Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 283, Decatur, Adams County, 1 December 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Snow And Ice Slow \ Traffic In Sfafe Contribute To Large Number Os Accidents By UNITED PRESS ! A coating of snow andice slowed sic on Indiana mgnways during

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the week end and contributed to a large number of The deaths of at toast tferee persons were blamed on weather conditions. There were five traffic deaths and one due to exposure. In ..addition, two out-of-state mishaps claimed the lives of Hoosiers. Although most main roads were clearing, state police warned of new hazardous driving conditions ahead. More snow or rain was expected. ; '. ,

A Shoals couple. Harry Nicholson; 70, and his Wife, Maggie, about 70, were Saturday when their auto skidded into the path of a\ truck on icy U. S. 50 near Loogootee.. \ > • A heart attack and exposure were blamed for the death of Edward Mohr, 28, Marysville, found dead Sunday in an auto near Market. ’' Lonnie G. ville, was killed when he walked

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

into the side of a Greyhound but. A two-car smashup at the intersection of Ind. 37 and Ind. 34 Saturday was fatal to Arthur Doers cher, 34, Goshen. I 1 Gene R. Thomas, 40, Indiana!* olis, was killed at a failroad crossing Saturday whexi; W» auto crashed into a New York Central paa» senger train. / A two-car crash /Sunday hear Henderson, Ky., claimed the life 0f Mrs. Irma JMtenhl, 29, an Evantviile bank teller. Near Sturgis, Ky., Zane Tucker, 57, Eyapsvllle, Wail killed Saturday in a car-truck crash on U. S. 60.; j &ti

Mamie Eisenhower Visits White House ' I H ' ... | •_ ft Next First Lady To ' . Break In On Job f WASHINGTON, \(UP) — Mr* Dwight D. Eisenhower took a 1 from her husband's cabinet offi* cers today and started breaking toearly on her new Jpb as of the House. She eccepted an invitation front Mrs. Harry S. Tn>man to drop i< and get acquainted with the lOOf room mansion at 1600 Pennsylf vania avenue which the ers will call home after Jan. 20. / iMra, Truptan had every reason to be proud of the place she wai showing off to her successor as First Lady. Thanks to an expensive remodelling job, cbmplqte4 sonly a few months ago, the White looks better than it has in malflKtfears,. \ ‘ .■ | , First Lady! also could Mrs. Eisenhower that she to worry about the Waiting for her is 5 household staff of 6^^^rsons.;— * including four cooks, a maitre d'hotel. platoon <jtmaJd"sT, doormen, housed uden, garcTehers. plumbers, ens;!-, hisers, electricians and laundresComing from New York with Mrs. .Eisenhower for today’s Visit was Mary Jane McCaXCree, personal secretary to MVs. Eisenhower for the last few months, is slated tor the job of White House social secretary. The post is noy< held by Mrs. James M. Helm, who has announced she will retire Lbe Truman’s leave. Mrs. McCaffree is the wife of Dr. Floyd McCaffree of the Republican national committee’s research - department. \ If Mrs. Elsenhower has any* ideas about redecorating — and what woman moving into a Jew home hasn’t?—she'will find Chat there are only about a dozen Tooms in the House iq which she can exercise her own 3ns freely. Those are the. ly living quarters on the secfloor. v \

Screen Actors Guild On Nationwide Strike HOLLYWOOD UP — Some 2,700 members of the Screen Actors Guild began a nationwide strike today against producers of filmed tele* visiori commercials. Actors from New York to Hollywood walked out for.the first time in the Guild’s 19-year history \ at midnight to back up demands for higher wages and restrictions, on the re-use of filmed commercials. • .The Guild also is seeking additional payment to actora wben commercials in which they appear are used more than once. Collar Bone Broken As Auto Overturns Walter' Schmidt’ 67, of Cincinnati, 0., escaped serious injur‘d Saturday night after his auto overturned as he was headed south on state road 27 about a mile and a half south of Decatur. Schmidt Sustained a broken collar bone.A According to reports of sheriff sßob Shraluka and state policeman Schlindler, Schmidt tried E. Übinan of route 2, also neadrraksouih. Lehman, however, slowed? dbwn as hexsaw himself approaching an icy patch of road, experienced throughout the southern of the cOunty. Schmidt bumpedXehman’s rigßl and Ridded pfNjig fehquldek The°sud(■ab§ed Schmidt’s new ,overturii\ahnest Tn—TTtH P r - J-ohiYxC. Carroll.'' * lirxCarroll troatM hoimxahd the vtwtfirn the Adamx ho ' pftal/ frwt WMHr be stow soon re- ■ car in &e wtm powdhle Wan Hoosier Train To fka’» InasgwM

Henry Cab’ol Lodge Heads U. S. Mission Will Hsfld! Mishap To United Nations J WASHINGTON UP — Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., has been a firm with Russia” U. S. senator who would use atomic weapons against Cdmmunist force* in Korea. . x Lodge Was named over the weekend to succeed Ambassador Warren R. Austin as head of the United. States mission to the United Nations. President-elect Eisenhower tapped Lodge tor that positipp in recognition of the senator’s socalled internationalist foreign policies and his leadership th the Eisenhower -for - President campaign. Lodge made the draft-Eis-enhower movement tick.. Lodge’s demand that atomic weapons be used against Communists in Korep 4 was made in the senate Oct. 11, 1951. Chairman Gordon Dean of the atomic energy commissipp had revealed PP Oct. 8 that the Uniteci States was bpginning to produce quantities df atomic weapons developed for use on the battlefield. Lodge spid if we had them W e should use them. Battlefield weapons are called tactical weapons *s opposed to strategic weapon*. The A-bomb* dropped on Japanese cities were strategic weapons. They were used as part of over-all strategy to compel the Japanese to quit.

Tactical weapons are designed to achieve a direct and immediate effect on the battlefield, itself. Atomic artillery, for example, or an atomic weapon dropped by airplane on enemy soldiers or oh other' battle field targets in support of ground troop* woqld be * 'i&ctical weapon. said these weapons should immediately but he did accept Dean’s assure United States a?tu-ally'-ItowSagi them. Some members of congressional atomic joined Lodge in demanaWk immediate use of tactical But another member. E. Van Zandt 4R-PU.) was “kidding the public," suph weapons were a long waj( off. The gtomic weapons incidept indicates the United States will have in Lodge an aggressive chief spokesman at the United Nations, when Korea is Lodge lost> his Massachusetts senate seat last month to Rep John F, Kennedy (D-Mass.).

Start Hearings On Political Spending Hearings Opened By Five Congressmen

WASHINGTON, (UP I — Five congressmen who are worried about the soaring Posts of political campaigning started a week of hearings today to see what can be done about the problem. The first witnesses called by the special house committee on campaign spending were Rep. Clarence J. Brown. R.-0.. who been active in national politico for many SmlthTThairman of the volunteers for Stevenson in the recent presidential campaign, and , John Paulding Brown, counsel for the Stevenson volunteers. the committee will hear from Arthur E, Summerfield, chairman of the Republican national committee, and attorney general James >T. McGranqry. Stephen A. Mitchell, chairman of the Democratic national committee, and Walter Williams, chairman of the citizens for Eisenhower. are among the witnesses slated to be heard Wednesday. Rep. Hale Boggs, D.-La., is chairman of the special investigating committee. Members are Reps. John J. Rooney, 11-N. •_¥„ Frank M. Karst ep. IX-Mp., Kenneth 11. Keating. R-N. Y., William M. McCulloch, R.-O. Boggs said estimates of the cost of the 1&52 presidential campaign as high as 1'100.000,000. The problem of reducing campaign costs is one in which both major are interested, be said. ‘Tswould like to emphasize that this isxm>t a partisan political Proceeding! Boggs said. “We and state poliljciil leaders >qf both of the as wjhUas experts ‘in particMmr x . “These wvbqesscs are all eXrnrijtejced in UreirXMds, and shoitkß RK|ftble to assist th constructive ions\to the Convenes.” ■

Furc|ue trofgssßr f Is Qranted Aware, CHICAGO UP — Dr - William Malcolm 'Beeson of Purdue University today was awarded the American feed manufacturers association’s $1,060 award tor outstanding contribution* to animal nutrition research. The award was made by W. E. Glennon, association president, during the 44th annual meeting pt the American society of animal production. which chose Beeson for the award.

Prague Purge Trial Used Against Jews Sentence 11 Czechs I To Death By Hanging LONDON, UP — The K ram Un u*ed laat week’s purge trial In Prague to hurt East European Jews, to arouse the Arabs against the west and' to offer more “proof” to American imperialism, an analysis showed today. Soviet and. Cominform propar gandists put out three version* ot the trial, in which Rudolf oian*ky, former foreign minister Vladimfr Clementis and nine otper* were sentenced to bp hanged. I Version No. 1 was broadcast by the Prague Radio in Czech and other Eastern European languages. K emphasized at every turn Up Jewish origin of at least II of the 14 defendants, add the alleged “intrigues” and crimes of Zionist and Israeli officials mnetinned In the trial. The emphasto was on Zionism as thp enemy of “socialism”- and the “people’s democracies” —Russia and its satellites. J ' -y ' ' i ' Version No. 2, broadcast ta the Middle East in Arabic through Comdnform-controlled radio stations, was that the existence pf the state ot Israel enadngers the Arab world.' Version No. .3 is the Russian one. Presented to the Russians in <their newavhpers apd on the radio. it pictures the trial as having proved the aggressiveness of the United S.tatps and the activities of* its intelligence agents. version also was broadcast and other stations to Europe, the United East and the Arab countries appropriate languages. The Czech wgs given much space by newspapers and . Prague Radio devoted five hours a day to reports of the trial in Czech. The version put out by the Cominfprm—the Communist Bureau bf Information, comprising the Soviet bloc countries —is showp by an editorial published by Rude Pravp, the newspaper organ of the Czechoslovak Communist party. “The Zionist organs which enjoyed Slansky’s support wpre bas-

i cd on the capitalist state of. Israel, i which has become the property of . the United States monopolists who converted it ipso a war base against the Soviet Union and a base fpr criminal plans against the enslaved Arab nations,” Rude Pravo said. /hfascow. in version No. 3. tried to blend objective news reports witli viojently anti-American propaganda material in its Arabic language broadcasts. The antiAmerjcan tone of Moscow broadcasts to the Arabs has been getting progressively move violent for the last moiith. It especially tried to convince the Arabs that "American are encroaching on Hhejr independence by setting up military bases. Legion Commander Urges Offensive WjUWUTGTON, VP —American Region cpnjmander Lewis K. Gough belipves the United States eventually ipay be forced to settle the Korean war through a big offensive without the backing of its United Nations allies. \ Gough, who recently returned from Korea. sqid fhls country should presept the Communists with “our minimum terms of agreement for an honorable truce and establish a termination date for further negotiations?* If y the Reds continqe to stall, he said’ in a radio interview Supday, “then we should, prepare to launch an offensive that will achieve victory and peace with honor and punishment for the aggressor.” -- v 1 ... < ■ More Rein Or Snow Qn sap. In Indiana XP — -More raln&i^no^- and- freezing temper atureu/whre on tap for Hoosiers ' 'tqnightSKm 1 Tuesday, the weather bureau reported today. indiaXaV umiri high w ays, which state polree clear1 ed today, vvereNiue kk become ! slippery agairKTuesday. Tftn \forN cast calls for snbw to SUhe west portion oTxtlie state towith/snow or rairHhjroughout state TueXdayS\\ d Temperatures were toss angry a.. ' Wk M * X

December Ushered In By Bitter Cold Four Persons Feared Drowned In Colorado By UNITED PRESS December was ushered in today by bitter cold weather In many parts of the country, including the deep Temperature* ranged from eight degrees below zero at Big Piney, Wyo., to 31 at Memphis, Tenm, and 33 at Atlanta, Ga. » The frigid cold in the west hampered authorities and volunteer* in attempts to locate four person* drowned in the Colorado river labout 10 miles east of Glenwood Springs, Colo. The body ot one other person, 30-year-old Robert Lee Stevenson, was found frozen in the ice about six feet from the river bank. packed snow and ice made driving hazardous in southern Illinois, Indiana and Ohio and as far east as New York. Slippery roads were responsible for at least three traffic deaths in Illinois, two in Indiana and ope in the New York metropolitan area. Forecasters predicted (a 1 r .weather east of the Rocky Mountains with some snow or rain moving into the middle’j Mississippi Valley today. Early today snow fell over eastern Kansas and northern Missouri and northward- through eastern Nebraska and extreme western lowa. Light snow flurries were reported over sections of the northern Appalachian mountains, the eastern Great Lakes region, western Washington and NewMexico. - ■ Moderate to heavy snow was reported from time to time in the Chicago area, and a drizzling rain fell throughout eastern \ Texas. Scattered showers were predicted for the Pacific Cbast states. “The only other spot reporting below zero temperatures today was Cadillac, Mi<fh., with three degrees below.

Husband Arrested For Death Os Wife ANDERSON, Ind- UP — Mrs. Lou LaMar, 35, died Saturday night of bullet wounds suffered in a fracas at her home. Authorities held her husband, John 35, pending an investigation. Luther Yager Quits As Hospital Trustee Representative-elect pf| AdamsffiTells counties, Luther Yager, filresignation from the Adams f hospital board today, announced by county auditor Thtßtaiafi I. Drew. Drew’ said disposition will be filled before the year. Since the board is owjjhjtisan and has traditionally pointee from Geneva, tw’o from Decatur, says DrewTßsS, next choice of the will probably be. a -Republican of Berne.

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Monday, decemder i, 1952 x

Moderate Leftists Lead In Venezuela; CARACAS, Venezuela UP The moderately leftist Republican-Dem-ocratic Union URD claimed victory on the basis of early scattered returns today in Venezuela’s first national election in five years. Mexico City Tense For Inauguration Police And Troops Patrol City Streets MEXICO CITY, UP — Police and- army troops patrolled the streets of this tense capital today as Adolfo Ruiz Cortines was inaugurated president of Mexico. The 62-year-old successor to retiring President Miguel Aleman was scheduled to take the oath of office for a six-year term at the downtown Palace of Fine Arts surrounded by secret service agents alerted for a possible outbreak of violence. Security officers hoped a preipaugural roundup of “agitators” still disgruntled over the outcome of the national election last July would avert any protest demonstrations. But heavily armed troops lined the inaugural parade route through the city. The capital and the nation meanwhile began a pound of traditional inauguration “fiestas” to usher in the new administration. Special diplomatic delegations from 53 nations were on for the swear-ing-in ceremony and celebrations to follow. \ The occasion brought together two antagonistic political figures from the United States, Vice Presi-dent-elect Richard M. Nixon and Ambassador William O’Dwyer. Nixon, who arrived by plane Sunday, avoided any - social contact with the formep New York mayor whom he attacked so vehemently during-the recent campaign in the "United States. Nixon, representing Presidentelect -Eisenhower at the inauguration, said his relations with O'Dwyer would be limited to those which “our positions require ” At an official diplomatic reception Sunday night, the young Californian ignored the presence of the retiring ambassador. Nixon said he would give Ruiz Cortines an invitation from Eisenhower to visit the' United States. The United States mission nt the inauguration was one of the largest from a country. Besides Nixon and O’Dwyer it included secretary of agriculture Charles Brannan. Gov. EaH Warren of California, Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas and Sen. Dennis Chavez of New Mexico. Democrat Want Ads' Bring Results i

"JL /I Gifts & Greetings for You — through WELCOME WAGON from Your Friendly Business Neighbors and Civic and w Social Welfare Leaders 1 On the occasion of; The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthdays Engagement Ajinouncemenls Housewarmings z Arrivals of Newcomers to Decatur Phone 3-3196