Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 196, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1951 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

- INDICTED BASKETBALL stars x>f VS Bradley University are booked at a I New York City police station in the : v ■ ?<« latest phase of the collegiate "fix* 1 .■ jOl scandal. The trio, all of Chicago, are (left to right): George Chianakas, Eugenc Melchiorre and William || - " MB?" Mann. Eight “fixers" named in the New York indictments include Jo- Blm*<-» soph Bcninter.de (right) who, with B one other, has nut yet been taken 1 into custody. (International) w

Filling Station Man Killed During Holdup Lafayette Man Dies Os Gunshot Wounds * ■ ’*r' x •• '■ v ?■s.■.)\ Indianapolis, Aug. 20—(UP) — A state police ballistics test will be conducted today- to determine if bullets that killed a Lafayette filling station attendant came from the same gun that wounded a Michigan vacationer near Noblesville. \ John Martin, 40, was killed by two .22 ealiber bullets early _ Sunday (luring a hold-up in which S9O was taken from the station. About four hours later, Dewey Wad kins, 49, Lansing, Mich., was wounded by a similar bullet when he defied demands of a gunman to hand over his money.’ 1.. ■ • i Wadkins, en route to Tennessee with his "wife, had parked his car along Ind. 37 about four miles . south of Noblesville to rest before

■Mg ■Bl ■■ We will make ■ complete heetmc $ E« UKg Kg survey of your borne, show you how | i j H KK E E to use any fuel at ■ saving. Mo ■ ■ obligation. Phone or wnhe as sow MH|K2 - — - L; "Always warm-but we bum 2 to 3 tons less coal” wMm ' a.- • . --ii ■.• r "Since imtaMinfl our WSKamxi Furnace four yean agSk '' *• have kept war* 'and ccary kt our 9-roc* home. Wo fiLdMg| bv ™ between two and *«*• *o«" l*» «xd *«R we «W >. E3TE .< formerly.* " r , ' I jp>»| (Signed) Alton SMven, Michigan B K 8 WTUIAMSON FURNACU fO« y (Kl * »*• ♦ Oi * Coal IP InTHiL L '*C Trfol-lto Al Fuel Fwrnaces UfILLIAMSON H A U G K W furnaces Heating & .Appliances 'Xu*”,' up Phone 3-3316 ■ wA -■■■' l j, -agarso njrS74'SS®Si.wmi't ■. duaM?-.'',.. a- I '; ii JratfcSW s af e Leaves Reports from RQTO-BALER owners say that weather-resistant rolled bales contain more leaves. Livestock eat rolled hay better because it is soft, sweet and retains its natural color. Here are some of the things farmers wanted to knbw z ? Would roped bales really shed showers? Would they handle and transport easily? Would -- ? f livestock eat them without waste, fed whole or h unrolled? Could straw for bedding be rolled out v i ; without shaking? The ROTO-BALER has answered “yes” to each /. of these questions, satisfying farmers every- *'. • where. Stop in and ask us for a free booklet on / rolled bales and the ROTO-BALiR. =— MORRISON FARM STORE 327 Grant St, Phone 3-2857

" T - ■" wJJ. M .I.' mu JU! ■ continuing his trip when the gunman approached the car. He was shot once |n the hip but was not wounded seriously. Martin, whose body was discovered by a motorist who stopped to use a washroom, died from loss of blood before he could ,be treated. Authorities said there were no witnesses and no clues! ' "We are investigating the possibility that the same man may have done the shooting in both oases,*' state police said- “However, there Will be no definite link-up between thp two unless the ballistics test, shows all the bullets came from the same gun.” Explorer Scours Will Meet Tonight I ■■ M L All members of Explorer Scout post 2060 are urged to be present at tonight’s meeting in the Boy Scout cabin in Hanna-Nuttman t park when the next three months* program will be thoroughly discussed and outlined. The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

Offers To Re-Enter Army To Stand Trial Former OSS Officer Denies Murder Guilt Washington, Aug. >•.—(UPhPussled Pentagon officials admittedly were confronted today wRh an unprecedented situation by the offer of a former OSS officer to reenter army and stan<| trial on chargee of murdering his commanding officer in . Italy. The offer was made by Aldo Icardi. former OSS lieutenant, who attacked the defense department’s charges as “absurd, vicious and completely untrue.” Icardi and former Sgt. Carl G. Lodolce of Rochester, SI.Y., have been accused by the defense department of the murder of Maj. William V. Holohan of New York while the three on a cloak end-dagger mission behind enemy lines in Italy in 1944Lodolce also has denied that he and Icardi poisoned and then shot Holohan with the help, of two Italian partisans. , The court of Assises in Novara, Italy, has moved to extradite the two men for trial here. Italian officials said they were named in confessions of two Italian partisans held on charges of complicity in the slaying. Icardi told the United Press that “enemies of this country are trying to extradite me to Italy where I wouldn’t stand a chance -of fair trial.* "Rather than he extradited,” he said, “I would be willing to re-enter the army and face a military court.” I' A defense department spokesman said there was “no precedent for this situation.” Icardi might face a tough time getting back into the army. Icardi, a reserve- officer, would have to apply for active duty. If his skills were needed, he would then have to be accepted on the basis of current physical and moral standards. That would be nprmal procedure, but there was no indication that, normal procedure would have to be followed it Icardi moved to return to the army. /. Legal technicalities prevent the army from plrosecuting Icardi and Loddlce now since they have been Separated from service. Federal courts do not have jurisdiction since the crime took place in an enemy country in time of war. Icardi claims that the charges against him are old and “were exploded as false long ago.” He said he submitted to an army Me detector test in 1947 and was told that he had been “completely exonerated.” The OSS -mission of Holohan, Lodolce and icardi was to supply arms and ammunition to guerrilla bands fighting behind Nasi llnefc. After a dispute, the defense department said. Holohan was poisoned, shot and dumped into the waters of Lake Orta. His weighted body was found in the lake with a bullet hole through Jts head. The department said Lodolce. fired the fatal shot.

State Police Cars To Corry Numbers , Indiana state police patrol cars soOn will carry numbers across the tops of the vehicles so they can be identified from 'the air, Supt. Arthur M. Thurston an nounced today. Identifying numbers op the cars will greatly Improve and speed operations of the state police airplane, which is being used more and more ip directing criminal chases and manhunts, traffic patrol and spotting, aerial surveillance at emergency scenes and other department functions, Thurston reported.

V J£* \ i v- ■; t* .-* M ’I V' Lt Sk* -nt***W MteA. MrakT If 1 ■ ■ THi EY| ®t Maj. Louis Montoya, Denver, might scare the Chineee out of Korea if they could see him like this, peering through magnifying glass at enlarged photos of important enemy buildup areas, Montoya does part of the vorlc of selecting targets for air ttrlkes in Korea. Far East Air •orce photo. ffnteraiuionai;

DECATUR) DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

, I —VL ’fW" JI 4 CM MUI AUIVAI tn Los Angeles from Australia, Sister Elizabeth Kenny, •5, suffering from Parkinson’s disease, talks to a fellow-plane passenger. Jack Hall, >O, stricken with polio in Tahiti last May. Hall is en route to the Sister Kenny Hospital tn Minneapolis. The Australian nurse, whose treatment pf infantile paralysis is credited with saving many lives, will soon leave to attend the International Poliomyelitis Conference to be i held next' month in C-npenh agon t Tkmmyrtr, (International Scuti dphof<*J

Storfes Conflict On Shooting Os Woman Warsaw, Ind., Aug. 26.—(UP)— Authorities studied two conflicting stories today in an effort to place blame in tpe shooting of a woman hitchhiker near here last Thursday. Margaret Morrison, 36. Uniontown, Pa., said a man who gave her a ride shot her When she repelled his advances. She is in McDonald hospital here with a bullet wound in her left side. Robert W. Golden, 31, Anderson, was arrested in his home townlater through clues offered by the woman. He said the gun discharged accidentally as he struggled with her when she pulled the revolver from the car’s glove compartment and v tried to rob him. 1200,000 LOSS IN I : Kansas, ;tate tree is the cot .tonwood. —y ■ If You Have Anything Th Sell Trj A Democrat Want Ad —It Pays

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$200,000 Loss In Fire At Anderson . Anderson, Ind., Aug. 20.—(UP) —Damage was estimated unofficially at $200,000 today in a fire that swept through two-thirds, of a large warehouse. , f Portions o,f the walls and roof collapsed while firemen fought the blaze almost three hours Saturday. No one was injured seriously but fireman Carl Hurley was overcome by an tank explosion. . > ’ •t * Held For Slaying Os Industrial Chemist Princeton, Ind., Aug; 20.—-(UP) i. —Nathaniel Tooley. Jr., 24. Oakland City, was held today for killing an Industrial chemist who ordered the youth off the chemist's farm., ' The victim was Robert D. Bruner, 41, Indianapolis, who was spending a vacation with ills

Entries Taken To Indiana State Fair 4-H Club Entries Are Taken To Fair Clothing, food preservation, handicraft, and electricity projects selected as state fair entries at the county 4-H fair were taken by Miss Anna K. Williams, home demonstration agent, to Indianapolis Saturday. There are a limited number of entries that can be sent to the state fair. The state fair entries in clothing are: division I, apron by Mary Beckmeyer; division 11, one-piece school dress by -Colleen Egly; division 111, school dress by Carol Jane Heller; division 4, sport dress by Alice Stuber; division 5, suit by Marie Hal>e£ger. ?ud best dress by Virginia Mitchell. i <a , There are 10 entries in the food preservation project: division 1, Ming cherries by Anh Smith; tomatoes by Normd Jean Bailey, division 11, wag beans by Margaret Schaefer; and carrots by Jean A. Laines; division 3, strawberries and sour cherries by Marine! Kae Striker; green beans and red beets by Marjorie Neuenschwander; division 4, blackberries and cherries by Carolyn Sue King; peas and beets by Alice Stuber; division &B, carrots, red beets, peas by Alice Alt; division SD, apple sauce, carrots, pineapple by Elaine Freels. This 4s the first year for handicraft to be exhibited as a 4-H project at the state fair. Six entries were selected for exhibition: Patricia Reed will exhibit a yarn doll; Ruth - Zimmerman, embroidery; Colleen Egly, textile painting; Norman Wall, coin purse; Sandra Cramer. favors, and Aharon Belts, tile plaques. The four electricity exhibits are: lamps by Rose Ann Bilderback, Ann Smith, Harry Mazelin, and Lowell Michaels. All these entries will be on disi play at the Indiana state fair from August 30 to September 7. family on their iarm near Oakland City. , Bruner died in an Oakland City hospital after describing the man he said shot him when Bruner ordered a trespasser not to hunt squirrels on the farm. Police found Tooley hiding in a field nearby, several hours after the shooting. If You Have Anything To Sell Try A Democrat ./ant Ad —lt Pays.

I Ji J I '•>* 11 ♦ Bi -I* * MRS. RANK CHULA, Uind since birth of her son Joseph (left) 11 years ago, is shown with him and daughter Mary Ahn shortly after her sight miraculously returned in Scranton, Pa. Joseph was in a hospital, ill, and Mrs. Cerra went Immediately to get a look at her son. AU she could say through her tears was, “He’s handsome, just handsome." She credita recovery to “prayer and faith.” (InUrnat ionol Soundplioto)

23 Persons Killed In Singapore Blast Singapore, Aug. 20.—-(UP) —At least 23 persona were killed and 20 others injured today when a tanker, loaded with 10,000 tons oJ gasoline and diesel oil, exploded and burned at a dock. Polke said the blasts rocked Shell island installations three miles south of Singapore. The

SALE CALENDAR AUG. 22 —Alton Shoemaker, Claypool. Ind. Business Building. Fixtures. Known as “SHOBMAKER’S CAFE." Midwest Realty Auction Co., J. F. Samnann, Auct. AUG. 2\\ —Claude Buchanan, 5 miles south of Wilshire, Ohio. 60 head of Hampshire hogs. 7:20 p. m. Aucts.: Paul -Good. Van Wert; Vaughn Lipp. Ossian; Claude Tipton. Troy, Ohio. SBPT. |3—1:00 P. M. C. L. VINING. Admn J. F. Becher. 2H miles northeast of Neptune, Ohio; 2% miles east and miles , 1 ! south of Mendon. Ohio; 9 miles northwest of St. Marys on . . Center A Union township lines; 240 acres in 4i tracts. Roy & Ned Johnson. Aucts. SEPT. 17—1:00 P. M. HERMAN KIPFER, 5 miles east of Bluffton on road 124, then 3t4 miles south on Adams and Wells counties line; 7 miles west of Coppess Corner on road 27 then 3H miles south. 29 registered Hoisteina. Roy & Ned John--f6r COMPLETE protection* BURKE INSURANCE SERVICE Phane »-X»O ’ S 512 N. Third St. Decatur, Ind.

MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1951

tanker was identified as the Anglo-Saxon Oil Co.'s dromus. Many crewmen went over the side of the blazing tanker and it was feared some of them drowned. Others were trapped in the cabin of the ship, which was scheduled to sail for the Philippines today. If You Have Anything To Sell Try A Democrat Want Ad —lt Pays. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur