Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

' , . I1 1 ■—■ Buick & Chevrolet Trade Ins 1951 Chevrolet Styline Tudor Radio—Heater. . ’ ’ , . • ' * u' * ‘ i ■■■■MIMMMMMM WMMMiO 1950 Buick Roadmaster Dynaflow—Radio—Heater. —' - J - • 1950 Olds 08 Tudor A Radh>—-Heater, f ~'^ v _ p ! 'U jI * 1947 Buick,Spoial 4 Door Radio—Heater.l i | ■■■■•■-■ — 1940 Ford Super Tudor Radio—Heater. r L-111 |. J ■ i 1946 Plymouth Special Sedan Radio—Heater. • ’ ' L.. . ' . j ■ ■, I n 1941 Dodge 4 Door Sedan | Radio—Heater. i i \ ' ; ' *2 ■■ ! H' !■ "' ! > I 1951 Henry J 6 Cylinder Overdrive—Radio—Heater. h . ■ ■ r— — ■- Mr; nr i'- ;r : ’ . \ ; . <2 ■ ■ ,!| .N Lr l|! b!:i, . !s' ’•. ■ ■ ; .1 I j II jl‘ <■[ ■ .i , Saylors Buick —- Chevrolet t "h. a .-■■■■ , -1. ■■ r*ii T: ■ i. ; - , r J.- .1 j I

M ■' Ml W M M V ■ M CITY STYLE . T. ' ■ ■ ■ ' ; .' ■ . <■| ] | I In the last twenty years - , farm life and' The farmer knows and appreciates the small town living have gained the com- Lvalue qf the trucking industry .. . for K torts and conveniences that were for- aral living has clanged radically in the F* merly available only to big city dwellers. ist few years because of the convenience iThis is possible only because of the speed. ’.inch canic with trucking. convenience and economy of them? *> s d Yes, trucks of every description arc I motor truck. ■ serving homes . . .farms .. . " J ■ i . The harm family is no longer dustries performing a complete doormotcly isolated that it canpol be reached. ■ door transportation service. r ; 1q -q< 1 ’ , 1 ’ q : - I 1. , . > k 7 The farm mother no longer murf.bhkc * ♦ ♦ her bread, or churn the b’ der, or accept J • L v- less in the line of conveniences than her ’member, the next time you sec a truck • city sister. lor truly, the farm family | the road that .. . everything you eat lives as economically and as comfort.-, . t . everythingjou wear... in ► ably as any individual in un; ’ nwf 7 I ting you use ... omes all or pari of the I tan area. ' i \vay to you by truck. i I' ‘ i i l : motor truck association, iNC. J ?.?Qs«yelt Building • 4, Indiana « ■ ■ '< I k r q b lid-T- f ■HKZ' i . kwl- X JL El -t -Wp vL-Zua ■MWRvI . 7/ • !■■■ ■L'4k L ■ M " ”**' ""—■■* J Wf^ y ■ z-x W l-rrrrr TmEJk/'/S\ UM

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George Opposed To Truman's Proposal Reorganization Os Tax Bureau Fought Washington. Feb. 26.—(UP)— President Truman’s plan to reorganize the scandal-troubled internal revenue bureau ran into the powerful opposition today of Sen. Walter F. George (D-Gas.). George is chairman of the tax-, writing senate finance committee. He told the senate executive expenditures committee he will sponsor a resolution to reject the president’s plan on grounds that it would “retard” tax collections. Mr. Truman has proposed to abolish the 64 politically-appointed revenue collectors and replace them with up to 25 district collectors aj>pointed by the secretary of treasury under civil service. George said for congress to approve that plan would be to abdicate its constitutional responsibility for tax collection. And putting the collectors under civil service wouldn’t necessarily curb corruption ,pe said. Os reve--1 uue bureau employes fired or forced to quit. George said. 96 percent were under civil service. The house has approved the president's proposal. It will go in effect March 14 unless at least 49 isepators vote against it. Several senators have questioned various aspects of the plan. «. .Other congressional developments: Veterans —The American Legion urged extension of G.I. bill of rights benefits to Korean veterans with only ptinor changes. But some members of the house veterans committee objected to revival of the "$2-20 cjub” under which veterans would get S2O a week unemployment compensation for up to 52 weeks. I UMT—Backers of universal military training told the house UMT • is the only way to keep the counBU\! wjSSsKf'MORE TINDER'' MORE pmcious \ MACARONI y I

, ■■ ' 1 . THE DEQATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

New Anti TB Drugs May Be Cheap As Aspirin

New Vork, Feb. 25.—(UP)— A lump of 4rd|nary cogi contained thp key that unlocked the secret to discovery oil two synthetic compounds that may give man complete victory over tuberculosis. Coal Is used to make artificial cooking and heating gas. The byproduct is coal tar derivatives. One such derivative cap, be converted Into the life-saving compounds. It takes only two major chemical steps. That’s why the cost of the new anti T.B. drugs may eventually cost no more than an aspirin tablet. Research scientists tvhft work like Hawksljaws tracking down a criminal have been knockinig on the doors of success for year. They hive longl had a suspicion that certain coal tar derivatives would have good action against the tuber culosis germ. In fact, some compounds had been tried—but none with a telling and lasting effect. In an synthesized one of the two compounds. It was an academic U, “just to keep in practice.’’ . In IMS. scientists of the Hbff-man-Larocbe laboratories in Nutley. N.J., first synthesized the same compound. )t wag used then in research with snlfa compounds. Some six years ago. the Roche scientists reopened their own investigation of a possible anti-T.B. drug. The detective team was headed by Dr. John Aeschilmann, director of chemical research and discoverer of prostigmiiie. One of his crack detectives. Dr. Herbert Fox. Completed a synthesis of a compound very similar to the one the Austrian bad rieported. Fox’s" synthesis was konwn technically as l-isonicotinyl-2-isopr<> pylbdraxiue. and tor short is now | called marsilid. ' I p i_,— try safe and at ithe same time solvent. Leading the tight tor the training program was chairman Carl Vinson (D-Gti.) of the armed services committee. ; He said it would make it unnecessary to maintain huge - staiidihg\ ’. forces and might save as mlurh ab' $13.000,0(»0,. (too a year. But Republican Whip i loeslie C. Arends (1".), said it ed to him as though UMT itk«|f would cost “several billions dollars every year." i — j—4—4— i . Three Candidacies 4 Filed Here Today Today is the firkt day that cans didutes for no ninatiens for countXi offices may officially file their intentions with the county clerk. Three have filed In Adams county. Mrs. Mabel Striker, Democratic candidate for county recorder; (,’halmer Werst. for G. O. P. pfecinct ct'miniUoeman in Decatur, first ward. B precinct and Edward P. Warreu. G. O. J?, candidate for . precinct cemiuitteeuan itt Decatur, third ward B precinct. Candidates have until March 27 : to tile their intentions. There, hae been several prospective can- , didates prominently mentioned the last tew days and indications are that numerous announcements will be forthcoming in both parties soon. LITTLE HOPE (Continwrd Fnnn I‘hk» leaders claim will hvae “motorists afoot in 10 days." Another 12,6(H) Workers would be affected Tn plants in Illinois. Minnesota, i Wisconsin. Ohio. Tepm ssee. Miclugan, Kentucky aiid lowa. A walkout by 15,000 union members in the gulf coast area would idle 25 plants, including the de-fense-vital chemical, butane and synthetic rubber Igr-products operations near ‘the oil city of Beau •nont, Tex. ’ V—H—4 1 Ches'apt ake Bay contains 200 kinds of fin and shellfish.

iMI JUi 0 Wwm *£’ ** ; .-^r '■’' •■ ’• ■uK^bS | '“**' '*i ... ’■ - *■'■ • ’ * '■’i '' ’ ■ liifcPL- ITT W ' X ' ! " ' I /<\' 1 Il py - ■ \ •£ .' U j : .\ , NANCY CHAFF'S KINER fleflt). pretty wife of the Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Ralph Kiner, holds her trophy as women’s indoor ! t?unls champion in New York.. With her is the ruaner-up, Mrs. : 1 Patricia Canning ToHH, beaten 61/6 0. It's Mrs. Kincr’i third strsigl4 ; ! national indoor crown. (International SoundpholQj ‘ I . ■ •’ / . 1 R ' ■ . ■ • . '&! >

Its action against tuberculosis gernja in tye lest tube and experimental animajs was quickly determined. Dr. Jtox wept a step further. He modified the structure of the cdmpound’a molecule. Thia time be got a compound known as glucosyl. It too hid definite anti T.B. activity. It ,wa» actually tke first, of the new Compounds to be used in a human patient. Meanwhile. Dr. Fox also bad synthesized isonicotinic acid hydrazide, known as rimifeu. I' , . Within a short time, the scientists learned; that glucosyl decomposed or changed into rjtpWpn. Thus the, production of glucosyl in the laboratory was stopped * nd efforts were concentrated on making marsilid and rimifon. The production speeded up a clinical doctors pleaded for more of compound. The drugs irerp working op human cgseZj aud with startling results. ! ; ” In laboratories j. of the JS.R. Squibb A Co', only a few mites away in Npw Brunswick. NJ.. scientists also had synthesized isonictonic acid hydrazide and called their product nydrazid. It was furnished for ciitiical trUis at another hospital. As pointed oqt by Dr. Aefchlimann. th* synthesis of either marsilid or is easy. Actually, it require® only two major steps. The first starting material is a coal tar derivative known as gamma picoline. It is a liquid, looks something like lubricating oil. By chemical means it is quickly converted to isoulctonic acid. Oue more quick chemical step, and the life-saving drug is mq/ie Withih a; matter" of hours it cap be at the bedside!of a T.B. patient. ' Hollywood Bobber Held In New York Trapped By Marked Money In Robbery New York. Feb. 26.— Hollywood bank, robber, arrested as be stepped off a trans-continen-tal pjane | tbday with his sl9,(rot) loot in a brief case, was trapped .and positively identified by marked myndy given out deliberately by the bank, the Ff-Jl said today. John Richard Bayless, 37, waited for forgery in Wichita, kansy,, and otbe4 bank robberies apross the country, looked like any other business ipan to his fellow passengers oh a trans world airlines’ Los Angeles-New York flight. But he had paid for his ticket, the FBI said, with i>art of $2,000 in identifiable bills which thp Hollywoml branch of tile Bank of America I bad registered »ud distributed ip its tellers’ cages—to be handed to robbers only. More Os the marked bills were among the $19,000 iu bis new calf briefcase, boldly stamped with his own initials. Bayless had escaped with $19,623 in a daylight hold-up 1 of the Hollywood bank yesterday. lie wais arrested as he stepped from the plane at La Guardia field after "a unique collaboration between California officials, the FBI and the plane's crew, who identified and “fingered" him for agents on ju formation radioed to the plane. ; The daring hold-up man. who once attemmpted a swimming escape from the treacherous waters surrounding Alcatraz prison in Suu Francisco Bay. was sought since last September for parole violation , and forgery. Bank officials in W. Vg., Columbus. ()., and New Haren. Conn., identified him tentatively from United Press pictures as the roblM«r wbo had pulled recent holdups in thejr banks.

Churchill Answers Laborife Censure | Says United States Attitude Changed I .1 * ’ 'I !”- j ’ , London, F|rt». 2C— (UP)— Prime . minister Wins(p* Churchill said today that the Untied State* changed its attitude toward Britaip vhen it learned (hat this country had developed an atomic bomb and was preparing to teat it. Defending himself against a labor party motion qf peyaopal cenqpre of his foreign policy, CUurplj||l said in the; house pf commons tyat the recenti labor government made thg. atomic bomb "as a matter of research" but concealed the news from parliament. “It was not until we (the conservatives) took off|ce that 1 learned that apt only bad the socialist government made the atomic bomb as a matter of research but that it had created at the expense of many scores of millions of pounds the plant necessary for its regular production." Cburcbili said. Hp then mentioned tha j agreement' which he reached wijh the Australian government to t<fst the oomb in Australia this yean “This agreement is certainly a real advantage Io use and jrben I informed the Americans in I Washington of the position that had been reached, quite a new atmosphere was created on this subject," Churchill said. Why Churchill asked, did not the laborites tell parliament of the development of the bomb instead of concealing it and at the same time accusing the conservatives of being war mongers. Cbutchill added that he had brought back from bis visit to President Truman in Washington in January an agreement that American atomic bomber planes would hot carry the bombs from their bases in Britain without British consent. The laborites introduced a motion of censure against Churchill personally because he said in a speech to the American congress Jan. 17 that Britain would join in* “prompt, resolute and effective" action if the Communists broke a Korean after one bad been concluded. The conservatives chose to make the motion one against the,government as a whole, meaning a vote of confidence, late tonight. The government was believed sure to win it. War Near ; To Complete Halt Bth Army Headquarters. Korea. Feb. 26.r-(UF) —The Korean war came to an almost complete bait both in the air and on the ground today. I Over 114 sorties were flown by Mb air force planes because of the a|most solid overcast over North Korea. It was the lowest number iof operational flights since Sept. 2d, 1951. when the weather limited the sth air force to seven Sorties. . .» . , An Btji army communique said there was no significant contact with the enemy on the ground except, on the central front, where fought liglpt epgage ments with Red units up to two squads in strength. v * ONLY ONE fCMttunea *■-<»•» raw* Mp*» ilej- brought the inmhte some aspirin he had requested- | The first of the men to be apprehended was Raymond Henson, 27. and the two Yowell brothers, Raymond, 17, and Glen, 19, all of St. pouts, Mo. They were seized it Newburg. Mo., about 200 miles from Quincy. ( Late last night. Keith Dudeu. 3P, the' inmate who originally asked for the aspirin and generally considered the ringleader in the wijh J 8 year-old Doq1 Walton approaches a home op the outskirts of CanMßsn, about 40 miles northeast of here| ’ ; The bqpiepwhir summoned stqtje police, who arrived a shqrt timp later. Dudeu and Walton neji a field. Officers caught up with Duden and he was recaptured. VValtpn, however, made good his escape. Duden told poliep that L’hris AJlisop, 26, was asleep in the stolen car in which the men bad * fled. The car was found parked' in a thicket. Allison was insjde. Polite said he was .drunk. Some three hours later. Walton, chilled by the t>ui»-(reeziug weather and exhausted from his flight. ' kno‘k«d at the door of another Camden home and gave himself vp. . All three mien wera returned (p the jail.' /»> - a When thev fled Birr Jah. the nten. took with them a machine gun and two bullet-proof vests. A •‘bort time later they stole tvu ears in Quincy. i. Four roliberies in nearby Bpwem Hk. in which a total pf $225 was taken, were attributed to thin fleeing inmates. . ' . . ■ ■ • ■ /11 . There arc 4 P .>51 miles of railroad . iu North Carolina, i : ’ |j

Lutheran Campaign For Fund* Planned c Henman KruOckeberg, cashier of the First State Bank and Frank C. Schmificp, school teacher at Preble, are members of committee "A" of the Lutheran Church-Missouri ayndi, headed by the Rev. Harry Dnhling of which will contact communicant members of the chureh ;n the March 2$ campaign to raise $10,1990,000 lor Lutheran expansion al buildings. T|)|e campaign wid go forward under the banner off Conquest for Christ." At a meeting held in Fort Waype yesterday, fh'j Rev. W, C. Birkner, executive secretary of misqlons and stewardship of the • central district, explained the purpose 0f the | Lutheran campaign. Membership in the church has doubled sjnee 1926. he said. New !>ui)dJngs, including churches, cbllegep and schools {uust.be built, he ex pained. The local campaign will be carried on from March 23 to June 30 and personal contact will be made with every Lutheran family ila the Decatur area. Krueckeberg stated. -f- —■ —T; - ' : weekly from Bprjjn’s Templehof airport, while in the last six months 35,00 P airp|anes landed and took off at Gjerman airports, cprryipg over 500,0P0 passengers. Li '■ Ln h L j

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■L |' J i I VLw i i TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26. 1952

SAYS TRUMAN <U»attau«d From p« v « Ob*, state Democratic executive committee. The committee voted yesterday*to ask Russll to be a candidate. Other political developments: ij. A slate of convention delegate ' candidates, favorable to Gen. Douglas MacArthur, was entered in the Wisconsin Republican presidential primary. 2. Sen. Robert A. Taft (R-O.j candidate for the GOP presidential nomination, said in a speech here that a GOP victory is needed this year to bring “|ioneaty, integrity, simplicity apd lihierty” into the government. ; 3. Chairman James P. Richards 1 (D-S.C.) of the house foreign affairs ?. committee »aid in another speech that Taft is “a great man” in many respects but is “utterly confused" about foreign policy, ®9anapac H Antihistamine and APC BsßbH Compound for all-’round cold relief. ■ 15 Tablets TP* Smith Drag Co.