Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 120, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1953 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
teeple MOVING & TRUCKING Local and Long Distance PHONE 3-2607 Box Office Opens 7:30 • Last Time Tonight - “BELLES ON THEIR .TOES”—In Color Jeanne Crain, Myrna Loy O—O FRI. & SAT. ACTION & FUN JN 2 FIRST RUN HITS!_ Wayne " &Wfcf* IV MW «r J| —ADDED LAUGHS— Ibw —O—O Sun.—First Decatur Showing! “AT SWORD’S POINT”—In Color & “LUCKY NICK CAIN” —<O—O>— Children Under 12 Free
At Goodin’s Food Market! I SWIFT PREMIUM I _ 1A ' 1 CAMPBELL’S ■ I Smoked Sausage Toma, ° I | 45<tlb. J™' I ■ .' i J!' Can Z9C I FRESHLY GROUND I Hamburger -““ I I 3 lbs- s i.oo X. I TASTY EMGES quart -qI Slicing Bologna “ I w Pasteurized I 39n CHEESE I I ? TENDER BONELESS 79c I Swiss Steak ™,,. A I I 65- « I I YOUNG AND TENDER CREAM I BOILING BEEF T 12c & gal - ®9c ■"- i ■ ■ I Goodin's Food Marketl STORE HOURS—B:3O A. M. to 9:00 P. M.—7 DAYS A WEEK f “NEXT TO CORT THEATRE” ■bhbmhhbmbbhbbbbbhhbbbhhbhhhmbbhmbmbhbbhhbb
SOUTH KOREAN <Continued From Paar One) tons of bombs on a Communist airfield at Onjong-Ni and returning pilots said 60 percent of -their bombs had fallen on the target. Off the east coast of North Korea, the destroyers Kyes and Eversole smashed a 20-car train. The cruiser Bremerton returned to the battered port of Wonsan to hammer coastal defenses. , Aces Enroute Home SEOUL. UP—Lt. Gen. Glenn O. Barcus, sth air- force commander, said, goodbye today to his> two top jet Qices and said men of their caliber Were America’s “secret weapons.” Capt. Joseph McConnell. Jr., of Apple Valley. Calif., and Capt. Manuel J. Fernandez of Miami, Fla., were to leave by light bomber today for Japan on the first leg of their trip home. The two aces were grounded after McConnell had shot down 16 Communist MIGs for a world record and Fernandez, the former
c %Vii iimt i — toi>ay—- >\> 1 ■ I . Continuous from 1:30 ! “REDHEAD FROM j WYOMING’* Maureen O*Hara r Alex Nicol | FRI & SAT . ALSO—Shorts 14c-50c Inc. Tax | j BE SURE TO ATTEND! | • | • W\ fz- z \ 3 1 Better than in i£2£ E N'k? Ros; the 3 DANNY JazW -was y C'- bV Torch/and I 'y rerrificl _ PEGGY. d tbchnTcolor ill FF d M'.iMD m • (dwo frw njxr.; „ mICnAtL —o —o Sun. Won. Tues.—“ Call Ma Madam”—Donald O'Connor, Vera-Ellen
record holder, had 14 to his credit. "It’s fellows like these.” Bartas said, "that are our secret weapon and to have two fighters like these in my air force —how lucky can I get." — ■ a GRADUATE < Continued From Page One) The Silvery Moon,” compliments of the Kalvers. Then —It’s now 4 a.m.—off they go to thd American Legion home for the wrapper-upper. Don Cochran, commander of the Legion post, said he will attend the Lions offering tomorrow morning and see for himself what’s what. Cochran says he may arrange to have the American Legion members take part in the actual doings next year as well as provide the hall. Cochran observed that many of the Lions are also members of the American Legion and arrangements jointly may turn out very well. Trade lit a good. Town —Decatur
DECAITR t)ATLY DEMOCRAT, DfiCATUR, INDIANA
Jury Trial Opened In City Court Here Jury Selected For City Court Trial Within an hour and a half the jury for the Richard Mtfler Mayor's court trial on a charge of driving under the influence, was chosen and by noon recess, examinations of two witnesses was nearly at an end. Chosen to starve on the jury, after six challenges for cause, were: B. F. Breiner, Josephini? l Ivetich, Don Burke, Morris Begun, E. W. Lankenau, Ralph Stanley, Clarence Weber, Elmo Miller, Robert Cole. Joe Murphy. Walter Winteregg and Emma Goldner. Mrs. Elizabeth Roebe testified for the state, under Lewis L. Smith’s questioning, and said she and her husband followed a red or maroon Cadillac through some of Fort Wayne, observed jt to do over 45 miles an saw the driver was tall, with' steel gray hair, balding on top. Under cross exami nation the witness said her car was going about 40 miles an hour in\ Fort Wayne. Mrs. Roebe said she and her husband called the state police. She said the Cadillac was followed by them because they wanted to be witnesses to an accident. Mrs. Roebe said she could recognize the man in the Cadillac by the back of his head. Robert Anderson, Miller's lawyer, asked Miller to get up and turn around, whereupon Mrs. Roebe identified him as the man in the Cadillac. ' City policeman Bob Hill was then called to the stand—he arrested Miller op the night of May 3—and testified that, in response to a call from state police.—he followed Miller’s car as it left a Thirteenth street address and observed Miller make a wide turn on Monroe and Tenth street, into Tenth, then proceed south on Tenth. Hill said the car stopped and he pulled up and described what he saw: Hill said Millqr had a threequarters fpll pint bottle of whisky in his tight coat pocket, a pitcher of ice in hi& right hand and he wae reaching fop several bbttles of mix in the rear on the floor. He said he to Wit ]k unsteadily inS noticed his face was flushed. x amination* Hill said Miller was going 15 miles an auur down Tentn street and was steady.
Muni Returns To Movies For TV Muni Absent From Movies Six Years HOLLYWOOD, UP —Paul Mtmi, absent. from the screen for six years, came back to movies today —but this time for television. The famed Oscar winner, one of the biggest stars of the ’3o’s and ‘4o’s in such films as "The Story of Louis Pasteur” and “Scarface,” joined the list of past master movie luminaries who are switching to the home screens. > But he insisted his debut in a half-hour TV movie, a courtroom drama for NBC’s Ford Theater screen gems, was not a “comeback.” “It isn’t a case of coming back from somewhere,” he explained “I had seeh the program and thought it very well done. I liked this script and decided, to do it. It all happened very quickly. ~ “I am working on an idea now for television, perhaps a series. This isn’t the beginning, of a new career or anything like that. If I do TV at all it will be in association’ with someone, where I will have some authority.” It was the absence of his own authority, he said, that caused hint to bow out of movies six years ago after a lightweight number, “Encounter.” He said he decided “to give up working for somebody else.” I wanted to make my own mistakes.” The graying actor scoffed at the Hollywood legend he was a victim of the “Oscar jinx.” He tried a play, “They Knew What They Wanted,” that “wasn’t too successful.” But he appeared for six months in the London version of “Death of a Salesman/’ While traveling around Europe, he worked for two and a half years on his idea of adding the life of Alfred Nobel, of the famed peace prize, Jo his list of screen portrayals.' J i' ’ “I met the Nobel family in Sweden and they pht up h lot of obstacles. ThejjiS I heard a Paris producer planned a Nobel film, so I gave ft up three years ago,” he said. “I may never do another feature film.” Since then he’s done “only little things, like radio shows, that didn’t amount to anything. I waited for something I could get excited about.” . ' If you nave sometning xo sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings r—nits. FOR ATHLETE’S FOOT A KERATOLYTIC IS A MUST What i» a keratolytic? Aa a**at that d»«deaa the infected akin. It then peels off, expoalap more Kerma to Its killinK action. Get T-4-L. a keratolytic, at air drug store. If not pleased IN ONE HOI R, your 4«e hack. Today at KoSine Dru* Store.
■■■■■ST Tjsa®'. ~—w ’Mi II IJi - HhoIL" ■ ■L L W B THE WASHINGTON STAGE appears seffop a big tax fight between President Eisenhower, shown telling the nation by radio that his "age of peril” tax program requires a six- wBB month extension of the excess profits tax, and Chairman Daniel A. Reed (right) of the House ways and means committee, who insists that the tax be allowed to lapse June 30 and personal income taxes be cut 10 per cent. President Eisenhower sets next ; Jan. 1 for the income tax cut and end of 4the excess profits tax. Said Reed after the . j. President’s address, "When I fight, I fight.” The thinks a July 1 would endanger making nation secure and dollar- - s :' sound. (International SoundphotoJ
CONGRESSMEN From I‘nxr One) committee, Wilson Wednesday defended the administration’s spending program for the air force -r---hardgst hit by the cuts in the program proposed by former President Truman. He said air power would not be materially Improved if Mr. Truman’s recommendations were followed.
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| j j ~/ Just Wanted Free Meal TRURO. Mass., UP — You can’t rush a Yankee. Truro folks sat in on the longest town meeting in the history of the Cape Cod town, a five-hour discourse on the building of an addition to the schoolhouse. In the middle of the meeting dinner was served by the Girl Scouts. Trade In a Good Town-—Decatur!
CALLS FRENCH, (Continued From Pn*r One) said: |_• i I "The government of the United States, France and Britain have b?en in consultation with the view of holding an informal high-level meeting. "We have agreed thht such a meeting H dpsirable at such a date convenient to all of us. A primary purpose will be further to develop Common viewpoints with these friends on the many problems that must be solved cooperatively so that the cause of world peace may lie advanced.” The “many problems” on which they wodld seek a meeting of ( the minds include the timing of any possible Big Four parley whh
-J v EAGLES OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, MAY 23rd Ham and Chicken JDINNER 5:00 to 7:00 P. M. Entertainment on Solovox Round & Square Dancing 9:00 P.M.
THURSDAY, MAY 211 19J3
Russia, Korean tfiice proposals, the future politiciil status of KoRed China’s bid for membership in the 'United Nations, the explosive Bou|hea<ut Asia situation, the problem of building iy> Western ’Europe’s dgfhises, Gernjiapy and the Near a fid Middle East. K \ First congressional reaction was favorable, Sen. H. Alexander -N. J. applauded the idea. Smith, a member of the senate foreign relations committee, said after * White House visit that the Big Three should agree upon a "common policy before we do any talking with .Sdviet Premier Georgi Malenkov.” ' __ Trade in a Good Town—Decaturl
