Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 295, Decatur, Adams County, 16 December 1953 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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Helena Rubinstein’s FRAGRANT CHEST ' ■ -1 ■ ‘ < A ' r■ . , . filled with Christmas pleasures at A bright and beautify! chest of drawers to decorate a tree, filled with fragrance to decorate the most hard>to>please ~ lady. 2 ounces of her favorite famous Helena Rubinstein cologne with 3 ounces of body powder to match, at a price that’s little for so much Christmas. Just 2.00 the \ chest plus tax J Choose it in flowering Heaven Sent, or icfrj i romantie White Magnolia or sunny Apple Blossom Time. LWAWW ' - '' <fl L < ■ ■' • i , ' ’ plus tax \ Smith Drug Co. \ 3 | 1 ? ’/ 'v-v <z t k<W; : - ' • ; . flr 1K ■MMBHIH r ’ ■W X _. x <x a f"' x : 'fj§*£ *■■ ' . 'A '•' ' rtet ’ fIHWthW l^Msr!Eff»aß^^ yZ - f*l A '" .< b wrWirprff^' k i x H 6 16 H 0 <3 feflpWpjWy a z JWr'f 111 4 ♦• *n l|s « Hkc 105 ei “ lw lißy

ZEN ITH TELEVISION ”UHRICK BROS. ■—«

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

Ex-Convicf Admits Strangling Os Girl Paroled Convict Is Held In Connecticut E HARTFORD, Conn. UP — Authorities said they would file j a murder charge t6day against a 10year old paroled sex offender w|to confessed he molested and Strangled an 11-year old girl week ago. W ’ Robert N. Malm of NewLngtcb, Conn., admitted the slaying pf Irene Fiederowicz to Hartford police late Tuesday! after several days of grilling. Only three holies earlier a young soldier at Fo|-t Deven, Mass., had confessed to the same crime. Police chief Michael J. Gddfrey said the soldier, Pfc. John H. W 1liams, 23, of Hertford, had admitted his confession of the strangling was a hoax. But the yoiiifh offered no explanation of why hte tried to involve himself in the crime, Godfrey said. ’ Malm broke down , in the Hartford jail and admitted the slayirfg shortly after he was told'that Williams had made a confession < Fort Devens. Hartford police pf£|cials were at the military hast questioning Williams when Malip confessed. Malm, an employe of a tuberculosis sanitarium, \. admitted | |h| strangled the Fiederowicz girl Qacj--9 and left her body in the ba :1& yard of a policeman’s home. <;ls told police he molested her tw ce after he accosted her vas is ie walked home from a grocery \stij e| An autopsy showed the girl jhad not been raped, but police »a|(| there was evideifce her clothing had been removed and then : placed. Malm had been picked up |f|4 questioning last Friday in confcJci tion with the molesting of a W year old girl on Nov. 22. Poji|4 said the circumstances of the Hovlj 22 case were so similar to thpi e of the later strangling that thi y kept questioning Malm intense y about it. ' | ; 1 Malm worked at a sanatarih ij at Newington, Conn., about f|Ve| miles from the scene of the sip 4 ing. His record as a sex went back to 1946, when* he serve g a jail teAn at New London, Coir .1 for molesting girls. i In 1947 he was arrested for rb’ H bery with violen<?e at Norwiil i j Conn., and sentenced to 7-tOsllo| years in the state prison at Wetlp ersfield. He was released on iiirole last March. • ? ' .... —‘.c|» Trade in a Good Town — Decatub.

Dr. C. P. Hinchman To Head Physicians Dr. C. P. Hinchman of Geneva was elected president of the Adams county medical association at a meeting held at Geneva Tuesd&y, it was announced by county health officer Dr. Harold F. Zwick, pf D - . catur. i Dr. Harold Lehman, of Berne, - was elected vice-president, and Dr. > John B. Terveer of Decatur, was - elected secretary treasurer. 1 _ —— i\ , Says Salary Boost r Need For Teachers 1 CHICAGO UP —The president s pf the AFL American Federation t of Teachers said today oply an 3 average annual pay boost of SSOO can sjtop ra mass movement of pub- ? lie school teachers to other jobs. - Carl J. Megel said the union’s - locals in 400 cities are now pre- - paring to make increased pay dei mands. . Robert Sprunger In • Broadcast Series - Robert Sprunger, Adams t 1953 IF YE, will, be heard ip a - series of seven broadcasts over e radio station WKJG beginning at i noon Thursday. These transcriptions were made with Wayne Roth- ■- geb, farm director of WKJG, Anna ) K. Williams, home demonstration L agent, and L. E. Archbold, county •f agent. Robert in this series of in a tervlews tells of the home life of a people he visited in France, Tull nisia, and Algeria; He tells of the | different food habits, and clothing. | Most interesting is his telling of I how Arabs obtain their wives and $ of an Arab wedding party. < ' His interviews on farming ac- | tivities tells of crops, tools used, | of a tractor that would run ~on | most any fuel, but had to be starti ed with a Jive flame. The final in- ( terview was developed in a more ; shrlous vein, telling of the educaS tional features of North Africa s and the objectives of the* IFYE program.

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BlamrCoigress For Apathy On Defense Mayors Put Blame At Congress' Door WASHINGTON, (UP) — The nation’s mayors blame congress for “public apathy” toward civil defense. They feel that the punlic is not likely to take the problem Seriously until, congress shows its own interest in’ the form of bigger federal Appropriations. The mayors made their view in a memorandum submitted to the White House Tuesday at the close of a two-day conference on military and civil defense attended by the mayors or city managers of nearly 200 cities. “Existing public apathy can be attributed mainly to the fact that to datet he legislative branch of the government has not taken civil defense seriously,” the memorandum said. They urged President Eisenhower to put in next year’s budget “sufficient funds” to fulfill the federal government’s “fundamental responsibility” in civil defense. The memorandum was delivered to presidential asst. Sherman Adams on behalf of the U. S. conference of mayors. It was signed by Mayor Elmer E. Robinson of San Francisco, conference president; former mayor now U. S. Sen. Thomas A. Burke of Cleveland, immediate past-president of the conference, and Paul V. Betters, executive secretary of the conference. They agreed that "city and state governments also have a grave responsibility for the protection of their people in the event of an enemy attack.*” But, they emphasized that congress sets the pace. \ The mayors also urged a stepped-up federal program of slum clearance and redevelopment.

Reds Tighten Grip On Strategic Waters STOCKHOLM, Sweden UP — The Soviet Union, which has made the Baltic Sea a “Russian lake,” was disclosed today to havei tightened its grip on those strategic waters by sending 12 new Skoryitype destroyers to join the Russian Baltic fleet. -THAT Io0*«nt up your cough from o cold so very much quicker -relievos torenett in fhrool almost instantly coughing HLe’— alioyt the tickle BEST COUGH SYRUP)

ENTERTAINMENT i ' 1 ’ L _- : ■' ■' ' \ ‘ ’ EILEEN AT THE HAMMOND will be at the PREBLE RESTAURANT FRIDAY—DECEMBER 18th CHICKEN—STEAKS—SEA FOOD ROOM FOR PRIVATE PARTY

P i - i. .C 7 vJB ' . 'SJ •%• ■' A sjh*W'i ■ B flg&Miiißlt z -.ji ■ ' #’ ' ■. - . yfc»«|k<y^' -- • wBBiHIMMMMb * fl :.. mA 2 7'SfcS < A- J SaiiflHßßEß SPECIAL — FORREST, ILLINOIS . . . A. P. Loomis, Honeggers*' Vice-President in charge of poultry breeding is shown (right) above receiving the 1953 Faultry Tribune! Trophy from J. H. Florea, Editorial Director of Poultry Tribune. This trophy was awarded for achieving the highest average production per bird of any breeder, (who had 5 or more pens entered) in all official U. S. egg laying contests held this year. Also shown are trophies awarded the HoneggeFLeghom for winning first place in the California Net Earnings test and also first place in their point system test. In the California Net Earnings test, Honegger Leghorns made an egg profit above feed costs of $7.90 per bird which was $2.31< more than the average of the other birds in the test. In the Random Sample test on the same location, Honeggers made an income of $6.35 pef chick started above feed costs. HONEGGERS Are Also Manufacturers of Big H Feeds k > Honeggers are Noted to be years ahead in the Development, the Formation, the Manufacturing and Merchandising of Scientific, Practical, Sound Money-making Feeding Programs. EGGS! [ EGGS! EGGS! 1000 Honegger Pultets are equal, in net profits \ to 160 acres of land in rotation, on the Honegger Feeding Prdgram, with good management. Plan NOW for a Honegger EGG FACTORY In 1954 SEE Gerber Feed Store . 5 Miles West, 1 North of Coppess Corner

"WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16. 1953

POINSETTIAS tsOc Np Delivery At Thia Price LUTES FLOWERS Phone 3-3304 Winchester St.