Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 255, Decatur, Adams County, 28 October 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

f Typhoon Blows Out Into China Sea MANILA, Philippines, UP — Typhoon ’jWjhna blew. out across into China Sea toward Indo- < Mpa, today, leaving three dead, C.misgfng and a trail of destruction through the Central Philippines. * ; Fifteen of the missing were aboard a U. S. air , force weather B-29 believed lost a|t sea between Guam and the Philippines. The planewas last heard from Sunday while tracking the'storm.. \ |

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Austria Reinstates Figi's Government VIENNA. Austria. UP — President Theodor Koerner formally reinstated ; chancellor Leopold Figi’s Coalition government today to end a six-day cabinet erisiis that developed over the budget. The new government, figl’a fourth the whr, was sworn again shortly after Koerner accepted the resignation tfiecabiuet suhriiitted last Wednesday? Trade Irt a Good Town—Decatur!

Indian Summer Is On Its Way Out Balmy Weather Out For Eastern U. S. , By UNITED PRESS lndlan\ Summer began to fade away today in the eastern half of the country aa colder weather moved inWeathermen said balmy weather was to. bow r out in the entire regipn except Tor the South Atlantic states. The central plains, however, were due tor slightly farmer temperatures and the west will retnain wap.ni. Snow flurries were expected in Michigan j.and Upper New Y%rk, and weathermen predicted flurries would also hit Northwestern Indiana and Northern > Drops of 20 to 28 degrees* in maximum temperatures were recorded in much of the north central portidn at the nation MondayBut the. merevfy xpseeight to 16 degrees in the middle; and North Atlantic states to the fid’s and low 70’s. \ In a four-state around Chicago, temperatures tanged from !i0 degrees along the Ohio River to 40 in Northern Wisconsin and Upper Michigan. Thf*| sun brought temperatures up to the 70’s aud B,o’s in most of the south, and the uouthwei-it continued to iwelter in' the 90’s. ’ . \ j Yuma, Aria., again, was the hottest spot in the\ nation jgritb a high of 93 degrees, while the lowest maximum temperature was 32 at International Falls, Minki. Other high temperatures were Fargo. N. D.7'37; fiurbn, S. 11, 43; Omaha, Neb..* 56; Kansas City, Mo.. 61; St. Louis,. Mo.. 74; Chicago 66. Boston 67, New York 66. Evansville, Ind., \ 82; New Orleans. La., 80; Brownsville, Tex.. 85; Miami. Fla., 76; Denver, Colo,. 60; Salt Lake City. Tf’tah, 69; Billings, Mont., 52; Seattle, Wash., 56; Los Angeles. Cadif.. 72; San Francisco 64 and Reno, Nev., 76. n . —i_u- r.. ■ . ■ ; u- i _ . i i.. Trade in a Good Town —Decatur!

“Ot ® .. \ j >. * ■ \ r BODIES OF LEGLESS wan veteran Hobeti Nugdnt, 43, Raraapo, N. Y., town clerk, and Charles Simpson, 38, Saddle River, N 4-, banker, and carcass of a deer lie in the Ramtpo mountains near Tuxedo Park. N. Y. t believed .victims id a poacher. Examining the bodies are State Police Lt. Lawrence Maxwell and Orange county officials. Nd|ent’a jeep is at right. The victims are believed to have come upon a deey poacher whom Nugent possibly recognised,. since he issues hunting licenses, tnd been shotgunned to death. (International Soundphoto J

Air Force Orders! F-100 Jet Fighters WASHINGTON UP - The air force has ordered an uudiscioisec number of F-100 supersonic jet fighters f?om North American Aviation Co. p j The F-10u was aesigneu to outperform the F-86, currently the air force’s best operational fighter. It also is ‘built hy North American. The F-86 has a listed speed of 650 miles an hour and a service ceiling of more than , 45,000 feet. w The air force said the F-104F is "designed to strike a more lethal blow in aerial combat pt speeds faster than sound.” . ; —p—i —7 ; . Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

[ i - DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Truman Lashes At One Party Press In U.S. Cites Eisenhower Surrender Ta Taft And GOP Old Guard ST. PAUL. Minn. (UP)—President TrOman said . today that Newspapers and J Republicans should be "shocked and horrified by- the facts I have brought out” instead of. criticizing his “Give ’em hell” campaign technique. . In a speech prepared for delivery here, thy President lashed out at what he called tne “one party press” and its "lofty editorials.” ■’Maybe they are all ashamed of thii» man they now support.” Mr. Truman said of newspaper editors.' ' >| ; •Instead of hurling epithets at in?, they should be calling on their favored candidate td face up to the grave defect in his own course of conduct and in his party's record.” : ) ~ \ .The President was scheduled to stop at Winona. Red Wing and .Hustings, Minu., before arrivingh;6re at 11 a. m. CST. He will push on !to Minneapolis. y Duluth and Hilyb|ng for a major night speech. x The President had bitter criticism for Dwight D. Eisenhower, she Republicau presidential candidate. .He went oh to list the. “facts" he had brought out. He said he pointed out that Eisenhower’s New York meeting with Sen. Robert A. Taft and the stitemeut Taft issued later surrender to the Republican GUI, Guard." “When the RephNican - candidate t,o shout tliat the Democratie party has been too well deposed toward the Soviets at the ctose of World W 0 11. I pointed out —citing from bit own book and his bwn testimony before congress — that he'had suffered store than most from soft delusions about Soviet intentions.” 1 Mr. Truman commented that he had said that Eisenhower’s promises |or a budget cut “involved abandoning 6ur Allies and cripidjng our own, armed forces.” < “The general’s, promises meant ifoUiing but surrender to the policies of isolationism, in the guise of .a budget cut.” be said. He said he pointed out that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin and Sen. William 1 E. Jenner of I’ldiaha. Whom Eisenhower lias endorsed,, “falsely slandered his own great benefactor, Gen. George C. Marshall.” i “I called that action a betrayal of morality and principle.” Truman said. Mr- Truman said that Eisenhower ilw’t “accepted’’ former Sen Chapman Itevercomb of West Virginia although "this man’s record, was so shameful and full of prejudice that eveq. New lYerk Gov. ’fhotuas Dewey refused to endorse him tp 1948. 1 stated that the present candidate must take responsilulity for the company h.e chose to ikeep." Deadline To Publish Title Os Offices ±oday js the past day for the <Herk of tho circuit court iu all the counties of Indiaua to publish the titke of ea<\h office to he filled the second time. It is also the last dfxy Tim- county chairmen of the Democratic’ and Republican parties Ito imminate precinct officers for the general elections and file suph nomUKHkrnji with tIM! clerk bt the court. • ~ -

Term McCarthy's I Address A Smear Termed Real Threat To Press Freedom ’ 11 i • WASHINGTON UP — Political circles greeted Sen. Joseph RMcCarthy’s “expose” of Democratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson tjoday with a variety of comment. The Democratic national committee said the first result of the speech, conning "two ' minutes” after McCarthy finished, was an "immediate campaign contribution’ for Stevenson. Democratic vice-presidential nominee Sen. John Sparkman, making a campaign speech in Stpekton, Calif., called McCarthy’s address a “pathetic smear” and “last ditch defense qf the Republican old guard.” 1,1 : "The soviet masters in the Kremlin must be laughing now,” the Alabama senator said. Sen. Frank Carlson, a prominent backer of GOP candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower, said the general does not owe McCarthy "anything” for the speech and remains “a no deal man.” •Steveilsoi. who had warned his followers to expect "the njost magnificent of all smears” from McCarthy, said he did not hear the speech. But he referred to McCarthy in- his own Speech Mon-' day night in' New York’s Harlem district. . . ’ He accused Eisenhower o( "speaking with the voice of Taft, sometimes the voice of Gov. James Byrnes, sometimes the voice of Sen. Richard M. Nixon, and tonight. 1 am told, by the voice of Senator Individuals in the Stevenson camp who were attacked by McCarthy for alleged Communist ties or background were quick to respond. James A. Wechsler, editor of th|e New .York Post who has assisted Stevenson in preparation of speeches. said “McCarthy’s real targets are not Communists but free Americans who happen to disagree With McCarthy.” "I suggest to my fellow; editors whether they support Eisenhower or Stevenson that McCarthy’s attempts t<L silence antHMcCar thy editors a very real threat to the freedom of\ the press," Wechsler said in New York. Arthur Scfaleslinger Jr., a writer on the Stevenson staff, said McCarthy "tore a sentence outl et context for the purpose of insiniiating that 1 am pro-Communist?’ McCarthy quoted a Schlesinger article' saying Communists shojuld be allowed to teach in universities. McCarthy dropped the last words of the sentence^ —“so long as they do not disqualify themselves by in-

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tellectual distortions in the ciawr<w»B.” Archibald MaqLeiak, former librarian of congress and a member of a Harvard University group raising funds to defeat McCarthy, said the senator’s attack on him was ’’a threat to all other citizens who criticize the Wisconsin senator.” MacLeish said his literary works were a “ccmplete refutation. . . of the lie that I am or ever have been sympathetic with Communism.” ! Americans for Democratic Action ADA referred to as “left wing” by McCarthy, said in a statement Issued in .Washington that the Wisconsin senator was carrying on “an attack not against Communism but against liberals.” ; , Stephen A. Mitchell, chairman of the Democratic national committee y who heard the speech in New York, said that Eisenhower “must assume full responsibility” for McCarthy's since the general has said deciniontjl in his campaign “have been and will be mine alone.' i The New York Times said that within SO minutes McCarthy spoke its \office received 200 telephone ca l lls, and numerous telegrams protesting tne senator’s speech and objecting to the newspaper's editorial support of Eisenhower. r b—-- , ? L Motion For Demurrer Overruled By Court Judge Myles F. Parrish today notified the attorney for the city board of zoning l appeals. Robert Anderson, that the motion the board had fjled in court yesterday for a demurrer has been overruled by him. A hearing was set on the motion, it was, however, without argument. ' (The court now has ill the records of the city board, the writ of certiorari having been satisfied. The next move is up to. the court, to deny or uphold the ordinance under fire by the Jehovah’s Witnesses of Decatur. t i I

1,1 i ■■ — . HOWARD ■ MORRISON F DEMOCRAT fori CONGRESS 4th Indiana District -— X ; EVERYBODY’S CANDIDATE E Jfl

YOU ARE INVITED TO HEAR Rev. Chas. McHatton . EVANGELISM And PROF, a CARL BROWN I \ FL Wayne Bible College in Charge of Music OCT. 28 j NOV. 8 Each Evening at 7:30 P. M. I Antioch United Missionary Chnrch John Detwiler, Pastor

TUESDA& OCTOBER 28, ; 1552 '

Cracking Down On 'Five Percenters' Influence Peddlers In NATO Assailed PARIS UP X The United States cracked down today on American and foreign "five percenters” who, officials charged, have promised European'manufacturers NATO defense contracts thruogh use of “influence” r ith U. S. officials. U. S, ambassador William H. Draper, Jr., U- i 8. special representative > in Europe, J announced the crackdowm on "influente peddlers” as the North Atlantic treaty council met with NATO’s military standing group to consider the whole European defense picture, including the U. S. program for procurement of weapons abroad. Officials at D'aper’s headquar-, ters said both American and foreign “contingent fee agents” have r been involved ip operations Under which foreign manufacturers —for a fee—were assured the use of the agent's “influence 1 ” with American officials. ' They described the practice as reminiscent of the influence peddling scandals in Washington. The “influence peddlers,” they said, have been particularly active in West Germany. Draper warded foreign contractors they could lose their contracts it it is discovered that such agents were used in their transactions. The formal session of the Atlantic council and the western alliance “standing group” was reliably reported to be devoting its attention to a survey of,European rearmament efforts, including procurement programs, and demands for the sharing’ of American atomic secrets. ’ A-X-Hf Bombed By Squirrel I WHITEHAVEN. Tenn. (UP)-J. C. Lightfoot was standing under a tfee when a Squirrel dropped a . corncob on him, putting a long cut in his head.