Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 240, Decatur, Adams County, 12 October 1954 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Revival Services Al Bethany Church Services Are Held Nightly At Church * The Rev. Renj. G; Thomas, pastor, reports rally day Sunday- at the Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church was a fine success, despite the heavy rains. Sunday school attendance was 324 >nd the offering totaled $2,219, to he applied to the building fund. The Rev. George S. Ixjzier. former pastor, spoke at morning and evening services. * Wednesday night, the 'Rev. Elmer Smith will continue preaching in the evangelistic meetings which opened Sunday night. The pastor spoke Monday night and will also preach tonight. Mrs. Roland Scherry will sing. Wednesday night will be youth night, with young people assisting 0 r — H — Last Time Tonight — Cinemascope A Color! •KNIGHTS OF THE —- ROUND TABLE” RobL Taylor, Ava Gardner ALSO — Shorts 15c -50 c 0 1 WED. & THURS. ' OUR~BIG DAYS! First Show Wed. at 6:30 Continuous Thur, from 1:30 BE SURE TO ATTEND! ■v - V ir -rr * ■■ AU the Fun, Stars, Songs, Dances, Gags that Had Broadway Cheering WithDelightl Cinemascope Ac— ft :* \ y ''' ■ ( " . ——* , Leonard WS Sillman's *** womter of 1 Uvnd 1 r V ihwwsimui laieuiijiMS > | ffSis | ROWv""*EMm« \*£F J GRAHAM-Kin V itu* /»OB«T ALICE VWCLARY.GHOSTLEr • S fcii i.i n. »mi j Fri. A Bat.—Greer Garson, “Her Twelve Men*—ln Oolor O—O Coming Sun. — “THE ROBE”

What IS A Boy or Girl Worth g|!l|||| Anyway? Wf OVER J Well, that depends on who’s judging. Once in a while you f' n< * someone who doesn’t think they’re worth much. Some would VV /o let them Q row , helter-skelter, without any discipline, without any Qf? horne training, without any good clean fun. - _ ' rB V A II Q And then there is the vast majority who think a boy or a V girl is a pretty valuable piece of goods—something to treasure • COMMUNITY above many other things. FUND Boys and girls are worth a lot. They need good training, GOES TO good self-discipline, a bit of outdoor life, confidence, a feeling of THE independence. These are the Ingredients it takes to make a YOUTH Sixty-three percent, or $7,385.00, pf YOUR Community Fund OF Budget this year is designated for the YOUTH OF YOUR YOUR COMMON,TY. COMMUNITY Decatur Community Fund Budget $11,665.00 EVERYBODY BENEFITS — EVERYBODY GIVES to The DECATUR COMMUNITY FUND H '

in the service. Rev. Smith’s ser- i mon will be on “Choosing Our i Side." Thursday will be'family night, with the sermon topic "Some j Thngs Always Impossible.” Friday will be Sunday school night, with the message on "Making an Appointment with God.” The public is invited to attend. I Says Secy. Wilson Slurs Unemployed Tape Recording Os Conference Studied DETROIT (INSh-A tape recording of deft use secretary Charles E. Wilson's news conference in De.’roit Monday was brought ou<: today to determine whether he had. as CtO-UAW President Walter Reuther claimed, slurred the nation’s unemployed. Reu t her di-patched a telegram ;o President Eisenhower Monday demand lug that Wilson either repudiate his news conference statemeats or resign Ms' post. The labor leader claimed in the telegram that Wilson had referred to unemployed workers as ‘'kennel dog's" and that such a ‘Catement disparaged the jobless workman. However, the official text of Wilson’s rr?ws conference revealed today that Wilton had been »■ peaking of a particular c4se. and not of unemployed persons as a group. Following I- a partial text of Wilson's remarks: — “I’d like to tell you a story that happened to me . . a group of people came in like yon’re talking about from a dietreosed area —eo called labor eurphie — and they pointed out that it was so classifkd. “And one of them made the ccmplaiht (this is a little over a ' year ago! in addition, he ’.said: You know, you have just reduced the draft. In our district /here are 110 more young men that -won’t have to go to the Korean fight now* and that will add to our unwnploytnent “And the idea that a 19-year-old boy could be drafted and sent to Korea to be phot at and he didn’t have enough gumption to go 100 miles and get himself a job — I don't go for that. “And I"ve got a lot of sympathy for pec pie where a sudden change catches tihem — But I have always liked bird dogs better than kennelled do?s myself. You know, one who’ll get out and hunt for food further than sit on his fanny and yell.” . i Raver Funeral Rites Held This Afternoon Funeral services were held this afternoon at S.urgis, Mich., for Mrs. Ettic.e Raver, former resident I cf Adams county, who died at her home in that city. The name was misspelled as Raber in Monday’s Daily Democrat. Monmouth Juniors To Sponsor Dance A square and’ round dartce will be sponsored by the junior class of Monmouth high* school Friday from 9 p. m. to 12:30 a. m. in RietdorFs Hayloft bain at Hoagland. The proceeds will be added to the class trip fund. The public is invited to attend.

New Sensation Expected From French Scandal France's Fantastic Spy Scandal Takes Sensational Turn PARIS HNS) — France’s fan-' tastic spy scandal gave promise of producing new sensations today as Andre Pelabon. director of the premier’s personal cabinet, was summoned to appear before the military magistrate investigating the case. The decision of Maj. Jean De Resseguier to question Pelabon coincided with reports that important new personalities, including officials of Pierre Mendes-France’s government and " two additional members of the national defense committee have been linked with the affair. What the French press described as “very important names” were given to De Resseguier by admitted- double-agent Andre. Barands during his testimony Monday. The identity of these personalities was not revealed since the military tribunal's investigation is being conducted in great secrecy, as is customary in a case involving leakage of top Military secrets and a threat to the security of the state. However, they are expected to begotne known ai the/ «te called to testify before De •Resseguier. who will try this week to find out whether Baranes is telling the truth. Paris-Press reported today that Baranes cited among those responsible for the leaks two very wellknown political men and "also two women, of whom one is the wife of one of these personalities and the other the relative of an extreme left-wing parliament member.” _ ' The two aoaitional members of the defense committee named by Red courier Baranes held "rank superior or equal to that of Jean Mons” according to Paris newspaper accounts. Mons, the secretary-general of the committee, is free pending trial on a charge of negligence. He was the only member of the group previously known to have been mentioned in connection with the leaks. De 'Resseguier reportedly regarded Baranes" new declarations as “very important." / Jean Dides. whose suspension as a Paris police inspector set off the revelations of the spy plot, was believed to have told the military tribunal that there may have been “ten or twenty mister X’s” who through stupidity, carelessness or otherwise leaked military secrets to Communist agent or fellow travelers. Motorist Killed As • Auto Hits Tree * | COATSVILLE, Ind., (INS) — i Daniel KL-Hope, 77. was killed late Tuesday wheif his car went out of control and hit a tree off Ind. 75 near his Coatesville farm home. Authorities believe a heart attack may have caused the accident.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

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A “MIRACLE BABY'* is what British doctors call Douglaa Irvine, shown here being held by his father, John Irvine, while the mother smiles happily from her bed in an Aylesbury, England, hospital Both parents are paralyzed from the waist down and were married in wheelchairs in August, 1953. Irvine was injured in a shipyard accident and his wife was hurt in an automobile crash. Radionhoto)

Expand Facililies At Atomic Plants 67 Million Dollar Program Announced WASHINGTON (INS) — The aicinie energy commission announced today it will t-pend $20.Idb.MO to expand facilities at ,iU_ Ffernald. Ohio plant, near Cincinnati. The expenditure is- part of a 67 million dollar expansion program announced by the A EC-today. Other plants affected include those at St. Louis. Mo. and Paducah. Ky. The AEC said the projects, at the peak of construction, will require approximately 3.500 % new workers and that the expanded facilities will ” substantially increase” •■production of materials for use In both A-weapons a n d peacetime atomic energy programs. — — Under the expansion plan, new facilities will be built in the St. Louis area at a cost of $39,800,000. including a $6,500,000 enlargement 'of the existing feed materials plant there. .... - Expansion of the feed materials production center at Feraald, 19 miles northwest of Cincinnati, will cost an_.ejjmated $20,100,000. At Paducah. thS program involves a seven million dollar expansion based on enlargement o’ existing buildingv anl equipment' The AEC said the program will be confpleted in three years. Motorist Is Fined On Traffic Count A fine of $1 and costs, totaling $14.75, was paid last ngiht to justice of the peace Floyd Huntef by Glen R. Foor, of Pleasant, Mills, for failure to yield the right of I way. Foor was arrested at second ' and Jackson Saturday night after an accident involving an automobile driven by Lester W. Meshberger, of route 1, Berne. Passenger Killed As Train Hits Taxi INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — A taxicab passenger was killed today when the cab was struck by a diesel switch pngine at a Monon railroad crossing in Indianapolis. John Battle, 25. of Indianapolis. ■ suffered head injuries in the Fol- | lision and died a short time later , in General’hospital. Pastel curtains won’t fade in the sunlight after washing it you dry them inside a pillow case. The only trouble with a sure thing is the uncertainty.—Courier, Waterloo, la.

- Mb? • * A VIEW of the Royal Albert and the King George V docks with ships and cranes idle as tlie result of the strike of dockers in the port of London. The wildcat dock walkout has idled 17,000 men in addition to 8,000 ship repair workers, who have been out for the past three weeks. I The strike was paused by a breach ot a long standing agreement that the last to be emnloyed should be the first tn be Laid aS. (International)

fl IF f * y ‘*sSKR KW ’ | Mt aFm Mg JOHN E. PIURIFOY, U.S. Ambassador to Thailand and former Guatemalan envoy, tells a House subcommittee in Washington that, despite setbacks in Guatemala, the Red menace “still continues in Latin America." Conceding that the Kremlin had been successfully blocked. Peurifoy testified that he did not consider the "setback a final defeat” for the Communists. Attend District Officers Meeting Roger Koeneihan. preMStmt-elect of the Adame county rural youth, and Shirley Gerke. secretary-elect, Attended the district meeting "of rural youth officers, at the Huntingion Farm Bureau community hull. Recommendation* for mass membership drives throughout the district were made by state rural youth officer*. John Ripley, vice-president-elect of the Adams county rural youth, will head the local membership committee. John Marks, district four cbnsul- ' tant for the department of edui cation of the Indiana Farm Bureau, spoke on the principals and aims of rural youth clubs. The district rural youth meeting at Bryant next Monday was discussed. Adams [ county will have charge of registration at the Bryant high school. The district meeting will Include a 1 talk meet, and election of district 1 officers. At least 30 members from , Adams county are expected to atI tend the meeting. A woman can bear up under anything when she #«ars jt new hat. ■ —U. F. Newlin. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

State Traffic Death Toll Now Totals 798 INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Indiana state police reported today that traffic accidents claimed 71*8 llveSzto midnight Oct. 10 compared with 942 killed during the same period of 1953. Rural collisions claimed 628 lives —480 in federal and state highways and 148 on county roads —while the remaining 170 deaths were chalked up against urban crashes. Coal Field Unrest In Pennsylvania Seniority Dispute Brings On Unrest PITTSBURGH (INS) —Unrest ruled the. soft coal fields of southwestern Pennsylvania today because of a seniority dispute between several locals of the United LMine Workers and U. S. Steel. Seven U. S. steel mines in the Fayette-Greene-Washington county area have been ehut down by roving pickets from •'Big Steel’s 1 ' Roheiia mine which employs about 2,-SOO diggers. They accused the corporation of violating a seniority agreement dealing with the promotion of miners. A total of about 6,04)0 have refused to work in what t’MW and company officials call o “wildcat walkout.” Robena is the world’s largest mechanized operation and turns out about 23,000 tons of coal daily. Allred C. Cavdlcante, president'' of the Rcibena local, claimed that' of the N.MW’s District 4 have cooperated with ..steel in what he called abrogating every seniority arrangement in effect since 1944. 'William Hynes, president of District 4, said that UMW chief John tL. Lewis has ordered a threemember commission to the scene to investigate the walkouts which have reduced coal production an estimated 45,000 tow per day. The tihree are John Kmetz, president of District 1 in Wilkes-Barre, John Gizzoni, president of District 2 in Homer City and Ceqil Urbanik, president of District 3. in Fairmont, W, Ya. Indianapolis Infant Suffocates In Crib INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Five-month-old Kandy lx»u McCarthy suffocated in her crib at her Indianapolis home. Monday. Deputy coroner Dr. Robert D. Arnold said the child was so weakend by malnutrition she was unattir to raise' her head from the mattress. He added that the child recently had been confined to a hospital. Local Man Candidate To State Lodge Office A fish fry and open house In honor of Junior Lake will be held at the Red Men’s Lodge at 8 o’clock Wednesday night, it was announced today. Lake is a candidate for great junior sagamore of the great council of Indiana of the Improved Order of Red Men. This is a position which will lead eventually to head of the state Red Men's organization. I-ake is one of four or five candidates; the position will be filled at the annual convention in Indianapolis next week. All 'Red Men. guests and friends are invited to attend the open house. — Democrat Want Ada Bring Result.

Attention All EGG Producers X- « ROBERT NELMS CO. INC. WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF ANOTHER EGG RECEIVING STATION AT ... STIEFEL GRAIN CO. - 217 NORTH FIRST STREET DECATUR, INDIANA, THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 1954 EGGS WILL BE RECEIVED EVERY THURSDAY FROM 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. ‘ CASH PAID WHEN EGGS ARE RECEIVED CASES EXCHANGED DON’T FAIL TO STOP IN TO SEE US THIS THURSDAY, OR CALL DECATUR 3-3709, TO SEE THE FANTASTIC PRICES THAT ARE BEING PAID FOR EGGS. ROBERT NELMS Co., INC., IS ONE OF NEW YORK’S LARGEST RECEIVERS, SELLING TO THE FINEST TRADE IN NEW YORK. Manager: HAROLD E. NELMS ROBERT NELMS CO. INC. SOUTH WHITLEY, IND. 760 ST. ANNS AVE. BRONX, NEW YORK

Confesses To Firing Fatal Shot At Dance Youth Fatally Shot At Teenage Dance ATLANTIC'CITY, N. J. (INS) — Police said today a 16-year-old boy has admitted firing the shot that killed another youth at a Veterans 'of Foreign Wars teenage dance last night in Atlantic City. The dance was sponsored by the post as one of a series aimed at reducing juvenile delinquency; Police said the boy. whose name was withheld?- insisted that ’the shooting of William’ Williamson, Jr., 16, was accidental. He was held on a juvenile delinquency charge—“to wit. manslaughter." Williamson was dancing when he was struck on the left side. Police searched the boys and a matron searched the girls but a weapon was not found. On the floor, however, police said they recovered a .32-caliber ammunition clip, a s hotgun shell, a switchblade knife and a pair of brass knuckles. One bey, who admitted having been seated near where the ammunition clip was ,f ound. wai taken to city hall where he confessed, p olice said. They quoted him as saying the pistol was handed to him by another boy who explained it belonged, to his grandfather. While he examined it the weapon discharged, he said.

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12. 1954-

Senior Class Plans Annual Fall Trip * The senior (daiss of Pleasant 'Mills higth school will leave Wed-, nesday for their annual fall trip. They will tour Washington, D. C., and points of interest on the east,, coast. Those who will make the trip are Carol Archer, Dick Bauman, 'Allen Bowen, Patsy Burkhart, Joe 'Butler, Byer, Dwight ridgell, Patty Hague, Rita Erhsam. abb Foor, Roger Grey Roger Foor, Ramona Gatts'haß, Bonnie Gep-hai-t, Ronnie Gephart. ‘Barbara Jacobs, Glenda Johnson. Mary Ann Jones, Suzanne Kuhn, Don Kramer, Kenneth, IMtarckel, Jim Smith. Dee Wolfe, Virginia Wolfe, Mary Bildenback, (Marlene hler and Kent Von Gunton. ‘Sponsors are Jack Gordan and (Mrs. Lois Bodkin. Democrat Want Ada Bring Result* EVERYBODY BENEFITS -■Everybody gives to Decatur Community Fund. It MASONIC Regular Stated Meeting Tuesday, October 12 7:30 P. M. Ray Stingely, W. M.