Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 209, Decatur, Adams County, 4 September 1953 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
FIRE AT CITY (Contlnwed From Png£ Owe) neighborhood. The councilman said he investigated and saw? that the wind was coming from the west. The councilman and the complainant both live wesi of the dump. Fire chief Cednic; Fisher said this morning he waik notified of the big title at the dhmp early this morning and agreed it was a problem that ought to be solfed, both for the safety of the oityf and for ___ ' : 1 L
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SUNDAY ONLY DECATUR J niHTor B Box Office Opens 7:00 f * * wtnl Afc Children Under 12 Free o t o The Fiqest Family Program We’ve Ever Presented! ; Grand Entertainment for Mom and Dad and All the Kids! Three Solid Hours of Pure Enjoyment! ; Mark it down on your “must” list! Here is one of the really fine family films of 1953. It tells of the fighting heart of a red-headed woman who turned a town’s hate to love. » From the company that gave the screen such great f amily pictures as “Stars In My ? Crown”, “Father Os The Bride” and many more, here is al warm and wonderful story! 1 M-G-M — GREER Gai ISON > WALTER PIDGEON I - " a ' E ? '■L * WARO! /z Ar ■ ■ B TECHNICOLOR HfflF > AGNES MOOREHEAD ® DONNA CORCORAN fSIHI ± > i /. ADDED tAUGH RIOT . O— O , I Tonight & Saturday “HORIZONS WEST”-—Color—-Robt. Ryan, Rock Hudson & “HITCH HIKER” Edmond O’Brien, Frank Lovejoy o— o \ Mon. < Tues.—4peclat Labor Day Show— Run— i 1 I “LONE HAND” Jdel McCrea, Barbara Hale—lN COLOR!
freedom from malodorous nuisance. The fire chief held with the mayor that a line might possibly be led up from the river and be used to wet down the dump thoroughly. That way, he pointed out. the fire department W’ould not have to make expensive special runs and a measure would have been taken toward prevention of fires. SCHOOL OPEN < Continued From Pwae Owe) necessary for the school board to rent any outside space to accommodate students this year. i Harvey Baker and Harry Poling. custodians at Lincoln, have been working all summer on the various painting and cleaning projects and at times they have been assisted by others. The principal’s office also has been redecorated and a new desk and chair have been added. It was pointed out that the entire cost of the remodelling would not exceed the estimated cost of renting outside space for one year.
Valparaiso Enters i Furniture Business k Provides Jobs For i| College Students VALPARAISO, 'lnd. UP — Vaiparaiso University, fqced with financial problems like many other small schools, is going into the furniture business/* ’k' The venture 1 H| designed to increase the university enrollment by providing jobs for students who otherwise could not attend college. The unique scheme was conceived jointly by O. P. Kretzmann, university president, and Paul 11. Brandt, president of the school’s board of directors. Brandt is president of A. Brandt Furniture Co., Fort Worth, Tex. Under the arrangement, the university bought a . former office building with 22.000 square feet. Brandt} then formed the Branco Corporation of Indiana, and leased the property from the school.' }ii The university in turn will supply the plant’s entire labor force; consisting of about 200 students; who will work parLtime about 20 hours a week. They will earn $1 an\hour. Students may apply for the jobs when they register for classes at the university gymnasium Sept. 14 and 15. The plant is due to begin operations Oct. 1. ,< University officials termed the project “a hew kind of coopera? tion between industry and educa*; tion” designed to solve “the serb ous financial problem which is plaguing private educational institutions throughout the country." Valparaiso is a school of about 1,600 students, situated in a town of 12,060. thd spokesman said, and 'there just aren’t enough’’ parttime jobs for students. The plant will produce, redwood picnic furniture, a seasonal operation which coincides almost perfectly with the school year. A spokesman said the university anticipates few "complaints” from' competitors. ‘ Some people might regard this' as a >cheap labor scheme,” the? university spokesman said, i°but outdoor furniture is a pretty limited item and there isn’t too much incentive for large manufacturers to undertake its production.” He said any union would be free to attempt to organize the stur dents, but he said he doubted if they would because of the part< time nature of the work. “Anyway, it would be up to the students,’’ he said.
DEAN RELATES (Continued From Page One) the questioning in relays, he said. “It was 68" hours the first -time.' The interpreters wore out. They gave them a respite. Next time it was only 44 hours. The third go was 32 hours." Hd* looked, at 54 years of age, an old Irian. His face was wrinkled and stained with dust. Dean was driven up to the Pan-; niunjom repatriation center in a Russian-made jeep. Freed, he refused the offer of a sedan for the drive here. Instead he came in anambulance with five of his freedl comrades. After his interview. Dean was flown by helicopter to the 121st evacuation hospital near Seoul, in a ward there, with GI patients and high American officers abound him, President Syngman Rhee decorated him with South Korea’s highest military medal. He already had been awarded, while a prisoner, the American congressional medal of honor. it was announced that Dean will be flown to Tokyo Saturday. There, after a thorough medical check-up, he will illy home. With his blue suit Dean wore, freed, a colored shirt and a ted tie. He appeared in good condition, and throughout his tiring interview here he kept his good humor. - > ’Tm certainly glad to be back,” he said at the start. \‘lt’s wonderful. It seems like a dream.” The only non-Koreans he had seen during his captivity were two renegade newspaper correspondents, an Australian and ia Briton, who are with the Communists, The first Z merican woman he
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Fear Dulles' Remarks May Boomerang i. . -■' * k .S ; Voice Apprehension On German Election On Dulles' Remarks WASHINGTON UP — The State Department was concerned today that an off-the-cuff remark by secretary of state John Foster Dulles might influence the outcome of next Sundays’ hotly-contcsted West German elections. Apprehension was voiced privately that Dulles’ comments at a news conference Thursday might boomerang against West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, a friend of the United States. Responding to a reporter’s question, Dulles said an election defeat for Adenauer’s government would have a disastrous effect on chances of German unification and restoration of German sovereignly. He said such a defeat would, in his opinion, indefinitely postpone a rational solution of the German problem. ’ Danger signals began flashing in Germany only a few hours aftepDules gave his views. The German Socialist party charged Dulles with a “malicious twisting of, the truth” and “interference." ' Veteran iiipfbmrfts predicted other anti Adenauer forces, including the Communists, would pounce on Dulles’ remarks as "proof” of their claim that Adenauer is an “American stooge.” . Officially, the state department maintained studious silence over the international reperchsslons. Whether any further comments are made apparently depends on? reports from ambassador James B. Conant, U. S. high commissioner in Germany. The hue and cry began just after the United States. Britain and France bad played their, trump diplomatic card designed to curry favor with the West Germans. They invited the Russians to a Big Four foreign ministers conference in Switzerland on Oct. 15 to discuss the German and Austrian problems, > ; . Dulles’ extemporaneous Comment also came after he had read a carefully-prepared statement on the German situation. He charged that the* “subborn” Soviet division of Germany was wrong to the Germans; it is a menace to the peace.” The continued partition of Germany between east and west, he said, was a “scandal" and a “crime.” saw, after his freedom, was Red Cross aide Lucy Maloney, Peru, Ind. He shook her hand warmly as stepped from his ambulance here and told his story. t >. —t | ‘ 1 Boren Deficiencies ' Thirty-one state* in the U. S. and six provinces in Canada have -reported boron deficiencies in ovsr 40 different crop*. ' Ancient Fundamentals The fundamentals of wesvinf ir Guatemala today are as ancient a> the history pUMavan culture. Trade in a good Town — Decatur
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Dean's Family joyful At General's Release
MONTEREY, Calif. UP — News that Maj. Gen. William F. Dean had been released after more than three years Communist imprisonment ..hit his wife “like a bombshell,’’ their daughter said today. Mrs. Robert C. Williams said her mother “used every superlative in the book” to describe her Joy. , “She said she was elated, over" joyed, overwhelmed, oh, she just used every superlative in the book,” Mrs. Williams said. “I didn’t even get a chance to tell her the details because she wouldn’t quit talking.” Mrs. Williams was the first to break the dramatic news to her mother, who was driving here Trom her home at Berkeley, Calif., when the general stepped across to freedom at Panmunjom. Mrs. Dean had planned to spend the weekend with her daughter here to await the release. But Mes. ; Williams said her mother was so tired when she reached this resort town 120 miles, south of San Francisco that she checked into a hotel instead of going to the Williams home, k Mrs. Williams said Mrs. pean called to tell her she would not be out to the house Thursday night but would be over today. It was then that Mrs. Williams informed her the general had been' released. After she got over the initial shock, Mrs. Dean told her daughter she was "utterly exhausted" and would not be able to talk to newsmen or pose for pictures. “What I need is eight hours’ sleep right now," Mrs. Dean said. “She will be I all right when she realizes it is irue, but rtews like that kind of leaves you numb,” Mrs. Williams said. “She said the news hit her like a bombshell.” Mrs. Williams, informed by the United Press earlier in the evening that the general was free, said she was “overwhelmed" by the news. ~ "Oh, how wonderful.” she said. Then she choked up with emotion and said: “I can’t say any more.” The general’s 25-year-old daughter lives,here with her army captain husband and their two children, whom the general has never seen. The captain is stationed at nearby Fort Qrd. Meanwhile, at Berkeley, Dean’s mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Dean, said "Thank God” when United Press called her with the first news of the release. j 1 Earlier, studying recent photographs of the general, his mother said: “He’s aged much but he’s still alive.. That was the worst part of all this, the never being sure.” At West Point, N. Y., the gen-
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*1 k ■ eral’? Cadet William F. Dean Jr., Said lhe was “very happy” at the “wdtirft rfipl news.” “Fm iceirtmnly looking forward to seciftg n?;(y father again,” he said. W . v Young a second classman at the miilt<fy academy, jsaid he had just? to West Point from the home in Berkeley and did < he would be able to to the west coast to greet §|ffijather when? he returns. ■’feMßj -i ' .\i ' s- \ | . REQS’ SURPRISE Front Page Ose> planned tc^^j"“Big Switch" Sunday, expecjjng to receive all their prisoners by the U. N. j OF aimhisisthatrix • i:M’A'i’i: N«. »i» >’otlee l«-*h«reb>' given. That the undersigned Hkh been appointed AdminixtratriX Cffi the eetate ot Ida B. Knave! latpi Adams County, deceased. Thfti estate is probably »blvent. 0- W . I ELT.A RA>fSEY Administratrix August 27, ISifS. & JOHN L. VOSS Attorney 8/28 9 /4— Trade in a good Town — ©ecatu.* ~ —<■>>>.--" »■ ■ 1 *w I * Ik ' - * ' -fe it Mok XJK « ,; < ' I- ' I i If w>s * 1 f j • I* ’ ■ ' I [ ■. ■ >i ‘ I I 1 r. >3 •” > KBNtK’ i y /u LL J u > MT . Wl TANNci) and refreshed, President Eisenhower pauses on steps of ths Doud residence In Denver, Colo., on return from Fraser, Colo., and « full week of relaxation. He biOre a "wound" from fishing at tfie Byers peak rafich, blister on fcand. (International)
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| i i- ■ |': ~1~ ' — ’ ' | i" I M LIN BOSTON GAM)£N SEPT ' 21 - EASTERN STATES le _r- . . EXPOSITION, SPRINGFIELD, MASS, sPr’ngt'*W s P r ’ngt'*W •jW t) rr Hershey ( J OCT- »3 MEETING OF STATE L GOP organizations, HERSHEY, pa. >J»»asningron I OCT. IS— MAJOR SPEECH! AT FUTURE FARMERS OF : Jg IN KANSAS CITY, MO. JT ‘ . J I ‘ - V' I IN NEW ORLEANS I Ne wQrleons \ ' L T \ > OCT. 19 —FALCON DAM 1 J Walton DEDICATION, FALCON. ’ TEX., ON RIO GP ANDE « <(p| THIS 1$ the travel and speaking schedule which awaits President Eisenhower’s return from vacation. His 63rd birthday Is Oct- 14. DEMOCRAT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
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-FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1553
You get greater getaway with the new Powerglide* * A lot finer performance on a lot less gas. That’s what you get with the new Powerglide automatic transmission. There’s no more advanced automatic transmission at any price. You get more power on less gas That’s because Chevrolet’s two great valve-in-head engines are high-compression engines. In Powerglide* models, you get the most powerful engine in Chevrolet’s field ■*- the new 115-h.p. “Blue-Flame.” Gearshift models offer the advanced 108-h.p “Thrift-King” engine. — 1 ' ~ It’s heavier for better roadability You’re in for a pleasant surprise at the Smooth, steady, big-car ride of this new Chevrolet. One reason is that, model for model, Chevrolet will weigh up to 200 pounds more than the other low-priced cars. •Combbuuion of Powerglide automatic transmission and J/5-Af. '‘Blue-Flame" engine optional on 'Two-Ten*’ and Bel Air models at extra cost. < _
