole. R.. N.Y.. • “" told a n porter he would try to hold Hershey tn ( a letter to thei committee*, pfomi-ihg that the test wouldbe given )tZ> “high school graduates who' had been accepted for the next academic year of college • ' On the eve of the start of house debate on the new draft and post!- , emergency universal military training (UMT)*bill. Cole said Hershey’s ...;vHoii “make.-* the whole question Tn eollfsc determent rather inean- ■ ihgless.". i '. The draft hill cq'mes up the i house tomorrow and debate Ts expccted to last about two weeks. ? Aidministration loaders and, .most Revival Continues ng? ■ i • » jm Evangelist Newell ' ' at the Church of god . Each Night 7:30 YOU ARE WELCOME ' — ,-y ...j■ ,~ , k

delinquent tax notice . ' ,ur 4 '"xe. \ i Decatur I .. J*. . Del. ’ , . >, ~ DeM’rfptlon Lot t nine ’S’nv , Lincoln Housing,.. . . 9178 -so Ro<jp. Frederick . Lj.nn &Wi fines 537 50 n bchmter, Joe f A Charlotte Erw :u x Archbold loos | • ’ t ' ... ~~ LWdLL_' ,110 68.29 ’■ , . l<OMt , r--A_ ■ , Steiiry a Abbatoir ... . Pt. se se See. 21 SA. C&Tft 31H62 ' " Geneva i> ■ ; i : Overla, Rosella W/2 Nelsons 197 20 , 6J6 In addition to the above tax . 0.30. costa must be added for each description for printing. ■ v ,| “ State ?f Indiana. County Os Adams, SS: i f > ' L Thurman I. Diev., Auditor in and for said cojjnty do hereby certify that the above is a true and. correct list of lands and city and town lots returned and remaining delinquent for the non-payment of taxes • fnr a 4'® ?u a . A 1 !' 1 ! J^ v Ji us u yC4rs i with penalty, .interest and costs, ana further that the awutt charred was recorded between the first Monday of December. 1948 ahd the first day of January 19i4f* V .Witness my hand and, seal at the Auditors Office in the city of -Decatur, this 19tn day of Starch, 19ul\. JfT iI. Drew Auditor Adams County, Indiana. State of Indiana, County of Adams. SS: ' , , i . ' J Notice is hereby .given that i;n much of the foreg/>itiß lands city ,aha town lots, as may be necessary to discharge tne taxes,; penalty, inter- , pst and <o;>ts \v hk n *rna y ; bo due thereon, or due from, the owners .there* hii on the .days <>f sale will i»e >«.?<! at pui>li( auction l>v the Treasurer of Adams County at the east door of the Court House in the Citv of Decatur, iu paid county and state on the second Monday of April, 11951. bfcinK on the Sth day of said month, commenting at 10 O'clock A.M. olf said day that said sale will continue frojn ilay t>> day until sold. 1 .Given under iny hand yt the Auditor’s office in Decatur Indiana, this 19th day of Ma rein 1951. t 1 ' ] Thurman I. Drew. Auditor Adaius County. Indiana. I; 'il ■ I 4 MARCH 19—26 <k APRIL 2 , 4

Western Union On 2nd Century Os Service Western Union Sunday began its second century of service tb the nation as a hew Western Union, .with its unified operations highly mechanized' and ultra modern, Charles Reyner, manager of the local office stated -today. Organized April 1| 185 J as New York and Mississippi Valley I Printing Telegraph Company in 1 Rochester, N. Y., arid changidp its l name to Western Uitfon five years later, the nation’s telegraph company* IS Observing ifs 100th anniversary j throughout this month. ' “Because of the Korean conflict and the necessity for concent rating attention on the special /defense communications reuirements of the armed services, the government) and industry, the company is \not holding an elaborate observance of its centennial," Reyner said, , ’ • Western Union’s first executive office ,in Rochester, N, Y,, back ‘in 1851, was equippeld with a singlet roll-top desk, a few chajrs and a cast-iron shaped like a plug hat. It was a. modest beginning for the. giant net of wires and cables that circle the world. ” >' The Daily Democrat’s United Press wire service originates most of its news gathering over West ern Union facilitfbs nation-wide. ,Aud the Decalin*, and Fort. Wayne General Electri<\plants aret'linked across the nation by la private wire service lehsed from and maintained, by Western Union. President of W Union is Walter P. Marshall, whose name appears on telegraph blank. ; —• l " — " "/"w of the armed services / committed believe the final bill, will be in ■ about the same from that the committee approved, ' ' house bijl would lower'‘the draft age-4o 18' % and provide 26 months of service, fho senate-ap-proved version krould draft youths J a( I'' after all other age groups 4 were cilled -for 34 months. The present draft, which expires July 9. i Calls men 19 through 25 for’ 21 months. 1 . * . ‘ > The senate bill would permit, 75,- | 000 college students Io be deferred each year,, but the House proposal -hand-felje-m csert law leave the mat- * ter to the president The big fight on the ht.use Titti ! 1 -i 11

11 Persons Dead In U.S. flood Waters , Thousands Are Made Hpmeless By Floods By United Press Floods receded slowly along I rivers in the east, midwest arid south today, having 11 persons dead and Thousands homeless. Health authorities fought to prevent epidemics in the flood arels, covering parts of 10 states. Residents in \most affected districts were warned to boil drinking water. > < The dead included five persons ip-the New York-New Jersey area. , two persons each in Alabama and Mississippi, and one each in Connecticut and lowa. More than 1,00.0 families, possibly 3.000 persons, weie homeless: . in. the New York area alone. A sheet of muddy water covered wide portions of Bergen, Morris and Passaic counties in northern New Jersey. The Passaic river wai; still four feet above normal and much wat- , er remained to be drained froin tributaries. The Ramapo river, swollen 30 times normal size, was receding slowly. Road crews worked to remove debris froin Jiighways in Rockland and Westchester counties of NewYork state. Motorists were warned that bridges ha<| been weakened by flood waters flowing over i secondary roads. At Mountain View. N J., flood refugees were livihg in city schoolhouses. Hundreds were homeless in Mississippi.; Alabama and Georgia. At Calhoun, Ga.. all highways and rail lines were washed out. High water at Columbus, Miss., farced the Gulf Mobile and Ohio streamliner ‘Rebel” to discharge its passengers so they could detour by buS to Mobile, Ala. The Des ’Moines river was ex- ’ peeted to citest tomorrow, 5%-feet ' over flood s\agr< at Eddyville, la., and later in the day at Ottumwa, la., where some residents had already fled to higher ground. ' Observers warned that' a bother one-foot ri-e on the Mississippi river would spill water into the .business section of Keokuk, la. Man Is Fined For 1 J Public Intoxication Sheriff Bob Shraluka arrested ' Jess Riker, of Willshire 0.. f..’ public intoxication shortly after, midnight Sunday on North Thirteenth street, and -the defendant later appeared \in justice of the peace court and was fined $5 rfnd costs, totalling sls. ..——, a_ was expected on a plan to split it ‘ in two partes and allow a separate ’ rote on a post-emergency fcMT. - President Truman issued new ’ regulations Saturday allptying deferment of top college students—or those accepted for admission to college—bn the basis of an aptitude test of their sdholastjc standing, fiershev w'as left to decide the mini\mum deferim nt score or. lowest allowable standing in class? If You Have Anything To Try A Democrat Want Ad—lt Pays.

■ ' DECATUILXIAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA -i - 1 l ; iL- i :

Roommate Is Slain By College Student Senior Strident Is Jailed For Murder Tuscaloosa, Ala., April 2.-^-(UP) 4-A shk teetotaling college student told popice today he was “not softy’’ he shot his hard-drinking fraternity brother roommate to death after being kept awake all night by a wild party attended by several co-eds. ■' t ■ ' • ;i The shooting took place yesterday afterpoon one ’block from fra- • row on the University of_. Alabama -campus; Luther (Jack) Veazey, 28-year-old from Greenville, Miss., died after being; shot five times. He had been tiding a bicycle down a* sidewalk. . “I am not sori y I did it,” said James Ludwig Gplvin. 24, a senior from Lincoln, Ala., who was Jailed on a murder charge, “Under the 1 circumstances I think it was justi-’ ’fied.” Colvin, an ex-marine who said he never has taken a drink in his life, told of a boisterous evening in the fashionable Riverside section m>artmcnt he shared with Veazey, a navy veteran.. He walked in on the party after a quiet night at the movies, the mild-mannered Colvin said. The girls already had gone, he said, btit

. —_— —_—_— n . \ ll ■ V \ Whatever your loads, whatever your roads... —Mt. MMBLLfi ■ hhj i . j—— —l’ ta—f -W I FEED, milk, poultry-formers in Economy FLOWERS get there quicker, fresher! Econ- GRAVEL travelled on tough off-road jobs \ Run found Fords hauled em bt mighty low cost omy Run drivers found Fords cut costs on stbp- in Economy kun—money saved every mile with -. ' per mile! F-l and all Fords offer TWO new cabs! end-go jobs. F-l has new fingprtip gearshift! the Power Pilot! F-5 is top heavy duty seller! ■ . 1 . ; : k. . \ ... the 48-State Economy Run points the way to more miles per dollar I O ■ ■ with the Ford POWER PILOT! f i YOU * kind of truck job was represented through off-the-road mud. .. . Economy ‘ >• Wy nationwide fifty-million mile Run drivers kept daily records of w 'jW Ford Truck Economy Run! • penpy spent for gas, oil, maintenance and ' \ Some 5000 drivers in the 6-month Run repa,irs. J \ hauled every kind °f load from ice cream The result: overh welming new evidence W• ~ .JBKIbHBI t° Pig l ron —l n every kind of Ford Truck that Ford Trucks with the Power Pilot from F-l Pickups to mammoth F-8 Big save you money every mile! Ford Truck ’ J° B tractor_tra H ers l They bucked city Power Pilot gives you the most power ; traffic, highballed cross-country’, pushed from the least gas! "3200 db. loads... 2.3 c a mile!” \ \ .x' p. Stockman Alex Forshage (address on re- | I JfrlWiH quest) drove his Ford F-5 Stake equipped \| EJf /)|| DJI | T|UwWIIM prO v.hrdTruck, with Power Pilot in\the Economy Run. He I ~jl IJ II yII J I • ■ M reports: “I drove 5j778 miles in 6 months, I I k V /| |\\| with average load bf 3200 lbs., made 1444 1-4 X-X LJ VZI—X ZLST ".SL.T.ZZ ' stops. Total cost of gas, oil and maintenance \ * rifCw " with no repairs cents a mile.” J—Cv—FCr • • • —..- • ' ■ ■ ■ r W? ■ 'i / ■ ' grrj ? —BslHßrGfiEbF WrW tiiSii" |PW® k' 3—E—aißL. ' * SfoA* ... .. y „■ w ' k * . LUMBER and al! building materials were CATTLE went on wheels for less per mile in LOGS moved to mills at lower cost, greater hustled in the Economy Run —at /pw fqn-mile the Economy Run. F-6, like all Fords, has Free- , profit in Economy Run. F-8 Big Jobs have 145- K cost! F-6 gives choice of three great truck engines! Turn valves, other advancements. V-8 or Six! h.p. engine. Ford offers over 180 truck\models! BRANT MOTORS, Inc. \ Decatur. Indiana ( ' Corner 3rd & Monroe | ' k ■ ■ . '■ WWWWWXIFT Illi — .-J. ■ ■ ■ • ■ .-- • ■ ■ AA

\ t seii. Brien McMahon (D. Conn.) chairman of 'the Congressional Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, will be the: principal speaker at the annual Democratic JefferT>on*Jackson Day dinner in indian:npo|is April 14. • • \ • i * T ".r' — * —! — 7 .........y ■«■■■■■(, Veazey and several other male students still whooping it up fend began to poster him when he complained about the noise. Veazey tried to pull him out of bed and \they had two fistfights duringAhe night, Colvin said. Later the. two made u|> —fraternity brothers said they had been close friends ■J- but the discord was resumed in the morning. polvin said his roommate request-1

ed that he rent a car for him and that Veazey wrecked the U-Drive-It auto \after driving it half a block. . Then, Colvin said, Veazey got a knife and crawled under the house. “I rushed down to the scene of the accident and we had another argument,” he said. “Veazey threatened to kill me.” \ Colvin said he and another student got'Veazey out from under the house and took him to the fraternity house. Tn> all right, I can walk," he quotedj Veazey as saying. )*T talked to a law student and we agreed that the boy was danColvin said. He said (ie.“talked to some of the about this wreck and they advisetr me to get a lawyer and have Veazey put undei\ a peace bond.” J \ Colvin had started to attorney Wagner Finnell’s office when he saw Veazey approach on a bicycle. “Don’t you come at me,” Colvin said he yelled. But when Veazey dismounted and kept coming. “I pulled out the gun which I had gotten at the apartment" He shot five times a\nd as Veazey dropped to the sidewalk, students attracted by the noise \bourted from the fraternity house. . ' * Motor Courts tn 1822, there wers only 600 motor cOLurts In the whois nation. Today art 20,000 motor courts with ah averagt of 22 rooms to each j court - - _ -J • 1

Declares Costello Can't Be Deported Finding Is Made By Justice Department , .Washington, Apr. 2 — (ijP) — the justice department has formally advised senate crimp investigator* that Frank “The Boss” Costello cannot be deported to his naitive Italy, officials said toSay. The department gave its formal legal finding in a letter to criftie committee chairman Estes Kefauver, D., Tenn. Kefauver had asked for a formal statement on the matteh The letter, prepared by deputy attorney general Peyton Fbrd, made the finding that there is now no law under which Costellonamed by the) committee as the coleader with Joe Adonlis of one of the nation’s two major crime syndicates, can be deported as vsuggested by several committee members. _j Attorney general J. Howard McGrath and immigration commissioner J. R. Mackey had told the 'committee as much >ln a public hearing, but promised to look further into tlie matter cothe up with a formal finding. Sen. Charles W. Tobey. R., N. H., claims Costello perpetrated several frauds when he was naturalize^—that he had not stated

MONDAY, APRIL 2, 1951

he was arrested once and - that two of his sponsors were bootleggers. McGrath and Mackey made it clear that if such could be proved Costello might he stripped of citizenship, ibut could not be deported. The committee moved down another avenue, however, to crack down on Costello. It has recommended to the senate that It cite fre gambler for contempt. Maxi- ' mum penalty on conviction is a year’s imprisonment and a |I,OOO i hne. -1 „'■ 1 ' ; \_ Counfy PMA Office v Hours Are Changed Winfred L. Gerke, chairman of the Adams county PMA committee, announced today that the county office hours have been changed and the new office hours will be from 8 a.m.'to 4 p.in., Mon- | day through Friday and from 8 1 a.m. to noon on Saturday., | coujity office is located at 130 1 , 2 North Second street, above the Sutton Jewelry Store. Go to the church of your chdice next Sunday. *'***QUALITY** Photo Finishing Featuring Oversize Prints HolthouseJprAigCo.