Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 146, Decatur, Adams County, 22 June 1953 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

’•’T” —~ b x— ji Bi*-*-wHlpi VA* ■ : Jf’" rB frlMgr ... THIS DROLL SCENE shows Diana Barrymore of the stage's "royal family” and a "turbaned” friend identified as John McNeil as they I enjoy coffee in coffeeshop of apartment building where she lives in « New York. Goes the story: there was a party in her apartment and both McNeil and her estranged husband, actor Robert M. Wilcox, were present, and during the festivities McNeil was rushed to City ’<• hospital, where the bandage was applied. (International Soundphoto)

Gen. Bradley Says Russians Stronger Atomic Stockpile Boosted By Reds WASHINGTON \UP—Gen. Omar N. Bradley has told the senate foreign relations committee that Russia “is getting stronger . . . . particularly in her atomic stockpile.” z The chairman of the joint chiefs of staff said this country ought to have the air power necessary “to combat a reasonable stockpile of A-bombs on their part.” Bradley also said it would be a good thing for the United States to have a powerful force of long-range atomic « bombers to smash the places from which enemy attacks might be launched against fthis country. But he did not say how many,

t w . >_ ■ V— (■ \Aw £ 11 ■§ dH W r it \ I fw SsS LgAMr 41 — ■ y /J/'liB 1 ' fetß ■ w A H 81-X-Jr Mr. and Mrs. Marry Dickerson end Son p‘ of Lexington, Kentucky IN BUYING our GUNNISON HOME we t j had divided reasons for our purchase. '! *' “"'»•»•• My wife was impressed by (1) the evident planning of the rooms to accommodate all types of furniture; (2) the efficient roominess of the kitchen with its'spacious s » » meta) cabinets and double-compartment ; fe sink, and (3) the ease of housekeeping J*%N|r W■■ 1 • and the compact work and storage space - in the utility room. s As for me, the high quality material, superior to anything else I had been able to find; the strength of construction; the jSIt low maintenance costs, all combined with JEgK'M 1 ?BMEIFteKBi ' our desire to buy a new house free of re- Pt - mKM pair and remodeling requirements, were the deciding factors. iJJHfflg ft ' . Sr/ 4 Not only It the kitchen a highlight of the •. f GUNNISON HOME, but the Bathroom, Living-room and Bedrooms also rate high, too, with their deluxe finishing! Rest UNITED STATES STSSL (utf) COeN>*ATIOH SUtSIOIARV < assured with a GUNNISON HOME—Amerlea’s favorite low-cost luxury home, de"Gunnison", ’’Coronado** and "Champion** , signed for families of modest means but —T.M. Gunnison Hornet, Inc. unlimited good tattel ...and You Can Save j\ The Family Car for the Family I If we can build your Gunnison Home in Porter Addition, Daddy can walk to work, leaving the family car at home for the family, j Ask us about Gunnison Homes to be b uilt near the General Electric and other industries in the Porter Addition, with Decatur’s Newest and Best Sewer and Other Facilities. I' ’ i • ' r -c r ■ Clark II Smith Bob Idler \ I .. Builder I Real Estate 1233 W. Adams Street Heller Building PHONE 3-3513 PHONE 3-4106

A-weapons this country has on hand or how many Russia possesses. He could not have made public that information without risking prosecution under the stern secrecy provisions of the atomic energy act. Bradley retires Aug. 16 as chairs man of the joint chiefs. But presumably he still has access to .all that is known about the U. S. and Russian stockpiles. The joint chiefs have said that the Russians will have enough Abombs a yea'r from now for a sboot-the-works atomic assault against the United States. But defense secretary Charles E. Wilson has stated “there’s no reason to believe they have atomic bombs in quite that volume.” If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results. Trade In a Good Town —Decatur) If you have sometlffng to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Vant Ad. It brings results.

Midwest Autoists Face Gas Increase Standard Oil Price Increase Announced CHICAGO UP — Midwestern motorists faced an increase in the price Os gasoline today, pr in the near future, as standard Oil of Indiana raised the wholesale price of its gasoline, one cent a gallon. Standard Oil also raised the wholesale price of heating oils and other products (because of what tl e company called recent rises in the price of crude oil. !A check of dealers throughout Chicago revealed that the retail price would be raised almost immediately, in most cases a cent a gallon to the purchase. The feeling of most filling station operators was that the margin of profit was too small for the operator to stand an increase of a cent without a corresponding in- ■ crease for the motorist. ; t | -The company said it acted after the price of crude oil went up 25, cents a barrel last week. The price increases are effective in Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois. Minnesota, lowa, Missouri, the Dakotas, Nebraska and Kansas. SUMMER DAWNS (Continued From Page One) one-two punch to Wichita, doing widespread damage, killing at least one man and injuring several other persons. A wind storm, with gusts up to 100 miles an hour, slammed into the city. Power company spokesmen said 65 per cent of the Kansjas city was without lights. A wind and thunder storm at Pittsburgh indirectly caused injury to 19 rushed from a swimming pool into a dressing room to escape the storm —and then tumbled 12 feet Jnto a shower room when the floor collapsed under their weight. \

THE DECATUR DAttt DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

VFW Head ’ jE3k& x X. I sj F* fBBF r fl The 32nd department encampment of the Veterans of Foreign Wars held in Terre' Haute last week, ended Sunday with the election of Richard L. Roudebush, Indianapolis, as department, commander, who will lead the' state organization for the coming year. Other state officers elected were: Glenn C. White. South Bend, , senior vice commander; Glendoh R. Hinshaw, Mooresville, junior vice commander; Orval B. Holycross, Jr., Indianapolis, quartermaster; Nicholas Popovich. East Chicago, chaplain; William S. Mercurl, Indiana. judge advocate l and Dr. Alex Bardowski, Gary, surgeon. Jacobs Will Attend A j’l Laymen Convention Lutheran Laymen To Meet In Colorado Louis Jacobs, of this city, will leave Thursday for the 36th annual convention of the Lutheran Laymen's league, which will be held June’2B-30 at Colorado i Springs, Cdl. Jacobs, who is vice-president of the Northern Indiana district, will be accompanied by Mrs. Jacobs and their sons, Bill and Steven. More than 15,000 Lutheran laymen are expected to attend the convention, which will open with a Lutheran hour rally in the Spencer Penrose stadium Sunday afternoon;, and close with a church wagon dinner in the Garden of the (Gods on the following - Tuesday evening. The Rev: Armin C. f Oldsen, speaker on the league-sponsored Lutheran "hour for the -past two years, will deliver his final rally address Sunday afternooty. He is retiring from the broadcast:because of ill health. Edgar Elbert, of Maywood, 111., president of Lions International, will deliver the major address at the final session Tuesday evening. Other speakers on the three-day program include Dr. O. P. Kretzmann. president of Valparaiso University; the Rev. A. W. Schelp, pastor of Ziou Lutheran church, Tacoma, Wash.; E. C. Jacobs, Cleveland. 0., national president of the 70,000-member organization, and Paul Friedrich, executive director of the league, whose headquarters are in St. Louis. ! ” '' < ’ | ; Officers Explain Spanking Results GLASTONBURY, Conn. UP — A young mother called police and told them her two-year-old son urgently needed medical treatment. Officers rushed to her. home and soon got to the seat of the trouble. They explained to the mother that that particular area of a child’s anatomy always turns red after a spanking.

kl h frd» I «| I *1 1 -1. ->i >«• 40 JOB *8» IL I I 11 F tII I $ i WUu • m mQ _*■> -fl I 1 rjy it vs* OWL / k x HEjP!t3I. fr? 'W* 9f fl ■i A W 'JrjsLW*W ! I 1 fl av\ Afi-,1 wi jL -<. ' W “ 1 7 , «3k' M Wk ,*L J t '’. ■ wH 1 4 wk' A • JPB 1 fIHI i <> W > J'Ma B I 1 * AZ * i * 4Rvl iWeuwGtßawWz AB Blrl 1 ' ~ jBSk *' iy ' ZyzF< h ini iliM J* vjSKr v. B !“ ■ V A : M- i 'B J«x. u HERE IS THE jubilant scene as ..management and union sign W unprecedented labor am tract providing one year paid vacations after 10 years with the Hedco Manufacturing company in Chicago. Seated, from left: Paul Davidson, president of Hedco, maker of radios and j P record players; Frank Darling, president and business manager of Local 1031, AFL-IntemationaJ Brotherhood of Electrical Workers; Willard CohSn, Hedco vice president. Behind are cheering Hedco employes. Davidson said he expects the contract to cut labor 8 turnover to “aero," Up to 10 standard vacations, fZnfemationai; .

State Violent . Death Toll Is WorstOf Year Traffic Accidents, Drownings Team Up For Deadliest Toll By UNITED PRESS Traffic accidents and drownings teamed up to deal Indiana its deadliest week end' of the year. The" violent death toll Soared to 15. The worst acciderts killed two and injured 41. Three children were orphaned when their parents were killed in another accident. Hoosier highways nine lives, and four person's|were drown*d- I The most crash kil’ed two Kokomo meh whose car crashed into a bus rhaking a religious pilgrimage to South Bend Saturday. The Vere Robert Lee Turner, 19. and Cline Loy, 27. None of the injured, all of Indianapolis, was in critical condition, although wene reported hurt seriously. Th e collision occurred two miles pf Peru on U. S. 31. |>| A Melrose Park, ,111., couple. Raymond E. Gillie. 30, ond his wife Imogene, was killedand their three children hurt slightly when their auto overturned Tpn U/S. 41 near Williamsport and 1 struck a utility pole. » X Charles Herthoge; 34,South Bena was killed Sunday and his wife and three step-children Injured when their car and a truck on U. S. 6 near Bremen. State police said Herthoge apparently wa« thrown from <his car aha run ov?c by the truck driven by Lyle T? Stephenson. 47, Chicago. Johnny Phillips. 21. Elwood, was killed and Roy Chaffin f ,25. Elwood, injured when their ccHwent out ol control, skidded 525 fejfi. and overturned on U. S. 24 vftst of Fort Wayne. Authorities Phillips lost control while trying to pass a truck. ’. \ David Miller, 61, Logdjisport, was killed when a car struclf him as L 1 carried his three-year-dW grandson across a city street. |The child. Michael Harvey, was. Injured. Am thorities held Mpyoney, 18.’ Lucerne, for driving without lights and with inadequate brakes. Eddie Haynes, 13, <|faw Castle, was killed and a companion, Steven Riggs, 11, hurt serioilfcly Sunday when they were struck! by a car in New Castle as they rode a bicycle. Another cyclist, Claude H. Lewis, 11, Indianapolis, was injured fatally Saturday when he hit by a car driven .by Connie Townsend, 38, Indiana'polis. \ ’ $,, All the drownings occurred Surday. Jack Flanery. 16?Martinsville, drowned while swimming in a gravel pit near his homd, ■Roland Puglsey, Fort Wayne, drowned when he slipped into deep water while wading in Cedar Creek near Fort Wayne. j r James Smallwood, 2S, Brownstown, drowned while pjyinunjng in a private lake near Hgownstowu. Gregory Whelan, Chicago, drowned while swimming in Wolf Lake near Hammond. Delmar Wilson, 50, Bjoomington, was crushed under the Wheels of a tractor Saturday while*working on his (farm. Fred Carlson, 66, Frankfort, was injured fatally Saturday when he fell from a Nickel rtlilroad trestle at Frankfort. iW was a retired inspector for the Railroad. du addition to the deaths in Indiana, at least two Hoosiers weie killed outside the sta|e. Walter Johnson, 19, Crawfordsville, was struck by a car

r'.-wm.jin.,.,,. , , .\ : n I ’ ■■ ■'■' i .'4B. . x i Mkjisrz w i THAT THE WAR isn’t oyer on the Korean front is indicated by this heap of thousands of shell casings used during the Outpost Harry battle. In the battle, the U. S. 3rd division’s area oil the west-central front. American soldiers smashed back four Red attacks. (International Radiophoto) j

Ky„ and Thomas B. Rotbehhoefer, 19, South Bend,' drowned In Diamond Lake in Michigan. V ? [ - i Ex-President Truman Back In Washington Initial Visit Since . Leaving White House WASHINGTON UP — Mr. Harry S. Truman was back in town today, an ex-president with nothing muck to do and tickled to death about “No politics,” he insisted to reporters and photographers wbo turned out to record his first visit to the capital since he moved out of the White House last Jan. 20. But old friends figured he eoufd scarcely avoid some behind-the-scenes political discussion. They noted he plans to have dinner with some of his former cabinet members Tuesday and lunch with Democratic senators Wedresdaj*. H e said the only business on his? schedule for today was a mid-after-noon visit to the offices off the Truman memorial library association, which is preparing plans for a\llbrary»at Independence, Mo., to house the Truman .papers. Mr. Truman breezed into town Sunday night just before supper time, driving his own shiny new black Chrysler. iTe was in his shirtsleeves because cf the sweltering first-day-of-summer heat. “One hundred and five in th? shade,” he breathed as he cooled off in an air-conditioned suite in the Mayflower Hotel with Mrs. Trumaft, who made the two-day drive from Independence with him. and their daughter-Margaret, who Game down from New York to make it a family reunion. Mr. Truman said he has no planto visit President Eisenhower. "I see no necessity for it,” he said. “He’s too busy to see every Tom, Dick and Harry that comes to town.” Mr. Truman said that, during his “wonderful” drive across the country, he and Mrs. Truman “were fooled” in their hopes they would not be recognized. “■We always were,” he said, “everybody wanted to shake hands

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or get our autograph. -They seemed exceedingly glad to see us.” It was that way Sunday in Frederick, Md., where the Trumans • stopped for gas and prearranged TV pictures after spending Saturday night in Wheeling, W. Va., enroute. Carroll H. Kohne, owner of the gas station, has been alerted for “some pictures” but did tot know who hig distinguished customer would be. He almost collapsed when he saw it was the ex-presi-. dent. A lifelong Democrat, he refused to take pay for the gasoline. The ex-president said he plans to lie here about a week or 10 days all told. He expects to go to Phila delpbia Friday for a Speech at ihe national reserve officers association. • | ROSENBERGS Continued From Page One) Brownell and J. Edgar Hoover? Broch shouted. “This is not American justice . . . we must be angry.” “America today,” he said, “is living under the heel of a military dictator garbed in civilian attire. ’ But the next speaker, Rabbi Abraham Bronbach. professor emeritus at the Hebrew Union College at Cincinnati, was mild and compassionate. I ■ |/\ ’ “We must eschew hqtred. we must disdain rancor,” the • rabbi pleaded. ‘ Os the government prosecutors ill the case, the rabbi said: “£et us give them credit for this much, they did what they thought right,” This brought a wave of hisses from the mourners. ' ' * : , ■ HOUSE GROUP* (Continued From I'ukc One) Republican members today fvoted against the two measures. ‘ Most Democrats voted for them. On the Hoffman resolution the vote was 14 to 12. On the Condon bill ft was 12 to 11. .. In contention is a section bf the plan granting the joint chiefs chairman more authority to pick and manage a subordinate working group known as the joint staff. This staff screens problems for the chiefs and jioes preliminary .work in determining military strength levels. It now is under the joint chiefs as a group.

MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1933

Indianapolis Man To Head Indiana Elks GARY UP — Sonje 500 delegates at the state convention ot the Indiana Elks’ Association Sunday ’’installed Len Krebs of Indianapolis as president. r Other officers: 1 Cecil M. Rapjpe, Union pity, Herbert Beitz, Kokomo. Dr. W. A. Hart, Michigan City-, « and John H. Jennings, Evansville, vice-presidentsC. L- Schiller. Tbrre Haute, secretary, and Paui Manship, Noblesville, treasurer. Trustees: GeOrge Means, Hammond; Charles Bender, Wabash: Ray Marx. Anderson. Norman Free- . land. Greensburg, and J. F. Belden, Seymour. I _ - Wolfpack Patrols Clear Os Fatals INDIANAPOLIS UP — Ihdiana state police “wolfpack” patiols, bent on reducing. - traffic deaths, steered clear <j»f fatal wrecks again during the week end. Headquarters reported today that 66 troopers from eight posts roamed 288 miles of “bad reputation” highway. But the nine fafals in Indiana Saturday and Sunday occur- ; red elsewhere. Three accidents' patrolled zones resulted in personal injuries and a.fourth in property damage. Officers arrested 62 drivers and — warned 126 others. , ' \ 'I ' ‘ Mrs. Monfort Dies At Hartford City HARTFORD CITY, Ind. UP — Mrs. Flossie Addms Montort, 63, j wife of Ralph W. Monfort, editor ; and publisher of the Hartford City News-Times, died. Sunday in Blackford county hospital. Mrs. Monfort had been uncon- | scious for more than a year following an operation for a brain tumor. Besides her husband, survivors include q son, John; three daughters, Mrs. Eric Lindahl, Laramie, Wyo.,r Mrs. A. .W. Lucas. Decatur, Ala., and Mrs. William Rosenbaum, Syracuse, Ind.; and a brother, Dwayne Adams, Groton, Conn. Private services will bej held Jj Wednesday. Trade In a Good Tbwn—Deeaturl !