Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 48, Number 88, Decatur, Adams County, 14 April 1950 — Page 1

Vol XLVUI. No. SB.

DELAY ANSWER TO SOVIET RUSSIA CHARGE

ii. ■■■—< -<-■ Full Dmmfl tP fifMitoKl ror . ’ Janes Curley MMOrWI rOllilCOI * 1 fl Dsue/i Ata rresKrennoi roraon Washington. April 14-(UP>— James Michael Curler, aged former te-— -■»■» Q-er •uvjri no* ot Mwwcßuwriiß ant VW of the Mote s moot colorful political hao been granted a fall P*rIm by Preeideot Truman fur two federal crimes. The White House confirmed today that Mr. Truman signed the full and unconditional pardon Wednesday for the 75-year-oM fourtime mayor of Boston. President Truman signed the pardon at the recommendation of •Horney general J. Howard tic Grntb. The pardon covered Curley's 1M« conviction hero for mail fraud and a IPM federal conviction for Impersonating another man in a civil service examination In Boston. Curley was convicted along with Donald Wakefield Smith and James G. Fuller la the mall fraud ease. The White House said that Mr. Truman also had signed a Ml -pardon tor Smith Under Maaancbaeetta law, the 7L ysaroM Democratic political figure nevertaethta rights to vote or hold public bfflce So H appeared that the advantage he gnine is awrely owe of cleaning tie state '■"‘--■The justice department- spoke* man would not comment other then to confirm that the presigeuHal pardon had been granted. On his eoovicitam dur maM 4kU® Curley served only five months of a ata to It-moath oenteggp st Uta Danbury. Conn reformatory In 1M? He was given a ecimmuwniim of sentence by Mr. Truman, because of his health Usually, when persona ask for pardons for federai Crimea they do so with the hope of obtaining return of their eivil rights The pardon by the President in such cases merely paves the stay-ter them to ask their states to restore - such rights. fiat seder- the Massachusetts constitution. Curley never loot his right to vote or to bold oft lee for the crime for which he was conCurley was a four-llmr mayor of Boston, governor of the stale and a U 8 representative He was one of the most colorful political figures in Massachusetts' modern history ■ =-—»- During almost a half-century of public life, be held 11 municipal, , state and natlcnal offices. He was often referred to as "King James " ' - ' -I Richmond Resident Indicted For Murder Richmond, lad.. April 14. —(UP) — Floyd Kprmit Hamby, SI, wttlj’ be arraigned today on *'firut-[! degree murder charge In con- ' nectloa -with Ute Easter eve shoot- ' Ing of Arthur F. Pippin. Jr., also « ; An Indictment charging Hamby with the slaying was returned yes- ' frrdsy by the Wayne county grand jury Hamby surrendered to police at I Cincinnati. 0.. Sunday, and admit- ' tod the shooting, they said. He had forced a friend Io drive him cut of the state after Oring Into J Pippin's head. Now York Hit fly _ Unseosonol Snow New York. April 14. —(UP)— , An uuasaaoual suow storm hit New , York City and neighboring towns , and states today Snow tell through moot of Now , York state, and la New Jersey. , Massachusetts Connecticut. Pena- . sylvaaia and Vermont. __ < The New York City sanitation | --- department put all Its sweepers | to wort clearing oft the 1.1 inches of snow that had coated the streets i by ID *m (ESTI. Bqt puhte: J transportation, including commuter I railroads, was operating normally. < —■ WKATHSR I Fair to partly eteudy and , hAgn s si |u a • Bwvw'Wflj x fair sad s little wsrmer hi t afterween. Low tonight ts to « (■ north, 2S to M south; high ■ Saturday 4g to 4d north, 4S to ■ •0 south. f

• . - ,- . ■ ■ - . - . f ’ . ' •• . ■ ■ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

— Im Mm Meted Caw CaV • Jtl IwHIvS 15 Tmssss Girh KCRprtuu invtMvou MootkMo, Ind., April Id—(UP) A -rink" prett y tstwaga girls engaged la systematic sea aad drinking parties with men over a 1 (entile srrt tor more than a year, proserutor Robert Million said today. "They seemed to operate on the philosophy that there was nothing wrong with sex or prinking or staying out all sight." Million said. Indictments were returned yesterday against IS men accused of taking part in the parties which the girls 'Most of the indictments will be served today. Million said He declined to name the men until they actually are arrested. Million described the girls as “very attractive." AU of them come from "nice families.” he said They ranged in age from 14 to 17. The group had aex relations with the men on single dates or attended parties tn threesomes and foursomes, Million said Their activities and their wanton "philosophy" became known over a wide area, he said, and they attracted men from outside Monticello They frequently loaded Into cars and drove as tar away as 16« miles, he said, stopping along the route at various drinking spots. The activities of the girls came to light through neighbors who complained that a bouse of prestl tatkm was operating in the community- MiHton -said hrvevtigalleo uncovered the ring of teenagers but the report of a disorderly bouse peeved inaccurate. mMMI seen this sort of thing before,* he said, "but I'Ve never JUMMV** II 1° he concentrated so greatly in ope town as it baa been here." The ag»« of the man indicted ranged from IP to 61 The disclosures here were the latest In a series of sex. liquor *n£ narcotics scandals involving young people Other such cases were discovered in recent months at Milwaukee and Raclpe ln Belvidere. Rockford; •UdCartin*vllle In Illinois, and St Joseph. Mo A similar situation to that here was found recently at New Haven. Ind . lOu.mUe* to the northeast Optimism Shown On Job Prospects Indianapolis April. 14. —(UP)—j Col Everett Gardner. Indiana employment security director, was optimistic today about Hoosier I Job prospects. Gardner said a high rate of recalls to work and a pick-up In new hiring made the employment picturd much brighter now than a year ago. He said the total number of ; claims for jobless pay rose seven i percent last week to just over iSb.dM. but that figure was 4! percent lees than tor the same week in I*4*. Gardner attributed moot of the increase In new claims to the beginning of s new quarter and not to new layoffs. Cowens Qualifies As Rm Receiver Appointed Rucuhrer Os South-Bud Firm { Lloyd Cowens. Decatur business man. baa qualified as receiver for the South Bud corporation, according to the, Adams, circuit court docket, sad Judge Myles R Parrisk has the receiver to take charge of the ass eta. Cowens filed bond In the sum of |tt.*ee. The bond was furnished by Maryland Casualty Co. Ed F Berltag. sttorney ln-faet The court examined the bond aad approved It aad the record shows I that . Cuwf a* Abai I J>rocee4 > life i the liquidation" of the Preble cou-| cent D. Burdette "Custer, attorney for the. plaintiffs tai the esse. Hansel and Mildred Foley, owners of the buildings whore the factory Is located. previously bad filed a motioa to dismiss, bet this motion was overruled. Custer then recorded an exceptioa to the ruling for the petitioners, bet at -noon today no further action had been taken. / 1

UN SecrelaiY ’ expecting io VbH Russia * Trypfe Lie FroboNy ‘ To Include Russia > On European Trip e Luke Success. N. Y.. Apr. 14 — X (UP)—Trygve Lie. secretary gear eval of the United Nations, said I. today he probably would go to i. Russia hell month and "if Gens eraliMimo Btalla ia in Moscow I h probably will see him.” e He made it clear, however, that . no final decision bad been made tor him to visit the Bbviel capital I- daring a three-week trip to Europe He said he probably would » go to Moscow If there la "aomei> thing of Importance", to discuss I. with the KremHn in connection . with the deadlock in the .UMit He said Koertantla Zinchenko. I- Russian assistant seeretary-gener-v al in charge of security council affairs would accompany him to i- Europe because "if the trip to i Moscow should bo arranged, ho r would be helpful.” I- The burly Norwegian said he planned to visit the foreign offices ■ in London and Paris to consult i, with Freiich foreign minister r Robert Schumann and British foreign secretary Ernest Bevin, if r the letter's health permits. y "If Generalissimo Stalin is ia . Moscow." Lie said, “I probably - will see him." >- Despite bis peeparattoM for ox- ■ haustive talks >n Europe, Lie held r little hope for a quick settlement of the UN impasse centered about - the Soviet demand to ouat the r Chinese nationalists in favor of » Mao Tse-Tung's Pelptag commwn- » lets "As far as I eaa judge." Lio 1 said, "the t'hlneee situation is unchanged. The deadlock is there > and I can't see any positive way L in which the question can bo t solved at this time or within the > next five or six weeks. 1 still - hope the qsesGon can be solved ; 1 before the next meeting of the : gowerui eseemhly qta September)" -. I Wilbur E. Petrie Heeds Rotary Club Annual Election Is J HaM Last Evening ’! Wilbur E Petrie, owner of the Prtrle Oil Uo. was elected preeident of the Decatur Rotary club at the annual election of officers, held Thursday evening daring the i weekly meeting of the service J organisation. ' Other officers elected last night I were: John Welch..assistant mana-, ger of the General Electric plant.! vice-preident; Harold Engie, of the Schafer Co. secretary; Otto Beehive, Rice hotel proprietor, treasurer, and Robert Ashbancher. of Asbhauchrr's Tin Shop, and E. W Lankenau. G E plant manager, directors. .■■ ■, Louis Jacobs, as retiring- president. will also serve on the bbard of directors. The newly elected officers will assume their duties at the first clab meeting in July. Following the election, an later-1 eating sound movie. "Trees to Tri hjines." was sbowa The picture [ showed steps la the newspaper l» (dnstry. from the felling of trees | tat Canada, down through the manufacture of newsprint to the finished newspaper rolltag off the Chicago Tribune presses James L. Kocher and Arthur R. HoMhouse were cochairmen as the program. Tkfat DoodliM ——l *v»Wm Ticket isssrvatkma will does I Baturday April J*, tar the dinner l | meeting of the Adams county cenItral commktee aad the Adams fetaMKrVMb»f^ x WMMV^£'r < ; v-hlch wilt be beH at the Mooue home Thursday evening. April *7. The dinner is opea to the public aad rickets may be obtatoed from Miss Rose Neeewald. Mine Flor i eace Hohhoase, Mrs. Charles < Lose or Miss Marcia Martin. Alex 1 Campbell, prominent Fort Wayne I attorney, end esndidate for the I U. 8- senatorial nomination, wilt I be the principal speaker. i

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Docotur, Indtay Frita* April M, 1990

u : STUMPED? ■I I s DR. ALBERT ffINBTIIN, of brilliant. eclrntlfU . mathematical mind, who caa coma up with the anewor to pnst profound prohisras. gives H sltont answer to census taker. Mrs. Kenneth Cromwell at Princeton, N. J . when she called at his homo n .Mine W . ass, I. ... . uh

Sum Deducted From Clumi I Adiiliiiwfa LvylllllCplv MaaißPßrtß ImAkamal Kiiitng is issiieu By Judge Farrhh Jndge Myton F. Parrish rpldd Thursday that a promissory -note which had been paid by a legator for one of the heirs was a perfectly legitimate deduction from that hdjr’a share kg the estate. * . The judge's ruling rtpeated a el&tiiar ruitaff naade January 1» (R the same rotate case by another of the legatees. « William Debolt, through his al tortieye Ed A Bosre and prosecut Ing attorney Severin Schnrger. bad filed an exception to the final report to the effect that not only did he disagree with the distribution but also the accounting of the estate. The Goal report hpd beep filed Get in. fM» by the sdmlntw tratrix. Mary Adams, through her attoraey. Feed Uttervr. Litterer aad R C. Parriah. of Fort Wayne, represented Mrs Adam* and the ref ate In ThurndayTcourt action . The judge ruied that tbe promlesory note payable to the First Bank of Herne, .a the amount of *l*6 41. tn which David 8 Debolt, deceased, was the surety for William Debolt, an heir aad who later paid the note' "was a proper deduction from the distributive share of William Debolt as an heir " The court further noted that since the filing of the final report last October by the admtaislratrtx ad tdltioaal assets have come “Into her hands as part of the estate" and| ordered her to file an amended and 1 supplemental final report to In- | clade all assets. I The inheritance tax schedule, compiled for tfie estate March *4. 1*47. revealed that the net appraised value estate at that time was *».M» 44 In the final report, the admlnls tratrix revealed that there was **.7*7.5* for distribution, of which WlQiam Debolt received as bls share *1.(01.01. the amount remaining following the deduction for the *l*» (> note / la a similar actloa January I*. Judge Parrish had declared that “a I person cm be mads responsible for promissory notes, even though tbs notes exceed the time bounds of the statutes of llmttatloue He thou, m now. ruled for the estate. AAll* ww AMMV H ▼ ▼ Is Burned To Death IndteMpoHs. April 14. —(UP) Mrs. May Uom, ?* died today ot horns suffered when she Med to ovtlnguish a tire started while btaMM <m Um Iraatac MtA tar ckitktac yeit«rdta- *. XM* < < if. O'. h.».A -..A » V A sSg.A-A.SM Cj Two-Yeor-Old Boy Drowns In Trough south 'EM*. Md. April It •“ i (UP)— John Fred mH* Ragle. S. I drowned la a bone trough on the < Raymewd-Sehreeder term south of ' hors yesterday. The boy appareat- < ly tried to walk on a sheet o' i this Ice covering the water, which < wm two and a half feet deep.

Fort Wayne Cripple Is Killed By Auto Art Wayne, Ind.. April 14. — ' (up> Charles Hanson. 40. was erasing a street, on crutches last alMt when ho was struck and kilted by a ear driven by Dem H. Jeffrey. N. Ho toM police he did not see the elderly crippU > aad was not hold. ~ )W- ~; r ■ '*^ c - 11 teAate*e AIRA T m 1 IvU riuVCiilCTi 10 : Be Held Ned Week To Raise Fund For College In Japan 1 Youth leaden of Adams County ‘ aro being contacted for the ICU movement, which will be observed neg*- week. Mine Beulah Jane Bertsch has been appointed by the Adams county ministerial assortstlow to. act as chairman ot the I group Mtoa Leila Smith_o(. Fort Wayne - -to-ibis area'chairmao aad-abe. ha* made contact with Min Brrtseh in making arrangements to have booth* set up In *ll different churches throughout Adams county within the next two weeks. ICU stands for International Christian University which ia to be built In Japan This will open the door to a new education for a new Japan . . a new world, an adventure In International friendship; a chance tor the young people of the world to live and learn to--1 aether. jCU will have a faculty composed of educators from many lands. Including the United States. This University proposes to raise ssfficient endowment funds to insure needy scholars from every pro vlace of Japan an opportunity to atkend When It opens. ICU will bouse graduate schools of educw tlon. aortal work, public administration, and a college of liberal arts. ICU will train teacher* along progreaalve educational line*, and so encourage democratic outlook and aetkm. During the week of April 1(-M, , AmericM young peopk will help forge a permanent link of triendship with the young men and wo- , men of Japan. For thia will be ( International Christian University , Week, and young Canadians and - Americans will vote for "Peace and , goodwill'' In communities all over North America the campaign will , take ou the experts of an eleetkm. ( aad there wfll be great effort* to . “turn out th* vote" Each ballot ( will reffroeent a dollar donation Young people will contribute to the ICU fund, and sign rosters which win be circulated ia all com- , munittogi Chicago Woman Dies Or Acaaoat Intones La Port*. Ind. April 14. —(UF) ] — Mrs. Date Boßou. M. Chicago. , d**d «f • fractarod stall to a ( lkfhAßoe*bl Ate A I xJWpMkM* te® M | of a Monday alght auto accMent ( when th* ear te which *h* was i a passenger skidded broadside Into < a semi-truek at th* Kankakee rtv er bridff* approach six mil** aas* t of Hua* m U*■ **. I

rtMMMBMMBBartMMMMMMHBMM* State Department Delays Answer; Hope Virtually Abandoned For Privateer - - -- - --- - - ■ - -- - -

rOnHM IBflinflT S Death Found Murder Autopsy flovoalod Toachor Mutdofod Mt Bummli. Ind . April 14—(UF) —A U-yearvold home economic* teacher, found dead alx week* ago at Portland, Ind., wa* a murder and not luiclde victim, her father said today. The body of Mia* Garnet Gian wan found dangling by n sewing machine belt from the door of her car last Feb. M. Dr. Donald B. Spahr. Jay county coroner, ruled out aH possibility of murder and presumed the death was suicide. Spahr, however, returned a verdict of death by strangulation aad dM not answer the quest 100 of murder or suicide Estil otan. high school principal here, said an autopsy performed in Indianapolis earlier this week showed hl* daughter wa* struck on the head «even time* before the bvlt wa* looped about her neck. 'The autopsy bore out the conclusions of my Wit* and me from the start —that our daughter wm murdered aad waa not a rolclde victim, (linn »aid Mlaa Olnn wa* last aeon alive at a sorority meeting the night of Feb. *T. Her body waa discovered by Portland school superintendent D. Re-Weller, who began a seerek when she failed to report for classas the following day At Portland. Spahr could not be reached for comment and proeecutor Keith Fraser said he could not comment on the case until he had seen an official report ot the autopsy Maj. Robert JI. O'Neal. Indiana staty police eyyeutiye officer, said hi* troopers would begin an "investigation. Musical Frogram Is Presented At School Four talented student* from the ' Cincinnati Conservatory of Music combined their tslenth today to present an "excellent” program in the Decatur high achool auditorium before member* of that student. body, .student* from the Decatur Catholic high school and the public. Mia* Phyllis Kohler, representing the choir, who sponsored the program aa a dedication to the new piano purchased for the high rchool by the school board presented the individual* featured today Plaas Are liandied — — -I For Un'm Election Decatur Men Attend Fort Wayne Meeting Tentative arrangementa were made at a meeting of company aad I union representatives before a | NLRB representative tn Fort Wayne yesterday, la relation to the proposed seton membership elections to be held among General Electric Workers In this city. Fort Wayne Md Wnbaah te th* near future I The electtoes will be conducted I ou G. E property and on compMy ' time. It was agreed. Details as to < the number of voting booth* aad i observer* for the election* Were i also discussed at the meetlag. I The election will decide which 1 union, the UE or the TUE will represent. G. E worker* ia tabor j negotiation*. Local employe* are < now members of th* UE. The Bute < for holding the xlro.tlou wfll be art 1 by the NLRB. I -AttMUliM-. tta .fOtferMCe. tTTMTI 4 t* this city were: H*ery Btaaffer and I Franoiq Eady for the UE. and Mia* i Elisabeth Moor* of Fort Wayne: I David Laaaer, tet«ya*ttow*l reproseatativ*. aad Joba Seburger for 1 the IUB: John Welch, aaatataat I manager aad Georg* LaurouL per ' soanel director as th* Dacutur I G E. plant I Fort Way** G. E. official* also attended the meeting, which wm i held at th* O. B. ptaaL _ <

Urges Inman To Push CM Rights Program Republican Senator Hits Recent Speech Os Democrat Solan Washington. April 1* —(UF) — A MmpoAiicA* BMUktof Mfltmfl Prmal" dent Truman today to carry out "hi* solemn promises" to push passage of civil right* legislation Ben. Robert C. Handrietaon. R., N. J., anid a raeeut *pe*ch by Bm. Lister HUI. D„ Ata. wm “proof positive of th* hypocrisy r*sort*d to by th* IMmerratic party to prevent th* pascag* of a sound civil right* program." Hendrickson railed ou Mr. Truman “to repudiate the word* of fba aemlor Mtuttor ffom Almbmm and to lend hie party immediately la the adoption of th* program to which h* ha* given but lip **r.vte*." . _ , _____ Hfll in M Atatatea radio speech cnb 9Fmflmosdmy cmltofl ob disMmnt MNrttam FVumiocnrts hfl rotur# to thmt DoofloCf*tlc te omlof to! ho te RMioithMi to oflteß'’Wflflhteß* who stayed te th* party Hmw buM mhte to dotemt mcM teshitetiom m member* of congreM- ' Other con<rMtioul devoiopmentu: Rent —Chairman Brent Spence.. D.. Ky. of the bouse banking committee proposed • c-ompromis* rent control extension bill to President Truman It would permit citie* to end rent control* If th* local govarnmeat approved such actloa or ts th* citiaeas voted for it. Spence said after a Whit* Hous* call that he does not belirv* Mr. Triiman wduld object to such a bill. Rent controls end .jteMir"**!' 7 , ■' ■ . ■ '■ Potatoes—A senate agriculture subcommittee approved a MU to cat potato surplase* ia the future. It would Mt up production curb* and establish marketing quota*. Farmer* who did not accept marketing quotas would be denied price support. The meosuro also would penalise excess prod oct too The full committee will consider the bill on Tuesday. Fll*s—Sen. Walter F; G*orge. D.. On., said the senate wonid be wasting it* time If it ettad government official* for fallars to ■arrender loyalty Hies to communlst Investigator*. Some Repablicans have saggested contempt pracMdinga against aecrotary of elate Dmo Acheson attorney general J. Howard McGrath and Harry B Mitchell, twwen »• rww* nts> Diinaged Bridges In County Repaired Fund Appfogriatod By Coaaty For Work The Sie.Pto appnpriattaa made by th* county hM permitted the highway department te repair w**h*dtmt bridge* aad thoa* won oat by constant truffle. Phu Sauer, eoMty highway superintendent, remarked today after ratwntag from the state rand school at Fwßm Univwrsity. This fond permits Immediate repairs aad salvage of hridgea. SaMr explained. The road school wm one of the mart tet*ra*Uag ever hate. Bv*ey coaaty la the mate hM it* problem*. Sauer Mid Adam* oMbdy. «a»d* high ta baxjar a good rood *y*t*m. tuplti the worst weather coatettaM «xp*rieac*d te a gcMtatioa. h* ante. Mm *a JHSL. .•*80! ..wPrtiMR ram. wcwooi ta*M Mid milk 'traato cm pat tteiMteh* tta MOtevteteteteßt wte. “W* Mod a eoupta w**ta at mb•Mm to got th* road repair wort te high paar.” Baoar Mid Sauer mad* a talk at th* road •ebool <>• tta tetaß* titwute® *®4 ' ettH tee *tea wW te tele tatay <

Fries Four Coots

Awoit Kogort Frau* DofoHM Dopurtiooat On Investigation ■ w w wBUp I BBBn I vClv B Waahiatfoa. April 14—(UP)— Th* United State* today delayed answering Russia * charge of a plan* skirmish over tatvta. apparently because the mi**tag U B- ‘ Mvy privateer ba* Mt been found. Th* state department intend* to base tts reply no • defense department report, and M hM Mt received it m yet. RttMte cll*rg4M teflt tea ml—iny plane flew over Latvia taxi Saturday and exchanged fire with Soviet fighter craft. The Mvy privateer patrol bomber disappeared at that time, and a wide search for R over th* Baltic Sea ta* been ***eerv*s fol Th* state department tad **- pected the defense department * raport todtey on it* Itet ntete UapttrteMFßt *p®lm*i®®® MichMl J. McDermott said that "we cannot reply to the Ra*etaa* nntil tee When w* have a report from defense m their invsetlgattou. there will be a reply to th* Soviet note ” It wm etaur that the nature of the d*feM* report wfll Mt tbe tone ot the American reply to th* Rae > etaaa If eluea to the fol* of the I rttautag plan* and Ito crew ar* unr *o**v*< th* atate dgparauMt re- , ply may take the |*m of k stiff , eortriarpratart. p - - If it obtaiM suffletant evidaac* te th* fotaro to coMtode that Boeata shot down the plane with roaul taat fort) as American Ilves, they .said, the railed States could be expected to iasae it* own >r*f*uf to the Soviet government tn th* Search plan** ar* no* combtag strongrot poaelble terms the Baltic area for some trace of the privateer and ft* l«mM ere*. So tar. their effort* have been unsuccessful The navy eraft was m ft* way from _ Wiesbaden, western Germany, to Copenhagen. Denmark, at . the time IT turned up mlwng The Russian* told the . United State* earlier this week tkat a U. S plane "of the type flew over the Latvian naval base of Lepaya When it fired on Soviet fighters, They said the Rsmls* plane* returned the Are and drove the U. S. plane oat to *ea Cent in u« Search Copenhagen. Denmark. April it. —(UP)—The U. 8. air force vto tually abandoned hope today for D> men missing ktoee Saturdny aboard a navy privateer plane, but ordered the full-scale search of the Baltic to go on. » Search beadquarter* here ' announced at mid-afternoon that !■' of th* 25 search planes had been ordered to return to their b-»me base*. Bet headquarter* retracted th* announcement to minute* later and said an endimtalshed “mask r.nm effort' had been ordered. It wm understood here that the decision to reduce th* search waa conntermanded by "the highest U. S. air force quarters." possibly in Waabtegton. A* a result, the reveath reem* sqaadroa will keep M to M plane* petrolling the Ba' I < Th* belief wm growing that the unarmed - fouheagtaed privateer crashed and mnk la the Battle wftbuut a trace after bring tired upM by Soviet tighten. The Baw •tan* claimed the plane hud flown ever th* Soviet republic as Latvia. Iteflte . Meecov e®M that th* mtaaiag privateer wm the plane os which its Ogbten had tlr ed Saturday, but taatated the AmericM pi*M flrod first . ▼ QiW»B Ta MB—K*MS t ■mV ÜBmvsWTj &nMi kxWtVWFW at S at tee cfcerte. A tteal WcUfo® V W TWW' - «a tea yartte tetecattea Mteßag fcy IteU B®eer vlll present final dataßa *f the program. —- retteg member* aro wgod to ba pr***at. A npuctel tn vitattaa to also ewtoudad te nN mM of th* eenateugattau wh* an not voting ma*her* to jute aad taka part is th* charck'* baetee** affair*.