Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 260, Decatur, Adams County, 3 November 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
•■' 1; | |- _• . j ”■/.. - *m k r ''' ni^y- mWmL' jmi s -' • : - -IwMk' JjMM * ' 'vMfiF 'KwHHMEnix, ■UH .\\ v'l jaHllL M L, . /*' J Hv > \V -i g ! -: ;f steH’ &m . '■ ' > b *' < ■' ■ ' | I Co „-:. _ A .IL . ■■■MM •;■ • ' •,';. ' | J ■! • ■ IN A SPEECH before 19,000 persorts at the"Chlcago Stadium, Gen, Dwight D. Eisenhower calls Gov. Stevenson and President Truman his “Siamese-twin opponents.” Applauding the Republican Presidential nom- . inee are Gov. Earl Warren, of California, and Harold Stassen, former Minnesota governor. (International)
DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
Adams Central Patrons II I I ' 'A •', .. . Jp|i •; i ■ ' . '• * VOTE FOR FLOYD M. MITCHEL FOR MEMBER SCHOOL BOARD WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP 7.'i ' ■ ■ THE FATHER OF CHILDREN ATTENDING SCHOOL, " MITCHEL HELPED ORGANIZE PROGRAM OF TRANSPORTATION OF PAROCHIAL SCHOOL CHILDREN AND J FAVORS CONTINUATION OF THIS PROGRAM. ‘ JL MITCHEL FAVORS CONSTRUCTION OF A CENTRAL- " IZED SCHOOL? TO EASE TRANSPORTATION PROBLEMS.\ OUR BUILDING PROGRAM IS ON ITS WAY! LET’S HAVE NO MORE COSTLY DELAYS! LET’S ELECT MITCHEL ■'■ ■•' . ■ 'A- ■ j ■ ■! ?< . Thia Advertisement Paid for By Candidate
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DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Terms McCarthy Voice Os Fascism Charges Once Used Forged Document MILWAUKEE, Wia. tIP — A former FBI Communist hunter said today that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, R-Wis., once used a “forged” document in a senate speech. \? E<iward Morgan, Washington attorney who once served as assistant to FBI director J. Edgar Hoov- , er, called the controversial senator ; the “voice of Fascism” in a television appearance? here Sunday night. >» ... Morgan, who said he specialized in investigations of Communism during his years with the FBI, appeared with Thomas E. Fairchild, McCarthy’s Democratic opponent for the senate. He said that an investigation by the FBI crime detection laboratory, proved a document which McCarthy once used in a senate speech to be “an out-and-out forgery,” He said that the document bore a stamp which McCarthy implied was the stamp of a government* security agency but that FBI agents learned the stamp was bogus. Morgan criticized McCarthy for “the colossal effrontery to present himself to the people of Wisconsin as a fighter against Communism.” This junior senator of yours instead of fighting Communism is the voice of Fascism in this country,” the former FBI agent said. Meanwhile, McCarthy promised an “expose”, of the democratic national committee’s answers to his recent “documentation” of the record of Dov. Adlal E. Stevenson, Democratic presidential candidate. McCarthy is scheduled to speak over the nationwide network of the Mutual Broadcasting System tonight at 8:30 p.fli. Don Surine, a McCarthy aide, said the senator’s radio speech will contain "new material” about the persons attacked in the “Stevenson versus Stevenson” speech he made from Chicago last Monday. The Democratic national committee charged \Saturday that McCarthy made at least 18 false statements or distortions in the Chicago speech? McCarthy called the national committee charge “the most frantic lying spree upon which a presidential campaign has ever embarked.” However, “I have a surprise for them because ... I will expose this desperate last-minute attempt
’ ! Evangelist I ||l|oJm Cm ■ r Revival services will begin at the »Friends church in Monroe tonight at 7:30 o’clock with the Rev? Mer Vin Taylor, Decatur, as the David and Rebekah LaShan of Tayjor University will have change of the singing. Services WiH [continue each night until Novsenper 16. ; The Rev. Vernon Riidy |is tijie resident pastor in charge. to hjde and protect the Communist linefthinkers and writers who dominate the Stevenson camp,” he Jackpots Are Handy ’ BLANDON, Miss. UP — The Rankin bounty home demonstration council converted the old abandoned county jail here into a Clubhouse. Th© women renovated the'structure with money recovered from confiscated slot machines (he had stored there. ■1? "I v ~ — Trie House Not Safe ■_ PpINT PLEASANT, W. Va. UP r-Ahy port in a storm doesn’t go Call, 13, and Dawson Can |to their tree house. A lightning bolt damaged the tree, s&atiere|l the house and the boys were treated at a hospital for body J>ur|s. ? I ’ Jail Too Dry For Him | WW BRITAIN, Conn. UP — |Aft|r being jailed for drunkenness, William B. Daniels picked a |o<il| and escaped, leaving a note Explaining, “I got awfully thirsty.”
Rival Parties I Claim Control Os Congress 432 House Seats, 34 In Senate Up ? For Grabs Tuesday WASHINGTON, UP — Republicans claimed today they will capture both houses of congress lin Tuesday’s voting. Democrats confidently* predicted they will strengthen their present majorities. Privately, strategists of both parties agreed whoever wins the presidential election is likely to carry the house. It would take something like a Republican landslide, however, to dislodge the Democrats from control of the Senate. \ Congressional elections will be held in Tuesday to fill 432 of the 435 house steals and 34; of the 96 senate seats. Maine elected a Republican senator and three Republican house members in its election September 8. The present lineup: House Senate ’’ Democrats 230 49 Republicans 200 46 Independent 11 ; H Vacancies 4 0 Forty-nine senate seats and 218 house seats are needed for Control. t j ' The political party electing a President normally wins control of both houses of congress. The last cast of a divided victory was in 1916, when Woodrow Wilson was elected along with a Democratic senate and a Republican house. Os the 34 senate scats at stake, 20 are now held by Republicans and 14 by the Democrats. Five of the Democrats are .southerners assured of election, leading the GOP just nine states to convert their present minority into a majority. Sen. Earle C. Clements of Kentucky, chairman of the Democratic senatorial campaign committee, predicted the Democrats will win 19 of the senate contests, including seven seats now held by Republicans. These seven are in Indiana, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Utah and Washington, If the Democrats' win thel 19 senate raceb, they I will hold: 54 senate seats in the congress which convenes Jan. 3. Thirty-five of the senators whose terms do not expire this year are Democrats. By his silence, on other contests, Clements in effect conceded the the seats they pow hold for Nebraska, where there are two senate coiltests this year, ’ North Dakota, New York, California, and Vermont. Sen. William F. Knowiand, 'R-Calif., has no Democratic opposition. ' L GOP campaigners see their best chances of unseating inpumbent Democrats in Michigan, Maryland, Wyoming and Connecticut .They look hopefully but with less confidence at Democratic seats in West Virginia, New Mexico and Kentucky.
TRUMAN GOES (Continued From Page Oae) Truman lifted the secrecy from the memorandum he, Knowland, \ had wired the justice department demanding an investigation of Morse’s use of it. | I L Mr, Truman planned tq spend a few hours today in the presidential suite of the Hotel Muelenbach in Kansas City, and then cdme to the ‘%ittl,e White Hoqse” here j for a map and to visit relatives. He accepted an invitation to attend a reunion dinner with his field •artillery buddies of World War I, and was scheduled to speak for live minutes on a final Democratic radio and television program tonight. Trade In a Good Town—Decaturl
— ! - IIIIIIIIIS B ' jBB w 8 IBW ,/ a-jC- «-’“.,S-*-« I mmHHhKb ’ , l . «>€ 1 w *v«?> ? \ B */■■ .’' w WBIC Hr WMMBMMpg- : %> jf RAMIS UGHT TH! SKY over the Ohio Penitentiary where 1,200 prisoners went on a wild spree of destruction tend fire-setting. The men ended their mutiny over “bad food” and returned to their cells just before a scheduled push by 600 Ohio National Guardsmen. Eight buildings in all were set ablaze .by the convicts at the downtown Columbus prison. Damage Is estimated at $1,000,000. (International) ,
Straight Party Votes Decreasing In County
Just as the pollsters are 1 queasy about making any outright predictions as to the outcome of the general elections, even in the strongest so called “strongholds,” the same situation exists in Adams county. From a look at the past three general elections in Adams county it may safely be said, here at least, that the day of the straight party voter is a thing of the past. People are simply not making one mark on their ballot, an indication? perhaps, that the voters are judging seperate individuals rather than parties. For instance, in 1948 Dewey carried Adams county by 192 votes, al-; most a split down the middle. Adams county folk cast 9,500 ballots, then. Gov. SChricker won by a plurality of 1,337 votes; Watkins by 1,235. Although Fleming, secretary of state, won locally by\ 1,285 votes, he lost to Republican Leland’ Smith two years later. However, in 1948, not a single Republican on the local ticket managed to get in Office. ' Going back i to 1944 the county toas stronger for ‘ Dewey, having given him a plurality over RooseVeit of votes. Locally, though, the GOP All candidates On the Democratic ebunty ticket w?re swept into bfficje, all except Republican Roy Price, who won out as treasurer. . In the 1940 election there is again the fluctuation between the national, state and local tickets, the kind that drives prophets cra|zy. Bombs Explode At Homes Os Workers I Harvester Plant Employes Guarded CHICAGO UP guarded the homes of 100 supervisory employes of the strike-plagued International Harvester Co. today after black powder bombs exploded at the homes of two workers. ; Police commissioner Timothy O’Connor met with Manin Kennelly and other police officials Sunday to the labo’- vio? lence and then announce! the plans for special police , protection. O’Connor said he had handed a list of 100 supervisory employes to Cajit. Thomas Lyqns, deputy chief of the uniformed force, and ordered him to furnish adequate protection, \ A series of violent incidents, im eluding a street slaying, have plagued police here since the Farm Equipment-United Electrical Work?ers Ind. went on strike at eight Harvester plants in three states. The black powder l|ombs ploded early Sunday, damaging the homes of two Harvester workers, but injuring nd one. The company offered a SI ,000 r'eward for information leading to the solution of each incident and expanded its offer to promise that the same rewajrd would be paid for the arrest and conviction of persons \ committing any future violence. One bomb was thrown onto the front stairs of the home of William
HOWARD MORRISON DEMOCRAT for CONGRESS ■ . ' r ■ \ ■jV ' .< .. :■ I■ ■ 4th Indiana District ; I EVERYBODY'S . CANDIDATE
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 195>
Republican W’illkie won the county by 865 votes. Now, however, the Republican standard bearer was Strong enough to pull through the local candidates here. The Republican broom cafcght Up air its candidates except third district commissioner Dubach and treasurer Blakey,, both Democrats. I Back still further, in 1936, Roosevelt walloped Landon characteristically as he had done all over the country. Roosevelt landslided his Republican opponent by 2,530 voles. In that disastrous year for the Republicans, it must be kept in mind, Landon carried only twb states in the entire nation, one reason, perhaps, (or such overwhelming Deifco'cratlc victories, on a local and state level. It appears to follow, that the stronger the national candidate, the more vote getting power rubs off on all other candidates, regardless of their politics. In 1936? there was another clean Democratic sweep, state,, local and national. It was then that SChricker entered the picture as lieut. governor. He took the county by 2,440. Townse’nd was candidate for governor. He won by a plurality of .2,456 votes here. So . . . vqry Jew are willing to stick their necks out over the results on the local outcome. The ones that do are the hard headed faithful found in’ each of the major parties. Inwardly, it's a safe bet, thqy’re all having palpitations about the result. V \ Kilpatrick, a forenlan at Harvester’s McCormick Works here. The explosion shattered 15 windows. About 30 minutes later another bomb was tossed against the doorway of Frank Hrdina’s home ajKfs,battered several windows. J Both men, who along with other supervisory employes and some non-union workers have been reporting to work each day, told police they had been (threatened. The FE-UE workers struck plants here and in Northern Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky to force acceptance of demands for a wage hike and fringe benefits. The union was expelled from the CIO several years ago for allegedly following Communist or pro Communist leaderships.? , , ‘ ? Commissioners In Monthly Meeting County commissioner# met in regular session this morning at the county auditor’s office. Routine claims were head with no petitions reported to have been - ceived. Commissioners this afternoon visited the property the county bought from the Elzey estate in Monmquth. Reportedly, the land •is scheduled to be as part or an extension of a epunty road. Ancient Dugouts Found JACKSONVILLE, Fla. UP — A party of clam-hunting youngsters discovered four dugout canoes in a mud flat here which the stat© archaeologist. John Griffin, believes were made by Indians more than 250 years ago.
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