Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 17 September 1953 — Page 9
SECTION TWO
Lutheran School To ? ’ . ■ i fl Open Here Saturday I Hold Bible School Saturday Mornings The Saturday Bible school or the Zion Lutheran church, West Mon*roe street, will open its fail: and winter season Saturday morning? classes beginning at 8:15 o’clock.
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
A short opening devotibn will be conducted In the church-before the children ot the various departments proceed to their Classrooms. Registration of children- who have not been previously enrolled will be held in the parish hall at 9 o’clbck. t ■ 1 The school will be divided into four departments, each department having two grades. The primary department, grades one and two, wit! be under the supervision of Mrs. Paul Hancher and; Mrs. Robert Zwick; the junior department.
grades three and four, Mrs. Herman Krueckeberg and -Mrs. C. Graydon Stuckey; the intermediate department, grades 5 and 6, the Rev. Walter D. Bauer, teacher; and the senior department, grades seven and eight, the Rev. Edgar P. Schmidt pastor of the Zion Lutheran church. nev. Schmidt will also serve as principal of the school and conduct the opening devotions each Saturday. All classes will be conducted in the new parish hall, and the course of studies will include Bible
Decatut Indiana, Thursday, September 17, 1953.
doctrine, Bible stories, hymn appreciation, handicraft, church history, worship, and some supervised ‘recreation. Classes will be held each Saturday from 9:15 to 11:39 o’clock, with two vacation Saturdays at Christmas and one at Easter. The school will close the Saturday before the .city schools close next spring. The Lutheran \ Saturday Bible school is open tc the public and parents of Decatur are invited to enroll their children. Honor Central Soya On Radio Programs First Program Will Be Given Tonight j The first of two radio programs featuring the Decatur plant of Central Soya company and McMillen Feed Mills will be broadcast this evening at 9:16t o’clock over station WGL. The program, “The Fort Wayne Story,”; is one of a series \ that tells in documentary style Hthe story of old and substantial industries in the local area. Tonight’s broadcast will trace the growth of Central Soya Company from 10 silos, and one small feed plant in 1934 to its present position of importance tn the feed gram calls particular attention to the contribution which plant personnel make to community welfare, and how they serve midwest agriculture. September 26, a- program explaining plant operations will be heard over station WOWO at 7 p.m. This will be one in a series called “Visiting Indiana’s industries” produced by the radio and television department of Indiana University. Actual on-the-spot recordings of familiar plant -sounds wil be used as the background for interviews with key people about thqir part in the production of Master Mix feeds. Those familiar with the plant will recognise the sound of beans being unloaded, the din of the feed line, and the peeping and chirping of poultry on test at McMillen feed research. “Visiting Indiana’s Industries*’ is an educational series thauwlll publicise a diverse group of Hoosier companies. The local plant of Central Soya and McMillen Feed
IB Ilmprisonmenilßy Czechs <
j (Editor’s note: William N. 'Oatis, Associated Press correspondent who 'was imprisoned two years in Czechoslovakia, has written a copyrighted of articles on his imprisonment. The United Press bhas prepared a series of five articles. Oatis is a native ot i>Marion, Ind.) ' NEW YORK, Sept. 17 UP—Associated Press Correspondent Wiiliam N. Oatis said today the testimony he gave at his Czech espionage trial was a memorized written by Communists and rehearsed in advance under their direction. Oatis was sentenced at the trial tb serve 10 yeafs in prison, but was pardoned last May. He described his ordeal in A series of dispatches copyrighted by the AP. ~ Oh July 2, 1961, Oatis gave his courtroom performance.' It tlid not insist of “nothing but the truth” e» in American trials, he said. The proceedings were arranged in adtpnce, during 70 days of questioning by Communist authorities. The script consisted of questions for the judges and prosecutor to ask and the answers he was to give, Oatis said. t He and three members of his AP staff were tried together, compiutlng between a prison outside ’Prague and the trial room at Pankyac Prison. Mills was selected, because it typifies eoyox processing and feed manufacturing in this area. IMuts To Nuts | OKMULGEE, Okla., UP—Thieves apparently were not looking dor peanuts when they broke into the Lone Star Peanut Co. here. They stole several tools and some gasoline- but no peanuts. Big Talk ■; SOItRNBCTADV. N. Y„ UP — General Electric Co.’s huge home plants here have the largest switchboard system in the world, according to the telephone com>l»any manager, Kenneth Brendstrup. There are 11,000 extensions * —amounting to about one telephone for every four employes.
Four Found Guilty The state prosecutor read the indictment, accusing the AP of being a spy agency and charging that all AP bureau chiefs in Prague since 1948 had been sides. Oatis then was called to testify, and, when asked, “Do you, feel guilty?” he replied, “Yes, I do.” “Seventy days of questioning had taught me that was the right answer,” he wrote. Oatis said he testified falsely that he studied espionage at U.S. army schools during the war and had “espionage meetings” with- Lt. Col. George L. Atwood, U.S. military attache in Prague. He said he also stated falsely he gathered ‘‘espionage news” from his employes, Other Czechs and diplomats. / ■ After he testified, Oatis the three employes told the court they had helped Oatis get unofficial reports. hHeven witnesses testified th* next day. Nearly all said they had given Oatis or his employes “unofficial information,” he said. Then the prosecutor and defense counsel spoke. “My lawyer said I was gbilty but there were alleviating circumstances,” Oatis said. The next morning, all four men were convicted, and Oatis said he rode to Ruzyne Prison in a bte black sedan. ' ! — How To Scrub Gas ROCHESTER, N. Y., UP — Scrubbing gas sounds about as easy as washing grime from the invisible man. Yet this is a process accomplished by the chemical industry today with the use of scrubber columns, according to engineers of the Pfaudler Co. Gases and vapors can be separated by introducing liquid at the top tower. This liquid absorbs corrosive 1 impurities from the vapor mixture. No Ringers Allowed WHITNEYVTLLE, Me., UP — A home-cooked pie waa the "ticket’^for admlsfilontO tfie annual Blueberry Bali here.
‘ di ~ B J "fl ill -yi i *' Sw BREAKING THE RESTRAINT they have shown since the administration changed In Washington, former President Harry Truman and the unsuccessful 1952 presidential candidate, Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, accuse the GOP government of inaction, lack of leadership and failure to carry out its campaign promises. At the >IOO- a- - dinner in Chicago, Truman and Stevenson chat (top photo) as national Chairman Steve Mitchell hovers in the background. In _ U«A lower f Aato JSterasaM winning ’52. Senator John . Sparkman. Alabama, shuts his eyes ds Stevenson probes through his suit for food that missed his mouth. flnternational)
Got What He Wanted LOUISVILLE, Ky., VP—Homer W. Wilson,, 45, was granted a request by Circuit Judge L. R. Curtis who last November suspended a year's sentence against him for assault and battery. The request was “put me in jail.” Wilson said he wanted to get away from liquor and keep out of more trouble Judge Curtis revoked the suspen- •*»»• Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
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Thunderbolt Through I NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.. UP— The U. S. air force’s last F-47 Thunderbolt fighter plane was placed on “inactive duty” at the air base here recently. The air force now uses F-85 Sabrejets. • : — ■: Hatt Girl * bANRURY, Conn.. UP — This hat center of the world has another “Hatt”—a girl, born to Mr. and Mrs. Leon E. Hatt.
