Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 49, Decatur, Adams County, 28 February 1955 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
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A „ 7 ihv 1 Ek* ♦ * ♦ ■ *♦*♦*)- w.* ♦ ILSiDISASTER MAP “’’ORPW 4 ** ig'gy^MWß! l You holp others—you help yourself— when you join your Red Cross litre are 317crosseson thismap. Each marks a Red Cross Chapter where disaster struck suddenly in 1953-1954 and where the Red Gross working with local organizations gave relief to disaster sufferers. ■*«.— -■*>> • »- /4 \ What will the Disaster Map for 1955 look like? Will there be fewer crosses? Or more? No J one knows. But one thing is certain: Year in and year out, on the average, your Red Cross J working with other local agencies gives relief in 6 disaster calls a week somewhere in the - U.S.A. r ■< ■ ■ ________ < Wfcen H Happens Nt Ono hAlont.;. You will ba there—bocousa your Red Cross will be there! That M the Red Cross way when disaster strikes; when blood or first aid save a life; when at $ ANSWER JTHE CALL 1| serviceman or his family needs a helping hand. /**:.- ’ „ - --, - •-1 JOIN YOUR RED CROSS! If you believe that no one should be alone in time of trouble-“-that ho one should be alone in I giving help—you will join your Red Cross and support it generously. / — ADAMS COURTY GOAL $9,500.00 g ADAMS COUNTY CHAPTER . .. .. '■ ■ . »• , ' f . ■ .. v ’ \ AMERICAN RED CROSS • . . K w «rx-. E. M. WEBB, President MRS. JOSEPH OELBERG, Sec’y. iW' ;, REV. LAWRENCE NORRIS Campaign Chairman x
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Rain, Mild Weather Prevalent In State Highway Death Toll Is Below Average INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Rains and mild temperatures prevailed over Indiana today and will continue through Tuesday, according to the forecast of the Indianapolis weather bureau today. The highway death toll was slightly below the week-end average: However. David Marnalejo. 56, of Gary, was killed in a head-on collision at Gary. Two occupants of the other automobile—Edward
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Szydlowskl, i», and his brother, Hubert, U, both of East Chicago, were injured critically. Herschel Ethington, 65. of Ttlsco, met death while ridiug in a car driven by Miss-Frances Daubs. 77, also of Otlsco, which went passed a stop signal and hit two other automobiles, according to police. Two brothers drowned when their automobile plunged through a street barricade into the St. Mary’s, river at Fort Wayne. They were Frank A. Pritchett, 39, of Etort Wayne, and Robert E. Pritchett. 36. of Indianapolis. Mrs. Larraine Murray. 38, wife of Prof. Raymond G. Murray, of Indiana University, was injured fatally when a car driven by her husband hit a tree along Road 43 five miles south of Cloverdale. When an automobile struck a parked truck near Blackhawk, Vigo county, Thomas Osborne, 33, of Terre Haute, was hurt fatally. Also. Anthony D. Kariukonis, Indianapolis man employed by a traveling show, was one of two persons killed when a truck overturned near Haines City, Fla.
Says Many Persons Seeking New Parly Clarence E. Manion Receives Letters SOUTH BEND, Ind. (INS) — Clkrence E. Mapion, former University of Notre Dame law school head, said Sunday night that many persons “want a new party that will stand for America, states’ rights and constitutional government detached from expensive and dangerous foreign entanglements.” Manion added: “The fraudulent nature of compulsory federal old age insurance was the chief concern expressed in most letters.” Manion advised the starting of a local all-American pressure group to resist federal spending by making it illegal for the federal government to spend a single dollar more than it takes in. *
Midnight Deadline For Auto Licenses IND6ANAIPOOS (INS) —Midnight tonight la tbe deadline for purchase of 1966 automobile license tabs by Hoosiers. Midnight also is the final hour for persons born in February to reney their driver’s licenses on a two-year basis. The same deadline applies for renewing chauffeur and public passenger chauffeur licenses. Urges Establishment Os Planning Board Hearst Speaker To National Press Club WASHIN&TOf? (INS) — Es tablishment of a permanent national planning board to help the U. S. "win the battle of competitive co-existence” with Russia whs urged today by William Randolph Hearst. Jr., on the basis of his recent trip to the Soviet Union. The editor-in-ctyef of the Hearst newspapers made his suggestion in a speech prepared for delivery at the National Press Club in Washington, before an audience of editors, publishers, capital newsmen and government Officials. Hearst spoke at the Invitation of the club to tell of his experiences and observations during his visit to Russia last month and his interviews with the four top Kremlin leaders, j \ . f , • Present with Hearst at the press club luncheon were Kingsbury Smith, European general manager of International News Service, and Frank Conniff, Hearst’s editorial assistant, who accompanied him to Russia and took part in the Kremlin interviews. Reviewing his talks with the Kremlin "Big Four” — Nikita S. Khrushchev, first secretary of the •Vommunist party; new premier Nikolai Bulganin; defense minister George Zhukov, and foreign minister V. M. Molotov —Hearst said: “With these four coldly realistic men at the top in the Soviet Union. I could not help feeling that any infmediate threat to world peace is more likely to come from Red China than (Russia. "Khrushchev told us he was confident that the Chinese Communist leaders would show what he described as common sense In this respect. , ■ “If that is so, and we are not going to have war in the foreseeable future, then I believe we are going to face a struggle that may prove more difficult for us to wage successfully than a military conflict. In the long run, however, this struggle will involve the survival of our way of life Just as much as a war would.” “I am referring,” Hearst continued, “to the conflict of competitive co-existence. This is intended to be an ideological and economic struggle aimed at achieving Communist domination of the world by measures short of an all-out, EastWest war. “That is what we face now. It will be much less terrifying and much less destructive in a material w’ay than a military conflict. It will be far more subtle than the cold' war was under Stalin. Bu| its ultimate objectives, as.far as we _are concerned. . will be the same,” Hearst noted that Khrushchev had told him that Communism would ultimately gain “the upper hand” throughout the world. “The second half of this 20th century." Hearst stated, "will determine whether Khrushchev was right.” Hearst said he believes in “the, strength and ultimate survival of the free world's system based on human freedom, the dignity of the individual, and private initiative . . hut the mere statement of this creed is not enough.” ■hb >* • . s wist i ’ AH CIO PRESIDENT Walter Reuther is shown in Washington telling reporters that the 44-membcr CIO Executive board approved the AFL-CIO merger with one dissent after four hours of debate. Dissenting, CIO-Ttansport Workers. //ntcmationaO
Conservative Anti-Reds In Japan Control Voters Apparently Endorse A Neutral Role tn Cold War CONSERVATIVE TOKYO (INS) — Conservative antl-Communists swept into control of the Japanese diet (parliament* today by almost a two to one margin, but Socialists also Scored heavily as voters in Japan’s national elections apparently endorsed a more neutral role in the cold war. Prime minister Ichiro Natoyama’i Democrats won 186 seats and the right to organise the government in returns backing the premier’s support of alliance with America but closer ties with Russia and Communist China. The Democrats alone do not have a majority of the 467-mem-ber diet, but the equally-conserva-tive Liberals have 111 seats and are expected to back the prime minister to guarantee a conserve live government. Left and right wing Socialists, won a total of 166 Diet contests, and are expected to vote together on most matters. The left Socialists won 89 seats and the right Socialists 67. Two Communists were elected, along with four members of the Farm-Labor party, two members of minor parties and six independents. The election results represented a clear victory for Hatoyama's support of diplomatic and trade ties with Communist nitions. Both Liberals and Democrats favor alliance with America and are anti-Communiat, but they split on the issue of ties with Russia and Red China. Hatoyama also campaigned on a platform of “independence,” which he indicated meant independence of American guidance of Japan’s foreign policy. His predecessor. Shigeru Yoshida of the Liberals, had been accused of being a tool of the U. S. state department. A total of 36,197,080 ballots were cast in the election Sunday. The Democrats got approximately 43 million popular votes to some nine and one-half million for the Liberals. The left and right Socialists together totaled more
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