Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 243, Decatur, Adams County, 14 October 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Queen Elizabeth On Rigorous Schedule HfiaVy Schedule To Coronation June 2 LONDON' UP — Britain’s 26-year-old Queen Elizabeth II return! 1 ! from Scotland today* to face In .IM ' I . • t •' - ‘ ; 1 ' ■■'■■■>*< j *4 —

- ■ ■ . . 1 1 , ■. .. I ,-•*• ■• •?. • ■ !' ' toTTh I . h .• ■■ 11 ■i-bbW ® f. V tow : ‘ hJK * A HYAITHY BABY IS A HAPPY BABY Whoever that yourig prrnce or prlncess Is dlsedntehied; you may be certain that he or she Is Iri need of very special attention. The. baby products v»e tell arts* designed \ to make that new arrival healthy and happy. If In need of baby supplies, come in and let us give you .the correct items. ’ . • T I. ' ' ’ s •■ , .■ ■ ■ BOTTLE WARMERS — BABY BQTTL.ES ' BABY OIL — BABY POWDER BABY FOOD — COTtbN — SCALES jj ■ DISPOSABLE DIAPERS — OIAPER LINERS Complete line of PLAYTEX Baby Nieds,' KOHNE DRUG STORE

’ I /» - "‘ r . ' * r / 14 f ' I 1 ?=^-— ■ *~7-'.gf-**-’ S»' J If .;■ JT • \ ■■ : 4, ys"»ssßf' ‘ -•->-• -■■£ '.< ; .‘3 MTW' - ■■ ■. r .asiiSßr ißw *,'.AjLjft» i j- jL— "•'— -- - . .. • ■ .—•■ - -?~~7 ~ -^k 1 ' ~ ' ««5 .' ', -f—-- — T _,j J ■. SIEk H " ' 1 'f r-: — p.| .... .... ....M.., .. - j..M .; t ..,,-.. - —■ ■■ ■ - —. > I K 73 — _ — 1 — -•-• ‘ — -, --— s< " l "^Bitoto™^toE±^' I BL A : i-J Si :;;; 1 J : .. ■ i‘| . : r ■ ' . . i, | f,j . ' «**wl •.Jj .| _ , Says Underfill Things About You I ■a i ' ' I il j ■ 11 : ‘ : '■ ' ' ■ » ■ ■ ■ . ’ ■■■.;,■ ■ \■ 1 ' I L ■ N .

.. ~ J; The instant your beautiful Cadillac points its crest 1 ' into view, it begins to say wonderful thihgs about \ It says; almost as p|ainly asps the words were written out, thjit you ate a person of in your own world L affairs, i . i > ■ , | H ft It talks of your good judgment and your splpndid taste—and indicates yout of resp^nsibifitly for those who ride with you as passengers, dr drive beside;; you in the traffic lanes., I . ;. t \ It speaks of your farinjly pnd hohne and youi way : of lite—and, in general, ppvqs the way fpr the ntepect of those you encounter is you sit at its wheel. \ This is true because those who own Cadillacs Form A a virtual “Who’s Who’ f of America’s highways. In - almost every-community in the country, it is obvious that Cadillac is the favored, car of the leading people.

Zintsfmaster Motor Sales First & Monroe. Streets, Decatur Ind. 1 ' Phone 3-2003 '• . ■; <•■ ; : It ■ \ ■ . p.l ( • . ~,.T Id * k s ♦ ijL .’■ « I t » ; f 77 ‘ . ■ ! I'4 •_ ' " ;ri- •!' ■ O ■ ■ Pin / /■ .i .. .

earnest the staggering responsibilities inheritefl froijn her father, > King George Vt. Ffbih notir until ifter tier coronation next June 2, the ybung queen will be caught in an endless chain o( royal tasks. She has set herself a working day of JO hours , from now until next August. And , thb ntimber psi hours is subject to revtelbn upward. Her schedule is being Worked otit\ hjontfes In advance, in periods bt I' ' ’'' ■■•' '■ • • j H V 1 • I — L: i ; —!

■ hs Httll as 15 minutes. It pfbbatily would be possible right now tor the bueen to Ibok ahead and find, sgy. that on next February 19 she wMI he playing with her son and 4 Prince Charles, who will be four next month, and. his two-year-dld ■' sister Princess Anne, from 9 ;to .; 10 a.m. Unless something comies : up. of course, that requires her to ' forego that one hour in the morning ■ With thfe children. j r j Certain hburs of her day must ■ be allotted to receiving government J officials, from prime minister Wlheton Churchill down. She must spend hours reading dispatches th ? offices of Churchill and other cabinet ministers, and reports sent to the foreign offliee from diplomatic etlvoyg. 'She must attebd ptibiic futibtioris of all Spirits and preside at meetings of the privy council and royal invests tures. j Those arb the duties of any monarch. But lit addition, because sljite is a Wbman, she must sandwich in time lb have her hair dressed atid to get her clothing fitted. Her most crowded three months will be next May, June and July, with the pliniax coming June 2, ;when shte Is crowned ih Westminster Abbey ih an Houte-lOnfe cetiemony. [ I : Morse Accuses Ike Aiding Oil Lobby WASHINGTON UP -- Republican Sen. Wa>ne Morse of Oregon has accused his party’s presidential candidate, Dwight 6. of supporting the ”00 lobby” on the tidelands question. “Political expediency may wjn Him votes of certain coastal states on this issue, but national security calls-fbr conservation of this flja* tfonal asset, VMorse said in a staiiement. He also accused Eisenhower, who favors state control of the oiil rich submerged lands,, of having been “taken in by the selfish interests of who seek to stefel 'tidelands -oil belonging tq all the people."' ' 5 , J ' ■ I r : ' v ". : b : -■!-

The reason for this, of course; is found in the history of the car itself. , \ For fifty years, it has been the unwavering purpose to make Cadillac as fine a car as it is practical to produce. Goodness has always been the watchword-r eraftsmanship has always beeh the creed. As a result, Cadillac has long been known and accepted as—“ The Standard of thd WoHd.” And, : inevitably, people, who want and seek the finest have turned to Cadillac. That’s why the man wha sits at the wheel of a Cadillac i§ an accepted member bf the most distinguished motoring family to be found anywhere. I If you are ready for membership in this incomparab e group, better come in and see tis Soon. We’d be happy to welcome you at any timf. , ' _

IMDCATUII DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR INDIANA

FT 1 "'"* *— ~p-- rr»"r-r- Fy'-TTV R ' ■ J " ' ft'M r J?. ■st JI *> Ms 1 i . A- hflF ! flyi PERSONS KILLED and 10 founded is the toll in a futile attempt;to Otfctthrow the three-man junta (above! haa ruled Venezuela Since ousting of President Romuto Oallego< in 1948. From left: Col. Louis Felipe Liovera Paez, m this ter ot interior; Kesldfent German Suarez Fldiherith; CoL Marcus Perez jimediea, minister of deffehse. The attempted coup was blamed on members of the Outlawed Democratic Actioh party and Communist party. (International Boundphoto)

■> : -4-t I' I Com, Soybean Crops Increased In Slate Expert Predictions | Exceeded By Crops i LAFAYETTE. Ind. UP -- Indiana’s 1952 corn and soybean crops ari exceeding experts’predictions, Purdue University Agricultural statisticians reported today. A monthly Hoosier cfop sumrniary estimated corn At 2>2t.750,000 bushels with a yield of 49.5 bushels per acre—slightly above last month. The crop Is good in the north, average in the central

-•■.-•■ .- L- —J districts and below average in theteoutb. Old corn still on farms Was 18,639,000 bushels, slightly above i 1 the 1941-50 average and 183 per a year agoi The . survey said? if favdrable harvest weather Continues, the soybean yield will be 22,5 bushels per acre and production will total 33,322,000 bushels. Farmers report 182,000 bushed of old beans on • hand. . 0 I■ < Other grain crop estimates stood unchanged. Farm stocks as Os L included 36.503.00 Q bushels of pats, slightly more than average but less than last year. Farm-held whhat was 167 percienf of test year but only 90 percent of Average. Barley; was 116 percent of last year and 81 perceht of average. Held rye is 116 percent of 1951 dnd’-77 percent of average, the aurtey gaid. Hdy production df 2.464,000 tons is. tiOOOjtons above last month. The crop is 92 percent of test year and' 98 perceht of 'average. The clover sebd forecast Is 9.200,000 abdut average. Fruit production Wig repotted belchv a fmonth agp, largely because drought in orchard districts prevented full sizlhg. , Commercial applys are placed at 1,148,000 bushels, peachaa at 472.000 bushels Mhd pears at 78,000 bukheift. Despite below average pasture conditions, milk pfbductidh per reached a new high. September milk production Was 331,000$00 pounds, l-.OOtyOOO above last, year and 19,000.000 poutdis above average; 5.000 Coal Miners In Illinois Idle Protesting Oeldy Ih Woge Increase st ■ :■ ' i WEST FRANKFORT. 111. UP — About 1,(010 Southern Illinois coal 'miners were idle tbday protesting a delay in their paiy raise, but an spokesman predicted ther< vteuld be noj general strike. Eleven mines were shut down when miners refused to work because the wage Stabilization board has ’not acted i recently negotiated $1.90 daily rflsei . A mine Operators’ spokesman here! who asked that his name not be u?ed; said “I dbn’t think thtere will be h general strike.” “Why; should there be?” he asked, “The wage board is ready to aH on the iricrease.” The board is jrheptlhg tonight to act qh tlie; boost, which was schedukd To take effect pct. 1. Tile latest walkoiits came At the Ufiibagbi and Franklin Mine No. £ at West Frankfort and threb Peabody Coal Cq. mines at Tovey, ’Pana arid Pawnee.' U '< Auburn Man Killed When Struck By Cbr Melvin. $9. Aiiburn, was killed Monday ’(phen he was striick by a car driven by Gebrge Crogg, 50, Auburn, on U. $. 27 near here. Roger LbHgenberger In Stafe Contest »- . . ' Rbger 5 Longenbergef, of Kirkland township, will compete in the state corp-picking contest at Rushville Friday. He w|ll compete in the one-row pickers contest against atx Other contestants. There will be i 4 competing; in the tworow pioWßrs contest; d TM qatlbnal contest will be held, at jßushyille Saturday. Lonwifi Use a Belle City corh. picker, ahd Is' spbnsbred by Dierkfes .Implement sales of this c ' ,v ' • j lx A house 1 in- tlie city is unlikely to be shrin k more .than once in i ( oott ; eyL b' lightu|hg. . . 'J . I ' 4 . ; ■- Wii • ,

Ex-fenllor Brooks Refuses Details Special Fund Aided Pay Office Expenses CHICAGO UP — C. Wayland Brooks, Republican national committeeman from Illinois who recently] attacked Gov. Adhtl E. Stevenson’s special fund, said today he received (money from a political fund to h'plp pay office expenses while fee was in the U. S. senate. I ! . Brooks, who served as an Illinois senator from 1046 to 1948, had demanded that Stevenson withdraw as Demotetatic presidential nominee because of thte fund he used to compensate stale officials he cdfasidered underpaid. Thte money, which Brooks Said amounted to M vbry considerably less” than $1,006 a month, came front the “Republican citizens finance committee of Illinois,” he said. ; Brooks refused to say how much nionhy he rtecteHfed, but “thb committee raised eribugh.mpney to keep my office going during the rest Os my eight years in! office.” The St. Louis Boat-Dispatch reported that Brooks: “acknowledged” recelvihg helir. Brooks said he “told all about" the fund in a speech delivered Oct. 6 at a meeting of Chicago’s 43rd ward Republican organization. , The former senator told the Post-; Dispatch that he “never solicited a dollar froni any individual.” In ah interview With the. United Press, Brooks haid he knew “the PostDisfiitch had been smelling around , on it,” ' ’ _-i ’ When asked if he knew of the newspaper’s investigation at- the L time of his speech, Brooks only snorted. Bfdbks, who was defeated for reelection in 1948 by Sep/-Paul Douglas D-111., said he neVer “solicited a dollar from any individual,”. Brodks insisted tbht none of the contributions were made by corporations. lie said he could hot thll who contributed the money, in amounts or how ii. was spent. "1 don’t recall the details,” he said, "flow much was spent depended on what Was going on in the senate and. what the issues were. I’m not going to give details of a fund of wnjch 1 don’t have much recollection f " RosdhbgfgS To Ask Court Review Cose NRW YORK UP — Jtillus and Ethel RoSenberg, who have bteen sentenced tb death in the electric chair for giving atomic bomb secrets tb the Soviet Union, will ask the supreme court to reconsider its decision not to review the case, .their attorney said today. -EmatiUel H. Block, the lawyer, said he would go to Washington Wedhesday to take the first step toward asking the court to reverse its 8 tb 1 decision of Monday. He said he hag until Oct. 28 tb file the petition for Baptist Pastor At ChurCh CohVehtioh The Rev. Robert Hammond, pastbr Os the First Baptist church' bf this city Is in Hammond this week attending the state convention of Baptist churches. The meetings are] being held Mbnday, Tuesday and I Wednesday bf this week in the Hammond First Baptist churbh. 'The annual programs for the paribus societies and divisions of the chUrch are being planned at the thrtete-day seSsidn. Rev. Hammbhd Is the bftiy Decatur lepresehtdtivte at the annual mteetlhg. ■—l i J—-— L_i

Mfi ~, Make sure f ._ I - ./.?j j m (jffllOUS w- < Hi i Ji j w. r - & JM|M mearamer! ’W< W-7 * j Baby grows closer to yo'u. meal- H i IWIMihWF ’ ‘JfcA. tlmcs arc nappy. By avoiding conflicts gy fI&R 7. ■fllgB”; "7£2' ''V’FLlsZli ovcr f°°d» y° u Baby thrive physiWH? cally and emotionally. When doctor ,fl& ■ recommends solids, let Beech-Nut . !■ >k 'tt Foods woo Baby’s appetite. When Baby |1"< : ■fegufl .- ; j his meals, yea’//enjoj Baby more! ;. ! 'W j Beech-Nut ■■W *- WMr wMIP FOODS/- BABIES '<j iHaElr sj /aw - —■ll- - This seal is your assurance 11;;:.; ;:•■•• L fl that CLV'-I Beech-Nut ; v ■; fe.... Be>Ch;Ntf* - wnnvv/* Food you give your Baby Hl;/ i> accepted by the Council ' t.d ' ini' ' ** ,, '/‘ l ‘ s on Food-and Nutrition of ' r'K/ii./ —2=^‘=- -rj: '- I t^le American Medical Association. X.J.thrive on them! 1 . ■ i " i ' L '■ ■ . ' ''J . . 1 ■' • ■ ■ : ' • ;.'■■< Li • ■ • ' \ : • . • "’/'> i i ::■./•’■ i

Indianapolis Man Is Killed ByAuto INDIANAPOLIS, UP — Charles N. Bray, 54, Indianapolis, was killed when he walked into the path of an auto operated by Dick Reed, Clermont, near the capital city limits latte Monday. Enforce Provisions Os Intangibles Tax Concerted Effort Underway In State AlbClt Harlow, Adams county assessor, has received word from the intangibles! tax division of the Indiana department of state revehue that a concerted effort is beitig made to enforce the provisions of the intangibles tax act passed by the 1933 general assembly. Manj Indiana citizens are unaware of the fact; that the Intangibles tax act levies a tax bn stocks, (except those of an Iridiana corporation I bonds; (except government bonds), postal savings certificates and deposits, notes, conditional and installment sales. contracts, mortgages, judgments and other written evidences of indebtedness. Many Indiana cltiaens are evading the intangibles tax 1 unintentionally because of their lack of knowledge of the meaning of the law. The rate of taxation is five cents for every S2O valuation

■ ■ Look for This Agency Sign | B. j. FE ASEL WALLPAI’EIUH’AInStoRE 270 N. 2nd St, < Decatur, Ind. I pUMnTsi GILLIOM LUMBER CO. 518 E. Main St. Berne, Ind. Wk, . ■—.- - --- -' Mill KB a. IlMh Bright, Cheery Rooms Work wolh took fr.* O nd olive Wonrfen for You? Home! with NU-DA Semi-Gloss Wall Finish. L - NU-DA Wall Finishes go on smoothly and easily ... stay bright longer! Easy to wash! Cheer op your home OTPi NOW ... w’rfh NU-DA Flaf or SemiGloss Wail Finish.! Many lovely colors |Pftift TS| i at your NU-DA Dealer’s? 7 Look In This Agency Sign ”11 Always Cosh More Not to Paint” INDIANAPOLIS PAINT & COLOR CO. 640 NORTH CAPITOL AVE., iNbiANAPdIIS, INDIANA

-■■ . r | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1952

I 1 ■inn || rII .ini' hum t or a fraction thereof, payable in advance on a yearly basis by use oi adhesive stamps sold by the county treasurer of the intangibles tax division office at 141 South Meridian street, Indianapolis, and should be attached to forms Noli 42 designed for that purpose and available at the county assessor’s] office. i Harlow urges all citizens to make sure that the intahgiblfes tax has “been paid oh all taxable intangibles owned by them since failure to do so may result in additional expense in the form of , penalty and interest, He hate been advised by Lawrence Arns-t man, administrator o£ the intangibles tax division that. In accordance with chapter No. 278j’ Sec. No. 1 of the acts of the regular session of the 1951. general Assembly, they are furnished with a list of Indiana shareholders by . ftweign corporations! licensed to do business in Indiana. For advice or information pertaining to intangibles tax, taxpayers are advised to contact their ! county assessor or the office of the intangibles tax division. l; » ' . . J Elkhart Lady Heads ‘ Rebekah INDIANAPOLIS. UP J- Mrs. ’ Ruth Salisbury, Elkhart, took over today as president of the Rebekah m assembly, an auxiliary of the Inde- ' pendent Order of Odd Fellows. t Others ejected at the group’s j 68th convention Monday were Mrs. 5 Ethel Potts. Vincennes, vice-presi- ] dent, and Mrs. Louise Brakefield, Bloomington, warden.