Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 181, Decatur, Adams County, 1 August 1952 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
ya* J-, JK3®«?WK- / .A, ■ ■ '/'■< '. smm * t ’ ML u j ‘ wcW’b,i 11 4 ® ‘. 1 K <i’l ol 4WBMWI -■ A . i .. .xWBhH : ■■■ : SV 1 I* gHfr v j* ’ *’*»* ■ MMF jk V - --- w ' J ir JI - W’' H HI y* • UigßMr S I C^RwWsß^lfOsF yh| j 9 ' , ’^A <! si ■T*,;'?.; 4, CHIC YOUNG, creator of the famed King Features "Blondie” comic strip, is showh with his family in their cabin aboard the liner Liberte in New York, bound for Europe'on a combined pleasure and business trip. Children are Dean, 14, and Jean, 13. ' (International)
Presidential Race\ ‘. Bv UNITED PRESS ; LatesL.developments in the presidential race: ) \ j - V Repuolicans >EISEN,HOWER - Dwight AD. Eisenhower wdnt into fa campaign strategy huddle in Deliver witii the top echelon of the Republican Par-' -» ty.j The GOP unity dlrive faced a possible setback, however, with a plea from the national citizens- for committee; that it be given an equal voice wklr-the OOP national committee “in the Ei’seni bower campaign oigairizatioh. Thp citizens group contended the regular Republican organization has “little appeal” among the indept ndiut voters. 'NIXON In his first major speech since his nomination as the, GOP vice presidential Sen. Richard M. Nixon charged in Columbus. Ohio, that Gov. Adlai E Stevenson was a “captive candidate” of “labor bosses; political bodies and PresidenpTi uman." He also told a wildly cheering Ohio
Use Your Gas Permit :j,.. gas BURNERS A Wall Flame Burner Tailor Made to Fit each size of furnace. ~ X—. '■ Jg 7-7; '-7-'" ' FREE DIAL , FREE INSPECTION 3-3316 ESTIMATES . HAUGKS GAS HEAT HEADQUARTERS OPEN HOUSE , .... In Monroeville, Indiana SUNDAY, AUGUST 3,1952 New 3-Bedroorh Home, located in a fine, progressive - community, with both Publiq and Catholic schools and only 18 miles from dowr.towif Fort Wayne. , ! ” i \ Complete with full bath, qtility room, largfc living room, steel kitchen, heated with fofoed air. dil fired furnace; water Heater. AU floorjr coveted with asphalt tile and carpeting. Sunny brook Lumber Co. \ , Monroeville, Ind. \ \ost Construction Cod* Clem Hardware Co. Decatur, Ind. | Mohroevllle I j ' ; Concrete , Steel Kitchen :\j Monroeville Zwick Furniture Cb. i Plumbing A Heating Decatur H I , Furnace Furniture A ' vioor Covering Monroeville Standard Rug-Linoleum Plumbing.. & Heating Fcrt Wayne . Plmnbing Asphalt Tile
state Republicans, convention that “the. record of the administration in the Hiss case ulpnei is enough to disqualify it.” \ Democrats : STEVENSON -Governor Stevenson was expected to name Wilson | Wyatt; former federal housing expediter and on.® time; mayor of y Louisville, Ry„ to dihect his campaign for the presidency. Reliable Sources said Wyatt would be appointed as Stevenson’s personal campaign director and ‘‘trouble i shooter.” p SPARKMAN — Sen. John J. i Sparkman started a brief vacation l motor„ trip with his family before ; making further campaign plans to , win- the vice presidency. Sparki nian planned to he gone about a week before returning to Washington and thenl- home ip Huntsville. Ala. ; SOUTH two Southern Democratic senators- t Aj. .Willis Robertson of Virginia and Russell B. s Long of Louisiana —Weakened reports of *a Hsing Eisenhower tide ’ ajndng Dixie Democrats by pledg--1 Hlig support to SieVensoh.
internet ion«l Ontlcrrn Sunday School L—ont T ~ Tr r 7 T 1 Samuel 4:lb-«:«2; READING t Proverba - -*• ' w Consecrated Genius Lesson for August 3, 1952 V i. . ~ v QNCE IN A WHILE men are born who have more careers than oie. Thomas Jefferson was architect, educator, lawyer, writer, executive; Samuel F. B. Morse was a painter and also the inventor of the
XU Dr. Foreman
telegraph; Thiodore Roosevelt was a; man so canysided that some one Ms written an abusing article showing that several thousands of years from now, scholars might easili conclude that T. Riposevelt was .not orie man but sev-
eral different men with the same na me. \ • • • Many-Sided Man QAMUEL WAS ONE of these many-sided men. We call him Samuel the prophet, but we could just as well call hitn judge, priest, prdacher, general writer and kingmaker.
Ee was a prophet, for the people who knew him turned to him when thep wanted to know what God thojght. We can call him a preacher, for we know of one very successful revival which he conducted (I jam. 7). He was also what we I call a circuit judge, going from town to town to hold court. He was 1 a successful general, for we know he not only adv Led military leaders but took the lead in raising an arrny himself and directing it in a su< cessful campaign. He was a priest, not only in I a formal way, offering sacrif ces at various places; but he also once said a memorable tiling which marks him as a j priest in the truest sense: ‘‘Ye hive done all this wickedness, y st. . . God forbid that I should ' ■ sin against you in ceasing to pray for you.” (Chap. 12.1 He was a writer, for though he : could have written both books, tha| bear his name, he did write ■ ‘‘the manner of the Kingdom”!—; i perhaps a kind of constitution. And. next week’s study will show him as a k ng-maker. • • • No Dictator f i d »pl E MANY SIDED MAN, the jot many talents, always has one; great temptation: to be a It isn’t bad people who become dictators; it isn’t the weak; it is the < strong and able A very able president, for inI stance, will take it on himself to run the State department and any other departments that specially interest him; In a small town a many-sided man may be superintendent of the mill, chairman of the school board, chief deacon In the church., superintendent of the Sunday school, major and post- I master besides. ’ !lt is not alone in public that ihe dictator flourishes.'Sometimes In a home the father, or the mother, will be so energetic and brainy that he <or She) finds it much easier to do things than to wait for the children to do them, or to teach the children how it is done. i Now the prophet Samuel, who towered high above the average of his country, must have been tempted to h e a dictator. | Samuel perhaps could have done M all, but he knew when to retire from the foreground. • • • . ' Public Spirit . OAMUEL himself is a model for all the many-gifted men who I reach, and deserve; positions of Ipower. He never mjlked the people for his own benefit;, he never used pyblic office for private gain. (With offle sad exception; he kept his worthless sons on the public payroll.) tie was a man of true public spirit. This jmeans two things, and Samjuel had them both. One is. a wide Vision: being able to see all sides of ;a question, and to see not only his own advantage, but how decisions! and policies affect all kinds of persons ' Most politicians will have at i heart the interests of their own’ little bailiwick; how many have the interests of the nation \gt heart? 1 Public spirit means vision, it means a wide concern, not only seeing but caring. In an election year, when politicians are clamoring at us fiom all sides, we may Well inquire about every candidate: Does this man have any resemblance to God s man Samuel?" Does ’ he have a sense of responsibility, to God? Does he have a wide vision, I a wide concern? Whose side is he on? Is he yut for himself, or for God and the whole people? I < <Copjrl<ht IVSI bj )he Dniston ot I Christian ESucatHn, National Council >f tie Churahea of Chriat of the t.niicu | -iatea of Amorica Released by f ; taiurea.) ’ > 1 5 ,
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Dedication Program
The following is the program \of the dedication service Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at the Decatur Missionary church. Tenth and Daytor streets. ? Congregational singing led by Rev. and Mrs. Carl Parlee, of Foit Wayne. Scripture and prayer by the pastor, Rev. H. J. Welty. ~ J 8t»lo, “Bless This House," Ralph Myers. Recognitions and acknowledgements. Solo, “Everyone is Welcome to
Rural Church News WOOD CHAPEL E. U. B. Albert N. Straley, pastor * Sunday school 9:30 a.m. Clarence Abbott, superlnt#ndth. Lesson, “Samiiel, Judge and Prophet." Prayer service 10:30 a.m- Orville Jewell, class leader. Evening service X p.m. Special : music. The; pastor will speak brief■ly on the message, “Unlocking the ! Reservoir.’’ Midweek prayer and praise serv-. ice Wednesday 8:30 p.m. The junior catechetical class will meet at this hour. PLEASANT VALLEY G. R. Shaw, pastor ; Sunday school. 9:30 a.m. Bob Bailey, superintendent. Morning service, 10:30 a.m. Worship and service. Message by \ the Rev. David King of Eairmount. i W. Y. P. S. service. 7 p.m. Evening service 7:30 p.m. i Prayer and praise service Wednesday 8 pun. Mrs, Matilda Sprung1 er. leader. rYvarre CIRCUIT i Brethren In Christ! • William F. Ensminger, pastor Mt. Zion at Bobo I 9:3Q, Sunday school. Electipn of officers for a new year will; be held. 1. ‘ I ’ |j.’ • 10:30. worship service. 7:30, p.m t , missionary pictures shown by Rev. Alvin Boggs oil the Kentucky mission. Wednesday evening prayer meetinc at 7:30 o'clock. Mt. Victory on State Line , 9!: 30 a.m.J Sunday school. W 10:30 a.m., worship kvrvcie. This is cash day for the Ijiuild- ; ing fund . No evening services due to spe ; ; ejali service iat Bobo. : Wednesday service prayer meeting. Pleasant Grove i 9:30 a.m.. Sundayischbol. | . 14:30 a.m.,\class meeting. , No evening s«>rvice due to. special service-on the Kentucky misj sions at Bobo. The W. M. A. has packed several of clothing for the mission valued at a btinj dred dollar.ST. PAUL—- • WINCHESTER CIRCUIT \ f United Brethren In Christ ‘ Stanley Peters, pastor , ST. PAUL CHURCH) Moinhm worship, 9:15 a.m. ! SundjU.v school 10:15 a.m. __ HmTrWif prayer itnd Bible study j for all ages. Wednesday at 7:30. ' Regular\ineetiug of the adminis I tHative board immediately follow- ' ing the prayer hour. WINCHESTER UHUItCH. Sundiiy school. 9:30 a.m. j o /’lass meeting 10:30 a.m. Harvesters. 7 p.m. V .Evangelistic hour. 7:3t) p.m. Meeting of the new church officers immediately, following the Sunday j evening service. ■ jHour of prayer and Bible study. Tlnirsday at 7 : :i() p.m; Regular inevtinjr of the admin isfi;itivt> board ’lmmediately following the prayer hour. j ‘Regular meeting qf WMA on VivdnesdaV afternoon, at the home of Mrs. William Liby.
s MOUNT PLEASANT METHODIST CHURCH F. H. Kise, pastor ' hnnday school 9:30 am., Leo Kihg, Sr.. supmint»?ndejit. Worship service 10:30 a.m.
- " - <aggag> — i 9» 'fl PROPOSE to run my campaign as fa® as ideas and speeches are concerned entirely myself,” Gov. Adlai Stevenson (left), Democratic presidential nominee, tells reporter* jn press conference on the executive mansion lawn in Springfield, 111. JI : (International Soundphoto)
the House of the Lord,” Mrs. Charles Tumbleson. Offertory, Mrs. Carl Parlee. Musical saw solo, Arden Schill- ■ j ing." I_. \ Solo, i "Lord, Give Me a Vision,” Mrs. Harold Welty, with Eddie Belhold playing the violin. Dedicatory message,-. Ilev. C. J. ! Gerig. Prayer of dedication —Rev. J. A. Rlngenberg. i y Hymn, “All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name." Benediction, Rev. Lyle Steiner.
PLEASANT VALLEY \ METHODIST CHURCH F. H. Kise, pastor Sunday school 9:30. a.m., Raymond Teeple, superintendent 9 . Evening evangelistic service at ’7:30 o’clock- ■ : r— P | UNION CHAPEL Evangelical; United Brethren Lawrence T. Norris, pastor ; Sunday school. 9:36’, Wendell Miller, superintendent. Warren Nidlinger, assistant. Notice— There will be no preaching service at our church this Sunday. The, pastor will be at conference. This will be visiting dayj All who cannot come to conference, this: will be an opportunity to go to church some where else. SALEM EVANGELICAL"AND REFORMED CHURCH H. E. Settlage, minister 9:00 Sunday school. Classes for every age group. 10:00 Worship service. Sermon, "The Law of the Harvest.”. 8:00 p.m. Youth fellowship meeting. Thursday, August 7. all-day meeting of the Ladies aid. Friday, 1:30, children’s choir rehearsal. ° 4 , PLEASANT MILLS METHODIST Harley T. Shady, pastor Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. Morning worship at 10:30 am. Sermon by the Rev.., Rai ph Johnson, of Moproe, Ind. Prayer meeting on Thursday evening at 8:00\ o’clock. ,\ SALEM METHODIST ■ - Harley T. Shady, pastor Sunday school at 9:<3(f a.m. Prayer meeting on Wednesday evening at s o < lock. y 1 ANTIOCH UNITED MISSIONARY John Detwiler, pastor Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. Morning worship. 10:30 >.m. Evening service. 7:30 o’clock. Prayer meeting Wednesday 8 p. in. ’ A special feature of our morning service will be a duet by Nolan Ginter and his sister, Mrs. Delores They be singing “Seek, Jesus Todhy.” This song was written by Mr. Ginter while serving in Korea. You are cordially invited to at‘tend all of our services. Saucer, 'Pilots' Are Bid To Monticello -MONTICELLO. Ind. UP The rest of the country can go around ehasing flying, saucers if it wants to, but Monticello is ready to sue for separate peace. \ group of said they plan to invite saucer “pilots” to land on nearby Lake Shafer and , alk -,, i ,. SS T . A„. 31 . Jacob Arvey Denies Deal At Convention LOS ANGELES. UP — Jacob Arvey. (’hi.ago Democratic party ’.leader, denies that big city party bosses engineered the presidential nomination of Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois. Arvey, here for a 10-day rest after the Democratic convention in Chicago, Thursday that no “deal” was made to get the nomination for Stevenson. -
COMMISSIONERS CLAIMS TO BE ALLOWED AVGUST 4, 1952 Haywood Pub. Co. '.. v 290.58 Decatur Light & Power 175.48 Citizens Tele. Co., do 104.15 The Comm. Print Shop, cl. op 4.ft4 E. F. Jaberg, do 2 ..... 30.00 Haltermans, do !.... 52.75 T. I. Drew, aud. oper. ........ 15.03 Decatur Demo Co., treas. oper. 9.75 Commercial Print, do 7.55 Dale Death, spec, deputy 10.00 Delores Shraluka, do 5.00 R. W. Shraluka, board bill 71.75 R. W. Shraluka, trans, pat. 53.80 Emerg. Radio, shf. oper. ....... 14.68 Decatur Democrat, do ........ 5.10 J. S. Lehman, do ...../, 4.00 C. .Burkhart, rod & stake 25343 Sam It Schwartz, do L 22.00 H. Moellering, hutv, mil 44.10 Austin Merriman, tile drain .. v 6.00 Leonard Wagley, do ............ ... 30.00 Richard Arnold, do ... 15.00 Donald Warthman, do .' 5.00 Max FVj Thieme, do 12.50 Yost LTF&vel & Ready Mix, do 33.27 Harry Moseft do . , 13.50 Harvey Lawson, do ■ 18.50 H f Moellering, surv. oper. .... 5.00 Decatur Ins. Agency, do 64.66 Decatur Co., do ~ — 1.40 Beaverrt Oil service, do 108.06 Klenks Service Center, do .... 5.70 Butlers Garage, do 3999.29 G. B. Chstard, schl. supt; 0perA60.37 Decatur Democrat Co., do 35.00 Comm. Print Shop, do 5.40 M 1 :. Archbold, co. agt. sal. .... 83.33 AK. Williams, co ho dem agt 83.33 Gloria Koeneman, do 150.00 Sally McCullough, do . 135.00 RoAe Kneiiss. do — — ... 75.00 L.Ei Archbold, oper 75.98. A. Williams, oper 65.03 Dr. H.F. Zwick, hea. off. sal. 77.00 S. Schurger, pros. atty. op. 40.74 Mabel Striker, reassessment 60.00 Mabel Striker, assesisbr ylk. 36.00 Clyde Boley, reassessment .. . 8.00 The Schafer Store, assess, op. 6.50 W.H. Amferson Co., ci. cor. o. 10.00 West Pub. Co., do ... 18.00 Samuel Bentz, do ......... ..:.... 16.00 C H. Muselman, pro. off. mil 6.25 John Bixler, ct. houke janitor 200.00 Hazel Galogly, co. house mat. 65.00 Sutton Jewelry Store, . oper. 30.00 S< hafer "Store, ct. house oper. 1.85 J.I. Holcomb Mfg.- Co., do ... 23.23 Habegger Hardware, do , 33,40 Klenks Service Center, do 11 96 Sam Augsburger, do : 67.00 Goodyear Service Store, do .. <a.oo Habegger Hdw., jail oper. 4 41 North. Ind. Pub. Serv., do .... 8.86 Haltermans, do 6 38 J.I. Holcomb, do 85.00 Thfe Schafer Store, do 6.46 Linn Grove t Hdw., do.. 55'22 Geo. Foahatigh. co. home supt. 166.66 B. Fosnaugh, Co. homo matron 100.00 Grover Kelley, co. home att. 50.00 Howard Martin, do 44.00 Daisy Martin, do ...; 40..00 Josephine Brandyberry, dd 100.00 Cora McFarland, do 30.00 Dale Fosnaugh, do ...... ... fZ.OO Mary Jane Fosnaugh, do . .... 43.00 Betty Fisher, do . ..... ... la-00 Ord Gehman. co home minist. a.OO Edgar P. Schmidt, do ... 5.00 Dr. J.M. Burk. co. home oper 129.00 The U.S. Chem. Co., do 49.20 The Dri-<las Corp , dp 34 30 George N. Heller>do ■ 23.2a Indiana State Industries, do 11.00 ) Spiegels Market, do 435.u8 ’ Curtis F. Hill, do , L* •’ Rortney Rad. Shop., do 31.00 Beavers Oil Serv., do Don Cook, do v •• Mollenkopf & Eitlng. do .. 922.00 Decatur SOper Service, do Z oa Stiefel Grain Co., do ■>?■;’!? Steffen Irnpl. Co., do «•■«» Stewarts Bakery, do I Will Whines. assessing 100 00 Betty Jane Nihiser, do 2n6.00 Clyde Nihiser, do ■ ■ *«<•<£ Otto Hoffman, comm. sal. 93.66 Lewis Worthman, do 93.66 J. C. Augsburger. do -vEd,A. Bosse, co. atty. 7500 Leota Connell, bd. of review ji2 .00 Gladys Reynolds, do > ....... .. ‘Z.OO t>ecatur Demo. Co., legal adv .»£ -4.» Berne Witness, do . 4* Meshberger Bro. St. t 0., brid 84.88 t’hrijst Miller, do | 18.90 Tom Else, do ... -1»Andrews Saw Alin, do 386 40 Andrews Saw Mill, do 308 7< Frank Nussbaum. do~ iA- go Kocher Lbm. Co.. do l"->-Lee Hardware, do 13-M Gottschalk Supply, do - 12.0 Irene Byron Sanatorium, do a30.00 A L. Lehman, T.B. testing 8.00 Jerry Price, do S M. Friedley, do Dr. Edward P. Feck, do 334.10 Dr. R.E. Allison, do 312. M Dr. D.W.. Fireoved, do 567.9 • Dr. Charles D Morrow, do 84.00 Laurence Smith, ditch imp. 481 .00 \Theodore Baker, do Kricks’ Welding Shop, do 24. Ben Bixler, do 1> Walter Brintzenhefe. d<> ) . ; S'tockberger Seastrom. do lo~.BZ Butlers Garage, do " Petri’e oil Co,, do Decatur Auto buhply. do ..1 4 Canary, Bros .do I 3 f '-- « Beery Motor Sales do 200 R.J. Leininger & Son, do Habeglfer Hardware, do . 14.40 Frank Singleton, supt. sal. 2a0.00 Philip Strahm, asst. supt. 238.80 ■rom Johnston, do„. .4 “3 20 Elmer Beer, do -13 JO Nathan Meshberger. do SMf® Hafrv Kershner, mechanic Virgil Draper, diesel 237.60 Roy Heller, \do Lawrence ooenig. do j 2a 80 Harold Burger, truck dr. 230.00 Burl Fuhrman do Z 27.70 ban Harvey, do *-3Z.« Jack Andrews, do, -Si Eli Hershey, do r -J <" Roger Steiner, do 22,.70 Vai Schnepp. do f2B 8.; Menno do - 141 9 Chester Shoaf, tlo v --3.10 Albert Beer, do -2340 Ernest Forman, d r > : Christ Zur<hcr, single hand 217.80 Joe Augsburger. do 80 .Joe Spangler, do -1 ‘ A M Hoffman office 12 ?'.2n Grover Cottrell, • -O" Citizens Telephone Co., oper. -1 48 Citizens Telephone Co., do H>-41 Decatur Light * Power, do 9.62 Pa TIT Yoder, do p 35.50 Main St. Filling Station, do I*oo Decatur Auto Supply, do 13.j>8 Indiana Equipment Co., do Z2.5»0 ytm kberger-Seastrom Inc., do 33 8a Mollehkopf Eiting, do . o9j> J? Mcßride & Son. do £ j_» Klenk s, do ? Butlers. Garage, do . & T. truck Line, <b> 2 91 Berne Farm Equip Co., do 13.10 L Ehrsam Im pl. Co. .do 1844 Sinclair Refining Co., do 663.00 Motor Fuel. Tax Div., do la 40 Pearl Oil Cb . do *ll 01 Leavers Oil Serv .do \ 8. ; Riehls Tractor & Irnpl * 0., do 10.70 Petrie <)il Co., do I 219.0.' The Lima Gen. Tire Co., do 148.85 J l. Holcomb ' Mfg Co., do 12-00 ollie Kreps. do . 40J'O I W Karch stone, material 200.33 Yost Gravel & Ready Mix, do- 10.66 Citizens Tel. Co do , , tViJ nMeshberger Storte Corp., do 1412 0. Fort Wayne} Pipe & Sup, do 149.81 ‘ Welfare \ Bernice Nelson, Traveling 224 9 Bernice Nelson, oper 20.00 Veronica Linn, traveling 11.48 Mary J- Hazelwood, do Mabel Marshall, do 1155 Citizens Telephone Co., do .. x 22.30 llavwood Publish. Co, oper. 4.34 Certified before me this Ist day Os August. 1952. • , THVRMAN I. DREW. Auditor Adams County AVGUST 1 (HQLD) Small But Hostile MA RY VILLE. Tenn, (UP) — A young mother ot two children became so excited when she. saw her husband being led to jail .that she struck the arresting officer with heir fist. The punch was leveled at a 200-pound highway patrolman. John Marshall, who admitted “the lick kinda stunned me.” Marshall said the 100-pound assailant must have felt the "effects of the Attack, too/ She faiuted. — Tradein a Good Town —Decatur! •41 ■ I \
L WjD ; I t 'll- ( |k> , / n ■>., 4bL - •- - .. f .. MARYLAND'S Gov, Theodore McKeldin cuts the ribbon to formally open the new Chesapeake Bay bridge linking Maryland and eastern shores at Sandy Point, Md. The bridge, a 4 H -mile span, cost >45,000,000 and eventually will form a link in a super-highway. Opening of the bridge ends 50 years of ferry service. (International lloundphotoj
Reds Reply To U. S. Protest Over Posters Aviation Display In Moscow Boycotted By U. S. Ambassador MOSCOW, UP — Pravda, Russian Communist party newspaper, said today "three aviation day posters which offended the United States! portrayed actual events. , .The posters purported to show Soviet fighter planes driving off American planes which violated \Russian Or \ satellite territory. Display of the. posters caused American ambassador George F. Kennan, the British ambasador and the French charge d’affaires to boycott the aviation display Sunday. Pravda's foreign editor, Yakov Victorov, said today the artist who ■painted the posters relied on 1 actual events arid showed the vigilance of the Soviet \air defenders. Victorov said the posters portrayed three American aerial violations of Communist territory—1. in April 1950. when Soviet fighters pursued an American “Flying Fortress’’ south of Liepaja, Ixitvia; 2. in November, 1951, when an American plane violated Hun garian territory and was forced by Soviet fighter planes to land; 3 November w.’ 1951. when an Arneri can Neptune plane crossed the Russian Far Eastern frontier. The United States changed Russia with shooting down an unarm Cd Navy Privateer plane over the open Baltic April 8. 1950. Its 1( riien were' lost. Russia sai.l the plane was a “Flying and violated Russian territory. A C-47 cargo plane strayed off its course on \a flight from Germany to Yugoslavia in November 1951. and was forced down in Hungary by Soviet planes. The United States paid a ransom of $120,00f ;o tITe Hungarian government, in the form of a “fine” for violation of Hungarian territory, to get the' four-man crew released. Ten navy men were lost when Russians shot down their Neptune weather reconnaissance ; plane over, the Pacific off Vladivostok. Siberia, last Nov. 6 Gen. Matthew B. Ridgtyay. then Allied supreme commander in the Far East, said the was 20 miles from the coast when attacked: Tljie posters “serve as a warning to all those trying to violate the inviolable Soviet borders and re mind Soviet fliers of their duty, to be vigilant.” Pravda said. Referring to a state department protest which followed up Kennirj’s boycott, Pravda ridiculed what it caped the of “injured innocense” of the United States} Pravda accused the state department' of inspiring a violent anti-Soviet' campaign in the American press, and cited articles in* Collier’s Weekly. Fortune, the Americah Magazine, the New York Times and the New York JournalAmerican. “Not only the reactionary press, but calfinet members, generals, ♦dmirals and top political leaders incite war.” it said. It cited Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Adlai E. Stevenson.\ aii secretary Thomas K. Finletter and Adm. William M. Fechteler, chief << naval operations. \ ■' ' ' - •"|. ■ ♦ School Days Over LOUP CITY. Nelv (UP) — Next year l ? for first time in many years. Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Swanson won't have a child attending Loilp City public schools The la- t' Os the 10 Swanson children graduated this spring. The first completed school in 1932. j
FRIDAY, AVGUST 1, 1952
CHURCH NEWS v Willshire Church of God The Rev. Mer Vin E. Taylor will again be the guest speaker at the Church of God, Willshire, Ohio, during the morning worship at 10:30 o’clock Sunday. . Taylor will speak at the Decatur Church of God Sunday at 7:30 p.m. z The public is invited to both of these services, to hear this hometown preacher. Affiliated with the fhurch of God, central offices Anderson, “Where a Christian Experience snakes you a. member!” Trade in a Good Town —Decatur*. VACATION SPECIALS Low Down Payment Up to 24 Months to Pay Commander, Club \ Coupe. Radio. 1946 CHEVROLET Custom Sedan. 1947 DODGE Custom Sedan. 1947 PLYMOUTH Club Coupe. y 1951 PLYMOUTH Sedan. R. & H. DICK MANSFIELD MOTOR SALES 222 N. 3rd Phnne 3-41 Os Are You Planning To Build or Remodel? ~ Il i! ! ■MSI S- ifi Get Our Low Prices Ob Plumbing I NOTHING DOWN 3 YEARS TO PAY! \' '* • Bath Rooms • Kitchens • Water Heaters • Water Systems • Hot Water Heating System HAUGKS HEATING - PLUMBING APPLIANCES i S. 2nd St. Across from Court House
