Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 166, Decatur, Adams County, 15 July 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
p.« • -•«>Wf'r*' •».•».• • «r• • *rr‘ -»T»• —■* ■ •*•••■• - ■ •■"• I 1 ' •i’«i«P!»u n»W- ' ■ j ' "<''<■ T" * - ”***' K jH . - ■M x «» > ** | U.S. ARMY TRUCKS and 22 freight cars are shown scattered around like toys after the train was wrecked at J > Olean. New York. Fortunately no one was injured in the crash.. {lnternational Soundphoto). Ju
Many High School z Students Working WASHINGTON, UP — The census bureau reported today that almost a quarter of America’s 7,i 200,000 high school students w’ork- | ed outside of school fiours during ; the past academic year. ; Trade in a Good Town —Deqatur!
ir > K ' RED-HAIRED ACTRESS Rhonda Fleming and Dr. Lewis V. Morrill are shown in auto-in -Holly wood before their scheduled marriage in Kaaalv Ut., where she is on location for a film. (International
! Last Load of Season Wednesday Eve. at 8:00 " Red and Black RASPBERRIES ..r V » "■ 1 SWEET CHERRIES . and DEWBERRIES CALL YOUR ORDER IN Phone 6-6663 Connie’s Market 5 Miles South of Decatur U. S. 27
In- 11. I 1 MH II ITT I PACKING COMPANY I Highway 27 — Slorth \ \ I I Buy Meat Wholesale I I I We have bought astri ng of We would be glad to have you || ■ Ybung Yearling Shorthorn Steers drop in anytime at otfr modern ■ and Heifers, dry fed aSid grain fed, equipped Packing House and look ■ ■ the quarters weighing from 70 to over our selection of Dressed Beef, I o - ~ . .. , , T . Pork, Home cured Smoked Hams ■ 8a lbs. each. Ideal for your Lock- an( j Bacon, Pork Loins, Shoulders, ■ er or Hqme Freezer Unit. Front Fresh Hams, and we have Fresh ■ quarters 55c ib., hind quarters at Rendered Lard, by the can at 13c | I 60c lb. Also some heavier quart- \ ■ ers at 52c to 57c lb. Cow quarters FARMERS: If you want a Beef ■ < for Hamburger and Canning, 48c or Hog killed, just call us at 3-3146 ■ to 53c lb. ' ( and we can pick it up most any ■j \ , day. We kill hogs,every Wednes- I ■ J We can sell a half or w hole day and kill cattle every day of the dressed hog at wholesale prices; week up to Saturday. and process, double wrap, sharp- We are in the market for livefreeze,- grind your suasage and stock at all times. 1 n ■ render your lard for 5c lb. ■ ■•• ■ >
When it comes to selecting new furniture, Americans are indicating a trend toward middle-of-the-road and conservative lines, the N. Y. Journal of Commerce reports. ' ‘ ’ ' V - I I L ■ ' 'y ■ ■ ■'■ ■■ \ The total value of all motor vehicles produced since the turn of‘ the century is-estimated at almost S9O billion. ' . ■
Churchill Blasis At Dean Os Canterbury Refuses Tribunal To Probe 'Red Dean' ■\w ■■ ■ , - 1 •'V 7 ' ■J- ■ ■ j‘ : I- ■ LONDON, UP — minister Winston Churchill lashed at the “Red Dean” of Canterbury today for charging that the Allies used germ warfare in Korea. But he refused, contemptuously, to set up a special tribunal to investigate the Very Rev. Hewlett Johnson. He ■ said such a group would merely give the charges “an importance they do not deserve.” \ ‘Churchill's statement, made in the house of commons, resulted from the demand of more than 40 members of the house that Queen Elizabeth II fire the clergyman. She is the temporal head of the Church of Englands and alone has power to act. The attorney general, Sir Lionel Heald, told the commons Monday that there was not sufficient evidence Ho try the 78-year-old dean for treason. i Today, answering \demands that a special tribunal investigate the dean. Churchill said! “The establishment of such a trfbunal would in the opinion of her Majesty’s government invest the activities of the Dean of Canterbury with an importance they do* not deserve. \ “Free speech carries with it the evil of all the foolish, venomous and unpleasant things that arq ’said. But on the whole we would rather lijimp them do away with free speech.” j The dean, for years an open Communist supporter, made his charges after a recent visit to Red Chinia. But he admitted, ,at a press \eonference, that he had ho evidence to support them. FBl's Conviction Record Excellent WASHINGTON,. UP — FBI director J. Edgar Hoover reported today that percent of FBlinvestigated cases tried during the year ended June 3 resulted in convictions. ' There were 9,036 Convictions, of which 8,316 or 92 percent, were on pleas of guilty. Remaining convictions were otained after trial. ’
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Allied Planes Continue To Hit Targets Locomotive Repair Shop And Cement Factory Blasted SEOUL, Kored, UP — Allied fighter-bombers hit a locomotive repair shop and cement factory near Pyongyang today in another aerial assaultnagainst vital targets in the North Korean capital zone. The attack was carried out by Shooting Stars and Marine Corsairs. Pilots reported a huge fire and numerous secondary explosions broke out after they dropped bombs and peppered the target area with machine gun bullets. The shop and factory were located about 15 miles east of Pyongyang. ' Other fighter-bombers continued close support strikes against Communist front line positions; destroying 24 bunkers, four gun positions and three supply buildings. , , In Tokyo, U. S. army chief of staff Gen. J. Lawton Collins warned the Communisms they can expect “some tough bombings” unless they agree to an armistice. v He “said also that U. N. forces could turn back any Communist offensive unless an “outside power” should enter the war. In that case, he said, the U. N. would “employ anything to save our fotces” except germ warfare. On the ground, Allied soldiers hurled back another savage Re<| counterattack on an east coast hill south of Kosong in a bitter hand-to-hand-battle. The toll of enemy dead and wounded on Hhe height rose to nearly 6()b for tike last font, days. 4- ■ j \ Speculation PANMUNJOM, Korea, UP -f The two-day recess in Korean truce negotiations touched Off speculation today that a major develop* ment may be near. The recess was requested by the Communists Monday, possibly to consider a still undisclosed United Nations proposal for breaking the deadlock over repatriation of war prisoners. I ■, «■ ; Gen. J. Lawton Collins, U. 8. chief of staff, warned at Tokyo that unless a truce was negotiated the U. N. will continue its steppedup air, war and paste the Reds with some “tough bombings.” A The Reds customarily ask for a recess in the truce talks only when they have something to refer to higher authorities ip Pyongyang and Peiping. The tallts will be resumed at 11 a.m. Wednesday. <
JQ Mbfe ' JK&aBBEF-' WBl wB Mak M WR * >■ •< WL SS/S/KgSt *jk Baoj FJ-® IMWkwIIMBBFy • wS»T ifefl < ~;;R MM y p t ■ Xk --J Y»4-r wr/ww W - VX M \V z ~«®wE t t!? ' :^!^ i ;* r , \\ • W f 'Mfc A 1 LSBm&s TSmlwjv ISNk ' r■ .WiMWr' TfWriiiMmf"”3 • 1 • •.. IN WHITTIER, Calif, Mr. and Mra. Francis Anthony Nixon spread the news that their son, Sen. Richard M. Nixon, 39, was nominated by acclamation for the Vice Presidency at GOP convention, nnternntionait * jririMMkk ■ - WVK « -e 1 r & > ft < I >: " ? r • ~ r'' s ' *•’■ z S^-^ s * 1 '■ - WjMMB x : • -Lu.’ JB|gE; J .4 *.■**«*** - - ' -■*• '■ ’ - SMOKE RESEMBLING an atomic bomb cloud (left) rises from a Korean hill following dropping of a napalm bomb on a Communist position. The cloud resolves Itself (right) into a smoke ring that looks like a halo. In each photo one of the U. S. Marine Corsair planes which participated in the attack can be seen.
West Berlin Police Complete Barriers BERLIN, UP — West Berlin police completed today the erection of steel road barriers along the city’s east-west border to prevent further kidnaping raids by Communist Eastern agents. Barriers were put up at 119 crossing points. The construction was speeded after the Communists said nothing could stop them if they wanted to get any “Western agent.” I Fair Trade Bill Is Signed By Truman Says Best Solution To Problem Unsound WASHINGTON. UP — President Truman signed the so-called "fair trade” blil into law Monday, but said congress had not found "the best solution” to the problem of fair retail price regulation. He urged the lawmakers to “make a thorough investigation of this field,” along with the related problems of price discrimination and anti-trust policy. Mr. Truman said in a statement that he signed the measure “because it doep have value in eliminating certain unfair competitive pracitces, apd thereby will help small businessmen to stay in business ..." “At the same time,” he said, “I believe the fair trade laws do remove some competitive forces which should be retained in our progressive free enterprise economy.” _ , j The law permits a manufacturer to make, minimum price agreements on brand products with one retailer in a state. All retailers in the state then are governed by the agreement. "j s graphic Society, 83,297,000 watermelons, valued at $3(1,297,00R, were raised and consumedl in the United States. I \■ — I Ireland is preparing a series of festivals, fairs, pageants and sporting events next spring in Dublin and other [cities.
fit )I’| • DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
7 I* \ > (L i H —H > \ / r 5r ~ l ~i V—- f L-srS&t*’ v r I I ***• 'j* 10 - X I \ x /fcr / J X JS, XT 1* — / X “ i / TEXAS] 0 * 1 * tARiC OENN. \ jL V-, a -\ I I ? ala-Vsa-X. X \ ixSx. fl '' f ' V ' ' 111 7“ IJr V 7 ' ■ Ila. - } j / I XX \ T \ \ /miss. 4 ’ -M V\' xYS \ r xj X 1 * x\ \ SHADEDSTATEs"are against a possible Communist air attack. More than 150,000 are operating the round-the-clock watch from 9,000 observation posts keyed to 32 filter stations. Civil Defense needs call for personnel of 500.000. Currently the volunteers must many hours, “overtime,” say civil Defense officials.
Paper Makes Beauty ! MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP)—Mrs. B. Turner, struck by the beauty of flowers in her neighbor’s yard, examined them more closely and found they were made of pajper. The Delaware riVer is one of the nation’s prime shipbuilding centers, with ways at Camden, Chester, Philadelphia, and elsewherei Calves lose their first teeth like humans and develop another set. More than 3,000,000 tourists have visited the Hyde Park, N. Y., residence of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt since its opening in 1946. The U1 S. Commerce Department has estimated that tourists' spend more than $350,000,000 a year in California. r
Lose Something ? v • \ — LOST and FOUND 3 | Small whit* tuny dog Answer* to tJfe n*m< Curley Phon* 325-R • , 54-3 t LOST Biown be-••*«fcK-Td *nd qMQMpPC Kin deiy %n Plw»« WHJr M-3t LOsTVSdnesdr _3<ng PjUT *r gold Bi f- n Jr . 307 NorimC> ,^aL~ :>9 ~ 3t SPECIAL NOTICE Have elderly loonier* b n d censed home. Phone M g ASTHMA? AathmaM fl yur■nt Drug Co. -\W P’*' funded Free D«nM< >o-' We clean M*** - ndc Ing Co Pn UTHOIjLS TFynMA 2nd. Phone Ml. !^SaBR® fQ P h 0 •t” «0• r,flni * b K 2*t Fur coat* Mr* Dcck*r \ WANTED: To| V fun»Itur*. make* f I Furnk \ new •nd keep* neS Eniturel 1 «»t---afj/ vU? wf . 5F Let The Daily Democrat Want Ads Help You Find It.
| r / I I | I $3,5 ° | Westindiouse ' I Handi-Out T |;iCEJCUBrTRAY | M the mess of ♦ I W A removing ice CXjSSjv I 1 I H Z FITS ANY limit i to a Cuttomor J . Xi Get Acquainted.,. with Westmghouse Work-Saving Electric Appliances. 'B fl s I REFRIGERATOR HOME FREEZER RANGE ; LAUNDRY TWINS DISHWASHER WASTE-AWAY* WATER HEATER KLENK’S DECATUR, INDIANA
DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS 'fl . j : i. V"/' ' HouHktes.-ifJflH| ■ ME MM Ml Ml MME mESa ECONOMY MODEL $ 319-95 'X MODEL CS - 15 15 Cu. Ft. Capacity 'X // Holds 525 lbs. Frozen Foods ___ // CHILL CHEST FOOD FREEZERS I Get a Chill Chest Food Freezer at this low cost per cubic foot for fast freezing and safe storage of more foods right in your home! Look at these features:—-Temperature control adjustable from zero to 20 below Zero; Separate, large fast | Famous Tecumseh Hermetic Sealed Unit; Counter-balanced lid V has automatic light; Good Housekeeping Seal and 5 year Warranty. You get all these features at this low cost. Ask to see the 8, 15 and 23 cu. ft. Chill Chest Deluxe Models also available at popular prices. : I ■ , ! ■ " ’ . Gef A Chill Chest For Performance ' ( ... For Quality... Economy • ■ j I , . ‘ • Habegger Hardware
TUESDAY; JULY 15, 1952
