Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 224, Decatur, Adams County, 23 September 1954 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
; - - RIB END POBK CHOPS lb. 3£ C LEAN MEATY BOILING BEEF »15c CHOICE CHUCK ROAST ». 39 C TENDER PORK LIVER ,b -19c BONELESS BEEF ROLLS ROAST or BOIL ,h -43c SLICED BOLOGNA 3 lbs. SI.OO TENDER CLUB STEAK ft. 49c FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER 3 ibs. SI.OO OLD FASHIONED SOUR CREAM BUTTER ». 59c * , Personal Attention Years of Experience SCHMITT MARKET f«7*. 2nd Phone 3-2903
At the Adams county memorial hoepHal . ■Mr. and Mrs. Russell Mitchell of Decatur are the parents of a baby boy, born Wednesday at >:«6 p. m., weighing six pounds and one ounce. A baby girl was horn today to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Burkholder of Portland at ?;25 a. in., weigh l jng eight pounds and seven ounces. lyi Admitted Mrs. Thomas O. Sullivan, Geneva. Dismissed Master William Wolfrey, Eaton. □., JCdward L. Gaae. Decatur; Joel Neuenschwander. Geneva; Mrs. Harold Schamerloh and baby boy, Decatur; Mrs. Bud Sheets and baby girl, Monroeville; Mrs. Hubera Zerkel, Jr., and baby girl, Decatur. *)amannai Waae <s -■*->- as taenite want acts cr ng nusuiii
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74 . ■ I Attack Admission Os Negro Students 'HVANSVFIjUE, Ind. (INS) —A complaint was prepared today for Gov. George N. Craig from parents of Caucasian student* at Harwood school in Evansville., Tlie complaint attacks the admission of 30 Negro,, students to the school. The >paireat» group ended two day. of picketing at the i-chool and agreed to let their ciiWren attend after principal J. B. MeCutchan threatened truancy chargee against absentees. Cardinal Spellman Praises Eisenhower PHIUVDBhPHIA (INS) —President Eisenhower was praised by Francis Cardinal Spellman Wednesday night for overriding opposition and ordering the issuance of foreign air mail stamps with the motto “In God We Trust.” Cardinal Spelhnan told a Philadelphia audience that some officiate thought the saying was ‘controvenrial," and he wrote to the President saying if that was the case “then we in America are sunk.”
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Italian Government *(" * Faces Tough Crisis Italian Reds Usina Party Girl Scandal ROME (INS) I—The 1 —The Italian Communiat and left wing parties pressed an all-out drive today to use party girl Wilma Montaai'a tragic death as a weapon to force the downfall of Premier Mar|o Seelba’a government. Police and troops were alerted for possible riots when Reds and their supporters backed up their political attacks with a call for “mass rallies" throughout the nation. Government leaders met secretly Wednesday to discuss the admitr tedly critical situation brought about by the resignation of foreign minister Attilio Plccioni last week and the arrest of Piccioni's jazaloving 32-year-old son, Piero, Tuesday night on a manslaughter charge. Also arrested was an aristocrat known as the Marquis Ugo Montagna, <6, who was accused of aiding and abetting Piero Piociopi. It was understood that leaders of the government coalition, at their meeting Wednesday, seriously considered the advisability of Scelba’s resigning, but decided against any such action at this time. However, the Scelba government found itself facing a stormy situation because of the prominent persons linked with the Montes! ease, the overtones of sex, scandal and narcotics in the affair and the steady hammering of Communist prepraganda claims that the government had tried to hush up the case. Piccioni, who withdrew from the cabinet because of his son's connection with the affair, was ordered to bed by his physicians Wednesday bight following a slight heart attack. 'Demands for Scelba's resignation came in parliament Wednesday from Sen. Imberto Terracini and left-wing socialist Emilio Lussu. Terracini, speaking for the Communists, accused the government of "trying to make the Montesi case a perfect crime,”
Oct 2 Newspaper Bay Day In State INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Gov. George N. Craig today aet Oct 2 aside as newspaper boy day in Indiana. Craig cited the paperboy as an owner and operator of a small business, citixen of tomorrow building character today and a vital part of the worW-wlde system of gathering, editing and distributing the news. Ives Is Nominated By New York G.O.P. Dewey Places Ives Name To Convention SYRACUSE, N. Y., (INS) — The New York state Republican convention today nominated U. S. senator Irving Ives and Westchester’s J. Raymond McGovern for governor and lieutenant governor, respectively. They will oppose, in November, W. Averell Harriman, Democratic nominee for governor, and Bronx district attorney George Deluca. The GOP executive committee, in an early morning session, officially decided to endorse to the convention tor attorney general (Rep. Jacob Javits of Manhattan’s 81st congressional district. He will face Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., the Democratic nominee. Still in debate was the selection of a downstate (New York City) man for the comptrollership. Backers of Rap. Henry Latham, of Queens, and Rep. Paul A. Fino, of the Bronx, appeared to be locked in a behind-the-scene struggle. Ives* name will be placed in nomination before the 1,279 delegates hy Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, who Is retiring from public life and returning to private law practice after 12 years as New York state's chief executive. In his nominating speech, Dewey is expected to deny charges that he is a political boss and to point out that the GOP slate was picked without ‘‘smoke-filled rooms.” He also will praise Ives’ lengthy political career, which began as a state assemblyman and moved up through various legislative and administrative poets to U. 8. seni a tor.
Nixon To Speak In Indianapolis Today Hoosier Republican Heads Are Worried INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Worried Indiana Republicans watatamo vied president Richard M. Nixon this afternoon with hopes that tee will undo whatever damage Adlal Stevenson and other top-ranking Democrats may have done to OOP election prospects five days ago. Nixon is to apeak tonight th Indianapolis at what probably will be the biggest Republican rally in Indiana before the Nov. I election. The vine nresidantto address in Butler University fieldhouse tonight Is the fine! one of bis current campaign tow, which previously took him into Ohio, Kansas, Missouri, South Dakota, Nebraska, Michigan and Minnesota. Ho is to fly from Duluth to Indianapolis this afternoon. Hoosiers got one bonus not afforded the other states. Nixon's pretty wife. Pat. is to come to Indianapolis tor tonight's GOP ral->-v - The echoes have not yet died away from a lively Democratic conference in Indianapolis last week end which closed with a flOOa-plate dinner at which Stevenson was principal speaker. The 1952 presidential nominee was aided by Gov.-elect Edmund Muakie of Maine, Gov. Frank dement of Tennessee, chairman Stephen Mitchell and other national Democratic leaders. The departing Democrats left a tag for the personable vice president, referring to hiiA facetiously as “the No. 1 traveling salesman from the front office." Indiana Republicans, faced with reelecting 10 GOP members of Congress, bad sought not only the “No. 1 aalMasan” but his boas, as well, for Indiana addresses. But up until now, President Dwight ft Eieechower has not scheduled any Hoosier talks and the Indiana GOP is booming tonight's Nixon appearance as the campagln showpiece. Indiana GOP Chairman Alvin Cast estimated 15,000 will attend, including delegations "from all of the state’s 92 counties.
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The vice presWeat MM VHh Actoe J«aa H«rah4t «W Mtornoon to officiate at ground-break-Ing ceremonies for a |5-mlllton Indianapolis Community hospital. He will apeak briefly at this ceremony, hut is expected to reserve partisan thunder for the night address. Gov. George N. Craig Is to introduce the vice president. The Hoosier GOP to putting up a united front with state officials from both of the party's deep-ftoaured factions seated together on the platform. k »> 111 • ■■‘H’ l ' n ' 7 -.' 1 Says German Troops Are Vital To NATO General Gruenther Appeals To France PARIS (INS) -r Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther has appealed to France not to Insist on "impossible condUions" tor the admission of West Germany into a western European defense system. The North Atlantic treaty organisation's supreme commander declared that German troops were needed In NATO to support the "insufficient'' forces now guarding western Europe against possible aggression. His speech before 60 French businessmen at the supreme headquarters of the Allied powers In Europe was hie first statement on German rearmament since the French National Assembly rejected the European Defense Community treaty. Gruenther said EDC now is "water over the dam" and added that “we must have a German conrtibutlon.” He appealed to the French not to ask for “a book full of safeguards” against the revival of German militarism. The supreme commander stressed that the Allied troops now guarding western Europe could not stall a possible Soviet invasion long enough for the West's main forces to be mobilised. The general declared that there is no such thing as “fool-proof safeguards” and said it would create “an atmosphere that is harmful and distrustful” to have too many “safeguards” directed at one western nation.
a. SEPTEMBER 23, 1964
Japs Report H-Bomb Exploded By Russia Weather Observers Report Evidence TOKYO (INS) — Japanese weather observers reported today they have evidence the Russians have exploded an H-bomb at a proving ground near Soviet-owned Wrangel Island in the Arctic ocean in an area only 600 miles west of Alaska. The newspaper Asahi said evidence from detecting devices coupled with a Russian announcement ot a •‘recent” H-bomb explosion teat Indicates the proving ground has been set up on the isolated northern island. The newspaper said atmospheric detecting devices registered the blast and located it in a northnortheasterly direction from Japan. These same devices gave similar responses when the United States conducted H-bomb tests at Bikini atoll in mid • Pacific last spring. Japanese scientists also said that leas than four hours after atmospheric electricity, presumably from the Russian H - bomb testa, was detected in Japan, a pressure gauge at the Shionomteaki observatory in western Japan recorded an abnormal reading. They aaid atmospheric vibrations caused by nuclear explosions ueually travel at a speed of 670 miles per hour and since the pressure gauge recorded the vibrations less than four hours after the blast —coming from a north-northeast-erly direction — Japanese scientists have placed the Russian proving ground on Wrangel slland. Northern Japan was showered with its first radioactive rains last week and they were probably ' caused by the Russian blast. In 1 Sendai on the north end of Honshu island a count of 38.300 was registered by geiger counters Wed- ' nesday. 1 I Short Packs VIENNA, (INS) — A Bucharest newspaper complains that smokers in Roumania are disappointed to find only 15 in a sealed pack of • supposedly 20 cigarettes ot the stale-produced “Marasesti” brand.
