Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 25 May 1955 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

British Wind Up Campaign For Election . Conservative Party Heavily Favored As Winner Thursday LONDON (I NSt — Britain chooses Thursday between five more years of the?CotwiPrvaUYe party's "Tory Democracy" and a return to Socialism unjier the Laborttes. All indications pointed to a victory. possibly by a large majority, for the governing Conservatives. Their biggest hurdle appeared to be over-confidence. Tory leaders from prime minister Sir Anthony Eden down to local canvassers stressed the need for a big turnout. At the same time, the Labor party chiefs were urging every one to vote in the hope that the bigger the electorate, the better their chances were to hold down Tonight & Thursday tn Technicolor! “WALKING MY BABY BACK HOME” Donald O’Connor, Janet Leigh PLUS — First Chapter of “Riding With Buffalo Bill” O—O Fri. £. Sat. — “Silver Lode” A “Diamond Queen” —o Sun. A Mon.—“ Cow Country” 4. “Detective Story” - o—o Color Cartoon on Every Program EHED Tonight & Thursday ° OUR BIG DAYS! * I First Show Tonight 6:30 {Continuous Thur, from 1:30' | BE SURE TO ATTEND! o o NEN FLABINC UEAUH fejtj I CtCITID MEN TO j EXKOSIVI K 4 VIOLENCE! ntMfcL MBBL mor i / I ™ ■ mmm TRUCOLORncaKMia NMUHO *V«U MV* HAYDEN • RALSTON • BRIAN iRSh ram • ii<j ttMKim • tn ius ALSO — Shorts 15c -50 c o—o—Fri. A Sat—ALAN LADD “DRUM BEAT"—Cinemascope —jo—o Sun. Mon. Tues.—" Hit the Deck" Debbie Reynolds, Tony Martin

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the Conservative majority. But the British public seemed to be more concerned with whowill win the Epsom Derby this afternoon than with the fate of the nation. The three weeks campaign was considered to be the quietest and dullest, both as to personalities and issues, in a quarter of a century. In the words of this morning's Times: “Prosperity, it seems, has drawn passion's teeth." The election of 630 members, of the new house of commons Will decide not only the path which Britain follows towards domestic social and economic goals, but alSb who will represent the United Kingdom in this summer's Big Four chiefs of state meeting. Sir Anthony, seeking an endorsement of his lengthy experience in" diplomacy, asked Tuesday night to be returned to office at a time when the future "of the world for a generation may be at stake.'' As the campaign oratory tapered off today, the parties were mainly concerned with rebutting the charges of the opposition rather than stating their own position. Eden denied again the Laborite gibe that he had sought the Big Four meeting with Russia purely to strengthen the Conservatives’ j hand in the election. Labor party secretary Morgan Phillips had his hands full. too. He took time and care Tuesday to deny a Conservative tabloid's charge that the Laborites were planning to ditch Clement Attlee and select left winger Aneurin ; Bevan as prime minister if they j won. FEAR VACCINE (Continued from Page One) General feeling of those queried in the survey was that the remaining five companies should not be hog tied because a sixth company's production was in doubt. Concern was expressed besause the optimum length of time between first and second doses, as recommended by Dr. Scheele’s own advisory committee of top medical experts, soon will be passed. Many of the first and second grade children -who received their first shots under the NFIP program were injected about four weeks ago. The surgeon general’s committee. in a bulletin sent to state health officers, said: “The second dose should be given two to six weeks after the first doses and before the polio season, if possible, although the second dose is beneficial even if given after a. number of months.” SAYS WITNESSES (Continued from Page One) ■ David Pollack a New York auditor, from his post at the Phila- . delphia quartermaster depot,for telling conflicting stories to the subcommittee. Pollack consistently denied getting any “payoff” from Rubin, although Levy swore that he Pollack take SSOO from Rubin. While Pollack was consistent in this denial, he shifted his testimony on several other points dealing with his relations with Rubin. WATCH for Mansfield Motor Sales—FßEE Offer in tomorrow’s Paper. This Is A Real Deal. It Trade in a Gooi* T*wn — Decatur SQUARE DANCE FRIDAY NIGHT 9:30 to 12:30 Featuring Mud Slingers MOOSE

Await Decision On Race Desegregation Reports Are Given At PTA Conclave CHICAGO (INS) — School color lines are fading, but only on the fringes of the deep south, leaders of parent and teacher associations reported today. . Most of Dixie is adopting a watt and see attitude, pending the U. S. supreme court's Expected reappraisal and decision of its May 17, 1954, directive, ordering the desegregation of public schools in the nation. So said the leaders of the na- " tional congress of parents and teachers, the national congress of colored parents and teachers and the national education association. All have been attending the three day national PTA convention which ends today in Chicago. Mrs. Newton P. Leonard of Providence. R. 1., retiring president of the PTA, said the organization expects to absorb most colored PTA locals in Oklahoma. Missouri. Delaware. Maryland, the District of Columbia and West Virginia “by the end of this year.” ~-v Neither Mrs. Leonard nor Mrs. Charles Williams of Miami, national president of the Negro PTA, would estimate how long it would be before racial integration is a fact in all the nation's schools. Mrs. Leonard said: “The PTA has not stepped into the problem on a national level. We feel it is of local concern where each community must do what it believes’ best in its own way.“But the national PTA has expressed its willingness to cooperate and take the Negro parent teachers into our organization. But then dur membership always has been open.” Mrs. Williams, head of the Negro PTA-ers. said desegregation is "definitely working in the fringe , areas.” She said: > “Our units in Missouri, Kansas and the District of Columbia have already voted to disband. “Deleware, West Virginia, Oklahoma and parts of Maryland — chiefly the Baltimore area — also ■ have done a good job. Some of the machinery has not been perfected but it should be by the end of the year.” The rest of Dixie, she said, is waiting for the supreme court “decision on how and when.” She said the NCPTA expects this decision before the tribunal recesses for the summer. And she added: “We hope the will set no arbitrary time limit but rather let communities and school boards set up their own system at their own rate of progress.” Fund Allocated To Psychiatric Center INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Dr. Nfa/garet Morgan said today the state will have one of the best psychiatric research centers in the 1 world operating within a year. The budget committee allocated $940,000 to build and equip the • facility which will be located in Indianapolis on tbe Indiana Univer- • sity medical center campus. I ’ 92 Polio Cases Among Vacßiife£s* v [ WASHINGTON (INS) — The U.S. public health service said today that there have been 92 cases of polio among children inoculated with the Salk vaccine. The latest confirmed reports show that 60 of the cases occurred among those who received shots made by the Cutter Laboratories. Os the others. 22 were vaccinated with the Eli Lilly product, nine with the Wyeth Laboratories vaccine and one with the Parke, Davis shots. SECRETARY OF (Continued from 1-age One) children. U. S. surgeon general Leonard A. Scheele reported Tuesday night that all Salk vaccine shots thus far received by youngsters have I proven safe except possibly two ' lota frohi the Cutter laboratories of Berkeley, Calif. However, he and other polio experts made it plain after an allday conference at the national institutes of health, that ridig new safety and inspection standards will be required before much new vaccine can be released. The house committee is taking up legislation to give President Eisenhower standby power over distribution oft the vaccine and 28 million dollars to buy Salk shots for children of low income fotnilies. Mr. EWenihOwer has formally requested the vaccine purchase fund but has opposed any federal control over distribution. He is placing his reliance on a voluntary system of allocation.

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THE MCATWr DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

Greek leader Warns Against Over Optimism Warns Against Wave _Of Optimism Over „ Outlook For Peace By SEYMOURi BERKSON (I. N. S. General Manager) (Copyright, 1955, By I. N. 8.) ATHENS (INS) — Greek vice premier and defense minister Panayotis Kanellopoulos warned today against the wave of optimism about the peace outlook sweeping the western world as a result of Soviet Russia’s indications of a more conciliatory attitude. , “Actually, we are facing one of the most critical times in world bistort* the vice premier declared in an exclusive interview with International New Service. “It is easy for Soviet Russia to launch a peace offensive whenever it serves thg purposes of the men in the Kremlin. They can turn it off and on like a water faucet. “The important thing is to analyze and consider what their true intentions are and what is their eventual objective. Whether the present peace offensive is a sign of Soviet weakness — or strength —is not the important thing. “What is important is to realize that their main objective is the disintegration of NATO (North Atlantic treaty organization), and the western alliance of free nations, especially since western Germany has now' become a full fledged partner in the NATO defense organization of Europe. "We are all so anxious in the western world for peace that some times even our statesmen allow themselves to be carried away by wishful thinking at the first sign of an olive branch being extended by Moscow. ’ “Those of us who have to look at the picture from a military viewpoint are not so easily persuaded though we are as desirous of peace as anybody else.” The Greek vice premier, who looks more like an ancient Roman Caesar than a Greek statesman, said he agreed heartily with the viewpoint expressed by President Eisenhower at his news conference on May 18. The President said then that he would not support any appeasement akjthe forthcoming Big Four conference and added that the west is approaching the conference from a greater position of strength than ever before. >6 “The only way to insure peace is to continue getting stronger and staying stronger in a military sense than the Soviet Russian bloe,” he said. “If we fall for a Moscow peace “offensive" and'are lulled to sleep by wishful thinking we will run a real risk of war. “The most dangerous moment would come when Russia thinks she has succeeded in getting us to let our guard down and feels we could no longer fight as an united team of nations to meet any sudden Soviet military adventure.” Kanellopoulos urged that the west be particularly cautious about any reduction in armaments proposed by Soviet Russia or inspired by a Kremlin conceived plan. TORNADOES IN (Continued from Page One) er in the western portions of Illinois and southwestern Wisconsin Thursday. Maximum temperatures today will range from the lower 50s across the northern lakes region to the 60s in northern Illinois, northern Indiana and southern Michigan to near 80 in extreme southern Illinois. ITS FUN TO EAT OUT E at OUT OFTEN RESTAURANT

: Crippled Michigan Child Is Missing Volunteers Comb Kalamazoo Area KALAMAZOO, Mich. (INS) — A thousand volunteers combed the northwest urea of Kalamazoo, Mich., for crippled, eight-year-old Jean Singleton today while a 17-year-old hotel busboy awaited a lie detector test. The little girl vanished Monday on her way home from school. She was last seen on busy Douglas St. when she paused for rest while climbing the last hill to her house. Iler new shoes evidently hurt her foot, crippled by rheumatic fever three years ago. The suspect, described as a “friend of the family” who dated Jeannie's 14-year-old sister, Mary, was jailed when police found he had a record as a sex offender. Kalamazoo detectives said the youth left his job in a downtown hotel about 2:30 p.m. Monday, his first day at work, but tells conflicting stories of his whereabouts that afternoon. According to Capt. Riley Stewart, the boy said he went to a downtown movie but can’t remember the name of the picture. He said he paid 50 cents admission, but matinee prices ’proved to be 40 cents. Capt. Stewart said he fears there is now less than a 50-50 chance of finding the girl alive. DULLES URGES (Continued from Page One) ■ free world has become so strong 1 that tfie Soviets "have to give up 1 some of the courses they once se- ’ lected.” MEMORIAL DAY (Continued from Page One) Decatur to honor the memory of Adams county men who died in the Service of their country.

ThisW Buick must have something that folks Just wont do without! 1 <£■ » ' -W i f kSn&Sg npwo months ago, in the public print, we said 1 JL that this looks like Buick’s biggest year-and , we weren’t fooling. hundreds of thousands just won’t do without? It’s ’ But what has happened-and continues to happen many things. i 1 i . —is almost beyond belief. It’s styling that’s boldly distinctive and fresh as ‘ People buy up these stunning new Buicks practi- tomorrow. It’s beauty of line and beauty of interior ’ cally as fast as we get them from the factory. Buick d e cor - It’s a ride that s level, firm and steady. It s production —already revised upward several times d new sweetness of handling. Its great power—- - keeps forging ahead to new highs every month walloping new V 8 power of record might. ( ; to meet the mounting demand. jj ut a b ove ; t » s fl new kind o f performance, from And Buick sales keep soaring higher and higher and a new kind of automatic transmission that was born higher- outstripping by far the phenomenal success of o f flight thinking. last year—the success that moved Buick into the “Big a * , Three” of America's bntMn 11 s Var,ab e P , ,t<: u h Dyn.flow«-eng.neered from the principle of the modem plane s switch-pitch What is it about the ’55 Buicks that folks by the propeller—and what it brings you in the way of pure thrill, mere words can’t describe. Zocl OeHverwlPrtee.fi J." sl /° u dr “ p io " ffiA iqcc nnie»fr cdfai Al I « nr I hat way you can see what a terrific automobile the 1955 Buick SPECIAL! IVVAg III aad a terr i fic buy-the hottest-solling Buick of all 2-Do.r 6-Pa.t.ng.r Sadae, L time really is. Model 48 (illustrated) it I Optional equipment, acceitoriet, *Dynaflow Drive it standard on Roadmastpr, optional at extra cost - - itote and local ta«e«, II any, I nt L„ Career additional. Price, may vary OH Os tier Series. .lightly in adiolning communitie.. n—tr *M|Wff** r . M you cep . ftffo . ctcip faffivo Even the foctory-ln.tailed e«tro. CAN YOU SEE STEER STOP SAFELY? you may wont ore bargain., .uch > CHECK YOUR CAR - CHECK ACCIDENTS 0.. Hearer 4 Defro.ter - SSUO; Radio 4 Antenna-SW. 50 ' * Thrill of the year is Buick ! — WHOi BETTER AUTOMOBILE* ARE BUILT BUICK Will BUILD THEM i i ■■■■■■—■!«■—— SAYLORS MOTOR SALES 13th Street and U. S. 27 “Established 1926” Decatur, Ind.

County To Receive 4-H Recognition The state 4-H club office at Purdue University has announced that Adams county will receive special recognition for having had an outstanding 4-H club program during 1954. , . Based upon 4-H enrollment as compared to the potential 4-H members in tbq county, plus the number of members ifi standard clubs. Adams county wHI receive a silver award daring the annual 4-H club round-up at Purdue in Jrfne. Membvratf* fa Jhe county, in 1954 totaled 887, tjfcd of thesfc, 502 were members of standard clubs. 28.6 percent df the boys an dgirls of 4-H age took part in the program last year. These awards have been made annually for 11 years by Prairie Farmer — WLS in cooperation with the Purdue University agricultural extension service. The first time a county wins an award it receives a plaque to hang In the county extension office. Subsequent awards are in the form of engraved bars which are attached to the plaque. County agricultural agent Leo N. Selteuright says that this is the seventh year that Adams county has qualified for this special merit award. Siamese Twin Near Death In Hospital NEW ORLEANS (INS)~—-An infant Siamese twin lay near death today in New Orleans Charity hospital following separation from her sister, who died on the operating table. Th#‘twins. ‘ TithO were joined at the abdomen and pelvis, were born Monday night in Gufport, Miss., to Mr. and Mrs. Leance Ducksworth. They were taken to Charity hospital for separation Tuesday and one died during the three-hour operation. Ts vou nav« something to sell or roopis for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad It brings results.

NEW POSTAL PAY (Continued from Page One) chairman Tom Murray (D-Tenn j and Rep. Edward H. Rees (RKan.) the ranking GOP member, joined in sponsoring a postal pay hike which they said would meet objections voiced by the President. However, their bill would provide about a 7.6 percent raise. Fifty four senators voted to upset the presidential veto. But 39 senators backed up the President’s action. This meant that those seeking to override the veto fell eight votes short of the two thirds they needed. A rousing political fight preceded the showdown. Senate post office chairman Olin D. Johnston (D-S. C.) referred to Mr. Eisenhower as “that poor, misguided, confused man in the White House.” j, But once the shouting was over and the vote was in. pledges of cooperation arched the two sides of the political aisle. Johnston and Sen. Frank Carlson (H-Kan.) ranking OOP member of the post office committee, each introduced new, somewhat similar pay bills. Both provided about an average 8 percent postal pay hike, with a 6 percent floor retroactive to March 1.

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WEDNESDAY. MAY 25. 1955

Their main difference was In details of Job reclassification, with Carlson’s bill paralleling administration recommendations, H» said Mr. Eisenhower would sign his bill. INSURANCE 111 • Fire • Windstorm • Auto LOW COST BROAD FORM • Burglary 111 • Liability COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. Cowens Janies Cowens 209 Court St. PHONE 3-3601