Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 30 June 1955 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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Story Os Abduction Fails Os Sympathy Woman Tells Police Os Reign Os Terror EVANSVILLE, In<i. (INS) -The stranger—than—fiction abduettion story related by Mrs. Reno Jobe, 29, failed today to impress her tbr* mer busband who said he has divorced her. Mrs. 9obe told Cleveland authorities that she was abducted from Iter frailer home in Chicago in 1962 at gunpoint by Angelo Camacho, 29, and forced to accompany him to the Ohio city, At the time, her husband, Fred Jobe, 34, a former ft mate of a veterans hospital in Madison, Wis., was being treated for tuberculosis. Mrs. Jobe said she lived under a reign of terror with Camacho for three yean,' during which time she bore him twoc hildren. She has three children by Jobe. Jobe said in Evansville, where he is now employed as a hydrotherapist in the state hospital: “Sha- left me while I was sick and I am not Intereetde in contacting her again. I divorced her early this year and have remarried.”

Camacho, who corroborated Mrs. Jobe's story regarding the strange* abduction, faces assault and battery charges for allegedly viciously beating Mrs. Jobe and their two-wear-old daughter, Jo Anna. Mrs. Anna Lahiff, a Cleveland probation officer, said Mrs. Jobe had welt marks across her back and was suffering from tuberculosis. Cleveland authorities said that Camacho left a previous wife and four children in Chicago at the time of the abduction. ♦ " —- • JJ - . ■ -II Reunion At Magley School Next Sunday The second annual Magley school reunion and homecoming will be neld Sunday at the Magley school a mile north of Magley. A carry-in basket dinner will be featured at noon, with entertainment and a business session following. Last year 180 former school officials, teachers, pupils and patrons attended. This year 260 invitations for the event have been mailed out. Officers are Ed Jaberg, president: D. C. Shady, vice-pres-ident; Ed Kolter, secretary, and E. J. Worthman, treasurer. Trade in a Good Town -w Decatar

THE DFCATVR DAILY DEMbCRAT, nECATTTR. nttrtANA

County Officials At District Meeting Two Adams county commissioners, Lewis Worthman and John Kintx, county surveyor Herman MoeHering and county highway supertatenden|t Premk Mngleton attended the regular session of the district of county comtn|fas.itonera association Wednesday at Hartford CHy. Lloyd Miller, Blackford county commissioner. gave the welcoming address at the business sesrfoh of the group and C. Gough was the principal speaker, explaining various laws enacted by the 1955 general assembly which affect county business. Highway safety also was discussed and county officiate were urged to in the slow down and live campaign now in progress in Indiana. The national convention of county commissioners will be held July 17 to 20 at Richmond, Va. Representatives to the national meet from the northeastern district will be selected teter. Washington — About .72 percent of the nation’s labor force worked on farms in 1820, but the number had diminished to only about 12 percent in the census of 1950. »

Flexible Farm Plan In Effect Friday Support For Wheat Will Drop Friday WASHINGTON (INS) --President Eisenhower’s flexible farm price support program—the center of bitter political dispute for more than two years—faces its first sink or swim test Friday when! it becomes the agricultural law W the land. ' Although the plan was enacted a year ago and was a major issue in the 1964 political campaign, it was not slated to become law nntil the beginning of the 1956-66 crop marketing year. For wheat-one of the five basic commM|:ieß planed under variable supports by the act—the marketing year begins July — Friday-wttii a seven and ope half per cent drop in farm price supports. The other four basic productscotton, corn, . rice and peanutswill move under the flexible program later this year, ps their individual marketing seasons begin. None, however, will undergo as radidaJ a reduction tn support levels as wheat will. The 1956 wheat crop will be supported at 82% per cent of parity, the statutory minimum for this year under the 1954 agricultural act. It will average out to a national support price of 82.06 per bushel. This is an 18 cent decline from the 1954 price of 82.24 per bushel, which reflected 90 per cent of parity under the rigid, high price support law enacted during the Truman and Roosevelt administrations. * The principle of the flexible sys-tem-—which generally has been damned by Democratic farm bloc leaders-is that government supports should increase as commodity surpluses decrease, and vice versa. Since the government now owns approximately one bilHon Bushels of wheat and since the total wheat supply in 1955-56 will be great enough to meet all U. S. domestic and export demands for two years, agriculture secretary Ezra Taft Benson decreed that wheat supports should be reduced as low as legally possible. For the 1956 crop of wheat—which will be marketed after July 1 of next year-the support level Hs being dropped to 76 per oent es; parity, which will mean a. support price eve rag in# - fl.Bl per bushel nationally. This will result in an additional 25 eent drop in Wheat supports next year. The support level for rice wMI 'fall from 90 to 86 per cent of parity on Aug. 1-a decline of 26 cents in the actual average support price per hundredweight. On Oct. 1, corn supports will drop down from 90 to 87 per cent partty-or from 81.62 per bushel for the 1954 crop to |1.58 per bushel for the 1965 crop. In addition to the basic commodities, supports on other farm products will be lowered Friday. They are oats, rye, barley, grain sorghums and soybeans. Cotton and peanuts, among the basics, enter new marketing years Aug. 1, but both will remain under 90 per cent supports this year. Swimmer Is Killed By Runaway Boat MCMECHEN, W. Va. (INS) —A li2^year-old boy-swimming in a dammed area of the Ohio River at McMechen, West Virginia — was killed Wednesday when a runaway motor boat tipped across bis body, nearly cutting him in half. Young Robert Howard was cut by the whirling blades ot the boat's motor. Deputy sheriff Floyd Yoho said Lloyd Williams of the same town, was driving the boat when the steering gear apparently stuck. I MAJOR AM ERICAN LEAGUE Club W. L. Pct. Q.B. New York - 60 24 .676 Chicago 42 26 .618' 5 Cleveland .42 30 .683 7 Detroit 37 31 .544 10 Boston 39 34 .534 01% Kansas City 28 41 .406 19% Washington 24 46 .343 24 Baltimore 20 60 .286 28 Wednesday’s Results New York 9-7, Baltimore 2-3. Detroit 8, Chicago 2. « Kansas City 12, Cleveland 4.. Boston 7, Washington 5. National league Club W. L. Pct. G.B. Brooklyn — 61 19 .729 Chicago 40 33 .548 12% Milwaukee 38 32 .648 13 New York — 34 37 .479 17% Cincinnati 32 35 .478 17% St. Louis 81 37 .456 19 Philadelphia .. 32 39 .451 19% Pittsburgh J 8 49 .819 29 Wednesday’s Results New York 6, Brooklyn L Philadelphia 6, Pittsburgh 3. Milwaukee 14, Chicago 1. St. Louis 9, Cincinnati 5.

Hoosier Is Killed In Tractor-Truck Crash SPENCER, Ind. (INS) —EzraGreen, 64, of Spencer, was killed Wednesday night when his tractor was struck by a truck on Ind. 46 two miles went of Spencer. State police said Frank Stewart, of Spencer, was in the act of . passing the tractor when (Green started to turn Into a field from he highway. The truck hit the tractor and knocked Green to the highway. Murder Trial For Woman Underway Charged With Death OSon By Scalding INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — The second degree murder trial of Mrs. Lucy L. Hawkins for the scalding death of her son six years ago began today in criminal court at Indianapolis. A jury of four women and eight men heard the first witness, Russell L. Hawkins, the defendant’s 20-year-old son, tell of events leading to the dunking of four-year-old David (R. Hawkins In a tub of scalding water. Russell and his sister, Mrs. Patricia Gary, 19, had told the court the prosecutor's office had threatened them with perjury so much they were afraid to testify. Judge Saul Rabb talked to the two witnesses and told them so long as they told the truth they would not be prosecuted. He said it didn’t matter if their stories did vary a little. Then Rabb overruled the defense objection that the witnesses had been "intimidated" and ordered the trial resumed. Mrs. Gary and another sister. Margaret R. Hawkins, 16, will follow Russell to the stand to tell their stories of the night of Oct. 23, 1949, when the child allegedly was placed in the scalding water as punishment David died Nov. 7, 1949. Mrs. Hawkins, 37, of Indianapolis, embraced each of the three children who accused her before she was led back to her cell in county jail Wednesday. State Bee Inspector Working In County Adam Wall, state bee inspector, will be working in Adams county tor the next two weeks. During this time, he will be inspecting colonies of bees in this county. If anyone should desire special assistance with bees, they should contact the county extension office at phone 3-3000 in the basement of the post office in Decatur. If you have something to sell or rooms tor rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.

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Family Pays Off Embezzled Funds Restitution Made To Windfall Bank family of an assistant cashieY today returned every last penny of 8175,856.10 she admitted embezzling from the Union State Bank at Windfall. < , The embesslement was discovered by a regular Weekly audit of the books at a time when the assistant cashier, Mrs. Genevieve Campbell, who had worked there 28 years, was in a hospital. Cashier Hugh McNew, who discovered the juggling, said the family made complete restitution and there will be no loss to the bank. No individual ledgers or account cards were disturbed by Mrs. Campbell. f In a statement, Mrs. Campbell

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THURSDAY, JUNE 80, 1958

said she took the money by juggling general ledger cards. The f statement was given to a representative of the state department of financial institutions and the FBI. ' Prosecution in the case is a decision that must be made by the federal government since the bank is a member of the federal system. Youthful Cyclist Is Killed In Collision HAMMOND, Ind. (INS) —lnjuries suffered in a motoi- cycle-auto collision cost the life of 23-year-old ' Al vie Wayne Fanning, of Black Oak. Young Fanning’s cycle was ipvol ved in a headon collision with a car driven by LaVerne R. Anderson, 25, of Manhattan, - 111., as the Illinois man was passing an-" other car on a hill. The crash occurred on Road 55, just north of Road 330, Wednesday and Fanning died later in a Hammond hospital.