Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 5 January 1953 — Page 1
Vol. LI. No. 3. ——
Traffic Death Record Is Set Over Holiday 417 Persons Killed J On Nation's Highways On New Year Holiday '<? ,By UNITED PRESS Traffic accidents during the fouri day New Year’s holiday set a new death record, final figured sfertwed today. . .. p. bp' . Al’nited Press tabulation showed 417 persons were killed ini traffic between 6 p.m. last Wednesday'and ivmidnight Sunday. Fifteen others were killed in plane crashes, 54 in fires a»nd 13'3 iri miscellaneous accidents for a total -of 619. The' 1 national safety council said , the traffic toll was the highest for any extended New Year’s holiday in history, The council said i the combined iptal of 1,005 : traffic deaths during the Christmas and -New Year’s holidays alsopsqt a -record for the twoifour-day periods The combined total of . all accidental deaths during the two holiwas 1,383. . 1 Ned HI. Dearborn, president of » the safety council, termed the, . record a “national disgrace,” ; . pjjr believe that the average j citizen is just as ijieartsick over . . this senseless and needless slaughter on the highways as I am. hnci that he" wants to help preVent it.' ’DehrHhfn tsaid. 5 • |\ ■ “I therefore appeal "’to tSKpry American who feels as I do - that this accident toll is a national disgrace—to; .write me with .any ideas he. may have for stopping the carnage. jji i “1 also invite .him to lake a personal .pledge that he will do eieryi thing within his power, day in'fed i day out, to prevent the one Mei-, defat he can prevent-■ the, one 'he i may cfese by some act of carelessnes#.” > p The all-time record for any hull- 1 day, was set' during the recun’ ■ Christmas period when 588 persons I were killed. I The bloody 1 record- written by the nation’s motorists Will, be eVen worse than the present figures ihdicate. The safety council has. estit mated that at least 150 peysbfas injured during the i-day and 100 injured during New - Year’s will'ulximjately die of then) wounds. Th-us. ihQre than 1,2|0 persons will have been killed during ( the two holidays. . ’ -j The safety council liefore the fouriday New Year s (holiday began, that JIO persons, Wduld be killed in traffic;. The guess Iseehied dose and irhay ourn out to have been conserva- , live as many Sunday aeeiidenfe 1 are not leained of by the press until Monday. ,■- , - I - Thq .New Year’s toll last year wjasj'Os traffic; j deaths, 58 i’ire deaths', 65 plane fatalities and 1116 mpsefefeeous accidental deathspor ah overall total of 582. . [Th? J'njted Press .tabulation < Turn Ta I'nue Five > Decatur Fire Loss In Year $48,305 Department Chief In Annual Report . Decatur hoifae (owners, and business nien saw 148,3b5 go upi [in smoke during 1952. according to a report by fire chief Cedric Fisher issued today. 4 Both regulars and volunteers s made a total of 56 calls, including“ [Grass fires. 10 calls; ears. 12; ; t/ailers, 2; grease, 4; furnace. ,3; gas stiive, 1; electric. 2; homes,, 9; ~ business places, 2 factories, 2; tarb paulin. 2. • p ■ -.» ; s’ Listed under a separate hearting of “special calls" are included’gas in sewers, 3; and false alarms 4 Firemen made li rural calls dptHng the past year, the damage figure tor. these said chief Fisher. is not included in the cash r W B * The most costly fire during 1952' was the Mollenkopf hand, .felting blaze on U. S. 27 just north-of the City. Chief Fisht’s $48,900 -figure puts the damage estimate lot that fire; at $30,000. , . j The tally for was $155,740.000. Tlhe large fighire includes- the damage estimate' of the Wayne Novelty Co. ” ’ ' > ' INDIANA WEATHER > j Partly cloudy and colder td- p night with a few snow flurries near Lake Michigan. Tuesday > Increasing cloudiness with light snow and continued cold. I Lew tonight 10-20 except locally lower central portions. High v Tuesday 22-28.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT x , J>NLY DAILY IN ADAMS COUNTY - U i ii i i -.-min, ~: i U— >
Survives “Fatal” Caesarean .X' /■Uk' 1 * fl F '"7 ..iAs • 1 'b ;/ 1 ■ MfejW Al RrT" A A fl x >”* F 1* ff® fl ’ I rd 1 1 I I ofl k ir® ' r WW'- isl ■ ’ ( i x |. , '■ ■ ' ■ ' i MRS. JEAN GARRETT and her husbaml. are Shown leaving the'' Hawthcrne, Calif., hospital where Mrs. Garrett underwent a Caesari ean operation Christmas night, facing the possibility of death. lowing the operation, .lean came through “beautifully” and is cmher way? home to introduce her fourth child, Mii-hltel Krtianuel, tp\ .his tjire’e brothers. ' \. \ | :• • '
GOP Wary Os Any Promises On Tax Cuts Hold Out Hope Os I Relief But Refuse Definite Promises WASHINGTON. UP — Republican of congress today held QUt sorne hope of tax relief this year Wt they were nos making any ’ promises. ' i Their “maybe” v attitude \was summed by.house GOP i floor leader Charles Halleck of* Indiana. He told a reporter that tax cut legislation will the greeh light if- — and only if—Republican strategists are convinced it won't jeopardize a balanced Imdyet. Halleck anil other influential Republicans reaffirmed their belief that the “first order of 'business’,’ mpst be cut federal Spending enough to balance.,\hfe government income and Outgo. Only then, they ~said, can congress i afford to' cut down on the income reducing taxes. ~ ■ k : Most COP leaders realize that merely balancing th|e budget without any decrease in taxes will be a formidable job for their party to accomplish during its first year in power. President Truman’s budget, which will go to cohgress Friday, is expected to call tor about 0C’0,000,000 in federal spending during the 1954 fiscal year Which begins next July 1. That is about $10,000,000,000 more Ilian the treasury expects, to take in during fiscal 1954 under present tax laws. Halleck said he is “quite certain” t|Kat congress can slash J “substantial sums" from the Truman 'budget, particularly with the coop eration of the Eisenhower administration which will take office lan. 20. But he was* unwilling to predict that ihe Truman budget can be cut enough to make possible tax yeah I|\ L\ Rep. Daniel A. Reed (R-N. Y.) r who is scheduled to be chairman of the, tax-writing house ways and means committee iij the new congress, \is one high-ranking Republican Who believes that thjfles can be reduced this year without throwing the federal budget out of balance. In furtherance of l this belief, Reed introdmled on [opening pay of congress Saturday, a bill to cut personal income taxes; about 5 | percent for this calendar year. It Would, make June ?0. 1953, the date for. a personal! iincdme tax reduction instead of Dec. 31. 1953, as provided under present law. , i | The program now on the books calls for an 11 percent reduction (TnuTo I’ajrt Five) Schools Reopened ! Following Holiday All of Decatpr’s school'a, Decatur high. Lincoln and Decatur Catholic, and ipl the Adamjs county schools reopened today after the holiday vacation. ! , The second semester at Decatur high begins on ilwl The eight-and-a-half month tertn Os the county schools have their second semester beginning on January 3 while th.e nine-monfh term’d second semester begins on January 16. 1 „-■. h . \ | . ■ X f
j,i I ' ’I " ‘ r Spiritual Emphasis k Week Opens Sunday Opening Service Is Held Sunday Night , The opening of the annual union Spiitual .Emphasis Weik was held last bight in- th£ iFirst Methodist Cfturclv with a splendid attendance to .help begin the vices. Topiglit Dr. Clyde W.* Meadows will 6<. on. hand to lead the congregation in song in his unique manner! Dr. Meadows will also preach his first sermon fyt the veriest in th<p evening meet ng. Each night this week, including v Saturday. Dr. MeadoWp will serve as song-leader and preacher. S< rvices begin at • \\ .' The choir of the host church and the director-of rm sic. Robert flay, provided special music spy the Sunday service. The Metljodalres, a maid quartet of he church. ?tlso sang a selection. ’. ' The Rev. F. y. Willard, chairman of committee on arrangements, presided in the Sunday services. The • Rev. Dwight McCurdy was devotional leader, Speaker, for the opening service , was the Rev. Ray J. Walther, min- , ister of the Presbyterian church. Rev. Walther’U?spd ns liis subject. •'Pit Experience or Prophetic Ecstacy.” j ■ ,i-. Rev. Walther began his sermon . with an example of a spider who , lowers himself into a pit} Ohly to I find his (ford to freedom severed, and Ire must spend the r<ist bf;his . days in the. pit. "Many! like the . spider, are trapped in the pit experiences of life, because they have failed to use the spiritual connection they have, with God.’’ He went on to discuss the; three groups of lost people in the country . today. “First, there is that group > who have outwardly denied God for > themselves and their families. Aftei : the first World War. there was a large number who Were disillusioned and thus denied God in , their lives. Today, there is an ever i increasing number as their 1 chilI dren’s children carry on their lack -of faith, Secopd, those who have good \ concerning their i faith, but do hbt actually jive it'to i its completion—‘They always mean to, but you know how it is.’ ” \This group Rev.'Walther pointed oult, are . to be found in any audience—[those b who can the story of faith as it is, portrayed in the Bibig buv cannot, give, evidence by their lives that they have accepted the faith. • And. third, there are those who ’ struggle intelectually with the • things of faith, but nevet actually - give their lives completely to God. “All three groups are in the pit I I experiences, ■of life because they 1 have not used the connection they, have with God. And moat, when they try to use this connection find as the, spider did, that it has been Severed.’R Rev. Walther’s solution was a return to the spiritual plane of life • such as thg prophets had, who lost " themselves in God's will so com- - plejtely tha; they were in a form ' of .ecstasy in Vyhich they Seemingly disregarded! the norma] fears Os r inajn. He quoted II Cor. 4th!'chapter ’ as the solution; Concluding, he ) said, “Remember, you Jan see 1 visions as the prophets, or ;yod can ' seel life as a tomb; depending Upon I whi?tjher you allow your connection to God to be severed or not.” ' . ' ; \ :1 '* ■ : ; ■ ■ ■ ‘. -
Decatur, Indiana, Monday; January 5, 1951
Winston Churchill Says Western Eih-ope Center Os World’s Problems ■ X !• L■ ■ ' \ ir-c • '1 ■ ■' . 1 : ' i., -A.• ’ ■ \I ■ \ -■ ■ ii . - . ■ : ■ I ■ •
; i — 1 Gen. Ridgway Says Progress Unsatisfactory Jays European Army Not Strong Enough' For Defense Needs • PAtRIS UP — Genl Matthew’ I\. f Ttiidgway, Allied supreme t|»m- - mander, said, today his forties would suffer “grievoiis blows’*, h the Russians attacked within bne yeUf to 18 months. ’ ( | f ;‘’i db nbt mean btj de^eated, J ' h,e addeil. \ j Itidgwfay. discussing 'the/ staff oi his - Ncpth Atlantic S organization forces at a press ference, i said progress in building upi the Allied bulwark against Coinmunist was uging. ■ ■ ■‘[■But f do not refg;yd the prdgppds as (satisfactory in light r. the’uH<si<m assigned to me aj'f ijK ifrhi of i enemy Ridglt ay said., “I have never used the wrd ‘satisfactory.’ An<l if 1 had used i« I wouldn’t have meant it.” h » j During a major summary <>f ' situation of the forces he 1 cmumgijids, throughout democratic We>terfa! Europe, the commander in ichief was asked whether his arnjies in the (direct path of- a £oihmunist sweep would be doomed to defeat. ' "P believe that, in the hypothetical case stated, the land fbrfi?j| would 'suffer grieyous blows,” lUdg ; way- said. "I do not rpean t||dt they would be defeated, r “The casualties wilj reflect : i|ie degree of combat; effectiveness and that, of course,\iihcludes tpumeripal strength.” ' Mei explained the feweir the soldiers the outnumbered western forceps would have to steiii a Soviet thrust. : the higher Allied jcaftualtles wouid be. Also, he said; his bMt trained men probably ivould becomel th? first casualtiesJ Ridgway refused to comment (bn a sta(emeni attributed tjo .Marshal Alphonse IJuin, his French poimmjander on he vital central front thjftt in event of (war the Russiuris could; be in Paris within 24 daiys after their tanks lunged across the west-east borderline in (lerinany; He declined aU& to sky whetlje: (T|nrn To Pa«e M|Kht) Commissioners In I Session Here today Initial Routine Meeting Os 1953 The Adams county board of comgathered this at the. office of county auditor Frank to hold their first routine meeting 6f 1953. several itenis of business besides routine bills having belfiri negotiated. Womqr Habegger, Hie Rev. Vdrdean Owens and Howard Richardson all of Geneva, appeared before the board concerning tax exemptions for the, Geneiva Nazarentfc church at Geneva. The matter was held in| abeyance-' however, until titles to |he church Is in the hands of the. petitioners. ( County home; superintendent George Fosnaugh filed his monthly report to the cpmriiissioners and showed (the home to have deposited. $7,13| in inconib with the county. In as, ?23 males and IP females inhabit jthle home at present^ 1 County (highway superintendent. Frank Singleton : reported to the ( that ,of the $226,261,42 appropriated for 1952. a balance of $248.47 remains. In connection with the highway department the boat’d will receive bids on ;a Jieavy : duty truck January 19 At the auditor’s office. The time of bidding will be 2 p.m. Sam D. Nussbaum, contractor of Monrfae, ha’i been retained by the comjjnissionere to inspect and give an estimate tfa repair tljefbarn\ at the ebnnty home. '<■ I ■ . ■' ’ ''
- , Dr. Rayl's Funeral. Tuesday Afternoon 1 . r ? ' - Final Rites Tuesday For Eminent Surgeon '' li ? Active and 1 boiiorary pallbear?rs for Dr. C. Rayl, eminent surgeon ano physician of. this city, whose death Occurred Saturday, were named -today. All are--mem-bers of the medical, profession. \ . ActiVei pallbearers will be: Drs. C. P. niitehman. Geneva; Janies M. Burk, Harold F. Zwick. Rolland J. Rcppert, Gerald J, Kohne,: Arthur Hy Girod. Jill of this city. The honorary pallbeafdrp will be: Dis. W. E: Smith, .John C. Carroy, Richard K. Parrish. Lonis- F. Raymond, and John Fb Tarveer; pr this.\city; Normail E[ Beaver. .Myron Habegger. Harold Bi Ix»hman. of Bernet J. V. Schetgeh, Geneva; B. S. Cornelk Fort .Wayne, Lawienee N.\liwHn; Lima. Ohio. Funeral services for the well known Decatur physician will b? conducted Tuesday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock at the Black funeral home. The Rev. Ray ,J. Walther, pastor of\ the First Presbyterian church, will officiate. A Scottish Rile service. will be conducted by Sam E. Ceake, secretary, and staff •• . the Fort Wayne Scottish Rite, of which Dr. Rayl was a member. Burial will be in the Decatur Memorial Explained Mrs. C. Kenneth Egeler. daughter, of Dr. Rayl, the purpose pf the memorial fund that is being established in memory of her father, in a personal message pointed ort page six Os this newspaper. Th? family requests (the ommission of flpwers. > . - - Division Drawn In Hospital Operation Nursing, Business Branches Separate As one of the most far reaching innovations introduced iiito the Adams county memorial hospital system by Mis. jhanche itrick, iteiv hospital administrator, a’ division has been drawn between the nyrsing an! business departments, two separate departments now Existing. Where formerly nursing and business negotiations ran together, Miss Florence Lichtensteiger having been noth superintendent and Jurchasing agtyt, business is now one entirely by Mrs. Kri*k and a small staff. The staff includes Mrs. Ray, Keller, and Mrs Ruth Knapp. , . \ . A system of “comparative- price buying.” taking into account, said Mrs. Krick, both pricejand quality, is being used by her in making purchases. The comparisons, averred the business head, ,are made periodically so as t<[> keep up with fluctuating price lines. the “rounds” were made ■of the various establishments in the city, re’tain of Mrs. KrPck’S buying priifiripies not having then been taken into account. -Mrs. Krick and her staff keep a inventory of food and drugs str as to prevent duplication of purchases, which had in the past. Each time authorized personnel removes either drugs or food from the stockrooms slips are filled in ajid cbfaveyed to the bush ness office; where they are made part of the inventory. ’ Whether or not much money' has been ,saveo through the change* Mrs. Krick declined to say. |ect being; declared Mrs. Kricfe. “to centtraliae i all business Into one main offiefe” \ J The liaison between the medical staff of the Jrdspital and Mrsi Krick’s depajttment are two doctors; Dr. Roland Reppert and Dr. John C. Carroll. They consult with tjfei>on hospital pblicy and consulted With Mrs. Krick (recently dn making a standard running drug inventory. As for cooperation between the doctors and herself. Mrs. Krick said it was “excellent.” ' v A l4 ' I ' !' i -
Four Western Senators And Ike lln Parley Hawaii Statehood Bill Is Slated For J Early Submission NE.W YORK UP —Four powerful western senators said after visiting President elect Eisenhower today that a bill, to make Hawaii a new state will be introduced in congress next wsek. They predicted its passage \ ; Sen. William F. Knowland of California, chairman pf the senate , Republican policy '-committee Hi ;the new senate, said as spokesman for the group that hp could hot for the general” but he believed Hawaii “will get statehood at a reasonably early date." \ i - Knowland said group did not discuss statehood for Alaska.',’ Knowland was accompanied ' by three other Republican senators—' Hugh Butler jof Nebraska, Guy Gordon of Oregon, and Arthur W. Watkins of Utah. ! Eisenhower planned jto confer \ also with his designated secretary of the Interior, Lxitiglasi McKaiyThough the sepatorj?, who arranged the meeting, epiphasized there has been "perfec|, coordination" and "no whatsoever "\froip Eisenhower oij wptetiernl problems, they: wahted the [right to be consulted abodt appointments of persopnei controlling natural resources and territorial Eisenhower frecently assured Republican bigwigs in the newly convened 83rd, congress that he would consult them before making any major appointments. ' ( Observers expected that th ei question of statehood fbr Hawaii .might be the most important issue disetussed at Eisehhower’s c(>nferepefe with the four senators. “.Immediate statehood’ ’for Hawaii was written into the Republican platform but Butler, who will be chairman of the senate interior and insular ahairs committee, was known to oppose this plank. The senators appeared especially interested in the appointment of a sublessor to outgoing Gov. Ernest Hruening of Alaska and a hew reclamation commissioner to re- . (Turn To Ppr? Six) j Mrs. Otto Boerger Is Taken By Death ( Funeral Services Tuesday Afternoon Funeral, services #ill ’be held Tuesday for Mrs. Boer- > ger. 78, of Root toW’nwip, who died suddenly of a heart auack Saturday morning while Visiting at the horpe of a daughter.[Mrs, Gfastav Gasdorf, at Lima, O. ’'j ; She was bi>rn iri Wurterinberg. Germany, May a daughter of Mhilliam and Christina ErlemeierReicnert, and came te this country in 1890. living in township Since that timje. ’;shfi|was married. May 12. 1895 t|O Ottrgfßoerger, Wholj! preceded her In deht|psept. Mrs.\ Boerger -member of ! St. Peter’s Lutlrerajfe'church. W Surviving ln’| ad|gtlon to the , daughter in Lirfia ; three other daughters. C|.S| s Mrs. Philip Rafe Miss Deila Boerger. all of four sons. Hugo, Wilitam J|tto and Herbert Boerger. atj of Wot township; 19 grandchildren; Wie brother, Julius Reichert ; of Iffene, and tU’o sisters, Mrs; Emilig Wetter and Mrs. Albert both of Bernp. One son andfbne sister are deceased. 1 Services will be conducted at 1|: 30 p.m. Tuesday at the Zwick funeral home and at 2 o'clock at the Stj Peter’s Lutheran church, the Rev. F. W. Droegemueller officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Frienifs jma? C& H at the funeral home uptll dime of the services. ‘ \ ’ y ■ < ’i: . \ Ii : i I ! rd. ■ ,d ■ t'" • j® ' ,1 i ,’ (3 * ‘ -111
Anti-Filibusfer To Showdown Tuesday Admit Move Faces Defeat By Senate WASH INGTON, <U^>—Several senators seeking to curb ‘Senate filibusters privately admitted today that their move faces certain defeat by a Republican-southern I>emocratlc coalition. The showdown on tite anti-fili-buster mow? come Tuesday. Both the senate. and. house were (in recess today until a joint ses-' Sion of congress is held Tuesday ( to [count the electoral vote and; formally declare Dwight D. Eisen-1 hower elected President. Immediately after the joint {session Tuesday, the senate will take UP a liiotion by Sen. Clinton PAnderson, D-N. M,-, calling; upon the new Republican - controlled senate to adopt rules. Approval of this motion would open the way for antf-Mlibuster senators to offer a rule timitifag senate debate. The anti-filibuster * ‘move Was doomiCd. however, when the Re- - publicans agreed in tfaeif- first caucus that tlie senate was a “continuing laxly" and therefore bpera- ! tipg under previous rules. The Republicans also count’on sup- ; port from who have traditionally used the fhibuster to block action op civil rights legislation. ' ( - After disposing of the rules question. the senate will be ready .to hear President Truman’< final State of the Union message Wednesday. That will be followed by the President’s annual budget message on Friday, and his econbtmc messaga-about, Jan. 14- After hearin/fthe President’s messpges. congress will ' mark time until Jan. 29 when the new Eisenhower administration fakes over and submits its oivn legislative recommends* ions. ' ——— ■ '• Conditional Stays Promised Rosenbergs • . ‘ ■ ■ ’I Atom Spies Slated For Death Jan. 14 , NEW* YORK UR —- Federal judge Irving R. \kaufman promised today to granv a conditional stay of execution fQr atom spies Julius > and Ethel Bosenberg so they can appeal to President Truman for mercy. The husband - and • wife tearri whose espionage work is believed to have made .it possible for Russki to make an atom bomb five or »10 years ahead of schedule are slated to be electrocuted Jan. 14 at 11 p.m.. according to their attorney, Emanuel Bloch. Federal Judge Thomas W. Swan Said the court “must reserve decision” when Bloch told him that he planned to seek afaother stay of execution from Federal Judge Irving ttaufman who meted out the Rosenberg death sentences In 1950 and refused only last week to grant judicial clemency... Blocif said if he; failed to get favorable action from either the court of appeals or judge Kaufman on Tiis request for, sufficient time (to prepare an appeal to Mr. Truman fe would ap(plly immediately tio U. S. supreme court for a. stay. , ■ ; , • ( ’ A Those were the only steps reP»d* »«■**> Brunner Infant Is ( First 1953 Baby Jd-Epen Brunner, infant daughter of Mr: and Mrs. Lester Brunner of St. Mary's township, has been officially declared the winder’, 6? the annual first- baby derby, sponsored by Decatur merchants. The girl baby born at 5:45 o’clock New Year’s morning at the Adams county memorial hospital. the first baby of 1953 born-to parents residing in the north half of Adams county. To Jo-£Hen and her parents will go the many gifts offered by the cooperating Decatur merchants. . ’ - ■
Price Five Cents
Churchill In United States To Meet Ike Declares (ftiances \ Os World War Are Believed Receded •A ' f NEV.' YORK. (VP) — P r i ifa e Minister Winston Churchill ; of ' ■Britain arrived today for historio : ■ proinauguration conferences ifith. President-elect au<l { said the chances of world (war I have “receded” ‘but 7 not ’Jurlw - - ( 5 A \ The 78-year-old statesman gayo immediate indication of^what? hh was’going-to tell the nation’s next President by declaring that “the real center of gravity in the werld” is along the p-on Curtain - ? in Western Europe —not in Kfeea. ' 7‘BuL‘majtoe J’m biased By Se near it." he said. .’ I , . xThe statement seemed a clear . i indication Churchill would resist any effort on the i>art ofi tho administration to swing added; etn- . phasis to thfa-Far East in the antij. Communist campaign. - ( t■ i Churchill arrived on the pinurx : . Queen Mary for talks with hls- ? "old frieiiH,” Eisenhower, and a p courtesy gall on President Truinaa whom hei praised for “rgliant' [ .. I decision's.”' 1 ' -,'J ‘ Churchill ,was to meet 'Eisenhower this afternoon at theftomo of financier Bernard three men wifi dine together at the Baruch residence following the historic conference. ' The British prime minister refused to reveal in advance ddfail.-t , cf his talk with Eisenhower.; but the portwnte. were mgde clear in a colorful dockside press conferei:ce. . ■ He made these points: , standing -up 4o aggression in greatest eyefe in the last five years—the Western world has “done more to improve < the chances of eWorld peacd<’•than t anything elese. . / ■ [ 3 — Britain would favor keeping sist, all attempts to enlarge the Korean war. “It would lie a great [J pity,” he said, ffor the Hjiitetl > Nations army to “i’ander 4IF Ibis vast China.’’< 3—Mritain would- fjiVoj>kfeping possiblA pressure cur the enemy iri Korea. \lle spoke of an “hn- . _ provement" in the iU. N. on the embattled; Far ’peninsula. i 11' 1 t —He would notj discuss tlie possibility of a meieting bdtween, Eisenhower, Churchill .and; Pre- - mter Stalin of Russia. s—Churchill complained' .indi-re-ctly over the lack jof cooperation between the United^ Stated and feritain on atomic j matters. “I haven't had the *adijantage., -kIMcK President RooSeveM! promised me. of haVimg tire fuUesk pOssflife formation on the atomic [bomb,” he said. JT ‘ >- 6— He indicated Britain , would like a chance to improve Its trade with the United States. | In high good humor with cigar a-tih, and Mrs. Churchill ? oh his loft band and Bernard Barjuch. his friend of 40 years on his right, Churchill ■ met the press- alxxir.L ttye> Queen Mary. Churchill was reminded that qn v that last arrival in New York harbor a year ago he had said the (Tara T« Pa*e Kiaht) • Lions Club To Hear Dr. Clyde Meadows The guest speaker at Hie Decatur Lions club Tuesday evening at 6:15 o’clock will be Dr. Clyde W. Meadow's, speaker of the Spiritual < OmphAsis Week- services. This Is ■ one of several speaking engagements planned for Dr. Meadows during his visit in Decatnr. . -Since the speaker wfe need .to be excused in time for tije evening preaching service, it is urged that Lions be op time x for their scheduled meeting. Members of the club have been invited to join in the preaching service which follows the club meeting. p 1 : “ - ' ' : I ■ » 44
