Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 277, Decatur, Adams County, 24 November 1953 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

McCarthy's Answer To Trufnan Tonight NEW YORK UP —Be|. Joseph R. McCarthy will lash .back at \former President Truman’s Nov. 16 Indictment of “McCarthyism”

New Jelly-like Formula Knocks Baked Grease Off Oven Surfaces i "ITS” is tne name of a new oven cleaner that restores oven surfaces to grease-free newness without scraping or scrubbing. The substance is brushed on. allowed to stand, then? wiped clean with water. “Ita” oven cleaner is available at Holthouse Drug Co. for $1 and this includes a plastic | brush. "ITS’* is non-inflammable and spectacular in performai&e. ii . rAdv.

TURKEY For Yow Thanksgiving Dinner I '\■’ J'' ■ ■ ■ K£&| J X, £J JyW HENS ifJJX DRESSED TOMS |\ DRESSED 11 to 13 Tbs. 14 to 17 fog, 59c n>- O’Sfk 55c >R>. 11. P. SfIIWTT tssr

PowerFlite! P r. ■ Newest, smoothest, most powerful of all transmissions T '.: . x> i '*''''~Zr* ——gjy Hf < 7 ? ] \k > / fli - New 54 Docge Rsyal V S Club Coupe with stepped.up 150-h.p. Red Rom V 8 engine. Specifications, equipment change ~\ I•! I• ' ! ’ __ ' »•».. ‘ii’

r, ■ ifc v . "'» /.* a> .'7 ; •* a V v*s >T JF§a x®®sßl ffitliSPM 1 "” - 11 '? '•< n^urt't 1 * -•-■• 4rW Uli oijx’ jSLJ Nev Dodp V 4 Setttiw Oecerds for Speed end Endurance on Bonneville Sett Flat* America’s Top Performance Team! The famous Dodge Red Ram V-8 engine and new fully-automatic PowerFlite Drive were “made for each other” . . . perfectly matched, perfectly mated tor flashing performance, trouble-free operation. ■ , - '■: • - ' - F ..- --~ I ! ~ ’ 7V’ f ’ ,

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tonight from 10 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. CST on the nation’s major radio and television networks. \ The Communist-hunting Wisconsin Republican demanded and obtained the blanket, nation-wide radio facilities of ABC, CBS, NBC, and MBS and the TV networks of ABC, CBS, and NBC to answer Truman’s television and radio charge that McCarthyism is the of truth . . . the abandonment of ’due process’ of law . . . and the rise to power of the demagogue.” ■ \ ’■ . CONQUEST (Continued From Page O»e> dous task of vaccinating between 00,5000 and 1,000,000 school children »in 200 communities across the entire nation. If the vaccine proves effective —the conquest of polio may be a reality,” he said.

Indianapolis Man Heads State C. C. Resolution Opposes Federal Assistance INDIANAPOLIS, (UP) — The Indiana State Chamber of Commerce resolved today that the federal government should “gradually withdraw” from public assistance programs, and elected E. B. Newill. Indianapolis, as president. . Two of a batch of resolutions adopted at the organization’s annual meeting touched on public assistance. One opposed planet to raise the old age and survivors insurance rates Jan. 1, the other opposed federal participation in public assistance \ programs. Newill, vice president of General Motors Corp, and general manager of the Allison Division, was elected to succeed R. 11. McMurtire of Huntingburg. The chamber said the OASI program should be "placed on a current financing basis, with the payroll tax rates being frozen at present levels, until such time as basic decisions are made as to the current financing of a matured OASI program and as to retirement of the federal government from participation in the financing of public assistance programs.” Federal grants to states for public assistance were designed as a “temporary expedient” until the OASI program was in "full operation.” one resolution said. There should be “a gradual withdrawal On the part of the federal government from participation in the financing and administration of the public assistance programs and the entire costs of such assistance as it needed to supplement eventually should be borne by the and their local subdivisions.” \ 1 Other resolutions opposed major changes in the Taft-Hartley law, said “the threat of craping socialism” still exists, commended the administration for tax relief plans, urged tax equality, opposed

Fully Automatic . . . Fully-Proved NEW ’54 DODGE V-8 WITH POWERFLITE 6RIVE SETS 12 OFFICIAL AAA RECORDS FOR SPEED AND ACCELERATION, 53 RECORDS FOR STAMINA AND ENDURANCE AT TOP SPEED 72-HOUR RUN In 6576 miles of night-and-day driving at an average of nearly 100 miles an hour, the ’54 Dodge with PowerFlite shattered every existing record for cars in its class and division. No other automatic transmission in any American car, regardless of price, has ever traveled so far so fast by the official records of the American Automobile Association! Here is proof that PowerFlite gives you dependability and performance unmatched by any other automatic transmission! Come take a PowerFlite drive in a new ’54 Dodge! Discover the newest, smoothest, most powerful of all automatic transmissions. No clutch to press, no gears to shift!. And try new Dodge full-time Power Steering, too. It’s truly the greatest! PowurFHte and Power St—ring an optional oguipmont. Thoir modoratp ’ n \ extra cost bring* lotting reward* in driving pieawre. NEW'S4

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

At Berne Monday ■ - V 5 J* X ' -' ‘4 S 4,< ■ A «w| VSjgL ' I™* m vf® I a 'W ? • : \A\ V • * jg The Grace Trumpeters, pictured above, wili take part in the coun-ty-«ide Youth for Christ rally at the First ’Mennonite church in Berne next Monday night at 7:30 o’clock. Principal speaker at the rally vPill be Dr. Paul R. Bauman, archaeologist, I- speaker and world traveler of Long Beach, Calif. Dr. Baqman will also show unusual pictures of Mount Seir, ancient capital of the kingdom of Esau, now called Petra. federal aid to schools. Besides Newill, other officers elected included: Paul W. Kerr, Elkhart, first vice president; Otto N. Frenzel, Indianapolis, treasurer; Hjalmar W. Johnson, East Chicago, and Glenn W. Thompson, Columbus, yice president: Clarence W. Bader, Gary, Fred A. Collinge, Wabash, Waiter J. Golden, Columbus, directors. Not Guilty PORTLAND, Me., UP — “I must have left the shower on!” gasped Mary Lou Wellington when she and her parents' returned home from a week-end trip. The Wellington house was “swimming” in Her father, J. Foster Wellington, found her not guilty when Trade in a good Town — Decatur

Pres. Eisenhower Faces Tough Year Congress Action To Make Or Break GOP WASHINGTON, UP —president Eisenhower is off to Georgia today for six relaxing days of golf as a build-up for the roughest, toughest year of his life. War was never like this. \ Next week Mr. Elsenhower goes to the Big Three Bermuda confer ence. He will devote tpe remainder of December to the hardest kind of work in preparation for the second session of the 83rd congress. » The Eisenhower administration likely will stand or fall on the record'of that session. What congress does next year will make or break i the Republican drive to win working control of the new 84th congress in next November’s general election. However, Mr. Eisenhower may see it, old timers on Capitol Hill are appalled by the job confronting him and the next session of congress. The President in his first year was a slow and careful starter. Now; the great bulk of his program remains to be enacted by a congress in which the Republicans lack even a numerical senate majority and are far short of working control in the house. Moreover. 1954 is an election year, in which members will balk, if they can, at a summer session which would interfere with campaigning. If the Eisenhower administration Is to establish vote-getting record next session, a great deal of so-called vital legislation must be enacted in addition to regu-

■..XU-.....-...U • -- ~i — iif 7'~'.'T r T?"i ———- Wt' fl IF I*l ■r y^^< * < ' Sg&aL; * _irinT &Hl I- I W 1 fl ■ I -JI r w St v I -W. 'v\ I i '] *l7 ’ l Ql *a t'LSI I v >Mflwi.. ; Fl ■■ • ■ j'■ F.■ rl i il®?3l'* r 1 87% a fl H x : fl i '' tjl c"j-j ,3j£2.. IM„.„MFL? ✓<k .; .7 >■ i^•>®s>‘‘? s^ '• J ik>W / iV*' / • < x / <J J H \ W;' H 3sn@@&s!&&s3&£S ! V»" '‘X jp ?>? ? ' % ' I 7 Let Us Bow W/XRflflE Our Heads 7 i 'in THANKS... S| Today, in the spirit of the first Thanks* .* s ?BK^flfl^^^^^^BflEL-M^fl^X c < giving, let us give thanks to the Creator for all the blessings we have received cans . • . a free people, living without 1 ■ .' s scar in ‘ frcecou, ‘ ,ry - Like ,hcPi,grim Oj:, Fathers, let us humbly acknowledge 7, '• .\ * l^iat we are an< l hope to become. Like them, let us bow our heads in a 6® prayer of gratitude to the Giver of “every good and perfect gift.? -•** \i ‘ How better express the gratitude that is in your heart than to gather with family and friends in Church on Thanksgiving Day? BEAVERS OIL SERVICE TYDOL-VEEDOL “Two Fine Petroleum Products”

lar appropriation bills. Appropriat- 1 ing for national defense, alone, i Will involve a major political contest because the Democrats have 1 chosen national defense cuts as a major issue against the tibepubli- j cans in 1954 and 1956. On the administration’s list for next session are such controversial items as: taxes, farm program, Taft-Hartley amendments, tariff and trade politicies, social security taxes, national debt limit, revising the 1946 atomic energy act, Hawaiian statehood. There is work for several ordinary sessions of congress in such a program. A well disciplined congress, safely controlled in both houses by a single party and strongly led from the White House could whip out such a program in three or four months — easy. FDR's first congress which met in the dark days of March, 1933, did that, and more. \ But the 83rd congress is not safely controlled. The Eisenhower honeymoon si oVer. It remains to be seen how strongly he can lead and how much discipline he can impose. Jet Pilot, Radar Observer Killed MADISON. Wis. UP —The pilot and radar observer of a crashed FB9 Scorpion jet plane were listed as dead today after their parachutes and bits of their remains were found in the wreckage. The plane crashed into marshy land on the shore of Lake Wingra near here Monday. The men werb\ identified as Ist Lt. John W. Schmidt, 28, Del Rio, Tex., the pilot, and Capt. Glen. E. Collins, 30, Indianapolis, the radar observer. Trade In a Good Town — Decatm

Claims Discovery Os Treasure Chest j Florida Man Claims Discovery Os Chest | JACKSONVILLE, Fla., UP —A | rare coin collector and treasure trove enthusiast claimed today to have found a chest full of old Spanish and English gold and silver worth $625,000 at the bottom of the Suwanee River in northwest Florida. William F. Sneed, Jr., 40, lakeland, Fla., hotel owner who has made treasure searches his hobby since the age of 16, said he located the chest under 12% feet of water? using “electronic” equipment. The chest contained coins dating back to 1757, he said. Sneed said he believed the chest was thrown overboard from one of 17 Spanish spips which had a brush with pirates on a voyage from Cuba in one of many episodes of Florida history which led to talk of sunken treasure ever Sneed, who said he raised the chest last - Saturday by barge winches not far from where the fabled Suw'annee empties into the Gulf of Mexico, displayed a large collection of specimens that he claimed to have found, including a large solid-silver cup stamped: “King’s -head, Enfield.” Sneed . displayed Spanish gold doubloons he said are valued up to $l5O. each today, and silver “pieces-of-eight” which he valued at about S9O each. He said the chest contained thousands of them. The Florida west coast, its river mouths and bayous, has been plumbed many tiines for legendary

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1953

sunken treasure chests and even submerged ships of pirating days. If you have sometntng to sen or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.

CELLO-paks ■X- i • • J'l . 10 29c When you care ' enough to send the very best. SMITH DRUG CO.