Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 145, Decatur, Adams County, 19 June 1952 — Page 10

Turtles Help Out THREE RIVERS, Mich- UP-' — A variation of the '‘Tortoise and the Hare" theme Was revived here. The Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Lions Club sponsored a turtle derby to raise money to help pay for an ambulance, for the fire department. Not Mad, Just Hungry ’ MUSKEGON, Mich. UP — Police officer Marshall Robbins an-

At Kaye’s SET MORE COMFORT and WEAR at MINIMUM COST! WEAR WOLVERINE SHELL HORSEHIDE WORK SHOES wKI SEE THAT SHELL! Wolverines have it in Soles and Uppers. V A A ’8.95 /11-95 WOLVERINES are your Very Best Buy because they cost less by the hionth or mile of wear on any work shoe job and give comfort besides. Try on a pair! KAYE’S SHOE STORE X-RAY FITTED 154 N. 2nd

- We Will Close .■i ■ > , v ' Friday, June 20th at .12:00 Noon I i I J ! oX' ■ - X .-i I . -j— To Attend-The Funeral Of] ; ’ Mrs. George Stultz ‘ p •' Lx ~ r £'■ ;I ' I Ikl \T v rvMdlVJlr PHONE 3-SO3O ?IS>B S. 2nd St. / / . . .VAAAAZAVAVv), . - r 1 I - 1 --rl^ n( COROH * DO i ! iwQii (Mai < J I BiMH. LML - 95 i " i R | Only $17.95 Down | ) ‘ •Giant 52.9 lb. < I i ■ Freezer Chest | <2 Dor-Racks; | " Butter Cabinet e I - T ’ r I* IT I I •Zonemaster g I |l Cold Control \ I I - ' 2^ggSSS^ j • Completely ■ | Mfr- _ BirtMfcaii '■ Automatic ' i ■MHnHHnHHMM 9 “'♦-2009 ' T 1 ’S; \’> . ."; < ' "j .. do'*” e aY 7OR- I Richly styled —with every deluke, g | ■ y®«» *** er ®»» 1 | wanted feature! "Custom 95" de- 9 ' 1 ON* 0 ? !'*«••»’ p ' o "j l frosts every night in a matter of | I ■ -nwW po * o y ’• ' ,uY 'j v ■■ minutes—no chance, for frozen foods . | I to thaw! 171/3 sq. ft. shelf space. I / > BETTER BUYS at Grcrm£€e4. J im ~~ ~~ ~ ~ ~K - - >

B —-THOM AL U QUALITY VENETIAN BLINDS jM I Custom Built to. Fit Your Windows gj Pg P|pßl| 3-DAY delivery B| uit h < 10l h tape * Hexa I urn Slats Flexible Aluminum * Self-Leveling Cords S* ats B<b * Easy to Remove Slats S I with Plastic Tape * Choice of Colors M NIBL IC K & Company S • ' ■ i ~ ' ' ■ ' ■ '- 1 : ,

swerrid an uneerit call to “come catch a niad dbg . . I. hl?’s frothing at the mquth.’ 1 ! Robbins caught the dog but what looked like! froth was only; breakfast sereal around the dog’s! inodth. v "* iW#’' yyi - ..^.....—4^PHILIP MURRAY, CIO and United Steelworkers president; addresses the executive! board and wagepolicy committee of the union in Pittsburgh. Murray declared some steel spokesmen were “lying?’ when they implied that the union shop was the only point of disagreement in the steel strike crisis. He declared,! there had been no agreement on any economic issue.'

Jg io * fIL -1 r I ■* O|tak a ? i jU 88 y * g/jjk w w ” A I > 11 O' Ji Wt W'' *+ -*** 1 «■ v 1 ; I- / 1 ■ fir PERU'S ENTRY in tha “Miss Uni< verse" beauty contest at Long Beach, Cal., June 23-30, is Ada . Gabriela Bueno, 18, shown on a Linia beach. She’s a freshman at \U. of San Marcos, oldest in west, em hemisphere. f International J It jyou have to sell or roonls for rent, try a Democrat i Want Ad. It brings results. NOTICE TO NON-RFSIOFNTS Term Time In the 'Adams Circuit Court! April Term, 1952 I Cause No. 19799 THE: STATE OF INDIANA.ISS. ADAMS COI’NTY ) Mark M. Moran ) i Vs ) Patrick. Moran, et al ) It [appearing from affidavit, filed in t|ie above 'entitled cause, that: Benjamin Fosty, Elsie M. Fosty, Frederick Fosty, Regina jC- Fosty, v Dani|el Joseph Moran. Marcella Libbing Glenn Libbing, Jeanette Baker. Marl: J. Mary Kenney, Patsy Kenney, Thomas F. Golden, Mary E. Gold ?n, Gertrude Sinnett, John B. Sinnott, Agnes Kenney, Grace Kenney, and Kathleen , Kenney, defendants are non-residents of the State of Indiana, and that cause of notion alleged in '.the complaint in this action is to enforce the partition, of real estate. NOTICE IS THEREFORE HEREBY GIVEN THE SAID Benjamin Hosty,’ Elsie M. Fosty, Frederick Fo ( sty, Regina C. Fosty, Daniel Joseph Moran, Marcella Libbing, Glenn Idbbing, Jeanette Baker,: Mark J. Baker, Mary Kenney, Patsy! Kenney, Thomas F. Golden'; Mary E. 'Golden, Gertrude Sinnett, John B. Sinnett. Agnes Kenney, Grace Kenney and Kathleen Kenney thfjit ithey he arid appear before the Hon. Judge of the Adams Circuit Court, on the 2nd Juridieial Day of tlie riext regular term thereof, to be holdijn at the Court House in the City [of Decatur, commencing on Monday, tlie Ist day of September A.D. l!». r >2, and plead by answer or demtir to said complaint, or the same will be heard arid determined in their absence. WITNESS, my name, and the Sea? of sjid Court hereto affixed, this 3rd day of June, 1952. SEAL EDWARD F. JABERG, Clerk By DONNA ROTH, DeputyJune 3. 1952. Hl BERT R. McCLENAHAN Attorney tor Plaintiff JUNE 5—12 -19 . TEEPLE Moving & Trucking Local and Long Distance ] PHONE 3-2607

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Conditions Appalling I In Red China Plant | Workers' Paradise ' Not So Heavenly HONG KONG, (UP) “Appalling labor and living conditions" in, k factory in Red China—once styled a "workers’ paradise”” by the Cbim; munist rulers—have been disclosed by the official Workers’ Daily -in;, Peiping. . \ 1 !. ■ "The "appalling” conditions wejreU said' to exist in the state-owned ■. gunny bag factory in Manchuria, where the Reds claim-; ed workers were enjoying better: treatment than in capitalistic coiim. tries. The Workers’ Daily said that; nearly all the 1,700 workers in the factory were suffering from brtjn l chitis, stomatitis or tuberculosis ha. a result of unsanitary conditions'! and overwork. About* 170 workers are on sick leave bn the average every day. I The Daily said conditions were so bar that the workers were coinplaining they “have not yet been liberated.” 'X I J' ' Party Unitt’-Blamed * The blame was l pinned on the “indifferent, irresponsible and bureaucratic attitude" of the papty’ Units in charge of tire factory. | H The Daily then went on to give, the following picture of ,the 4i>- : palling labor and living in the factory: J " "The whole place l is filled dust from hemp, hot air. machine’ oil smell, and bad odor of Wet l)enip which make breathing difficult. Not only is there no regular equipment for ventilation but there is not even a small window fpr fresh air to come in and stufjy air to get out. The window glass on the ceiling is covered with?a thick layet of dust which makes lit ' impossible for sunshine to copie through. : "These are the conditions mainly responsible for the fact’ that SO per cent of the sick workers arjfe affected with coughing. Dormitories Filthy "What about the dormitories? They are crowded, bad and dirty. In the dormitories for the workers’ families, fTnir, five or even ] families live in one room, with double-decked bunks, and the result is that some of the families simply see no sunlight. "in a dormitory housing nidre than 200 families, only one toilet is available and women have Uo; tine up for their turn. In the court-,! yard the drains for dirty water (ire: out of condition. j t "The dormitory for single weirk-. ers is provided ! with only woodmenk'ang (platform used as bed and heated by attached oven) and oi?er 10 persons qccupy one room with hree persons sharing one mat ..! "Though bad. crowded and dirty as the dormitories are, not all teleworkers can live there. During August. September and October,! ipal, some workers having no plwe (0 live'went to sleep in the booking office of the railway station and some even had to live under, the arch of bridges, only to be' taken back to the factory by lihe police. \ " - j i One Mess Hall "There is only one mess hall (or the factory. The kitchenLis small and filled with steam, and when it rains, the cook has to woj-k under an umbrella. The food Us poor and after some time majiy complain of gust.ro - intestinal troubles." i , "Besides, the workers originally worked nine, hours a day with day off in a week, but in the fi|st and second quarters of the they have only one day in two weeks due to the nation’s urgent need of production. "Now they have to work on Sundays every other week. As working hours are long and the time for rest js short, and as the conditions for rest are extremely poor, the workers have little chance pt • recuperation."

•Whj 9 IJI JMfeiiwft THE 30-YEAR career in public office of Senator Owen Brewstfei (R), Maine, ends with victory pl Gov. Frederick G. Payne (abovte) In the Maine senatorial payne likes Ike, while Brewster is a Taft \backer. Payne defeated Brewster 68,000 to 65,000 votes jn one of the state’s most' bitterly Contested races. flntemationalj

MSMhF ;WJjf~® “ '>s*- * ' &&&&ss&?' <*'■ *■'<" Jri j jg ;S J . I 1*- ■ ■"'■ / >; A FATHER AND SON who narrowly escaped dead when their auto crashed through a guard rail on the Richardson Bay bridge near Mill Valley, Cal., and plunged into the water 40 feeti below are shown on the auto’s roof during rescue by two shorts-clad Good Samaritans who improvised a raft. Water Under the bridge was low, fortunately for Alfred Lee, 68, and son Robert, 39, who were taken to a hospital. Their condition was described as good. (International Soundphoto) _lL_ i

Owns Rare Auto Relic PAWTUCkET, R. 1. UP — PDliip Rattie believes he owns the only existing Cameron automobile. The 1 car, the 13th of some 1,800 built’here between 1902 and 1906,

Klenk’s Special - Os A Lifetime; K -oHIPSIMk'W-1 •-• i I wI ■ /hot r6" B B t 1 17 Sl^r IB I/ f console ry D r\ ifajiML . Wf “A «' C \.-AK •s^s'sk-2^ 1 Ji . k I HURRY! > HURRY!! JI VIRY UM,TiD WlWf • ORDER BY PHONE I vot^c*N BE KLENK’S

U — — originally was bought by Rattie’s with side curtains, a fluted hood with Windscoops the motor aiid flat wooden fenders.

r" i - THIS CRANK < 1 helps save the grain | Hplfi wwwMwßO It’s the ALL-CROP Harvester's Quick-Speed Changer. Just a few turns instantly cuts down or increases cylinder speed while the cylinder is in motion. It’s simple as dialing a radio. Lets you start earlier on damp mornings, keeps you going longer in the evening. You have the right cylinder speed for every change in crop and moisture condition. Just one more reason why an ALL-CROP Harvester is easier to run and does better work. Let Us show you. I AH.rtOP l. „„ Alli,.O»olm»r» tradMorfr. I line in C\ AU.IS-CHfII.MERS) Hour — Every "V SAIfS AND SIAVICf 'J Saturday — NBC \ Delivered on Your Farm ONLY $1250.00 Morrison Farm Store South 131 h St. \ Phone 3-2957 - - - ■

/HJ b;qn < ■ ,\.V ■- .' - THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1952