Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 164, Decatur, Adams County, 14 July 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Shortage Found In v . Intangibles Office Shortage Os Cash, Stamps Reported INDIANAPOLIS UP — The .state board of accounts today announced discovery of a shortage of $1,219 in intangibles stamps and cash from the office of the Indiana intangibles tax division. Robert .R. WJckersham. chief examiner, -a.d lie could not point the “finger of guilt" at anyone, but added his examiners found the safe in the agency's main office “usually was open during business DBHBHHMDHOHiMHaBBBHI - . A--CvVi’lilFf AIR-CONDITIONED O — - - —■*. 0 I _4 — Last Time Tonight — 'SCARED STIFF” Dean Marting Jerry Lewis jALSO—Shorts 1-feb-50c Inc, Tax O— -■■■ ' o o—O 0 i— \ ■. c WED. & THURS. H OCR BIG DAYS! A I First Show Wed. at 6:30 ? Continuous Thur, from 1:30 BE SURE TO ATTEND! o-— ■ o |No one . | could 'dSgSßk I fall her I**- ■ an andluii gid Iwlm I i—BUJE I -- GARDENIA , eutMMTto *V L. .■ f Warner Bros. i- ’i £ w» ■ OT mmu nw—. . owt —a *7 MT WCOLE XSTjuMaSoS. | NOTE—For Better Enjoyment Os This Exciting Mystery, See It Frcm the Beginning! Features at 7:05 and 9:10 O—O Fri. &. Sat. —“Desert Legion” Alan Ladd, Arlene Dahl ——o—O Sun. — “South -Sea Woman” Burt Lancaster, Virginia Mayo

11 Ji iS - Last Time Tonight - “Bend of the River” James Stewart. Julia Adams —o WED. & THURS. First Dezatur .Showing! r-' y f'" 'f i ' - \ IT'LL MAKE YOU FEEL / jdO'Oood/! || sbtnoduj, £ LANCASTER - McGUIRE fe figL 4h 1 t GW E NN-Wg|| MisterygjJ *M> MILLAK) MITCHELL b fvd by *»Wve«d by ? "* 9a Edmund Goulding • Julian Blaustein L fej? SMH ru, W (Mtn MM • IM » • J/> ArMa M The M> TarMr »X CW McMMiy X-LJU Fri. & Sat.—“ Half Breed” & “Great White Hunter” —o Sun. —“Captain Pirate” & Bowery Boys in “.Jalopy”

hours and access to its contents available to all employes.” ll* said thi* report covered the ! period between Jan. 1. 1952. and Feb. 17, 1953. State Auditor Frank T. Millis said he inherited the shortage when he took office Jan. } 12. and said he had instructed the new tax administrator,. Frank J. Noll. .In, Indianapolis, to take stricter security measures. ( Wiikersham said Miss Nellie K. Moran, former and ; Lawrence F. Arrisman. former administrator, were responsible for : the stamps. Arn.-jnan said if one I sheet of $lO stamps had f stuck to another it would, have accounted t for most of (the shortage. East German Purge, | ' I; By Reds Reported Security Boss Is Reported Missing BERLIN UP —The West Berlin newspaper Telegraf said today that East German security boss Wilhelm Zalsser has* been mising Horn his office since Thursday and i I's members of his state secret -police* have beten arrested in a j purge of ills ministry. Zaisser. as minister of state J security in Communist Germany., ( is reported to have been directly responsible to arrested Soviet chief of secret police Lavrenti P. Beria. The report could not be confirmed by other sources. The Northwest German Radio 'said today that, the Kremlin has < summoned mars ha 1 Konstantin Rokbssuvsky. Polish minister of national defense,' to Moscow for consultations. Rokossovsky was a marshall of the Soviet"arpiy until sent to Warsaw in '1949 to head the armed forces of the puppet Polish Communist regime. There have been recent reports of spreading unrest in Poland, but .the reports were categorically denied by tlje Polish government. Meantime, the Yugoslav news agency Yugopress reported highrabking Chechoslovakian officials went to Moscow last week and ■informed quarters do not exclude the possibility that there will be changes, in the Czechoslovak government after their return.” Czechoslovakia recently was the ! scene of widespread disorders set off by the Communist government’s currency reform. COMMITTEE IN (Continued From I’njee One) pected to pass it quickly and send it to the White House. Without such legislation, the agriculture department will be required Wednesday' to proclaim a 55.0D0.000j acre wheat limit for next season. Boy Killed When Thrown By Horse TERRE HAUTE, UP —Thomas Allen Vance, 11, .was thrown from a horse~Monday night and died of a skull fracture today in St. Anthony's hospital. The boy. son of Richard Vance t of near’ Terre Haute, a neighbor’s horse stabled at the Vigo county fairgrounds when the horse bolted and threw him against afUtility pole. Trade In a Good Town —Decatuid

1953 CHEVROLET ■ ■ T U ■. ' . '' • Tudor Sedan . •-r” f •. v ME*' *■ ■ k eLjJ ; A If r ? J E _ ■■ - JEM Delivered In Decatur i ( ‘sl67s.°° SAYLORS ■ ■■ u

Big Three To Wind Up Talks This Afternoon Possible Showdown Talks With Moscow On Cold War Issue WASHINGTON, UP — The Big Three foreign ministers set wheels in motion today for possible showdown talks with Moscow on two of the biggest issues in the cold war — Germany and Austria. They agreed tentatively tb call for a four-power conference of foreign ministers this fall to put Russiu’i self-styled peace campaign to the dtid test. Word of the understanding on Big Four talks came as secretary of state John Foster Dulles, acting British foreign secretary Lord Salisbury, and French foreign minister Georges Bidault put the finishing touches on their five-day strategy conference with a final session this afternoon! They planned a final communique summing up their effort to work out ways to exploit the unrest behind the Iron Curtain and to deal with Allied troubles in Europe. the Middle East, and the Far East. ■ The three statesmen sent a. report on their agreements Monday night to London jand P ( aris. If the home governments approve, 'the Big Three were reported ready to: L, Propose that Moscow join in four-power talks designed to dear the way for an end to the Austrianpoccupation and free all-Gerinan elections leading toward unification of Soviet-controlled Eastern Germany and Western' Germany. This would provide a major test of the Soviets’ peace offensive. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was understood to have been asked to approve, the move to be outlined in an early note addressed to the Kremlin. 2. Warn the Communists that any aggression in the; Far East following a Korean l truce would have the gravest consequences on world peace. The French are alarmed over the prospect that Red China may mount a new military offensive against Indochina after an end of the Korean war, which appears near. \ 3. Pledge their determination to strive for peace by taking advantage of any Communist efforts to call of the East-West cold war. ■ ALL 58 ABOARD (Continued From Pane One) the plane. The sighting of a slate Monday gave rise to hopes there were survivors near the search scene. But when no further evidence turned up. it was believed the flare may have come from one of'thb many fishing boats operating in the vicinity. The plane was carrying 50 passengers, including 10 children, and a crew of eight when it left Guam Saturday night. Many of the passengers were construction workers and their families en route to homes in the United States. Trade in a Good Town —Decatur

TWB OTCATtfR DAttt MtMOCftAT, OTCAITTR, UftHANA

Decafur, 111., To Inoculate Children Mass Inoculation To Head Off Epidemic DECATUR, 111., UP — Doctors mapped emergency plans today for mass inoculation of 13,000 Macon county children to head of! a possible epidemic of polio. The U. S' public health- service responded to an appeal from Illinois health officials Monday by allocating 133.000 cubic Centimeters of the serugi gamma globulin for distribution here. Mass inoculation of children under ten years old was expected to begin later -this week at schools and other convenient Shotsl will be given on a voluntary basi.Si ■ \ The serum allotment is ehoqgh for 13.300 average doses for the estimated 18.C00 children under

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ten In the county, which ftja center of the 1111noi» soybean’ growing and processing industry; Baxter K. Richardson, deputy director of the Illinois -public health department in Springfield, said the polio situation here was “potentially the worst” in There have been 14 polios cases in Macon county this yeqr and three deaths. Ten of the and all three deaths have occurred within the last three weeks. Richardson explained t|iat a projection of the case figures.'; based on the current rate and the early stage of the polio season, indicated there could be an epildnig if it isn't headed off. “Thp prevalence of the. disease at this moment is such as lio indicate a potential of a sharp epidemic," he said. * Gamma globulin is givanj as a polio preventive, not as a cure. It takes effect in about h week and is believed to give five,to six weeks immunity from the disease. ' ; Trade in a Good Town —Ddcaturl

WEST GERMANS fContinwed From Page One) for several hours Monday while worriers held meetings to protest the Red rejection Os the American food, The bureau is an anti-Communist intelligence agency with sources regarded) as reliable in Red Germany. * Both Moscow.f and the German Communist regime had (.indignantly denied dny food shortages existed in the! Soviet zone. Communist border guards in pertriitting the s East Berlin residents to bring their food - purchases into the Soviet sector reversed previous practices. In the past the police confiscated even the smallest quantity of food and sometimes they went as far as to take shoes bought in the West off the feet of their East Berlin purchesers. In Bonn. American officials for the second straight day discussed means of makipg available to the hungry East Germans the food, offered by Mr. Eisenhower. The

Americans today named Kenneth < Dalton, deputy director of the high commission’s political affairs 1 office', as “food coordinator." t The food problem also was dis- ' cussed Monday night by I'. S. 1 high commissioner James B. Conant and Walter Hallstein, West < German secretary of state for ’ foreign affairs. ' WABASH DRAFT i (Continued From I’ajce One) \ , replace them.” The board , said Beamer and Peebles never were given any other classification expect 1-A but their cases were “postponed” by , Elective service headquarters in Washington after being unanimously . approved by both local board and state appeal board. The statement: “Because of interference, the local board does not have the heart to induct other boys of this i county into active service when i Beamer and Peebles are allowed Ito remain at home through appar-

TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1953

ent political influence, i "The last official action of the local hoard was to postpone Induetiop of other registrants Jue to report July 27, 1953. along with Beamer. ’ “The local board has made °every attempt to be fair in the evaluation of all .cases and has always kept their actions within the regulation of the selective service system. ‘‘The local board does not think it fair to send other boys in this county to replace the eligible inductees."' \ , Beamer* is employed at Palo Alto.; t’aJif. He was married only last weeli end in Bluefield. W. Va.

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