Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 140, Decatur, Adams County, 15 June 1954 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

To Dedicate Unit Os Church Sunday Dedication Sunday At Bluffton Church The Rev. Matthew Worthman, pastor of the First Evangelical and Reformed church in Bluffton for the past 23 years will see the ded-

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Icatlon of the remodeled educational unit of his church Sunday. Rev. Worthman, a native of Adams county, is also gpiding plans for construction of an addition to the unit in the next few years. A graduate of the Missions House College and Seminary at Plymouth, Wis., Rev. Worthman first served at St. Paris, O. He came to the Bluffton church In June of 1931 and has remained there since. He has also served as president of the Michigan-Indiana sy-« nod for four years between 1947 and 1951. He was also a director i for the denomination’s old folks i home at Upper Sandusky. 0., and is now one of the trustees of Heidelberg College at Tiffin, O.» Rev. and Mrs. Worthman have I four children, Geraldine, Richard, and Dorothy, at home, and Mrs. Robert Anderson of Pontiac, Mich. Former Local Pastor Is Praised For Work An article in the Indiana Presbyterian praises the work of the Rev. A. C. E. Gillander, formerly pastor of the First Presbyterian church of this city, and now with Sutherland Presbyterian church in Indianapolis. Rev. Gillander has received a recognition for his work with boys. He has organized a group of 60 into a weekly boxing club. The group has had to move twice to larger quarters. Originally organized to combat juvenile delinquency among both colored and white boys, no regular members of the group have gotten Into trouble since its organization .NOTICE OF «l %RDIA\’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE is hereby given that by virtue of an order of t-he Adamis Circuit Court the undersigned guardian of Claude Bibersteift, being emuse number 1618 in the Adame Circuit Court, will at the Uw office of Severin H. Sohurger. 119% South Second Street. Decatur, Indiana, on Monday, June 21, 1954, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock A.M. and from day to day thereafter until sold, offer at private sale for not less than the fall appraised value, certain real estate 'belonging to said ward and described as follows, towit: an interest therein of:— Commencing at the southwest corner of lot NliHjnber One Hundred and six (106) in David Studebaker’s Addition -to the town of Buffalo, now Geneva, thence East Sixty Six (66) feet, thence North One Hundred Thirty Two (132) teet, thence West Sixty Six (66) feet„ th the NorthWest corner of Lot numbered One Hundred Seven 410 T) in said Addition, thence South One Hundred Thirty Two (132) feet, to the place •n-f beginning, -being the west part of Inlot One Hundred . Six (106) and One Hundred Seven (107)—in said addition to the town of. Geneva. The purchaser will be required to pay at least one third (1/3) down of the purchase tnoney Cash In hand and the balance upon delivery - of a "Seed gild merchantable alrstract- of title showing said real estate te be free of all ffehs and enmmhrances except the 1954 taxes due and payable in 1955. MARGARET BI BERSTEIN, Guardian 3EVKRIN H. SCHURGER, Attorney JUNE B—ls . ’ . If yon have something to sell or rooms for -ent, try a Democra* Want Add. It brings results.

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Mexico Government I In Critical Period , Inflation Problem Is Growing Worse MEXICO-CITY (INS)— Mexico, gripped by socially and economically dangerous inflation and threatened with a general strike, is in i one of the most critical periods of the nation’s recent history. Inflation has been a problem for years. Before the recent devaluation of the dollar-backed peso, It already had pushed the lower classes near starvation. The peso devaluation in midApril tq an all-time low now threatens to relegate the country’s relatively new middle class to a position of want. in the face of this difficult problem, the powerful Confederation of Mexican Workers (CTM) has reversed previously announced policy-of holding the wage line. • The union voted a general strike tor July 12 unless industry comes forward with a 24 percent salary increase to cover the cost of.living Increase since the devaluation. The government moved quickly to arrange a series of talks among industry, labor and federal officials to attempt peaceful settlement of the dispute. The first of those talks was held Monday in Mexico City. While other unions have not yet taken strike votes, they have placed their demands for' 30 percent wage increases before the secretary of labor. Industry, caught in the middle, says it cannot grant the raises without a corresponding increase in prices. The economic situation has developed along with a marked increase in anti-United States sentiment that has reached its highest pitch since foreign oil interests were kicked out of Mexico in 1938. The CTM strike call represents a complete about-face of the policy it announced after President Ruiz Cortines' state of the union message last month, when the CTM’s secretary-general declared it would not press for wage increases. The reversal parallels the Communist plan, which was outlined just prior to the peso devaluation and urged members to demand salary increases of not -less than 25 percent. The CT Ji move also dovetails with the Communist exhortation to dispense with “moderate” measures and return to’ ’frevolu- j tiohary tactics of a general strike.” The “new look” of Communism also called for constant attacks against U.S. industries in Mexico and a general fomenting of unrest. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

THE

! Bar To m Hold Annual Picnic The Adams county bar association will hold its annuaj summer picnic at the cottag*-4»f t). Burdette Custer at Lake Lavine on Thursday.’ ’Arrangements are being made by attorneys Lewis Lutz Smith and Hubert II McClenahan. U. N. Council Will Meet On Wednesday Council To Study Thailand Request i’NITED NATIONS. N.Y. (INS) —• The security council meets Wednesday on a new Thailand request for action on sending UN military observers to Communistthreatened areas in Southeast Asia. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., responded to a plea from Tharrat Khoinan of Thailand for an'early meeting of the body despite the lack of a French government and the uncertain status of the Geneva talks. Khoman said he had “instructions” from his government to ask for a new council session ‘.despite the fact that on June 3 the council approved his request for discussing the dispatch of a UN military mission to Thailand and to Cambodia and Laos, if the latter gave their consent. Lodge, president of the couneib for June, brushed aside British and French objections to Khoman’s request and summoned the meeting for Wednesday despite lack of any concrete resolution. French and British objections are based on the contention that discussion of the Indo-China Situation by the council at this time is likely to interfere with the Geneva conference, although it is likely to wind up quickly in the face of Soviet and Red Chinese opposition to any agreements ex ’ cept those on Communist terms. The imminent collapse of the Geneva conference considerably •heightened expectations at the UN that the Indo-China issue would involve the international organization progressively in all its phases, from the fighting in Vietnam against the Communist Vietminh to the charges of aggression by Red forces of Cambodia and Laos. Round-Clock Hunt On For Hurricanes J ■ .MUML Fla... UNS). r~ A round-the-cloSMiunt tor hurricane* was launched today with the take off of an Air Force plane from a Bermuda base. The start of the search for the howiers over a huge area extending from Wilmington, N. C., to Bronsville. Tex., traditionally signals the opening of the hurricane season.

$75,000 In Ransom Money Is Recovered Irregularities In Case Investigated PHOENIX. Aril. (INS) - The strange circumstances involved in the recovery of $75,000 in ransom paid to the kidnaper of Mrs. Evelyn Ann Smith spurred detectives today to investigate more closely many irregularities in the case. The money was found Monday in plain sight in an area repeatedly covered by searchers. Newsmen, suspecting that the money was planted in the open where it would be readily found, asked Mrs. Smith's fa tiler-in-law, Sam Smith, whether the family had made a deal with Daniel J. Marsin, who is under arrest as the woman's abductor. Smith replied heatedly: _4“We wouldn't deal with a kidnaper." p Last week Smith offered $5,000 to Marsin, 41-year-pld unemployed welder, if he would lead police to*the missing money. The money was found Monday in the foothills of the Superstition Mountains beside the road leading to the ranch house of the Quarter Circle U ranch. • It was at the ranch house that Marsin was arrested last Thursday night, a few hours after the ransom was, paid. when he stumbled into the place apparently about, to collapse from thirst and clayning that he was a lost prospector: The ranch house is about five miles from where the ransom was paid and scores of searchers had combed the ranch, looking for the money, since Marsin's arrest. The money was found by police detective Earl Moore. It was thought at first that only part of the money had been found, but police said that a count showed all of the s7a*,ooo was recovered. It was in seven bundles and was wrapped in an old blue work shirt.

■-J-o Ik « 9 4 w S o - -;-■’wk; jl - ' V/R\* jirWL d*® *■ i ii a 1 II ,11 I i _.ia — i j ' y' He’s Ten Years Younger Today!

Here’s a man who has just taken ten years off his age * ' —insofar as his spirits and mental outlook are concerned. He’s going for his first ride in his first Cadillac—and he’s a happy, happy man—with his hdptes in the sky and his heart singing a song it hasn’t recalled for a decade, - - He’s having an experience which we can’t tell you about. You have to live it yourself—at the wheel of , that first Cadillac—in order to evaluate it. ; You know how it goes. You work and you worry and plan and hope. The years go by—and, bit by bit, you get things done. The insurance creeps up where you want it—the mortgage on the home goes ' into the fire—there’s that nest-egg against the future and the college fund is in the bank. . ** And then, one day, you. feel there’s no further need

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With it was a .32 caliber pistol. Charles O. Little, who has been on camping trips into the Superstitions with Marsin, identified both the shirt and the pistol as belonging* to Marsin. Mrs. Smith, 23-year-old wife of Phoenix industrialist Herbert Smith, was kidnaped last Wednesday afternoon. She was released unharmed the following afternoon. Marsin has neither admitted nor denied the kidnaping. Guatemalan Leaders Warned By Officers Warn Arbenz To Quit Aiding Communists < WASHINGTON (INS) — Highly responsible U. S. officials reported today receiving information that top Guatemalan army officers have warned President Jacobo Arbenx to quit playing ball with the Communists — or get out. These officials said they consider their information very reliable but are checking further into it. They said they have received several reports from Guatemala indicating that the army—heretofore loyal to Arbenx — has now broken with his Red-tinged government. * One official in close touch with the situation described as “substantlally correct" reports that, a largp group of army officers had called on the president demanding that he change his ways. This official was unable to confirm or deny reports that the army officers had ' given Arbenx 24 hours to accept their ultimatum. But he said the army will have to move fast before their is any distribution of the 2,000 tone of arms recently shipped to’ Guatemala from behind the Iron Curtain. If you nave something to sell or rooms fo* rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.

Forecast Cooling Trend By Weekend Scattered Showers Forecast In State INDIANAPOLIS, (INS) — Most Hoosiers today were hoping that one of those scattered thundershowers the weatherman has been talking about would shower down on them, but that lightning would go strike someplace else. The outlook was for continued warm weather today, Wednesday and Thursday, with a cooling trend to set in by the end of the week. Scattered thundershowers also were promised today, Wednesday and Thursday, with total rainfall between three-fourths and one and ore-half inches. A likelihood of more rain over the week end ateo was predicted in the five-day weather forecast. Temperatures today were in the mid-90s, and will ease down to the lower 70s tonight. That is almost a duplicate of Monday's temperatures, which saw Evansville and Fort Wayne JJoth reporting maximums of 95. Last rites I were to be held Wednesday for three-year-old Elisabeth Ann McGarvey, ‘ who was drowned Monday in the Hillcrest Country Club pool, Indianapolis. The little girl’s drowning followed a week end of water tragedies which claimed nine lives in Indiana. Also in Indianapolis, two persons were treated at hospitals after being shocked when lightning struck near them Monday. Bowman Elder Leaves Estate To Children INDIANAPOLIS. (INS) — The will of a former Indiana Democratic party leader today disclosed that personal and real property valued at $225,000 was divided evenly between a son and daughter. Bowman Elder, who died last

for resisting—so you order the Cadillac—and wait for the happy news—“lt’s here!” Your ride home will live in your memory forever. You’ve put the cap sheaf on your w£rld of dreams. Os course, this great sense of is only the/nrr thrill that comes with your Cadillac. There’s its magnificent performance—its marvelous balance and roadability—and its rare comfort and safety and handling ease. Every hour at the wheel is a privilege—and every journey is a wonderful memory. Is the time about right for you to step up to a \ Cadillac? If So—please come in and see us. The longer we’re in business, the happier we are when we deliver a man his first Cadillac. We’ll. be waiting to welcome you—anytime. ~

—- TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1954

Thursday, left his entire estate to his sori. William L. Elder, 31, also of Indianapolis, and his daughter. Mrs. Anne K. Schermerhorn, 33, of Hyde Park, N. Y. 4 Democrat Want Ade Brins Results - I ... —-

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