Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 156, Decatur, Adams County, 3 July 1956 — Page 3

TUESDAY. JULY 3, 1958

VIOLA DULL IS HOSTESS TO PINOCHLE CLUB '/ ~~ The Pinochle <jfub m«t lecently at the home of Viola 1 mil in Wren, O. A business session wts held, after which five games of pinochle were played. Prize* ,w.ere won by Margaret. Ashbaucher.'"Clarice Porter, and Edna McDougal. Janice Thatcher and Ruth Sehannerloh were guests of the club. During the nutting. Mrs. Dull nerved a delicious desSeN. Jaly 19 the club will meet with; Rljumnh Custer and Clarice Porter' will furnish the prizes. ■ ■ 5........... -■- Mw. -Gail—Baae4HHem- wa-e h-vwi4--ly hostess tt> a. piei.lc held at her home for her Sunday School class Those present were Linda Reed, Beth Ann Snyder, Lyiwtte Dedolph, Barbara Houk. Elndn ’Long, Carolyn Houk, John Meeks. Alien I jKrischer, and Greg Fruth. Visitors' wore Martha McGenth and Jane, and Kathy Fruth. The W S. W7 S. FBICX6. 2 of the Bethany Evangelise! United Brethren church will meet at the | hofye of Mrs. Martha Rawley Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. ; Mrs. Faye Miller yilUbe program X chairman. - The Rainbow tor Girls are asked to meet at the Masonic halt for a regular meeting Thursday at 45:45 p.m. ■’* The Decatur Peppy Gals 4-H club • will meet Thursday afternoon at] 1:30 p.m. . At the Adams/VSunty memorial hospital. A baby girl fras born to Dale and Lorena Hoffman Mankey of route two, Decatur, Monday at 9:22 p.m.. weighing eight pound- amUio ounce-. ) 5 Hhrry and Piiyliss Beineke Houk of rente 1. Hoagland, are the par-4 ents of a seven pound 14 ounces daughter born today at 2:10 ami. i At 10:15 o’clock this nforning. | ' a baby girl was born to Walter and I Barbara, .Wagnnr Weigel of route i 2, Celina. She .weighed-,, seven i ' pounds and 11 ojyices. —u—.. — _ ./ WOSRIUL 0 n Admitted Greeley Troute.r, Decatur; Elizabeth Schmidt. Monroe. . Dismissed Mrs. O. L. Ba<on. Decatur; Mrs. Charles Fetters. Decatur: Miss Carol Tiiikei, Decatur: Mrs. —f LWilliam Porter, Decatur; Mrs. Marvin Ostermeyer and baby boy, Fort Wayne,: Mrs. Corah Meyer,'Berne.

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Society Itema roc today’s publication nyuat be phoned In by 11 a.rb. (Saturday 9:30 a.m.) Karen Striker Phpne 3-2121 • TUESDAY Catholic Ladies of Columbia, ; business meeting, C. L, of C. hall I 7:30 p.m. Happy Homemakers home deI monstration club, family night and I hamburger fry, Bertie Park, 6;30 Upnnr ' < —■ — J THURSDAY Decatur Peppy Gats 4-H club, 1:30 p.m. Rainbow for Girls, Masonic Hall, 6:45 p.m. : W.S.W.S. Unit No. 2of Bethany IE, J’ 13. church, Mr*. Martha Raw- ; ley, 2 p.m. Zion Lutheran Needle club, parish hall, 1 pin. Everready Sunday school class. Mrs. Gail Baughman, North Sac ond street, W.S.W.S. unit three Bethany church, Mrs. D, E. Foreman, 1022 Marshall St., 7:30 p.m. Women of the Moose.- initiation* rites, Moose home 8 p.m., officers/ 7:30 p.m. ~ / Plan For Increased Control Os Planes Increase Control To Prevent Collisions WASHINGTON. (UP) — Aviation officials in. governnjent and private industry today told of plans and Jdeas for greatly int reased - control of planes in flight to prevent collisions in the air. Investigators seeking'the cause of Saturday's fatal double crash in Grand Canyon have made no otfivinl finding, but the circum--4 trances pointed to, the possibility i that the two airliners ran into i each other.' ” Many air-conscious people have > been voicing concern for several J years about cjyxeAL air traffic ; congestion and the likelihood _of ; critical congestion la the future there are more and faster planes There was some feeling .today.Atot last, weekeml's. tragedy »i beneficial results in bringing j more energies' to bear on solution ol the-problem. , • > M.orfg before the . latest catas- ; »rophe„. plana, and programs were being started. The civil aeronautics adminisi Iration has a 265 million dollar five-year-plan for multiplying its ground installations for air navifation and traffic control- radar. radio signals and ground-to-air communications. Congress ifeeently voted 40 million dollars for the first year's work. The Air Transport Assn., made up of the nation's 47 scheduled airlines, decided only last week to make a big push in their i sedrch for a device to warn pilots ; when they are on a collision course wtyr another irtanenearby. The ’ CAA and military are working on the possibility of usi ing U. S. air defense Tartar installations in the control of non-mili-Utry aviation as . well as military. These units are part of the 'SAGE (seinin uUMUttie- •-grmind envlrdnmentl'4 syllgya tor detecting an - enemy "Ttlr attack and guiding S. fighter planes to the invaders. A complete SAGE-type system for the whole country, with'* ra4y.ir augmented by—computers to direct planes in the air. would be dxpe-isive, but spine- quarters feel rfmJh complete, full-time control is necessary, or soon will be. The several government and industry air safety programs are working in that direction. PETITION ON (Conlliniril fro « Page Qari — will be made before any action is taken in this matter. A petition for a lOOfoot exteri sion of the road- on the north side of Oak Ridge addition 'south of Decatur was filed with the’ commissioners by Clark Smith ’Fhe matter was taken under ad visemept.

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V-v- S • - ( Mary Lou Strough Married Recently To Aioysius Brite Miss Mary Lou Strough recently becarue the bride of Aioysius Brite in d double ring ceremony performed by the Rev. James JHggens in the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, Blessed Sacrement Ghapel in -In_ diapapolis. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs: William Strough of 46(12 East 21st Street in Indianapolis. and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Brite of route 2, Decatur. Brite has been residing at 115*4 W. 12th Street in Indiapalis. The bride chose a erystalette gown with a sepop neckline decorated with sequins, and her very full skirt was floor length, sleeves came to points L over her hands and she wore a silk illusion finger tip veil caught to a tiara decorated with sequins. .She carried a prayer book topped with a white orahid surrounded with Amazonica lilltes, stephanotls and a shower of pink sweetheart roses. Serving as -mttid-of-lHinor -wusMtsjr*"Rtercse Giambrall of Indianapolis. The fitted bodice of her azure blue. erystalette gown featured a "V" neckline and short sleeves. A pleated ctxff encircUu the drooped waistline' and formed

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a bustle bow ih the back of the bouffant ballerina length skirt. She carried a Colonial bouquet of tinted, blue earnations, with blue roses and' daisies placed throughout. A headband of blue feathered carnations completed her ensemble. Wearing gowns identical to the honor attendant’s were the bridesmaids. Miss Karen Sue Strough, sister at. the bride, and Miss Peggy Jo Furgerson of Indianapolis, who is a niece of the bride. Their Colonial bouquets were interspersed with blue carnations and roses, and tiny white daisies. They also wore blue feathered carnation headbands. John Brite of route 2, Decatur, served his brother as best man and ushers for the occasion were Gordon Fritts and Virgil Hamersley of Indianapolis, and Roman Brite ofDecatur, a brother of the bridegroom. Following a reception at the Moose lodge in Indianapolis, the couple left for a week in Decatur. The newly-weds are new at home at 11.’.'0 West 12th Street in Indianapolis. 7 " Mrs. Brite attended Arsenal -■TWBntratTrtth' sdroot and is presently employed by the board oi school commissioners in Indianapolis. Brite attended Warner’s Beauty college toJEoft Wayne, and ; is associated with Raul's Beaitty 1 Salon in-Indianapolis.

Dr. Taylor Warns >. On Atom Radiation Says Nuclear War Threat To World WASHINGTON (UP) — Dr. Lauriston S- Taylor said today I hat atomic radiation o is something “we can live with in peace but not in War."” Taylor is chief of the atomic radiation physics division of. the national bureau of standards. He is one of the nation's foremost authorities on the effects of radi rtiou upon life. The United Press asfced his opinion of Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin's recent testimony in congress that Subatomic attack “in orce” on Russia would kill- “hundreds of millions of persons'.' in Durasfa, depending on wind directions. /, -■ Taylor’s belief is that Gavin head-of army research and development. understated the case. He said that an all-out nuclear at tack, whatever country...it was aimed at. would jeopardize ~hu man life all over the planet. But he made, and then empha sized, this point: Radiation from whatever source, — natural back ground.' medical X-rays, atomicweapons tests —is not now a-men ace to mankind. All that the experts, including those who made the recent na tiOnal academy of sciences report want to do, Taylor said, is alert mankind to the dangers of pos sible future great increases in the radiation level. Given peace, Taylor said, man now haa, all the knowledge he needs to protect himself against :,U foreseeable boosts in the ('mount of' radioactivity stemming from exploitation of the atom. But if full scgle nuclear -s war break* out, the result can be only “cataSt'r&phie.” Taylor said. Five-Year-old BoyIs Killed By Auto SUSTIN, Ind (UPI-dDanny Dean King. 5, Austin, was killed Monday ..When struck by a car on U.S, 31 abpiib a half mile southwest of The- ear cajrifid his body 160 feet, state police said. Danny fttshed across the highway to- meet his brother on the other side, and ran into the path of a car driven by Lester Miilef%lß, Elwood. -J,

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Publish Journal On Natural Law New Journal Issued At Notre Dame U. SOUTH BEND (UP) — The first issue of the Natural Law Forum. believed to be the only Journal in English devoted exclusively to the natural law, was published here today by the University so Notre Dame’s law school. The new journal begins as an annual publication and will be- ’ come a Quarterly eventually, the editfirs said. , , , “We are interested in promoting a serious and scholarly investigation of natural law in all its aspects,” they said, “not in defending any established point of view.”. ... .. Professor Antonio de Luna of the University of Madrid and Notre Dame law school -faculties is editor. The first issue contains articles by scholars in England, Italy, Germany, France, Spain as well as the Ignited States. The Forum will explore "the fuextent of the contribution natural law can make to the soluttwti of today’s problems,” Joseph O’Meara, dean of the law school, said. » Associate editors include Vernon J. Bourke, St. Louis University; Anton-Hermann Chroust, Notre Dame; George W. Constable, Baltimore attorney; A. P. d’Entreves, Oxford; Myres S. McDougla, Yale; William J. Curran, Boston College; Lon L. Fuller, Harvard; F. S. C. Northrop, Yale, H- A. Rommen, Georgetown Leo Strauss, University of Chicago, and John Will, Harvard. ’ —- . ■’ Truman Asserts Ike Part Time President Says Health Should Not Enter Campaign - NEW YORK (UP) Former President Harry S. Truman said today President Eisenhower has been “a part time president” ever since he took office. And that, said Mr. Truman is "legitimate political game.” ' , •— But Mr. Truman said the President’s health is “not a matter that should go into the campaign at all.* Mr. Truman made his comments i as he arrived on the liner United . states after a sfx-week tour of Europe. He said he would announce his own choice for the Democratic presidential candidate "when I arrive at the convention.” “I’ll be for the he added, “whoever he is.” ' ~ Mr. Truman said of Mr. Eisenhower "I don’t think any man can - he a part-time president and- be a success.” That charge against the President, he said, “is an issue that preceded any health condition entirely. It started right at the beginning.” A reporter asked if he~referred to the President’s golf playing. “Yes, I think that’s right,” Mr. Truman replied. , Mr. Truman said that to put Mr. Eisenhower’s health into the campaign is “not proper,” “I don’t like to talk about it wh|?n. the President announces he is “on the road to recovery,” he said. “I like the present occupant of the White House and J don’t want to make any statements that will reflect upon him. I appointed him chief of staff and put himifi charge of NATO. I don’t know how much more 1 could do to show that (■ like him.” Mr. Truman was reminded that he had said in Europe he would like to see a young man as president. How young is young? he was asked. . “It’s a matter of physical condition,” he said. “I’d like to see a man with young ideas and physical condition to meet the terrific strain of the presidency.” Legislation Tough On Confidence Men WASHINGTON (UP) — The house has passed and sent to the White House two bills making it tougher for confidence men and phony stock promoters to operate. One bill would subject confidence mtn to a 110,000 fine and 10 years in jail if their schemes involve their victims in interstate travel. 7 ' I » A Second measure would make, salesmen selling phony stock by telephone subject to prosecution even if they operate from Canada or Mexico. Cycle-Auto Crash Takes Second Life ELKHART, Ind. (UP)—Vernon Ray Vinson,' _l6, Elkhart, died Monday of injuries suffered Sunday when his with a car on a Michigan county road north of here. The drash killed Vinson’s neighbor, Leslie Mock,

•—— — • w • . it — A ._ * ■ MR. AND MRB. HOMER REPPERT, of Fort Wa?he. formerly of Decatur, have announced the engagement of their only daughter, ' Sundra Sue, to Pvt. Charles L. Tooman. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ear) Tooman of route 1, Garrett. Miss Reppert is a former student of Decatur high school, and was recently graduated from South Side high school in Fort Wayne. She is presently employed.at the Baptist church camp at North Webster, and will be a freshman at Manchester College this fall. Pvt. Tooman is a graduate of Garrett high school and is stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. No been set for the wedding.

Autoist Guilty Os Reckless Driving “Wayne Brunson, 21. of Decatur, was found guilty of reckless driving in justice of the peace Floyd Hunter’s court Monday evening and was fined $lO and costs. It was also recommended that his license be suspended for 90 dayjj. Brunson was arrested June 7 following an accident on the Monmouth road at the St. Mary’s river bridge. Also* appearing in J. P. court Monday night was Chester Hamerick of Van Wert, 0., who was fined $1 and costs for driving without an opera tiors license. Braggart Killer Os Three Slain Monday Ohio Man Cornered By Highway Police WARREN, Ohio (UP) Alfred (Buck) Wilson, braggart killer of two women and a young girl, died Monday night with a highway patrolman's bullet in his braid. Wilson, Si, who murdered his two sisters-ln-law and a 16-year-old girl in a bloody rage, was cornered in t tree Monday by three highway patrolmen. * The patrolmen blasted Wilson from his perch before he had a chance to use any of the four bullets in his Lunger. He died (our hours later. Wildion was such a skilled woodsman that he eluded his searchers tor, 11 days. He evaded a 250-man posse last Friday and hid out in an abandoned building in the center of nearby ; ; Leavittsburg. 100 yards Item fnoblle ‘ search headquarters at the Warren township fire station. Wilson went on his bloody rampage June 21 when he set out to find his common-law, wife, Juanita, 7 35, who hid filed assult and battery charges against him and threatened to leave him.

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Five Drownings Are ■ Recorded In State Two-Day ToJI Os State Drownings By UNITED PRESS Indiana counted a two-day toll of at least five drownings today in the wake of blistering heat that pushed the mercury unofficially above 100 degrees. Lakes, streams and swimming pools overflowed with youngsters seeking relief from “the heat. The drowning victims ranged in age from 3 to 20. Roger Allen Barkdull, 3, Anderson, was one of four who drowned Monday. He fell off a pier at Westler Lake 7 ""Sines southwest of Lagrange. David Rice, 9, drowned in . the basement of his home near, Adderb,e apparently slipped on a shower board while the water was running. Paul W. Good, 14, Central Barren, drowned while w-ading in a pond near his home town. ! Charles Winter, 20, Kokomo, drowned in a gravel pit near Ko- ’ komo when his watersoaked clothing apparently pulled him under. William J. Ostrowski, 17, Fort 1 Wayne, failed in an attempt to 1 swim to a raft about 100 yards from the shore of Loon Lake near Columbia City Sunday.

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PAGE THREE

Harriman Lashes At Ike Policies Says Promises To Americans Broken MINNEAPOLIS (UPI — New Yifrk Gov. Averell Harriman lashed out at President Eisenhower and his policies Monday night as the presidential asiprant ended a quick three state hunt for delegates. Mr. Elsenhower is "very skillful at the army game — the art of getting credit when things go right and shifting the blame when they go wrong,” Harriman said. The governor spoke to Minnesota's Democratic national convention delegation which has 25 votes pledged to Sen. Estes Kefauver ’’and four to Adlai E. Stevenson. He hosted Kefauver delegates at a breakfast this morning before’ taking off for New York. He was scheduled to leave here At 11:45 a.m. CST. Harriman told the entire delegation Monday night, "I’m satisfied we have the Republican party beaten, but I’m not convinced w<? have Ftestdeilt Eisenhower beaten, yet.” . ■ - Then he blistered the Republican administration oh foreign arid domestic policies. He eaid the administration has “plowed under 600.00 b farm families.” The President has broken promises.. ta_.labor and his reelection would mean “the continuation of union-busting laws,” Han riman charged. Listening with the delegates were Minnesota Gov. Orville L. Freeman and several other party bigwigs who are in corner. Freeman hinted earlier that Harriman would be his second choice for the nomination should Stevenson fail to win. Harriman invited the delegates “whenever you are / [ tree to do ao, join the cause 1/ , represent * ,- He went on to tell them the , United States has lost prestige under Republican leadership. “IV , we have four more years of Eiseh- , hower and secretary of state John j Fester Dulles, the shape of the 5 world will be different,” he said. Harriman began his three - day . tour in lowa and extended it , through Nprth Dakota. He told a t Cavalier, N.D., audience earlier t Monday that the rrestSewt “has run out on bis promises to the s farmers, promises made when he - wanted the farm vote In 1952.” i He backed higher prtee supports r for the farmers and "direct production payments tailored to the - farm family ” i “The Democratic farm bill that the President vetoed would have been a good start.” he said. K ' . " r , _ ..

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