Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 157, Decatur, Adams County, 5 July 1957 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Attend Convention Os Lutheran Laymen Decatur Delegates Attend Convention Decatur's delegates to the 40 th anniversary convention of the in ternational Lutheran laymen's lea gue in St. Louis, June 30 to July 3 were Mr. and Mrs. D. Hoyt Cal low and Mr. and Mrs. Louis A

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Jacobs. The Callows, of 303 North Tenth street, and the Jacobses, of 116 North Tenth, heard as two highlights of the convention, speeches by Dr. Oswald Hoffmann, Lutheran Hour radio preacher, and United States Senator Stuart Symington, (D-Mo.) Speaking to 2,500 persons Sunh day at the opening Lutheran Hour i- rally. Dr. Hoffmann declared, i- “God is not performing any tricks 1, when He bestows on the laymen I who attend this LLIf convention L the solid title of 'men of distinc-

1 tion.’ ” ti At the Kiel Opera House there. 6 a pageant-tableau looked forward r to the 25th broadcasting season of s the Lutheran Hour this fall, and 4 depicted the 40-year history of the 1 Lutheran laymen's league, which i, sponsors the world-wide gospel program. • Tuesday evening, In a locally r televised speech for the conven- * tion banquet, Senator Symington s observed that America’s military i' planning must be geared to meet i limited local aggression as well as -'global war. Calling for ultimate , i “peace through disarmament'' to end the “jfomic stalemate.” the nation’s first Secretary of the Air Force declared: “I am worried about our present plans to concentrate almost entirely on all-out war as the only alternative to all-out peace, because if the Soviets continue to nibble successfully with their various limited wars, ultimately they will endager the position of the free world.” > Symington called on his banquet I and television audience to “act ADAMS Tonight & Saturday Spencer Katharine TRACY HEPBURN Iwinkingly introduce you I to | I COLOW by o« UUXB wrtMrtW |l GIG YOUNG • JOAN BLONDELL —ADDED THRILLER— Exciting Story of a Gunslinger Who Turned Parson—and Tamed a Lawless Western Town! “THE PEACE- . MAKER” James Mitchell, Bosemarie Bowe

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, .DECATUR, INDIANA

r -. r 1 . 1 ............. btzsmmmi 1 I . x - f -■ I KflM ■ I gg||g 1 , - 4 *' ™| K THE ABOVE VIEW, taken from outside the building, shows the roof of the Preble Tavern blown . onto two autos parked to the northeast of the new building. Four cars were badly damaged by the j roof.—i Staff Photo.)

with courage, understanding and clear thought.” He said, “It would seem that God has given us the right to utilise this new atomic power either to much improve the world or to destroy it.” One of three men specially honored at the convention, Dr. Ernest J. Gallmeyer, Fort Wayne, was presented an award of merit for outstanding Christian service, San Diego, Calif., will be the site of the 1958 LLL convention, I AW—

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and Buffalo, N. Y., was chosen to be the 1959 convention city, RED MILITARY such famous military leaders as Marshal Ivan Koniev, chief of the Warsaw. Pact forces, and the heads of the Soviet air force, armored forces and navy. In Washington American diploI rustic experts felt that Khrush-

chev had immeasurably strength- I ened his hold on the Kremlin and i that the move marked a.new rise in power for the Red army. Moscow newspapers predicted I the new leadership would “work more efficiently for relaxation of international tensions and world peace” but Washington sources saw little change in relations between East and WestEconomic Reforms Predicted Drastic reforms in Russia's economy were predicted — heralded by a Sovigt decree that farmers no longer will have to deliver their products to the government It was a major concession to win support of the farmers who have chafed under the yoke of I their forced deliveries. But the most immediate effect was expected to be widespreaa changes in the satellites. The Soviet political upheaval was accompanied by the demotion of two Romanian Stalinists. Informed sources said this apparently signified the start of a purge by Khrushchev aimed at ridding the Red world of the last Stalinists. 1 The "old guard” leadership as • represented by Molotov remains • in power in Czechoslovakia, Al-i bania, Romania, Bulgaria and East Germany. FRANKLIN AREA (Continued from Page One) Sunday or Monday and again about Wednesday were expected The Franklin storm was described as one of the worst in the city’s history. The 123-year-old Franklin Col- (

lege campus was littered with fallen trees t many of which weathered storms for generations, i Trees trapped many motorists for hours until volunteers .working with power saws cut narrow paths for restoration of traffic. Banis Are Flattened Several persons were hurt by limbs flying through the air. A plate glass window was broken in one business building and parts of roofs and sheet metal siding on other shops were ripped away. Few homes .were damaged, however, except by falling trees and limbs. Several barns were flattened or badly damaged in the area. • — Dozens of bathers at the Franklin swimming pool were herded in bathhouses to wait out the storm while anxious parents flooded the telephone switchboard to learn of their safety. • Johnson County .Memorial Hospital was blacked out and used auxiliary generators. The storm also swept Columbus, North Vernon and nearby small towns- Power was disrupted to small towns around Columbus. An automobile traveling along Ind. 7 near Columbus hit a pole while trying to avoid fallen trees. A house was destroyed by fire from a lightning bolt at North Vernon. At Waverly, a bridge on Ind. 37 was reported by police to- have been washed out. Eleven persons were trapped

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FRIDAY. JULY 5, 1957

when the skating rink tent collapsed at New Castle alongside a drive-in theater. Rink manager Tom Long, 25, suffered a shoulder injury and 12-year-old Becky Covey, a skater, sustained a back injury. Golfers caught at Hillview Country Club at Franklin lay flat on the fairways for nearly half an hour as the storm swept across the course. Other precipitation measurements included 3 inches at Greenwood, and about m inches at Martinsville, Seymour, Kokomo, Peru, Bluffton and Winchester. Local Lady's Brother Is Taken By Death Donald E. Noble, 45, of near Garrett, died Tuesday in St. Joseph’s hospital. Fort Wayne, after a year’s illness of anemia. Survivors include the widow, Mary; a son Stephen, at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Noble of Fort Wayne; a brother. Russell Notte of Columbia City, and six sisters, Mrs. George Galetine and Mrs. Robert Byers of Fort Wayne. Mrs. George Bailey of Spencerville, Mrs. Ruth Zinn of Mississippi City, Miss., Mrs. Raymond Heimann of Decatur, and Mrs. Ralph Shaffer } f Wolcottville. Funeral services were held this afternoon at the McKee funeral home at Garrett.