Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 149, Decatur, Adams County, 25 June 1953 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT B* o *!* Sunday By Enters of CO., INC. Entered ar th „ I * c * tur ’ Ind ” Post Off fc® M Second Class Matter t’ w g°}* hattß * Editor r'h-. 5®S Vice-President Chas. Holthouse , Treasurer „ ~ . Subscription Rates: \ ±jy Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $8.00: bix months, $4.20; 3 months, $2.25. MM * 1 ? 1 ,: be y° nd and Adjofaing Counties: One year, ♦9.00, 6 months, $4-75;. 3 months, $2.50. Carrier, 25 cents per week. Single copies, 5 cents.
No one would object if rain burst out all over. 0 q The Korean war has entered its fourth year. Our progress to ward peace is over shadowed by the possibility that we may have to fight the South Koreans before the conflict ends. 0 0 The Captain of the Polish liner Batory is said to have deserted his ship and asks for asylum in Britain. Gerhardt Eisler, the Communist, escaped deportation from the United States by stowing away on the Batory. If the Captain wanted to be a real hero he should have ordered his crew to abandon ship and then scuttled the liner, which is now owned by the Red government of Poland. O 0— Legislation has been enacted to send 37 million bushels of wheat, worth about 80 million dollars to Pakistan to feed the hungry. There was some opposition to the give-away gesture, but the congressional majority was also swayed by the thought that a gift of wheat to the Indians would also reduce the big surplus of grain in this country. From a humanitarian point of view, the act is commendable for it seems that we have more wheat than can be eaten. - , Q 0 Republican Governor Stratton of Illinois is making a poor record as chief executive of the state. He has not been able to lead the majority party and Yesterday was turned down in a crime-busting : : 11 ' - , bill, although gangsters seem to over run the: state. So far the kidnaping oTTjffffSSSETStF?? Clem Garver has not been solved and authorities are| inclined to think that the assembly member has been murdered;!His body may be at the bottom of Lake Michigan. The Governor should be able to arouse public opinion in a cleanup drive. 0 0 Unexpectedly the senate hearing on President ’ Eisenhower s nomination of Tom Lyon as .director of the Bureau of Mines was cancelled, before a witness was heard. Political experts believe that Lyon’s name was withdrawn because of John L. Lewis’ strong opposition to the appointment. The administration may be trying to butter Lewis bread by letting him dictate the appointment of the mam to direct the inspection of mineth but the old mine boss is the sort of fellow who always drives a one-way bargain. Kowtowing- to Lewis will hot aid the President.
Keep YOUR HH oh ifowEjgggy, |QS9Q9Vwife«l IdtiUmßkwJ miia wwahia dedicated to i iprove to you that there U I Ur. Sehall’c ebeiolutely no need to J ** * •offer becauae of came, | CA/)r caUouaaa, bunioea, tired, I Wf tender, burning feet, JCAARMIDTa Athlete’. Foot or rheu- I * *Fmr VItF 9 matic-like peina due to I M/rrae weak or fallen arcbee. I VVCCH I A«eM made foot happy f ♦•97 ■ J through the use of I ™ Dr. ScboU’a Foot 1 Comfort Appliance., Remediea and Arch ..
Robbing The People:— Communist governments have no trouble in meeting financial problems. They simply resort to one kind of robbery or another. When the Reds came to power in Czechoslovakia they forced all workers to subscribe about four weeks of their salary annually as a state loan. Faced with recent economic problems the Czech government then decided to reevaluate the currency on the basis of the Russian ruble and at — the same time repudiate the loans, stroke confiscated a large share of individual savings. The order resulted in rioting in the streets, the same kind of rioting that flared up in East Germany. Only by calling out troops could order be restored but the people who were swindled out of their savings are not likely to forget their grievance. By stern measures the Reds may be able to stifle active resistance to their -tyranny. But a cold fear must grip them each time they think of the silent hatred that is building up in the hearts of the oppressed. Red leaders can never know when next •the fury of the mob will mount to the danger point, when the slaves will rise again in streets crying for the blood of their mas-, ters. -4-u—! o • 20 Years Ago Today j o o H •• I \ June 25, 1933 was Sunday. 0 o I Modern Etiquette | J BY ROBERTA LEE « I. 0 , 0 Q. If you are walking along the street with a friend and that friend stops to exchange a few words with an acquaintance, what should you do? I .. A. Don’t hang ajbout as if waiting to be introduced. Walk on slowly until your friend rejoins you. You should not join the other two persons unless specifically asked. Q. When mailing wedding announcements, is it all to include a card bearing the future address of the couple? A. Yes.; It may say: “Mr. ami Mrs. John R. \MoLcan. After the first pf ; October — 2241 (Madison Street. Fair City, Ohio.” Q. When a girl is dining out iwith a young man, and the food is not very good, is she privileged to -criticize it? A. Never under any circunistan - es. This would be the same as criticizing the cooking in a private .home, and ig just as ill-bred.
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CHAIN LIGHTNING! ’ 1 " I Q. | 0 ■ M c HHS
Summerfield Asks Postal Rate Boost Formal Request Is Made Os Congress WASHINGTON. UP —Postmaster general Arthur E. Summerfield has formally asked congress to approve postal rate increases to yield $240,625,061) a year, it was disclosed today. He proposed a four-cent stamp on non-local first class mail. The present rate is three cents for the first ounce. He recommended raising the present slx-cent rate for airmail to seven cents. He asked no change in the present rate of three cents for local first class mail or in the present two-cent rate fpr postcards. Hi a letter to Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Summerfield said the administration wants postal rate increases to make his department “as self-sustaining as practicable.” The rate increases asked are part of Summerfield’s program to wipe out a Post_ Office deficit of about $600,000,000 a year, 0 J- .———i o | Household Scrapbook | | BY ROBERTA LEE | 0 o Re-Sizing Rugs To re-size rugs, dissolve one pound of granulated glue in one gallon of boiling wateir. Tack the rug down on the floor,'lace down.-, and apply the\ hot glue to tin? back with a whitewash brush, taking care that the glue does uot soak through the rug. Furniture Marks It is often possible: to remove the white marks on furniture, that are caused by heat or water, by holding a hot iron near the spo‘t, but not near\ enough to )np-n or scorch. 'Lemons In order to make a lemon yield nearly double the quantity of juice that would be otherwise obtainable, heat it thoroughly Ixefore squeezing. Trade in a good Town —
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDUXA
Doan Is Chairman ‘ e j For Korean Drive. Mayor John Doan has been appointed Adams county chairman for the American-Korean Foundation. Inc., it wag announced today. Organization of the committee arid county quotas for the Korean-a|d drive will be outlined at a ’luncheon in Fort Wayne Friday noop, it was announced. Fourth district chairman is Clifford B. Ward of Fort Wayne. The drive will be made to raise SIB,OOO in the district and Allen countjls share will be more than: half of that amount. The state's quota |s $150,000 and the national goal js $5,000,000. Proceeds from the campaign will be used for immediate relief and rehabilitation work (n South Korea amonft Korean orphans, war widows, amputees and other victims of the war. j i’■ | Samuel Goldstein Trial Continues i / ’ 5 The trial of Samuel Goldsteifi, 62 of Fort Waype, who kidnaped sheriff John Baker and deputy sheriff Dalas Hower in 1926 |n this city, following a robbery qf the Linn Grove bank, continues in the Noble circuit court in Albion. ' s Goldstein 'is charged with selond degree burglary and ppsessiqn of burglary tools with intent; |o commit a felony by a person previously convicted of a felony. lie was previously convicted of participation in the burglary, but ttfe conviction was set asicft by ttje Indiana supreme -court because qf errors at the trial. ? Goldstein has served many years in prison. He was convictwl in the Adams circuit coihrt and sent to prison. He also served p term from 1935 to 1945. ;; Court News Divorce Case 1 Mary R. McGill I vs Mqrlin G. McGill; complaint for divorce; restraining order issued; notice issued for defendant on hearing fcSr attorney's fees and allowance oh June 26. Attorney: Parrish & Parrish. Marriage License Edwin Korte, 24. Decatur, anil Dorothy Etzler, 22, Convoy, O. ?
Relief Promised To Hoi Hoosiers Cool Front Friday Is Latest Forecast INDIANAPOLIS UP — Indiana’s first 1953 heat wave, which already has set one all-time 81-year Tecord and tied another, boiled on toward another mark today. '* But relief is in sight for sweltering Hoosiers, although a cool’front expected Friday won’t include enough rain to help drought-Strick-en crops. • The mercury neared 90 - before noon in Indianapolis and probably will break the all-time record for June 25 of 95 degrees set in 1890. It was the ninth day . of; this month to record 90-degree-or-better temperatures in the Hoosier capital, and the 12th day of the year. So far, weather experts said. June temperatures have averaged about three degrees above* normal. The mercury may reafh 100 downstate before the cooled breezes wash the scorched state- ft touched 100 in Indianapolis J June 20, only one degree short of the all-time record for any Jun£ day. Meanwhile, parched croplands wilted under the hot sun an<| suffered from lack of rain. June precipitation totaled only 1.17? ipches in Indianapolis through Wednesday, about one-third of normal. I A fire blamed on a caneles* motorist swept between and eight acres of the Greene-Sullivan state forest, the state ccjniervation department, Forty mature pine trees were destroyed, according to district fireJwjirden Ernest Craven of Brazil. Joseph Young, state forester in charge of fire control, urged lAotorists throughout the state Hribt to throw matches or of cars while the fire threat regains. Wednesday highs over included 97 at Evansville; |5 «t Indianapolis. Terre Haute and Fort Wayne, and 91 at South Bend? J, ;, < | I Eisenhower Praises | Work Os Red Cross || • WASHINGTON UP — Eisenhower said Wednesday! night he has "never been able to convey the depths of sentiment -dh- my heart” for the work of tlHi: Red I Cross. -J In an off-the-cuff speech tb the R£d Cross’ annual Mr. Eisenhower said no moralq factor in any war America has < ever waged has been more inrpertant than the Red Cross. 'hli 1 He added Red Cross ifilfkers, who serve as I have learned there is no happiness in life savq in service to and this satisfaction leads to est to heaven you’ll ever 'ie't on this earth.*’ " All Lit Up 1 . MONTPELIER. Vt . UP 87 percent of 'Vermont’s farms now get electric serv(o&, according to the state public commission. A total 19.123 Receive electric service now. a gairj bf 1,215 in the'past two years. :
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HOT WEATHER SPECIALS! U r ; COCA-COLA I . s Csrteß A M rge J * icy 2 Carton Limit W Lemons -- ! »■ 'i ' 4 lll .j llll Mi l ,Uj l y •! f ’ ,■ _ ' SUNKIST FANCY RED RIPE 4 \ CALIFORNIA SLICING 1 HOME MADE ORANGES TOMATOES COOKIES 4 Doz. 1.00 | I'>9o I 00. = D MRMELOi W SF — — — VINE RIPENED - , aree I CANTALOVPE 4 51.00 MICHIGAN PEACHES, CHERRIES STRAWBERRIES ■ ■ QT.39c| CITY Fruit V■■ I MARKET BETWEEN CHAT & CHEW and ZESTO OPEN 24-HOURS A DAY Owned and Operated by The Strickler Faniily ' ! \ ■ ■ ' ’ - ' ' •’ —- if your FOOD At IGA i i . VEAT* FRESH GROUND, Round IGROOAD BEEF 3 'l-oo STEAK tb. END an<| p|ECES STEAK ... lb. 75* LEAN BACON Xsl TCt SWIFT’S PREMIUM I "Zr SMOKIES -E—'Us»c. POCKET m. 2 9C SMOKED SAUSAGE . Vettl i AQr OUR MEATS ARE INSPECTED ROAST !b. FOR YOUR PROTECTION. , JELLO I frozen sonny boy DESSERT ORANGE > j SOFT and ' i JUICE DRINK SYRUP PUDDING u. s. grade A : No Sugar Needed 5 Flavors 3 pkgs. 20C 2 cans 30C , Battle 29C - c I ■ H ■( .■ '* '' ' ' 1 ' , . "j "W! 1 11 ■■■'■ i«l i i ROSE DALE FRYBACK’S GOLDEN CORN ICE CREAM , c<N AOc, I 69c - Goodin’s ?TPn> SELF SERVICE STORE L I I ’■WW 1 J NEXT TO CORT THEATRE “ r ■ • , lri : ■ ' ' ’ ' 7?*' L I STORE HOURS — DAILY B:3s A. M. to 9:00 I*. M.
TWCBSDAT, JUNK it, IK*
