Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 102, Decatur, Adams County, 30 April 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

BEST VALUES ON WHEELS 1952 Studebaker Hard top, V-8 Com* mander. Low mileage ' One owner car. A Perfect Cah - 1 1952 Plymouth i ■V. 4-door, local car, in perfect condition, priced right. 1952 Studebaker Land Cruiser. Beautiful light green finish Can. be handled on a small down payment. 1951 Chevrolet Fleetline deluxe 2-dr. . radio and heater, dark blue finish. ALSO A Green One. 1951 Ford Victoria, two- tone green. 22,000 miles, all ready to go, Get it quick! 1951 Buick ' Super Rivieria 4-door, radio and heater, maroon bott tom, grey top. 1951 Studebaker Champion 4-dr, radio, ( heater, automatic drive,! two \tone green. Really a sharp car. 1950 Chevrolet deluxe, 2-door, two to choose from. One green and one \ i black. Both are fully equipped, very nice _ . cars. 1990 Ford Custom “8” 4-door, radio and heater, dark green finish. Runs and drives perfect. 1950 Buick ■'* ’ ■■ Super 4-door, radio & heater. Dark blue finish, 4 new 7 tires. 1948 Chevrolet Fleetline 4-door, one > owner, local car,*? 60,4)00 actual miles. 1948 Plymouth . 5 pass. Coupe, motor . completely overhauled 4 new tires. Has radio and heater. 1947 Chevrolet 2-door, local car, runs good, priced reasonable. , 1947 Buick Super 4-door, radio. r heater and 4 new U.S. /. Royal Master tires. Beautiful black finish. 1950 Chrysler Royal sedan, one owner dar with only 28,000 actual miles; As good as when ne.w. a 1946 Pontiac *‘B’* Sedanette, twotone green. A Transportation Special. ALSO a few older cars to choose from, and a couple Os good MOTORCYCLES. Most all of these cars are , exceptionally nice and we are In shape to give good trades. See u* before you buy. AUTO SALES N. 13th St. ' Decatur, Ind.

I Baccalaureate Rites . | Sunday For Hartford IThe Rev. John Sprunger, assistant pastor of the First Mennonite i! church in Bertie, will give the baccalaureate sermon to the sen- ; ior class of Hartford Center high school Sunday at S His subject will be, “Conquering Life Through Christ.” Rev. Sprunger attended Rob Jones University and ha*i devoted much study to the education of youth. ■ ■■!■> 'l ' 111 I J FRI. SAT. & SUN. Continuous Sat. & Sun. TWIN EXCITEMENT! HURTLING INTO INTRIGUE v 3 rxtt'r kUWfKAKVZraa! JON HALL Mta CHKUTIM UUSM . USA FCMMAT ■ 00UOM «. —ADDLED DYNAMITE— ) STEEL-FIST FURY! six-gun THRILLS! r ■ ■ERRBPLArfTtf Only 14c-30c Inc. Tax Box Office Opens 7:30 - Last Time Tonight - FIRST DE<?ATUR SHOWING! “HOODLUM EMPIRE” * Brian Donlevy, Forrest Tucker FRI. & SAT. GREAT ENTERTAINMENT - in 2 TOP PICTURES! Ciiof Mightiest Adventure! Hi I® l > mH9I ISk W ** KANGAROO!* wri». O'HARA * PETER LAWFORD W* •it* Finlay Curria • Richard Boon. <■ —ADDED SMASH—--SRBMRH&feBBBIGMBHCQBNkN* ■■ V" ifew I k/)ll ;;s i iIOII I IKH.jJt- *' FRANK ’ RICHARD RUSTY ANITA IfIVEJOV CARLSON lAM IBUISE' o—o——— Sun. — “Japanese War Bride” & "Ft. Vengeance”—2 First Runs! I 4— O—O ■ Children Under 12 Free

Cage Treatment For Prisoners Revealed Liberated Soldier Tells Os Treatment A 'si • ■ ■ S' TOKYO UP — American war prisoners refusing to make Communist broadcasts were put in three foot high wire cages wh\ere they had to crouch like animals, a liberated soldier said today. Cpl. Charles E. Dick of Spann, Ky.. said some of .the soldiers gained release froiA the torture and humiliation by saying they had seen the error of their ways, i “Ydu could lie down only at? night,” Dick said. “The longest period I heard of was a man who spent ’six months in the cage. I was never there myself.” Dick discussed\the 'Communists’ human zoo during an interview in the library of an army.h9spital. “Most of us sighed statements and petitions,” said Dick. 21, who used to haul ’coal in Spann. “I made a broadcast to let my folks I was wounded.’/ Those who refused to sign docu'-' ments or make recordings for broadcasts got the cage treatment, he said, 't'he broadcast, he said, was about a “peace appeal to the United Nations.” “At one time only eight men In the company did not sign,” Dick said. There were about 200 m£n ini the POW'company then. “At first a lot of the guys played .along and gave bpinions.” he said. ‘But gradually we ..began to 1 find out you could keep quiet and get as= well. If they thought you A’ere influential or reactionary, they threw you in the cage.” \ Dick said there were “hard labor camps” in addition to the cage.,. men preferred the labor camps to tIU cages,” he said. “You worked hard, bull, at\ least you had some room.” I He said he resisted! the Communists’ wheedling and coaxing sou about two days and finally consented to make a recording wheti the Reds threatened to withdraw medical care. . ' ' ■ -A' If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.

— TODAY—? i Continuous froip 1:30 “Blackbeard the Pirate” Linda Darnell, Win. Bendix ALSO—Shorts 14c-50c Inc. Tax BE SURE TO ATTEND! O—O—FRI. &SAT. k big miral iSksSSi i WBRtwnuy I L CWJI <yU>R I r STAniwG 3?/' MOGAYNOR W ... scon BRADY 4 f _ with MITZI GRtEN 2fY MARGUERITE CHAPMAN MICHAEL O'SHEA O—O Sun. Mon. Tues.—“ Road to. Bali” Bing Crosby, Bob Hope

dries fast MUM wa H s o «abie WU PMHT Fz a /x Tft£ Avmct COAT covers -CgL4 7 MOST SURFACES J BEAUTIFUL COLORS L-2 -»j 1. ■■ ■oq.iWM. . .I KLENK’S

r.' . . I DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

11 Are Killed By Tornadoes In Mid-South Destructive Path Made By Tornadoes In Southern States NEW ORLEANS, UP —A passive "’tornadb-packed squall line left 11 persons dead today in a destructive < march across the midsouth. r - . As front moved into GeorI gia, its hurricane force pnd torrential rains graickially dissipated into local storms ami showers. Weather forecasters said there was no more danger of tornadoes. High velocity winds up to 75 mules per hour raged across Louisiana and Mississippi/'before abating as they blew east into .Alabama Wednesday night. Heavy ..xajns flooded sections of Louisiana' -and Mississippi. In Texas, where the storms first hit, Tuesday, at least 10 persons were dead. At Laiayette, La.. John Yancy was killed Wednesday when winds tossed a tree limb on the,''truck bed he was riding. Two other persons! were killed lin accidents indirectly blamed on the storms. Thomas Neil Guilliams, 37, was electrocutedh at Hope, Ark.,‘by a wind-spvere.l wire and Mrs. Glennie Green 'Porter, 65, died in an. automobile accident blamed on heavy rains at Byhalia, Misis. Eight inches of ; rain flooded Jackson, capitol of Mississippi, leaving 100 persons stranded or Authorities called R the “worst flood” pver recorded in the city. Marine reserve national guard units and Red Cross personnel evacuated residents of a housing project in amphigious trucks. The two-ton, gold leaf->pteted eagle on the capitol dome at Jackson was turned 45 degrees by 50rnile an hour winds. , 7! \ 5 At Camp Polk, La., two soldiers who couldn’t swim w'ere rescued by a “human chain” from the top i of their trucks when their trucks were swept into a swollen creek. More than 300 persons fled their homes in Alexandria, La., as a sudden 10-inch downpour. sent flash floods surging through, cify streets. Rescue boats picked up many of the flood victims. Trips On Railroad Made By Students M. { W. Bumgerdner, Decatur agent for the-\Erie railroad, today reported that students of a number of schools have made trips'to Washington, D. C. and New York City, and others are planned the next two weekends. Students already having made the trips are Pleasant Mills, Markle and Hartford Center. Chester Center pupils ~will make the trip this weekend, and Monmouth and Jefferson the following weekend. In addition. 48, Berne Boy Scouts made a special round trip to Lima, 0., recently. \ ■ . -, ..... I v : Dean Mitchel Is C. Os C. Treasurer WASHINGTON, UP — Dean H. Mitchell, Hammond, IndJ, president of the Northern Indiana Public service company was installed Wednesday as treasurer of the U. S. Chanrber of Commerce at the organization’s annual meeting. Mitchell formerly was president of the Indiana stale Chamber of Commerce. 21 OF FIRST ip (Contlwtied From Paige One! the men got thick steaks and Strawberry shortcake with ice cream for lunch. If you nave sometninx to sell ‘or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add- It brings results.

New Moose Lodge Officers Installed i ! Formal Installation , Held Tuesday Night Recently-elected officers of Adams Ipdge 1311, Loyal Orddr of ’Moose, were formally installed at the. regular ty>rge meeting Tuesday night, and will ,assume their official capacities as of midnight tonight A, lunch; was served following the meeting. ' Leo Workinger. was installed as governor, succeeding Anthony Murphy. ' ' Other neiw officers are: Boyd Myers, junior governor; Carl D. Sheets, prelate; Lloyd Roth, treasurer; Ralph Stevens, trustee; Franklin Lybarger, outer guard; Robert Gerber,\inner guard 1 ;, Virgil Fleming, sf'rgesnt-at-arms. Membfers of the Decatur lodge will go to Fort Wayne May 12. when Fritchoff Sal,lness, supreme, governor of Moose lodges, w’ill be thex honored guest. All lodges in the district will be represented with a class enrollment at this meeting, and the Decatur lodge wdll have* 11 candidates for initiation (at this time. U_J ■ NAMES IN LITTLE ° XConttanvd From Pnge One> since last Qctober. She said that she had deceived a Christmas; card frotn a friepd of |ier son, but nothing from her boy since he wrotd in October. The family of Pvt. Clarence- R. Peterson, Wawa, Pa., was overjoyed \o „hear he still is alive in a Communist POW camp. Mrs. Henry Hollinger, his poster mother, .salid the family hadn't heard from him since ' Christmas, 19 51. . <*' „ “We didn’t know whether he still was alive,” she said. GEN. HARRISON < Coottnurd From Page One) munist pressured After the meeting Harrison indicated that he might still agree to India if the Reds agree to keep thd prisoners in this countrji. ’ “I don’t know one way or the. other. That is a matter that Has to be settled on a pretty high level.”

MBBBHHH ■■ fwS ' Bac!;bre<,kin 9 WORK ond WEATHER WORRIES on WasMoysl CLOTHES DRYER \\ \ IMBiX \ \\ \ \ \ "The thing I’d give up last \\ \ J \ is my Westinghouse \\ v —--23SL CLOTHES DRYER" MCQ9S Iwv '' \ : J ■ . \ [ N USE YOUR OLD 11^ CLOTHES LINE ■ AS DOWN PAYMENT KLENK’S

-JHarrison was blunt at the truce meetings . ,v . “All Asian nations located very to countries' dominated by Communists and might therefore be subjected to Communist, military, economic or political influence,” he said. | , [. YOUNG IS (Contlmned Fram Page Owe) morUy for Mrs. Young’s coat was advanced by Joseph H. Rdsenbaum, attorney for clients with RFC loans.

■ML- \ Rolled Veal ROAST --- - - lb. 351 C POTATOES / 7 ; IO .a. 39c HAMBURGER lb. 39c 7~ BOILING BEEF - ~ - < 1b.15c FABorVEL —r— — — 2 S 55c SLICING BOLOGNA - - - - lb. 39c - ; —■ FRY BACK’S SMOKED SAUSAGE - - - lb. 45c ECONOMY PACK ■. -j - : -—- ICE CREAM Beef Goast -- - lb. 39c Vi GaL 69c Goodin's Food Market STORE HOURS—B:3O A. M. to 9:00 P. M.—7 DAYS A WEEK “NEXT TO CORT THEATRE”

ENTERTAINMENT < Con tinned Praia Page Oar) (tion? Do they, use goou abowmanfehip? (4) Do the performers use good technique in moving, gesturing? tC. (1) Are the costumes and stage settings appropriate? . (2) Do they add tn the effectiveness of the act? No information has yet beep giv-‘ fen on what categories of entertainment wifi be presented, follow-

THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1953

ing Monday’s parade of bands but the committee pro’mises no one will Ibe left out and anyone Who thinks ffie or she has any talent, in or out of the county, is welcome. FAIRWAY'S DELIVERY SERVICE ’ ff:00 and 8:00 P. M. v. EACH WEEK DAY ’PHONE 3-3355