Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 269, Decatur, Adams County, 13 November 1952 — Page 10
PAGE TWO-A
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DMCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBCATUR, INDIANA
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America Smiles On Displaced Latvians Mississippi Firm Employs Latvians SLEDGE, Miss. UP — When Harvey Howze offered to find homes on his 1,500 acre plantation here for 25 familiea of Latvian refugees he little realized he was undertaking an impressive experiment in American* opportunity. As a matter of fact. Howze had occasion to regret his decision many thnes before a common understanding resulted in a profitable venture known as the Latvia Furniture Manufacturing Co. It became a firm which now sells school furniture to all but three of the 48 states and has *n annual payroll of $200,000. When the families, all of whom had fled their' homes from both Germans and Russians, arrived, they had little more than the clothes they 1 wore. Few spoke more than broken English and all were unaccustomed to the climate and terrain of the Mississippi Delta. They did woiiders with the tenant houses to which they were assigned — putting in new floors, papering the ceilings and breaking ground for new gardens. Their ability' to grow much on a small plot amazed all the planters but they couldn't get used to American cotton plantation methods. 'They are a cultured people unaccustomed to rigorous toil under a broiling sun,” Howze said. ‘They 1 , were more accustomed to dairying
and livestock than to cotton farming. ”i \ The- Latvians became restless and }|owze sensed it. He noted many xrf them showed exceptional skill in woodworking and mechanics so he set up a woodworking Hobby ’ shop on the plantation. It wasn’t many days before Howzer discovered he had some excellent craftsmen. ' Tlieif °dd jobs soon had developed into orders for store fixtures and £ven one request for a bank iuterio?. Then Howze found out from the National School Service that 600,000 desks were needed for classrooms Over the country, *He and the Latvians moved their hobby shop to a 4O*acre site. Soon defense orders began to come tn, too. Today the plant employs 25 workers. The five original Latvian workers have key jobs. All of the 12 families now living in this area have new automobiles and they have built their own chore*, equipped with pews hewn in the local shop. Their fear long since has given way to hope for the; futire. ” ' ■ Nation's Corn Crop Forecast Increased ! ' : T ' Forecast Is Above Average Production November 16 to 22 has been designated as national diabetes test week, it was announced today by Dr. Gerald Koihne, county chairman of -the American diabetes society’s Annual drive. “Tt is? estimated that there are a inilli<>n persons in the nation wifio hrtve diabetes and do not know it,” Dr. Kohne said. “The firtFt job is to tlhd these people and the Adams county medical society is joining other similar organizations throughout the nation in setting aside a week during whkh time specimens brought to any doctor will be tested without any chkirge.” Dr. I Kohne added that people whq oesjre to have the free test are asked to go to their family dociot possible so the task will be teveply divided throughout the! county. However, he added, any physician wilt make the test for any resident of the county free of charge. | : The ns mm al organization pointed out that if dlalietes is detected in an burly stage, the victim can live indefinitely with very few inconveniences In a normal life. If the wlHnent goes' unheeded/ death can -raMwi. The iuittonal society has sponsored Un annual free test week for the dwst several years, hut .this year iU'fti the hope that every person |n|the nation who has any Bymptoibw of diabetes will take adthe dettH tion week program, the local chairman said. ? »I
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THIS STUDENT at University ot Minnesota, chained and roped to a statue outside Charlie’s case to downtown Minneapolis during fraternity Initiation prank, wouldriT. give the photographer his name unless the photographer produced a file, and J the photographer safd, “No name,: no file," and left him thia way. j i ’' < International)
Working Mothers Welfare Problem Lack Os Cdre For Children Problem l r NEW YORK (U.P.)—Catharine Lenroot took her first job when it wasn't too unusual for a girl of 12 to be put work in a factory. She retired after nearly 40 years as one of the nation’s leading experts on child welfare and admitted that we’re faced with a new kind of employment problem for women. The problem now Is working mothers, not working daughters. “Lack of proper day care for children adds to the problem,** said the former head of the children’s bureau in Washington. D.C. “It is something which must be solved by communities. “I believe so thoroughly in the responsibility of the local citiieb Now I’ll have a chance to see how child welfare works at the community ievei.” Now in Suburbs She just established a home with friends in suburban Hartsdale. N. Y. The last part of her busy career to be left behind was her appointment as United States representative on the executive board of the United Nations international children’s emergency fund, which she resigned last month. ■ The 61-year-o|d child welfare expert still vividly recalls one of her first interviews when she was hired by the industrial commis-
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slot* in Wisconsin in 1913. “I went to see a Polish, woman,” she recalled. “She told me that her 12-year-old daughter had died reWhen I told her how sorry I was, she remarked that the girl soon could have gone to work. It made a lasting impression on me. It wasn’t that the mother didn’t lpvo the child, but the family was so desperately in need that every child had to go to work aa soon as possible.” Remembers Depression _j Twenty-five years later, when she was chief of the government children's bureau, came the longawaited day in her career, Congress passed the first federal child labor legislation. Asked what events of the past 40 years she thinks had the most •ericas effect on young people, Miss Lenroot answered without hesitation: I “The depression I lay awake mote nights during, the depression than at any other time.lt was difficult« to think that young girls, as well as boys, were hopping freight trains and traveling from ohej town to looking for any kind of job” Ju ! Nine Lives Saved I WESTBROOK. Me.. UP —A cat called Snookie got himself imprisoned in the ceiling of a newlybuilt houie and only his faint *‘ineow«" attracted rescuers after a week's captivity. Charles 'Elleano, a French acrobat, Crossed the Thames River In England in 1951 on a wire lilOO feet long and %ths of an inch thick. 7' - ' Trade in a Good "Town—Decatur!
© THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1953
WEEK - END SPECIALS Leave Your Orders Now for Thanksgiving. HI |1 ' I » LARD lb. With SI.OO Meat Order BACK BONES — Ib, 39c Fresh Sausage 3 lbs. SI.OO FRESH SIDE 3 lbs. SI.OO SWEET BREADS, Ib. 39c BEEF CHOPS — lb. 59c T-BONES — Ib. 59c LEAN PORK STEAK—Ib. 4te Center Cut Our Own Smoked Ham tb. 59c Our Own Smoked Sausage Ib. 49c ~J'' ' 11 ... . k ...-..A—AJA. :SUDDUTH MEAT MARKET so. 13th St Phone 3-270«
HEARING EXPERT RETURNS TO DECATUR SONOTONE’S HEARING specialist, J. M. Friend, of Fort Wayne, will conduct Sonotone’s regular , monthly hearing center at th** Rice flotel in Decatur , this SaytVday. November 15, from 2 to 1 6 p. m. ' Anyone who! has a hearing, problem or difficulty in understanding is invited to consult Mr. Friend without charge. Those doing’igo will be given an audiometric hearing test following medically accepted practices and an analysis of the individual hearing loss. v Investigate the Sonotone plan for better hearing, it employs the latest research developments for compensative correction of hearing impairments. idvt.
WISCONSIN OPEN EYE SWISS MCHEESE OFF THE BIG 200 LB. WHEEL 59c LB.
