Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 138, Decatur, Adams County, 11 June 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
■FT ; i‘ I- JH? i I ~1 I th 'BL C M K' fl I 8~~ A X\ '—B O *l I -.fedßHHn£i B M rJIHV’ MF ■ av b -> B| u *■■ ’’ '■' ' I ■ , 1' 808 CONSIDINE, International Newsservice star reporter and writer is presented in Chicago the Lasker Medical Journalism Award silver statuette for outstanding newspaper Reporting on medical research and * public health during 1951. Brig. Gen. James S. Simmons (left), Dead of Harvard University School of Public Health makes- the presentation. ,
Argentina, Chile Shaken By Quake BUENOS AIRES, UP — A violent earthquake shook a wide area of Western Argentina and Chile Tuesday night. I \ It was felt as far east a‘s Buenos Aires and La Plata. f
Public Auction , ■ f ! J ■ : Real Estate Personal Property GENEVA, INDIANA 1 Saturday, June 14-1 P.M., DST LOCATION: 1 Block South of Schools then West on Shackley Street to lasfi house on right side. ! j REAL ESTATE TO SELL AT 3 P. M? By virtue of an order of the Adams Circuit Court Miriam R. Brpwn,; Administratrix of the Gee R. G'reene estate, will offer for sale, subject to the approval of said court, thti following described Real Estate: The undivided one-third (1-3) interest in Lbt Number Three Hundred Ninety Seven (397) in the frown, of Geneva, Adams Indiana. • ? - j : • At the saine time the heirs of Edith M. Greene will sell at public auction the foUownig described rVal estate: The undivided two-thirds (2-3) interest in Lot Number Three Hun-i dred Ninety Seven -(397) in the tdwn of Ueneva, Adams County, Ind. So that the entire Fee Simple interest in this, property will be sold. This is a 7 room modern home except furnace. There are 3 large; bedrooms and full bath bn second Mor, living room, dining room, kltchen/one bedroom and bath on firs| floor. Built in cupboards in thej kitchen, automatic hot water The bedrooiris are all nice size and each has clothes closet. It'is located Jin a nice 66 x 132 lot, good lawn, plenty of shades 16 x 22 Garage, 14 x 16 Chicken house;! 6 x 8 Shed. . f ■ - cl This would make an ideal apartment, duplex cr a nice individualhome. Inspection can be made at anytime by contacting either Mr.j Darrel Brown, located 4th house souih of Studebakßf Garage on No. 27 in Geneva, Phone 112 J or the Auctioneers. TERMS ON REAL ESTATE—I-3 Caih on day of Side, balance upon delivery of clear Merchantable Abstract of Title. ' POSSESSION-Vlmmediately, '1 ■ ■ -■ 'll r' ' PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE ESTATE OF EDITH M. GREENE Living room suite; Radio; Radio Book rack; 2 Smokes.tands; Flbwer vase; 2 End tables; 3 Hall trges; Table and floor lamps; 2 Rugs' and pads; Electric sweeper; 2 Bed£ and springs 2 Chest drawers; Dressing table; 2 Dressers; Hope chUst; Spinet rocker; Sewing stand; 2 Dining room chairs; Alarm block| 2 Heating stoves; Mirrbrs; Love seat; 6 Kitchen chairs and table; hamper; Irioning board; Speed Queen Washer; Kitchen cuifboard; Tubs; Boilers Dish pans; Medicine cabinet; Wardrobe; Handl painted china dished; Commode; Writing and filing cabinet; Dining |room table and pad;; Linens; pil-l lows, blankets, comforters; utensils and many other miscellaneous articles. | TERMS ON PERSONAL PROPERTSY-Cash. I V- •’ I MIRIAM R. BROWN, Admx. Gee R. Greene DARREL S. BFtOWN, Admr. Edith M. Greene I /. , si I ■ 11 ;\ Heirs of Edith .M. Greene—Owners Custer & sfnith. Attorneys G. G. Strickler and D. is. Blair —Auctioneers C, W. Kent—Sales Mgr. . r Mr, & Mrs. Kenneth Van Emriion —Cperks. Sale Conducted by The Kent Realty & Auction Co. Decatur, Indiana Phone 3-3390 i Not responsible for accidents. / 6 11
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4 -r r. I Police repotted at least one person killed. There were ho immediate reports oh property damage. t The epicenter was placed between the Western Argentine towns of Media Agua and Carpinteria, about 30 miles south of San Jhan city whptb an Estimated 10,OpQ persons died in a 1944 earthquake. I,'- i
Liss Blood Donors Here Last Friday Complete List Of' Donors Announced The Decatur chapter of the American Red Cross has released the list of persons who donated dne pint of blood each to the Fort Wayne blobdmohile unit here last Friday.; Besides private citizens showing up, in liberal nu mbers, also represented are the Central Soya Co.; Bag Service, Inc.; General Electric Co.; Schafer Co.; First State Bank of Decatur; Krick-Tyndall Co.; and the Dunbar Mfg. Co. of Berne. Carl Brown. Mrs. Robert Gay, Rev. Robert H. Hammond, Mrs. Robert Bonekemper, Donald Gage, Mrs. Eva Braun, Mrs. Gladys Keller, James Hunter, Clarence Lengerich, Richard Des Jetin. Richard Mansfield, Earl Searlarough, Mrs. Donald DeArmond, Rosalia Miller, -Donald Stebing, Rachel Schwartz, Rev. Karl Tauber, Albert M. Stahly, Gordon Liechty, Jack Heller, S. W. McMillen, Milton L. Hoffman, Charles Ripley,, Howard Neuenschwander, Mrs. Betty Schacklby.t George Tricker, Harold Mumma, Mrs. Joseph Thompason. Deryll Sprunger, Howard Culp, Wayne Stucky, Mrs. Harold Zeigler,l Donald Corey, Chalmer > Stevens, Irene Thieme;- Lois Barkley, Eleanor Frauhiger; Mfs. Ray Myers, Mrs. Alfred Krummen, Eleanor Goeltz, Frances Faurote, Mrs. Wesley Lehman, Jack Schreibman, Harold Thieme, Mrs. Richard Bogner, Earl Stucky, Mrs. Ann Jones, Gerhardt Schultz. Forrest Hawkins, John Ebersole, Wilson Mann, William Lose, Jr. , \ Mrs. Carl Brown,. Donald Mansfield. Maurice Teeple, Mrs. Watson Maddox, James Mufltaugh, Henry Gilliom, Thomas Lambert, Donald Heiman, Mrs. Millatd Aschliman, W’illiam Mansfield, Everett Rydall, Norbert Lose, David A. Macklin, Barbara Osterman, Harold P. Engle, Max Sprunger, , Luther Yager, Mrs. Mryron Robert Railing, Mrs. S. W. McMillen, Barbara Kelly, Dr. H. R. Frey, Phil TerVeer, Robert Zwick, Richard Mies, Mrs. Frances Magley, Mrs. Raymond Walters. Earl Shoaf. Rev. Ord Gehman, Howard Baumgartner, John Ptirvis, ;[ Donald Cochran, Lester • Strahm, Alice Geimer, James Nussbaum, Edward Vian, Arthur BCeler, Alfred Krummen, John, Hdlterman, Emerson Lehman, Mrs. Gerftld Smith. Mrs. Norma Rowland, Mrs. Donald Hess, Mrs. Ralph Smith, Mrs. Ralph Grotle, Mrs. Earl Stucky, Melvin Luhman, Lawrence Morand, Rickard Walters, Delbert Haviland, Mrs. Frances Reidenbach, Mrs. Ethel Edwards, i, Earl Fuhrman, Mrs. Frances Andrews, Claude Deitsch, Charles Cook, Chester Beitler, Alton Bieberstein, Reinhold Sauer, Paul Hakes, Doris Garboden, EdWinna Stucky, Mrs. David C. Wynn, Mrs. Beulah Fryback, George Litchfield, Perry Werst, Harold Swygart, Roy Gilliom, Russel LeFeyer, Ray Schott, Eloise Noll, JeronU Keller, David C. Wynn, Kenneth Jackson. HHW B I' . J I„ - i, J |jg; •. i % WORLD'S FIRST operational delta type plane to go into mas* production, a Hawker Siddeley GA.S, heads straight up in test over England. Note the elevated tail section. The plane is in mass production after months of evaluation by the RAF. It's a supersonic jet fighter designed to destroy enemy atom bombers at very high altitudes, , (International}
DEOATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
— --—rr- - - ■ « fll I- ’ •'•**'*£ J WPRF Sk ; -a- • . J 1 f V*. sos IRtl t ' - H t OR, < J V'-t t" Hr H •it ( -4 f Vr Jl ibb-- IHH JI La I S Ik JBL* LABOR AND MANAGEMENT NEGOTIATORS tn the steel strike crisis confer at the White House in Washing- « ton. In the group (L to r.) are: John Stephens, UH. Steel Corp.; Charles White, Republic Steel Corp.; | David J. McDonald, secretary-treasurer, CIO and United Steelworkers Union, and Philip Murray, CIO- | Steelworkers president. Standing la Dr. John R. Steelman, acting Director of Defense Mobilization. Mean- 1 while, Sen. Wayne Morse (R-Ore.) predicted the strike, which has made more than 100,000 idle in allied | industries in audition to the 650,000 steel workers, “will be settled in the next few days.” (International)
Blasts At Medical J Association Moves | a U!ILj High-Powered icity Campaign CHICAGO, (UP) — The chairman of Preadient Truman’s com+ mission on national health said he was “sick” of the American Medical Association's high-powered publicity campaigns as the AMA house of delegates mist Wednesday, possibly to reconsider a resolution attacking the commission. Dr, Paul B. Magnuson lashed out at the AMA public relations program and announced, “I for one am sick of it.” He told the national association of science writers ■ the average American doctor doesn't need a ‘,‘|loo,ooo-a-year public relations firm to keep the American people from biting him in the leg.” ‘ ’ Magnuson and the presidential commission he heads are expected to issue a report of their findings and recommendations sometime next fall or winter. A resolution introduced at the. current sessions of the AMA’s 101 at annual convention strongly denounced the commission and called Magnuson “an unwitting captive of the forces of Socialism/’ Speaking at a banquet meeting of the science i writers group, Magnuson said the commission was prejudiced “before it has a chance to function.” , i — ■■ !■ Declares Red Party ; More Democratic ■ i Jailed Red Editor Gives Testimony WASHINGTON, UP — John Gates, jailed editor of the Daily' Worker, said Wednesday the Communist party in the United States is “a million times more democratic" than the Democrats or Republicans. ? “We’re not just a talking shop,” Gates said. “The party is serious about the improvement of tiie American people.” Gates’ statement brought objections from government attorneys at a hearing before the subversive, activities control board. But board chairman Peter Campbell Browjn allowed it to be included in the record of Gates’ answer about the functions of the party in this country. The board is hearing the Communists’ defense of the government’s charge that it is Mosowcontrolled and must register with the justice department. It was Gates’ third day J>efore the board as the party’s first witness, He was subpenaed to appear from his cell in a federal prison where tie is serving a five year term fi>r teaching and advocating violent, overthrow of the government. i y In reply to another question from former Rep. Vito Marcantonio ALPN, Y., counsel for the Communists, Gates said that Southern members of the party must meet in private homes and “run the risk of being lynched.” x > ! - j \\ ; ''l - - ' Noted Lady Writer - Is Taken By Death NEW YORK, UP — Katherine Brush, 49, novelist and short, story writer, died Tuesday in St. Luke’s hospital. She had been ill for sev*? eral months. Mrs. Brush, who began her reer as a reporter for the Boston Traveler, had been a writer; of note since 1920. Probably her most famous book was “Young Man of Manhattan,” published in 1930. Mrs. Brush had nearly completed a novel when she became ill. It would have been her first notel since “This Man and This Woman,” published in 1944.
Injured Youngster Reported Improved f Danny Arnold, a six-year-old boy injured yesterday when he was h,i£ by a truck while riding his tricycle, was reported to be “much improved” by the hospital today. Mrs. Charles Marks Dies Last Evening i. r j Funeral Services 'Thursday Afternoon '•|dri. Charles V. Marks, 81. a native of Hartford township, died at;[7:3o o’clock Tuesday evening at heir home in Berne. She had been » semi-invalid six years and bedfast two weeks. 1 A' lifelong resident of Adams county, M rs. Marks was a member of,{the First Mennonite church. Surviving are her husband, a son, Charles G. Marks of Wabash, O.; ami a daughter, Mrs. Beulah Engle of near Monroe. Funeral, services will be held at 2 Thursday at the Yager fu teral home in Berne, the Rev. O. A. Krehbiel officiating. Burial will be in the MRE cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 o’clock this evening uptil time of the services.
FIELD DEHOISTILITIOI FRIDAY, JUNE 13th I ' ■ ■ ' J' I 1:OOP.M. - at s \:d■ . . ■ ■ I Marvin Stoutenberry Bellmont Farm i »/ 4 Mile East on U. S. 224 and Mile North Come Out and See the ■ New LONG “60” SS? BALER ——————— ' .. ' 1 ■■ I ' ' ' < • j'j . ' ' ' ■ ■ ; i'' i . ■ I I ■ ’■ ■ . . • ■ Bales Up to 9 Bales Per Minute—l 2 Tons Per Hour The new LONG “60” automatic pick-up hay baler has 25% fewer parts than any other popular model automatic pick-up hay baler on the market. This means . i fewer parts to get out of adjustment ... and fewer parts to wear out or cause y trouble. You will have less down time and save real money on upkeep. Come Out Friday And See The Many Outstanding Features. IIIKIIII TWIW & IllPffllffl ffl. ( ' - ■ . \ ' 'I /\ ■■ : ,‘z • - j Nuttman Avenue | \ - / . Phone 3-2509 \ a \ ' ' ■ , ■ ’ , ~ ’ I • • .
Order Court Martial For Army Sergeant Clark's Handling Os Incident Criticized FORT ORD, Calif. UP — A 24-year-old army sergeant said Wednesday he was “astonished” the army has ordered hltn to face a court martial trial for criticizing Gen. Mark Clark’s handling of the Koje prisoner-of-war camp incident. The court martial was ordered for Sgt. Colonel Dean Chase, Salt Lake City, who said he “could not refrain” from giving Clayk a “personal admonition” in a letter written May 16. Clark turned the letter over to 6th army headquarters in San Francisco with the notation the 6th army could take “any action you consider appropriate.” In his letter, Chase said Clark had committed, a “repugnant and disgraceful” act in repudiating the agreement under which Communist prosoners of war on Koje released Col. Francis T. Dodd, former Koje camp commander. “Koje is a name whose infamy will now echo through the pages of history in company with Dachau. Nordhausen, Buchenwald, et al,” Chase wrote. \ . _ . \ •
Doubts Reports Os i 'Phantom Gunman' Chief Os Illinois Police Skeptical SPRINGFIELD, 111. UP — The chief of the Illinois state police, who is directing a state-wide hunt for \a /‘phantom gunman,” admits there may not even be such a madman. I , But chief Tomas J. O'Donnell said his highway patrolmen haven't relaxed their search for the gunman who has become the terror of route 66 by shooting at Illinois motorists. At least 22 persons have reported attacks, and three motorists have been wounded. Three of the victims said they were shot at in nearby Sullivan, Ind. “All we have is a maze of vague and conflicting information that does not add up Ito the conclusion
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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1952
that one gunman is causing all these reports.” O’Donnell said. “We should like to have a case where no one is hurt but where the motorist can say to us, ‘There is no mistake, gentlemen, I saw a, gun,’” said the harried police of" ficiai. ‘ \ \ Not all policemen agree with Q'Donnell. The latest phantom report came from a patrolman in Marengo. Ill.; who said he was shot at while driving in a squad car. If the gunman is one person and not a group of trigger-happy pranksters, he is a clever and elusive criminal. O’Donnell said. The gunman has slipped through roadblocks, evaded airplane searches and ranged all over the state —and evidently into Indiana. “I believe that nearly all of these incidents were the results of stones bitting cars, and that very likely fire crackers or backfiring motors played a part,’’ said O’Donnell. Trade in a Good Town —Decatur!
