Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 239, Decatur, Adams County, 11 October 1955 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Democrats Assail Secretary Douglas Charge Favoritism For Big Business WASHINGTON (INS) — The In>mocratic national committee today accused interior secretary Douglas McKay Qf -favoritism to business and ihdustry” and said there is a “growing clamor"^ for his retirement. „ ' The committee launched an attick on the cabinet officer in an article in the November issue of its magazine. Democratic Digest, entitled “Meet Doug McKay, The Giveaway King.” Specifically, the Digest article charged that in administering his agency, .McKav: . L Drought the public power program to a “virtual standstill.” 2. Closed down a 40-million-doI la: government plant in lamisiana.
EGGGB Tonight,, Wed., Thurs. « — -' ® OUR BIG DAYS! Shows Tonieht & Wed. at 7 Continuous Thur, from 1:30 BE SURE TO ATTEND! e— o The Battle of the Alamo — And History’* Great Figures,— Jim Bowie, Davy Crockett. Santa Anna &. Stephen Austin SIX-FOOT-SBX JUS Gambler, "knife-fighter, ~ h® fought a fiery battle f° r freedom I maurra JlßHLsgh (SSJEtIBcLSIiEI® HEILM MYDEN AMU MAIM ALBERSHETD MCHAK) CARLSON ARTHUR HOlflOn aCTHMILUMLMm - MBw-Hxwow-anomca —o Coming Sun. — Jack Webb in ‘‘PETE KELLY’S BLUES”
ALL OF THIS FOR $11,200.00 Including Lot —See or Call for Appointment Today LEISURE LIViNG FOR A HAPPY FAMILY OUR THREE BEDROOM PLACE HOME CONTAINS • Kitchen Maid Cabinet in Natural Birch. • Radiant Heating S ThermotJane A\ynlna tyje. Windowswith Aluminunt Screens. • Large Storage Wall Type Closets with Modernfold Doors. • Aluminum Combination Doors and Screens. • Birch Flush Doors Throughout M. C. SIELING "BUILDER OF HOMES” Park View Addition Phone 3-3086
I k SFA/VJ A COAM CR/B SO A EASY TO ERECT itf 11 " 1 A ITk TH E I K. ■ wh Speedy I XOjCOIHI CRIB I -The base of the Speedy roof is anchored 24 times to the rotten and to the cribitself. IT CANT BLOW OFF! Heo.y 26 gouge • golvonaed steel roof sections and 8 STEEL RAFTERS giro So. A Speedy roofs strength ond rigidity unknown to ordinary corn ■ /L crib roofs. Steep pitch allows easy elevator loading! Ferman- Sr. / / ently attached ladder. Bag / / W*-Eight steel rafters moke the Speedy roof a regular fortress . / I against bod weather. . . The only corn crib roof with such HH f f terrific BUILT-IN STRENGTH! 4 roof rafters extend into Jju I I filler housing ond oct os o deflector for even com distribution „ 'i, 1 f within the crib. I / £*»HeovyS-gaugewiremesh—thick as a quarter-inch bolt—stays Hs;> I / straight.. unbent yeor after year .. . bushel after bushel! IP'* "BAR-LOK" vertical brocAig by Speedy mokes ordinary "angle- M-a f iron" corn enbs 01 obsolete as the Flying Jenny! NO-SAG.. VW-NO BULGE "BAR-LOK" construction sets up quickly into o ■'„ big, rigid 1263 bushel crib! DOOR, 6’ x 32" allows fast.. efficient unloading B EST BY ”"7. hw> ” k,t ,v *” ■ DREDS OF INTERVIEWEQ CORN BELT FARMERS | | CA (26c per bu.) Govt. Will Seal at $1.51. I RIEHLE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO. | Nutt man Ave. West of 13th St. Decatur, Ind
Mo.. that was just about to perfect a process of producing oil from coal and then sold the plant at onequarter of its original cost. 3. Approved the ’sale of a* goveminent plant in western Colorado to private business after success in an experiment of extracting oil from shale. 4. Has told California officials he would entertain a proposal to buy the multimillion dollar Central Valley project for irrigation and flood control. 5, Ignored a law that requires municipalities and non • profit groups to get first call on govern meat power 6, Unsuccessfully attempted to liquidate the federal government’s facilities for making helium gas and to return coal mine safety regulation to state administration McKay and the Eisenhower ad ministration have long advocated turning over more responsibilities to state and local authorities—parimilarly in handling of natural resources.
Four Instruments Give Drurik Tests Officers In Kansas Planning Crackdown LAWRENCE, Kas. (INS) — Kansas law enforcement officers are preparing to crack down on drunken drivers with four different kinds of instruments, none of which can be fooled by cloves or chlorophyll. Kansas this year became the second state to require drunk-driv-ing suspects to submit to a scientific tdst of the amount of alcohol in their systems. New York is the other state. About 20 others permit lhe use of such tests on a voluntary basis. The “intoxiineter,” the smallest of the four devices, probably will be used •by state troopers It is carried in a pasteboard mailing tube, about a foot long. The suspect simply inflates a balloon connected to a glass receptacle. The unit is sent to a laboratory for analysis. The likely testing device for small cities is the “alcometer,” the speediest of the four. It is not portable but uses. 110-volt electric curernt, the operation is simple and the results are quick. The “drunkometer” is rated the “precinct-size” device. It is larger than the intoxiineter, but portable and simple to operate. Latest development among the breath testing machines is the breathholizer.” .which operates from 110-volt. .current, like the “alrom®ter/’*t»ut is less bulky and can be operated from a car battery with a few changes. Although blood, saliva and other tests can determine the alcohol content of a person, Kansas offl-
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HARRY S. HOLT, an Oregon farmer, poses with the eight Korean orphans he has adopted and will soon take back home to live in his “nice big house” in Cresswell. To assure his “family” of a perfect homecoming, Holt recently took the children to the
cers were told that results between a blood test and a breath test do not vary between more than two-tenths of one per cent of the total alcohol concentration. McCarthy Guarded Following Threat Report Threat On Life Os McCarthy BOSTON (INS) — Boston polic® today guarded Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wisconsin) following a. reported threat on his life. The senator, with Mrs. McCarthy, was in Boston to appear as chief prosecution witness at the trial of Leon J. Karnin, former Harvard university research assistant on contempt charges, opening today before Feueral Judge Bailey Aldrich. Karnin is charged with six counts of contempt of a senate investigating committee. Karnin, when called before the senate permanent investigating committee, formerly headed by McCarthy, refused to take refuge in the fifth amendment as did other reluctant witnesses. He read into the record a statement in which he said: “I refuse to be a political informant and to traffic in the names of former Communist associates I believe were guilty of rto criminal action.” If found guilty, Karnin, now associate research director at McGill university in Canada, faces a year in jail and a fl.ooo fine on each of six counts.
More Thon 20 Injured In Refinery Blast /JHJESTEM? Pa,. (INSj feU vestigation was unde: way today io learfi what caused an exp’osfon at the Sinclair Refining Co.’s plant at Trainer/ near Chester/ which Injured more than 20 workers. The blast in one of the installation’s main cracking units late yesterday showered a wide area with liquid fixe and jarred scores of homis nearby. The 20 men most severely burned were rushed to Chester and CrOzer hospitals other employes with leser injuries were treated at the oil firm's dispensary.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Rural Youth Will Meet On Thursday Monthly Meeting At Community Center The October regular meeting of the Adams county rural youth will be held Thursday night at the Youth and Community Center in Decatur at 8 p.m. Roger Koeneman. president, will preside at the business session. Jean Ann Potts is in charge of group singing and Bob Yoder will lead the devotions. Sally McCullough. Shirley Gerke and Gloria Koeneman will report on the state rural youth camp they attended at Merom Institute in September, and the newly elected officers will report on the officer’s training school held this week-end at the Youth and Community Center. The 1956 program will be presented for the approval and suggestions of the club. Plans will be to attend the district 4 rural youth meeting at the Ossian high school gym Monday night, October 17, and the state rural youth convention in Indianapolis November 9 •New folk games and square dances will be taught during the recreation period. Refreshments will close the meeting at 11 p.m. All rural young people are invited to attend this meeting. '
IHE GOVERNMENT ’could get ilong very well” without President Eisenhower for a number >f weeks or months, but would ‘miss the boss’’ eventually, is what Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson is saying here, during his press conference in the Pentagon. (International) NOTED Boston heart specialist Dr. Paul Dudley White says In Denver, "The President has received and is receiving excel- , lent treatment” at Fitzsimons Army hospital, where President „ Eisenhower was taken after , “ suffering a heart • attack. He also said it probably will take six weeks for the President to i recover. (International) ,
Seoul airport on a “dry-run" of departure. Shown with the enlarged Holt family is Miss Katherin® Cowan, a nurse, who will take care of the children on their flight from Korea to their new home in the United States. fin ternational Soundphoto)
Rumor Statement On Princess Margaret Three Capitals Are Swept By Rumors LONDON (INS) —A report swept three capitals today that an official British statement regarding the future of Princess Margaret and. Group Capt. Peter Townsend may be Imminent, possibly within the next few days. According to the report in London, Paris and Brussels, the royal family and the cabinet have decided to hasten the announcement that may end the guessing game over the romance of the 25-year-old princess and the 40-year-old commoner. e The decision was said to have been reached in view of the public feeling that has been whipped up about Townsend's difficult position and appeals to end his misery. No confirmation or denial could be obtained from palace or official government spokesmen. It was strongly indicated in in-
gjKA The 19B ® Ford Thund * rbir<i c - in nr ««««(« c f "'T . ' ~’~~7 Y '?' ' '-,.» * ‘ WWWm The Fairlane Victoria is one of 18 new ff r VaW -v>: : Tliunilirbinl-inspiri ■<! Fords. You can see Drive it today I 56 FORD with new 202-h.p. Thunderbird Y 8 * with new Thunderbird Styling ... with new Lifeguard Design . . . . ■*.. - ._■■-■ -_•-■••_ -; • -~-' — —————- : - Hf— — —» - —• HA glance tells you that the ’56 Ford has the long, low lines ... the dazzling beauty of the Thunderbird. But wait till you touch the gas pedal! Ford goes like the Thunderbird, too. With the new 202-h.p. Thunderbird Y-8 engine, available in Fordomatic Fairlane and Station Wagon models, you’ll pass with new confidence, smile at hills. And there’s even bigger news—Lifeguard Design! With the cooperation of universities, medical associations and safety experts, Ford found that most accident injuries were caused by the driver being thrown against the steering post, occupants being thrown forward against hard surfaces, or from the car. So, Ford developed a new steering wheel with a deep-center structure to help protect you from the post . . . double-grip door locks to give added protection from doors opening under shock . . . optional cushioning for instrument panel and sun visors, to help lessen injury from impact . . . optional seat belts that help keep occupants in seats. 4 NEW LIFEGUARD FEATURES-new deep-center steer- Come in! See the ’56 Ford, drive it, learn what Lifeguard ing wheel, new double-grip door locks, optional new Design means for the greater safetyof you and your family.' — - padded instrument panel and sun visors, and optional new ' Ford seat belts. the fine car at half the fine-car price! '56 FORD. Schwartz Ford Company, Inc. CORNER THIRD & MONROE STREETS „ DECATUR, IND.
Man Faces Charge Os Child Neglect Claimed He Bought Infant Fdr SSOO INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — A 89 year-old Indianapolis man who said he bought a baby for SSOO from an unwed mother today faced child neglect charges. The six-month-oid girl wae found in a filth-laden room where she was recuperating from measles. She was taken to General hospital and then to the Marion county children's guardians home. Juvenile court will decide the infant's fate. Juvenile court also will consider the plea of Wilbert 'Earl Hare, who said he pai<Tah’’unwed former roomer at his home SSOO for the baby. Police said Hire has a long criminal record; has been married three times, and is paying support for four children. Mrs. Aileen Hare, 35. who has been wed five times, is being sought by police who were told by Hare that she hadn't been home since last Friday. formed palace quarters and by sources close to the prime minister's office that there is nothing known about an imminent state) ment concerning the princess, who at 25 now does not need the queen’s consent to marry. There was a tendency to connect the newest report as being inevitable. and possibly a forerunner of many others, in view of Townsend’s expected arrival in England Wednesday. It will be a vacation trip for the handsome World War II air ace, who was sent to Brussels two years ago as an air attache after the first reports of a romance leaked out. 80-90 WORKERS (Continued from Page One) can. arid that right will be preserved by the military. In other words, labor may use ks economic force under the terms of the injunction to strike and picket. The employer may use his economic force in attempting to operate his plant. They both will do it now without further violence.” And so martial law came, for what may be a long stay, to three Indiana cities.
"if WH I ■ ■Kt . ■ ’ A- ' '-r MRS. GERALDINE MAWHINNEY, 33, who didn’t know she was going to have a baby till the day before she had it, is shown in hospital in Los Angeles, her husband Clyde beside her. She said she had pains, went to her doctor t and was sent to the hospital with diagnosis of "rupture.” However, when she was x-rayed she was told, "a baby . . ." The Mawhinneys have been married 10 years and little Geraldine Lea is their first child. (International Soundphoto)'
POSTMASTERS (C o n tlnued trom Page One) istration. If Sen. Johnson has evidence of illegal political practices, he should have brought that evidence to the civil service commission. We would be happy to investigate." Lexington—The bridge at Cleveland, Kentuc'ky is 25© feet above river level and 1,736 feet from shore to shore, probably the highest continuous steebdeck bridge in the United States. * n rade in a Good Town — Decatm
MY OFFICE NOW LOCATED AT 303 South sth Street WILL BE CLOSED October 12 until October 27 DOCTOR J. E. MORRIS
TUESDAY. OCTbBER 11. 1955
If you nav- eometning to aen 01 rooms for rer‘, Uy a Democrat Want Ad It brings results.
REXALL 1c SALE COMING SOON! Oct. 17 thru Oct. 22 SMITH DRUG CO.
