Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1953 — Page 9

DECATUR DAU A’ DEMOCRAT

* ’ ’ In ■ Il NO HEAVY PfeTV NO ROPES N 0 WEATHEIt UFTINGf .JtS NO PINS.! WSR»ISM| Announcing the ■ ' -tD|/HftA|Dit completely new and different I MVI IrFlllwll Filtramatic Clothes Dryer W THROW OFF STEAMY HEAT j OR STICKY LINT/ | A new and different kind of electee dryer I Dries clothes perfectly—any day of the year. Si- , elusive built-in FILTRATOR eliminates expensive plumbing and outside vents for lint and moisture. Come' jn ■ today I ‘ i «:■ \ u \ The ONLY PRYIR with § | Cabinet and Drum I in UMTIMt PORCELAIN I I ft I ® I Protects against moisture, rus, I stains and scratches. Easy op I clothes. Stays new looking for I years! i D “”|’ ' fl' I FRIGIOAIRE'S * \ I Ultra-Mafic DRYER I and FRIOIDAIRE V • 8 r~N~~EWB ‘H AUTOMATIC ( |l* I WASHER. PlOn \ to own thorn I J iuy on | F-OF-VALUE-■Mb 5 259 K NEW LOW TERMS LJJIf — -1 > • L ■ Ip UHRICK BROS. ' \ 1 ■ 'UN. • N r \ li \ • i * ■ I ■ I i"'■■■■■ i | ■■b * P . — '

NOW! NO MONEY DOWN T BEST WASHER DEAL IN TOWN! ~ pesafasr-K o WITH THE PURCHASE OF EITHER OF THESE rn‘ rU j 4qp I Ij 1® ffi£= —-ffi I .. £2„„ \ A : 1 J| JX :. j | I ; , WASHERS ® J J WITH NO MONEY DOWN Inn Will Receive At Kt Extra Cost wiS| < ' )& * ' 4 | . *~~L- IU y SHEETS and PILLOW CASES ■ i v ~ ' ; :■ V ' i f (4 SHEETS and 4 PILLOW CASES) ' ' ' 1 i — — v W F"""""" 1 ‘"1 Just Think NOW “*“'”*f if I GOOD/wEAR I NO Mover DOWN •ll».w S« "1-iS '149-95 I T 7 >'-‘"„, NIdS , I on tires, naoios NO MONEY {DOWN | I NQ MONEY DOWN I—J ■ g , - , L_ ■ jISL : ..: ;..^JfL.liiL___ J i... . i ... 2 L_ ,____j ; ,

Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, February 26,1953.

MaWy Tongues Pose Problems T 4 Indian Life CAiVWTTA, UP —The language probLenjpin India is one of the na- ' tion’s biggest headaches. Out\ of this iproilem grow social and political < lffi<pulties. There I are about 225 languages and dfacets in India, but many of these; «< languages are mere tribal topgues spoken by a small number|!pf people. Stitl; jit takek 24 languages to accoiintiifor the speech of 96 percent of iihe population. Theiu|e of many 1 languages complicates Hhe activities of the nfefy republic! i which has just entered its four®! year. For example, there are different languages on a 10-rupe^;p ote to designate the value piece of paper money. The wicial language of the Indian republic is Hindi, but it is not uhaprstbod in many' areas. There eyen is. resistance to it in sorde j!t)lij| , es. It is moist popular in northjerrijllndia. Perhaps one-fourth of the J 00,000,0<00 people in India use it a i; their n|ative language. 1 I In ithi i t l eastern area the main ( j is Bengali. In tihe south therel jfir.e two main languages}, Tamil; and Telugu. On the western the main languages are Gujerh-tiCand Marathi.. i Thdlj liriide between these varitous Unfiiage groups is English, the lahwiage left in India by the British |r»ho ruled the country for 30G year®. English has been referred th “the currency of understandiidg|t ItJs widely used by the travelllinit members of the business and political worlds. OnO i <ffi the major problems to develop the presence of the' manyjlaiguage groups in India has been ;thfe} strong demand for the of linguistic states. Undertpressure from those who want • l|sia to be divided into states! 1 ; flflipng language lirfes, the government his promised to set UP one subdivision, the state of ! Andhra. Whis is on the eastern sea■l>oard ;iit<l the language* | spoken there l^rWelu gn. N ' * ' “Laiigfjiige is both a binding force iia-4d separating orite,” said

P/ime Minister Nehru in discussting the problem. “We have to be vAry careful in the matter of languages in India, lest, in our enthusiasm for unity, we might not encourage disruption.** Nehru feels that the government did right in designating Hindi as tb,e national language of India. He ■ believe® it comes to qualifying for the job. } y He told his people that-use ‘Hindi must be encouraged, but at ( |the same time said, "we have to the other great provincial languages also." . |i. Some persona believe it might be |wise to adopt "Movjd'Hindustani” jas the national language. Thip is jh dialect which hasl been popularized by the Indian movie industry find which is generally understood gill over the country by the millions of enthusiastic movie-goers. Nudes Outlawed, Slumps | MILWAUKEE. Wis., UP. — The I>us iijess of tattooing designs oh brawny chests and biceps has Bropped off so much that Milwaukee's leading tattoo artist depends bn sign-painting for his living. I And that despite the . fact that Milwaukee is a favorite leave town for sailors front Great Lakes (111.) raval training station. Armund Dletzel, Milwaukee’s top ntan with the electric) needle and figment, can see no irnprovement for the future either. He added sadly that tattoo bjisi- , ness, or whait’s left oc it, is becomlihg more conservative. The reason Sjk that most of his few customers are those lads from Grebt Lakes and the U. S. navy frowns on un-. draped female forms etched on its Sailors. i 1 “The navy insists on putting . clothes on ’em", said Diejtzel. “If a Tad already has an unclothed girl tattooed on his ann, we have I to [rait on a couple of garments.’*N Thus it's purely, sentiment that keeps a number pf tattoo patterns tacked to Dietzel’s studio w r all. N’avy regulations never, Would periiiit them on any sailor. I The price of a tattoo is one of the few things inflation lias ,nut hit. Dletzel has kept his prices rm low as 51 or 11.50 for some of his designs. |The price is higher, of course,

4- By"--— k if £ N.j. Wk f 1081 ■ * M , IMF 1... .^•W r " kfc D 'Ti9 . . . ‘'Sorrj I killed v !1 '’ Kb ” ■ ffi ■ 4't ‘ 7? ... 'wE .i. Ihl —• • Mrs. Ida Bruns, mother-in-taw, > Clifton Cockerham (head bowed) Is led down stairway by officers. is wheeled into operating room. A BRIDE ,<Fi nJn ® months, Mrs. Doris Cockerham, 25, is dead and her mother, Mrs. Ida H. Brims, is in a I* hospital with serious stab wounds in New York. Folice said they broke into the home and found the r.hsband, Clifton Cockerham, 29, leaning over his wife’s body muttering, “You’re so beautiful. I'm sorry J killed you.” Mrs. Bruns allegedly was'stabbed while attempting to protect her daughter. (International) ——— r-: r — -t — ■- ■ j — i ; ; — .

for su<‘h decorations jus a “^hest-1 wide" Yull-rigjited sailing ship and the legend “HomeU'ard Bound.” Or ! a good-looking girl 1 wearing a sailor cap. Or a’ full-length, bare-leg-ged female form with a pair of sixguns belted tq her slim waist with the legend “Lone Star Texas,” Then -there ars tbe slauAards — dragons, peacixks, mermaids and. rertairily, ithe mkull and crosabonq®.

slut, as Dietzel sadly said, “You | can't depend on these tattoos; I paijit signp mostly.” ; . ■ Religious Fire AKRON, 0., UP—The fire that the R«v. Dallas F. Billington started i heta was cause for rejoicing and not prosecution. Hd burned the final mortgage papers on the nUI-

lion-dollar temple of his Baptist congregation just |hree years and seven mopths after moving-in time, although he ! had been told it would be 20 years before the mortgage could be paid off. — —: — , — The General Electric Company supplied electrical -equipment for more than I,ooo* diesebelectric locomotives durihg 1952.