Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 77, Decatur, Adams County, 1 April 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Book On Red China Now Haunts Dulles U,N. Admission Is ; Delicate Question WASHINGTON <UP)— John him ever since on one point—the question of Red China’s admission to the United Nations. times since 1950 Dulles must have thought of the Biblical words in the 31st Chapter of Job. Verse 35—" My desire is .. . that mine adversary had written a book.” Newsmen and diplomats over the last four years ’have reminded Dulles that before he became secretary of state he wrote on page 190 cf his book "War or Peace:” "I have .-.w come to believe that the Umud Nations will best serve the cause of peace if its assembly is representative of what the- world actually is. and not merely of the parts which we like. “The i elore, we ought to be willing that all the nations should be members without attempting to appraise closely those which are 'good' and those which are 'bad.' . Must Prove Ability “If the Communist government of China in fact proves its ability to govern China without serious domestic resistance, then it. too. should be admitted to the United Nations. However, a regime that claims to have become the government of a country through civil war should not be recognized until it has been tested over a reasonable period of time?’ Dulles hadn't been secretary of state for long when he had to come to grips with the actual issue of Red China's possible place in the United Nations. He took a strong stand against admission of the Peiping regime, particularly after Sen. William F. Knowland <R-Calif» declared in 1954 that he would fight for American withdrawal from the UN if Red China got in. After Knowland’s blast, Dulles was asked at a news conference •’July 8, 1954) whether he felt his views on the issue "have been modified since your book in 1950?” A Lot Happened? Dulles took the position, in his answer, that a lot had happened “which in the winter of 1949 and

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1950 were not predictable.” He'referred primarily to Communist China's aggressive actions against I Korea and Indochina. The State Department has dis-; closed that Dulles now has written i a 2.000-word foreword” for new editions of his 1950 book, about one-fourth of which is devoted to an explanation of the Red China question. / In 1957. Dulles junks the idea jptaLrßnd f?hia> ahawld Ra in iba * United Nations to make it a truly "universal” organization whether member nations are “good” or ‘bad.’’ He recalls now that he did say the regime should be tested over a reasonable period of time. ''“This testing has indicated the ability, so far, of the Communist regime to maintain itself in power, although by ruthless, police-state pulles now writes. "However, it is equally demonstrated that that regime does not possess me qualities which entitle it -o speak for China in the United Nations . . .” RED CROSS rroi V«K« O»*> j Baumgartner, French. SB. Leo E. Engle, French township, sl4: Mrs. H. Brunstrup, Blue Creek, $10; Mrs. Delmore Wechter. Blue Creek, $7; Ernest Hofstetter, Wabash, $15.40; Orval Ar-J nold, Wabash, sl9; Godfred Smith, Wabash, $7; Mrs. Louis Sheets. Union, $23.35; Jonas Sprunger, i Monroe township, $10; Charles Brunstrup, Blue Creek, $8; Alva Railing, Union, s2l; Raymond V> glewede, Washington, $5; Arman Habegger. Monroe township, $13.90, and Erwin Bauman, Wabash. SB. Miss Donelda Marckel, Blue Creek, additional. $5; Roy Young. Blue Creek township. $7; Harold Thieme, Root township, $5; Mrs. Charles Burkhart. Blue Creek, $5; ■ Henry Aschliman. French. $11: G. A. Bieberick, Preble, $10: R. M. Bleeke, Union, $8; Glen Girod, ] Preble township, $7. Mrs. George Schultz, Washington, $7: Melvin Conrad, Preble j township. $11; Rosemary Spang- f ler, Kirkland township. $23; Carl Heckman, Root township, $7.50; j Frank Dellinger, Blue Creek, , $8.50; Mrs. A. Ketchum, Decatur t residential, $11: Mrs. P. Germann. j Kirkland township. $6.50; Mrs. H. , Weigmann, ♦Union township, $6, and John Heyerly, French, $23. { Mrs. L. Smith, Decatur residen- < tial, $32; Mrs. E. Schuller, Preble I township, $9.50; Miss Lucile Beav- < ers, Kirkland township, $18; Al- 1 bert Roth, Kirkland, $7; Mrs. F. s Ehrman, Kirkland, $10; Mrs. R. Kershner, Kirkland, $8.56; Mrs. W. Gaunt, Union. $3; B. A. Sees- ' enguth, French township, $9. Howard Bluhm, French township, $4; Menno .Augsburger,

10-Year-Old Alter A Quarter Million I Resumes Chase On TV Show Tuesday NEW YORK (UP> — Robert who houses a giant brain inside a Lilliputian frame, resumes his chase Tuesday night of of a million dollars. Rob, a 51-inch, 65-pound fifthgrader from the Bronx. N.Y., is the youngster who safely tucked away $64,000 on CBS-TWs “The $64,000 Question.” Under the revised rules of the show, Rob was permitted to shoot for three more s64.ooos—or $256,000 in all. In his second go-around. Rob, a former Quiz Kid, haS reached the $32,000 level, giving him a tentative $96,000 total. He has climbed to this giddy height by polishing off a series of science questions •during seven weeks in categories ias chewey as electricity, math, i astronomy and chemistry. What makes Robbie tick is one of those imponderables. He was reading the New York Times when he was 3. He taught himself to type at 4. He wrote a 96-chapter ! novel, "Unger’s Grocery Store.” at ■the same age. He could use a stridering iron expertly at 6. He’s Well - Behaved He’s an expert in photography and is studying to be a ham operator. He will soon launch a mimeographed magazine. “Jr. Scientist,” His reading matter runs from ‘Treasure Island" to abstruse tracts on engineering and calculus. a On the other side of the coin, he exhibits all the traits of any normal 10-year-old. He plays the outfield on a Little League team. He's an Elvis Presley fan. He likes to play the harmonica and plays only passable piano. Unlike many other child wonders, he is well-behaved—the reason may be that his parents, Albert and Beatrice Strom, spank him when he gets out of line. His father, a man who earns SB,OOO a year teaching electric motors at a vocational high school here, and his mother, a Phi Beta Kappa, discount the photographic memory theory. “He has an analytical mind and I all of the questions he has been called upon to answer thus far have required him to give the kind of answers that would show he knows what he's talking about,” says Albert Strom. He Teaches Himself “He was always a curious boy.” says his mother. “Anything with the quality of mystery, the unknown, just fascinates him. When he was 9 he saw a book On shorthand in the public library—he was so fascinated he taught it to Rimself. ; “A friend of mine speaks Hebrew. Rob heard her and now is teaching it to himself. He has heard me speak Hungarian so he’s trying to learn that, too. It's the quality of ‘x’ about anything that thrills him.” Rob himself is unaffected by his fame. His parents screen his mail and the newspapers so he won’t suffer from ego - bloating. They have him on rations of $2.50 a month, most of which he spends on books or tape for his magnetic tape recorder. “I guess the most important thing about having a boy like Rob is to get across to other people that he's not some kind of freak,” says his mom. "A child like Rob could become warped if he were misguided or unguided, but we've accepted him just as another kid. The danger in a situation like this is looking upon him as a cockeyed wonder.” : r i Fined On Charge Os Drunken Driving Gene Finch, 42, of Willshire, 0. arrested Friday night on Mercer avenue on a charge of driving while under the influence of alcohol appeared in city court Saturday and was fined SSO and costs. He was also given a 30-day suspended sentence. Missionary Film At Presbyterian Church Miss Sara Perkins, noted missionary, will be seen and heard in a sound film address at the First Presbyterian church Tuesday evening in the fifth of the Lenten prayer services at the church. Miss Perkins, a registered nurse, for years in the mission field of the Presbyterian church, relates in the film her experiences as a prisoner pf the Communists for. four and one-halt years. An offering will French, $6.25;- Mrs. Bud Townsend, Decatur residential, S3O; Mrs. George Mac Lean, Decatur residential, $34.01; Mrs. A. Holthouse, Decatur residential, $24.50; Miss Irene Zwick, Decatur, residential, $64.30; Union township, women's club, $2.50; Beverly Singer, Decatur residential, $5.85; Mrs. C. B. Brewer, Decatur residential, $4, and G. D. Koeneman, Preble township. $9.50. The reported total also includes donations of $148.42 from the Schafer company and employes, $694.03 from the General Electric company and employes and s4l from Decatur Industries and employes.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

1 > L'.> v -.Wh AA . a. v-TRI ■ .Mw ui ;i r ■ % 1 j k * ’ ■« y j ■ if / ■ flu 1 r flfl r ANOTHER CHAPTER in medfcai history was written at Franklin Square Hospital, Baltimore, where hypnosis, instead of anesthesia was used successfully in an operation on Rosemary C. Kanya, 30, shown smiling as she sits up in bed. At left is Dr. Nathan Chiodi, who described the surgery as “a gynecological procedure.” In center is Dr. Leah Camp, who stood by in case the hypnosis was broken. Miss Kanya said that she felt no pain. (International Soundphoto) '

Alert Civil Delense Fighters In Minute Warning System In Operation May 1 WASHINGTON HP) — Starting next month, the nation’s civil defense fighters from Maine to California can be alerted to an attack by hydrogen bombers in a flat 60 seconds. The warning can be flashed to more than 200 civil defense centers across the land under an intricate new warning system going into operation May 1. It is the Federal Civil Defense Administration's new National Warning System (NAWAS', and, will cut down the current 8 to 10minute relay time to just 1 minute. Warnin/j.’ can he sent from any of three key centers which can operate independently of each other if necessary. All civil defense installations and warning centers are linked round-the-clock by voice circuits. 'The nation is divided into three main sectors in the civil defense setup—central, eastern and western. are each subdivided, into northern and southern areas. The warning center and control point for the central sector is Ideated at the headquarters of the Continental Air Defense Command at Colorado Springs, Colo. The eastern warning center is at Stewart Air Force Base, N. Y., the western one at Hamilton Air Force Base, Calif. 'c TORNADOES (Contfeft O—» 1 a .disturbance reaching from the 1 Kansas-Oklahoma border to west : Texas. It was expected to sweep along the Gulf states as far east as northern Florida. ' Elsewhere,' the central Rockies ' and the north central states were ( the only areas with unusual last- , of-March weather. ; Showers, drizzle and snow fell over the central Rockies, covering . Wyoming with j. 2-to-4-inch snow 1 mantle. Rain or snow fell in Minnesota near the lowa-Nebraska border. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad, it brings results.

* ** z * C23MB9BHMBB3F L f Wil ' WW . hes jW Jr My ’• > ’ K I FR. ir —liSMMk r 111* IL ■ Ilk iP i I WWnWnfW* V ■ k* i -V* < M I I M wMmbl ;j TjBKBf < C A- ' v>* 7 v .v **» * s a jBM .. * - A u / r i I Ar 4 Bi ** 4 ■itl E. / CARRIED BY ITS MOTHER, ■ child looks apprehensively at skulls and bones of some of the 300 former members of the Confraternity of The Big Red Hoods, one of the strangest of religious sects in the world. It has as its center a church and cemetery on Tiberina Island on the Tiber River, Rome’s historic waterway. Behind the woman, who wears a traditional red scarf. Is a hooded member of the Order. Founded in 1700, Pope Pius VI recognized the Confraternity and, later. Pope Pius IX gave the Brotherhood the body of St Pacifico, which rests beneath the altar. .Today, there are only 10 Brothers, still living, and some 50 women members. (International Exclusive) _

Trucker Killed In Huntington Wreck Transport Crashes Into Parked Truck ! HUNTINGTON. Ind. HP — Wal- • ter Mitchel Murrell Jr., 38, Dear- • born, Mich., was killed today when his auto transport crashed • into two big trucks parked on U.S. 24 three miles east of here. i Authorities said a truck driven ■ I by Robert Cook, 46, Fort Wayne, broke down and Cook pulled off the four-lane highway to the berm. He hailed a ride into Huntington and called his home office, Sherman White Trucking Co., Fort Wayne, for help, —— Another of the firm’s trucks driven by Eugene P. Rearick, 41. Fort Wayne, came to take Cook’s load. Rearick parked on the highi way. authorities said. J Cook saw the transport coming . and warned Rearick to jump. The transport skidded into the . parked trucks, overturning both of them. The transport’s cab burst . into flames. Authorities said Mur- , rel w?s dead before the fire burned . his legs. I Rearick was treated for shock. One automobile on the loaded i transport was damaged. i BROWNELL > <Continne<i rmm Pace Ont. - himself unable to do his work and s delegate the vice president to take r Over. If the president were so ill he couldn’t make such a decision the cabinet could do it by majority vote. Under Keating’s plan a commission reoresenting the Supreme Court, Congress and the executive - branch would decide when a pres--1 ident was incapacitated. 1 A third plan has been offered t by the subcommittee chairman. Rep. Emanuel Celler (D-NY), 5 who is also chairman of the full : committee. This would give the - vice president the responsibility of deciding when a president is 1 disabled. , 1 Pansies For Christmas i OBLONG, 111. — W — Largepansies picked from the snow in the outdoor garden of Mr. arid • Mrs. Sylvan Cross were used as I the centerpiece on their Christmas dinner table.

British Physician's Trial In Third Week Specialist Tells Os Massive Doses LONDON (UP) — Dr. John Bod- • Mir Adams-gtwe i» weaHtiy" wtdowed patient Injections of heroin as high as 30 times the accepted maximum dose in the last five days of her life, a famous specialist testified today. Dr. Arthur Douthwaite, the crown’s chief medical witness and an international authority on narcotics, made his statement as the murder trial of Adams entered its third week in Old Bailey criminal court. Douthwaite said that from Nov. 8. 1950, until her death on Nov. 13, 1950, Mrs. Edith Alice Morrell, 81, was receiving massive doses of narcotics. According to previous testimony, Mrs. Morrell was forced into narcotics addiction by treatment she received after having suffered a stroke. It was not estimated in court, however, what dosage an addict could withstand. Douthwaite said none of the narcotics injections by themselves could have killed the patient. But he said that in his opinion she died from an accumulation. The crown contends that Adams made Mrs. Morrell an addict and then killed her with "massive” doses of narcotics in order to benefit from a bequest in her will. Adams has pleaded innocent. Four Persons Killed By Berserk Father Ohio Patrolman Is Seriously Wounded GALION, Ohio (UP>- State Highway Patrolman Murry C. Youtz remained in serious condition today from wounds suffered when a beserk father shot him at a roadblock. • Youtz. 25, was shot in the arm and chest. Doctors said one bullet was deflected by a rib. The wounding of Youtz climaxed a week end of terror which resulted in the deaths of four persons. The killing spree began Saturday night when Manford Draper. 28, an unemployed railroad worker, ran down his estranged wife’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pollak in Marion, several* miles south of here. A relative of Draper believed he went berserk because the Pollaks refused to let him visit his daughter, Martha Elizabeth. 6. Draper’s wife, Marilyn, and the girl had lived with the Pollaks since last year. Draper ran the Pollaks down with his auto as they walked in an alley. Mrs. Dora Harris, 55, Mr s. Pollak’s mother, walking with them also was bowled over. She said Draper turned the car around and ran over the Pollaks again before he fled. Draper stole another car at gunpoint and headed for Bucyrus. The Highway Patrol had been alerted and set up roadblocks. Highway Patrolman Robert E. Karsminski, 35, picked up Draper’s trail and gave chase. Draper attempted to skirt a police car roadblock at high speed, but his car spun out of control onto the lawn of a home and , overturned throwing Draper out. Karsminski arrived moments later and walked to where Draper was lying face down in the mud. As Karsminski attempted to move Draper, the man suddenly rolled over and fired point blank. Karsminski died almost instantly. Draper then wounded Youtz, hitting the patrolman in the chest and left arm. Officers opened fire on Draper, killing him instantly.

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r u . r i , - . T PEGGY, a 2-year-old dingo in London zoo, looks soulfully about as she plays hostess at lunch time to her 3-day-old litter of nine. A dingo is an Australian wild dog, and is like a wolf, a vicious and treacherous animal. But Peggy doesn’t look it. (International}

Anderson Woman Is Held For Shooting Former Sweetheart And Bride Wounded PHOENIX, Ariz. W — M r s . Harriet Murley, 71, a prominent Anderson. Ind., clubwoman, was held today in the shooting of her former sweetheart and his 58-year-old bride of nine months. Jacob Metzing. «9, and his wife, Noma, were shot in their home early Sunday. Mrs. Metzing was wounded critically and Metzing was in fair condition. Sheriff s deputies believed the shots were fired by someone who waited in the darkness of their home until the Metzings returned from an evening out. Mrs. Hurley was arrested a mile from the Metzing home. Police said she had two pistols and a policeman’s night stick. Investigators said Mrs. Hurlev

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MONDAY, APRIL 1, 1957

apparently came here all the way from Anderson to gain revenge on Metzing for marrying last June. They said Metzing and Mrs. Hurley were neighbors in Anderson for years and Metzing asked her to marry him several times but Mrs. Hurley refused for fear she would lose a $55 monthly widow’s pension if she remarried. Mrs. Hurley was booked in county jail Sunday. She refused*' to discuss the shootings and said she would stand on her “constitutianal rights.” Anderson sources said Mrs. Hurley was President of the East Side Women’s Club, a civic organization, and operates an ( antique shop. Burns Prove Fatal To Wabash Worker WARSAW. Ind. (UP)—Walter B. Hartman, 42. Warsaw, a foreman for a Warsaw industrial plant, died Saturday of burns sustained in a flash fire at the plant the day before. -