Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 197, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
B'4(- 4 :i ‘ 'f- >' ■'^ 111 ''' '''\T t '' , -* t J*|<. I . jNBEsIWREFAnssWAWitf® w®wMW *' f > .{ tWSTR. .. f v>.■^j^.W** i»t^x^te^^|BMl^gHsßod^gß^oH|MMW|iWß||yc. y J 3 : *' ’ * 1 f*; 4 Wry.^wWrtll• - S»W» ** ISfc I ><' ft /. / '' ■’ • '■’’' 11 d■'?\^SW<’l' JwW W W ; <’ ■ x d-M <. > M^. A - '.. Xi* .-* • 4 .a.- w . ... ,?K*. am4> x* * s*- ft ,’. t • .*. «£ PRINCE SUNBEAM 249TH stares sullenly in Red Bank, N. J., perhaps contemplating the inconvenience of commuting nearly across the continent every six months. Known as th'e world’s most valuable bull, a half Interest in him was purchased for SIOO,OOO by Much ison & Ljungdahl of San Antonio, Tex., from Dr. Armand Hammer of Red Bank. The record price pays for a half interest in the Aberdeen’s 1,800 pounds, with an agreement that Prince Sunbeam will spend six months at Red Bank and six months in San Antonio “ tach year, commuting by air. ( (International Soundphoto)
Noted Financier Is j Dead On West Coast SAN FRANCISCO, UP — Lawrence Mario Giannini, presidents of the Bank .of America and one of the Hast financial giants died Tuesday night after a lingering illneisi Hd' was 57 years old. The ch i es- executive .. of the “world’s largesjt bank’’, who fought vigorously against' government con-
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trol of the (gigantic empirezhis immigrant Ratner had built upV died at 11:25 p.m. ’ Giannini’s physician, Dr. Leroy Brooks, who attended him at Franklin hospital, said the financier apparently died of a heart attack. If you have something to sett or rooms for rent, try < Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.
{Question Wrestler On Girl's Presence CHICAGO, UP —Police today questioned tawny-haired Leon Kirilenko, 34, known tb thousands of wrestling fans as the mad Russian. after a pretty nine-year-old \girl was found In his hot'll room. An intensive police /search located Kirilenko and the girl after her mother reported Kirilenko had “abducted” her from a group of youngsters gathered outside of •wrestling-promoter’s office. Kirilenko said he did not molest the girl. An examination at the American hospital revealed she had not been harmed, doctors said. Police said Kirilenko asked the girl if she would like to have a soda and look at his publicity album when he came upon a group of children outside the promoter’s office. ' ' After the soda, police said, he took her to his room in the Leland Hotel. The girl’s mother notified police her daughter was missing a short time later when the girl failed to come home. Police!traced the wrestler to the Leland. When they entered his room they foynd him showing a picture scrap book to the girl. He was held without charge.
! z ' ’ iI i UK ’ 5 i ■ I ; 1 B w JE B. ; ■^ir^js < r~ 1 - 'f~' --u MODEL NANCY HAWKINS, growing^N ew *“y ork vice probe Is shown as she appeared during one of her recent r photographic assignments, in this photograph copyrighted by the New York Daily Mirror.—(Copyright N. Y. Daily Mirror) ggggjMjjjjjjjjjg===- . .. >< "r 1 in y 4\ Mlb * ? w' KI , e i 'i -/\\\ ‘ ■ k 4 I’.- % i A l® 1 «' 1 ' \ K>i "il TffiC/-' 1 B®N ■•- wß' '4 I W I E-R/44j| t ■.■ . M ’ . "2 '' ' L - ■ '' : ' ■' FIRST QUADRUPLE AMPUTEE of the Korea war, Robert L. Smith, who lost his limbs because of wounds and frostbite at the Changjin reservoir in November, 1950, leaves chapel at Fort Lincoln cemetery, Washington, with his bride, the former Barbara Borm, IT, Takoma Park, Md. Smith’s home is Middleburg, Pa. He was discharged from Walter Reed hospital, where his bride met him, July 4. While there he received £120,000 in donations. ■ ffntemational Soundphoto?,
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
State Fair Races To Be Big Feature INDIANAPOLIS, — A recordbreaking $192,00(1 in prize money will be distributed during the annual Grand Circuit meeting at the Indiana State Fair Aug. 30-Sept.s. Tlie fastest horses and the best drivers in the nation will be on hand to compete in such traditional events as the $30,000 Fox Stake the $35,000 Horseman Stake and the two $20,000 divisions of The Horseman Futurity, Continuation of these great stakes and the added lure of The Hoosier Futurity and four new races designed exclusively for fillies is expected to make the 1952 program the most, spectacular in history. The filly races, one for each of the two 4nd 3-year-old trotting and pacing divisions, will be contested on Friday of Fair Week under sponsorship of Two Farm, well-known Hoosier nursery and Walnut Hall Stud Farm. Lexington, _Ky. The races will be worth $6,000-SB,OOO apiece. But while the Stats Fair program consists of a bevy of big races, principal as always, will center on The Fox Stake and The Horseman Stake. llt is from these two proving grounds that the 19-year-old and aged champions of tomorrow emerge and the hosters of previous winners makes up a star-spangled roll call of the all-time harness racing greats. The Fox Stake will be raced; Sept. 3rd and will be broadcast; nationally by The Columbia Broadcasting System.\ Its $30,00P tag makes it the richest 2-year-old pacing event of the season and a field of 15 is likely to go to the post. \ At least that many and possibly more will "have taken the word a day earlier in the $35,000 Horseman Stake. From the ranks of the Horseman Stake victors have come a number of Hambletonian Stake winneds of the folloying year. Among them have been Peter Astra Bill Gallon, Volo Song, Titan Hanover, Hoot Mon and Miss Tilly. The Grand Circuit program opens Saturday, Aug. 30th with a pair of overnights and two Inriana Trotting & Pacing Horse association stakes the climax will be reached at the tag' end of the following week when the fastest horses in America go in the $3,000 Open Trot on Thursday and the $3,000 Open Pace on Friday. j The schedule adds up to the greatest racing ever witnessed in Indiana.
Moose Conclave Will Witness Presentations CHICAGO, UP — Nomination of Officers and presentation of civic awards today highlight the 64th International convention of the Ld'yal Order of Moose. New officers will be elected and installed during \the closing session Thursday. ; Three awards will be presented for civic achievement in each of three classifications. The first includes lodges of 2,000 or more members; the second between 500 and 2,000, and the third under 50Q members. There will be 25 honorable mentions. : In the Parade of Dollars program Tuesday, Moose lodgers contributed $502,000 to the new Mooseheart high school building fund. • * ; ———— Make Last Attempt To Avert Harvester Strike CHICAGO, UP —\ A JasLditch effort to avert a strike by some 26,000 International Harvester Co. workers in 10 plants was scheduled today as edmpany and management attempted tp come to terms before midnight. \ ' i The contract between the company and the United Farm Equipment Workers, Ind., expires at midnight. Union and company (Officials were scheduled to meet today in a final session of negotiations. Father Held On Charge Os Murdering Daughter CHEBOYGAN, Mich. UP — Albert Byrne, 41-year-old ex-convict, was held on a murder charge today in the strangulation slaying of his teen-age daughter whose nude body was found half-buried in a lovers’ lane pond early this month. Byrne, whose previous troubles with the law. included a statutory rape change, was arrested Tuesday night at a factory where he worked. \-
W Um - A ■ u<,, H GASOLINE H TO 30 TONS MUIiJ "4’,-S. DIESEL ?’A TO 35 TONS - I Yonrkey to greater kauliag profitt PAYLOAD "H 95 extra pounds of it! a [ . • . .-■■'< ' ■ .■■■■' ■■ ' ' -'•. '■■ > - ■■■-.<;•’, I ■■ • ■. 1 ■. ’ W' ’■■•; 2 ’■: u ’ ■• . -to cut your costs, increase your profits! . .. " ; 4 ' ' ''. . - ' GMC engineering brings you this gfeat V Highest compression -72 to 1-excels any other new Model 470 highway tractor that *standard gasoline truck engine, accelerates faster, hauls up4o 1,195 pounds more cargo than Delivers full power at an easy-stroking 3,200 r.p.m. j any other vehicle in the 45,000 gross, u weiaht clan* • ° I More ton-mites per gallon—less dead weight in ♦ j ® _;y engine and chassis means more profit in every Here are the reasons why. It will pay mile. you to Study thorn carefully. Highest payload capacity—upwards of one-half 4 [ Sensational new engine. Model 470 is powered t° n greater than any other tractor of the same by GMCTs new 145 h.p. valve-in-head “302” GCW rating. • engine —the most powerful gasoline engine for „ . ... . it, weight in truck history. Prk.-th. bl 88 . rt .urprtw of all. Compare the 4 ■’ • _ once you have to pay for this pace-setting GMG Maxtmom poww-to-welaM ratio. The “302” .gainst the field. Nowhere else will so little buy engine weighs as much as 500 pounds less than so much in a 3. lo tractor. - other engines of comparable power, due to new 4 high efficiency design. Why not come in and see for yourself? BUTLER’S CARAGE 126 S. First St. Decatur, Ind. Ypu’ll do holier on a used truck with your GAIC dealer MMMaIHIMHaHMMaHHHIHaiaiIIa>
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Graham, Basilio Scrap Scheduled For Tonight CHICAGO, UP — Billy Graham New York east sides, made preparations for “the hardest fight of my career” tonight against Carmen Basilio in a 10-round non-title welterweight scrap in the Chicago stadium. "I’ve got to knock this noy out,” Graham said. “There can’t be any doubt if we want tq have a good gate in Cuba.” He referred to his scheduled Oct. 4 match for the welterweight crown champion Gavilan in the titleholder’s own back yard. Trade In a Good Town —'Decatur
Church Youth Leaders Suggest Big Campaign LAFAYETTE, Ind, UP —Youth leaders of the Methodist Church today suggested a. church-wide evangelistic campaign to ' win 4,600,000 young pteople by 1960. The leaders from across the nation figured the goal as the church’s responsibility for an estimated 20,000,000 youths who belong to no church. They said this, would more than double current Methodist youth membership of nearly 2,000,000. Miss Willie F. Coleman, Tupelo, Miss., was elected president of the youth directors group at a Method dist conference here.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1953
hHMkt I I - . ACTOR Richard Short (Richard Wallace), 39, tries to hide his face (above) as he is booked in New York on charges of living off pro- 7 ceeds of prostitution. At left, Fat Thompson, 22, is taken into custody under SIO,OOO bait Detectives say she paid Short S3OO a week for “love, affection,’* {lnterMationoQ
Hay Fever Addicts \ Have First Sneezes A report from most in town indicates that today qnd yesterday the seasonal curse, hay fever, started its upsweep in this area. A late report from the Fort Wayne agency which makes pollen counts sets the count at 173; they called it a high count and getting higher by the day. They said when the count gets anywhere above 100 cases begin to break out. Officials there said they expected. it w-ould go up to 6/00 this season and would stay there until a cold snap came to kill off the floating plants.
