Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 308, Decatur, Adams County, 31 December 1952 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
The world record speed on rails was achieved in 1906 by a Pennsylvania ißailroad steam train which ran three miles in Ohio in 85 seconds, or at a rate of 127.06 miles an hour.
O— 0 May-J 953 Bring You All Health, Peace z and Prosperity! HAPPY NEW YEAR!* O .. o Tonight & Thursday o — o i OUR BIG DAYS! X First Show Tonight 6:30 Continuous Thur, from 1:30 j BE SURE TO ATTEND! | .o— . o aoups* 0 ® 2 > os o Hollywood Cinderella gets ' her fella ■ franki: , T irt color by' f ■ eieriTechnicolor 1 0® D O \W>\DAKiEiS iOm. - ... M®*'* — ALSO—Shorts 14c 50c Inc. Tax . . I -■ - O—O Fri. & Sat.—“lsland of Desire” ;■ Linda Darnell—ln Technicolor •. o—o Sun. Mon. Tues.—-Stewart Granger “prisoner of Zenda”—Color.
I > 83 H N C SALE STARTS ~ ' 8 ■ (mv ’ \ Tv * ' \\... \> M ■ J All Wool Worsteds 1W H BETTER COME EARLY! l! I"" n T ' V'T ’4t I «OWm ■ Si‘2-45 Ogf ii 0.95 $.95 MEN'S i I : L ’ ""■ •' ■ • ."-. -■ k ’h-. .-'i ■ r \rn H ? ''''■ MEN S MEN’S PLAID BOY’S FANCY Loafer Work ! MEN’S 2-BUCKLE CUSHION FOOT , y SUITS f ■ • '* 5249 Va'ue* $2.95 Values $1.95 Values H $2.95 Valves - J $3-95 Values 39c Value Long Sleeve. Washable H $2.95 Values Slightly Soiled [ — ", -" ; r < i'| ’*■.••■/* ’* ” 1 I I ' \ ■ i . .
Churchill Is Enroute For Ike Parley Meeting Slated To Renew (Cooperation * With United States ABOARD THE QUEEN MARY. (UP) — Prime .Minister Winston Churchill sailed today for New York and a meeting with Presi-dent-elect Eisenhower which will set the pattern (or cooperation between the 1 hew Republican administration khd Great Britain. ' ‘ The trip, the eighth, to the United States. si|ncjje 19411 for the 78-' ,year-old British prime minister, i will have its principal objective the renewal intimate war-tithe! partnership with the United States. (hurcnill feels that jhat close working agreement, which won the war. has corroded under the 'stress and ‘misunderstandings *of the two nations’ post war relaiSnns. "M , . i What Churchill hopes to achieve with, Eisenhower is a meeting of minds on such prime world issues as the prosecution of the war in l Korea, advisability of a meeting with Soviet Premier Josef Stalin, the sharing of Anglo-American atomic knowledge and a stretchout of the rearijiament program to. cope with a “long cold war.” The British prime minister sailed from Southampton Ito the cheers of dockside workmen. He boarded thp Queen Mary Tuesday night and spent the night in the 10-room suite reserved for the prime minister and his party. . He set out on his historic mission jauntily, hi£\trademark cigar punctuating his (unite and a silverheaded cane in His hand. He, wore a dark overcoat iand a block homburg as he came aboard and he . replied to the greetings of, other passengers with a genial wave ot. Jiis hand. , , "V Before retiring for the night he posed for photographers add wished them a Happy New Year. Today he began a cdrefut study compiled fdr him and submitted_Tuesday at a final, special cabinet peeling at No, lb Downing street. I \ > U Intimates ’ said he received from' foreign secretary Anthony Eden a farewell “briefing” •on “some significant confidences” Eden • gathered from hi* recent confer-
- FAMOUS PEOPLE WHO PIEQ DURING 1952 LgO&Z BfWI EBMH VHHI FSB 'WIB I ‘ U i FwMEua**. d g JMT k ’’BSraMHi yMJ j *a 11. ml's£j'7 i BbL w JII IKr** B ' mb Bl BP"Car L '\ tB I HaOahWwIIBsSBBm "ja Jlb MB A wHI BBBBBHnBi EHBBBBA WHHBHI -JJw AB v.. \ 0 Philip Murray Fulton Ourslor Sir Stafford Cripps’ William Graen WlffiamEox* Maxim Litvinov Fanny Ward HB |S*V|BR’ '<”JS RRa^B : Wk HEUe rd Bv B x.XABj rar c-Tkß ■MHggMw in Uwl IKb rSTI jW ; bHHMMI bHKJbb k. jAKk ab bbb al HQMBHi L. M. Giannini > Sister Konny Harold k lckoe Hugh Herbert Chaim Woizmann King George Susan Peter* - Ferenc Molnar BBBKBBBBBBBBI W -Ifc Wil IT i||L... ?iZ rii? Mui A - a » i ‘ Irlmk 11 •* x c^A..BB& L T& f&L • '.>«< B BbtJT>g|BwMß « BL LF JL A Sri. a. ' bHMmF St wBaHbHIi bb .)■ Bk x bHB I BML '' 4 ™ 81l U I 'll I ' Andrew Jacksom Howard Chandler /A. Robert P. Gertrude Higgins A Christy John Garfield Carlo Sforza Brien McMahon Vittorio Orlando ’ Patterson Lawrence v
ences .with Eisenhower and secretary of statenlesignate John Foster Dulles. ! ——— ~ , I ! ' r -J’. :I ■ ■ 1 QUESTIONNAIRE | _ <Contl^nrd\ From Psgr Om;i vacancy Xj (10) Do ’ the teachers have to continue profeslonal studies to get promoted? (11) D<) some teachers have too many classes? i —r - (12) What are the teachers required to do besides teach? (13) Cin teachers get a fair hearing fqr their grievances? (14) Is experimentation in instructional techniques allowed? (15) Wlrat professional studies have been made by o\ir teachers during the| past year? (Jfi) does Lincoln (school) rate in thfUstate? (\l7) -How does Lincoln rate nationally? r (18) W’hat achievement tests of national .calibre are given? To ■" 'I ! !—-^— —
; -' ;■ . C ! ■■ .. J v '.. \■' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA > •_ ■..- ■ ' - - -- ■ . -j. T
whom ? (19) How do we (Lincoln school) stand scholastically in NEIA? (20) How do Indiana schools i rate as compared to other schools? I (21) Why is our school day so I long? HOODLUM HELD ' (Continued From Page One) showed up. “I recognized it as a plane, but the man thought it was a Communist plane as we were over Communist territory by then. sent a hurst oif gunfire across the l>ow of the plqlne. Communist anti-airdraft opened up. 1 saw at least three bursty.’’ A second Nationalist plane appeared and waved Gaston down to a hafe landing at Kinmen. Gaston said it was not untiLAng. left the cockpit after the p|ane had stopped that the gunmah i realized he was*in the hands oi the Nationalists. d- ; )
He walked from the plane right into the arms of Nationalist' sold>er s Who came swarming up the ladder. Gaston said. . The American were 1 Mary Ireton, of Bethel. 0., and" Marshall ;E. Nunn, 24, San Francisco, both employes of the U. S. information service in the Philippines. . SAYS DISLOYAL (Continued From Paae One) ; quest for names *pf department employes w’ho sent infbriuation to the United Nations On Americans employed there. The state department refused to give the grand jury investigating alleged Communist activities among Americans at the U. N, the names of the State Department employes. Achegpn \said the qi}estion\ previously came up because of the request of the senate appropriations ’ committee. That request, he said.. I was denied on grounds that it
would violate “executive privilege.” He said Mr. Truman re-affirmed tha£ position in regard to the grand jury request. The out-going he and his chiqf officers “are responsible, publicly and every o/her wise for what goes on. . “We should hear the responsibility, and the blame, if* things go wrong,” he testified. Acheson said a new loyalty check procedure, soon to be ordered by President Truman, will “greatly irhprove the situation.” The new loyalty checking machinery has been drawn up by the stat»T department, justice department and civil service commission. The FBI will carry odt full field investigations of Americans to be- -employed by the U. N.'- > . ~~ . ■- Tr you have something to sell or roofns for rent> try a Democrat ' Want Ad. Lt brings results.
||| I H. M »I^|||^ WII . I I|.|W I M ) MIW "IW Il'.u th Town And Country Churches To Meet Decatur Pqstdr To . Attend Conference i The Indiana town and country churches of the Diaciples of Christ will meet at Kenda-rfVilie January 5 to discuss and make t>lans for more aggressive leadership in rural life in Indiana. ' The R&v. and Mrs. Traverse Chandler of the Decatur Christian church and several other Decatur members are planning on attending the meeting. » Leaders for the institute’ includes: Dr. O. L. Shelton, dean, school of religion. Butler university; Prof. E.. E. ißector, department of rural church, school ot religion. Butler’, Dale W. Medearis, national director of towm ajjd country church. United Christian Missionary Society; Roy L. Thorp, director of stew-ardship, / Unified Promotion. Inc.; Mrs. R. H- Bruner, executive secretary. Christian Women’s fellowship; Miss Anna 'M. Clarke, director of Indiana department of Religious education; Miss Beksie M. director of children’s work. Indiana department of religious education, along with other sthte leaders of the churches. The institute program will begin at 10 o’clock featuring discussion worship, Christian education, stewardship in rural life/ evangelism and membership de velopment, world work and “What Lt Means to be a. Christian Fanner.” The high light of the afternoon session will be a success story on “How; We Did It” by Jesse M. Dunn, pastor of the New Lisbon Church of Christ and member of the Indiana rural church commission of the Indiana Christian misslonary association.- t The evening session .will begin with a fellowship dinnef at 6’90, at which time short reports of the discussion groups findings will be
New Year’s Dance TONIGHT ELKS ■ . i• i Members—Wives—Sweethearts
WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER U, 1952
— made by the guest leaders. The day will then be climated by a worship service and a sermon to be delivered by Kenneth Brady. r pastor of the host church. REQUEST RULING wed From Pnt» l>»eT ! the national Emergency provision ■ -heart of thel Taft-Hartlev law—never spelled but a national emergency strike |s illegal, and that the courts therefore had no right to intervene 4nd grant a fltrikeinjunction. The Btfffalo court ruled Mbnday the provision is constitution!!. ff you have tomething to cell or rooms for renjt, try a Democrat Want Add. ft brings result*. ——>— r — Democrat Want Ad* Bring Result* ,
Need A Job? •< 7 , » BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES OPPORTUNTTT 4*fi*t>ie party ' handW wholeMle hurt setting Ifectlons. through new matic meschandistrs Kge not essential < run or earn up to cash require!n?»’T«L«uAs*eayaM|ra ad unless definitely have the required easlvWrlt&0 r giving phone nuitdwr view with factaryj Vian P O Box 7041. r -jJES SALESMAN Look Here -usineas on rrr'lit I 'arm-home Product! 1 dealers now maA pu'<B .o-xf profits For MALE HELP ~ r”•, Use The Daily Democrat Want Ads
