Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 37, Decatur, Adams County, 13 February 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

CHINESE REDS T <Contlnnrd From I’nce Onfl 45-man Communist supplyTStejn. Rain and overcast restricted visibility the length of the Korean peninsula during the morning, giving the Reds a chance to move vital: supplies south to the battlefront. tighter-bombed ; were grounded during the morning. Sabrejets swept MIG alley for the. Russian-built fighters, but reported up contacts up to noon. i Change Violation • . PANMUNJOM, Korea’ UP — The Communists twice[ ar<»used United Nations armed patrols today of violating the neutrality of the Panmunjom truce zone. The accusations were made in a letter delivered to Col. Willard B. Cgrlock, U. N. senior liaison officer. The Reds charged an unoccupied\ house and two woodsheds were set afire and small arms were discharged in the neutral area last Tuesday. They also claimed Communist guards were fired on Thursday in the same area and that One was wounded superficially in the hand. ’i '■ —-—: ‘ . The Dominion of Canada was established, July 1, 1867. >

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Pat Ward Continues On Witness Stand Reveal Beatings \ At Hands Os Jelke - ' U ;A ■ ' NEW YORK UP V- Green-eyed > Pat Ward said today shs had suffered scores of beatings at the handp of Minot! F. Micjcey Jelke, but never left the 23-year-old oleo heir because shie was "Very touch in love with him and afraid.” She walked into criminal court building oh the armof hey attorney J. Roland Sala, to take the stand for another; day of cross-examina-tion, but paused |in the cbrridbr for a 15-minute interview with reporters, who still are barred from covering the detailed testimony (if the vice case.\;' • ! ■ , I [ Miss Ward, who h the state’s major witness against Jelke on a nine—cotint indictment ? charging him with compulsory prostitution and living off theiprdceeds of [prostitution. saiid [witnesses to the beatings |n several occasions. She said ! they happened many othet tiino when she and Jelke were alone,. Jelke defense ckninsieT Samuel Segal said his cro&s-exaininatidn of Miss Ward at today’s session Would bring out a‘ “highly unusual phase in this girl’s life/’ He refused td be specific! and there was some chah.ee details of her testimony might never be kndwri. An order byjJudge iprancis L. Valente bars press pnd! public from the trial. / The 19-year old Miss Ward, who ha s sworn she was a. case society call girl at Jelke’s urging, id the state’s star witness laggirist the oleo heir. Os p ne counts in grand jury indictment J£lke,, seven are based ol the prosecution’s charges he con; niitted < ojnpulsory prostitution with Miss Ward and Jived off her ei rnings. The story of her testimony so far has leaked out through her own attorney, J' Roland sala, .arid defense attorneys!! Segal and Martin Benjamin. Thjby s£id she had admitted knpwljjgii some 65 to 70 of New York's'gayest garment district millionaires [jknd shpw busi ness playboys, matey of them married. and had received from $35 to SIOO a night fdr dates. withUtem. . 11 ; - 4U_. J. HOUSE PASSES (ConttnueJ Frrim Piut.Ono dial, one of the onti Crais Republicans, si|id: i “I never thought live to see the dijy the Republican party would fall in .th j fodtstepfs of the New Deal.’’ 1 . Earlier, .the house kept alive a bill to deny free hunting and fishing licenses to lundreds 'of thouands of Hoosier kar veterans. \Trade in a Good Town —Decaturl

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Health Officers Os Midwest In Meeting I SPRINGFIELD urft- About 200 midwest health officers will meet here for 'their annual seminar m venera 1 I disease |pntrol hex \ Thursday and Fridajv Authorities from armed i forces and from •}•’ following states will lie' preseri Illinois, Indiana, Oi lb, Kentucky, Minnesota howa, Michi? gan, .Missouri, Kaid ip, Nebraska; North Dakota and i?>uth Dakota, i ■ |■■■ p I Too Much Sei recy On Public Business ’ ' Is I Newsmen Cj hplain On Capital Conditions WASHINGTON liß X- Important figures in the Eisenhj fjver administration ar|e' persuAd| q there haw been altogether too [ riuch secrecy about public busine iy since the Republicans took offi ip more than? three weeks ago. i 1 j ‘ They are hoping f! At President (Eisenhower will soon! mss the word to his cabinet that Hall right \o give out some information adopt *what the new adm* tjistratibn is; [thinking and doing. 4 One highly-placed Official suggested that Mr. Eis qhower may begin literally on his j h*n doorstep, by authorizing morewpews -aljont; cabinet meetings and jilmilar White! House confabs. One pW posal under* study is to tap one ,u rticipani in! each White House ma ting aAJtliej man who will talk to Reporters on the way out.-Standard ractice now is for all the confer# >'s to hurry I out, muttering “no comment/’ There has been \orfe ’ one ntiWs conference with a[ to|! official o*j the Eisenhower aii ninistration since it. took office tiki ti reporters 1 are beginning to complain against tnfe shut-out. [1 ‘ been satisfactory htei etofore in I, some instances wltAilv unsatisfactory in others, na{tibly in the justice department vijibre repprters were frustrated a®every level during but the lasiciew months of the Trtiman adminjl trafion. ,As events proved, therlj had boen something to hide. m All reporters are unhappy. Those covering, -the i’iiiterior department say secretOy Douglas McKay is available his office or by telephone at 1 time sos any questions <which ‘jmay have come up. jj Defense secretary Hrharles IR. Wilson [ had a “get t<cqMaintbd” meeting with reporte d? but countered questions with a “This is no press conferenc<|! Secretary of treasuring George pl. Humphrey has ducked inferences i But treasury repOrtem say they are getting more ( amkjbetter explanations from subordinates now than they o’te'r got before. ' || I\’ Secretary of \ labor SlMartin P. Durbin has never repliaijl to the request made to him for ® news conference. Most of the Xilhers have indicated they would d|ave , news conferences — some titrn*. n Traffic Fatalities Decline In Indiana INDIANAPOLIS Up||- Traffic fatalities on Indiana Mtehways declined during the mAh ending Feb. 11, Governor CiWg reported today. , iO He said there were deaths as compared to. 85 during the same period a year ago. CraM said that was “encouraging.” He conferred with Police Supt. Frank A. and announced troopers will patrols of rural areas an4%bttempt to pinpoint particularly ffifdangeroiis spots where many occpr in an effort to cut thi|gtoll. \ FIRE Obi (Continued From 6ne> Tile paint'was shearecfland portholes in the forward of the Superstructure were shap ered. The flash fire blackened cpmpaniotiways. |

' • r j i ’-Ob h \ wr W i ■ijK nlentine Dance i| at ihe Vjl ' MOOSE SATURDAY FEBRUARY 14 ■(jiFTS FOR LADIES

DECATUR DAILY pEJMOORAT. DBOATUfc, INDIANA

CHiang Makes Tour Os Formosa Bases i Hold Conference On Move Against Reds \TAIPEII. Formosa UP —General ssimo Chiang Kai-Shek toured Nat pnalist army, navy, air force and marine training centers op today before returning t td his beadquarters for conferences on action against the Chiniese Reds. Thp conferences opened here a week after President Eisenhower ordered the ,U. S.; Seventh Fleet td slob-l shielding the Chinese . Communist mainland from the’Nation! alisth. U ( Chiang cbnferreij at [length, with his tbp and talked ,td| thetti; in the Natiolanist ranks!. IjMf first; reaction hbre tb the interview whi[ch he. gave Unftied Press staff correspondent Frank H. Bartholmew was, cen! tered on Chiang’s statement that the Nationalists “cannot tb wait until we are fully prepared.?! THls appeared to mean action of sbmp kind was contemplated soop, but,ftot a major locale. \ [ Military and diplomatic officials throjlghout the iyorld generally agreed with Chianghs statement as expressed to Bartholomew that, his foirefes toddy are ; in no shape to laubtjh a major invasion of the Red Chinese mainland. There .also was general ’ merit in Takyo, Washington. London! and the United Natk/ns that! an invasion by Chiang’is National ists,! Unsupported by [any other t’riited Na; ion’s member, was nat, ari affair for the IT.l T . N. . HpWever. there was a division of opinion on Chiang’s statement Jhat* his forces could invade the mainland without drawing the Soviet Uriioli into a war in support of. the Chinese Communists. [A Officials in London would - nojt ! eombient on Chiang’s I that the Soviets would not support [ the (Chinese Reds in a mainland invasion. in tihe United Natfdps soine officials feared ’ Im mediate intervention by the Soviet 1 Union. I. '■''■'i The Chinese Nationalists at the, Unitdb Nations led a group which was of the opinibn that since Rus Ma had girein the North Kofeatr and Chinese Communists proven and continued aid in the Korean war, tVithor t being branded an ag ; the United could do the skme for Chiang in a mainland invasion. Anwrlean congressional and mflf;taty offiefh Is fell in with' Chiang-’s l e did not have adequately eqhipped forces now tp, invade the piainland. i I Some of them felt Chiang’s statement 1 added up| to an indirect teqiffest tor hi are (American aid. Britain Mobilizes New Huge Airlift Sandbags Rushed To Bettered Sea Walls I A' \ ■ ■ p IV u LONDON UP — Britain mobilized giant airlift from eight European nations and the pnited Stattsploday to rush lit.OOO.OMi sandJaags to its battered East Coast sea spring tides reach a hew peak in Sea.' : Ro|i|l airX fjorce transports and commercial joined in Jhe inprecedented effort' while special trains, trucks and even tateis waited it airports tb speed the empty landbdfcs to thousands of troops, police- apd volunteers along the nouthiof the Thames northward to Norfolk. The ;ides will hit Sunday light,'knd many dikes are breached. The, (foreign pfflce Thursday night lashed an appeal to forelgh capitals sot- sandbags as an “urgent. precaM- ! ion” (.against a -repetition of the 1 raged jr; early I his month when 535 Jriton# died in mammoth floods and marine disasters. In Washington. U. S.. secretary Os statb John Foster Dulles said uhiptnimt/ of sandbags were being •eadied and many of them shoujd each England by’ Saturday. .The appeal for sandbags also was

»• -1 ■ .-<r. , VT [! ■ • ■ i ■ sent to Switzerland, Portugal. Denmark, Germany, Belgium, France, Italy and Norway. Benson Stands Firm On Price Supports - Angry Protests On Support Attitude WASHINGTON UP rr Secretary of agriculture (Ezra T. Benabnetood his ground today in the face of a new chorus of angry congressional protests about his attitude toward farm price supports. Democratic and Republican lawmakers from farming areas were Ftfll sizzling over; [Benson’s statement. in a St. Paul speech Wednes* day night, that government' price supports should be used only as “disaster insurance,”, and not to encourage "uneconomic 7 farm ductionSen. James O. Eestlqnd D-Miss. predicted in a speech prepared for sepate delivery thalt the Republicans will be plowed under at the pojls in 1.954 if the| administration foresakes the po|ini of supporting major, farm crops at 90 per cent of [ parity. , “The farmer is [going to have pr|ce supports," he declared, “and he will vote for the party wEich papses In obvious answer to the congressional criticism* Benson a grpup Os cotton Industry leaders Thursday that he still thinks the right solution to falling farm prices is to get v back to “tlie operation of a free market.” v fWe wjlll support farm prices," he said, “as prescribed by law.” ; present law, which expires in 1354, requires JBlenion to support the basic crops -4 corn wheat, peanuts, tobbcco and rice—at 90 per cent of parity; He must support six other designated crops at [75 to 90 per cent of parity. He cap, but does not to, support other crops. Benson said he reserves the right “tb examine the ni4chanics of the prpgrams while wp fulfill the support obligations tp she full." He also pledged, he ‘‘to work ‘o achieve full parity for the farmers in the market placb4-by the operation of a free markbt.” Sen. Clinton P. Anderson N. M , a former Damocrajtic secretary ; of agriculture, was Ore of the few congressmen to defend Benson. [He said Bendon apparently! does no s intend “to l>e led into extreme high level supports which would add surpluses/’ but favofs “flexibility” in price supports. I I

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HS&aWM r \ - B ■ I .T. GEN. Charles L. Bolte (above) will become commander of U. S Army forces tn Europe on retirement of Lt. Gen. Manton S. Eddy March 31. Bolte is 7th Army cpmnander in Europe. (Intematibnali Bring Your Ambulance TORRINGTON, I Conn.. UP-An ambulance driver, William- Hoysradt, transported a woman, from a hospital to her home, and then strained his back moving her bed. He was helped back into his ambulance and taken to a hospital. Fur Piece FALLS CITY, Neb., UP r-Nor- [ man Aue, 18, got himself a red fox i pelt the hard, way. He andl. his brother James, saw the fox trying to climb the sides of a gully. When the fox saw it couldn’t make the climb, it tried to run between the two boys but Norman grabbed the animal and killed it with a knife. SHARP BOOSTS (Co»tl«nK Fr»m Page One) parts) of the country. In addition to crude oil, petroleum products other than homeheating fuel oil. newsprint ’ and* ecrap metals, he also decontrhlled prices of poultry and eggs, soaps, fats and bils other than oleomargarine, tires and all other rubber products, [construction services —- but not materials, pre-fabricated housing;, lead, zinc and tin and other ;metals, paints and var : nishes, iron ore, all paper, window glass, apd glass and tin containers. \ | - ;; i ■ The price agency had planned to decontrol milk and save petrbleum and its products for later. But, informed sburces said, lastminutq White House pressure put' l oil apd all its products except; home-heaQnfc oil | [on Thursday’s 1 list. j ’!'■■■ \ ,

The milk decontrol was postponed because price officiate asid botl} milk and gasoline prices are expected to go up.| Their prograpi is designed to ease the impact of price hikes by spacing them opi between pow and April 30. SCdUT BANQUET (Ceatlnwed From Fo<e Ooe> district (Adams, Wells and Jay counties)., of the Anthony Wayne a _£ olint Speaking briefly

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1953

W«re Louis Raatetter, of ,Fort Wayne, president of the Anthony I Wayne council; It. L. Van Horn, area executive, apd Bill Phillips, district worker. The speaker was introduced, by George Bair, chairman ramie ing and artivkies for the Dec&tur st'outs. All scouts were led in tire ■scout oath by Niland OchsenWboutmaster of the I>egion troop, and an interesting demonsrration on electricity was given by Jack Lawson.