Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 22 October 1953 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

GERMAN DOUBTS (Coatlnird Fram Page' Qae> include a huge Unitdd States loan for agricultural and food development projects. “ MASONIC FRIDAY, , October 23rd, 1953 Banquet at 6:30 K M. followed by awarding of two fifty-year emblems to two members of local Lodge. .</■ ? Program and Address by Dr. Darrell Linder at 7:30 P. M. F t Paul D. Moore, W. M.

IF YOU LIKE TO EAT i HERE’S SOME GOOD MEAT *2|hw < i • BIG BIG Veal Sale Beef Sale i i » —— VEAL STEW or t tender VEAL POCKET ROAST MINUTE STEAK ft- (Lean) < 65c ffi - VEAL SHOULDER ROAST (Meaty Cut) OlflOU U I ERA OtdF* lb. Outoof The Round „ „ > 65c £2! " s CHUCK ROAST 9 39c ft** ROUND VEAL > 'nni| T iiii> s »H > ° for CHOP SUEY BOILING BEEF 69c lb - 21c Ib - slbs5 lbs - s 1 .oo ROUND VEAL STEAK or lean round veal swiss GROUND BEEF c tb - 3fts-si.oo RAI E fl iwcii E SIRLOIN, T-BONE CALF SWEET BREADS or CLUB STEAK AS LOW. HtHEY LAST 59C VEAIjLOAF I»ir T ctmk< With Lean Porjk Added for Loaf lIID v I wind 49icft. | 49c ■ f 1,1 „ PORK SPECIALS QUARTERS of BEEF LEAN PORK ROAST baby beef quarters \ . ... 4 1 C l , b '„ SS <0 SS »«. eM h. L,an 41SSJ S““ ge f™, ijtlSC tL J $J»OO Hind Q uarters to* 35c YOUNG FRESH SIDE young native grain fed Chunk Ir Sliced „ > STEERS and HEIFERS, 90 to 55e lb. 100 lbs. to the quarter, by the LEAN PORK TENDERLOIN ide, front and hind quarters, A ! Sliced 0r Chunk tb. 32c 95c lb. That Dehiious Home Cured " F "* Up the Freezer a ‘ these favor ‘ RINDLESS BACON able prices on Adams County Corn 69c lb. 4 lbs. SI.3S Fed BEEF - ■ .CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING.... ~~~ We slaughter jIOGS on TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY. CATTLE and CALVES 6 DAYS A WEEK! If you are unable to bring them in, call us and we will pick them up at nominal cost. I \- Y ]' - '| . ; ! 11 D CPU MITT LOCKER SERVICE ilb I I PACKING COMPANY - , ’i I •; • | ' . ■ *

MISSING MONEY (Continued From l*»ne <>■»> was kept .secret. Afterwards police chief Jeremiah O’Connell said. “From what I know so far. I don’t think the : $300,000 was ever brought here.’’ But he added the investigators have “not reached any conclusion.’’ ' \ Hall collected the ransom near Kansas City, the home of his victim’s wealthy father. He had already killed the lad aud buried him at the comfortable St. Joseph, Mo., home of his accomplice, Mrs. Bonnie Brown Heady. Hall had two suitcases stuffed w4th $293,000 when Shoulders and patrolman Elmer Dolan arrested him in St. Louis Oct. 6. About $2,000 of the rest of the loot was iecovered elsewhere. The FBI has been reported as saying there was a one hour lapse between the time Hall was booked at the Newstead police station and the time the money was brought to the station.

Locomotive, Seven Cars Are Derailed BRISTOL. Pa., UP — The locomotive and seven cars of a erack Pennsylvania Railroad train were derailed early today when the flyer struck a sidetracked freight car on the main line between Philadelphia and New York. About 13Q passengers were shaken by the ' crash, but only one, Israel Beard, 27, York, Pa., required hospital treatment. Winchester Man Is Named Secretary INDIANAPOLIS, UP r- Cecil Bolinger, Winchester, deputy state was appointed secretary of the Indiana public employes retirement fund Wednesday effective Dec. 1. f Bolinger will succeed Ross Reckemeyer, Indianapolis. who has been secretary since the fund 1 was established in 1945.

THK DECATUR DAILY DRIMQCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

McCarthy Returns I. To Fort Monmouth ' '■ ' . j'; Continues Hearing On Security Leaks FORT MONMOUTH. N. J. — Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy returns to the site o| the army’s secret radar laboratory today to question “six or seven” civilian employes about security leaks which he suspects may involve espionage, f i McCarthy scheduled a closed hearing of his senate permanent investigating subcommittee at- this signal corps installation where executed atom spy Julius Rosenberg once woHced as a technician. 7 I The Wisconsin senator said the witnesses would include some persons ‘‘who are suspected of disloyalty.” The subcommittee will move to New York Friday to continue its hearings, and is planning to arrange for questioning of Wiljiam | Perl, a former Columbia Uuivelr- | sity physics instructor who was' sentenced for perjury in the Rpsenberg spy case. McCarthy said after hearings in New York last week he had fpuhd evidence that Rosenberg set up an espionage ring at Fort MonnWuth during World War 11. He said .he had “not evaluated the evidence” to determine whether such a ripgfstill was operating. A subcommittee source would be questioned about theft of top-secret documents from the radar lab, .\and possibly about Ms activities as an employe of the flight propulson a‘t Cleveland, Ohio. He worked there prior to joining the Columbia faculty in 1950. | Perl is in a federal prison at Terre Haute, Ind., serving affive year sentence for perjury. He was convicted of lying when he told a grand jury he did not know Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, the husband-wife spy ttam executed for giving atomic energy information to Soviet agents. ' McCarthy also has announced plans to question David Greenglass, brother of Ethel Rosenberg, who is serving a 15 year prison 'sentence for his part in the spy case. |Two subcommittee investigators will question Greenglass next monUr at the Lewisburg. Pa., federal prison. — | » State Legion Head Scores Physicians ? Lashes Plan To End VA Hospitalization INDIANAPOLIS. UP —Hos M. Amos, state commander off the American legion, accused att official of the state medical association today of selfish mbtivda in. advocating an end to veterans administration hospitalization sos vets with non-service disabilities. He said Dr. Paul D. Crfamm, retiring president of the medical group, advocated “added burdens, for taxpayers and added miseries for unfortunate veterans.” . | Crimm is “professed spokesman” for a group of doctors terested chiefly in their pocketbooks,” Amos said. “They fear§ . . sbme veteran might escape their own fees.” \ He said Crimm was suggesting a "big increase” in state and local taxes by wanting to shift thq problem ’of veterans with iionservice connected disabilities trom federal to local hands. > “If non-service connected hospitalization by the VA were abolished ... 2,000 bed-ridden veterans would be dumped into the laps of the state and its municipalities,” the Goshen man said. "Evedybody knows that all state institutions are bulging at the seams and there is a great civilian bed shortage in private hospitals.” z | Under such circumstances, ,/he said, Governor Craig woufti hiive to call a special session of the state legislature to appropriate money to build new Even with that, Amos said, the care given vets would “go dqwn because there would l be no coordinated program.” . If you have some:a'.ng to seil o; rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results. Trade In a good rnwn — Decato*

MOOSE ' FRIDAyToCT. 23 PARTY NITE 7:30 ALSO SQUARE DANCE With The Hoosier Stampers s ,* ■' SAT. NITE, OCT. 24 DANCE 9 to 12 with I THE 4 KEYS PLUS A Good Floor Show ■ .

Indiana PTA Meets At Purdue Nov. 4-5 INDIANAPOLIS (UP) —The Indiana congress of parents and teachers holds its biennial institute Nov. 4-5 on the Purdue University campus at Lafayette. “Identifying the home’s responsibility for the child in a changing world” is theme of the institute. About 700 persons are expected to attend, according to Mrs. Jack C. Greig, Indianapolis, state PTA president; \ . 1 Porcupines of the past “wro»e” their own histories when 'they gnawed tree bark a century or • more ago. says the National Geo- > graphic Society. By boring into! the trees and counting the rings, I scientists can tell when the gnawing was done and thus when and where porcupines were most num erous. r Founded more than 13 centuries ago, the Moslem religion has spread over the globe with no clergy, no pontiff and scant liturgy says the National Geographic Society. Meeting at first with strhMg opposition and winning few folldw’ers, Islam to<Lay numbers 37C,000,000 adherajuts.

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Observe Sacrament At Lutheran Church Zion Lutheran church. West Monroe street, will celebrate the Sacrament of Holy Communion at both morning services Sunday, 8 and 10:30 o’clock. Members who desire to partake of the Sacrament may announce their intention 'on Friday, in the church, on the hours of 2,4, 5,7 and 8 o’clock. If it is impossible for them to attend these devotionals, they may announce by mailing a card to the pastor, tlse Rev. Edgar P. Schmidt. The pastor will speak Sunday on the theme: “tjhpfstians are Blesa- : ed People.” Luke 10, 23 and 24, : BUILD ATOM (Contleoed From Page Oee> use 1 vast quantities of electricity. The commissioner warned that it is just as important for the United States to beat Russia in the development of industrial atomic power as it is for it to stay ahead in A-bom’b production. BLUE SUNOCO High Test Gasoline, 25.9 c per gallon. Come Out and Fill Up. Engle & Irwin Motors, Winchester at 27.. It

We Picked Theee Cars As GROUCHY IA 1952 Ford Conv. Cpe. One O\vner—Sharp ★ 1952 DeSolo Sedan “8” A 1951 Ford Custom 2-door " 1948 KAISER 4-Door 1 MANSFIELD MOTOR SALES 251 N. 2nd St. OPEN EVENINGS

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1953