Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 232, Decatur, Adams County, 2 October 1951 — Page 1

Vol. XLIX. No. 232.

DODGERS BATTLE TO EVEN PLAYOFF SERIES Tl■.* ■ ' ' \

State Senate In Debate On Welfare Bills , Ewing, Schrtcker Are Attacked By j Republican Solon i I Indianapolis, Oct. 2 — (UP) Federal security administrator Oacar Ewing was accused today <?f “lies and misrepresentation’’ and Governor Schricker of “swallflding them hook, line and sinker” in debate on the public welfare problem in the Indiaha legislators. Republican Sen. G. Richard , rails of Kokomo leveled the ns senators argued long and loud ~ whether to ‘ pass a Democratic policy bill to keep welfare recortfs secret two more years. “The governor has swallowed hook, line and sinker the advice ci the federal security adminis-. tratolr in accepting without question Ewing’s opinion that senate hill 86 (the anti-secrecy law) coi-. flirted with federal law,’:’ Ellis said. “Ewing has lied and deliberately misrepresented the facts. He withheld the funds wrongfully. The people of Indiana have (lip • right to ask if there isn’t some political conspiracy here.” After nearly two hours of oratory, the senate recessed for an ' L hour and scheduled more debate this afternoon. t In the bouse, /our new Republican "home rule” welfare billh were introduced and . barely ah ? hour later passed first reading. The judiciary “A" committee, ia a hurried session, recommended that three of them pass. A majority report on the fourth also had a do-pass label and the house accepted it and sent all four bill® tn second reading. Sen. Milford Anness, R., Meti- ‘ mora, also spoke against the “postponement” bill. “This is a fight,” Anness said. . “against socialism and a vote for federal domination today means | ’ federal dictatorship tomorrow.” she “postponement” bill, sponsored by the Democrat' minority with the support of two “irregular” Republicans, came up third reading and brought on wordy debate ip the closely-divid-ed senate. •, 5- - In the house, where the GO| > proved its dominance in thrpp tests yesterday, the reassured mi- ' jority offered four new bills iji their program to conduct welfare without federal funds or regulations. > 'I The special session, now in its second Week, was called wheji federal security administrator Oscar Ewing withdrew 120,000,000 £ year because Indiana enacted $ law opening welfare rolls for public inspection. The new house bills, sponsored by majority leader Glenn of Monticello, would: ' 1 1. Abolish the state director's office and create a new administration directed by an eggcutive secretary appointed by the governor. 1 2. Refuse welfare aid to afl persons until all other possible means of support had > been exhausted. - 3. Remove—from the state welfare board the authority to remove county welfare directors. J 4. Wrests from the state public works department the power to increase county welfare bu<|gets and permits county countdfe to make or deny additional appropriations for eounty welfare departments which overspend their (Torn T* Pax* «x> . | " b — Monroeville Man Is Killed In Accident Robert W. Speers,. 30, Monroeville. and Floyd A. Fuig, 46, Paulding, 0., were killed in the colli- | sion of Speers’ auto and a gravel truck driven by Fulk at > rodfl intersection three miles south df New Haven Monday afternood. Authorities said Fulk apparently failed to see a stop sign at the intersection and crashed into th£ Speers autor ' . t Fourteen children were made fatherless by the crash. Speeri, who moved to Monroeville from Chicago a: year ago, was the fatfi er of four children, and Fulk the .father of 10. » *- I ' ?

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT only Gaily newspaper in adams county •A Uk . . 1-- - - - - - - — -—-——

Oil Workers Demand Evacuation By Air Protest Plans For Evacuation By Sea Abadan, Iran, Oct. 2.—(UP) — British Oil workers demanded today that the British government fly Athym out of Iran rather than subject them to an "unnecessarily degrading” evacuation by sea. The 323 remaining staff technicians of the Iranian-nationalized, British-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil company cabled a strong protest to London against plans to remove Ahem on the cruiser ,Mauritus tomorrow before an Iranian expulsion expires. “We regard marching up a gangplank with the Persians laughing and jeering as unnecessarily degrading and see no reason why the original air evacuation plan shouldn’t be carried out,” a senior company official said. The oil workers told London that they are unwilling to become a public spectacle I ;\‘ : 1 In Tehran, the Iranian parliament cheered premier Mohammed Mossadegh for his decision to fly to New York to fight Britain in the security* council. He expects to leave in about nine days. The Russians were reported today to have renewed their promise of economic aid to Iran under the recently negotiated barter agreement and to have suggested at (he same tim# that Iran ease restrictions *on the Communist' Tudeh party. I Hj-’ " A Soviet ambassador Ivan Sadchb kov conferred with prime minister Mohammed Moseedegh in Tehran this morning. Mossadegh thanked him for Russia’s support in the UN security council. Willing To Negotiate United Nations, N.Y., Oct. 2 — (UP)—Britain and Iran both professed willingness today to negotiate a settlement of the AngloIranian Oil company dispute without a decision by rhe United Nations security council. The councilyvoted yesterday, 9-2 over objections-\but no veto —by Russia and Yugoslavia, to consider | the supercharged dispute arising from the nationalization by Iran Os the AIOC and then adjourned for 10 days to permit time for the fervent Iranian premier, Dr. Mohammed Mossadegh, to arrive here and plead his country’s cause. But Britain's Sir Gladwyn Jebb, after warning that Iran’s "insensate” and “suicidal” policy on nationalization of the giant refineries at Abadan could mean that, economically, Iran’s “goose will be cooked.” concluded his opening presentation before the council by declaring: “Given a minimum of good will, there is absolutely no reason why an arrangement entirely satisfactory to both sides should not be worked out, and worked out quickI” ■ Breakin At Decatur Home Being Probed Intruders Escape ; Capture Last Night ' A b i'- r Police today are .continuing their investigation of the breakin pf the Robert ghiith Meibers street, after the intruders eluded capture and escaped. One of two men who escaped Was discovered climbing from a bedroom window by Jim Closson, who lives in the Smith home, when he returned to the residence. , Closson, according to the report to police, heard Mexicans talking when he reached' the house and went around the west side, from where the voices came. |No one was home at the time, the Smiths In Fort Wayne, and Closson just returning. ' < He waited until the subject descended, then clipped him on the back of the head. -Just then a companion of the intruder- cam,e from the rear of the house, and the two men raced away. Closson gave chase, but failed to catch either of them. Smith reported the breakin •bout 1:30 a. m. today. Neighbors reported they saw a light in the bedroom about 11 p. m. but thought it was Closson returning home, v . * Investigation revealed nothing missing from the home.

Bradley Says UN Can Halt Reds' Attack Declares UN Forces Sufficient To Stop Communist Assaut Tokyo, Qct. 2. —(UP) —Gen. Omar , N. Bradley said today that the 1 United Nations have enough men in > to stop any possible Corti- ? munist attack. \ j Bradley, chairman of thb U.S. i joint chiefs of staff, made the comment at a Korean airport as he pre- • pared to fly back to Tokyo after a 5 two-day tour of the front. He also told newsmen earlier In ’ the day that he believed the United > Nations could win the Korean war r on the battlefield if truce talks collapse. t ■ t Bradley landed at Tokyo's Hane- • da airport at 7:f>s p.m. (4:55 a.m. CST). With hiip were Ghn. Mat- ■ thew B. Ridgway, supreme UN com--1 mander, and Charles E. (Chip) r ' Bohlen, U.S. state department ex- ? pert ,on Russia, who accompanied > Bradley from Washington. Other developments in the Ko- • rean war included: s 1. —American Sabrejets shot > down six and probably seven Com- • munist MIG-15 jet fighters and » damaged another without loss in ■ two air battles over northwest 1 Korea. The six planes definitely destroyed equalled the sth air • force's record bag for a single day. 2. —Fifth air force fighters and 1 light bombers wrecked 650 out of I 2.000 trucks spotted during the night rushing Communist reinforcements and supplies the battlefront. v |-4 S bH 3. —Fiercely-resisting Chinese troops stalled the UN “limited ob- ■ jective” attack west of Chorwin on tile west-central front for the third straight day. The allies were trying to push the Reds from the last peak they hold on an important ridge- ! l|ne. The Communists bombarded ' the UN troops with 400 shells in four hours. • 4.—A fifth day passed without a 1 Communist reply to Ridgway’s pro- ’ posal to shift the suspended cease- ’ fire talks from Kaesong to Songh- • yon; eight miles to the southeast ; in : There was j speculation that dissension over a •I reply had broken out hmong the ■ North Koreans, Chinese and Rus- ’ sians. s 5. —Chinese com- ’ mander-ii>chief Chu Teh issued an 5 order of the day to China's armed ■ forces accusing the U.S. of “wreck- ' ing and obstructing" the Korean <Twhb To Face Six) ; ' v .. ; Voter Registration Deadline October 8 Intense Campaigns Waged By Parties Indication that there will be a heavy vote in the Decatur municipal election November 6 was evidenced by the fact that both Democrat and Republican deputy registration clerks are combing the precincts this week in an effori to regr ister every eligible voter in the J city. . Both major political parties have } workers in every precinct and with the deadline for registration sftt . for next Monday, October 8, candldates are joining the precinct ers in registration work. ’ Both mayoralty candidates have ’ started intensive campaigns, which ’ will take them personally to a majority of the voters before the elec- ’ tion. Democrat candidate John B. Stults and incumbent Mayor John 1 M. Doan each has won one term as • mayor. The contest this year will 5 be the third time the two have met. 1 Stults won the first round and then was defeated for reelection four J years ago by Mayor Doan. Ji Councilmanic candidates for each 1 party are actively At 9 present there are five Democrats J on the council. Four of the five are candidates for reelection. 1 Councilman Joe Krick is not a candidate and Ed Bauer, - well J known business executive, is the s fifth Democrat s The county election commissiont ers recently completed the job of I supervising the printing of ballots for the city election, and city chair 5 men will name the election boards later in October. . ’ J , ■ J - \ "'r ' ' A. ;i|

Decatur. Indiana, Tuesday, October 2, 1951.

Blind Newsie Donates Blood N ■ - • - WITH HIS seeing-eye dog hover-inf (Aver him: N|icha?l Schwarzt, blind president of the Blind NewsdeahMw' nAsociation, donates blood for armed forces at center in New . S 1

Governors Discuss Security, Welfare Dulles Applauded In Speech Monday Gatlinburg. Tenn., Oct. 2 —(UP) , —Gov. John S. Fine, R., Pa., said today it is much too early for Pennsylvania Republicans to h<gin taking sides in ths of a presidential nominee for 1953. According to tradition. Fine. •#. governor, will head Pennsylvania's 7Q-vote delegation to the R«j, publican nominating convention next July. \ . . He has no part in the movement led by Sen' James H. Duff. R, Pa., to draft Gen. Dwight D. Eiyenhower to head the ticket. Nor is he committed to Sep. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, another likely contender. \ Fine, here to attend the 43rd annual governor’s conference, said in an interview he won’t decide whom to support for the nomination for several months and not until after consulting other state i GOP leaders. ' . I The governors turned their attention today to the problems of social security and public welfare —one of the most extensive and expensive activities of government these days. For a round discussion headed by Gov. Thoinas E.< Dewey of New York they had federal security | administrator Oscar E. Ewing as a special guest speaker. Last night at their annual banquet the governors hehrd and applauded a speech by John Foster Dulles, special Republican adviser to the state department and chief architect of the Japanese peace treaty. Dulles paid tribute to the bi-par-tisan foreign policy, represented by his own place in the Truman . adminlstratoin, as one of principal ingredients which made the treaty possible. 1 He said it took considerable courage to go ahead wi|h the treaty arrangements in the • face of Russian 7 threats which might touch off another* war. Dulles said the administration i also recognized the risk In Invit-’ I Ing Russia to the San Francisco conference at which the treaty was debated and signed by but Soviets and two satellites — Poland and Czechoslovakia? But, ' he said, the treaty \sponsors were i confident they wbuld win. V * ' i Approve Requisitions ‘ For Printing Supplies Members of the board of county 1 'commissioners Monday approved the requisitions for printing supplies for 1952 and will receive 1 bids fbr the five clsses of print--1 ing during the December meetings ’ At present the Haywood Publish- * ing company, of Lafayette, has the ’ contract. I In the only other business bet fore the commissioners in the afternoon session, aftbr spending . the morning allowing claims, the t grocery and tobacco contract, to t supply the county home for three ■ months, was awarded Spiegel's i Market, of Decatur. Spiegel was the lone bidder for the contract. i- \ ' ''S'-' ' • L A ' ' -L ■' ■ L ■

November Draft Call For Indiana 1,502 > •' ' A Indianapolis, Oct. 2.—(UP) —A 1.502-man November draft call for Indiana was announced today by Brig. Gen. Robinson Hitchcock, state selective service director. Earlier, the call was announced as men. I —i ? Argentine Aviation Minister Replaced Ex-U.S_ Ambassador U Blamed For Revolt I ■ 1 J .i • b ' Buenos Aires, Argentine, Qct. 2 4-(VP) —Argentine aviation minister Brig. Cesar Ojeda yresigned t|nlay and was replaced J immediately by Brig.. Juan San Martin. JSart Martin resigned yesterday aj governor of Cordoba province.. Oyeda has been aviation minister since March 17, 1949. I (Seventy Argentine airmen who took part In the attempted revolt against President Juan D. Peron’s government last Friday fled to X ? rughay when the uprising failed* ... \ ?Peron charged yesterday that former U. S. assistant secretary state Spruille was the "initiator” of the “crazy" revolt agaihst his regime. The brief uprising ,was based bd "action developed by Mr. Braden” when he was U.iS. ambassador to Argentina in 1945, Peron told a press conference yesterday. Foreign correspondents were barred from the meeting. <“He (Braden) is the initiator oE what has just occurred/’ Peron Udd the newsmen. f yPeron also said former U. S. cultural attache i John Griffiths w>s involved in the plot.; La “supreme military council” appointed to try army and air force officers accused of directing tho uprising had been expected to announce its decision yesterday. However the council did hot finish its investigation and now is expected to return a decision tomorrow. '‘l . ' b ! ; ■T■ b . |b.- • Bryant Principal's Wife Dies Monday 'Mrs. Mildred Glentzer. 32, wife Lee G. Glentzer, principal of the Bryant high school, died Monday afternoon at the Portland hospital after an illness of two weeks. in addition to the hiisband are a son, Billy, and a dughter, Janet; at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. -Frank Gilberg lof Redkey; four brothers, Herschel, Ralph, Roy and Kenhetb i Gijberg of Redkey, and two sia- ■ teirs, Mrs. Mabel Thornburg and , Mrs. Nila Hughes of Muncie. The body Is at the Baird funeral home, i Portland. Funeral arrangements ale incomplete. ' -b;' ' ; INDIANA WEATHER * \ ; Partly cloudy and continued Warm tonight and Wednesday, With a few laoiated showers likely extreme north tonight i jLow tonight SB-63, high Wednesday 80-85 north, 85-90 south. ■ ’ p. " •■ ; '.■

Rookie Pitcher Starts Second Game In Series For National Pennant ■ . ' 1 ' g ‘ i■ ' ■ .

Southern Florida Is Hit By Storm Center Os Storm Is On West Coast Miami, Fla., Oct. 2.—(UP)— Wind gusts up to 60 miles an hour and torrential rains pounded south Florida today as a broad tropical storm moved .inland after endangering four vessels in the Gulf of Mexico. At least three Jive* were believOdjost as she storm, sofriewhat jess fhan hurrttfane strength, move*! intithe Florida between Fort Myers and Sarasota at 7:30 a.m. CST. The high winds threatened the southern \citrus belt where “high--1 iy vulnerable” grapefruit wa’s hangr ing, almost ready for harvest. ' Although the center of the storm • was over the jrest coast, th ehlgh- • est winds recorded by the weather 1 bureau were in Miami. XSusts up to 60miles an hour toppled a concrete block wall of Miami Beach and knocked two window panes into the city room of the Miami Daily News on Biscayne Boulevard. There were no casualties. A coast guard, official said three persons aboard a 16-foot inboard motorboat off Bayport, Fla., were believed lost although an air search was continuing. The men, L.L. William*, 45. and Homer Fry, 32, both of Orlando, Fla., and Bert bitter, , 61. of Bayport, have been missing in the storm-tossed Gulf waters I since Sunday. The coast guard also was searching for the disabled motorship Kerry Mac with nine men aboard. r The fishing boat Gypsy, also pounded by the rough seas in the Gulf, r was taken in tow. \ Warns Violators Os ■ Beef Price Rulings J 443 Slaughterers » Face Court Cases ' Oct. 2 — (UP) — I Price stabiliser Michael V. Di? Salle has warned violators of beef ’ prcie regulations that the gov- ’ eminent will “try to get the last bit of penalty we can get.” \ “We are not apologizing for catching these violators of the' r laws ( of this nation,” DiSalle told, newsmen late yesterday. The office of price stabilization (OPS) is preparing court cases against 443 slaughterers who allegedly violated beef price regu- , lations. Upon conviction, they face penalties ranging up to a r iIO.OOO fine and a year in prison. ’ OPS enforcement director Ed- * ward P. Morgan said that the agency theoretically has power to take slaughter licenses away ’ from slaughterers found Violating price laws. DiSalle indicated, however, that he \ would not take such action without going through legal procedure. The chunky price stabilizer agreed with Morgan that the main goal of court action is to force ’ slaughterers to comply with OPS regulations rather than to put them out of business. DiSalle and Morgan said most ■ price violations have 1 been “wlll- * ful.” 1 Morgan said OPS used all its ’ enforcement agents in its current J investigation of slaughter houses '" 1 which turned up 443 violators 1 among 1J92 slaughterers covered J by. the survey. ( ’ Find Woman's Body 3 In Lake Michigan Whiting, Ind.. Oct. I.—(UP) — Authorities sought to identify today the\ body of a woman, about 60, which was recovered from Lake Michigan off Municipal Beach. Police said she may have jumped into the water as a suicide because there were no marks of violence on her body.

_ ; J House Implies Senate Delays Legislation Summary Designed To Show Action In House Much Better y Washington, Oct. 2 — (UP)- — The house plainly implied today that If the senate ddin’t drag its feet/ congressmen could, spend more time back home. House officials published a summary designed to show that the 435 house members get more done in less time than do the 96 senators. c So far in this session, the summary showed, the hoiise has passed 733 bills in 731 hours and 52 minutes, using up in the process only 6,321 pages of the congressional record. The senate, however. has passed only 547 bills up to now, Consuming 913 hours and 41 minutes and ; filling 7,313 page* of the record j with speeches and, documents. f Last summer congressional lead- ' ers , were shootings for adjournment Qct. 1. That goal has long ( since been abandoned, and after looking at today’s comparative ac- ’ complishment figures, house offi- ’ cials put the tentative adjournment date three weeks hence. Other congressional deyelop- , ments: \ Air Force — Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., 'R„ Mass., confirmed that the joint chiefs of staff have agreed to expand the air force from 95 to about 140 combat groups. He said they also have approved activation of three more army divisions and one additional marine division. j * Jessup—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, R„ Wis., charged that am-bassador-at-large Philip C. Jessup “adopted 100 precent” a policy program favorable to the Chinese Communists. McCarthy testified before a senate foreign relations subcommittee against Jessup’s (Tara To Pace Six) Wisconsin Bank Is Robbed 01 $16,000 Two Men Arrested For Questioning Rockford, 111., Oct; 2.—(UP) — The county sheriff’s office today said that two men bad been arrest-' ed for questioning about the polite |16,000 robbery of the Woodford, Wis., State bank; \ Deputies said that Arthur Dredske, Jr., 17, had admitted helping obtain a car used inAthe robbery, but denied taking part in it. They said Dredske implicated a 26-year-old Rockford man who was jailed but not identified. Dredske’s arrest followed a tracing of automobile license numbers, the deputies said. - The" unmasked bandit stepped quietly up to cashier Arleigh Johnson’s window just before closing time yesterday, produced a revolv* er, and asked him and bookkeeper Jean Campbelle to please keep ■ quiet. Then he ordered th|m to go into the vault with a burlap sack and fill it with “cash and ho checks.” As. he prepared to the gunman asked the bank? employes if they would suffocate;if he locked them in the vault. They assured them that they would and, the bandit smilingly agreed to let them stay outside. ; ' Lafayette county sheriff Homer Curry said the robber fled in a car with an Illinois liceijse plate. A check showed the license was registered to R. W. Traff, Loves Park, 111., who is now in the army. Curry said the youbg man was about 27 years old, wore dark glasses, and Was dressed in a green "uniform.” I p s 1

Price Five Cents

Polo Grounds Site , Os Second Game Os Playoff Series In r National League BULLETIN New York, Oct. 2.— (UP)— The Brooklyn Dodgers, with Jackie Robinaon in the starring " role, had a 5 to 0 lead over the New York Giants with two men out in the sixth inning of their second playdff game for the ( National league pennant today when time was called because of rain. New York, Oct. 2. —(UP) —Clem Labine, a rookie who has been in the major league only two mpnths, * was entrusted today with the vital assignment of keeping the Brooklyn Dodgers alive’ in the National league playoff against the New York Grants. Sheldon Jpnes pitched for the Giants. Labine, who has won four games this season while losing one faced in Jones and in-an<hout righthander who has won six games while losing 1 10. A 3 to 1 victor at Ebbets field yesterday, the' Giants needed only to win today to gain the right to meet the New York Yankees in the opening game of the world series Thursday at Yankee Stadium. Should the Dodgers win to even the playoff series, the third and final game (Would be played at the Polo grounds * tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. CST. Brookiyn-manager Charley Dressen made a last minute switch today and sent Al Walker in to catch instead of the injured Roy Campa nella. LineupS: ' Dodgers Giants Furillo, rs . Stanky, 2b Reese, ss Dark, ss Snider, cf Mueller, rs Robinson, 2b Irvin, If Pafko, If Lockman,; lb Hodges,ilb 4 Thomson, 3b Cox, 3b Mays, cf Walker, c Westru’m, c Labine. p Jones, p ) A play-by-play description follows:' First Inning Dodgers—Furillo filed out to Mueller. Reese (lined a single to left. Snider struck out. Robinson hit Jones’ first pitch into the lower left fetid stands for a home itan. Pafko filed to Mueller. Two runs, two hits, no errors, none left. Giants —Stanky was called put on strikes. Cox out Dark.<■Mueller was safe at first when his grounder went through Hodges for an error. Mueller was forced at sec- 1 ond on Irv.in’s Reese to Robinson. No runs, no hits, one ’ error, one left. Second Inning Dodgers—Hodges singled to left. Jones up Cox’s sacrifice bunt but threw wild to first and t Hodges went to third as Cox held first. It was an error for Jones. Walker bounced to -Lockman and Hodges was caught in a rundown between'third and the plate, Lockman to Westrum to Thomson. Cox went all the way to third but Walker held first. Labine went down swinging. Furillo bounced out to Jones. ;No runs, one hit, one error, two left. | Giants— Labine tossed out \ Lockman. Thomson lined to the left ‘field fence for a double. Mays beat out a slow grounder to Reese. Thomson advancing to third. Westjum bopped up to Cox. Jones fore-* ed Mays at second, Reese to Robinson. No runs, two hits, no errors, two left. Third Inning Dodgers—Stanky tossed out Reese. Snider walked. Robinson .singled to right, Snider stopping at second. George Spencer replaced Jones as the Giants’ hurler. Pafko popped up to Dark. Spencer picked up Hodges* trickier tn front of the plate but his throw hit and bounced away. Lockman scooped , up the ball and threw to the plate where Westrum tagged out Snider. . Spencer was charged with an error. No runs, one bit, one errpr, two left. Giants —Stanky’s grounder went through Reese for an error. Reese made a great pickup of Dark’s (Tara Ta Pa*a Six)