Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 23 May 1952 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Demands Full Probe Os Law Distortion j Brannan Recalled |For Questioning Washington. May 23 — (UP) 4- | Ssi l George D. Aiken said today bh'! would “have to insist” on a ft 1 investigation of whether . thj) D e noerats deliberately distorted t|i< 4948 farm law to help win the la s ; presidential election. ' he Vermonth Republican said a i tatement by secretary of agricilture Charles F. Brannan makes it ‘necessary” that the senate agri ciilture committee look into , the . “laets.” .. \ j|fl don't want to see the name thmg done to the farmers in 1952,?< Ajien said. I:|le made* the statement to repptters as Brannan was recalled fort a third straight day of quests ling in the committees investigp ion of the government’s crop sic rage program. | . | ’ Jrknnan ended his second long da r of testimony by issuing a sh tement to the press branding as ”p|re nonsense” Aiken’s charge tfilt the agriculture department played a “dirty trick” on farmers I by* ‘deliberately” forcing down ■ pfrliin prices in 1948. Aiken said tip administration. In an effort to l||me GOP 1947-49 congress, led fa: mers to sell their grain instead off storing it and thus worked down, th > price. < . ,■- v. A Purchase Os Home 1$ Announced Today I I ' I 1 -\ . ' ' I \ ! A*’?' I Richard W. Walter, operator .of p ck’s Diner, has purchased the (f; rl Gerber home 6n Mercer averji e and will move his family intb till e new residence soon. jThe Gerbers recently purchased lie Leo Saylors home on Fifth : treet. “■ , (turd ay School To 1 Closed Tomorrow 'he- Saturday Bible school of local Zion Lutheran churchI officially close for this term lorrow morning. The children I meet in their classrooms at 5 o’clock for final sessions with

FOR YOUR PROTECTION •Yellow Resistant Early Acres f Cabbage < Plants ' ? Tomato Plants , i i and Other Plants 1 ;■ ¥ | ; n — M HELLER COAL FEED & SUPPLY r “Through Service We Grow” J 722 W. Monroe St. , Phone 3-2912 IL^—' T~~ ■ I I I vlw/i tScccteeZ I I■■ \ z I I CITY I I Fruit Market! ■l L I I Between Zes to and Chat & Chew I North 13th Street ! I I STRAWBERRIES , IQuart B I bananas I I IOC' I | RIPE TOMATOES I I S9c 1 lb. box | I - WATERMELONS I I CANTELOUPE I I THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUN., MAY 25 R I NEWT D. STRIKER, Mgr. I

* Present Final Concert Os Year Sunday Everting Pll -Id' := iA•; ’ -LiAsOffllrs o P O ■.. .Milt 4 lit- 'A* ■ -A ■"A j. A M-m ■ — 1 Ji i I I > I f I J t ' f ’ ■ I . :? If ■ < " : > II ? i I . ■ I r I M ! : h : 4 f. < i •> ■ - v r 1 ; \ The Aoelian choir of the Decatur General Electric plant will present its final concert of the season Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the Trinity Evangelical! United Brethren church. . . | • Ljai ■ The choir, directed b|y David Embler, has presented numerous concerts throughout this section bf the country during the past season * and has drawn highly favorable comment. The public is invited to attend this final concert. i

: . I ' . r iThe program by the 60-voice choir for Sunday's final concert, the 10th of the season, follows: Organ prelude—“ Prelude in G Minor,” Evangeline Embler, pianist, Harold Mumma, organist. Processional hynin—“Holy, Holy, Holy.; Call to worship, invocation — choral amen.

their teachers, s|nd at 10 o’clock will proceed to the church for the traditional closing devotional. The Rev. Edgar P. Schmidt, pastor, will conduct the chapel exercises, and the Rev.. Otto C. llusse, !of St. Paul’s ' Lutheran church, Preble, will briefly address the children. The parents and friends of the Saturday school are invited to attend this closing devotion. The 93 children of the Zion Lutheran Saturday Bible school have been instructed each week by the following teachers: Mrs. H. H. Krueckeberg, Mrs. C. G. Stuckey, Mrs. Paul Han Cher, Mrs. Robert Zwick, Fred Zehnder, and RCv. Schmidt. Whole mountainsides of the Great Smoky Mountains in south-eastern United States are covered in late May and early June by flowering shrubs in full blopm.j

"O Lord Increase My Faith,” “Adoramus Te, Christe,” “O Jesus Grant Me Hope and Comfort,” “Yea Though I Wander,” and “To Thee We Sing,” \the Aoelian choir. "A Legend, “Now tbe Day Is Over,” and “Jubilee.” the dll-girl choin I “List the Cherubic Host,” from “The Holy City,” Kathryn Mayclln,

— Bh '■ ■ r \ > 1' I B J . JgM|' r ?, V b| . X MwrX ip nL ft i' >; . 1. jgi Howard Hildebrandt GloHaDale * Robert R. LaPlante z| TWO MEN are under arrest by FBI agents in connection with th# SIOO,OOO robbery of the U. S. Naval Air station at Quonset Point, R. 1., March 7, and singer Gloria Dale, 30, New York, is held as a material Witness. Arrested are Howard Hildebrandt, 25, West Warwick, Ry and Robert LaPlante. 27. West Warwick. (International Soundpholoa) • . • .' i - ■ - ;l • . ,r ’ . 1 .. ' •* | S

y **—"ALEUTIAN IS. 1‘ & •• i • -- i■ ■ b/ IRAMAPO DEEP.) I L 34.038 FEET | lOST (challenger deep. | r V Facfficicten I CAPE JOHNSON DEEP.I * ’ . ’ 34.440 FEET. OFF . .i SURIGAO STRAIT < V» ; .. _@J I _ - ARROW AND CROSS indicate new “deepest deep” found in the Pa|ifl< ocean, 35,640 feet, between Guam and Yap by British hydrographii ship, HMS Challenger. The Challenger, after wH(ch the deep is named I plumbed it with a weighted steel wire and sonicjsignal. Previous deepest spot was off the Philippines (shown). Tlwrd deepest is be tweet Tokyo and Iwo Jima (also shown). A 140-pound weight ran for an houi and a half before striking bottom. National Geographic Society report* I -—J— I y II < B BHL ■ Bur Bl I Mtti HI K ■ I \ • f Wwl nffil I wIBkI <IT, JIMB i.wi IKI ®ffla i # I Li ul-. I I LOOKING TENSE, hatless Leland Ivan Ferre, 28, is taken into Piatt I county courthouse, Monticello, HI., during trial on five charges of I burglary committed while he was in jail. He is handcuffed to Deputy I Sheriff John J. Smith, in jail on another charge, Ferre, a trusty, made I a key, let himself out to burglarize stores. His ruse was discovered I because the jail cat also got out and Ferre couldn’t catch it to take it I back in. Investigation of the cat’* being out led to Ferre’s undoing. | He got five years to life. l-j . i Sanndphota)\ ," Ti ■ - .' ■ ■ ' ■ i . b.'-

■ - • • Cri ? >■ , * I ! ' • • j •THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

harpist, Helaine Foley, soprano, 1 Karl Reinking, baritone. | -1 ‘‘Fantaslestuck,” Kathryn May- ‘ clin, harpist. « 1 Offertory, “Pastorale,” organ! add piano. “All Through the Night,” • add “All God's Chi Hun Got Wipgs.’* 1 men's glee club- . I ■ , 1 “Go to Dark Gethsemane,” “The 1 j. L x

Lord’S Prayer,” “Set Down Servant,” “Steal Away to Jesus,” and “Battle Hymn of the Republic,” the Aoelian choir. Benedictioni, choral response. Miss Eileen Bieberich will be accompanist, with Sharlene Lehman, Janet Seitz, Winston Seitz and Jack Lawson as soloists. Named To Boards At Methodist Conference I |i: ■ • ■ The Rev. Samuel Emerick, pastor of the First Methodist church, Decatur, and Fred Busche, lay leader, have been elected th boards at the annual meeting of the North Indiana conference of the Metho.dist church at Elkhart. Rev. Emerick was named to the board of missions and the committee on conference relations. BUsche was named as a member of the commission on minimum support and. is also on the committee on conference entertainment. , ■■■■■—,— ..ii a r b K If sat TUM . m.

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WAR PRISONERS (Continued F'roxi l‘nge <>n»> More are expected. Fitzgerald will be replaced -by Col. Howard L. Taylor. The exdeputy will be transferred to Taegu on the mainland and will be Korea military government adviser to the national police. Boatner said hd has held meetings. with compound leaders, including one today. He said some meetings had been satisfactory, others unsatisfactory. '3 morning at notorious compound 76 where the former camp commander was seized and, held hostage, M/Sgt. Ernest Noble Jr, of San Antonio handed a packet of 44 bdiletihs V° va North Korean spokesman. The Red spokesman one of 3’5 v prisoners brought to the compound to help negotiate in the seizure, of Brig. Gen. Frandis T. Dodd on pMay 7. They have refused. to lebve. The (jJommunists were reluctant to accept the packagd. They asked whether the “No. 1 spokes--man” would be allowed to talk with news correspondents. Capt. Joseph Hunter, Honolulu, commandant of compound 76, told him “no.’\ Finally one of them took the package but still had made no effort td the bulletins as newsmen left. They had thrown some previous bulletins over the fence. . In Tokyo, Gen. Mark W. Cldrk, supreme U. N. commander, forwarded to Washington his hlghlysecret report on the .seizure and ransom of the former Koje Island commander, Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd. Dodd was back in Bth army headquarters today on undisclosed duty after release from a hospital hear Seoul. He entered the hospital Saturday for treatment of “gastric disturbances.” ■ .. '\, ALLIED PLANES (Continued From Face One) tories. factory-type buildings, barracks,\power houses and other storage buildings.’ Pilots said huge secondary explosions sent towers of flame and ’ smoke billowing out' of the already burning wreckage. They believed they had hit stores*of ammunition and fuel. On the ground. Communist mortars and artillery shelled U.N. positions with 2.4(H) rounds on a three and one-half mile front northwest of Yonchon Thursday night. AHigd infantryman braced for a majoh attack, but only two Chinese platoons! moved against the U.N. line; They lost 46 men killed or wounded Bth artmy headquarters reported that allied ground forces killed an estimated 1,127 Reds, wounded 1,171 anb'captured 27 in the wejek ended May 15-21. . r.\ ' a | bA'j Reynosa, Mexico, nine miles south of McAllen, Tex., although only a border town of 32,900, hjas the fourth largest nightclub in the Western Hemisphere with a seating capacity of 3,500.

a > BBBHBHKHBhBBHBBB IN THE WHITE HOUSE rose garden, President Truman congratulates “faeacber of the Year” Mrs. Geraldine Wheldon Jones, Santa Barbara, Cal., a visitor with her husband Harold (left). “Next tt> a child’s ipother,” said the President, “the greatest influence on his character ahd his groiwth into a good citizen is his teacher.” Mrs. Jones was selected by McCall’s magazine. (International Soundphoto) L_ ; • DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS A Modernize Your Home! } I- 1 V" ' '-WW I IRBMOT-I ■ll7l nlilial —i — SHk’fJ W/ Mfflfi “H' ' Ri! ' bKt l2 ! Ik»iV IIIITi I - •> Hfifri — j j ■lute - - - ! GET OUR LOW PRICES'ON PLUMBING ': ' \ / A-:. - Nothing Down—3 Yeats To Pay • BATH ROOHIS I • WATER SYSTEMS • KITCHENS ! • HOT WATER • WATER HEATERS HEATING SYSTEMS I 1 A ■ . : i . -A / . : . ■ HAUGKS HEATING-APPLIANCES—PLUMBING 1 A- : 1 a -'A ' - • * ■ S. Second St. *A ■ . ; Across fnHn Court House ; ' ■ ■ J / ' ' ' -■ A' ■ . " ■' J

FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1952