Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1952 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Average Earnings H<t Record High UP —The average earningsfof the nation’s 13,e00,-. oof| factory Workers rose to a record-high of $69.58 a wV» 5 k in September. A bureau pf labor statistics survey showed factory' employes averaged a 4111 Hour work week during the .Tnon|h *■— the. highest work ' week since |944. ■ ' I The bureatj said the longer, hours and higher pay were due to* a •’greater tlhan usual” cplume production in tnej'metal working industry.' Durihg the month output i of steel climbed to record levels, . ' - .■ —| ....; Aj Democrat Want Ads Bring Results j "i "4 11 ! 1 '"j"—ir Tonight, Sat & Sun. Continuous Sat. A Sun., REX ALLEN “BORDERTOWN SADDLEMATES” & “TALK ABOUT A STRANGER” George Murphy, Nancy Davis Only 146-30 c Inc. Tax

sun. mom tues. 1 ■ I " Continuous Sujn.! from 1:15 14c-50c Inc. Tax | l< I I If Hcruuti MC " Jktl Iw HAWORTH WITH her GILDA FJWM MAN! r~- ■ - W « •■• b Scou-bj • Vaiehe Bettis • Toon ®i '. jFTw •*«. nij t>, OStA» MUt end JAWS ' ' , Bf' cc'.'l • FroducM end Li<‘Ued Sy VINCEMT SHERMAN ® f * MCXWOetH COWSAtld* - ....* \> -I f —o 1 — TONIGHT AND SATURDAY — ‘ Continuous Saturday from 1:45 When the Devil Tribes Os Dakota Rampaged Out of the Black Hills’; The Blooding Fury of thp Most Call to Gallantry! Filmed in B’li'rning TECHNICOLOR! “BUGLES IN THE AFTERNOON” Ray Mifland, Helena. Carter,. Hugh Marlowe, Forrest Tucker /■’ ALSO—Cartoon; Novelty; News —14c-50c Inc. Tax " 1 —_ SUNDAY ONLY 'First Show Starts at 6:30 Children Under 12 Free o —. —- o Las? of the Season! Thanks For Your Wonderful Patronage! See You All in April! First Decatur Showing-of This Swell'Comedy! F sGals /i wtWjv 1 ' ♦ Mm ral Ml Wff ’ > • £ JUfWS w ■ W 4 > WOffl MT/ y’W’ ! bßr!x IS • M ’ ...rr WHO ROOM for& Ira feotooM'S — TONIGHT AND SATURDAY — First Show Saturday Night lat 6:30 .2 Grand Hits—First .Decatur. Showing I ’ “MAN IN THE SADDLE” Randolph, Scott, Joan Leslie—ln Color & “THE FIRST TIME” , ■ » . \ . i I; I :”l| ■ Robert, Cummings, Barbara Hale, Jeff Donnell

Crane Operator Is Crushed Tot Death : NVANSVILIV:, Ind. UP —Hertis .indfrHon, |2B. :a 1 wiste . products crenel opi*raitor. was crushtid betweeif \a | < |Tine and a scrap container Tltnrsday while at work, lie walked calpi y to a car which t|ok him tdl a doctor’s office where b'e died of Lhest injuries while beAi HURRICANE IS (Continued From Huge Q»O returned to Manila Thursday night lifter visiting Lekkspi City, where •all pubAc building P er C W of private hfomds )wpre destroyed. Albaj Province appeared to be the ha idjest hit , area.- The whole province was de^criheti’as a mass of levelled Mrm jatids and The people weie dazed' by the catastrophp. •' The largest , single death toll came from Alody where unconfirmed reports Maid 346 persons died. 4 —4-4-4 ' 4 \ ■■ : I 1 ' I ■ The' Columbia, first American ship to sail, ardifnd the vforld. put out from Sept. 30 { 1787. The trip tojuk intayly three years. J, rta—Li_j ■■ " 5 ' 4 Tirade In a Good Town—Decatur! TRY OUR MARKS FILM SERVICE FOR QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING Smith Rexall Drags

Paralyzed Actress Dies Last Evening | •j Susan Peters Dies Thursday Evening VISALIA, ('akif. UP — Suhan Peters, the pug-hosed little actress who captured the heart of the nation with her- courageous struggle against the handicap of paralysis, died Thursday. , T Her doctor said she had ‘‘lost the will td live.” . > The 31-fear-old actress died 'at 5:45 p.m. at Municipal Hospital. She had entered the hospital less than 24 earlier. ' “The primary cause” of her death was kidney failure, Dr. Karl F.- Weiss, the attending physician, But the pert, browm-hairPd Miss Peters had been “going down hill” for several months, Weiss said, Br. > Manchester. Exeter, Ualif., her regular physician who xvas ill himself at the time of her death, said Miss Peters' death could be attributed partly ito the fact that she ‘‘wouldn’t allow anyone to help her recently.” “In the Tiast few months I felt she had lost the wi}l to live, Manchester said. Miss Peters was one of Hollywood's mosjt promising young ■ actresses a hunting accident on Jan. 1. 1945 left hey paralyzed from the wa,ist down. I After *her tragic accident. Miss Peters! refused io give up her (acting career and later toured the country for seven months placing ‘The Bdrretts of Wimpold Street” on the stage. She also toured for threle months in “The Glass: Menagerie" and appeared in a film called “the Sign of the Ram.” In those roles she played persons who were crippled. She later appeared television, starring in a series about a woman lawyer called “Miss Susan ” Shei and actor-husband Richard Quine were divorced in September 1948. when she testified that *©ur personalities clashed, our tempera-ments-caused arguments.” i The couple had an adopted fipn; Timothy Richard, now six;, whpse custody she won. The actress i was born in Spokane, Wash. \ ! ; ; ru'4 ' V 14 ■ Gamma Globulin Aid In Fighting Polioj Further Breakdown Os Tests Revealed CHICAGO UP — Doctors vfho conducted the mass tests of gam na globulin today ,made public a cohnty-by-county breakdown on its efficacy as an immunizing agent in poliomyelitis. The figures! were published in the American Medijcal Assoi'iatloin Journal by Dre. Hammoh. Lewis L. Coriell, Paul F. Wehrle, Christian R. Klimt and Joseph Stokes Jr. Hamman Wednesday disclosed in Cleveland that there were 90 cases of paralytic polio among tihe 54,772 children innocuiated in Provo, Utah, Houston, Tex.,> and in Woodbury County, loWa, and Dakota County, Nebraska. Os these 90 cases, Hamnion said 64 were among children who \vere giyen injections of an inactive gelatin for’ comparison iwirposeS. Only 26 of the 90 cases occurred among children injected with gamma globulin, jIn the lowatNebraska experiment, 14 children who received gamma globulin contracted paralytic polio and«4l who were given the gelatin were stricken. In , a summary of their findings thus the doctors ggpuha globulin provided “significant protection." L ' “During the first week after injection there was no significant reduction In the number of icisies i'll the groiip receiving gainma globulin,” the doctors “but. the severity. of paralysis appears to

Gasoline Gossip By , Bob • I "That old boy travels cheap, no one collected the money from him!” Our main concern is that dach of our customers leaves thorougly satisfied. PORTER TIRE CO. 334 N. Second Phone 3-4308

: t I' : DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, INDIANA

One Man Killed As |. Train Hits Truck 1 MISHAWAKA, Ind. UP — Orville C. Clark. 50, Mishawaka, was killed today when a Grand Trunk Western j railroad train struck his truck at a Mishawaka crossing. Clark’s son-in-law. Philip HAupe, 25. Osceola, ; jumped from the truck to safety. Ask Kindergartens In School Systems Legislative Plans Adapted By Teachers INDIANAPOLIS UP The 99th annual convention of the Indiana State Tedchers Association headed into its final sessions today after adopting 13 legislative proposals to submit to the next Indiana general assembly. i , The teachers werp welcomed Thursday night by. Governor Schrieker and heard an address by Dr. Ralph W. Sockmam minister of Christ Church, New York City. Schrieker said the schoolroom and the pulpit are the “spinal cord” of Democracy. The governor said Democracy can never disappear as long as teacAers stand fast against “ptish button” education. Schrieker also let the Visitors in On “a little secret.” recalled that during his first term! of governor he was sure he had made good when the teachers invited him to address them. i , . “Fdr a man whb never went past the eighth grade, that invitation meant that J had hit the jackpot,” Schrieker said. i V! * At an afternoon business session, the teachers adopted a legislative proposal that kindergartens be Inade an Integral part of the statesupported public school system. They- also adopted a resolution calling for a reduction in The 24 years required by law to read! top salary. A resolution opposing federal aid to education was defeated overwhelmingly. New officers elected were George F. Ostheimer, principal c>f Indian apoli.s public school 12 and ISTA treasurer, president; ahd Miss Audrey Sliaurer, Valparaiso high school English teacher; vice president. At the closing session today, the Chicago University round table will discuss “Hpw Can Democratic Nations Cope With International Communism?” have oeen modified. "From the second through the fifth weeks highly significant protection w*as demonstrated- After the fifth week this was less evident but more definite conclusions .regarding the duration of protection and ]M>ssible modification of disease should be available uj'ter a longer period of follow-up.”| FISH FRY , (Coatianed FreHi Pane, One) and provided a delightful hour of strange sounds, stranger sight's, and\racy but inoffensive gags. Monkeys pranced among the audience flinging peanuts front bedpans; an old-timer, dispensed some “real Hoosier wit” in , the form of a recitation o( James Whitcbmb Riley's “The I Passihg of the Backhouse.” A bgss fiddle ir the shape »f the edifice in point was decorated ('complete with crescent an<l made rnifsic besides. The nutty group played a finale to the cheers and approval of evifryone. ! •• When all said and done, someone figured that the folks hud, on the . average, downed a little more than a Half pound of blue pike per person. > Since not as many people attended the fry- as had been planned, about 50 pounds Os fish wftk unepten. The Chamber of Commerce donated 20 pounds to trits’ county home and sold the balance. GOVERNMENT IN (<'ontfnu«*d From Pave One) hesitant about flatly rejecting the demand. Both sides are working an interim agreement reached, a month hgo, but there was a question whether Lewis might end that agreement and call a walkout if negotiations broke (Jown. ; Trade in a Good Town—Decatur!

HOWARD MORRISON DEMOCRAT I MBI3RM . Hi z. for CONGRESS 4th Indiana District EVERYBODY'S CANDIDATE |

Annual Convention Os McMillen Feeds vT - 4 ■ $ Sales Convention Is j Planned Oct. 30-31 > t The 18th annual sales convenA |lon of McMillen Feed Mills will lie at French Lick, it was announced today by Fred W. Thompresident.) Mqre than'2so key, personnel from the company’s ■feed sales, retail stores and farm supply division, manufacturing plants, and executive offices will he attending the two-day conference October 30 and 31. J C. I. Finlayson, local pla,nt manager, and 18 department supervisors, from this city, will attend the event. . . Highlighting the presentation of ‘he coming year’s sales plans and objectives will be the guest speaker, br. Kenneth McFarland, noted lecturer from General Motors Corporation, and ‘Reader’s Digest. D. W McMillen, Sr., chairman of the hoard, will be the main speaker at Use banquet Friday night and will mjie presentations to outstanding gales for their records oji3 past year. ■; McMillen Feed Mills is a leading producer of livestock and poultry feed concentrates. They distribute 4 complete line of concentrates and straight feeds through more Dian 1,500 I independent dealers located throughout the midwest, middle Atlantic, and southern state’s. The company's largest pl&nt is located in this city. Candidate For State Auditor Speaks Here Herbert I. Johnson J Speaker Thursday Herbert I. Johnson. Democratic candidate for state auditor, visited Decatur Thursday ami spoke briefly tp local Democratic officials at headquarters. Johnson read figures showing that an impartial survey by the federal 1 bureau, of public road's of the 48 states, ranks Indiana as the state getting the most roads for the tax dollar. He also stated that in the last thtee and a half years of Democratte .administration, Indiana has been raised to sixth ;place in the nation ip mileage of hard surfaced roads' Four of the states ahead of Indiana aje in, the eastern section of the country where : the population enables them to raise more money for improvements, The one other state has increased its vehicle tax to about one third more than tridianas. \ Johnson attributed the economy of construction: and extent of improved roads lit Indiana to the Democratic administration and said that the people’ could expect further benefits by electing - Lt. Gov. I Jphn Watkins ■' to the governor’s office to succeed GoV. ' Henry F. SMricker. He 'predicted the election of Gov. Schricker to the United Spates senate. "The speaker Baid he had been an accountant qlLj of his life and in hie present position ,in the' right-of-way division of the state highway department has been , one of the persons charged with the program of making the department function efficiently. Re promised to bring the same efficiency into the state auditor’s office and said he would end the delay of issuance of state checks, now under .Republican control. ADLAI SEEKING < Continued From Page' One) .made America strong and free and great,” he said; "We do not believe that the ends justify the means." Although he mentioned only Sen. Ilicjiard M. Nikon, the GOP vice ■presidential candidate, And Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy as those conducing that kind of campaign, Stevenson 1 made it clear he feels Eisenhqwer must accept “full responsibility.” . 1 'r \ He quoted Eisenhower’s recent .statjemenb.that the decisions in this campaign “will j me mine alone” and. Nixon’s statement that the general is "captain of the team” and, "is the plays.” 1 ' , rn - i Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

Gary Emerson Keeps Chance For Title 'i ■ : GARY <(UP)iTv-Gary Emerson retained its mathematical chance for the West NfHSC \ football championship Thursday night by defeating Gary Horace Mann. 39 ioU - _i RURAL SCHOOLS (Continued From Page One) share with the less fortunate. Participation in the national children’s clothing crusade will help foster a sense of brotherhood and lay a foundation for international good will. “In many countries of Europe, the scars of war have hot yet healed.. The federation represent- i atives in Europe report that clothing needs are particularly acute in many ureas of Italy; and in Greece where villagers who > filed from Communist aggression have returned to their native homes only to find them in ruins’. In the United States, clothing is distributed in IdW-InfOme 1 areas of eight squthern and mid western states and on, Navajb and Papago Indian reservations. “1 hope we; will give a l)it of ourselves with these gifts,, by cleaning ahd mending the garments so they will express our good wishes for those who receive them.”'! v APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATOR With Will Annexed /Notice In hereby given, That the undersigned Itos been appointed Administrator with will annexed of the estate of George M. Appolrnan late of Adams County. deceased. The estate is probably solvent, i ANDREW aFPKLMAN 1 V , Administrator With Will Annexed SEVERIN H. SCiri’RGER _Attorney pet. 6. 1»52 October. 10-17-21

to -1 O' a “ £ 50 ? -S! > WEBI Sgiwj Sin » os “1 C 3 m < I S HN ff| Z A, (/) H bn srg m I H Q k-L □ ' '■

v ‘ “You May Be j \ \ ? It’s l_ ' t I ■ . the Lucky person” Original” «'■ V ! THE / \2b. \ “1311 SHOW” /h SAT. HITE, OCT. 25 mHse ! Featuring - “We Give 1 jVik 1 The4 - Ke) ' s , y JilywL

Fred E. Kolter ■Mk 'W DEMOCRAT | BEfit ■ for Iroßk /• COUNTY AUDITOR O Graduate of International Business College. • Coiirt Bailiff of Adams Circuit S Court for 10 Years. ||||| , -*•’ . r • Experienced in Gross and Fed- » eral Income Tax Filing for il Individualsand Business Firm-. B .0% * • Now Operate a Bookkeeping ' and Accounting Service. g YOUR SUPPORT AND VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED FRED E. KOLTER ‘

MORE POWER TO ATTACK. I ■ 1 . ■ i ■ *’ a ' kV - I> '‘ ■ ' -r< r: ’ ’ • - ' ■■'l'T'- ■! • ■'! ■ ■ ’ 'r' * / ■'■ • 1 ■ • ’..i • I ! ■ ■ ’' l ; Bristling with rockets, launched from deck platforms this converted Navy LCI spearheads powerful landing attacks v t on enemy shores. J -f’ ! • , . i . ■ 1 •• 1 ' > ■ 1 I' ■ • 'i. ■ ' i•' i < • TO YOU WITH... | / * J aso A Z I I ' — I •. -'■ Get Tydol and get •’going.’’ Spare | / I your battery! Spare your engine! / I Spare your, purse! And spare your* / I self the nuisance of coaxing a frost- / I ,// bitten car back to life. With Tydol / I if Flying-A- in your car you’re set to / I go at theilrop of a hat. Try this • I great winter gasoline, today! 0 ftA NEWCA^"’ OLO cars/ / “The Taxes )Ve Pay—Help Suppbrt Our Community” BEAVERS OIL SERVICE PHONE 3-2705 Decatur, Ind. , 1 DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS

r FRIDAY, OCTOBER ,?4. I>«2