Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 8 July 1952 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
.FMeS tR jflFjLfl 1 BTFStiML.. Tv if Jr UKU IKpj» '“ . fcX' > i I tor ■ .JTJ ’ f V /< .|u * iw I • R Iv ' ■ 'ft'T I •’ Zj L§- T M'/f ■m.^.... ..:. J. k<- . --a ;. v.. ;•\. n iri'Mtf'rr S ITS A REAL diploma Kathryn Beaumont, 14, Is getting from her teacher, Mrs. Dorothy Mullen in ‘ Hollywood. First graduate of the [ Walter Disney studio branch of the Loe Angelee Public Schools, the British-boro starlet studied at classes held on the set between “shooting schedules." She was the “voice" of “Alice In Wonderland* and speaks for Wendy to the forthcoming “Peter Pan" movie. IM SERVICE Jfjb New Address Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Peterson have received the following address for their son: Max T. Peterson. YN3, UrS.S. Kearsarge C.V. 33," X Div.? C. 1.0., c/o F'.P.O. San Francisco. Calif. 1 Trade in a Good Town —Decatur’.
EIG-TOP OOIW QUEEN (SSZ&P FOR DESSERT X. ; — list Eiji i Geuiit DairyQ«e«» i« / POStTi / ' ! CONES • SUNDAES • MALTS i SNAKES *— / 122 N. 13th St. SEVEN ROOM HOME AT Public Auction F ' ‘ '' 1. i • ; The undersigned Executor of the Estate of Hattie Andrews will by order of the Attains Circuit' Court the following described real estate at'Public Auction, on { . ' Friday, July 18,1952 i • EVENING SALE at 7:00 P. M. EVENING SALE -> ■ . '' - ■ i 1 LyOCATION 515 Nuttman Avenue, Decatur, Indiana —Corner of Sixth J Street and Nuttman Avenue. SEVEN ROOM HOME Two Storyi Seven Room Frame House Bevel Siding Asphalt &)ingle LifeT|ime- Roof—Living Room. Dining Room, Bedroom and Kitchen and Toilet Downstairs —-Three Bedrooms upstairs Fruit Cellar Garage. .'Nice Corner Lot - Nice Lawn. Shade Trees Mid Garden Space. House is in good condition. This is a splendid location. A Fine Residential Area.- Inside Railroads, within .short walking distance of Churches. Schools, Shopping District and Factories. Please cgll. _ Ned’C. Johnson if you wjsfy to inspect; the property. ! i ; TERMS & POSSESSION—SoId free of Jipns or encumbrances. One Third Cash day of sale. Balance C|-sh on delivery of Deed and Merely atitable Abstract. House is un-ocdtipied. Possession may be had imibediately mpon payment of one third of purchase price day of sale Not responsiblp for Statements made by the Auctioneers on day .of sale shall take precedence over statements contained herein. 1 LEO ANDREWS,! Executor ROY S. JOHNSON & SON HUBERT R. McCLENAHAN Auctioneers Attorney for the Estate . Decatur, Indiana 160 No. 2nd St., Decatur. Ind. • ' ' , '• \ 811 17
Pan ® Cake I ' ■ ■ \ ' \ ■ !■ * I • I Every coke has that soft lacey texture that actually melts in your mouth! ■ Large size (13 egg recipe, created by LUKER) \ regular 7 J 111/’ I Baked by'LUKER, America’s Angel Food King! \ I I f Weight one pound. XeeeßMee kJF / DELIVERED-TO-US direct from the oven in the Pan. No Pans can leave store! NO PAN DEPOSIT U. S. Patent 2271921. NO PAN FOR SALE US' GOODIN’S food market 132 N. SECOND ST. PHONE 3-3210
Three Killed During Rioting In Mexico I Protest Election > Os Adolfo Cortines MEXICO CITY, UP — Armed police smashed the defiant 'hard core of a rioting “Communist” mob today that caused at least three deaths in a bloody protest against the election of Adolfq Ruiz Cortines to the presidency; Authorities said 73 others were injured, six critically, in a six-hour pitched battle Monday night betweeri police and followers of defeated presidential candidate Gen. Miguel Henriquez Gqzman. i i [ Saber-wielding police rounded up 395 agitators after breaking up the demonstration shortly after midnight, but 'remained on the alert for new outbreaks of Violence. Henriquez’ Gugmaii said he did not cause the riot but wanted he would lead any movement against the/ government, which supported Ruiz, Cortines and has ruled co for 26 years. . | ' The riot started about p.m. near Alameda Plaza, a favorite tourist. spot in the heart df the capital, when about 2.000 leftists demonstrated for Henriquez G uz " man, who was overwhelmingly defeated by Ruiz Cortines in Sunday’s bloodless balloting. - . ' On the border of Nepali and Tibet stands Mount Everest, the 29.002-foot pinnacle that toU’efs above everything else on e'arthj. lower Hudson the North River without knowing why. The name is a relic of Dutch colonial diines when the Delaware, at the end of New Netherlands, was the' South River, says the National Geographic Society.. ’ ' J.
OVERALL’ VIEW at Chicago’s International Amphitheatre as Chairman Giiy Gabrielson prepared to call the first session of the 1952'Republican National Convention to. order. Delegates milled to the aisles, wallowing in the first air-conditioned National .bondave in history. \
Harriman Bids For Indiana's Support Roosevelt-Truman P Policies Endorsed i INDIANAPOLIS, UP r- Dempicratic presidential candidate W. Averell Harriman completed his bid for Indiana delegate . support today an endorsement of Itoose domestic and foreign policies. He'claimed he is the “only candidate who \stands full-square l on the principles of Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman” and said aj tour of about half the 48’ states convinced °hi\n that is what Amerwant. . Harriman conferred with state " |. ’■ • CIO leaders today before leaving Cfharlefdon. W. V«. t after similar conferences Monday with AFL representatives. Gov. Schricker. national cbinmittepiuafi Pail But ler. and Hoosier delegates to the national convention. Harriman stitd the-question of whtit support lie might obtain in Indiana was. .not discussed witji Schricker. ah avowed'hacker of Illinois Gov. Wlai Stevenson for the nomination,.{He said he will go into the party’s national convention ‘‘with a substantial vote and it
SMaMKf-W ' o'w W'lMWi I". ★ M ? ft ■ i « <f ' • • ■' *-* ’ f v 4*** jf .- x / ■\* iw'-i-L *~TI W- • AVt/v 7 I A FOUR TO FIVE-DAY public battle over contested delegates to the Republican national convention j 3 predicted after legal representatives-of Ohio Senator Robert A. Taft and Gen. Dwight Eisenhower iron out rules for the bearing. At the rul'ei meeting axe (from left) .Sinclair Weeks, former senator from Mass-ichusetts. representing the Eisen- > hower forces; Guy Gabrielson, chai: mart of the GOP national comnp.it- ‘ tfce, and Morton Appel of Washington, representing the Taft forces. Seventh-five delegates '.re disputed. (international Bmf,n(tp!wto!
will increase as balloting continues.” Democrats can win in November he predicted, regardless of who the Republicans I nominate because “the campaign will be based on issues.” j The international question will be m’ost important, he said, upholding President Tnuman’s foreign aid program which he said costs about 10 cents of each tax dollar. “It's the' best investment this generation can make,” he said. “We’re making an investment in well-equipped Allies, if we stick to what w-o’re doing, international tension will be down in two years and we might well be able to reduce taxes.” * \ Harriman indicated he believed Mr. Truman could swing the nomination to any man he favored but hesitated to state he was thai man. But unlikjh other candidates, he said, he. “goes absolutely down the bn what President Truman is battling for” in such matters as civil the tidelands controversy. steel, seizure and the ’TaftHartley la# . At. Hie. end of ah ebhd nearly kt-Ven miles dbwn.’ British sea snrleyors h;ii\e found a new deepest ‘Heep" for all the worlds oceans. Il M.S. Challenger, sounding a vas »nd<iirt cSbyn# <4odth rrf Ofttiffi in the iwestenn Pafj,cic t tqiHhfefl bot(om at feet;' ' ■ ’■
DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Hutcheson's Vole On \ Test Shrugged Off No Significance In , Vote At Convention i ■ . ■ ' . - ’ . CHICAGO, UP — Taft and Eisenhower leaders in the delegation today shrugged off William L. Hutdheson’s vote on the Republican convention’s first ballot ]teSt. But each side claimed they saw signs of strength in the defeat ot the Brown amendment. \ Hutcheson, president emeritus of the AFL International Carpentors’ Union, voted with the 30 JlooTaftites Iq amend the Eisen-htiwer-sponsored Eanglie proposal on heating contested delegates. But Hutcheson quickly scotched any Interpretation that he had switched to Taft. He and Indianapolis Publisher Eugene C. Pulliam are Indiana's only avowed Eisenhower delegates. /Htitbheson said he voted with the Taft stroup only because he felt seven Louisiana delegates should not l>e deprived of their seats. Pulliam, the Indiana Eisenhower leader, and "Lisle Wallaqe{ who heads the Hoosier Taft group, sawno significance in the Hutcheson volte. But Pulliam skid acceptance of the Langlie proposal meant victory for Eisenhower. “I think now he will win on the third iballot,” Pulliam said.: “The nomination was settled this afternoon. This was the tipoff.” Pulliam said he believed if the delegates had been votihg between Taft and Eisenhower for the nom-. inatlon this afternoon, Eisenhowoeif w\puld have won and /“there would'not have been 10 or 15 votes difference from the Browm amendment vote.". feut Wallace said the 548 votes favoring the Brown amendment “shows awfully firm Taft support.” “That’s 11 more votes thfcn Taft claimed as members of his delegation club,” Wallace said. “I firmly believe Taft will be nominated tm an early ballot.’; AVaMace said it wasn’t a triumph for the Eisenhower forces but “a victory for the 25 Republican governors” who signed a manifesto u.iglng fair play in the seating of contested delegates.
If yoil have something to sen or t obnis for rent. tr» a Dem«crat '•Vant Ad; It brings results. IF ;' ■ 11, JI , . .J*C *lk 1 ■>*< .'wl ’ ::h| AmtCijl y-H * iw I < ♦ n? jfejl / 1A I IN CHICAGO. Eleanor 21, of Ridgfield. Conn, displays a lovely pair of legs and “I Like Ike*’ button tp prove her Ipyalty to ,Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, candidate for the GOP Presiden- ' tial nomination. (Intematianal)
Posse Seeks Jealous Killer Os Two Men Murders Two M6n, Abducts Ex-Wife PONTIAC, 111. UP - A posse today blocked highway intersections and searched back roads in a search for a jealous gunman who killed two men, abducted his exwlfe and then pleaded for her love during a wild auto ride. At' Joliet, 111., police said they believed the fugitive, Richard Cox, 27, may have returned to that city in a borrowed automobile. Officers said they believed the killer might keep a date to return the car to the friend who loaned it to him. They said a squad of officers had the car’s owner in custody and were lying in wait fdr Cox. , \ Cox drove the borrowed car to Pontiac Monday, stalked into a case and shot two men. He abducted ,his , recently divorced wife, Betty, and sped northward along countryroads. A 50man posse, with shoot-to-kill if necessary orders, spread out over the countryside. Police squads cruised through Joliet for some trace of the jealous gunman. ■'» Cox released the nearly hysterical woman Monday night near Morris, 111., after forcing her repeatedly to promise they would be reconciled and making her swear her love for him. > ; Police said Mrs. Cox probably saved her own life by quick thinking. As Cox sped away from the scene of the killings, she snatched the gun from its place on the front seat and threw it from the moving automobile. Officers recovered the pistol. Mrs. Cox was rushed to the county jail here, where she jwas kept in protective custody. \ The 22-year-old estranged wife, a Waitress in the OK Case in Pontiac, looked on Monday when Cox whipped out a .32 calibre pistol and 6hot Lyle Patterson, 27, four times. Patterson was killed almost instantly. Bulets ripped through his body, pierced the back of a wooden booth and lodged in a cigarette machine. Roy Juenger, 34, tilled to wrest the gun away from Cox but the young truck driver shoved him aside and shoOhim in the stomach, \ Juenger, whom police believe was a stranger to Cox, died a few hours later, bf stomach wounds. The killer had walked into the case to talk w-ith Mrs. Cox and
WASHER SALE ■ ■ .. . ' ; ■ ' ' I -- ' ! This Deluxe ; “SPEED QUEEN” regularly priced at s ~I $139*50 ft iWff 1' 1 NOW FOR \ $109.50 riMl ~~51 ' AND YOUR OLD WASHER IW/ Don’t ask us how we can do it. This !■ I II breath-taking price comes from the l| . MV 1 I IL factory.. It’s a special “promotion” to ssf MP wlk W move warehouse stock. The washer is ’■P a genuine double-wall Speed Queen, t fully guaranteed in every respect. We can This is a genuine double-wall Speed most earnestly and honestly say that— Queen with Bowl-Shaped Tub, Timer, if you need a new washer, you’ll be very automatic Super Duty Aluminum wise to grab one of these machines. We 6 Wringer and Duratex Agitator. Car- have never hlul lhe Privilege of offering ries maximum washer guarantee. a wl,sher bar « ain equal to iL And we may never again. It’s truly a sensationAAn 11A AH al money-saving value. Stop in —or WII phone and we’ll be glad to hold one fori ' you - ‘ - | \ ; <' ■ - ’ ' ' J o . v
F ■ t J: ■ fc,; Aoy. 1 Bl IF U. S. SECRETAftY of State Dean Acheson and President Getulio Vargas (left) of Brazil confer at the Presidential Palace in Rio de Janeiro. Acheson to on good win tour of Brazil. 1 (International Radiopboto)
try to effect a reconciliation. He called her aside and chatted for a few minutes. Suddenly the young woman broke away from Cojx and screamed, “Call the sheriff, Dick is going to kill himself.” . It was then that Cox opened fire. CHURCHES Church of God The regular mid-week I prayer meeting will be held Wednesdayevening at 7:30 at the Church of God on Cleveland street, two blocks northwest of hospital. Herman W. Hammond will be tbe speaker. The community daily vacation Bib?; school will meet every morn* | ing this week at 9 a.m. with the I closing program to be held Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The public is invited to all the services. Wren E. U. B. The Rev. Werner P. Kuhlberg, a native of Russia and now pastor of the Zion Lutheran church at Schumm, O„ will give a religious description of Russia before and after Communism, at the Wren Evangelical United Brethren church Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. The public is invited to attend. | ■ ; ——— . A? ■ There is no one metal which can be said to he the most durable. Steel, an alloy of iron with small amounts of carbon, is one of the most prominent of structural niet-
TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1952
als. In resistance to corrosioln, copper is highly durable as is lead, gold, silver and platinum.
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