Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 154, Decatur, Adams County, 1 July 1955 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
County Agent On Radio Saturday County agent Leo Seltenright. will be a *UMt on Jay Gould's Little Red Barn tirogram Saturday morning. The time of the program la 1:1,6 a. m and the diaeussion topic it the Vanderburgh county axchange 4-H trip. TEE P L E MOVING A TRUCKING Local and ■ Lang Distance PHONE 3-2607
THE DECATUR — KROGER NOW OPEN 9 > 9 FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS
136 Hi Top T (1 Performers Qv <W;P •* JV wllß " - ■» V M> \ ' ■ffffCTßl m ;aiß, f <' V guwß <k v EHL wTifiiß \ HV vK- \ ' IYjSpL ] ]\\ Gd both for ■ \ /S\ ... up to 40 extra mile* [/Mg 1 f t/: n\ per tankful. High octane :XL*-j=- Jm VXL \ ’ Flying “A” Tydol Ethyl V \ burns cleanly—evenly)fv \ \ F 100% Pennsylvania Veedol 10-30 V X. \ I cuts down octane-robbing \ I yl \ I carbon deposits and, with - Bfr V '£ j IV \ — ®*l drag, save* > \ ' I gasoline, too. V \ Change now. / \ \ \ \ \' I ‘ V\ See Your TYDOL DEALER for V \ "Everything Good for Your Cur" k •• "< *- . f <A .'--- ■- z-J --X. / ;'Z z 1 “ ■ ' _.„'■ ■ .-■ r j WII* - '■' -L yi J l - 1 1 .' ! " -— J' BEAVERS OIL SERVICE Phone 3-2705 ! Decatur, Ind.
Baffle Over Search And Seizure Grows Woman Arrested On Orders By Justice ANDERSON, Ind. (INS) —While a 31 year old Indianapolis woman cooled her heels in MadiaOn county jail, a legal battle- over search and seizure grew warmer and warmer. - —— Indianapolis attorney iNiillifi R.
Correll said ha aever heard of criminal .charges based on “failure to answer correspondence." ’ But that is one of the charges Ingale justice of the peace Harley Chappel cited in arresting Mre. Marjorie Foley and taking her forcibly from her Jnditsnapolin home to Madison county jail. Mrs. Foley and her husband. Robert, were stopped May 30th by state police near Fortville and charged with driving 44 mile per hour in a 30 mile zone. They co-signed a check for 115.76 fine June 1 and gave it to Chappel He said there was not sufficient funds to cover the check. The J.. P. said two letters he wrore them were ignored. He eaid Foley failed to keep a Saturday appointment to_explaiy the situation. Chappel. who said the arrest' was made in company with a Marion county deputy sheriff, said he ordered Mrs. Foley jailed when she “got wild and wooly" with hhn. In addition to ordering her -jailed for being “wild and wooly," Chappel also fined her $76.60 and added 83 cents for telephone calls she had made.' Foley said he had sent a money order on Tuesday of this week to cox er his fine. Chappel said he had not received it. Montpelier, Vt. — All maples yield gS’f inaple and the black maple are important to syrup producers.
HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
TUB DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
} p 4 -*■'nW i I r W > • j .nLi ■■ * t j Jsk IJ'' - MAtYUND'S candidate for “Miss Universe" title in Long Beach, Calif., gives you a smile after being crowned in Baltimore. She is Mrs. Gloria Ruth Kins a modal. (International) 4-H Beef Club Tour Scheduled July 8 The 4-H beef club members will meet Friday. July 8 for their tour. Jack Rolston of the 4-H club department will be the discussion leader on the tour. The tour will start at 9:30 a. m. at the William Schnepf. Jr. farm about a mile southeast of Decatur. The noon sack lunch stop will be at the Henry Rumple farm. Each 4-H beef club member will be visited. it was reported by Leo Seltenright, county agent.
More Newsmen Sought In Red Spy inquiry Issue Subpoenas For Several New York City Newsmen WASHINGTON (INS) —Senate investigators searched today for several New York City newsmen who’Wave been named as one time Communists by a former red spy. Chief counsel Jay 0. Sourwine of the senate internal sceurity subcommittee said subpoenas have been issued for David Gordon and Hyman Charniak as well as for "others" whom he did not identify. Columbia Broadcasting System newsman Winston Burdett testified that he, Gordon and Charniak were among the members of a Communist cell at the now dhfunct Brooklyn Eagle in the late 1930’5. Burdette also said he later served overseas as a red spy but quit the party in 1942. -told Sourwine that a David Gordon now employed by the New York Daily News has denied ever being a Communist. Sourwine sold he does not know whether this is the same Gordon named by Burdett. He added that investigators have found Gordons" but neither oi meiii *as me One Burdett had in mind. Sourwine added: “it’s a common name." Twice Thursday he called for a David Gordon to take the stand but no one responded to the call. Hearings on Burdett's own past and hie allegations about former colleagues ended after two days Thursday with a parade of Witnesses who refused under the fifth amendment to say whether they had been reds. Charles Grutxner, a reporter for the New York Times, admitted joining, the Communist party in 1937 but said he quit in 1940. He 'was among those named by Burdett as members of the old Communist unit at the Eagle, w Grutxner denied-end the Times latexjjacked him up-that a story he filed from Korea in 1950 “may have cost American Hves.” The story reported that the U. S. had used an F-86 Saberjet for the first time in the Korean war. Grutxner insisted the Pentagon had cleared the story. Sourwine .4aid the subcommittee “made inquiry" about this at the Pentagon but the defense department reply was “inconclusive.” In he New' York Times’ statement supporting Grutzner’s testb mony; managing editor Turner Catledge rejected “any implication that national security was jeopardized” by. the Sabre jet story. Catledge pointed out that Grutzi.er had filed the story from Korea with a note to the foreign editor suggesting 4t bee feared with the Pentagon before publication. A member of the newspaper’s Washington bureau. Catledge said, read the story to a “responsible civilian member of the press section of the air farce,” arid that official said to publish the dispatch. Sourwine assured reporters that "the committee is not investigating newspapers nor television not radio” but has questioned newsmen because Burdett “happened to belong to a -newspaper unit.” Predict 380 Death. Toll Over Holiday Biggest Holiday On Wheels In History CHICAGO (INS) — The biggest holiday on- wheels in America’s History is-what the national safely, council terms the Fourth of July holiday weekend. During the three-day holiday an expected traffic volume of 40 million automobiles will be in motion. The safety council predicts 380 persons will be killed on the highways from 6 p.m. today until midnight Monday. How can that toll be cut? The safety council gives these si? rules on how to say alive: 1. Drive about 10 miles per hour befqw._y.qur normal speed. 2? Start in plenty of time so you won’t have to hurry to reach your destination. 3. Stay alerty. Don't let distractions take your mind off the serious business of driving. 4. Don’t compete with the other fellow. Let him have the right of way. ; 5. Pass other cars one .at a time, and be sure you have a dear margin of safety. Don’t change JaiM-s__wilhout looking, and leave plenty of room between you and ,-the car ahead. • ’ 6. Slow down at sundown soyou can stop In the range of your headlights. Avoid driving when sleepy or overtired. 1 rude iu ii Cloud fbwn — Decatur
Attend Convention Os Lutheran Laymen Annual Convention Is Held In Seattle Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Callow and Mr. and Mra. Louis A. Jacoba, all of Decatur, spent thia week in Seattle, Wash., where they attended the 38th international convention of the Lutheran laymen'a league, with more than 1,300 delegatee in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Callow left Seattle by plane fdr home Wednesday, while Mr. and Mrs. Jacoba stayed in Seattle for a visit with his brother, and will return home in a few days via San Franclaco. Jacobs, as president of the Northern Indiana district, served i as a member of the resolution and election committee, and Callow served as the Lutheran Hour chairman from this district. Two officers and eight members of the leagues’ board of governors were elected by the convention. Homer E< Cully. Sioux City, Ia„ was elected secretary and Erwin Wesche. St Louts. 1 was——elected treasurer of the 82,000-member organization. Elected to the league's board of governors for two-year terms were: Fred W. Schriefer, Garden City. N. Y-: Harry G. Barr, Fcfft Smith. Ark.; Harold J. Meinke, Detroit, Mich.: Walter E. Schmalz, Minneapolis: Lee A. Lohrberg? Lincoln. Neb.; Robert F. Qaiser, Denver, Colo.; Elmer F. Kosche, Tacoma, Wash.; and Roy Wendell, Kitchener, Ont.. Canada. Resolutions calling for the league to embark on a plan for youth leadership training, an active church-work program for “senior citizens," and a broad program of lay evangelism were adopted by the convention. Highlighting the evangelism presentation was a discussion by a six-man panel in the Tuesday session. Led by Roland Jacobs, member of the board of governors, the panel discussed. "A Program Os Active Evangelism in our Church.” included on the panel were the Rev. William H. Hillmer, St. Louis, executive secretary for missions 4n North and South America for the Lutheran church-Missouri synod; the Rev. Oswald A. Waech, secretary of evangelism for the synod; the Rev. Arthur H. Haake, paster -of West Portal Lutheran church, San Francisco, and member of the Missouri synod board for missions in North and South America; Karl Schmidt, Beardstown, 111., member of the league's board of governors; and William Fenske. Detroit, member of the Lutheran hour operating committee. More than 3000 persons jammed Seattle’s First Presbyterian church on June 26 to bear the Rev. Armin (rGx'Oldsee, phatoi' qf St. Paul Lutheran church. Lakewood. Ohio, who spoke on the convention theme: .’’Speak Up for Christ.” The service featured choral music by the Concordia Seminary Lutheran Hour Chorus of St. Louis, and the Greater Seattle Walther League choir. * Highlighting the entertainment side of the convention was a salmon bake and the annual banquet. More than 1000 attended the salmon bake in Seattle’s Seward Park despite an allday rain, and the banquet crowd of more than 700’ overflowed into the Olympic Hotel mezzanine. Speaker at the banquet was Col. Erwin A. Jones, staff judge advocate, the infantry center. Fort Benning. Ga., and a member of the league’s board of governors. He spoke to the convention on the importance of prayer in the life of a Christian. Milton Carpenter, comptroller of the City of St. Louis/ and retiring treasurer was the banquet speaker? Entertainment was furnished by Seattle TV-Star Stan Bor an sen: Next year‘s convention will he held in San Antonio, Tex., and the 1957 meeting will be in St. Louis, Mo., the league’s headquarters city. Fashion Comeback By International News Service Women are wearing lighterweight wool goods, according to a I recent survey. The Wool Bureau claims this may mean an eventual return to high fashion style of worsteds —a fabric of importance in the early post-war days.
> - I SAY IT WITH ) FLOWERS from * Jl -'2 _. i . ’ ■ .
Niblick & Co. DRESS SALE! $i ‘ 1 Y ' * ■ ' ' A / ' Junior, Misses, Half-Sizes Just when you need Dresses (and many of them) to round out your summer wardrobe! Included are silky finished Cottons! 2-piece Pongees! • Rayon Linens! Plain colors, figured, plaids, checks. We offer Special Groups, taken from our regular stock and greatly reduced, for quick clearance! , $12«95 reduced to $ jq.oo •10-95 Reduced to sg.oo $g.95 REDUCED TO ’ 7“ ' "' ■" L 17 * ONE GROUP 133 DRESSES, New Arrivals! | include beautiful Cottons, in street or sun dresses for summer wear. Junior, Misses, Half Sizes, many are Dhn River Wrinkle-Shed Cottons in Dimity, Tissue Gingham, Etc. / ON SALE $5.98 ONE GROUP 142 DRESSES, Greatly Reduced! Real bargains! Values from $5.98 to $16.95. Cottons, Rayons, Few Nylons. Sizes: Juniors, Regulars, Half Sizes. .. ■ _ -- — ON SALE $4.99 EMBOSSED. CORDED, OR OTHER COTTON DRESSES! Sun Backs; Jacket Dresses; Street Dresses; Misses and Half-Sizes, a very good selection. ON SALE 52.98 and $3.98 ONE GROUP OF COTTON SKIRTS! i : .. "■" ■■' Figured, Flower Style, Dark and Prints. ’ r \- ON SALE $2.49 / ■■ 11 — II „ u . .. — Niblick & Co., “Over 100 Years A Quality Store”
FRIDAY,-JULY 1, 1955
