Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 2 March 1953 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Says Butter Surplus 'Should Go To Gl's Suggestion Is Mode By Dairy Spokesman < WASHINGTON, UP -Adairy . industry spokesman suggested to congress today |t would be nice to let CH's e<M> some of the government's Gutter before it turns ran, cid in storage. y . I Charles- W. Holman, secretary ot Itha National Milk Producers Federation. told the senatje hanking committee that butter boyght by jthe fgriculpre department in price Ruppert operations Should be sold to the armed fortes at prices competitive with margarine. > ' “It is inconsistent and\ 'unnecessary that one arm of our governin ent aaeumulate abundant supplleg of dairy products while the armed forces are buying imitations because they are cheaper,” Holman argued. \ The agriculture department has >ought about 88,000.060 pounds of . i surplus "butter |n the last three months. It probably will buy a'lot more, since secretary pf agriculture Kara T. Benson ruled last , H' 66 ' 11 t^at dairy price supports will

,FMunU CHUDMN For coughs and acute bronchitis due to colds you can now get Creomulsion specially prepared for Children in a new pink and blue package and be sure: (1) Your child will like it. , (2) It contains only safe, proven ingredients. L , (3) It contains no narcotics to disturb nature’s processes. (4) It will aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed throat and bronchial membranes, thus relieving the cough and promoting rest arid sleep. Ask for Creomulsion for Children in the pink and blue package. CREOMULSION ; FOR CHILDREN ] <ei eves Ceughs, Chect Colds, Acute BroncHtii

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Results Announced for X-Ray Program Mrs. W. Guy Brawn, . secretary of the Adams county tuberculosis association, announced today the results of the county-wide x-ray program- carried on here during the„week of February 2p.. Mrs. Brown. said that, of the 995 > x-rays that iwere two are sqppected of showing TB and nine others of having pathologies. Individual result*, staled Mr*. Brown, "jrere in the mall today and probably have already been "celved. ______ Observes 30th Year In Garage Business Clyde Butler, jyst returned from a vacation in Iporida, today celebrated hi* 30th anniversary in th* garage business, the oldest in consecutive years in Detatur. Butler first started with Herbert Kern and they wpw partpess for 10. years. They started in the Jiuildlyig now occupied by the Mies bowling alleys, and the Butlep gatage is now located op Bopth Firs|t street. ' r ‘ A;X" ■X, I ’■ X' '

be kept fdr another year at 90 per cent of parity, highest level permitted under farm law. Holman’s proposal that the armed forces be allowed to! buy the surplus butter at bargain rates came as two Minnesota Republican congressmen were belaboring the military for serving margarine to troops. > if Rep. August H. Andresen, chairman of a house agriculture sub\ committee |nveatigatihg dairy surpluses. said his group is “looking into the matter” apd h as ordered the defense department to supply “all the facts and figures.” Hep. H. Carl Andersen, head of the house agriculture: appropriations subcommittee, aaid- he already has lodged a complaint at the Pentagon. „ The navy is prohibited by law from serving margarine as a table spread, but (here is no such* ban in the army arid air forice.

GOP Cutting Dotoi Governmenf Payroll Slowly Cut Down On Federal Rolls'l| I WASHINGTON. UP —j Republican congressional leaders'wd after a White House call tojiay they expept to pass Hawaiian statehood apd tidelands legislation* jin about three weeks. i jj] I They also expect President Eisenhower to submit no later than next wpek a reorganization plan which would raise the federal security agency to cabinet level. —' A Prospects for the Hawaiian statehood and tidelands|qijil bills were discussed - by house J;ripbaker Joseph W. Martin, Jr., (Maris.) and senate Republican leader * Robert A. Taft (O.) after the President’s regular Monday morning )i conference with Republican congressional leaders. \ •! , Sen. Hugh Butler (R-Neb ) and Rep. Chauncey Reed chairmen of the senate and committees handling the tidelapds legislation, sat in on the coriference with Mr. Eisenhower. ; “ Martin expected the house judiciary committee to report out the Hawaiian statehood hill Tuesday. Taft said the senate cotpniittee expects to approve statehood for Hawaii this week and “it will take a week to paps’* the bill tri make the islands the 49th state, p Mr. Eisenhower, back from four days of golf at August, Gai buckled down in earnest today tp work. The meeting with the legislative leaders was the fiyst order business. r i i -Martin said the off-shpre 041 hill is expected out of committee this week and it would be taken) up an the bouse floor “reasonably >soon.” Taft said the group also'discussed the idea of continuing aj, presidential council of economic advisers. He said one econoitlib adviser will be appointed and;senti-

M 0 • . * v . * ■ ' ! THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA \ -*•- i- - - - - - - -. '

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6 Elk. JAMES A. VAN FLEET, retiring Commander of the Bth Army, and his j wife are greeted ,by Mayor Fletcher Bowron on their arrival in Los Angeles for a gala reception. Mrs. Van Fleet holds a large bouquet of **birds of paradise,” the official flower of\the city. (International)

ment iseamed to be leaning in the direction of keeping it a three-man operapojas was created by the full employment law of 1947. , , 1 - + "“' Adult Farmers Class Meets| Tbis Evening A representative of the McAllister company of Indianapolls; dll speak to the* adult farmers class at Adams Central high school at 7; 36 o’clock this evening. - | . Two f jms, “Power for protection” riindl “Farmer does the job,” will a|iown. .■"**■ < 1 " 1 - , \iiefoi® washing ties, baste them carefully to prevent the lining or padding froni| becoming lumpy. Remov^ ; the basting thread before ironing! the! ties.

Vishinsky To State Latest Korean Policy Russian Slated To Answer Challenge Os U. S. Delegate UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. UP— Spviet Foreign minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky notified the United Nations today that\ he will be ready this afternoon set forth the 'Kremlin’s latest policy' on the Korean war. The gtiizled Moscow mouthpiece was scheduled to answer the' challenge flung down by United I States Ambassador Henry Cabot liodgei Jr. to disprove that the Rpssia'ns aye keeping the Korean t war going. Lodge cited “10 facts” lirit wriek and dared Vishinsky to attempt to disprove them. Vishjnsky notified the U. N. this I morning he would speak Ist this afternoon’s session of the general I assembly’s political committee. ** He pumped his satellite.' Polish foreign minister Stanislaw Skrxesi Bewski. off the speaker**; list. £zech foreigin minister Vaclav Da- , yid, scheduled to speak this morning. also canceled, leaving Vlshin-, Bky a clear field to state the CoinFiUnist case. U. N. diplomats expected no encouraging deviation in the Soviet Iftie. But they looked forward .with interest to Vishinsky's pronouncement anyway, particularly I (because they believed it might contain some new move cagey Soviet campaign to arrange ian ‘ meeting. \ The U? S„ anxious to get on with, the iassembly, started prodding |he Kremlin delegate last Thursday when he made known he would no| be rriady to speak until this, week at the earliest. Sentiment was crystallizing meanwhile to open debate this week o,li Secpetary-Gendral Trygve c Lie’s controversial policy of oust; ing American U. N. employes suspected of subversive activities. After that comes the importair taslc of pickings a successor to ' Lie. ■ \ , General , assembly president , LesteV Bi Pearson is a leading ’ candidate to become the new sec- ; reary-geheral. Pearson’s chief ' competitor in the race is Brig. ■ Gen. Carlos P. Romolo, of the Philippines. The issrie of Lie’s ; successor is closely related to the personnel controversy because the outcome may hinge in part on what the assembly decides a U N. chief should or should not do in the future. I If you'have something to sell or roopis for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.

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Methodist District Rally Tuesday Night Missionary Speaks A| Auburn Meeting I The Rev. F. Olin Stackwell, miaslonary of the Methodist church who was held on trumped-up charges of espionage by the Chinese Communists for 23 months, will be the guest-speaker at a Ft. Wayne district MettwaHst rally at the Aubum church Tuesday at 7:80 p.m. Rev. Stockwell will speak on his experiences both as a missionary and as a prisoner. Much of the time he was held in solitary confinement. He was released bV train into Hong Kong Nov. 17, 1952, and two weeks later rejoined his family in Chicago. Rev. Stockwell will also tell what life was like among the Communists 1 after the taking pyer by them of China'ri government. A missionary in Chengtu, West China, -when the Communists overran that city, he. could have fled before the entering army but instead, , elected to remain and attempt to carry pn his work. Soma months later he was arrested and after a Communist trial with no chance to defend himself, was sentenced to prison. Among other punishments, he was given a course im-“mind purging” and in Communist indoctrination. * An Indiana church was supporting Rev. Stockwell and his work in China. It was the Wayne Street Methodist church in Fort Wayne A native of Perry, Okla., Rev. Stockwell is a member of a Methodist family that has given missionaries to China, India, Burma, and Argentina, and a nuipber of ministers to the United States. He was educated at Oklahoma Ci*y college, Ohio Wesleyan University and Garrett Biblical Institute. He was ordained to the ministry tn Oklahoma. . iKnterijjg the missionary service of the board of missions of the Methodist church in 1925. Rev. Stockwrill whs assigned to China where he engaged in evangelistic work in the Foochow conference of Fukien provience. Later he transferred; to West China and carried on evangelistic work. He was considered one of the outstanding missionaries to China in this, field and had successfull:' built up the Christian community and ponstituent of his district when the Communist civil disturbance. began. Fred Busche, Decatur, the district lay leader, will preside at a laymen's fellowship supper which will precede the evening rally. Senator Morse Hits At Foreign Policies PHILADELPHIA UP — 3en. Wayne Morse Zl-Ore. charged Sunday the “get tough" foreign policy of the Eisenhower administration has greatly increased changes Os a third world war. . “It is now 60, to 40 in favor of World War III," Morse said on the teleVision p[ograih Junior PTeas Conjference. He said his estrangetnent from the Republican party, which he bolted during last year’s election campaign is more pronounced than ever, I -i Morse said the recent! European Tip of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Mutual Security Administrator Harold Stassen was “a dud.” X. •..‘fj r ui’.‘ip?4 ’ Vtf. l.\i. ’ a House Ways gnet f*,eans 5-40-cqmmittee us Washington. He tp|d the probit* that Donald Tydjngs. cousin of former Sen. Millard Tydings. of Maryland, escaped disciplinary action for many irregularities as an employee of the AjriohM Tax Division. MacFherson explained it this way: “It you have a friend in court, you ean j Wt about get by anything.* d~

Youth Charged With Assault And Battery Ralph Sell, 19, 1626 Krick street, is in the county jail awaiting action on a charge at assault and battery on his fathe.r, Ora Sells, 85, who, it is reported, “got into a quarrel” with his son, who is alleged to have struck him. The altercation occurred at the Sells home last night at about 8:30, police reports state. | • . -Sell was arraigned in J. P. court last night and a plea was entered of not guilty. Floyd Hunter, justice of the peace, set bond at >SO I which war not raised •'by the de- i fendant, whereupon he was re-! manded to jalL House School Bill Assailed By Young Termed A Peril To ; Pupils In Indiana UP — State school supi. Wilbur attacked a house bill today as “imperiling” the welfare of many of Indiana’s 700>000 school pupils. Young called house bjll 265 “unsound.’’ It is a bill to change the formula for distributing |l»8,000,600 of state tuition support funds. Young said it was so designed in “compromise” form agreed on by leaders of both house and senate that a six-member commission of

the state board of education “could destroy er alter by a single decislen the entire teacher salary structure.” ' ' ' j “Moreover,” he added, “It is leaving the door open to such sinister influences as federal aid, overbalanced rural or urban partiality, and anti-home rule advocates.” Young said the bill transfers “yast authority” to the commission “Instead -of making specific provisions in the law fat such distribution.” and would “ignore the combined judgment of elected leg- ; islatOrs.” Young said the bill also places an “extremely. low ceiling" on distribution of transportation funds.” “Some communities may be com--1 pelled to discontinue transportation cd children, as mandated by law,” he said. Monthly Report By Police Department During the montjh pf February city police investigated 21 traffic accidents ajid made seven arrests, it was revealed today in the monthly report issued by the Decatur police department. Os the , 21 mishaps, two involved pedestrians. 16 with vehicles, with trains, and one with a fixed object, ( t ■ Monday and Tuesday were the favorites for, accidents in February with six accidents each. The hour of greatest incident of accF dents was 3 in the afternoon. The age range from 35 to 54 accounted for the greatest number of mishaps than any other age group—--14. An even 15 out-of-towners and 15 local residents were ir volved. 1 'll

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MONDAY; MARCH 2, 1953

Pope Pius Observes His 77th Birthday Little Departure From j Daily Routine VATICAN CITY UP — Pope Plus XJI observed bis 77th birthday and the 14th anniversary of “his election to the papal throne today with little departure from his daily routine. White and yellow flags flew from all buildings iu the Vatican state for the double anniversary of the 261st pontiff of the Roman Catholic church. But for the pontiff and the 1,060 citizens of the Vatican .it was another day of nortpal routine. The Pope begins his usual work day at 6 a.m. and continues until late at night. About the only variation intoday's routine was elimination of the usual private and public audiences. Pope Pius is completely recovered from the attack of influenza last January which kept him in bed lor about a month. Congratulatory inessages on the anniversary poured into the Vatican from all over the world. All indications are that pny cel» - brations will wait until March 12. the 14th anniversary of the Pope’s coronation. He was elevated to the papal throne after the shortest conclave in recorded Catholic history.

Born into a Roman patrician family, Pope Pius made “peace” his byword the day he became a priest 54 years ago on April 2. Despite the losses suffered by the church behind the- Iron Curtain and in Asia, it has passed through its greatest during the 14-year reign of Pius' XII.

W jß)w> Gifts & Greetings for You — through WELCOME WAGON from Your Friendly Business Neighbors and Civic and * Social Welfare Leaders On the occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthdays \ Engagement Announce* ments Housewarmings. Arrivals of Newcomers to Decatur Phone .3*3196 or 3-3966.