Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 43, Decatur, Adams County, 20 February 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

BRITISH SAY (Coatlmied Frooi Page Owe) [chequer R. A. Butler will impress this view upon president Eisenhower and secretary of state John Foster Dulles’ when they -go to Washington next week. Eden ana Butler* will go with the knowledge British tears about American policy in the Far East are severely "straining AngloAmerican relations, the infonnant sadl. Hence, he added, they will try to seek a better understanding with the President and Dulles. He commented the British government

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admits frankly it Jias' no solution to ehding| the Korean war. - r WWI l . j BLIZZARD t Continued From I’ag« One! “zero-zero” weather conditions with winds up tO( 57 miles-per-hour piling the <now into towering drifts. The temperature, however, was only 13 degrees. Teh inches of snow was reported at Cheyenne, Wyo., on the western perimeter of the storm and five inches at Wausau. Wis., to the east. Heavy pelted eastern Ipwaras the storm moved eastward, and' h ear blizzard conditions were forecast for Michigan’s upper penlrtsula. i . j —f. * THIEVES (fcontlnaed From Page One) January 5, recently cooperated , with the Adame county sheriff’s department in the apprehension of Lewis M. Smith who was convicted in’ Adams circuit court of grand larcepy and given a suspended stnthnce. Smith had tried to peddle .soybeans he stole from the Central jSoya Go. at a Wren. O. grain: elevator, the act which proved to bp his undoing, the arrest apd conviction following. • ■ M ' .Huston, U. • S. Senator from ; Tegas before the Civil War, went to Washington wearing a vest made fi-qm panther skin.. Thei-e ire 58 billion tons of “reasonably Workable’’ coal reserves in Great Br tain, two billion less than

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Eisenhower*Thanks Byrd For Action | Expresses Thanks For Senate WASHINGTON .1® — President ’Eisenhower has personally ’thanked Sen; Harry F. ByrdJp-Va. for starting the senate figfl over confir-. ination of defense sectary X’harles E. "Wilson, it iwas learned today. Byrd was ; the senator to call to a which prohibits | government Jrom doing business witbptrms in which they have a privall? interest. \ln the controversy thawollowed, Wilson and threO top affies were forced to sell yaluabW stock holdings in ordef- to mn senate approval. \ ; . • Close friends of the senator reported today I that Mir. Eisenhower telephoned Byrd .Recently and thanked him warmly for raising the issue so that iwould be met at the outset of tjw new administration. 'JI® I Questioned abfeOithe incident, Byrd said he did nM care to comment. He has said however, that he raise®, the question because he did riotlwant the administration to getjibff to a bad start by violating an anti-corruptiop law.®. Wilson and depute defense secretary Roger M. Ky»s both were former officie.ls anal’ stockholders of General Copp. They agreed to sell theimpM holdings after Byrd legal requirements to the attention of the senate armeq servidqa cpramittAe. Air force tiecreta'ry Harold E. Talbott and i.rmy, secretary Robert T. Steven? also lifereed to sell stoick holdings in confipanies which do business with ttyipr respective departments. \ byrd, who was frequently at odds with attacked the so -mer president during last fall’ll presidential campaign and poi itedly, failed to endorse the candidacwof Adlai E. Stevenson. ' | I President Eiseihwer invited Byrd, -with a grouw of senato Democrats to unch at the White Hoqse Thursday. It. vias the senator’s first visit to the White House, on much an for seyeral yeai-s. • . sit Ili I ' . SHARLENE LEHMAN (Continued From H>«e Que) law makers,Mie Present—as the nails, framework, and bo forth. “The government the phited States is a construction organization! commissioned to build and maintain your lipase of freedom.” she dec ared. Jt he people elected by you to operate the Sawmills and furr ish th* materials for the framework the members of congress. wh| make the federal laws.” ' I,dr The ' speeches mad<S>|by the students Receding Misjs. Lehman were with vety feqO alterations identical with . Miskf Lehman’s, with the exception ijjjg the first speaker, Miss Hurtt, 1 “{whose talk dealt with the more tfqjitemporary aspects and .applications of the constitution. | Miss Lehman, | howrier, for all the simlliarity tetweejoher speech and the others, put, astone judge expressed it later, “Motion and feeling into it,” as indjfed she did punctuate seve-al points in her talk with appropriate iljlbstureß. The scoring of the. Jiidges was based on a point system. Twentyfive points is presence, pojise and personality'. I ,*'’Fifty for composition, accuracy hnd effectiveness. And 1® points foi\ oratory, “power to thrill, quicken and sompel.” ||l p \ Decatur commercial teacher Maynard Hetrick was official timekeeper—each talk tb be of a duration of 10 to 12 minutes, fwa points charged ior earltf• minute or' fraction over or Cathj eripe Weidler, Eecatur Macher, assisted Ed Jaberg as chairman. , Miss Lehman will with the winners of oratorical in the other eight counties of the fourth district at the| American Legion post 47, Fort Waijne, March ll - _ * h!■ ■ J’| • \- ’ Starting Earls’ 1 MIDDLEBURY, Vt UE —, Four teen children at a kluIdergarten were taught ,jpiing this winter. 11l

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Americanism Essays Witten By Students Americanism eslsaya, having as a title’ “llhe Survival of Our Liberties, 7, are being written by the junior and senipr h|gh sdhool itnol the county. Thlp project is \ Sponsored tyy the American Legkin s uxiliary and its main purpose is to have the students real-' l£ei|;hat It is becoming more apparent day by day for them to know Why anq how they wfll able to feeajteirvel these ireedoms, as they are the future Americans who will havepo preserve them. Frizes of |5, $!? and |2 are being offered l!or each of the two classifications'by the (local organization. Th4 winners of 1 this contest will district wlnners\pvill be'sent to the Sta|ej cphtest. Fifty points are given foil the originality land 1 content Os tie fesag and 50 poirits for the Ejnglish and fiction. No names of thp students or school appear on thje essays. | “ P \ Square Dance At Leqjori Saturday • Adams Post 43, American Legtqn, will| |told a square dance Saturday evening it the Legion on,, Madison strqqtl beginning kt 9:30 o clock. :'L’ ’ ' *“’ “T 1 ] ' Eight-Year-Old Girl Is Killed By Auto BOYNTON BEACH, Fla.. UP -4 Eligl|t-year-old Karen Merkel had bleed driven to school in the family aGtoibobije since she entered the first! grade two years ago. s She h^r mother to be permitted to ride a pchool bus with the other children. ' Her mother consented Thursday mbrnipg. As the child, joyfully crossed the highway the bus stop* she was struck by a car and died fe hour later, I ~—T - ? ; "■, URGE AG DEPT. (CftßtlUTd From there 1wa:» any real conflict tween’ths,t’and the school lunch progrmm purchases recommended bythe iHubcommit tee. \ p [ “The school*-lunch purchases would I not be extensive,” Hope said. : K He poted the agriculture department|4 Height turkey meat last fall and porkpast spring for use in thq school lunbh program. t’SOMe people feel that taking »vfeh|a small amount off the market wquld help prices.” he said. .Meanwhile, housewives continued to snab' up 39-cent a pound New Zealand steaks on sale' at scattered naarkets throughout the coun*. try. ..HoUce were called out to handle: crowds at a Columbus, Q., market Thursday and customers stoodi line in a drizzling rain outside: a Memphis, Tenn., market. “Tlie* fellows whd shipped that New 'Zealand beef are taking a real bfeting on prices,”^Hill tfld a irepb|ter. “We don’t expect any more io| It to shipped in.” ' His subcommittee has jurisdiction over Jivestock matters. It investigated the New Zealand imports jifter American cattlemen protested. Subcommittee members’ concluded that the beef is bqhig sold jttc a Joss in order to dispose iiOt. j “I tih|nk the problem’s going to. solve l|self," Hill said. “There’s no | amount of New Zealand beef hqre, and all of it must be sold sopn because It won’t keep much longer.” f ‘ Almut 75,000,000 pounds of New Zealandi' beef were brought into the United States by the Canadian government last fall after shipments; qf Canadian cattle and beef were embargoed because of an Outbreak of foot and mouth disease there. The; 'agriculture department has advised;the subcommittee there is no leyhjl barrier to further shipments ;t|rom New Zealghd but- no more ajre expected. Despite the New iepland shipments, total imports qt; beef and cattle from July i ovember amounted , to less tjiaja the amount imported In the sahie flve-month period of 1951. according to the department. indiiSt|ry spokesmen agreed with Ilill tllat most of the supply is gone; and Go. fra large diatributor»of it, saidj it ahd five other qiajor packers have sold between; ’ t>®.OOQL<X>O ajid' 60,000,000 pound*! since last September 1.

Draft Board Office Closed On Monday L- ' ' ' ' f' H' Decatur local draft board No. 1 announced today that the office bn North Second Street will not be open on the day of observance of Washington’s birthday, February 23. Neither will tne court hoqse be nor, the First State bank. Mother Os Jet Ace Opposed His Flying Once Pleaded With Son Not To Fly , U. nJ. ADVANOZ AliftBASE, Korea UP —I The mother of Am.ercia’s latest jet ace once pleaded with her son not to fly. . “She was mad at my father when he took me on my first airplape r|ide,“ said Capt. Manudr j. Fernandez, 27, Miami, Fla. “But I kept talking about flying so I much she finally gate in.” Fernandez becatne an ace Wednesday when he, shot down hliS fifth MIG and forced, anqtper io crash. He is the 26th jet' ice of the Korean war. I , “I’m going to try to write mother tonight and tell her whpt I’ve done,” Fernandez said. Fernandez took his first plape ride -when he was five With his father, Col. Manuel Fernandez, Sr. He started training fat 16 and enlisted in thu Air Force fqhr days after from high 'school.' j ' ' ;- L ’b ; J : ■ When he isn’t firing, he whittles model ajrplanes as a > Fernandez’ father is a flyer aikl commands a communications group at Donaldsqn j) Alr Force Base S. C. he used to shy jokingly of His son that he ‘roarqd like an airplane eigihe instead of crying like a baby.;’ \ Once emarked on flying as a career, Fernandez had little time for anything else. J ’ “All I thought about was; flying. I hadn’t heard of karllyn Monroe.” .He is not married; and has no steady girl friend. i ‘ “But don’t get a lot pf strange girls writing ta me,” he said. “I don’t \want to get mixed up ib anything like that.” \ On Wednesday, Fernandez and three other Sabre pilots spotted 32 MIGs to thleir left. Fernandez went after the first one, firing frobi only 200 feet ahd hitting the fuselage. “Smoke started poluring out of the engine section and pipceis were falling off,” he said, f'l dodged to the right to miss the debris'ahd puli up in a steep climb over him. i could see the pilot fumbling around in the cockpit, apparently trying to eject himself.” \ i _> 1 Fernandez rolled Hack on the .MiG’s tail and was almost blinded by the smoke pouring from the enemy jet.. “I closed on him and I kpew right thfen that I was an ac<i? I was only 200 feet away. I couldn’t miss him.” '■ : ' 1 [’ He didn’t. He fired another burst and' more Smoke poured froin the MIG as Fernandez rolled to the crippled jet. Then pilot bailed out. > Fernandez got his fourth plane a month ago. He Said he lost sleep thinking about when he would, get his fifth. But he said he '’never talked of it to his friends for fear they would laugh. j i \ I I I Draft Regulations May Change Soon Cut In Deferments To College Pupils K EAST LANSING, Mich., UP — Assistant defense secretary John »A. Hannah pays draft regulations may soon be changed to men deferred for college studies from escaping military service laitogether by getting mprried. r Hannah, here to attend a ■tit* board of agriculture meeting in hfs capacity as president of Michigan State College, said, “It seems to be generally agreed that no student should be deferred and then flowed .to make that deferment ap exemption by getting married qnd having children. [

Canadian Income Taxes To Be Cut 1 ! I 11 Per Cent Slash Effective July 1 OTTAWA, Ont t’P — Canadians welcomed today word from Finance Minister Douglas C.\ Abbott! that personal income taxes Would be slashed 11 per cent effective July 1. In a budgiet address to the bouse of commons Thursday night, Abbott also announced immediate' cuts in* corporation and nuisance taxes. The immediate tax cuts include a reduction of foqr cents a pack on cigarets, abolition of the $2.50 radio license fee, repeal of the stamp tax on checks and money orders and removal of the sales tax on newsprint, books and . magazines. Next July 1 personal income taxes Will be restored t|o the 1949-50 pre-Korea level which, Abbott said, was about 11 per pent below the tax rates for ( the year now drawing to a closet . Economic experts said the budget was one which might wqo voters with headlines but was unlikely to affect the country's overall economy. 1 On 1953 it was estimated that for a married man on a $3,500 salary 'with no dependents the reduction would amount to approximately sls. 4n 19&4 the amount savled would be doubled since the tax reduction 1 would cover the entire tax year. Considerable relief, however, was expected fOr corporations which under the old tax rate paid 20 per cent on profits up to SIO,OOO and' 50 per cent on anything above that level. The new rate will be 18 pei cerit on| ! r the first $20,000 and 47 per cent on additiohal profits. Biggest boon to the man on strpet was the reduction of taxes on cigarets. A pack of 20 will qow cosi 35 cents, a reduction oi four cents oVer the olb price of 39 cents a pack. The new budget als’o raised | in,dividaul exemptions from |6OO to $750 effective -on 1953 returns; permits S4OO deductions for dependents over 21 attending college: lifts the 10 per cent sales” tax from books, newsprint and magazines. ■ I y Rear Adm. Keliher Dies Last Njght SAN FRANCISCO, UP —Mem orial services for Rear Adm. Thomas J. Keliher, Jr., wartime commander of the Battleship Indiana, will be held here Saturday, the 12;h naval district announced today. Keliher, ab. a native of Boston, died Thursday night. Burial will be in Arlington National cemetery. l y.■■ • v - ‘ - 'J',?' J Jobless Pay Claims In State Decreased INDIANAPOLIS UP — A “continuing high employment level” in Indiana was credited largely today with again reducing the number of claims for unemployment insur-

SAVE FUEL—HAVE MORE COMFORT with a I AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER I Dry rir makes you feel chilly-moistened, humid fled air makes you feel wanner at less cost la fuel Adeouate humidity avoids the dry. scratch] feelint in your nose and throat—reduces souths, colds, sere throat, sinus trouble. feetM MM Am*mumM* oKliiuv' wWiwS wUU AuioniaUC riinniQiiNe y wnici snity If I s f®il invtitnwnt ifi homo comfort. Itl! solf-flusidac toss ifeininf. Corrosioi resistant, it is long laslhy. Moderate in cost, too SM* a fliaA flea Isamsa t iri 1 mm imrtsnnowi ir nomo cotmoru i ASHBAUCHER'S TIN SHOP Installers of Quality Heating Since 1915 HEATING—ROOFING—SIDING 116 N. Ist St. Phone 3-2615 , > L :i p |

ance last week. Director William C. Stalnaker of the Indiana Employment Security Division said 17,003 claims were filed, a decrease of 12 per cfent. from the last previous week. GOVERNOR CRAIG < 4t«»atii»ne* F?am Past O»e> partnients, since the present eom-. merep department—a Chamber of Commerce type Operation—would remain. : Craig said he will accept whatever portion qf his reorganization proposals survive legislative attack and indicated he will press lor th*' program in its entirety again; in 1955 if the present legislature trims, it too much. ! If you have something to sell or fooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add, It-brings results. ALLIED PLANES (Continurd From Page One) | - communications center, supply dumps and warehouses. There also were 360 single story buildings in the y headquarters area. ,

The Ten Commandments . \ 1 '' i ; J ' | ’ . of ? Good Business ——O oi A customer is the most important person in any busiI , ness. A customer is not dependent on us-\-we are dependent on him. j A customer is not an interruption of our work—he is - the purpose of it. A customer us a favor when he calls—We are not doing him a favor by serving him. A customer is a part of our business—riot an outsider. A customer is not at cold statistic—he is a flesh-and-blood human being with feelings and emotions like our own.' A customer is not someone to argue or match wits with. . A customer is a person who brings us his wants—it is our job to fill those wants. A customer is deserving of the most courteous and attentive treatment we can give him. A customer is the life-blood of this and every other business. —Courtesy of Milwaukee Sentinel Reprinted by Fairway Restaurant

Public Auction 1 will sell the following at Public Auction 8 miles East of filerne, Ind. on Road 118 (at Indiana-Oliio State Line) or 1 mile North of Chattanooga, Ohio on Road *49 th«n 1 mile West on Road 709 then % mile on- ' , Monday, February 23,1953 at 10:00 A. M. Indiana Time 22—REGISTERED ANGUS CATTLE—22 2 Registered Angjus Cows with calves (1 Heifer, 1 Bull); 5 Registered Angus Cows due to calf from April let; 4 Registered Angus Heifers 18 to 24 mo. old, Bred; 5 Registered Angus Yearling Heifers, Open; 1 Heifier & 1 Bull Angus Calf, 6 moj. did; HERD BUl»L “Eillenmere Buxom Boy, 1394706” born Sept. 29, 1950, traces to “Dr. Briggs” Angus Herd, Columbia City, Ind.; JR. HERD SIRE “Kreigh’s Delmas 1450934” born July 28, 1951 —This is a complete dispersal of the Bollenbacher Herd of 14 Head and consignments of 8 Head from the Wilbert T. -Baker Herd. HEALTH—Calfhood Vaccinated and will have Blood Test within 30 aye of sale. 22—HEAD DAIRY CATTLE—22 Holstein Cow due with 3rd calf by day of sale; Red Cow with calf by side; Jersey Cow 7 yr. old, calf hy side; Roan Cow due with 2nd calf In June, Milking; Guernsey Cow 5 yr. old, milking; 5 Holstein Helfers -with calves bjk side, milking; 4 Holstein Heifers 18 mo. old. Bred; Guernsey Heifer 18 mo. old, Bred. Cattle are T. B. and Bangs Tested and Calfhood v Vaccinate I. , MILKER A STANCHIONS—Farm Master 2 Unit Milker with Pipe & Stall Cocks; Stanchions and dividers for 10 cows. SHEEP—4 Ewes due to Lamb in April. 2 TRACTORS AND IMPLEMENTS ■ 1942 Farmall ! “H” Tractor completely equipped with Power Lift Cultivators; 1938 .Farmall F-20 Tractor on rubber; John Deere 2 bottom 14 inch Tractor Plow; Kfinn. M. 2 bottom 14 inch Tractor Plow; 2 bottom 12 inch mounted plow for Ford or Ferguson; IHC No. 9A Tractor Disc; Bradley 7 ft. Tractor Disc; 2 Section Tooth Harrow; Sarlent Manure Loadet for “H” or ‘M”; Cultimulcher; 1947 Allis Chalmers 5 ft. Combine; 1947 Case Pick Up Baler; IH£ No. 25 V Tractor Mower, 7 fL; IHC No. 230 Tractor Corn Planter with Fertiliser Attachment; Rubber Tire Wagon with 14 fl. bed; Implement Trailer with ’SO x 20 Tires; 2 Wheel Trailer; 24 ft. Grain Elevator; Grain Blower; IHC 10 inch Burr Feed Grinder; End Gate Seeder; Round Sdlf Hog Feeder; many other articles. « '■ J FEED —400 Bales Clover Hay; 250 Bales Mixed Hay; 500 Bales Wheat Straw; 300 Bushel Clinton 59 Oats; Clover Seed. CHICKENS—I6O Honegger Leghorn Pullets, laying good. HOUSEHOLD GOODS \! Sellers Kitchen Cabinet; Utility Cabinet; Dining Room Suite; Kitchen Table and 6 chairs-; Davenport; Mapld Dresser; Chest Drawers; Baby Bed, complete; 2 Heating Stoves; Range Cook Stove; Glass Door Cupboard; Single Bed; Lard Press; . Good Kitchen Sink with 15ouble Drain Board; 2 Large Bay Window and other windows with Storm Sash and Screens; Several Used Doors; Jacuzzi Deep Weil Pump; Cistern Pump; Copper Wash Boiler; Many other articles. TRUCK—lnternational 1944 —IX4 Ton Truck with extra good Grain Bed and Stock Rack. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. -j DELMAS (Mike) BOLLENBACHER, Owner' ■. | Roy S. Johnson, < Ned C. Johnson — Auctioneers Kenneth Hoblet 'A . E. W. Baumgartner, Berne Lunch By St. Paul Ev. Reformed Church - { 17 20

FRIDAY, FSBRVART 20 1933

The Communists sent up at least four jet fighters to intercept the medium bombers. They made firing passes, but scooted back to Manchuria wherr marine , night fighters were called in. “A 'pinpoint of light from a Communist jet exhause caught my eye." said Airman 1-C Jean J. Andre of 224 S. Walnut St., Hartford City, Ind. “When we spotted four ' more exhaust flames, we called* in our friendly fighters. The enemy, jets quickly darted back across the Yalu.” XOTICF. OF FIVAI, SEITLEMEXT OF KSTATK >o. 471TJ Notice Is hereby given to the creditors heirs, and legatees of William D. Zimmerman, deceased to appear in the Adams; Circuit Court held at Decatur. Indiana, on the 9th day of March, 1963, and show cause. If any why the FINAD HETTLBMPJXT ACrOVXTS with th«estite of said decedent should not he and said heirs are notified to then and there make proqf of heirship, and receive their distributive shares JRXNIE McALHAXY z Administratrix Decatur. Indiana February 1.1. 18a3. Attorney KERD L. LITTERER FEB. 13—20 I