Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 270, Decatur, Adams County, 14 November 1952 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

IKE CONFERS I . (Cow Hawed Frew p >r . Om<?) I intention to listen, but not' be swayed. _ i f > Eisenhower wants no part of any Truman policy decisions made before the government is transferred to the new administration. ? Eisenhower’s staff also took a guarded attitude toward the suggestion of Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr. R-Mass. that the seek the advice of former Gen. Douglas MacArthur on Asiatic problems. , After checking up for several hours Hagerty replied with >o comment.” T.ie np ’o Korea will not stlrt before! la.t this month or egfrly December and, until today.at leMst, was sUH in the planning staged Hagerty said Thursday night •he knew of “no detailed arrangements,” although he did admit that

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Klsenhower had beep in touch with the defense department since the Election about the Korean venture. / Asked about a French report tha| Eisenhower intends to go to Moscow for a meeting with Premier Josef Stalin after the Korean visit, Hagerty denied he knew of any such plans. Hagerty recalled that Eisenhower, during his campaign, told a .meeting of. ward workers in Chicago that he would bri willing to ?‘go anywhere and do anything in the interest of peace.” i i V But Hagerty took the view that his point of "emergency” had not arrived. * <•' ' i ■’ ft ——— ' 1 1 • Just Testing NAUGATUCK, Conn. (UP) — It was a cool summer day but it was luting hot in ttye/post office buildrig. Postmaster Frank T. Green Investigated. He discovered the ;Sjpitor was testing a new furnace.

Soldiers In Korea Want Ike Up In Front Lines

/ WESTERN FRONT, Korea UP —'Riflemen in this dimly-lit bunker hope President-elect^ Dwight D. Eisenhower will come right up to the front lines when he visits Korea, They think he should see for himself what sweating out shells and patrolling Communist territory day after day and night after night \with death constantly at your shoulder can do to a soldier in Korea. “A month of this will put you in a strait jacket,” said Pfc. Frederick J. Kling, 21, of Fort Wayne, Ind. “You got nothing to live for.” Kling and his pals have been on this hill for 18 days. That's long enough for the “bad part” of the Korean war to become engraved on their minds forever. “See that communications trench out there?” said Cpl. Robert Murphy, 22, of Baltimore, Md. The trench was blocked with bodies—mostly, but not .all, Chinese. “TherwsT leg bones, € hip bones and everything out there,” he said. “A couple of days ago we dug up another body — some guy from •Massachusetts. “Bad part" also means the three men who have cracked up. on this hill in the last 18 days. \ ' One ’was a tough ex-ranger, another was a lieutenant with the silver star for gallantry, and the last was a kid! Who.could not stand artillery. The ex-ranger had just come back from a raid. “He was all right on the raid,” said Sgt. James Cleverly of Sutton, Vt. “Then he had to carry this body back. I guess that got him. It took three of us to hold him down. We tied him up with phone wire.” The lieutenant was awarded a silver star for his part in the raid. When he came back to this hill, the enemy started shelling. “He was lying in the trench, face down, saying ‘Are the Chinks coming, are the Chinks coming Cleverly said. “We heard that when they gave him the medal in the hospital he buried it in the sand under his cot.” The kid just sat in the bunker and cried, they said. •• This is the “bad part” these men want Eisenhower to see. But they are afraid army brass will keep the president-elect far behind the front; “I think all the people that come over just see the good part,” said Pfc. Clark V. Mills of Harrisburg.

Public Sale ■l\ / H M Well Improved 80 Acre Farm iwr. \ and Personal Property Located 1 mile east and, 455 miles north of Decatur, Ind., or 5 miles south of Monroeville on Road 101 then. 2 miles west and % mile south or 1 mHe east and % rtaile south of Fuelling Church, on Saturday, November 22, 1952 * Commencing at 10:30 A. M. \ Farm sells at IP.M. » 80 ACRES * With Fine Set of Improvements * Consisting of 10 room house, 6 down and 4 up, plenty of closet space, partial basement, summer kitchen and garage. Barn 36 x 60 with L shed 24 x 40. Corn crib and wagon shed. Chicken house 15x 38; 2 brooder bouses. These buildings are In excellent condition, built by presept owner and well taken care of. 80 acres of fertile soil laying level with 70 acres under cultivation, balance wood pasture. Fences are fair with mostly concrete corner posts. Fairly Well tiled with good outlet. This farm has been owned by present owner several years and crops have been rotated'. ' ; POSSESSION: Immediate possession of buildings. Land upon closing tsansaction, subject to tenants rights. \ Household Goods ■ ■ i .■ • . i \ u cane bottom chairs; 3 large rugs; throw rugs; piano with bench; 6 rockers; antique love seat and couch, good; Delco cabinet radio; large mirror; Delco Horton washer; 3 tables, 4 dining chairs; buffet; combination safe; 2 heating stoves; bottle gas range; combination range and heating etove; laundry stove; glass door cupboard; sewing machine; Delco sweeper; 2 beds with springs and mattress; dresser; commode; folding bed; bed clothing; table linens; trunk; curtains*; antique lamps; silverware; lots of cooking utensils, dishes, canned fruit, fruit jars, 12 ga. shot gun. MISCELLANEOUS: Gramm rubber tired wagon, lumber, extension ladder, step ladder, iron kettles, brooder stoves, coal, fence posts, fence, hand tools, barrels, corn sheller, forks, ehovels and many other numerous articles. TERMS—ReaI Estate: 20% Cash day of sale? balance upon delivery of warranty deed and merchantable title. Personal Property Cash. Not Responsible for Accidents. For further Information or Inspection contact Auctioneer. ''/ ' - Lizetta Knapp, Owner GLENN C. M ERlCA—Auctioneer i Monroeville, Ind., Phone 3971 4 Paul Reinking, Clerk. t ' Lunch served by St. Peters Ladies Aid, Fuelling Church 14 20

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Pa. “They stay back there with all the brass. Ike should come up and spend a night out here.” This caused qn argument over whether a future president should risk his neck out here. Mills finally Conceded: I ’ “Well, be should at least talk to the guys on the line instead of the guys in the rear with three hot meals a day.” Nobody knew what Ike could do about ending the Korean war. But they had one concrete suggestion: “Tell him to fix the point system so a man knows when he’s going home.” And as I left, one of the men added: “Tell him we like, .-6 —»• he can get us out of here.” U. H.’s Top legal Adviser Suicides Nervous Breakdown Is Blamed For Act NEW YORK UP —The senate internal security subcommittee promised no let-up today in its investigation of American Employes in the United Nations despite protests over the suicide leap of the 1 U. N.’s top legal adviser. Three members of the subcommittee said they intend” to continue their investigation of possible/Communist influence among American employes of the U. N. Abraham H. Feller, 47, general counsel and acting assistant secretary general for legal affairs in the U. N., leaped to his death Thursday from his 12th floor apartment in Manhattan. His friends and associates in the U. N. blamed his death on a nervous breakdown caused by the subcommittee’s attacks on loyalty of U.’N. personnel. Secretary general Trygve Lie said Feller had been under “a prolonged and serious strain” in trying to uphold due process of Taw against “indiscriminate smears'and exaggerated charges.” “The terrible tragedy of his death is, the result/’ Lie said. Lie’s remarks were denounced as “irresponsible” by three members of the internal security subcommittee in a statement issued through the subcommittee's special counsel, Robert Mortis. > / "Although the inveetigatioDf is barely under way we have seen a

6. 0. P. Al Odds On ’■ ■ i Promised Tax Slash Congress Leaders Reported At Odds WASHINGTON, UP — Republican leaders of the House and Senate were at odds today over the timing of the tax riut the GOP has promised. Senate Republican leader Styles Bridges (N. H.) thought tax relief should wait until the budget is balanced. That, by 1954. j Rep. Joseph W. Martin, Jr., (Mana.), who is slated to be speaker, ot the 83rd congress, agreed thgt“our ultimate objective must bri a balanced budget.” But he added that congress might “take a chance” and put through a tax cut before the government is entirely in the black. He explained that lower taxes might well stimulate business so much that the government would take • in more total revenue that way than if the rates were left at their present high levels. Martin said there is a “lot of sentiment” among Republicans for ddlng. away with the excess profits tdt which’'is scheduled to expire sdme excise sales levies “probably Will have to be cut’’ also. But he while after Martin talked to reported plan of Rpp. Daniel A. Reed (R-N. Y.), prospective chairman of .the house ways and means committee, for | a five percent cut in personal income taxes next year. who held a news conference at the Capitol a short while aMrtin talked to reporters Thursday, sidestepped all specific questions about when, where and how much the GOP may . reduce taxes. “First. I’d like to see the budgrit balinced,” he said. Bridges had conferred earlier with Joseph M. Dodge, who is rripresenting President-elect Eisen* hower in conferences with the Truman administration on next year's federal budget. preliminary unofficial estimates indicate Mr. Truman will submit a budget totalling about ■ $85,000,OOp.OOO -for the 1954 fiscal year which ' begins next July 1. I Bridges said he believed congress could “approach” a SIO,OOO/ 000,000 cut in a budget of that 8,!?e - Secret Report On Massacre Missing ’I ’4 5 i' House Committee Seeking Document/ IWAS4UNGTON UP — A former chief rif army intelligence faced hostile questioning today from a hofase Committee trying to solve the disappearance of a secret wartime, report blaming Russia for the Katyn Forest massacre. The witness, retired Maj. Gen. Clayton Bissell, stamped the report “iop secret” after receiving it pt the Pentagon in May, 1945. H» told the committee last June he; couldn’t explain how it vanished. |But he added that ho “might” have forwarded it to the state department. Oomml.ttee members said Bissell was recalled, for further questioning because the evidence now “clearly indicates” the state department never received the report. The committee after investigation has accused Russia of the massacre of sriveral thousand Polish leaders near Smolensk. Russia;' early In Wprld War 11. Lt now is trying tri prove that high governmeat- officials sought to suppress evidence of Russian guilt Russia and. Germany always blamed each other for the atrocity. j ( The committee planned to complete its hearings today. The report which vanished was written -at the Pentagon by Lt Col. John H.- Van Vliet Jr. after his release from a German prisoner of war camp. It told how he decided after a German-conducted tour of the massacre serine in 1943 that the Russians pairpetrated the slaughter. •Former George H. Earle of Pennsylvania revealed Thursday that the late President Roosevelt in a letter dated March 24, 1945 —two months before Germany surrendered — forbade him to publish an article assailing, Russia as a “greater menace than Germany?’ \ Earle/ wartime minister to Bulgaria and Austria, told the committee the article would have, among other things, blamed Russia for the Ratyn massacre. He said he submitted evidence d RusSjan guilt to Roosevelt at the White Houso 10 months earlier. But Roosevelt pooh-poohed it as German j“propaganda” and told him to stop ■ worrying about the Russian “menace” because the Soviet Union Wohld ?‘fly apart” after World War 11, Earle said. parade of United Nations officials refuse th deny membership in the Communist party and in some cases refuse td answer whether they hate been Involved in espionage against this country,” they said, i • “, . .;We fully Intend to continue our investigation in the interest of

Death

RM: J

ABRAHAM H. FELLER, 47, gen T eral consul for the United Nations, plunged to hie death from his 12th , floor NeW York apartment after fighting free from his wife, Alice, who tried to restrain him. He had suffered a recent nervous breakdown and, according to his wife, had been morose and; despondent since the resignation of l|. N. secretary general Trygve Lie.

the security of the United States'.” Morris said the statement represented the views of Sens. James Eastland D-Miss., Homer Ferguson RrMich, and Willis Smith D-N. C; \ Station Wagon Hits Pole, Driver Killed INDIANAPOLIS UP — Fred R. ■Martin, 28, formerly of Kokomo, was killed early today when the station wagon he .was driving struck a utility pole. ’

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! 1 Hoosier Democrat leaders Praised No Shakeup Seen In Party Leaders ' INDUNARQfiJS UP — /Indiana Democrats today anticipated no immediate shakeup in leadership despite the bruising defeat suffered by the party in'the Nov. 4 election Instead, the ‘ party’s high command was given a! vote of confidence Thursday night at a dinner meeting sponsored by Lt. Gov. John A. Watkins, defeated candidate for Hoosier governor. The Democratic sthte committee adopted a resolution giving a “vote of gratitude qnd j confidence” to state officers who worked^. "tirelessly and unceasingly” during the campaign. I. Cited in the resolution were national committeeman Paul M. Butler, South Bepd; ' national committeewoman Mrs. Inez School, Connersville; state Chairman Charles E. Skilien, Winamac; vice chairman Mrs. Georgia A|rnstnan, Lebanon ; secretary Patrick J. Baron, Indianapolis, and treasurer Russell E. Wise, City. Watkins, who wks defeated by Republican George N. Craig by 22g,000 votes, denied his sponsorship of the dinner was intended as a bid to retain control of the party organization. He earlier described Himself as a “political dead pigeon.’ V “! ’

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1952

Among those attending were Governor Schrlcker, defeated in the senatorial race by Sen. William E. Jenner, other state candidates and members of the state committee. Truman Visits With National Press Club WASHINGTON, UP -t-PresHent Harry S. Truman stopped in Thursday night to shake hands and say good-bye to his fellow members of the National Press Club. Several hundred newsmen jammed the club’s ballroom to see the President who retires from the White House on Jan. . 20. They pressed aroundi Mr. Truman to wish him Well—Republicans and Democrats alike.

Correction The Price of APPLES '■■ ■ ! | ' are 6 ibs 49c HAMMOND | FRUIT MARKET