Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 37, Decatur, Adams County, 13 February 1962 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

»YMINWSDJff WES "• * From Your M KING of HEARTS 1 SALIw» I This Week Only I ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS - *M MM AUTOMATIC WASHERS - DRYERS | B y An y Measure ... We at FAGERS say “There is Nothing Just As good as GE” Automatic Model GE *— — — Electric Clothes Dryer hokedl Loaded with High Priced RBT CHOICE-i/ hr! FLAMELESS ELECTRIC Catalog Boys! Clothes Dryers * • THERE’S NOT ROOM IN THE i—,’V- — PAPER TO PUT ALL THE [ FEATURES BBSBA O THIS IS THE TRUE PICTURE WKiGW ' COME IN YOU’LL AGREE . . . ‘ Fager is open to sell when you * ,ear * he price! NO MONEY DOWN LOW WEEKLY TERMS C GE Matching 12 Pound AUTOMATIC WASHER • FILTER FLO No* A Gimmick Price. The top-of-the-line Washer. -THIS WEEK ONLY- _ YOUR OLD WASNER WORTH slso°° ’ TRADE IN ON THIS PAIR ? -■ 111 A T I f E • iF YOU PLAN to buy a dryer or a washer.■ — IH V I IVL• OR A PAIR THIS YEAR DON'T PASS UP THIS OFFER! ■ (NEVER WERE PRICES LOWER - G. E. MADE HISTORY IN 1961 WITH A NEWI ■l2 LB. WASHER. FAGER APPLIANCE IS GOING TO MAKE HISTORY INB [DECATUR FOR ONE WEEK J General Electric Water Heaters APPROVED DY INDIANA A MICHIGAN ELECTRIC CO. and other LEADING UTILITY COMPANIES in the UNITED STATES Jg WtU j | 11 Elenkin Water Heaters Are l=3K=si Ml • Automatic • Reliable • Economical |j=====E§| i g MR * SAFE (no flames) ? | II •FAST-FAST-FAST | HI • GOST ONLY PENNIES iyl- ss iOS T7 fiuM 11. ■ w : a month VX-: MMMI Fro© ? ■■ B 4R fl 11 IB APPLIANCE for i full year on Ihßwrfc D and All Appliances | AIIEK Sporting Goods COUNTS! 147 S. Second SI. Phone 3-4362 — K.W is* lwOMjmaK& n*-. JNifWt'’'' *•*<- • • . •• * I

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA "

Tradition To Deny Spying Activity

Editor’s note: This is the second of three dispatches on the vast esptonaae stravrle which roes on beneath the surface of the cold war. It reporta on Russian spies in the United States . By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — It is traditional for nations to deny that they engage in espionage, and to persist in this bland denial even when their spies are caught red-handed. The United States broke with this tradition by admitting in May 1960, that Francis Gary Powers was indeed on a picture - taking mission over the Soviet Union when he fell into Russian hands. Russia, however, is still maintaining the t r adi tio n of total hypocrisy. Hours after the rest of the world knew about the exchange of Powers and Col. Rudolf L. Abel, Soviet authorities were piously insisting to Moscow newsmen that they had never heard of Abel. They should have. He served for nine years as head of the biggest Russian spy ring yet uncovered in the United States. The FBI, which is responsible for combatting espionage activities in the United States, says that Russia has been sending spies to this country in a steady stream for 30 years. Use News Media As reported in a previous dispatch, Soviet intelligence agents pick up a vast amount of information about American from freelyavailable public sources. They subscribe, for example, to local newspapers published near military bases. They are avid attenders of conventions. One year recently, FBI agents spotted Russian operatives at no fewer than 30 technical meetings in such fields as aeronautics, electronics and engineering. They are among the most faithful customers of the U.S. Patent Office’s official re - ports on newly - patented inventions. ( Domestic Communists were employed in the extensive espionage operations conducted during the 1930’s by a Soviet agent called J. Peters. He sent a young communist named Whittaker Chambers to Washington to set up a spy apparatus among pro-Communist employes of the U.S. government. After breaking with communism.. Chambers identified Alger Hiss h£ one of the men who supplied him with information. Hiss, by that time a high state department official, denied the charge under oath, but in 1950 a federal jury found him guilty of perjury and he was sentenced to a five year term in prison In Own Backyard Once' FBI found the tentacles of Soviet espionage reaching right into its own headquarters. Judith Copion, a Brooklyn girl who worked as a clerk in the Justice Department, was arrested in 1949 during a clandestine rendezvous with Valentine A. Gubitchev, a Soviet employe of the United Nations. In her purse, arresting agents foun d copies of confidential FBI reports. The pains taken by Russia to plant a spy in the United States are illustrated by the case o f Reino Hayhanen. According to his own testimony after defecting. Hayhanen was drafted into the Soviet NKVD in 1939, and was trained for 13 years to assume the identity of one Eugene Maki, ■ who had been bom in America I of Estonian parents, and had re- ' turned with them to Estonia as a i small child. (What happened to i the real Eugene Maki can only !be conjectured; Estonia is now ' Soviet-occupied territory.) After learning to speak English with the proper overtones of Estonian and I American accent, and spending i sometime in Estonia to fade into I his “cover” identify, Hayhanen was sent to the United States with Maki’s passport in 1952. Hayhanen’s testimony put the FBI on the trail of M-Sgt Roy Adair Rhodes, who later admitted that he had been “in contact” with Soviet intelligence agents for two years, but denied having given them any information of value. Trapped In Tryst I Rhodes’ story is typical of Soviet tactics in recruiting sources for espionage data. The sergeant

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had been assigned to the U.S. embassy in Moscow. He said the Russians caught him in a compromising situation with a Russian girl friend with whom he had been having an affair, and blackmailed him into serving as a “contact.” Rhodes was dishonorably discharged and sentenced in 1958 to a five -year prison term. The Reds are still working that trick. Just last October, 41-year-old Irvin C Scarbeck, a former US. diplomat in Poland, was found guilty of slipping American secrets to Communist agents in Warsaw, and sentenced to 30 years in prison. Scarbeck, a greying, bespectacled married man with four children, testified that the agents burst in and photographed him during a tryst with his 22-year-old Polish mistress, Urszala Discher. He said they blackmailed him into giving them information by threatening to send Miss Discher into a Polish army brothel. (Wednesday: The controversial CIA). Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 7,000; steady to weak, in-* stances 25 lower on 230 lb down: 81 head No 1-2 196 lb 17.75; mostly No 1-2 190-225 lb 17.35-17.50; mixed No 1-3 190-230 lb 16.75-17.25; 230-260 lb 16.50-17.00; No 2-3 250280 lb 16.00-16.50 ; 270-300 lb 15.7516.25. Cattle 4,500. calves 50; slaughter steers average choice and better fully steady, lower grades steady to weak; heifers low choice and down steady to 25 lower, not enough sales other grades to establish trend; vea lers steady; five loads prime 1133-1200 lb steers 28.25; part load prime 1250 lb 28.50; load high choice and prime 1200 lb 28.00; choice 9001400 lb 26.00-27.50; load choice with good end 1450 lb 25.50; loadlots mixed good and choice 25.2525.75; good 22.50-25.00; few loads high good to low choice heifers 25.00-25.50: good 22.00-24.75; standard and good vealers 20.00-28.00; choice up to 32.00. . ' Sheep 2,500; s laughter lambs strong to 25 higher; choice and prime 98-112 lb fed western wooled lambs 18.50; good and choice native wooled slaughter lambs 16.0017.50: load choice and prime 109 lb shorn fed lambs No 1 pelts 17.50; 50 head 100 lb No 3 pelts 15.50. Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: -Live poultry heavy hens 24; special fed White Rock fryers 21; roasters 27-29, mostly 28-29. — Cheese single daisies 40 - 42; longhorns 40-42; processed loaf 38*4-40(4; Swiss Grade A 48-52; B 45-50. Butter steady; 93 score 59%; 92 i score 5 9%; 90 s core 58% ; 89 ' scote 56%. I Eggs about steady; white large extras 35(4; mixed large extras 35(4; mediums 34(4; standards 32(4New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T„ 132%; Central Soya. 31(4; DuPont. 245; General Electric. 75%; General Motors, 56%; Gulf Oil. 41(4; Standard Oil Ind., 57; Standard Oil N. J., 53%; J. S. Steel, 72%.

~m' ~ • - x. iHNHHU W& ' ’ d Sr /wi Bfe\ H . • ■;. —) J • • ■•with Tlllhfolß DliVO , m(Mion (TuriWn* Drive) is standard equip* ment on every Buick Le Sabre. That's one reason Le Sabre Is the year’s best power value. Le Sabre also gives you the exclusive “go” of Advanced Thrust, a big Wildcat engine, finned aluminum front brakes—all at : , no extra cost. Note: Le Sabre costs you less than many “low-price'' car models. See It! Buick LeSabre is the buy. SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED QUALITY BUICK DEALER NOW ... VOL’R QUALITY BUICK PAUL HAVENS chevrolet-buick, inc. DEALER IN DECATUR IS: ■ linWfaßW 305 N 13th St Decatur, Ind. <««.rrr..v.o•••*«•«•• Big reteclion! Big values! See your Buick Dealer for Double Check Used Cars! .".7. • ... • •

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twin VALENTINES—Heart Fund Twins of 1962, Jacalyn and Jeryln Pelletier!, 6, Milton, NX, examine bracelets given by Mrs. John F. Kennedy to Debbie and Donna Horst. 8, when they were Heart Fund Twins a year ago. All trf Be children have undergone corrective heart surgery.

Prince Recovering From Appendectomy LONDON (UPD—Prince Charles was reported recovering rapidly today from an emergency operation for acute appendicitis. The 13-year-old heir to the British throne was stricken late Sunday night in his Hampshire country Cheam prep school and rushed by ambulance 58 miles to London’s Hospital for Sick Children where surgery was performed shortly after 4 a.m. Neither his mother. Queen Elizabeth H, nor his father, Prince Philip, was in London for the operation. The Queen, who is rumored to be expecting her fourth child, was 20 miles away spending the weekend at Windsor Castle. Philip was in Venezuela on a tour of South America He was kept advised by telephone and cable. The Queen gave persmission for the operation by telephone and returned to Landon about 12:30 p.m. She waited until her son had recovered from the anesthetic before visiting him. Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) — Livestock: Hogs 6,000; steady to 25 lower; 190-230 lb 17.25-17.50; bulk 180-240 lb 16.50-17.25 : 240-270 lb 16.00-16.75, 270-320 lb 15.50-16.00; 160-175 lb 15.00-16.75; sows steady to 50 lower; 280-400 lb 14.25-15.75 ; 400600 lb 13.75-14.75. Cattle 2.550: calves 100; steers steady to weak, heifers steady; choice steers 26.50; good and mixed good and choice 23.00-25.50; good and mixed good and choice heifers 22.50-24.50: cows unevenly steady: commercial 14.00-15.50; cutter and utility 13.50-15.50; canners 12.00-13.50; bulls steady to 50 higher; utility and commercial 18.00-19.50: vealers strong; choice 37.00; good and choice 30.00-36.00. Sheep 575 ; 25-50 lower; choice and mixed choice and prime wooled lambs 16.00-17.75; good and mixed good and choice 14.0016.00.

Berne Car Undamaged In Accident Sunday A car driven by Gary D. Brewster. 26, of Berne, was not damaged Sunday at 4:15 p. m. on state road 1-in front of the Dutch Mill at Bluffton, when a car driven by Ted L. Bailey, 18, of Bluffton, tried to pass him on the right side as Brewster turned right into the restaurant parking lot. Damage to Bailey’s car was estimated at S2OO. Max Grandlienard Trustee Candidate Max Grandlienard, a native of Adams county, and a resident of Wells county since 1945, has announced his candidacy for Harrison township trustee in that county, subject to the Democratic primary. He is assistant chairman of the Harrison township Farm Bureau, and a member of the Old Salem EUB church.

I THIS WEEK ONLY! I JONATHAN APPLES 99 BUSHEL * ■ HAMMOND-™"” I 240 N. 13th STREET I W OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK-8:30 A. M to 9JO P. M.

TUESDAY, FEBRI

Public Invited To Lincoln Day Meeting The public Is invited to attend the Lincoln day meeting sponsored by the Adams county Republican central committee, at 8 o’clock tonight at the Decatur Youth and Community Center. The affair will open with a carry-in dinner at 6:30, but any persons unable to attend the dinner is invited to the meeting. Mrs. Dorothy Gardner, Indiana state auditor, will be the speaker. Others expected to attend include E. Ross Adair, fourth district congressman: Robert Gates, fourth district chairman, and Dr. George Gillie, former fourth district congressman. Adair and Gillie will be at the Center at 4 o’clock this afternoon to confer with any one not able to attend the dinner or meeting. Studebaker Aiming At Full Production SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPD — Studebaker - Packard officials aimed at full plant production today in the wake of a 40-day strike by 6,500 United Auto Workers, who ratified a three - year contract during the weekend. UAW Local 5 returned to work Monday, after approving the contract Saturday. Initial agreement on terms came last Thursday in Washington, D. C. Abandoned Building At School Is Burned CLERMONT, Ind. <UPD —Fire burned out of control Monday night in a an abandoned power plant building at the Indiana Girls School. None of the residential buildings which house inmates of the school was endangered. The fire temporarily cut off water to a tank supplying the institution. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.

DRISTAN for Sinus, Colds Congestion and Hay Fever KOHNE DRUG STORE

lARY 13, 1980