Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Stop Shipping Hogs Into Indianapolis Follows Discovery J Os Disease ln\Hogs IXDIANAPOUS, UP —ffitg shipments to kyards were banned Tuesday following discovery of vesicular exanthema. ■ (; Hogs infected\ With th& : disease were shipped from the nation's third largest iuig market, tO rßaltimore. Md., an& Springfield. Mass., before the infection wjas discovered.; I V An estimated 11,500 hogs, valued at 1500,000, were at the market when the ban was imposed. The U. S. department of agriculture’s orddr stipulated the animals must be slaughtered .nithin 24 nours Or held for observation for 21 days;. . '

Officials said the disease had

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been apparent here and that the origin of the infection which struck the swine shipped, to Baltimore and Springfield was not known. jHogs may be shipped to yards at Clayton. 20 miles west of heire. The Clayton yards were opened by the Producers’ Marketing Association, whose spokesmen said they; acted to prevent “dislocation" of the hqg market. The Indianapolis |\ stockyards handle from 40,000 to 50,000 or mori head of hogs eat-h week. \Aboqt 25 percent are bought by Indianapolis packers. The bulk of the rest is shipped to eastern markets. . ■ ■' ~ Vesicular exanthema is blamed on the feeding of raw garbage to swine. Only last week, Gov. George N. Craig signed into immediate law ;a legislative bill prohibiting the use of unepoked garbage for hog food. La&t fall; then Gov. Henry F. Schrfcker imposed a ban on shipments of hogs from outside Indiana for a time because of outbreaks in other states. The ban came-just before the Indiana state fair, which had to refuse swine entries from, other states. $150,000 Fire At Indianapolis Today INpIANAPOUS. UF* — Eleven fire companies battled a two-alarm fire which caused an estimated slso,tfoo’ damage in a downtown paintistore that once housed a fire statical. Flakes raged put of cbntrol for two hours at the Berry Brothers Paint|[Co., not far from the heart of the, city. Thq-: mulberry tree provides leave® for silkworms, berries for hogs, and birds, and wodd for furniture and' cabinet work.

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Midwestern Farm Land Boom Ended Predicts Settling Os Farmland Prices CHICAGO UP The boom in midwesitern farmland -values has ended, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago skid today. The bank, in its monthly review of business conditions, predicted a “slow settling” of farm land prices after an almost uninterrupted postwar boom, Toward the close of 1952. the bank said selling prices of farms in most parts of Illinois, Indiana, lowa, Michigan and Wisconsin leveled off. \ In some areas, the bank said, prices dropped as much as 5 per cent. At present, it said, neither buyers nor sellers appear eager to do business. The bank attributed the leveling off to the disappearance of inflation fears, and to falling prices for farm pryduets. As the prospects for continued, inflation diminish, the bank said, buyers have slowed theiir purchases of farmland as a hedge against inflation. With falling prices for farm products, there also is less promise of a high return on farm land investment. Land prices in the corn belt and in general farming areas now are about double their 1935-1939 level, the bank Said. But land values in dairy and' spring wheat regions rose less than the national average of 1 % times Land values in l|owa and Michigan during the last two and a half yeani\ kept pace with the national average and climbed about 25 per cent, the batik reported. Illinois and Indiana .farm land prices soared 32 \ per cent during the same - Period, Wisconsin rose only 17 per cent. The Wisconsin values reflect the less favorable returns from dairy farming than from other types of farming in the postwar years, the bank said. I •——--I \ SAYS CHINESE, (Continued From FaOar) Was considered by foreign observers as one of the most significant developments since premier Georgl M. Malenkov’s government Took over after the death of Josef Stalin. Soviet-Chinese relations took the center of the Moscow political stage only a few hours after Stalin’s elaborate funeral Monday; \ Mao wroteJn Pravda: “We profoundly believe the central committee jof the Communist party of the Soviet Union and the Soviet government head by ‘comrade Malenkov can unconditionally continue the cause of comrade Stalin, to advance and brilliantly develop the great cause of Communism. A \ "There can be (no doubt that tho camp of peace, democracy and socialism let! by the Soviet Union will become even more solid and eVen more powerful. \ “Any imperialist aggression will be crushed by Us; all base provo cations will end in collapde.; “The great friendship of the peoples of China and the Soviet Union is indestructible because it is founded on the great principles of internationalism of .Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin. “Long live into eternity and undyingly •' the name of the great Stalin.” - \J LEGISLATORS, (Outlawed From rage One> crease in teacher minimum salaries. The house approved a S2OO boost. Craig said he would settle, tor no less than SIOO. The senate refused any raise. Craig made a last-minute caucus appeal to the rebellious Republican senators half an hour before midnight. The clock was stopped ?t 11:45 p. m. When it was 12 o’clock,, senate Democrats walked out. Most other lawmakers wearily went to thejr hotels about 1:30 a. m. with an understanding they would return at 11 a. m. LL Gov.) Harold Handley and Senate Republican chief John Van Ness, R-Valparaise.ded the mutiny against Craig’s demands. They agreed to surrender to four of five house demands on the budget —all except teacher salaries—and then expected to 'adjourn sine die. House leaders made no immediate reply. But Craig threatened to veto the budget bills if the senate adjourned. He then could call a spe- • cial session on 10 days’, notice. V

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Autoists Pay SBS Inf; Special Taxes Indianapolis, up —The Hoosier Motor Club figured today the average Indiana auto owner paid abbut SBS last year in “special automotive taxes.” The taxes included federal ■ and gasoline levies and taxes on new cars, parts, accessories, lubricating oil, tires and tubes, and licenses. Rut Richard T. James, secretary-., ‘manager, said; the average if-aii- include only s47’ of the sß| as ,a deductible item in figuringSfederal income taxes. *! ' 1 5 ' '• . Expose Book Dealer As Escaped German Chicago Man -Deportation Move 4 CfHICAGO, UP — A book dealer wds exposed; today as k former member, of the German pan'zer division who fled a Ptysoji. fcanip eight years ago. & : FBI agents said Reinhold Pkbel.. 38. Was captured in Italy in jb*43, &nd !i sent to the PO\V at HI. \ ■ ! T>-o nights after his FBI said, Pabel escaped and iWsrkdd His way to Chicago wherff he got, a joJ> as a clerk in a loop kook d(ore. i'He lived frugally, he fought his own store c|n the. Nrafth S|de and stocked it with umes. ® : ’Paibel’s ‘business bis ktock expanded to 50,000 sboks aidtthe one time Hitlerite became a:riepected member pf the agents said he woul£ be turned over to im.migra|tion auswbr-\ for disposition. * said Pabel, whoised th<e ,alias Phil Brick in his j|o<>k business, is a theology gradual of tpe Unhersity of Muen|siter in-Jler-many and speaks Russian si4n,; Pajbel's book business flourished apdhe married. He Is now 1 '; the father of an eight-month-old |sr>n. ! His wife. Avis, said it didn’t mik£ any difference to was an alien and an escaped pHsdner. - < ? She said he told her he w£si a GeSrtban citizen and had serves ih the Herman army. \; ‘<’d have married him anyggay," Bbe r id * __x WILSON DENIES Ji (fcontlnneg From Page Onej Hl , assistant .Secretary of in charge of materiel. He desorbed Slezak as “ideally qualified t 4 asilst tn tne ammunition Though today's meeting closed to the public, pared statement was to reporters. Wilson and other Miembets 'of the high command called to clear «up apparent; disdr«fpancies between past ktatefnents an<! Van Fleet’s mony. n F Wilson reported provement’’ recently in production bfljfour sizes of ammunition which, hk said, “were. considered jjjost critical." fiei did not specify the sizeif but there have been Tfib Worst shortages were nicntar types and in 105 and IS&mm artillery Ammunition. - •WThe production in exceeded the production in November by 57 per cent and the pibtiuctiqn In February exceeded the use iff; JKqrea during January, the latest month for which figures are available, by 114 per Cent,” Wllson'said. "the defense secretary told • the coirtinilttee he had assured President Eisenhower during Mr. BhseD' i hower’s pre-inauguratlon trip to Korea that he would “immediately ‘akft itneasures to correct any deficiencies in ammunition reserves and rate of production as sompaired to use.” L , Chairman Leverett SaltoJUtall R-Maslß, said in an opening osatemenf that the committee is trying, to establish the truth in nition controversy. He said . Van views “simply do not square wilh-r-in fact they flatly contradict —previous reports, given to us by authoritative official*, that there is actually a safe supply of ammunition in Korea, the Far East, andelsewheie?- ■. DENIES PLANS < Frwm Oue> that Velde meant his statement “as a sort* of threat” against xminieters who have criticized ihim. —1 ( tr ' You can help crippled children. Use Easter Seals. . ' j " Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

Congressmen Laud i Ike's Conferences , Meets Weekly With Congress Leaders WASHINGTON, UP —President 'Elsenhower has made a hit with Republican congressional leaders by the way he acts at their weekly . legislative conferences. Always jealous of tbeir constitutional prerogatives as leaders of a co-equal branch of the. government the lawmakers have been gratified to find that Mr. Eisephower does not look .upon himself as a commander giving orders to "his lieutenants. ; Rather, as one participant puts it, the President serves as a sort of "moderator” at ’the sessions, paying respectful attention to everyone’s views and never taking “a dogmatic position from which he cannot retreat.’\ The chief executive meets at the White House (path Monday morning at 8:30 am. e.s.t. with a nine-man group of hpuse and senate GOP leaders. Chairmen of committees handling currently important issues also attend sometimes. Before each session, the White House prepares an agenda of topics to be discussed. Mr. Eisenhower presides but) does not try to run the conferences with tbehcrisp precision of a board of director's meeting. All of, those present get a chance to speak without regard to~seniority or other formal precedence. By common consent, individual members of the congressional group speak with more authority on some , subjects than others. With his background of military staff conferences. Mr. Eisenhower is described as deft at drawing out the congressional viewpoints. His handling of these meetings has contributed to the belief that Mr. Eisenhower is eager to establish and maintain friendly relations with congress.

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However, there have 'been two majbr breakdowns in the White House congressional relationship. The first came when the GQP majority of a house committee, voted against the President on a government reorganization bill and the second when senate Republicans tried to amend an administration .rasokuUen to-.condemn lhe “enslavement” of peoples by Russia. Woman Arrested On Embezzlement Count Evansville Woman Taken Into Custody EVANSVILLE, Ind. UP -r-Police arrested Miss Helen Marie Gibson, 2s, Monday night on a $30,000 embezzlement charge and questioned a male friend after she accused hirti of taking the money from her. Miss Gibson was arrested as she got off a train at Union Station feore than* three weetyi after she Minished <rom &r job/at the TriState 'Ford Co.’With company cash and checks for deposit in a bank. She was released on SI,OOO bon|i. She said in a signed statement she had lunch with William Whiten, 31, the day she took the money. She said told Whitten she only had a fevf hundred dollars. “Then he slapped me and told me I had lied to him/’ the statement said. She said Whitten took the money from her and warned her he would kill her if she told police. The statement said Whitten told her to drive tp St. Louis, Mo., and take a train |to Huntington Park, Calif. Miss Gibson said she arrived in Los Angeles Feb. 20. Chief of Detectives Dan Hudson quoted her as saying Whitten promised to meet her- at Huntington Park. Whitten told her police probably would question him, but he promised to talk his way out, Hudson quoted Miss Gibson. • Whitten was released earlier when a lie detector confirmed his

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NOTirr. OF Fix AL WETTf.EWEWT OF RSTATK %’o. 4SOO Notice Ir hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Charles O. McKean, deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, heJd> at Decatur, Indiana, on the 3rd day of April, 1353, arid show cause, if anj-, why the FINAL \SETTLHMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not •b». approved; and raid heirs are notified to then and there make proof of. heirship, and receive €hefr distributive shares. CALVLN J. McKEAN. Executor Tiecatur, Indiana. March 2. 19 3 Z. Attorney G. BP2MY BIEIILY MAR. S—lo