Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 303, Decatur, Adams County, 24 December 1952 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Paper Reports New Strategic Plan For Korea Says Eisenhoyer, Top Advisers Have Mapped Out Strategy SIEW YORK (UP) —Presidentelect Eisenhower and his top advisers have worked out a “new strategic plan” to bring about an end To the war in Korea, the New York Times reported today. , The Times, in a dispatch from I'nited Nations headquarters here, said details of the plan could not ;Ve made public but the strategy wriuld follow .tire general litres laid down by Eisenhower upon his return from Korea. ' Eisenhower's headquarters announced it had “no comment” on the Times dispatch. The plan would be aimed at convincing the Kremlin that tire United States willvnot pull out of Korea or yield her position against forced repatriation of war prisoners. Nor would the plan ln» volve danger of spreading thp Korean fighting into a trigger war. The Times, said the plan was worked out by “the high command of the administration.” It said the soiitce for its news did not * say whether Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who 'conferred with Eisenhower last <week; contributed to forming the plan. The plan, according'to the newspaper, calls for, "considerable increase” in participation of South Korean forces in the war, but with no great increase in participation by other members of the United Nations. r y Details of the new’ strategy remain to be formulated 'by the state and defense departments after thh new’ administration takes office 20. the Times said, • Then representatives of otWrij’ nations involved jfrould be called in to work out a final, decision on future conduct of the war. The* general assembly of , »the United Nations has recessed until Feb. 24. a .date which allows the Eisenhower administration to establish its policies toward U. N. affairs. Lester PearsOn of Canada, president of the assembly.paid he r .wfflild call the body Ixicklin session sooner if necessary/. ; [ '■T~ Trade in a uooa Town —Oecatur!

I We Wish One and All Joy, Peace and Health, „ | and a Very 1 Merry Christmas! o o F\W(il SSL * % 1 t. I IJ Tonight & Thursday o - , . o | OUR BIG DAYS! I f First Show Tonight 6:30 Continuous Thur, from 1:30 f BE SURE TO ATTEND! o-~—-- o A Gay, Light-Hearted ' Comedy With That Funny Fellow You Laughed at in “Miracle on 34th Street!”

r if] ■t M I i If tfl kI il nr Ip I qWj I 2of » p v ; J } VICIOt BTmCIA > EDMUND MATURE NEAL GWENN ALSO —Shorts 14c-50c inc. Tax / ,Q- O Frl. & 'Sat,— Conquest” Cornel Wilde, Teresa Wright ■ t- Q o— Sun. Mon. Tuee.—“The Big Sky"

Pedestrian Killed 4- ; When Struck By Car TER R_E HAUTE, UP—Otho McCammack, 64, Greencastle, was killed today when struck by a car while walking along U. S. 41 north of here. Police did not hold the motorist, Ghorgfc W. Soules. Rosedale, » \ i r < HEAVY LOSSES | (Continued From Page Ontj) cocktall~ roast turkey, dressing, potatoes, vegetables, piej biscuits, -alad and ive crearrt. Gl’s had to eat fast before it got, cold in belowfreezing temperature. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

J; ’ .ir v- . ■ ■ - = ' J a i V A _ -X Aly ,<| _H \ * . . ■i « • anda 4 I lilT HU'l'l OW IEIR WOi? W A I from the Entire Staff and Carrier Salesmen ~ -Vk vßPtx. J//W. ii w I \ i A ,1k i / 1 . . ■ 1 viJXLu/v DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT ■ . j ’j’* \ '' v . 1 ; z • / OWEN K. BAKER J f DAVID ANDREWS i WILLIAM BLYTHE v NORMAN BASSETT \ LOUIS COFFEE \ '. \ ,i .\ < BILL BAUMANN ROBERT GARARD A £ > < DICK BAUMANN DAVID HELLEft < l * i UENE BAXTER PICK I). HELLER A 4 ’ \. GORDON BLACK . , 1 1 JACK HELLER i DAVE CASTON < \ \ f - JOHN H. HELLER \ * V JOE COSTELLO ‘ A. R. HOLTHOUSE LEONA FORD CHAS. HOLTHOUSE RONNIE FORD / I i JAMES KINGSLEY . ANTHONY GILLIG JACK KLINE v DON GILLIG JAMES MARKLEY , " 1 — ' DAVE HEIMAN ; \ \ JAMES MEADOWS 1 ' \ DAN JOHNSON ARTHUR MOESCHBERGER I | JIM KLENK ' F-- ' PETE REYNOLDS EDDIE LAURENT \ . i , . \ JACK SCHREIBMAN A 1 808 MILLER KATHLEEN TERVEER \ TOM RAMBO \ 1 ; . GERALD TIMMONS , RUMSCHLAG GLORIA TIMMONS A L PAVID SHEETS THEODORE WEMHOFF \ ' HAROLD VAN HORN V v i CHALMER WOLFE .■< r ' .. - . . g I I Sr ApolH jSS P

Order FBI Probe Os Waterfront Rackets Government Orders FBI Men Oh Trail ■' ' - V < NHW YORK UP The government put FBI agents bn the -trail of waterfront hoodlums and racketeers today to ‘ find out if they are violating federal laws in their plunder on the piers. Attorney General James P. ;McGranery ordered J. Edgar Hoover’s G-men to make a “full scale investigation” qf New York dock conditions, a job already under-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA --- - _L ■■■■■» - . -M

by a Agency and the Brooklyn grand jury. The New York Crime Commission, mow in recess, recently produced testimony showing the world’s busiest watanfrbht was a playground for shakedown' agists, ex-convicts, foan Sharks and cor* rupt union officials. McGraneryj issued a'brief statement in Wakfiington Tuesday announcing he| had put the FBI to work on tbei waterfront. Although XicGranery’s terse announcement did riot say what steps FBI agents were taking, it was indicatejd they were watching for violatiori of the Taft-Hartley get and oth|er federal statues on gbvernment-ipwned piers. The state commissiori already

has heard testimony indicating vfblaltlon of a section of the TaftHartley law making it a misdemeanor for employe -group agents to give or take payments in any activility involving interstate commerce. • • 'Thus bne waterfront figure has been convicted in the crackdown Edward J. Florio, New Jersey organizer for the International Longshoremen’s Association A’FL, received an 18-month prison term for lying when he told a grand I jury he never received ?2.O(M> from a stevedoring firm to furnish it with longshoremen. U. S. attorney Myles J. Lane said Tuesday night he expected the FBI investigation to produce

Ufuntiher, Indictment” of waterfront criminals. He said a grand jury was awaiting their evidence. NO MARKED <Co»tlnw»d From Page Owy)-, j off severed veins and arteries during surgery. The process usually takes about nine days. When ths sutures are absorbed, the spliced'blood vessels must be strong enough to carry blood without the supporting material, or hemorrhage qr clots may result. \ Plastic surgery is definitely the next order of business, but until now the doctors had been to anxious about the boys’ condition to even consider more work with the knife.

Doctors are now beginning to think it is “entirely possiblle" both chilt ren may live, the spokesman said But he admitted it was a big L_ IMMIGRATION (Continued From Paire 4>ne> Tuesday - (hat 269 of the crow' iiff 974 would not. be eligible Io enter the country. Most ,of the pG9 had refused tjo answer certain questions especially about their political affiliations, required undqr new regulations. j The immigration service said it hoped to avoid delays in clearing foreign crews by playing a U. S. inspector aboard all‘(ships to conduct the screening during voyages.

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1952 •4 > 4 11. !

'One ship entering the New York harbor today underth > tightened rules had aboard itj-the man most responsible for the new law, .Sen. Pat MeCarran He was returning from a Sout i American inspection tour aboard the Grace liner Santa Rosa. MeCarran, author c f the bill alqng with 'Rep. Franc! i E. Walter (I>Pa.) Vhas ardently < efended it, and charged that poll deal candidates picked it as a target to votes among the immigrant- population. An official at New Orleans said he expected np change in* the reception of aliens at that busy southern port. He said most undesirables don’t try ; to enter the country legally irf ttie first place.