Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 167, Decatur, Adams County, 17 July 1951 — Page 3
TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1951
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ADAMS COUNTY CHORUS MEETS LAST EVENING The Adams County Chorus m*. last evening at the' Farm Bureau building in Monroe. After the rehearsal Mrs. Noble Reynolds, president, conducted the busihess meeting. bp ■ \ ' j _ \ Mrs. Reynolds read an article from the Farm News about the recent trip the chorus made to Chicago. During the trip they visited the “Breakfast Club" program and sang "There’s Something I* About the Air in Indiana." At last right’s Mrs. Harrison Miller played a recording of the song. - , The group voted to hold rehearsal on July will leave the following day for the * music festival at Purdue University, The Phoebe Bible class of the Zion . Evangelical and Reformed church will have a picnic at the home of Mrs. George Thomas Thursday evening at six thirty o’clock. Assisting hostesses are Mrs. Cal Yost and Mrs. A. R. Ash baucher. The committee will furnish meat, rolls and coffee. |J r ' [ . Unit 3 of the Bethany W.S.W.S. will meet at the home of Mrs. Violet Bonifas, 221 South Fifth street, Thursday evening at seven thirty o’cldek. Mrs. Bryce Roop is the assisting hostess. and Mrs. Amos Ketchum wil have charge of the study period. - ’ ■ p L ’ v IA The Young Adult class of Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church will sponsor a bake sale at city hall Saturday beginning at nine o’clock in the morning. . Mrs. Drake will be host<ss to the Bobo Methodist W.sIC.S. Friday evening at seven thirty c'clock. Thursday evening at seven thirty o’clock the D.Y.B. clast of Trinity church will meet in the
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church basement. The hostesses ’art Mrs. Edith Mrs. Gaylie Bittner and Mrs. Emma Butler. j\ ... I I s The Friendship Village club ■will meet Thursday afternoon at one thirty o’clock jat Kimsej school. Hostesses will be.-Wilma Young, Blanche Bryan, i Lydia Meyer, MarjorieiCarvqr and Grace Bryan. |\ Gefald Strickler and his ifephew. Neri Keller, are| visiting in Cody, Wyo., with Mr.' and Mrs. Glenn Newton. Mrs. Strickler will leave sometime next week for Cody. Mrs. Newton is the former Miss Barbara Kohls\ of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Price, of Louisville, Ky.,j visited over the weekend with Mr|. Price’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. ijemy Bierly. Mis& Ann Price returned home with hep parents after spending the week with her grandparents. Mrs. James E| Nuss and son Jim, of Lakewood, 0., are visiting here with her brother and sister in law, Mr. and [Mrs. Cletus H Miller of Nuttmaq Avenue. J Mr. and Mrs. £aul McCullough and family, and Miss Louise John son returned Saturday from e week's fishing trip in northern Michigan. While ;there they attended the cheryy festival at Traverse City. | I \l j; , Steven Ellis has-been dismissed from the Van Weft, 0., hospital. The contracts have been let ani the corner stone laying will Je held August 26 for*, a new $150,000 chapel at the Methodist memorial home at Warren. |lt will have a 100 foot steeple avoiding the neces sity for airplane warning Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parr and Mrs. Bert Parr of Berne visited ever the weekend with the latter’s son at Great Lakes! 111., and made a trip into Wisconsin. Keith completed his at* the Great Lakes station. Mrs. L. Gray Paddock and son Steven, of Huntington, visited here today with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dee Fryback of West Adams street, t
—l. l — 1 * WIOSHTAL ! V n Jlo&*
Adihitted: Raymond MeytT, Decatur; Mrs. Sam Wolfe, Bryajit; Mrs. Charles Kukblhan, Decatur loute 3. '■ Dismissed: Mrs.- Paul Longsworth and baby girt; Decatur; Mrs Roland Wolfe, Pleasant Mips; Mrs. Kenneth Sciihepf and\ bgby girl, Decatur. ? »f Forecast Relief From Muggy Temperatures Indianapolis, July 17.' —XUP) — The weather bureau forecast relief today from the ? muggy temperatures that have jplagued Hoosiers for the past wees. Phe bureAu said a slight cabling will follow scattered thundershowers today And the tempera tures for the rest of the week will average near orifa few degrees below' normal. The long-radge outlook/ said there will be a “minor warning" tomorrow, cooler weather Thursday and Friday and warmer temperatures again- this weekend- The average was expected to be near or slightly below normal highs oi P 8 to 91 degrees and low% of 62 to 66. I % ' . |_| . . ; ■ . If You Have Anything To Sell Try A Democrat |/ant Ad —lt Pays.
vrs/ 1 A X ;' ■ ■> -h- < Society Items for day’s pub- - llcatlon must be phoned In by 11 a. m. (Saturday 9:30 a. m.) ' ' Phone 3-2121 i ( Phyllis Acheson TUESDAY’ • Rebekah Lodge, ijO.O.F. hall, 7:30 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma sorority, Mrs. Don Stump, 8 p.m. | Bpthany Loyal Daughters family picnic, Hdnna-Nuttman park sheh |er hoUse, 6 p.m. \ Decatur Garden club, Mrs. Forrest Elzey, 2 p.m. , Catholic Ladies of Columbia potluck supper, \C. L. of C. hall, 6:30 p.m. \ WEDNESDAY ® Decatur Home Economics club. Mrs. Gerald Durkin. 2 p.m. THURSDAY Friendship Village club, KimsCy school, 1:30 p.m. D.Y.B. class 'of Trinity church, church basement, 7:30 p.m. Phoebe Class of Zion E. and R. chprch, Mrs.. George Thomas, 6:30 p.m. BBethany W.S.WIS Unit 3, Mrs. Violet Bonifas, 221 South Fifta street, 7:30 p.m. Union Chapel liadies Aid, church, all day. | X Pleasant Mills /Methodlai w.S.C.S., Mrs. Laura Davis, 1:30 p.m. , \ ' Unit 4 of Bethany W.S.W.S. picnic supper, Mrs. Roy Bieberich, route 2,\ 6:30 p.m. St. Luke’s Women’s >G ull J, FRIDAY Bobo Methodist W.S.C.S., Mrs Arnold Drake, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY \ Bethany Young Adult class bake sale, city hall, 9 a.m. church, all day.
‘ A baby daughter, Theresa Louise, w'as born to Mrs. Thelma Strickrath at 3.M>5 p. m. Sunday at the Adams county memorial hospital. Shp weighed 6 pounds, 15% ounces. ' Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schultz are; the parents of a baby son, born at 8:31 a. ra. today at the Adams wunly anemorial hospital. He weighed 7 pounds, 6% ounces. i : r Four Persons Fined On Traffic Counts Four petsbns paid fines in justice of the peace court Monday after being apprehended by the sheriff’s de-. partmei|it and city police over the weekend. All those arraigned pleaded guilty to the charges, Burdette Custer, of Winchester street, Doyle Mattax, of near Monroe, and Wendell of route 2. for speeding, and Thomas! JBrlede, of 502 West Jefferson, for running a red lignt. Custer and? Mattax were arrested by sheriff Bob Shraluka for racing their cars at 60 miles' an hour along North Second street. Custer was \fined $2 and costs, totalling $12.75, and Mattax $1 and costs, totalling $11.75. j Sowards, like Briede arrested by city police, was fined $1 and costs for speeding 50 miles an hour along West Monroe, while Briede was fined the same amount for running the Second and Monroe street Stop light. Vladivostok, Soviet Russia’s Far Eastern bastion, is a city whose real might lies untierground in the surrounding hills.! Aircraft hangars, subterranean ammunition depots, dumps and troop are buried in the huge man-made caves, the National Geographic Society reports.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
I K u w - '■ ■'l r v / z i r ■ A ■ MRS. JAMES A. COWENS was the former Miss Audrey Ross, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ross of near Pleasant Mills, before her marridge. The double ring ceremony was solemnized in the Bobb United Brethren church by the Rev. L. A. Middaugh. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cowens of-this city are the parents of the groom. The couple are now at home at 333 Stevenson street in this city. i — Photo by Anspaugh
President Truman ' v \ Views Flood Area 4 Flying Trip Over ■i Flood-Ravaged Area Bulletin Washington, July. 17.—(UP) —The senate today passed and . sent to the White House legislation granting $25,000,000 in emergency aid to the flood-de-vastated areas of Kansas and Missouri. Kansas City; M0.!3 July 17.— (UP) —President Truman will inspect by air toddy the nation’s most expensive flodd, which struck close to his Independence, Mo., home! He was to leave Washington at 10:30 p.m. -CST. A Mr. Truman will fly over the $750,000,000 floodtnlvaged a tea with Maj. Lewis A. Pick, chief of army engineers, after Mrs. Truman and Margaret Truinan leave the plane at Independence. He will make an aerial survey of the flood as far west as Manhattart. Kans. But lie was not expected to Vtop at Kansas City, the harifesp hit sector. V ' ' I 'I. Vi The flood rolled down the Missouri river. At St. Louik, where the Missouri joins the Mississippi, raijroad switching yards and river .froht buildings already were flooded.? The stockyards were closed and a crest of 40 feet, the third highest in history, was expected at St. Louis Frjdpy. i i Miami, flooded by the Neosho river, which i drove 3;oiib persons out of thefr homes and caused <5,000 damage. Gov. Johns! ton Murray declared a state of emergency in Ottawa county, Okla. At Washington rue nouse approv- 1 ed/ $25|.000,000 in emergency funds for flood relief yesterday. The senate was set to follow with prompt approval-today Mr. Truman wil| sign the bill as soon as he gets it. Mr. jrAman will vote in a bond election, at Independence after he [looks at the flood- He takes off for Washington tonight. Mrs. Truman and Margaret will remain in Independence, 10 miles east of Kansas City. It is in the hills and was riot flooded, •- Independence gets its water frbm Kansas City. Mo|, and when a pumping station was flooded at Kansas City, pressure at Independence fell 75 percent. Mayor P. I Weatherford has closed all but essential businesses. The Missouri river had dropped more th)an six a V Kansas City and the Kansas river more than 11 feet from Saturday’s crest stages. As the rtvers fell, the water poured but of buildings that had been Covered to a reight of 25 feet. Gasoline and oil poured out Os ruptured tanks and refineries bf the Phillips Petroleum company, the Sinclair Oil\company and the Great Lakes Pipe Lines company, in Kansas City, Kans., creating a “highly dangerous” situation. “The situation is serious enough that I might order the intercity viaduct (the only Mnk between the two Kansas Citys) closed,” civil defense director Eli Dahlin of Kansas City, Kans., said, j “I don’t want a Texas City here. All smoking tn the area around the tanks has been strictly prohibited. It’s so bad we’re afraid to use power boats in the’ area. A spark might touch it off.” But a.tire that had burned mll-i lions of gallons of oil and at least 24 buildings in an eight-block area partly in Missouri and partly |n Kansas was “just about burned out,” a fire department spokesman said today. That fire is about two
miles from the broken oil tanks in Kansas City, Kan. \ Insane Patient Is Nabbed After Hunt An insanity who ,Ls scheduled to be taken to Richmond today, provided considerable excitement in the county home area Monday when he escaped from that institution. V' ; The subject of a four-hbur man hunt led by sheriff Bob Shraluka. the patient escaped from the county home where he was in a cell. Picking a lock, the patient was on the loose, armed with a club, but tabbed before anyone was harmed Once caught, the man was placed in the county jail prior to being taken to Richmond. Uranium has been found in rich deposits in Europe. Africa, Asia and as close as Canada’s Great Bear Lake, but in the United States large pockets of pitch-blende,Rich-est of radioactive ores have rievfr been found.
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Guards Take Sentry Duties In Cicero Guard Apartment House After Riots '4 f 4: J ■Chicago, July 17 —(UP) — Two companies of' “hometown" national guardsmen today took over sentry duty at an apartment house in suburban Cicero where rioters demonstarted against a negro family’s plan to move! in. i The department of justice has Indicated that it may take action in the case. Duripg\ the demonstrations late last week, 117 peiy soph were arrested. Companies E and. H of the 228th infantry, 33rd division, took up guard today under the command of Col. Frederick Locheihler of Oak Park, 11L They replaced companics G and 11, ! 129th infantry, 4-lth division. Three other bompan les of the 11th were sent home yesterday. The new units are based in the suburbs which fringe Chicago’s west side. They returned Sunday from a summer encampment. ' Earlier, the department of justice said it is investigating the' incidents on the basis of complaints filed by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. v - \ The department, however, did not indicate what action it Would, take. The court cases of those arrested dpring three 1 nights of violence were continued until Aug. 6. During the hearing before police magistrate E. Marvin Capouch, anti-negro handbills, werei circulated surreptitiously within a' few feet of the bench. . ’ Most of them were handed quietly to defendants. The message said ih part: "Go go. keep Cicerp white — wanted 50,000 people ih Cicero to join the defense of Cicero sponsored by the Whitb Circle League of America . . . ” ’ . They “exhorted" Cicero youths to “stand firm against negro and
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communist aggressertr ' i, The state of l&d year revoked the charter Os th® White Circle ’ League as aii undesirable organization after the group was -fined 1200 under a seldom-used statute making it illegal :to hold grbups or persons up to ridicule. The case has been appealed to the U. S. supreme cohrt. - y y ■ 4 To Start Trading In Soybean Meal Futures Chicagpl July 17.— The Chicago board of trade has. voted to authorize trading |n soybean meal futures contracts, effective
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August 1, or as soon thereafter as an offieial date is set.{m. , 1 A board spokesman said that activity in soybeans and in soybean Oil had reached a point where dealing in soybean meal was necessary to meet the demands of the soybean industry. In 1926, the total U.S, production of soybean meal was only 8,300 tons while in 1950 the production was almost 5,000,000 tons, ? !
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