Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 231, Decatur, Adams County, 30 September 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Minor Violence At Harvester Plants Back-To-Work Move , Results In Clashes CHICAGO, UP —'Minor violence on picket lines before midwestern International Harvester company plants was reported for the second consecutive day today. The clashed resulted from a back to work Movement among some employes at plants In Chicago, Rock Island, 111., and. Richmond, Ind., where members pt the independent Farm Equipment Workers are bn strike.

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Police broke up smalt tint tights ajon£ the picket lines the , Rock Island, 111., Fantail tractor plant'today. No Injuries were reported. One man was taken into Custody and after police Admonished him. ■ Company officials «ai|d 402 workers entered the plant: compared with .29*1 Monday. ; At Richmond, Ind.j Maybr Lester F. Meadows for state . police aid in controlling picket line violence after a w4>rker was threatened near strike-bound plant there Monday. , Cov. Henry F. Schricker sent Robert O'Neal, superintendent of thh Indiana state police, and state labor experts to Richmond as an Investigating team. < About 25.000 members of the j ;.--.■ j. . t- n. 'HIL

independent Farm EJquiptnent - United Electric Workers Union have been pn strike at Harvester plants since Aug. 21 in a fight Tor higher wages and fringe benefits. A dozen strikers were arrested in Chicago Monday at the McCormick tractor works w hen .pickets tried to stop workers whtij were attempting to return to work. Several slugfests were reported ' at Rock Island’s Harvester plant after the Farm Bquipment Workers local ordered all strikers to report for mass picketing in an attempt to halt back-to-work movements. At Richmond a union organizer, Wilbur F. McNair, 33, of Detroit, 1 Mich.|,\ was arrested on an assault 1 l>.' 1 \ FI j ! ,;iuR

> DODOATUB DAILY IHBMOOHAT, DBO4THB, INDIANA

charge and held iq lieu of 32,000 bond Monday. Police said he threatened one of about fOO returning workers with a club. Meantime, the Chicago district of the Army, Ordnance Carps said it withdrew its inspectors from the Harvester plant in suburban Melrose Park. 111., after . strikers served notice that they would not allow the government inspectors to enter the plant. That plant has been closed by a strike by the 010 United Auto Workers since negotiations for a new contract with th© company were broken -off. • Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

Little Damage Done Aj Autos Collide About |4Q in damages whs caused to two cars today when ©Hie V. Culbertson, 62, 6, Decatur, stopped at the stop sign on Third and Monroe street, then proceeded, apparently ,too soon, and was struck by a car driven by Fern Kendall, 57m Wren, O. , Continues Cases Os Youths Indefinitely ;The. three 18-year-olds who were arraigned Sunday for allegedly causing a disturbance at the SunSiet skating rink oVer the weekend, were released with their cases continued indefinitely by justice of the peace Floyd Hunthr. * The youths are 'Jack Btetler, R. Buchmaster, both of Willshire, Q., and, Lester Manley of Salem. Attends Conference Os 'Friends Os Land' Chamber of Commerce secretary Walter Ford, and Ward| Calland, managing director of the national soybean crop improvement council, attended the conference of the “Friends of the Land’* last eve* ning at Fort Wayne, and report the prhceedjngs as being highly inforiuative and extremely interest tng. .. __ ■ WpWFAIJ Admitted: Williaan A. Hendericks, Berne; Richard Meshberger, Linn Grove; Duane Cliffton, Wren Ohio; Charles H. Miller, Willshire Ohio; Dismissed: Mrs. Francis Geels and baby girl Decatur; Mrs.\ Erhard Bliewerriitz and baby girl, Berne; Mrs. Marcpp Castro and baby girl, Willshire, Ohio. WiMgjmi Ilin ■hi4'i »" W? t gm The Rev. and Mrai. William BoP linger of Hu-ntingtoh, are the parents of a bahy boy, Weighing 7 lbs., 4 oz.. and at g:lj7 p.m. Monday at the hospital. Pfc, and Brice Farlow of Geneva, are the parents of a baby born at £: 20 a.ni. today at the* hospital and weighing 6 lbs., 12H az. ' ■ A' son was;boirn to, Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Muselnjan o( Indianapolis, former of Berne, at 12:22 p.m. at the hospital and weighed 8 lbs., ,14 op. The mother was foYnher Marilyn Smith. A-son. weighing 6 lbs. 8 oz., was born to Mr. and Mrs; Fred Haugk at 11: *5 p.m. Jtbday at the hospital. Janet Ann is the jname of the daughter born tik - Bjfr. and Mrs. Andrew Miller at 1 a.m. today at the -hospital. Sl)e weighed 7 Ibs.i 10 oz.?and is. the second child and daughter in tiie family. The mother is the’ former- Jackie Teeple and Mr. 'and Mrs. Leo Teapie and Mrs. Peter d. Miller are the grandpar1 ents, : I I _ < - rT~f v Democrat Want Ads Bring Resqßs SstsitMA iCollipop 'Brief We.l »4. 419,455 /ar tbe active Kiddies Long wearing pretty panties in delicioijis Candy colors AWe of softest cozy knit cotton Absorbent Comfortable Wash n-r a wink Needs Np ironing mH COLORS: Y Blue i \ Pink Maize Xfiflr M|nt / White Sizes: '2 Y& t 65c 690 Ehinger’s , The Boston Store ' '= : J

Top Czech Diploma! To Remain In U. S. '' i ’ Ketno Turns Back On ; \j Red-Ruled Homeland united Nations, n. y., up 1 — Dr. Ivan Kertao of Czechoslovakia, who quit list week as United Nations secretary general tor legal affairs, turned his back on his Communist-ruled homeland today to remain in “this great and free country of the United States,” Diplomatic observers considered Remote decision as the most important defection among high-rank-ing han Curtain diplomats in recent years. Kerno, an intiipate of Jan Masaryk and undersecretary of state in the government of Eduard Bepes announced his decision in a denunciation of the :Communist coup which seized Czechoslovakia from the Benes regime in 1848. , ”ln 1948,” he said Monday night on a radio and television of the U. N. correspondents association pane) show, “United or Not,” “I had to conform to' the U- N. staff regulations and to reserve my opinion. Now l am free to speak, especially concerning relations between Czechoslovakia /md the Soviet Union.” Kerno, who is 61, said he planned to remain with the U. N. even though he voluntarily relinquished his post as assistant to secretary General Trygve L|ie on Sept. 26. He expected to wdrk tor the U.N, international law |commission on problems of refugees and stateless “I have always forked in countries where international questions are of paramount importance,” he said. “After six yejurs with the U. N.. I plan to remain here in this great and free country — the U. S. — and continue to* work ° n international ; Kerno was thej third top-lipe Czech in recent years to renounce Prague's red regime and to spek sanctuary here. Jan Papanek, chief ? - _ V ' Ask Abort I Decatur Camera Olab PHOTO CONTEST HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.

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representative t<v the U. N. tor Czechoslovakia in 194|, denounced the Cqpmqnist coup w*hen it occurred. Two years ago, Vladimir Houdek, then chief of the Czech delegation) to the U. N., resigned and asked Washington for political asylum. Kerno sa|d he anticipated, no difficulty in gaining permission to remain here> Even it his U- N- diplomatic status should lapse, he told

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r‘ ■ F ‘ I- • r TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30,1952

newsmen, he was certain Washington would raise no objection. The international legalist, who had a distinguished career in the defunct League of Nations, told his broadcast audience that Masaryk and Benes had’ always held that “no compromise is possible with dictators.” “I am mor« than ieyler convinced that they were right,” he said. “Any arrangement with dictators does not last.”