Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 290, Decatur, Adams County, 9 December 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
..■’? ■ ■ ■ \ — — — DECATUR , STORES OPEN «3jL till; WEDNESDAYS i iWTp, v ■ ■ >' - \ ' I ? — OPEN ALL DAY- THURSDAYS OPEN till 9:00 pl m. SATURDAYS OPEN till 9 WMjEM» Eve. ing December 17 th through 23rd : ' v r ——- 1 RETAIL DIVISION CHAMBER of COMMERCE k . . ' ■ - Hi'. ...
DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
zblmg wM. H®k JR • !>y| y r h <• : * WlwA X-JL -XX W —- K ■ '■ ? ' ; p . ' ■ J y I Another Milestone in the Erie’s Progress '■ . ; " J ■' :|. This is big hews for folks in every community along knows, efficient transportation and community welfare the Erie Rajlroad. Now every Erie freight train is go hand in hand. As the railroad improves its service, hauled fy sjndoth, powerful diesel locomotives! This .. > I . « . . , i . x - TTp r \ it becomes a more valuable asset to industry, shippers puts the Erie first among railroads operating between \ A i New York and Chicago to achieve this high point in and the P ublic " a b «g ef Ms « “M 1 concerned. efficient ' ; This steady build-up in dieselization is a milestone in | What does this $80,000,000 investment in dieselsimean progressive railroading-and not the last in the story to you as a resident in an Erie community? As everyone 0f Erie’s progress! - * •’ • ••■ 1 M O'- ’ " - : -X - / x ' ' j 'P ■ - ■ > X - ■ . ■ ■. j - ■ :.i \ i . ■ ■ ■ i ■ ? ■ Erie Railroad ... .... 1 SERVING THfc HEART OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA " ) of ELMIRA x I <b I ■S , ll® > a Uittn to Tht Railroad \ I CLEVELAND<ME ADVI gj jjl' ( | _ .... V AKBoXSrC&P t I'l ’"" ».<r fj.ac. 8.00 »■«■ .-d T 7**«i| M ‘ ll,> J ■ "Ail y<<f /? I SCMMTO. Af’/’5£S»( >* . EmHt* Standard Tima. HWITINOTON —I <F\ / X\\ V . « [INDIANA X £|\ 4- Mark of Progrnu a^: x fe r a — \ ■ ' /‘’’"’/rix -<"“”•■••«'* » \ n B ft!W ; _ -«l * ) I \mtt».ur»h I. H 'S W * R ' , v ' Z^" 56V DMEIMKa THE ERIE, YOUR HOME TOWN PARTNER ... MAKES JOBS ... MAINTAINS EMPLOYMENT. .. PAYS TAXES ... ATTRACTS INDUSTRIE!
Senators Question Acheson Adviser Closed Hearing On Employes Os U. N. NEW YORK UP — The senate internal security subcommittee called one of secretary of state Dteaii Acheson’s top advisers to a closed hearing today in its investigation of subversive influence amon.; American employes of the Uni ed Nations. The subcommittee was. scheduled to Question Adrian Fisher; assistant secretary of state pnd legal adviser to the state department, at an executive session scheduled for 1 p.m. e.s.t, Sens. Herbert R. O’Conor ( D-Md. and
“Watch the Swing PR)RD Wk % . • w.y » Coming f P.D.A.F. December nW
r ? U* ’ h Decatur daily democrat, ddcatur, Indiana
Homer Ferguson R-Mlch. planned to attend. I. J 1 , O’Conor said- he would read into the jrecord a letter released in Washington Mo*lay night in which Acheson said there was no danger of U. S. secrets falling into the hands of Communists employed by the United Nations. O’donor described the letter, written Oct. 12, as “shockingly wjeak” and said it Indicited Acheson flacked “an of the" present danger” in hiving American Communists or Red sympathizers employed by the U. N. Secretary - General Trygve Lie last Week fired nine American employes who had refq4ed to tell the internal security subcdmmittee whether they were Communists. Fisher refused to tell a federal, grand jury several weeks ago which officials in the state department had Approved for U, N. employment persons who refusedto testify about their Communist connections. The grand jury last week handed down a presentment sharply criticizing the state department for its cloSe-mout'hed attitude toward “misleading’ loyalty reports on U. N. personnel. The state department, in reply to the grand jury attack, said it would serve no purpose to disclose the names of the officials involved since those officials were not. authorized to discuss such confidential files. Acheson's letter, written to Sen. Alexander Wiley R-Wis. of the senate foreign relations committee, said Americans hired by the U. N. secretariat “do not represent the United States but are representatives of 'the United Nations insofar as their official capacity
is concerned.” [ , He pointed out that citizens of Communist nations holding U. N. membership are entitled to employment by tbe secretariat. Temporary Layoff At Studebaker's Plant SOUTH BEND, UP — About 10,OOff Studebaker Corp, employes on passenger car assembly lines will begin a temporary layoff Thursday while machinery is being rearranged and converted, it was announced today. SUPREME COURT , (Centlnwed From Page Ooc) Marshall, 44, New York, representing the national association for the advancement of colored people. Marshall has won outstanding Supreme court victories for Negroes in such fields as housing, transportation and political rights, as well as education. Elderly, white-haired John W. Davis, New York, one-time Democratic candidate for president, represents South Carolina. Davis, a renowned constitutional lawyer, won one of the most far-reaching decisions of modern times last June when the court struck down President Truman’s seizure of the steel Industry. It is Davis’ job to convince the justices that racial segregation is nope of their business hut is a matter for state legislatures and congress. The states have always argued that separation of the races is’ necessary to prevent riots and forestall eventual chaos in public education. ! '
Crime Commission Studies Evidence Criminals in Key Waterfront Posts NEW YORK UP — The state crime commission today studied testimony that state and county authorities had refused to cooperate in removing criminals from key positions on the New York wftterfroht. The committee also heard testimony that criminals on the waterfront were both tolerated and “paid for peace” by the strikeworried maritime industry. One shipping company executive told the commission Monday that former Mayor Frank ' Hague of Jersey City had told him that John V. Kenny, . who replaced Hague, was siding with striking longshoremen in a 1949 stoppage because “he likep his cabbage and he’s trying to get in lour years what it took me 32 years to get.T The witness was American Export Lines vice president Lelgnd ~S. Andrews. John iE. Slater, president of American Export Lines, and James Sinclair, president of the Luckenbach Steamship Company, ide., told the commission that it was impossible for their companies to prevent hoodlum union members from muscling in on management functions without! assistance from law enforcement agencies. Sinclair charged that the city had merely “whitewashed” itself, by insisting that the companies must assume responsibility for the public loaders on the piers they lease. In well known practice, the public loaders are on the piers on ttie sufferance of the ioCais! of the ILA, of which the boss loaders are usually members themselves. Both men \charged that they were unable to- receive any legal protetion against strikes called to enforce the illegitimate union demands which have perpetuated the present corruption. | An ex-convict and former dock worker, who apparently took his life in his hands to testify, told the commission Monday that he had been promised a dock job by his ‘‘colleagues” in Sing Sing prison, had been hired on an Ameri-
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can (Export Line pier and then sat around playing cards and “looking io steal something.” Anthony Tisehon, now apparently going straight, testified' to baggage looting, sometimes in conivance with U. S. customs guards, always with a “cut” for the pier bosses. 1953 Mercyry Makes Its Bow Wednesday DETROIT UP — The 1953 Mercury makes its bow in dealer showrooms Wednesday with no change from 1952 prices. Benson Eord, vice president of the Ford Motor company apd head of the Lincoln-Mercury division, made the announcement.
DEPARTMENT STORE OF CANDIES Thousands Rush to Hear Sweetest Story Ever Told
FORT WAYNE—-Candy connoisseurs are completely captivated by the amazing display of toothsome confections at HargesMills Candy Shop here. This unusual “department store of candy” has more than 30 domestic and 7 imported kinds of boxed candies, hundreds of unusual bulk candies, all types of gift and novelty packages for children, servicemen, and adults. The gourmet with a sweet tooth can have the time of his life at Harges-Mills. He’ll find good-to-eat things from such famous factories as DeMet’s, Ernest Wilson, Flora-Mir, Rosemarie, Droste, Lint, Hagley’s, Charlott Charles and thirty others.
f|arg«CAN D Y SHOPS •I'•■ • ’__ ■ - I . ••%/«• 131 W. WASHINGTON BLVD. . PHONE E-41?4 • FORT WAYNE, IND.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1952
Premier Os France Wins Crucial Test \ PARIS UP — Premier Antoine Pi nay won a crucial confidence test today in .he national assembly. The vote called for Immediate point-by-point debate (of his record 1953 budget. The official vote was 300 for Pinay to 291 against. The vote was tantamount to an assembly endorsement of Pinay’s nlne-month effort to stabilize France’s shaky economy. Come to Kohne’s for gifts that are a pleasure to give and exciting to get. Kohne Drug Store. It
There are chocolates from Holland, Switzerland and France . . . brandied dates from Arabia . . . stick candies and toffees from England . ... and of course such other culinary delights as plum puddings, fancy imported cookies, exotic jellies and jams, and snacks to please the discriminating palate of an epicure. Whether you’re looking for a few gifts to give to those hard-to-please people on your list, or buying Christmas candies for employes, church groups or fraternal organizations, you owe it to yourself to stop at Harges-Mills in Fort Wayne. Store hours are 9 ‘ A.M. to 6 P.M.; Wed. and Fri. till 9. This year make it Candy for Christmas I
