Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 11, Decatur, Adams County, 14 January 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

4-H'ers In Tractor j Maintenanceflans Training Plained For 4-H Members All tractor maireknance 4-H members met at the fherkes imple- • inent store Monday Evening. All were given their 4-Hifets-. I. The first year groitb will be under the supervision $ Jim Smith and Richard Baker Richie Implement company. Tlwy are: Jerry Sgiith,' Willis NussMhjm. Wayne Byerly, Arnold. Gerfeef.flery Girod, Ronald Wagley. Arfr-n Mitchel. Bobby Wagley, John JShaffer, Palmer Urick. Charles.Sfurgeon, rms Karl Sprunger. Ed Affolder, Jr., of Affolder Jt Sons/will work with of *'ec* ond year project members. They iare: . Ray Gilbert. Riffiard Kaehr, Philip Moser., Alan Hatiegger, Pah tiler Inniger, Lee Swinger, and Roger ® ’ ■ ( The rest of thesecortt year me tribe fs will be given- theaKYrainhi'g by Herb ‘li®rkes Imple-i men! and'Leo Men4niaß of’MoUenkopf and. Eiting. Thej|-are: Philip Gerber. Ronald Gerijeril Keith Griffiths, Don Bailey, Marvin Grote. James Bpfrger, Jqkeplg Brite, Leo Busick, Herman Witte.feavid Boltz. Norvin Thieme, Arno irod, Melvin Fuelling, John <F&nk, Roger koepertian. Max Gordon Singleton, Jim Smith; liari-v Busiek. John Ripley, and Luthe| ; Hedington. Don Sipith of the Stiffen Implement company will ha# four boys in tfie third division afd will also have 15 boys in tlue fourth division. The fourth division the care arid maintenance | of corn • picker? plows, mowers, spreader, cultivators, planters, |and grain drills. ALLIED PLACES (Continued From Pa|re) pulverizing strike on romi and rail , bridges crossing the It.'hongehon and Taeryong rivers of Sinanju. , ! , ||. The sudden raid e>ught . the Communists feverishly l.atempting to repair damage on tae bridges inflicted by previous dayis of steady ’pounding,, -including tile biggest raid of tne/\ year Tuesrnty by 440 warplanes. | That raid was followed up by an by 11 Okinawa-based B-29's which dropped |,500-pound bombs on the western; |dge of Sinanju while other B-29’| slammed rail at Village). 'A . Then the F-84 Thundergets moved in? They came from fou| air force wings and one marine. Itir grou;i. They hit six rail and ft wo road hriqges. Pilots reported I numerous hits on spans not previously destroyed. ' T Allied attacking force® met very light anti-aircraft fire. ' Ground attacks slump|d ag temalong the 155-|iile battle line dropped below Allied troops wses.t' of Valley battered |iack three coiimiunist atatacks. the longest ofwaich lasted two hours. s.

— teeplSe.. MOVING & TRUCKING , Local and p i Long Distanced ‘ PHONE 3-26b7 Tonight & Thursday • O — 0 OUR BIG DAtS! First Show Tonight 6:3ft Continuous Thur, frbm 1:30 BE SURE TO ATTEND! ° DID HER ' EUI« - . KIND >y mgm OF GIRL HHk HAVE A CHANCE FOR 11 LOVE? W jfMuT- ! wkmMm AMD! starring SHELLEY WINTERS RICARDO MONTAIBAN WENDELL CORIY CLAIRE TREVOR ' \ ALSO—Shdrts 14c-50c pic. Tax —O-o—i' Frl. & Sat.—“ Because |f You” Jeff Chandler, LorettJ Young Sun. Mon. Tuej. —“Irgn Alan Ladd, Virginia J Mayo .. ■< d' ~ - U I '' .''

Inauguration Schedule

WASHINGTON, IIP -r- Here is the schedule <>f principal inauguration ’’ eVents; ] < All times Central Standard). I A b' ’ \ . ; [A ■ Sunday | 2:30-5 p.m. X Reception for gov-, erriors and [other distinguished guests Statle| Hotel. • t :|;3O p.m. - - [Concert hy Nat ionul Sjjmplwnjr Qrihestra Constitution Hpllj I ~ M Monday j J 4:3oi’ pm. i I—- Reception tor Young Republicans — Hotel Washington. j ■ A 7 p.m. — “Festival A huge variety show presented by famriu? entertainers ll’line Arena. A repeat pt plater at the Cap-, itol Th satfer. | j V Presi lent elw-t and Mrs. Eisenhower and th?ir immediate- party are expected td| arrive in .Washington from New] York late .Monday evening; but will not attend any of the| |Mbndaj| events. They wil. stay_at*th-e Statler Hotel. | Tuesday | B:3o'a.m.—Gfen. and Mt>. Eisenhower and othar incbmingwifficials attend .special services at the Na tional Presbyterian church. .—.—j t —i—. IKE SUMMONS (Continued From I’ake •*"*• Bank qf Mew wrk. Eiseiihower ehose Andrews for the tpp[ income job on the recommendation bfASen. Harry F, Byrd, ffllkya.), an outspoken critic lof policies. Ahdrewg. though a Democrat, supp<)rted |Eisenhower during •his campaign fdr the presidency. Charles R. Hpok, Jr., of Cleveland and Elbert P. Tuttle of Atlanta also jreceived high administrative ajipointnients. Hook, a jvicd president of the Chesapeake <fc Ohio railroad, Was named deputy postmaster general and Tuttle. Georgia GOP chairman, was Appointed general of the Treasury. I ■ . REDS PLAN (Contlnned From Page One) has been mentioned in connection With capital charges. ; The doctors were tied to the American British intelligence serv|iee lly! the charges pulfr lishied rdgainst them in' Moscow n|ewspapßrs] They were said to be part off the international Zionist movement |uthichj like all other nationalist movements, has been considered counter-tevolutipnary and criminal in the Soviet Union , and outlawed. The trial prpljably will be before the x militarjl tribunal of the kupreijiei court, wihose judgment is Irrevocable, but vkhe presidium of the j Supreme Soviet may grant clemencvi. |\ ■ ] Since the | tend iof World War II capital punishment rarely has been

,jl ■ • '’H MAKE YOUR HOUSE A MODERN HOME! i .Xet HAUGK’S Experienced j| Plumbers Help You Design J ■ \ '1 y and Plan Your Plumbing. dV fa ; U‘ . i , K: . -.-Hm BfflrL i- ;. ■HH ■ ■ I llTdddddu i 1 GET OUR LOW PRICES ON PLUMBING. ■ i I i . . ; i -■ % I? Nothing Down—3*Yeats To Pay ■ ♦ I \lit • BATH ROOMS • WATER SYSTEMS • . • ■) ■ ' L> i • KITCHENS • HOT WATER • WATER HEATERS [ HEATING SYSTEMS jI +■ " J nI ■ ■ I - J ■ ; 1 V HAUGKS I' ' 1 HEATING - APPLIANCES - PLUMBING South Second St. ■ Across from Count House ■i . t ; i : . f ’

i 10:30 am. ■ ii|hpr<>x. _ General • jEiserihowiir wtijj be driven to the 1 .White H nisej'^vhence president ’ f Truman] will him to the Capitol. 11 ahi. Innctipn ceripmonies j outside the Natim a amhifem and invocation. I Vice 1 residtehW Richard Nixon sworn l:y Ssn.'|wilnam F. Knowland (RCalit.ilL I Presider t Eisenhower sworn by . Chief Justice Flnied Vinspn. President Eisenhower fjeliveys inaugural , Bened ction. , Immei lately this ceremony, Mr. and Mrsl Tjhima|rwiß po td|a ’ hotel while ; FWsident and Mrs. \ Eisenhower their' party have luhoh in the 12:3d [i.ni. - Pri’sident Eisenhower leads iniuffl|rAl froth . Capitol to White Hkiuse; paVadie , expected to las.®to 3 hours. ; , 5:30 p ; m. Mr|',|and r Mrs. Trumati leave by train' Independence, \ - M<> - U e ■ 9 p.m halls —National GijJrd ariporfc and .Georgetown Uni vers ty gyuiKasiun|. President aud Mrs. Eiken wwer jßxpe<;ted tv attend. \ ••. w * . : lj ; 11 JL .. a . • < .-.a. applied iin the Imbviet I’nicin. hut there, is: little the eittremo penalty will be wthcoming in this • case ’ I 1 W-A ■ i II : ■ !'■ i■■ One Buried i By Plant Explosion j .LANcksT£R,f|?a. UP — A tremendous explosiol spewed tons ol . crumbliijg cohcre'|| and ipetal down on seven wo^kerjs|ifleeing for their lives in the itiain!®lant of the .'Arm, i strong Cork ]Co.iSiere tod'ay. One - worker was bur|®rt and presumed killed. Two were injured. ' The. Blast three BQ-foot gas stoyes arid h?wily [damaged another, shaking bidings in a wide area surroun4ing''lhe plant. It was the worrit explos|iqn in the plant s history. ■ It .. . \ ' •- A W. "\ vi State Sales Tax \ By CIO i INDIA NAPOLI W’P — The Indiana CIO todap- 'o|i»osed a hint by > Governor Crtiig fIL his legislative messdge that a’i»tate.\ sales t.i.\ might ibe conkide|j|dj A legidative bwetin distributed by the • Indiana [iytate Industyia) Union Council quri&i Cralg’s-state-iment that “there W much'that cari be said for tke of a sales l tax]”i and eoiriiri'e4S d: • “Ytes, there; is 4li*feh that can be paid of a sales tasi, We hope the povernbr is thinki® of the reduced living standards t||&t would b.e> -the jot of thousands oiiindiana families it \it were! IniftrisetS »■ ' ■ w — Trade in a Good own—

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATITR, INDIANA

Taft Apologizepo\ Three Colleagues Apologizes ForlUse Os Names In Letter WASHINGTON UP - |en. Robert A. Taft] R-O.' apoldjgltwd -today to three cQl||eagues for.p>4ng their nances in [connection >|ith his crtiicism Os the appointment of Martin P. Durkin tu be Secretary of labor. ' I In defending ms criticiyli of the appointment! by Pres'iderit-.tlect Eisenhower Os, Durkin ajt |‘incrediblel” the si-mate GOP leader u-ed the names <lf three other yenators in a form letter. . The form letter was? Sent to letter waters who protesitli Taft's criHcism. Il said that - Jappoint-nu-nt (if a. than who isi.opposed to the Tutt - Hartley law stems’ to tne a (liret t repudiation,Of the generars pddtion on that issue, a poslhon approved by thy'! people. “It' is: exrietly as if h« ad •'Appointed Acheson sect * iary >tate or jteyen ! pet tiapsj, Sen. I*4'' McCarranl D-Ntev.. i r Sten. WTlliwj E. Jenner R ind, < r Sen. Joseph] R. McCarthy R-Wjs.” | Later Tafi sent Sennc? fa letter explaining gest to the [critical lethT. writers “how he have felt had sonieone been panned sectetary o| state who'-was erhisidered opposed to (Eisenhower*-; T foreign

ON DISPLAY TOMORROW - Till 1953 - » A•. jj v : - -I V —— _ ,11 , 1 ' f "Ij. w S ■ '■ f f // W A Sx Sw J* / I T( / / ! V t • A IH INSPIRHION FOR THE ALTOMOTIVE WORLD x ■ r x - wNfl ik-jii/^ ? BV tHE PREMIER. BUILDER VS e “ g, ’ e! 4 ■■■■ ■ ■ . ■ - i ■■ ■iri- j ' .■» . - -■ | Wk A- 1 RjßsrffiffrS MIa //L >.Xu < i . 1 17 fliC? Jl . 5 ■ \ . V? fa-

li | I I j.■ 1.1.11.11 i j (nj . ' • p ' •■. . v IMPROVEMENT HIGHLIGHTS I ■: '’■ i ■’ - . ''' \ !r - : j ‘" I '\ . DYNAMIC NIW 210 H.P. ENGINE VAST|LY IMPROVED HYDRA-MATIC DRIVE ADVANCED POWER STEERING* BREATH-TAKING NEW INTERIORS NEW CADILLAC AIR CONDITIONER** AO L ■ A. M \ MOHE BEAimm EXTERIOR STYLING EVEH GREATER OPERATING ECONOMY *a<*» cmi. — a-—.—; i .. I

ZINTSMASTER MOTOR SALES CORNER FIRST & MONROE STS. d ,V . PHONE 3-2003

policy views. \ . I “I regret much that I usbd your nanie at all, and ' certainly did not intend to imply that, yqu in 'any way agreed with secretary Achesons position,” Taft wroie Jenner. “I did not even intend to imply an opinion that your views disagreed with General Eisenhow-' <r ’ S ” ' $ ORDERS F B I TO (Continued From I‘age One) tion of the (j. In. Secretariat by U, S. Communists# The investigations resulted inV gome resignations. - I.' | Wiley announced his committee will hear John Foster Dulles, inCuming .secretary of state, Thursday morning in public session tn clear the wayTor Senate confirmation oft the JEisenhpwer cabinet Inauguration pay. V I 1 b ■ ' ■ HIT BY TRANSIT (Continued From Page O»e) years left manST persons grumbling as contrasted with the last strike when .the public attitude generally was one of friendliness arid good hunior. I r Official? uraed motorist? to pick lip hitchhiker® and many pers< ris hastily formed car pools. .Sone employers furnished truck tra isportation for, theih workers, e rid Navy buses \were Organized into .transport . systems for federal workers. \ : Trade ip a Good Town —Decatur.

Oil Cartel Case To New Administration Judge Gives Lecture To Case Attorneys V WASHINGTON UP —Presidehtelec't Eisenhower apparently will inherit the task of deciding whether itio press crimihal monopoly charges against five of the jargest U. S. oil companies. Th? Tru m a n administration, which’ originally Accused the companiejs of illegally joining a world Oil cartel, has now decided that it w-oulri diplomatically, risky to air the case in open coiirt. The oil companies have import* .tint holdings in the Middle East. Federal Judge James R- Kirkland frankly tossed the ball to the hew administration Tuesday when he ilulted that millions of -secret oil' company documents sought *by the government; need not be produced until Jan. 28. he said' he was ordering the . delay Vo the ini.‘oming administration I could deride wl»at to do about the . conroversial case. > ‘\ !, little ole lawsuit.” Kirkland lectured some 20 attorneys on bdth Sides for almost art hour after they Jailed to agree On President Truriari’s proposal to substitute civil I tjor criminal proceedings for the I sake df national security. Civil proceedings are brought merely to

.■'. j ■ ’ ■ V ■ > ■ \)i A great new inspiration for the automotive world will be on display ip our showroom tomorrow. It’s the 1953 Cadillac—the latest triumph of engineering and styling genius. (J Its beauty alone would place this new motoring creation among Cadillac’s all-time “greats”—for its innumerable exterior changes have made it simply breath-taking to behold. (J Its interiors, too, are dramatically new—offering the most beautiful fabrics and appointments ever available in a motor car. (J And for those who desire the ultimate in comfort, a wonderful new Cadillac Air Conditioner* is now available. (J I?ut the heart qf this new Cadillac’s greatness lies in its • performance—so extraordinary that it transcends any previous concept of how a motor car should act and handle. (J This magnificent performance

slop alleged illegal activities, while case also results in punishment of convicted; offenders; by [fine or imprisonment. Oil company lawyers* had la- [ beled tjhe Truman plan “blackmail” |i n d asked Kirkland to dismiss tt|e investigating grand jury, thus ki|ling the case. Chances For Brodie Twin Called Remote J Weaker Os Twins Is | Unlikely To Survive V CHICAhO UP —The ( loanees for survival by Roger Brodie, the weaker of Separated Siamese twins}, mighty k mote," an attending physician says. ' A rThe chances are even more re-• mate that he would be a normal I individual” if he does,survive, the doctor said, because Roger already has suffered permanent brain darn Rodntey Dee, who. was given vital cranial vein when separated] from his brother, shows no signs: cf brain impairment, the physician said. "He has! a gMry good chance of ] becoming d normal child and lead- : ing a norriial* tife,” if he lives, he said. L The boys, joined at the top of their heads, were separated Dec. 17 a: the University of Illinois Research and, educational

' | ' . v : • i comes from many sources. (J It comes from Cadillac’s improved Hydra-Matic Drive. (J It comes from Cadillac’s advanced Power Steering* —so marvelous that turning and parking and steering become almost a response to your wish.. (J And it comes —in even greater measure—from v Cadillac’s great new 210 h.p. engine . . . the dramatic climax of almost 40 years of unduplicated experience in the design and construction of V-8 engines. (J We sincerely urge you to see and drive this great motor car. Q It is offered in three new series—the beautiful “Sixty-Two,’’ the luxurious “Sixty Special” and the distinguished * “Seventy-Five.” There is also Cadillac’s new sports convertible, the Eldorado—the most glamorous and exciting creation in the whole of Cadillac history. (J Why* not see them soon ?

WEDNESDAY,

hospital. ’ - Rodney was given the saggltal sinus vein; wh|rh , drains blood front the brain, and njost of the protective di/ra mater shared by f the twins whem the Surgical team had to make a “survival ,of the fittest” decisitih. - ’ Roger never has regained consciousness since the historic daylong operation and has hovered constantly on the brink of death. , A pediatrician who has attended the twins regularly briefed newsmeh on the. brothers' -condition Mopday, with the stipulation that bls: name not be used. He said Roger may cjing to life for I months, perhaps years, or he \ maV die at any irfomenf. Fur ail “practical purposes.” he sai<f»_ J Roger's : condition was as preearious as L the moment he left the operating table. 12 MEN KILLED (Centlnuetf From Page One) from the plane were not burned, and one report said the men apparently died of j concus?ipri when the * plahe plummeted to the grolind, ■ ' The crash was the iWh military air disaster in the Pacific coast arga ln| two months, and brought the accumulated death toll to 288 for the period, j . The Newriort (11. I.) Mercury, a weekly newspaper founded in 1758. still is published. , Illinois has less waste land in i proportion to total areg than any • I other state; -