Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 47, Decatur, Adams County, 25 February 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

FUNERALFrom Pa Ke One) 1934 and a i Came the 1948 primary and Boh. was out. He was a shaft, ■ stocky man, like his father, wlft-.a waddling walk, and deadly debate like the old man who always, tHed to cut fils foes torbits. 4 LaFollette’s widow is former Rachel Wilson, whom h« married in 1930. He also leaves |two, children, Joseph '’Oden and? Brpnson Cttting. | The Younger Generation NEWBURYPORT, Masi UP — During the same month! 65-year old Henry' Little retired as a Boston banket* and his lot-.year-old father retired as president of a Newburyport bank. I

Tonight & Thursday | —o { OUR BIG PAYS! First Show Tonight'-6:30 , Continuous, Thur. froAi 1:30 [ BE SURE TO ATTEND! o —r - : —j-r° ' u ~ lb FRED ALLEN w'jJu. ANNE BAXTER OW JEANNE GRAIN djji FARLEY GRANGER CHARLES LAUGHTON OSCAR LEVANT MARILYN MONROE ’fcfjj KAN PETERS ' Jjd GREGORY RATOEF DALE ROBERTSON 'W| DAViO WAYNE RICHARD WIDMARK ALSO—Shorts 14c-50c Inc. It>x O—O— | Fri. <9. Sat. —Randolph Scott “The Man Behind thei Gun” , o—o I Sun. Mon. Tues. — Red Skelton in “THE CLOWN” R-

PH ■ PH ■ PIGS HOG FEEDERS— Honeggers SUGAR COATED Pig starter (actually a pre starter) pellets are here NOW, Pigs need these pellets the FIRST of their life; Pigs gain IbJ on 1.75 lb. starter. [This is Another Honegger step . toward n ! more prosperous community. Get limited supply NOW at any Honegger Dealer. - i Oerber Feed Store 5 Miles West,ij 1 North Coppess Corner

.'. 'J'. -•• |r'l'/ir > : Right-off-the-press.... A j I.V —R . f . V paily Edition of Decatiir Dally Democrat I J Home Newspaper” •' | 'On Sale At , : CjTY NEWS AGENCY ; • | 123 W. Monroe St. | s DECATUR NEWS STAND I 240 W. \ Madison St. Ttje above Stores are Open i i. EvenlnflS and Saturday Afternoon ‘ *|' • ’j- - /- • r IF EXTMA COPIES ARE WANTED, ~ PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY !

Shorts Raid Staged By Giggling Girls Reverse Pqnty Raid Staged At Toledo U. TOLEDO ’I'P-A’Thirty-five gigglling bobby soxersi s termed through a men’s dormitory at Toledo University Tuesday night on a\panty raid in reverse. The girls in blue jeans and parka jackets made a wh rlwind invasion of the three-story < ormitory. startling half-dressed mi le students and stealing pairs of shorts as they raced from room to room. It appeared to be an outbreak of the same fever that i touched off a of panty raids oh women’s dormitories at niore than a dozen Policies last spring. In this case, the mtn were on the receiving end. ’' The male victims at Toledo ' seemed to be more about, the damage to their dignity than to their wardrobes. They literally caught with their pants down. The raiders struck at bedtime when most of the students were either bathing or lounging iij their bedrooms in their shorts. “1 guess we were lucky}’ one student said. “They, didn’t try to get t the shorts we weie wearing.’ lEugene Schoch, manager of the dormitory, said the twirls seemed to come out of nowhere. He said he suspected they were celebrating a Victory in a high school bhsketbal tournament being held in the university fieldhouse nearby.: The girls raced through hallways on all three floors of the brand new million-dollar x Dowd | Residential Hall. One girl went straight to a student’s bureau, pulled out a pair W- blue striped shirts, tore ;them to shreds and tossed them op the floor. Then she skipped'out to raid another room. Another student said he slammed his door shut when he saw two girls heading down his corridor. ‘But they opened it again and shouted ‘fyoh’t worry, you’re too voung’ and. then slammed it and left,” he said. PROFESSOR - ,<Co ■ *• •»"rd From I‘nge Oar) a “brief brush with the party years ago.” x “It serves no purpose to get public testimony about things that occurred years ago and which- the committee knows all s about,’ll he said- People merely wbuld be hopelessly embarrassed.” , Rep. Bernard W. Pat Kehrny R-iN.Y. said he is opposed to “persecuting” anyone by , forcing them to tell in public that they Strayed into the party ah a youth but dropped, out on discovering its -real purpose. “We’re supposed to be investigating the extent of Communism in education today-not what it was 20 years ago," he said. | PRICE CONTROL (Continued Froth Pngf One) aluminum price increases. " Thecopper picture is “bopfused," he said, but-“there will pel increases." • . 1—U—l— If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results. Trade in a Good Town—Decatur!

Report Wilson Doubts Cut In Military Cbst Defense Secretary s \ Makes Appearance Before House Group WASHINGTON, u|' — Some members of the houtfe appropriations committee tptjhy pictured defense secretary Charles E. Wilson as blowing cold hri the prospect of big cqts in military spending. il ' Wilson appeared before the committee Tuesday to launch its closed hearings on fornfefe President Truinan’s military spending budget for |tn|e 1954 fiscal year starting nei|| July 1. One member said Wilson “looked askance” at committee talk of heavy slashes in the defense budget. , , ■ “He certainly didnrw point Out any place where I it dolqld be .cut, and I got the ImpresSlcwi he didn’t think it can be cut much,” reported this member, who!||eclined to he nanred. wi Another committee source insisted that some cuts will be made. source Wilson hasn’t been in office lijlng enough \to know yet, where anffiiihow much the defense budget cafl be pared without risk to national security. Republican leaders ! glgree that there is no way of balancing the budget without lopping Several billion dollars off the miH»ry spending figure. And President Eisenhower has served notice he will expose tax cuts, by ve»tib if 'necessary. until A. - budget is in sight. • |li Members of the Senate Banking committee, who had a |losed-door meeting Tuesday . witfl | .Secretary of the Treasury George' M. Humphrey and Budget Director Joseph M. Dodge, also came a,Way with a gloomy impression of the outlook for balancing the fiscal}; 1954 budget. . 11 Sen. A. Willis RolxCVtson (DVaa.) said Dodge made; pear it is “questionable” whethej.' the government can get out of IQiie red before ,1955 at best. |.® Chairman Homer EjlUijcapehart (R-Ind.) Agreed that thy outlook isn’t pleasant}' Sen. Paul H. DougSato (D-lll.) said he thinks there is |‘|U>out $5,000.0G0.00U of fat" in tjt|! $78,600,000,000 Truman- bijidgetij But he added that “it would iMke a heroic effort to cut it out: it nd additional cuts beyond this['could be made only at the expense of national security.”,. .■ Mj | '■ . —T-|| - Chiang Abrogates Pact With Russia \ 1 Signs Resolution ‘ Abrogating .Trraty TAIPEH, Formosa OT|—.President Chiang Kai-Shek Signed a resolution abrogating the 4949 treaty of friendshi||| and' Ballance between Natkinamit China and the Soviet ITnioh. Foreign Minister Yeh ; said Chiang’s action'.KiHps China the right to claim from* t>e Soviet Union !<any damage and ;Wss which -has resulted or may r e>4llt from the latter’s violations oMthe said ■ treaty ...” 1 j The abrogation "b«fcaßh|fei official when Chiang, affixed hi(s seal to the resolution adopted Tuesday by the Nationalist parliame'itt. Word of the actibn wIH be feahwl to thp United Nations for its records. Last year the I’. Mi genera’ assembly adopted by narrow margin a resolution chiding Russia for failing to carry Sput provisions of the treaty. s |i Yeh said tjie Soviet*® Union's “flagrant violations” caused ‘serious damages and suffering to Chinaj and th£®Chinese people.” i Obviously he was retiming to ftussian help given theJvChinese Communists! in their to win control of the Chinese Russia ha® carried out'l! “predatory and hostHe” policy! toward China, Yeh said, a pblicSd that is x still going on “with decreasing truculence and ruthlessness.” Abrogation at the treat# the way for Nationalist /China to claim not only damage® I rom the Soviet Union, but to real Bert her sovereignty over Outer the Manchurian ports o ; Dairen and Port Arthur and fl Manchurian railroad linking Caina and Siberia. , , ? ! PRESIDENT I ; <Co»tlnw«>d From Paae i >■«*> nection with i roposals to limit the, use of atratnic explosives. 1 I ; \' |f i . The baptismal name ( President Ulysses Simpson Grant was Hirman Ulysses, Cleveland’s full name was Stephen Grover Cleveland. Woods w Wilson’s first name was Thomas and Calvin Coolidge was* christened John Calvin.

■it ! ' r 5 - i ■ : \ DECATUR DAILY MMOCRaY, DtCAtUR, NDTANA

Ui S. Production if Hew All-Time High I Momentum Carries H j Over To This Year ;! 1 Washington up Last Tehf’s record production and, inciopie got this year ioff to a good according to the two federal keeping the closest ;wntcli bn Economic trends. ;jpi The commerce Idepartment Reported the value of total U. S. production last year hit a new.Htigh of $948,900,000,000, while the actual iiidivtidual and business incohie frjam ihiiij production climbed to, $290 ; - s<)(j.poo,'ooo. .The federal reserve «board p» governors at the same time s«it| allifypes of lending increased as a .WsWlt of bigger spending by biisiijesiii, government and the general 1 üblic. - - The momentum (tarried over Jpip tfie first of 1953. l|ast year’s increases in jncobie Wttfl i production were not as greftt dis the Increases in 195’, thl ctlipmefee department survey noted. And it is generally expected this year’s economic growth will be leksj rapid than 19^2’s.. j • the department said the over-all economic picture featured tilri IhrproVement in the relationship hjetW|6en the nation’s output and cfonhptner demand. It said two resialdsi were: “comparatively’.’ stablfe prices and gradual tjne; government’s economic controlpf ,' 7

Beith \suFveys said there was ah | unuhUal spurt in business activity during the last three months Os making up for a long midyear stretch which was not $o exbenslve. ; stjeel strike and other work stoppages had a "marked affect" bn .production, the commerce de Pertinent said, but there was a ‘rebound" in the fall as businesses added “substantially’’ to theii- decreased inventories. Flijss reserve board said a pickup |j|n consumer spending last spring touched off an over-ail expansion in which spread to many lines of business after! the steel strike was settled in late ind|viduals spent 92 per cent of thb income they had left after pay ing taxes. They saved the rest, or twicej as big a portion as before the.JKorean war started: Savings aecouhts at banks showed the largest ihcrease of all methods of _ ] Record state ’(Contlnnrd From Fine Ortel trend! toward decrease in recipients |!jand $300,000 from health board personnel appropriation’ beof’inability to fill jobs.; I ' ’> RojlJert Wyatlt, executive secretary’if the Indiana State Teaeljt ertt’ iAssociation, said acfion oh thp itiiinimum salaries raises of * 2ol> l>er year for now receiving minimums and a portion of that for thoss* now not at least S2OO above minf.mtpnlji * He,estimated 25 to 36 percent of Indiana's 27.000 teachers will win' pajt booets automatically. ottterfi; Wyatt said, will have to negotiate for raises locally. - H * ASSESSING » (<j!«»tinu»d From Plage Owe) and iriclude: » Fred Bittper, "Union &wiM»hip( August Selking Root: Ed Aumahn; Preble: Lester R. Adler, Kirk?: land: j Will Winnes (elected aM feesbori, Washington; Nimrod: McCdl)ou»h, st. Mary’s; Floyd MeyerA Blue Creek; Noah Neuen> sclkwander. ‘Monfoe; Eli Graber,?. Emil Stauffer, Hartford? WUm Mann, Wabash; Hugh D», Moser, Jefferson. The deputies assisting the above] trustees in the assessment will be, assigned to Washington. Jeffer-j son. 'Rinkland. Mon Foe and Wa-s bash> townships follow: \ f Charles Mashand, M. . Stults.l Bob Itobenold and Mildred Dar t wachteir. Washington township;: Sam fy. Fogle, Jefferson; AugustSchUickman. Kirkland; NathanSpranger and Gerald Reinkiug. >iohrbe: and Clyde Nihiser for; Wabash. I / ! A» the trustees left the brief.; me Whig, county auditor Frank Kiteon, distributed the allotmenu bt dog tags. | STATE SENATE I. jCbattaweg From Pose One) exempt organizations said*it would “weaken’’ the bill and open the door to organized gamblers. Some believed it would make the bill uhconstitutional. However, the senate sponsor, Sen. Q; W. Martin (R-Indiananolis) said liter that while the amendment crippled the bill, he felt the (Ttiesticm of constitutionality should be left up to courts] Marlin believed the measure, as amended, would pass the senate. He ateo believed the house, where it passed 81 fo\7, would concur in the amendments.- ’ T ~ l-j - A If yoj have something to sell or rooniis for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results. ■r® L ■ J I ■ i-:

Funeral Rites Held For Jacob Brehm Funeral services were held today for Jacob Brehm, 64,. brother-in-paw of Mrs. William Affolder of this icity, who died suddenly at his hbme Sunday in Van Wert. Ohio.! He was .employed in the Van Wert Contbin!ef factory. Surviving are the wflfp, daughter and’ two grandchildren,, House Continuing ;• . » Tax Scandal Probe I i■ \ ■ Favored Treatment j To Tydings' Cousin j WASHLYGTON. UP—An internal revenue official testified todajr ‘that a cousin of former Sen. Millard E. Tydings, IMMd., got fayorjed treatment in his government job although he couldn’t get aldng with any of'his co-workers. : Henry R. Peterson, ap official Os the alcohol tax division in New York.l told the story of Donald S.j Tydiri’gs to a house ways and pikans. subcommittee investigiti|ng’ (aX scandals. i Peterson said Tydings, the fbr1 * senator’s cousin, was transferred from Baltimore, to the Atlanta office at the internal revenue bureau in 1944. J While in Atlanta. Tydings engaged in almost constanf feuds $ it‘h his supporters, his own assistants and investigators', PeterQoh said. ' ' a ; internal revenue intelligense officers investigated one report that Tydings borrowed's3,ooo from an Atlanta liquor dealer. Peterson Added, 'but no disciplinary action slab taken against him. Before the committee session opened, chairman Robert W. l|-N. J<, said testimony would’ Wing mention of at least ,two former members of congress who allegedly used "pressure” to inflpbnce hiring and promotions In tijie'i internal revenue bureau. The committee recessed until Thursday without any sbeh showing. Kean told a reporter one fornier congressman would be named “fairly soon.” But he wouldn’t nrake-any prediction® on the flqor. ; Henry R. Peterson, Os the alcotax division’s New York office, was; called ag a witness at today’s m ould tell about aJleged irregularities In the division's Atlanta, GAj, office. Subcommittee sources ta|ttied these involved use of political pressure. t The house Tuesday granted the sjipxiomimittee the subpena powers foj* which it has l>een waiting for two weeks. Kean has said it wbuld have been useless to proceed in this particular phase of the investigation without authority to subpena documents and “unfriendly witnesses.”

Dollar for dollar ynu cax't; feat a ssjponiutc ■ \ A GEJVERAIj MOTORS MASTERPIECE ■ J ■■ ' ’ if / 1 ** . ... J l. x *■ fc—arj Solid Choice of Solid Citizens! , ■ ! r I • In its distinctive beauty, its size and comfort, its interior HN£ST w FMnm e« AT TH*IK lOWttT toil luxury and its all-around performance, Pontiac ranks high ' ?<Xe?t g ! America 8 qUaHty car B- yet il ’ 8 P riced i UBt above l “ e c®mpletely New B.a|.StFe«k Stylimg Thus Pontiac has an almost irresistible appeal t 6 people 2S * W Leeger Wheel bees who find it wise to keep, their automobile investment at a Peatlac's Great Daal-Baage Fewer TraGe* minimum—without sacrificing quality. It is thia unique _ [T combination of goodness and price which makes Pontiac Langer, Leveller, Reemier Bodies the solid choice of those solid who are money wise New Oae-Fieee Panoramic windshield and quality conscious. and Bear Window The reasons for this preference were never more obvious than in the 1953 Pontiaci But more important, it carries on ■ wonderful New Fewer steering* Pontiac’s tradition of long life and carefree, economical Speetaeular New Over-All FeHormanee dependability. r •opBomi« wt. Come in and see how this great new car offers Wonderful ENT r R C m s n«,m B rmß highways proof that ‘ Dollar for Dollar You Can’t Beat a Pontiac.” | awards contest DECATUR SUPER SERVICE 224 W. Monroe St. I " Decatur. Indiana

Jelke's Mother Is Witness At Trial ■i ’• Gives Testimony In Her Son's Defense NEW YORK. UP- The mother •of Ml no IF. Mickey Jelke testified today in her son’s' defense against charges of 1 coMpulsory prostitution and living off the earnings at case society vice girls. Sirs. Ralph Teal produced a list ci checks and other gifts of money which she said, she gave the 23-year-old heir between Janj. 1, 1951, and August, 1952. In that period the state charges young Jelke ami fi one-time movie Irit player; R-ieh-hrd Short, ran a plush vice ring that supplied night club millionaires with prostitutes at SSQ a date and up. Leafing through her records, Mrs. Teal testified she gave hlrft a morethly allowance of SIBO in January, 1951, and Increased it to S2OO aYjngnth .in Apjil-' Shortly thej*i>a&efc she collateral so that Thisr son could Ixirrow- SIOO a month from the Bankers ( Trust Company. . •? AW-' 5 ' ' ■ ' I “You mean you just guaranteed’ the loan, you didn’t actually givehim. the mdney,’’ Judge Francisi 1.. Valente interrupted. “That’s right. I furnished the; bank with satisfactory collaterals and they set up a loan arrangement. It gave him S4OO a month,” Mrs. Teal replied. Judge Valente has told the de-; sense to “quit stalling” or rest its? case. Judge Valente issued hik speedup or up orders-to (defense i attorney Carnuel Segal in a bitter s exchange at the close at testimony; Tuesday. F “You’re st^lin plaiq or-; dinary stalling,” said the judge. .“You’ve had three and a half days to prepare and you’ve done nothing. absolutely nothing,” He ordered Segal to be pared today “because If you're not going to direct you to rest your case.” ‘ l' Fire Department Call False Alarm When firemen arrived at l Shell Brothers plumbing and heating store. 9V5 North Second, yesterday at about 4:30 p.tn. —where they wer<p called by a woman livipg |n the neighborhood they found smoke alright, frem a cigarette that was being nonehalontly puffed on by a man on the premises. What the alert woman had ; seen was a blowtorch resting oh, the floor of the store blazing away—• which it still was doing •when the firemen shuffled off without so much as unlimbering an axej. Trade In a Good Town—Decatun

KOJIr mLjiCj ■ I ■■ <■ z» * * ''WiyiP j* r I - wI If 4 / VERY DIPLOMATIC INDEED is the appearance of U. S ambassador Winthrop Aldrich as he gets into his state coach at his Prince's Gate residence. to go to Buckingham palace in London to present credentials to Queen Elizabeth IL f International)

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* WE-DNDSDAY, FEBRUARY 25* 1953