Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 247, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1956 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
,<faA . \ k - j jo |O < is® * kWrairA & l i I-' “’ - l. i > A >. * u ** ' ■ ir«»< * vi *' y *’ iL Wfe*>- \ </ / y' S w *y* \ / //Cr Wh ' f *WP •' H Ofc omW fffl GREATEST W idea ” SINCE THE INVENTION OF MONEY! • '■'s7_ ; _ A _.’ <.---'t-— — —•• S. .«. 5— -—- --. -—e4—l •— • .... —— IT’S GOING TO BE ANNOUNCED -l__ --»-■■ ■’ ' , ■. - BY DECATUR RETAILERS SOON I WHO WILL PAY AT THE RATE OF $6,000.°° A BUSHEL FOR SOYBEANS? KEEP AN EYE ON THE ADVERTISEMENTS IN THE DECATUR lAKf DEMOCRAT
TH! DBCATUH DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Ike Carrying His Campaign To California Reports President Fighting Mad Over Hydrogen Bomb Test PORTLAND. Ore. (UP) — President Eisenhower took hie campaign today into the strategic state ot California where he wa« expected to make another gloves-off assault on Adlai E. Stevenson's call for a ban on hydrogen-bomb tests. White House press secretary James C. Hagerty made clear that the President was fighting mad over the hydrogen test controversy and "will continue to lay the facts of the campaign on the line.” Mr. Elsenhower will speak tonight at a Republican rally in the Hollywood Bowl. His speech will be carried ovex a California. Nevada and prisons TV network of the Columbia Broadcasting System (at 12:30 am. EDT Saturday). The President bore down on the H-bomb, draft and “giveaway* issues in attacks on Stevenson in Portland Thursday at two separate GGP rallies in Civic Auditorium. He said that “the road to surrender is paved with good intentions" such as Stevenson’s “wishful thinking” proposals for halting hydrogen bomb tests and ending the draft. The President said he will never support a theory “that the way to defend peace or freedom is to abandon simultaneously our military draft and our testing of our most advanced military weapons." He flatly rejected unilateral disarmament “in any respect” but promised to continue his quest for a just world peace from a position of strength. At this point the President said unilateral disarmament wdiild leave the United States with only “pie in the sky” promises on the part of other nations. Mr. Eisenhower pledged to use the country's spiritual, intellectual. military and economic strength "resolutely to defend ourselves, wisely to warn our enemies, constantly to give hope to the enslaved, prudently to help guard freedom everywhere.” Thomae Jefferson was among the early American wine growers, fte cultivated grapes at. Mpntice.llp.
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Darting into the street from between parked cars is a dangerous practice and the cause of many injury or fatal accidents each year. A motorist has little or no warning when a child suddenly looms in front of his car. In haste to get out of the approaching cold weather, don’t take the deathly short-cut between parked cars. Parents and teachers should warn youngsters of the danger of such practice. This is the message contained in the Chicago Motor Club’s monthly safety poster, which has been distributed to more than 44,000 elementary school classrooms throughout the Motor Club’s Illinois and Indiana territory.
Carabinieri Band At Coliseum Nov. 13 FORT WAYNE. Ind. — the famed Cprabinierni band of Rome, making its first triumphant tour of the United States, will appear in the Coliseum in Fort Wayne Tuesday night, Nov. 13j the next major attraction at the building. The tollman band will present a spectacular marching-musix;ale similar to that offered last year by the Scots Guards, who attracted nearly 7,000 persons to the Coliseum. The Fort Wayne performance will be the Carabinieri's only appearance in Indiana. It will play only 42’cities before returning to Italy Nov. 25. It's Coliseum app arance is being sponsored by Zollner Productions, Inc. Parked Car Damaged Thursday Evening A parked car owned by William Dwight Borror of Ninth street was damaged at 8:15 p.m. Thursday on Ninth street near the Jackson Stneet intersetion. The car was hit by another car driven by Betty -Lou Stetler, 31, of Decatur.—--An unidentified third vehicle made wide turn off Jackson street, forcing the Stetler vehicle to swerve into the Borror car. The third car did not stOfi. Damage wa§ estimated at SIOO to the Borror car and $75 to the Stetler car. ■ / CANCER SOCIETY (Continued from I'aar One) society at 621 N. Fifth street in Decatur. . April of each year is cancer month. Since money is collected in Berne and Decatur through I Community Chests, and the only I active fund campaigns conducted during that month are in Geneva and the rural areas. Other officers of the local cancer society are Dr. C. P. Hinchman. i first vice-chairman; ■ Marie Felber, second vice-chairman; Dorcas Ha- ! beggar, secretary; T.. F. Graliker, | treasurer, and Dick Heller, pub- | licity director. The adyisorj' council includes i Dr. Norman E. Beaver. Dr. James Burk. Dr. John Spaulding, Thurman Drew. Robert Holthouse. Ken- | neth E. Hirschy, Julius Baker. I Hugh Andrews, Mrs. Raymond : Kohne, the Rev. Ray J. Walther. I Simtjn Schwartz and Roy L. Kalver.
Public Auction MIDDLEBURY, OHIO FIVE ROOM HOME and NEARLY ONE ACRE OF LAND FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26 5:00 P. M. (Evening Sale) LOCATION: In Middlebury. Ohio on South Side of Highway 224. Or Nine Miles East of Decatur; Indiana. Ot* .Nine Miles West of Van AVert, Ohio on Highway 224. DESCRIPTION.: A NICELY ARRANGED. WELL CONSTRUCTED HOME LN GOOD REPAIR. Has Nice Kitchen with built-in features. Double Howl Sink. Inlaid Linoleum. Large Pantry. Living Room. Bedfbom agd Complete Bath on FirsUTTdorr Two Bedrooms on Second Floor. Ample Clset Space. New Circulating Oil Heating Unit. Enclosed Back Porch. GOOD GARAuu. ABOUT % ACRE OF LAND. Large Garden Spot. Some Fruit. Nice Yiftd. Shrubbery and Flowejrs. GOOD LOCATION: Easy Driving Distance from Van Wert, Ohio. Decatur, or Fort Wayne. Indiana. . .; TERMS—2OT day of sale, balance upon delivery of good title. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. , MFIS. MABEL J. STETLER, Owner 'J. F. Sanmann—Auctioneer . „ George C. Thomas. Representative by Midwest Realty Auction Co. . 1: ' Decatur, Indiana. 19 23
East German Reds Deny Any Uprising Reports Persist Os Poznan-Type Trouble BERLIN (UP) —- East German Communists today denied reports of a Poznan-type uprising touched off by labor unrest in the Communist zone, but the Frankfurt newspaper Abendpost insisted that strikes occurred in East German plants Tuesday and were kept secret for two days. The Abendpost correspondent rn Berlin said people’s police were called to the factories when the workers refused to work. He said workers at a factory in Schemnttz. now natned Karl Marx City started the strike in protest against pay cuts and cbh il ditions. They shouted down union representatives who attempted to . get them to return, the paper said, but an hour after the strike began police moved in and the workers, etill gnunbling, returned to their machines. However, Abendpost said, the work stoppage touched off sympathy strikes iff other plants which were also ended by the appearance of police. Earlier, unconfirmed press reports were branded as complete lies by the East German trade union and the official Communist party newspaper. They said the reports were based on a “distortion” of a trade union statement published Tuesday concerning complaints of workers in Magdeburg. The East German government today escorted a group of West German newsmen to Magdeburg so they could check the reports. • Western "allied newsmen were not invited. There are more than 300 woodpreserving plants in the nation, providing year-around employment for about 14,000 persons whose salaries and wages amount to more than 340,000,000 a year. Moose meat was almost the complete source of meat for those who . cut tire first pine. of Minnesota. The 1.042-foot television antenna of station KCMO-TV in Kansas City, Mo., is the world’s tallest self-supported tower. The Eiffel tower in Paip is 984% feet in height. • Trade In a Goou Town — Decatur
Elvis Presley Is Involved In Brawl Tangles With Pair At Service Station MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) — Elvis Presley today claimed a victory in his fight- with two service station attendants, but one of his opponents said the rock ’n roll singer was just telling another of “his houn’ Dog* lies.” Presley and tne two attendants, Ed Hopper, 42, and Aubry Brown, 21. were ordered to appear in city court today to answer assault and battery and disorderly conduct charges which grew out of the brief scuffle. * Reports of exactly what happened at the filling station were conflicting. Presley, who at first refused comment and was “out In the back yard feeding the mule” when reporters called? later held a news conference and accused Hopper of pulling a knife on him. Hopper denied that he drew a knife and charged that Presley slugged him while a policeman held him with his arms pinned to his side. Hopper supported a nifty shiner as evidence. A third story was furnished by two patrolmen who were on the scene—R. E. Ferguson and D. L. Rogers. The patrolmen denied holding anyone, and said that Hopper first hit Presley and that the “Pelvis” responded by slugging Hopper in the eye and Brown on the cheek as he rushed to Hopper’s aid. The incident started Thursday night when Presley, who has recorded such rock ’n roll hits as “Houn’ Dog”, "Heartbreak Ho-
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tel” and “Don’t Be Cruel” pulled his white Lincoln into a downtown service station to find out if ga# fumes were leaking into the car through the air conditioner. Hoppet said he tried to find the trouble with Presley’s car without success and twice asked the singer to. move so ..that other cars could get up to the pumps. Hopper said on the third trip, “Presley told me, ‘l’ll move when I’m ready.’ That kind of made me mad. I slapped at him. kind of brushing his face, anyway 1 hit him.” I The name, “Kansas,'’ is taken from ,the name of a tribe of Sioux Indians who called themselves People of the South Wind.
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