Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 188, Decatur, Adams County, 11 August 1953 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

■jop REPATRIATED Pfc. Ray Hendrix of Atlanta, Ga., receives his back pay at Inchon, his first in a long, long time, after being released. Inside cage is Pfc. Ralph W. Martin, Floral Park, L. I. (International)

TRUCKLOAD | MICHIGAN Red Haven and Golden Jubilee PEACHES -AT- • ■ ■ i ■ ’i /MTV fruit VI I I market N. 13th St. Phone 3-3810

mi ay - ’ Jraß X- i ■Ms H K JWM* l * %.< WWI WtFwHlk.pL : waKBOj , 4ki> . : \ 4>* A HEALTHY BABY IS A HAPPY BABY Whenever that young prrnce or princess Is discontented, you may be certain that he or she is In need of very special attention. The baby products we sell are designed to make that new arrival healthy and happy. If in need of baby supplies, comp In and let us give you the correct items. I; - I 4 ' !i : ■ \ • L ' I-; I'"| - ; ' BOTTLE WARMERS — BABY BOTTLES BABY OIL — BABY POWDER BABY FOOD — COTTON — SCALES I DISPOSABLE DIAPERS — DIAPER LINERS Complete line of PLAYTEX Baby Needs. KOHNE DRUG STORE

\;/ H-H I-:’ ',H< : J. ; : \ ■'- I ''- ■ I *' ll ' lll A Why take less than a IJpHi ‘WSC W ! \ Packard-built car? ■ B M V 1' ’ i|Pk ' B—- _ ★ Packard Power Brakes ★ Packard Power Steering f* —JF/** I ★ Ultramatic No-Shift Drive • K ★ Wrap-Around Rear Window v r r ★ Famous Packard Engine CLUB SRDM DBUtERED And remember, advanced contour styling is one of the principal •’’’“• n»u and ioeai um, w «ay. optional JXz M 18 °* «* year ” today •• • will be the trade-in-value of the year later on. communing du« to ahippim charge*. | I N-101-G WINTEREGG MOTOR SALES 104 N. THIRD ST. I I ' < I ' ‘ ! DECATUR, IND. » «NMS|' ' ■<, ' p.is» 1 ''l-'/ •» »

Berlin Ringed By Police To Halt Food Rush > | -J ' Thousands Os East Germans Are Turned Back By Red Police BERLIN, Up —The East German government ringed Berlin with heavily-armed police today to halt a final rush for “Eisenhower food parces” before next Saturday's deadline. Food-seekers who ran the tightened blodkade said police arnjed <>yith machine pistols stopped Berßn-bound traffic 50 miles from the city and turned back thousands of hungry East Germans. People’s pojice were said to be patroling secondary roads and checking trucks, bicydles and pedestrians to enforce the ban on picking up free food in West Berlin. z Reinforced police guards rode all trains into the city. Other police units backed by Communist strong arm squads patroled railway and elevated stations in perlin suburbs. However, an estimated 100,000 of the free parcels were distributed today, about half of, them to residents of the Soviet zone outside of Berlin. They brought the total for the 17 days of the program to about 250,000,0€'0 free food parcels distributed. The number was expected to climb sharply between :iow and Saturday when the distribution' will stop for 12 days until a new program gets under way on Aug. 27. Communist authorities plso adopted terror 1 as a weapon in a fight to save their harvest and avert starvation. The Neue Zeitung, U.’ S. high commission newspaper, repo rted' police arrested farmers and farm laborers throughout the Soviet tone during the weekend and charged them with delay in harvesting crops. In many cities, police arrested persons for refusing to volunteer for farm labor or for spreading “tendentious rumors" about the harvest, the newspaper said. The flight of thousands \of farmers to the West in the last year has produced a critical shortage of agricultural labor. The government has appealed in vain to workers, city dwellers and \hc|usewives to volunteer to help bar vest crops. 1 1 ‘

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THE DECA

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A NEW arrival in the family of Lawrence Williams, Detroit policeman, makes the chow line add up to 12 children. Mrs. Williams starts dishing it to (from bottom) Larry, 2; Dolores, 3; Tommy, 4; Patricia, 6; Michael, 7; Rija, 9; Catherine, 10j Joseph, 11; Mary Ellen, 12; Anne, 13; Monica, 14, finally, the newest member, held by pop at end of line. (International SoVndphoto)

More Testimony Is Sought By McCarthy Evidence Os Red jn Key Job WASHINGTON UP — J Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's senate investigating subcommittee fought further testimony today abbyt an alleged Coijitnuniat who holds a government i job with ‘‘access” to top secret information. ?■ Ah infornjed source said (he inquiryrnvalyed an employe of the government Lm inting office. !? - However. .McCarthy refused to identify the .employe or any.pf the four witnesses who testified at Monday's first closed-door session on the case Witnesses w’ere called to another closed session today. After Monday’s session, McCarthy said the testimony involved “alleged Communists” now in government handling top Secret material of the military establishment, atomic energy commission and* the central intelligence ageihcy. He later modified his statement to indicate that a single employe was involved. ? The Wiscpnsin Republican' added that "the Situation ' is extremely bad” if the testimony is correct. He said the investigation developed out of “leads” obtained from a witness who testified dudtig the subcommittee’s previous rhqu|ry into the government’s foreign information program. ],'| ' He expects to hold public! hearings bn the case, perhaps laje this week. i e i \ 17 FORMER WAR (Continued From Page bnr) However, they were allowed to talk with two flight nurses, while security officers monitore<| the conversations. During most of the flight from Midway to Hickarn, the purses said their patients read magazines, asked about movie? stars and the latest news in the states. Trade in a good Town —Decatur

I : ' $ O B& ■ 1 AW x ■ -1? P ..I Kw I Jar >y - : : ••ftSr 'BK jau. ? war < - ? / ■IB wB shb ' < :Jk . . bM**. m 1 v % •« Wk » '.W \V? x SkuAjlL n x KkibiiffiK < FATHER AND SON meeting seems happy as band leader Meyer Davis greets his homecoming son Garry, self-styled “World Citizen No, 1," aboard the liner Queen Mary in New York harbor. Garry was ordered to leave England After months of trouble with authorities, and was confined to his cabin on the voyage. He arrived in Eng* land last January, was arrested for sleeping in the open under a ! coronation grandstand outside Buckingham palace. Ho was dis-, charged on condition he leave the country, was rearrested and de“j* , d01n « ®°- in 1648 the 31-year-old tore up his U. S. P ass Port t 0 “oiUsen of the world,*

DAILY DEMOCRAT, DF.CATTTR, INDIANA

Movie Owners Blue ' -- 4'"' 4 ■ 4 ■ Over Retained Tax Industry Sources See No Difference HOLLYWOOD, UP 4- Theater Owners were Iblue today because the movie ticket'tax was retained, but industry sources decided the tax—op or off — doesn’t matter much to movie-makers or the public! ' . i- ‘ : ■ 4 When . exhibitors heard President Eisenhower had pOcket-ve-toed a bill to repeal the movie ticket tax, they wailed that from 2.090 to 3,000 ailing theaters may have to close thelf doors. If the tax had been repealed, they said, ||hose popcorn palaces could have stayed in business. Most theater exhibitors have admitted that the loss of the 20 per cent tax, if approved by the President, , wouldn’t have been passed on to the public. Admissions would have remained unchanged, and the savings would have been pocketed by theaters who are in danger of closing because of television — and the high prices of movie tickets. ' ; s, J . “It might; not have made much difference to the theaters in the long run,’’ one spokesman said. "The public still would have balked at tjhe high prices, antjl television still Would have kept, them, home, sb thejr business may have continued to drop.” Movie studio spokestp en refused to be duoted by name, because they are hesitant to get in any hassle w ith the theaters. But they pointed out anonymously that the “marginal” thjeaters in danger of closing the chief interest of the studios, anyway.: Forty-two percent of a movie' studio’s revenue is from! foreign countries. Os the s U. S. I revenue, the lion’s share comes from big theaters in big cities. Holly vrood leaders insist the r small neighborhood theater has been doomed since the advent of television. They further reveal movie studios are bmphasiking “big” movies

Study Motives For Red Announcement Much Skepticism On Hydrogen Bomb WASHINGTON UP — American officials said today Russian Premier Gedrgi Malenkov may'have had devious diplomatic motives for claiming that the H-bomb| Ads been added to the Soviet arsenaj. Malenkov:* announcement has been with considerable skepticism mere, largely j because no recent atomic explosions have been detected in Russia. > The inference is that even if the Russians have mastered the theoretical know-how of the H-bohtb; they have not yet tested one. r That raises the question of why Malenkov chose last Saturday to tell the world that Russia had cracked the I’. S. monopoly on the superbomb. After | close study, Russian experts and others have dome up Y«th these possible explanations: ' 1. Russia may be trying to Western European countries into forsaking their ( lose ties with the United States-in favor of a neutral role in the struggle. One way to stimulate latent neutralism is to keep reminding small countries of the fate they could expect in an atomic war, with both sides holding H-bombs. 2. The announcement may have been intended primarily to reassure Red China. It was noted that Gen. Mark W. Clark, United Nations Far Eastern commander, said ■last! week he would favor Using atomic weapons agaipst the Communists in Korea if they violated the truce. Malenkov may have thought that his H-bomb boast\ would serve to make the point that Russia has a formidable atomic arsenal too. 3. It could have been aimed at other Communist satelliteis, have been showing growing signs of unrest . under Soviet dominatjion. TO RELEASE (Continued From Page OneV POW’s, Gen. Mark Clark, Far Eastern commander, haso said the army has information indicating the Communists may have cap+ tured up to 3.000 more. | — spectacles and westerns for wide-sdreens shown ] often i|r \big theaters for long runs at higher prices. Some studibsj such as 2oth Century-Fox, are. concentrating on wide-screen pictures and leaving small-screen lowlbudget films to TV.

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Eisenhower Honors Gen. March ■ g. ■ ■ ■: B S /' A d GEN. PEYTON C. MARCH, 88, Chief of Staff df the Army in World War I, and Mrs. March, are shown at the Wh'lteHouse as the General displays a' resolution of appreciation Congress voted him recently, lie received the scroll for his counsel Hi matters of national security. President Eisenhower said it was “a very great privilege” to present this resolution of Congress to Gen; March.:,

Bell Reports More Phone Cables Cut Reports Cables Cut j In Anderson Area / v INDIANAPOLIS.. UP - Indiana! Bell Telephone C(l). said tpday that; three more of its long distance cables, have -been out. z h The utility, whose employes | have been on strike Tor 21 days ih demand/[tor-j- 1 higher wages, said the cables jvere cut about' 10 p.m. : Monday in the vicinity. Most Herviee was restored about six hours later. Bell believed one cable was’cut with an axe and two were sawed.. An iflndianapolis-Anderson cable was (UP - nedr Pendleton and :Mu Ms e-Anderson cables were jut Jt two places north of Anderson. : \Be|| said. _ • .Utility spokesmen said some of the sliced cables also carried, wire news t<|> newspapers•.? and radio stations in the northeastern; part of the state. to one ' radio station was reported out

TUESDAY, ‘ AUGUST 111, 1933

about 12! hours. The ’telephone company charged earlier' in' the strike thait sdmh ■ables were- cut: but did not ijiik ■he vandalism directly to the (jl(> Communication Workers. The FBJt kas asked to investigate last wiek end s slicing of a cable serving Atterbury air base. • j f Negotiations, scheduled for midmqrning,' were postponed until afternoon. There was a reporj of “ftp djefihite progress’’ when 'the conference ended Monday. iracfe; In a Good Town—-becalurl -'-'C' 1 ! ‘ |jr : "f mynunn < WANT ADS In The DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT