Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 221, Decatur, Adams County, 18 September 1952 — Page 4

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I DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT ’ Published Every Evening Except Sunday By the decatur Democrat co-, inc. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., >ost Office as Second Class Matter i P ic * D - Heller ... __ ___ President A. R. Holthouse , - Editor J <H. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthouse ___.L k- Treasurer . Subscription Rates: ; By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 16.00_—Rix months, $3.25; 3 mpnthS, >1.75. h ; ' By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year >7.00; 6 months, $3.75; 3 months, $2.00. 'jp i F, L - C By Carrier, 25 cents per week. Single copies. 5 cents. I • > ■" ’■ ■ . ~ ■ 1 ,\ 1

Salute To Mr. Mac:— Appreciation that Iras been i \. v ■ - rolling up in the heart of this community tor a magnetic individual, will find spontaneous expression this evening at the a when city, arid school officials, business and civic leaders gather to honor Dale W. McMillen, Sr., founder and directing of Central Soya “Eighteen years ago Mr. McMilleh and! associates founded Cen- ’ tral Soya Company and in that ; short span have-built it into the k largest soybean processing plant; in the country. That is an Indus- > trial achievement- 4 But Ifir. McMillen has done ' more than k build a successful manufacturing concern, which J employs more than 500 .persons.r • r /•* ■ . ■ • 4 '■ '"i Fon. the Ibcal site and brings pros-;? pej-ity t) the community through a big payroll. . ' ?' { Last week when the Company; r nd> employes celebrated the completion of a two-year expansion?, program at the Decatur plant. < various and worthy' tributes were - ><aid ■ to i Mr. McMillep as an industrialist, a master ay great eivic leader and a builder of homes, He deserves, recognition fpr attainments in- Uhese fields, but as Fred Thomas said in pre’senting him to the“ crowd .at the high '* : ’ |\ J ■ 1 school auditorium, other com- , incndable virtues endear 'Mr. McMillen to the community. Referring to him as “Mr. Mac”, ■’! an affectjonate\ nickname, for the j chief of,.these highly successful ' McMillen Enterprises, the speaker said: . ' * ■ i - ». . [ “He is an individualist ... that ■ is, if being himself is being an in- £ dividualist. He has never been ■ the victim of restricted thinking ; ... he has always had an abundance of freshness in what he be-. Itevesi'and in what he thinks. His habit/iof thought is for things instead of againsi them.. Flowing from the heart of this. man is a • r broad Understanding of ' human frailties. lie understands and be-

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lieves In the rights of the individual, but never waivers from the belief that the individual has responsibility and a duty to his work and to his donimunity.” Mr. McMillen’s hu nility is best conveyed by his feeling thjit his greatest contribution is the assistance given by his organization «in the. building of more than 14G modern homes tor company employes in this city. For these and many other reasons all hot or him. We have already, waited too long to publicly acknowledge his numerous contributions to our healthy' prosperous and growing community. Aset’s get on with the party!; - r*Q' . 4 ■ The high school tootball season will \open here Friday night when the Yellow Jackets will meet the GarretViiailrQaders in a gridiron battle at Worthfnan Field. The event will bring out the youth of the city and it ■ 'will be your chance to see the boys and girls on the march. ' o Truman gave a couple shofty in-the-arm to the presidential campaign with his speeches before the American Hospital Association and the Ariiprican Federation of Labor. Opponents criticise Mr. Truman fob his method of attack, but all will admit that ho can explain the issues in short, terse languag^. ? He is an effective , and able campaigner, willing to let the chips fall where they may. g i . . ’ • ——o p ; A children s caoir of 250 heavenly voices will sing at the Lutheran Rally Hour in this city Sunday I afternoon. The concert will be I directed by Prof. ,W|ll|am Utto!-' man, choirmaster and organist of ■ the Bingen Lutheran church, as part of the inusicail program, which also included singing by the Decatur GCnorpl Electric Aeolian and Zion Lutheran choirs. For those who attend the religiousi Service the singing will give emphasis to the- sp ritual messages schedule for the afternoon.

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I 20 Years Ago I \ TODAY o •— p September 18, 1932 was Sunday. a*"- 1 ~ —o Modern Etiquette I BY ROBERTA LEE { •j i—*——. « Q. What expenses of- the wedding are the bride and her parents responsible for? |A.-Invitations and announcements, organist, soloist and sextan’s (fees, church decorations, transportation for bridal party, reception expenses, wedding dress and accessories, bridesmaids’ bouquets, bride’s father’s boutonniere,' trjousseau, bride’s gifts tb'her attendants, bride’s gift to bridegroom and his wedding ring |if i any), photographs of wedding party. iQ. Should a wear mourning after the death of her liaise? A. This is hot customary., although she majy wear some modified type of mourning if she eel It is entirely optional. * p. If olives, and celery pre to be served, * whetr is the proper time to pass them around the table? k; During the soup course. o-T- j—* r —« Household Scrapbook | | BY ROBERTA LEE j HH - -1 ° I Silverware .Soak the silverware in a solution of hot water and borax (Quart of hot water to a tablespoon of borax j and it will usually remove- the tar*nish. Do not boil. Place a few pieces of silver in at a time. Remove, and then wash in a solution of soap; borax and water. . > Coffee to test the quality of coffee, a teaspoonful in a ha|lf glass of cold water. If good, there will ;-<! ‘■ r ■ ■ ■‘r ■■; r i : •

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CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX a NANCE turned down the bed.•bvers. ' • Eve took bff her shoes. They nade puddles on the Moor. ‘‘l’m ill fight,” she said, looking up. *Go away. vLet me alone.” But her voice was thick, and she swayed as she faised her arms ;o unfasten her dress. Nance said luickly, “Let me help you.” Eve pushed her off. All right,” she repeated. She jnsteadily to the bed, and then, with a small moan, fell across it. Nance undressed her and got jer into bed. Her hands and feet were ice-cold. When Song Lee rame with the hot-water bottles, b7an<be put them at Eve’s feet. She went downstairs and miked hot water and whisky and brought Eve’s teeth Jcnobked against the Class as she drank it. She sank back on the pillow. She said unexpectedly, “I am going to givs Jeremy his freedom.” Nance straightened. She set the glass on the bedside table. < “Did you hear me?’” Eve demanded querulously. “I’m going to-” j; - “Yes,” Nance soothed. “Now don’t talk, Eve. Try to sleep." Eve closed her\ eyes. She was tjrembling violently. A chill, Nance thought. It_could be serious, this close after her illness. She wished Jeremy would come. Nance stayed in the room until she heard Jeremy come to. Then she went down. - „ He satd, “Nance!” in surprise at seeing her here. < . “Eve Is ill,” she explained.. “I found her pn the Oxford Street bridge. 1 don’t know how long she had been walking around in the rain, Jeremy. Hours, probably. She was soaked, and chilled right through. 1 got her into bed.” “Thanks, Nance.” He had shed his hat and raincoat whi|e ’ she talked, and now he started toward the stairs.\ 'J . .'I i> That weekend, Eve died. A month after Eve’s death, Jeremy left town. He had an indefinite leave of absence from the hospital, Eleanor told Nance. Song Lee had been discharged, and the house closed up. r No word from Jeremy until early April, and then Eleanor had a card postmarked in Canada. He was well, he said. He hoped they were, tod. And that tvas AH .. . | Then, at the end of the month, there was a telegram. Jleremy was coming home. Eleanor began to sing again about the house, and bought yarn and canvas for a new piece of needlepoint. Nance, spending long, busy hours in the attic studio, wondered many times what Jeremy’s return would mean

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to her. Kit had said, Bven i/ he is free/he may not want yon. Yet there had been moments, voiceless but intelligible, wh(>n she had been sure that Jeremy still loved her.' J He had been bhek in town several days before Nance saw him. Then, on the other sidebf the front door when she opened it one evening, Jeremy was there. She simply looked at him, not speaking, not smiling. She said at last, “Come in, Jeremy,” and moved " aside so that he could enter; {’ I BytJie did not come in. He said, thought you might like to go for a drive.” “Yes,” Nance said. “Yes, I would.•* She put on a camel’s hair coat, capewise, and went out to the car with him. - { They drove to the lake. It was too early for the. cottagers. The evergreens were dark, the birch and elan misty with new green, and there was the smell of snow still unmelted deep in the woods. Beside the road ,at the lake where they parked; marigolds were a mass of polished yellew. In an hour, when the sun set, the flower ctijis would close, hoarding their gold for the daylight. A whippoorwill called its sad, repetitive complaint across the water*. They sat for a long time without talking. Then Jeremy said, “You knoW that I love you, Nancy.” j “Yes. I love you ,too.” i “I’m | soirry, Nance.” His tone was without color, emotionless. “I messed things up, didn’t I?” “Yes,” she said. plt j makes me sick to think about, it.” ; “Then don’t. It’s over.” She asked; "It is, Jeremy, isn’t it?” “Yesj it’s over.” He circled the steering wheel with his arms, stared out over the water. “Then try to forget it, Jeremy.” “It> not that easy.” know.” For some Os the things that Eve had left behind could not ever be quite forgotten. “Shy wasn’t ever happy, Nance,” he, said. And then he told her Eve’s story as she had told it to him. ! . -j ' " She felt pity stirring through her. “She missed so much,” she said once, wonderingly. “She wasn’t ever young." And she knew suddenly why Eve had tried sb hard to learn to skate and swim and rl|de, to play tennis and golf. Those were the things of normal childhood Eve never had had. She had tried to make up for those lost years . . . Nance felt a sting of tears. She had never thought that she would weep for Eve. It was dusk, and they sat on. k ‘Tve found a place in Canada,” Jeremy told her. “A small town

IM SERVICE Home On Leavy \A/3c Daniel J. Mills is enjoying a 'Hhday leave with his parents, ML and Mrs. Robert Ik Mills of Fourth street. He will be stationed at> Sioux City, lowa with the piedleal.corps of the air force. Second Lieutenant A Everett Hutker, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Hutker, 733 Cleveland street, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the field

that needs a doctor. We’ll go there, Nance. We’ll start over, together." She felt herself go .a little taut. “Jeremy, what’s wrong with starting over right here?” “You know, Nance. Tve failed.” “Because you didn’t get the staff pppointment!” she said indignantly. \ | “Tbit, and the rest.” | The rest, of course. The diminished practice, the impaired reputation. Jeremy could not easily minimize these, nor could Nanee. But if he weht away? Wouldn’t the stigma of this failure be the * shadow' always pursuing him? ■ ' At length, she said slowly; carefully, "No, Jeremy. We won’t go away. We’ll stay and get back the things Eve took from us. We have to stay, because if we run away we’re acknowledging that Eve has won—don’t you see? There’s always a place where the force for. good has to make a stand against the force for evil—and this is where we have to make our stand, Jeretny, or we’re lost.” She took a deep breath. “We’ll stay. Sam will nm again for mayor, and he Will be elected. And you J . . People wiß give you back their confidence, Jeremy. You’ll rebuild your practice ...” “And oust Avery as chief of staff?" “No." She spoke sadly. “That’s a thing forever lost, isn’t it?” “The price of folly.” His hands clenched on the steering wheel. “I can’t expect to get off scot free.” His arms went around her for the first time,; and Nance moved Closer- "It’i funny, Jeremy. I don’t .hate her. She never had any Os the breaks, did she ? Everything She got she had to take. I had everything given to me. A home, love, security. Suppose I'd never had any of those things? How do I know I mightn’t have been like Eve?” “No,” he said. “You’re honest, Nance." “Oh, it’s easy to be honest, and good, when there’s Ino temptation to be anything else . . . Poor Eve. No, I don’t hate her. Pm so terribly sorry for her.” His arm tightened around her. “AR right, Nance,” he said. “We’ll stay nere. I If that’s the way you want it.” “DOn’t you, too?” ,j x “It won’t be easy. I You know that?” i L' ' "I know.” ; He shook his headiat her, slowly, making it not a negative gesture but a token of gratefulness and Wonder that she would be with him, loving him, all the long, hard Way back. He said again, “No, it Won’t be easy. But... Yes, Nance, it’s the way I want it, too.” r ’ . f The End) ;.< >;.■ ’ J-' . - ‘ \

lirtillery offichr’B corps of ihe U. 18. army at Fort Sill, Okla. Li. Hutker was a meipber of the 23rd graduating class of the artillery officer candidate school. The ceremonies were held Sept. 9. Lt. Hutker is a graduate of Decatur high U:hool. : ' ■ Rubber Workers In Annual Convention Casting Ballots For National Officers • s ’ ' {’ : ''l I 4 ASBURY PARK, N. J., (UP) - Six hundred delegates to the CIO United Rubber Workers 17lh ahfliial convention past ballots today for national officers and trustees. Leland S. Buckmaster, incumbent president, and most of his officers were expected to succeed themselves for another year. There was no hint of opposition pflor io nominating speeches. Voting was by secret ballot). delegates caucused Wednesday night after two proposed constitutional amendinents, bmh advocated by j the laws comnfittee, Were defeated by voice v||e. ‘ antes B. Carey, CIO secretarytreasurer’ and' president of the International union of Electrical Workers, had beep scheduled to sseak Wednesday but notified the UllW he could not make jtJ The speech was rescheduled for Friday. - One of the proposed dmendments palled for biennial instead of annual international conventions and the other would have extended the terms of general otM*ers from one year to two. ®The committee said the 135,000 WW members could save $250,4o'o every other year by holding hpwer conventions. The policy group also Was atSmpting to work out an impasse that has blocked union acceptance a multi-plan contract covering eight locals in Firestone Rubber Up. plants in this country. Iflxx-hls' 7 in 1 Akron, Ohio, and 136 in Pottstown, Pa., which cousin a\majority of the Firestone workers, have,' rejected a basic section Which spells oat ,wha.t a union must do to purge itself of t|fcancial responsibility 'in i event of a wildcat walkout or on-the-job sdpwdown. measure also was submitted Bthe laws committee by Local at New Toronto, Canada, propping a $4 monthly strike assesstnent in district six to aid 1,400 Ffrestdne employes in Cariadh' on s&rike for J 16 weeks over wages apd a pension plan. || . , . • Truck Driver Dies As Truck Overturns BLOOMINGTON. -Ind. UP — J|jw« W. Horn, 46, Bloomington, lai. died Wednesday of injuries suffered when his pickup truck oveFtttrned in a curve on Ind. 46 sap west of here Tuesday. If d V. .... • ■

'i ' - Ruled To Answer F? ‘Michigan Motor Freight Lines, vs Spegtbr Motor JJnes, Inc., ccffinrilaint for damages; defendant rujed to answer interrogation September 27. Case Continued I§lva Mae Weller vs Clement T. Miller, complaint for damages; botft\ cqurtsels agree to continuatiotToT base? Finds For Plaintiff Sliaron Michaud vs Maurice Teq|le and Esta Whitaker, cornplant for Ramages; finds Tor plaindefendants ordered to pay s2o| each to plaintiff. Falls To Appear ,F>y<i Kelly vs Walter Clem, complaftit on account; defendant fails to appear in court in answer to citation. 'i ; |! Filed Authorization "■’< . Wuaneta B. King vs Richard E. King, as judged when absolute decpae of dlvbrce- was granted. Ricjiard. E- King files allotment authorization for support of minor child. Under Advisement Wjlma Nord vs Pauli C. Nord, complaint for divorce, after cjourt heatings, case now under adViseI m,. j ' J. Estate Cases Estate of Sidney O. Lautzenheliper, ifet value of estate appraiaed at $3,603.63; Estate of John D.V Hiller, real andfbersonal property appraised at reail estate directed to be sold; and proceeds toigo to brother, Geoffe D. Hiller. Chris Myselman , of Berne named executor.' '\,l J .

Midwest Democrat Leaders In Meeting Strategy Session Is Held In lowa DES I MOINES. lowa, UP — Democratic national chairman Stephen j Mitchell and Democratic party leaders from 15 midwest states meet today for a one-day strategy session designed to "keep up the Victory trend.” By Coincidence, the > Democrats were meeting while Dwight D. Eisenhower, Republican presidential candidate, is across Ipwa. $ The meeting is one of four regional strategy ; get-togethers planbed by Mitchell. State party chairman Jake Moire said national committeemen and commit and state chairmen bnd vice chairmen from Illinois,. Indiana, lowa, I Kansas, Michigan, Mibiiesota, Missbubi, Montana,' Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Wyoming would attend. J At Omaha, I Neb., Wednesday night, Mitchell 'said it was "good politics- If or; us | as Democrats to clean up bur. own dirt and throw but our own party men whenever they arei Vrrong.” "I. He told a Democratic gathering in honof of national committeeman Bernard Boyle that Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson was "just being himself” when he ! uses witticisms

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in his campalg n speeches. «. I; Stevenson “has had and will have very serious things to «ay,” Mitchell said/The Republicans wil) undoubtedly wish they were ' replaced hy more witticisms.” Earlier he said, "I'd like to hear General | Eisenhower talk about parity without notes, anyway,” in scoffing al Republican Chaffeß~tire administration had the farm program; - Mitchell said Sen. Joseph McCarthy R-Wis was the , “Repub- . beans’ problem, not ours.? "We're not running against McCarthy,” h_e skid. “But we will debate the isskea of Communism and corruption.” ij j 1; , . /■/ ■..-■■fc.—»■—. ■ { r : Ireland offers its visitors the Use of 260 golf . courses and in many placed ' golfing concessions are included, in hptel tariffs or tickets, are issued! charging less than a dollar* a according to the Irish tourist bureau. Wake Up * To More Comfort Without Nagging Backache Nkggingbackache.loss of pep and energy, headaches and dizziness may be due to slow- ‘ down of kidney function. Doctors say good kidney function is very important to good health. When some everyday condition, such . as stress and strain* causes this important function to slow down, many folks suffernagging backache—feel miserable. Minor bladder irritations due to eold or wrong diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passages. Don’t neglect your kidneys if thee, conditions bother you. Try Doan’s Pills—a mild B tie. Used succesHfully by millions for .0 years. It’s amazing how many times ’• give happy relief from these discomforts—help the 1 Srnilesof kidney tubes and flli ten flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills today!

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