Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 35, Decatur, Adams County, 11 February 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Fines Are Assessed On Traffic Charges Three Men Are Fined In Justice Court William D. Armstrong, Is, Geneva route 2. paid a fl afl d coats assessment in J.P. court Sunday morning following his arrest by city police on a reckless driving charge. James A. Hackman, 18, ftecartur paid a fine of $lO and costs following his arrest o.n a charge of reckless driving. Police arrested Hackman early Sunday morning. The police record shows that dur-

See The Famous Westinghouse.. LAUNDRY TWINS ' . ; ' 4 I i I ■ ' . ■ i " : . Demonstrated At „ | FMlIf ft Miss Marjorie Zinimerman K L LIIK u Hom. l aundry Counselor from (he • I W I W W estinghouse Electric Co. ! ! T| \ Tj J Thursday, Febiwj I f til, m». mimp. m. BRING YOUR DUTY CLOTHES and COME! v / i“S wwu _ . // // // Hl woio / // // / Zeflßwlßl I / w // // / I l I ) 1 u. // // / // I — . IZT 4 zr— — . II ■ 111 -■ ■■ ■ . j r \ Weotioghou.e >, f Westinghouse LAUNDROMAT \CLOTWES DRYER THS LAUNDROMAT THi CLOTHES DRYER WEIGHS YOUR CLOTHES oh its exclusive Weigh-to-Sate Door. You Automatically takes over the complete job of clothes drying, sure of waging the right amount of clothes in just th4 amount a*tX* i* , ... , .... I' Os #ater with the amount of soap. EXCLUSIVE DRY-PIAL takes the time-guessing out of clothes drying . . . gives you accurate control over how clothes will come out. . . bone-dry. for SAVES SOAP AND HOT WATER —Whfeh you set the Laundromat’s storage or just the right dampness for ironing ... as you prefer. Water Saver Dial to correspond to the weight of the load you Thßtring— 8 „.u u iu i- » P . . Ua* - small, medium, regular, vou save tallonarf hot water and wgp, too! SAVES YOU all the backbreaking work of bne-drying . . . hfhng, bending, stooping, stretching. | . . - a^''Ll he v? a i’’‘!L IBCI T ed Wash ™ R V'** • MG» YOU from all weather worries .. . let. you dry clothes whenever ■ of the laundromat gently and thoroughly washes each piece witlwut your vm i Wart t T dav ar nidht' . / i' hands touching umter. And, when the clothes are washed clean, lAey stay * ’ clean because dirty wash and rinse waters ate drained afwry from the —i » a- ts dothes-rtoier through them! BUY With CIH f¥£ Rfc tfl© FUTURE $ Z99.95 5218.55 Easy Terms Easy Terme FREE |Z| E4MKC FRE£ DOOR PRIZE rVLutni A3 refreshments REMEMBER THE BATE! THURSDAY, FEBRUARY M - 9:30 a.n. & ZdM p.m.

tag 1$81; REaOkman r&elvMtf one warning on • speeding dhar|h?; was arrested and. convicted four tlzftee on traffic cherge* «&d Was ibvotved in three accidents;: : 1 Homer Ratliff, 37, ffort Wayne, I will face a speeding charge Ln J.P. court at-6:30? tonight. He was charged by cify pblice with speedlog early Monday morning Darwin P. Tetters.- it, Fort Recovery. O. paid a fitte of $1 and costa on a charge of passing at an intersection, following an ante nriehap involving ’Tbetert’ vehicle and one driven by Jacß'EttgilHre Nverett. DS&atur route 1, at Thirteenth and Monroe streets Sunday. There were po personal injuries and 1 damage to tlte two automobiles was estimated at $125.

Report Agreeflienf In Utility Strike ■■ - .. ■: ■ U. iTentative Agreement In Anderson Strike ■ \ ■ i ■ Anderson, Ind.. Feb. 11-Mup)— Ctty officials reeelied tentative agreement vHfh sfrtktag mnuictpal atfttty Workers today io end a sixday dispute Which threatened the city’s water, electrfclify and heating facilities. I Terms of the agreement were not announced. Some CIO utility Workers were to decide by noon if they will ratify if. But after lengthy conferences

DRCATDB DAILY PHOOUT, aWATOB. INDIANA

brofce ay at 2 a.m. tod#, uiddi mdn agreed to turn uji dttam preffr surd immediately and gite ad# ovate heafrio some WO dowfttoWg businesses and apartments heated from the city steam generator. The downtown buildings; include ing ctfy hall and the .Madison County courthouse, were chilled half of last week because es insufficient steam. Watbj* add electrical service was cut off momentarily whei the strike Was called Wednesday. City councilman Charles Hardy fold condittong favort aLle for a sJtflenient." The agreement came alter mayor NOland Wright threatened to hire new workers to take Over the jobs of 18 strike-leaders unless a settlement was reefehed. Fte said “a lot” ■■„ M fi ~ , „ - J ~..

of eltlMM urged that actfbu. ’ The dispute flardd whtd union meh charged Wri#rt fired two aepa mfiiruu • w-urm political change of administration, fright said they were dispilseed s (or "inefficiency” and would not be retired “under any clrcum- ■ stances.” :/ When the strike threat/ was id I rted otrt, the city switched to standby- bower from Indiana-Mfehlgah Electric Co., and non-striking worker* maTnfained normal water *erVJc4‘ atfier faucets sputtered tor led* ' jftan a minute. .. — ; , 1 The council on foods and nutrition of the American Medichl Asofficially stated that the ' Use of aluminum cooking utensils not injuTiotte so hetfth. i.J 4 iIMIM ■

fcydiiaftisf Hdd On Draft Violation »Took Payment For Classification Chicago, Feb. 12.—(UP’>— FBI ggdnts hid in an apartment robm and Watched a selective service psychiatrist deedpt payment for a ,phony 4-F classification from a yotrng draft induct de. Federal agents yesterday arrested Dt. Charles Herband, 43, an alien from Israel, for violations of the selective servicb act after they saw the psychlatrfik accept SSO for Henry Friedman, 26. Herband was to be arraigned before U.», commissioner C. S. Betob ley Pike 1 today. Harry T. O’Connor, FM agentinr charge in Chicago, said Frtedman notiffed arrthoritfee after he allegedly paid Herband S6OO for a false diagnosis, ft stated that Friedman was a “sexual deviate.” Thisi automatically classifies the ind,uetee 4-F thereby exempting him from service. V - Frfedman, Who is married, told agents that Herband Cffdred (to help Mm escape; the draft when he appeared for a physical examination at the Chicago induction center Dec. 17. Herband tokj Friedman that there was nothing wrong with him but that he would get a 4-F classification with a certification that he was a “sexual deviate,” the youth sa|d. Friedman said H 1 er band “coached” him on how to act like a sexual deviate in the event of a checkback. Friedman said Heroand took S6OO, which Friedman had to bofX®w, for false diagnosis, and .tben asked for SSO more after the 4-F rating was issued. A rendezvous was set for the last payment and Friedman called authorities tb Witness the transaction. The FBI said that Herband, who came to this country from Palestine last March, claimed the S6OO Went to a doctor “friend" of his who preiraredl a letter certifying that the yotnh was a psycho-neurotic. Herband contended if whs this letter Which led to the 4-F classification and that the SSO he took yesterday was for his own “expenses" in making arrangements. CFConnor said that the FBI was pot aMe so find the other doctor hnd that Friedman's pre-lnduction physical record shows an entry of Htrband's attending that the youth Was a “«Fxual deviate.** I ‘ O’Connbr said no charges were against Friedman. i Herband. who has a wife and child, worked five days a week for $25 a day at the induction station. A native of Austria, he lives at Dyer. Ind., near Chicago. The FBI said he studied in Be> gloni and served an internship there in 1937. Later he served in i the British fmy and rose to the rank of major before going to Palestine. 16-YEAROLD I Coati*wed From FRgV OWe» body into bedroom” Schulz then took tbe keys to the family catr and caned a trfend. Ralph Tred(\ also T 6. Trede later told police Schulz said that he had found at bote from W father skying he could the car. Trede shid Schulz picked him up and together fhey Went to k basketball game art Pulaski high school. they we«t to a drivC-irr Movie. At no time. Trede told police, did Schtilz appear excited or nervous/ • Schulz dropped Trede about 1 a.m. yesterday and then apparently began his long drive south. Altljougii auroras, or “northern •H|fets,” smnetimes give the illusion »6f touching the ground, none has been measured at a height of less then 35 mites above the earth’s surface. , — —-—! y ■■; ~“ It 'WwBl ’ sH ■ ■■ i ONCt fHf BOYf get ti good look art j the Berzin sisters, DPs shown ar- . riving, in New York on the 11. 8. Navy transport Gener«fl lilulr, theft new life Win be iiaippy. Zlggi, 21 (Im), win go with her family to Detroit send study ddntfstry. Kkrrhen, 2S, has M scholarship in ten- , grteges at Sa»* Marcos, Tex., ICachers college. ( ffiterndttofidlj

\' I — I •’/ ’ - x 'rvjßE- < dIT si [Jr "'' ww ’ ■ 1 w 1 I ■ 7 t3B|t ■■UK*, I THE SCENE ABOVE illustrates what has hSppenid during tee post four decades in the Valentine line—mothers getting more Valentines than sweethearts, according to Jeanette Lee of Hallmark; More than 30 per cent of today’s Valentines are designed tot mothers, fathers and [other relatives. Only compared to 50 per cent 40 years ago. ftetenMtientf/

Pressure On Chicago Police Department Scorch Desperately For Mart's Murderer Chicago, Feb. 11 — etmscious politkianH—goaded by public cries for action —today put the prefigure on Chicago’s harried police department, searching desperately bur unsuccesgfully for the ’ kilreCs Os a 56-ycar-old politician. The clamor io find and punish the assassins of Republican Charles Gfotr was almost unprecedented and i,the “heat was put on — right dowp the line.” ■ |A Thtere were these developments: I*-A prectnc( captain in the 31st ward where Gross had been acting committeeman said his life had been threatened. It was the third death fhreat since Grosii was cut down ill front of a west side church last Wednesday night. 2— -Democrats joined the Repute licaons in a move, to sweep the hoodlum influences out of the west side wards, although the Democratic moVe was undertaken with less enthusiasm, than the OOP effort. 3— Five aidermen said they would demand that a "top grade private investigator”, be retained to into the Chicago police department and all aspects of the crime situation f “ ’ I 4—A public mass meeting, sponsored by the Chicago association of commerce anti industry and the Chicago crime commission, was sldted for tomorrow afternoon in the LaSalle hotel. '■— < 6hStego p<frtee, ■ the primary objjeet of alt this pressure, rounded up a number of persons—mostly previous offenders — questioned them, asked thdm to take lie de--1 tector tests then announced that thoke iwho had were "cleared.” were refOmsdtf on technical charges of disorderly conduct. It <tfti all routine procCedtrre in a gaMg-sfyle slaying, and perhaps the moss hdat was felt on the qndcrworld level'. William E. Block, an ex-convict and handbook Operator who was indicted for the 1946 murder of . ■ 1 ■ [i ' 1 - J

j r SON UCIS n make happy by pfcvidmK iteaithful heat, ay Wilharoson natron’s oldest ei* of Mating >r FREE INt terms. <S ts • Plumbing south zna Street ’ Attention:I AM OPENING A NEW SIGN SHOP hr Deeatur. >am planning to <M sigh paffftirtg full time, 10 give prompt and courteous service. tJnfi! I get a room for my shop. I wifi be doing Sign Painting ih my home—Ro9 SttHJebaker street. My Sign .Shop wffl be known as *Sighs by Joe *Dunit*. M I have keen in the Sigh fainting business for the past 10 years in Dunkirk and Kokomo, before coming to Decatur. ! Our Motto! No Sign is done till Joe “Dtnit.” FLOYD ‘Moe” GRAY Studeb? v rr Street

Z' . , -MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1952 t

racing news czar Jamear M. Rggen, was one of; those who refused to take a He detector test. lie at first agreed to take the test in thb Oros< staying, bbt then he cocked his head and 1 reconsidered. \ “No," he said, “no, I don’t think I’ll take it. In 1947 when I took a He test for the Ragen killing the Uft showed I was guilty—and f , ! I wasn't. This time I’m going to 1 prove I’m uot guilty the hard * way.” f. k , ' 'L ? ’ KING GEORGE ECMMtRwaXI Frew F—» Om> 1 highland dress, including a kilt of * the Royal Stuart tartan. First to emerge from the gate Os the: royal estatp id the 75-yard procession Were fhtee police offi- ■ cers,, [followed by a platoon o* 11 Grenadier guards ih tall bearskin « hats, great ceats and dark blue 1 trouser* with Red stripes doWn * the seem; [ Behind the coffin walked the ’ duke of Edinburgh, husband' of Queen Elizabeth 11, and the (iiike ■ of Gio jeester, the king’s younger brother. They were bareheaded and in mourning cOlthes. Edinburgh looked drawn and white us he walked with bowed head. Gloucester inarched with head erect, looking straight ahead. ' I Two; cars followed. In the first * rode the new queen, heir mother and Princess Margaret, all heavHy veiled, i In tbe second!' were their ladles in wafting. Carburetor Tod IKefl > Maktf ttotorM Toe Pew T ' 1 ’ J-<■■ Car owners who are wasting money and not getting proper gas mileage! due to over-rich mixtures will be! pleased to Team of a Wisconsin inventor who has developed a very clever unit that helps save gasoline by "Vacu-matmg.” It is automatic and operates on the supercharge principle. Easily installed in a few minutes. FJts alt edrs, trucks and tractors. The manufacturers, the Vacu-matic Carburetor Co., 7617-700 W. State | 3t, Wauwatosa, Wis., are offering a Vacu-matic to anyone who will install in on his car and help introduce’ -it to others. They will gladly slend full free particulars if you them Or send your name and address on a post card today. n- . / .. J.. . — : ’