Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 256, Decatur, Adams County, 30 October 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Ceiling On Defense Spending Is Lifted No Pennypinching In America's Efforts WASHINGTON (UP)—The administration made clear today it doesn't want to, be accused of pennypinching America's effort to best Russia in space weapons. A step by Defense Secretary Neil H. McElroy toward lifting the government's spending ceiling to keep from jeopardizing "essential programs” was concurrent with the ' blossoming of a fourth congrej; sional investigation of the U.S* missile program. Further administration intentions for dealing with the new Soviet weapons challenge were expected to be detailed during President Eisenhower's news conference. Dre Under Pressure The President has been under continuing Congressional pressure to step up the U.S. ballistic missile development pace and satellite program. The House Manpower Subcommittee became the fourth congressional group to look into the missile setup, seeking to learn whether it has been hampered by waste of scientific talent.

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McElroy gave n clear indication Tuesday lie expects defense spending to exceed its 38 billion dollar limit. He said during the last half of 1957 expenditures would be likely to hit $19,400,000,000. This is 400 million dollars more than the ceiling imposed b,v his predecessor. Charles E. Wilson. On Monday McElroy revoked another Wilson order and restored 170 million dollars to the departments research and development funds. Services Will Testify High ranking Army, Navy, Air Force and Defense Department officials will testify Nov. 4-6 before the House Manpower SubcommitI tee. A subcommittee source said it has reports competition is "running wiki" for scientists and technicians are ending up in ordinary Administrative work because of surpluses in some sections of the research, and development field. Other congressional investigations into the missile-satellite programs are under way by the Senate Preparedness subcommittee, a House Appropriations subcommittee and a House Government Information subcommittee. A porcupine doesn't roll itself into a ball when danger threatens J but simply arches its back and hides its nose between its forepaws.

Gaillard Seeks To Form Government Sweeping Changes Sought In Policies PARIS <UP) — Right and LeftWing political spokesmen clamored today for sweeping changes in France’s political structure to avoid future government crises. But their demands would have to wait a decision today by Felix Gaillard, 38-year-old finance minister in the last government, on whether he will try to form a government to end this month-old crisis. Gaillard is to inform President Rene Coty sometime this evening whether he will become the sixth political leader to try to solve the impasse. He planned a series of political talks during the day before making up his mind. From the extreme left, French Communist leaders called on the Socialists once again to join them in a political alliance to change basic French policies. The Communists and Socialists together could form a majority in Parliament. The appeals followed Socialist Party Leader Guy Mollet’s failure to win National Assembly approval as the next French premier. His plans were wrecked 290 to 227 when the Conservative Independents voted against him. | This deepened the political crisis and played into the hands of the Right and extreme Left who denounce the present regime for different reasons but with I equal bitterness. The Right-Wing Social Republican Assembly bloc met and issued a public warning that if the crisis drags on it irlight be necessary to call in De Gaulle as a strongman who could serve somewhat as a benevolent dictator until France could Straighten itself out. Law Enforcement Leaders At Seminar Discussions and demonstrations of various aspects of homicide investigations are being featured at a meeting this afternoon at Columbia City for the benefit of law enforcement officers of the northeastern Indiana area. Among those attending from Adams county will be sheriff Merle As folder,, deputy Charles Arnold, prosecuting attorney Lewis L. Smith, Decatur police chief James Borders, Berrie police chief Karl .Sprunger, Mayor Robert Cole. Judge Myles F. Parrish, Geneva town marshal Preston Pyle, Berne justice of the peace Arthur Muselman, and state troopers Dan Kwasneski and Al Coppes. The greatest deposits of potash in the United States, hear Carlsbad, N. M., were discovered in the late 1920 s during oil exploration, which proved to be unsucessfu.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Final Rites Held

For Emma Riggin Mrs. Emma I. Riggin, 90, of Muncie, died Monday at the home of a son, Claude Riggin, of Geneva, where she was visiting. Also surviving is a daughter. Mrs. Herb Clark, of Muncie. Funeral services were held this afternoon at Muncie. Thomas J. Settles Is Taken By Death Thomas J. Settles, 79, Wells county farmer died Tuesday at his home west of Geneva following a long illness. Surviving are two sons, Richard of Elkhart, and | Lloyd of Keystone; three brothers, James, Charles and Walter Settles, all west of Geneva, and a sister, Mrs. Olive Templin of Bluffton. Services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Hardy & Hardy funeral home in Geneva. Archbold To Speak To Decatur Scouts L. E. Archbold, Farm Bureau fieldman, will address all the Boy Scouts of Decatur, and their parents in a meeting at the Decatur Community center Thursday, Nov. 7, at 7 p.m. Archbold, former county agent, will discuss agriculture and its relation to scouting. Following his talk there will be a question and, answer session. The talk is sponsored by the American Legion Post 43 trocp number 63, Robert Raudenbush, scoutmaster, stated. * 171 ■"' ,l 11 ' 1 I' ■ ■ Adams County Agent On Radio Friday , Leo Seltenright, Adams county agent, will appear on the Little Red Barn and Dinner on the Farm program Friday morning with Jay Gould over radio station WOWO. Seltenright and farm service director Gould will discuss soybeans during the 6:15 a. m. program, and at 11:35 they will talk about the dangers of selling treated wheat seed in the public market. The recording for the show was made Tuesday morning. Judge Parrish Asks - Transfer Os Funds Judge Myles F. Parrish, of Adams circuit court, has asked the Adams county council for the transfer of funds already appropriated for operation of Adams ’circuit court for the balance of the present year. The requests are transfers already appropriated so an additional appropriation will not be necessary. The court pointed out that cost of law books for the law library had sky-rocketed in price and it was necessary that these books be obtained to keep the library modera and up to date. Other transfers will provide for an additional SSO for mileage for the probation officer, which was provided for in a new statute. The entire request is merely for a shift in funds, already granted. Muncie Man Killed When Hit By Truck MUNCIE (IP) — General Ross Herron, 21. Muncie, was killed Tuesday when he was run over by a tow truck at the Indiana Bridge Co. He died in Ball Memorial Hospital about two hours after the accident. Funeral Thursday For Louis B. Mayer HOLLYWOOD — (W — Funeral services will be held Thursday for Louis B. Mayer, onetime giant of the Hollywood movie industry. Mayer died Tuesday of anemia brought on by acute leukemia at the UGL/dttedical Center where he had been a patient for nearly six weeks. He was 72. The final rites will be held at the Willshire Boulevard Temple. EIGHT fContinued from Page One) State trooper Ralph Severance said the house was “literally leveled.” Ha said there was almost nothing left of the house but, a bed of glowing cjals. “The house was tinder-dry and shingled,” he said. “Flames swept through it in minutes.” Police said there was a coal heater in the living room of the house where Carrick was sleeping alone on a cot. “The blaze seemed to be centered in that part of the house,” Severance said. Rose said she awoke in the predawn hours and heard her sister Norma, screaming. , “I tried to find her,” Rose said, “but I couldn’t because of th# darkness.” Rose said her mother and father began breaking windows and she climbed from one to a back porch where she jumped to the ground. She ran next door to the house of her uncle, Arthur Carrick* The uncle said that by the time he called firemen and ran outside to help the bottom of the house was a mass of flames.

EIGHT

Rookies Star In Early Pro League Games By EARL WRIGHT United Press Sports Writer “ National Football League rookies are as busy as ants at a picnic this season. In past years, first-year players felt lucky if they could stick on a pro squad and see a few minutes action when a game was won or lost. The rookies have changed the script in 1957. . Os the 145 touchdowns scored so far this season, rookies have been involved in 35 or nearly one-fourth of thd total. Rookies have scored 19 touchdowns on runs or plunges, caught 13 touchdown passes, scored two on interceptions and passed for another. Cothren Toes Well In addition, Paige Cothren, the former Mississippi star is making like Lou Groza with his foot. Cothren has kicked five field goals and 12 extra points for the Los Angeles Rams to lead the first-year players in scoring with 27 points. Willie Galimore of the Chicago Bears, a former Florida A & M player who didn't show on the 1956 All-Americas, leads the rookies in touchdowns with six. R. C. Owens of the San Francisco Forty-Niners, a College of Idaho lad you won’t find on any 1956 All-America teams, is second to Galimore among the rookie touchdown-makers with four on pass receptions. 'Skins Start Three Paul Hornung of the Green Bay Packers, Jim Brown of the Cleveland Browns and Jim Podoley of the Washington Redskins are next among the rookies with three touchdowns apiece. Washington has three rookies in its starting offensive backfield and they have contributed eight touchdowns. In Sunday’s other games, the Forty-Niners are 3ta point choices to beat the Detroit Lions at San Francisco; the Rams are favored over the Bears by three at Los Angeles; the Giants are favored over the Packers by six at Green Bay; the Colts are favored over the Pittsburgh Steelers by IVt at Baltimore, and the Cardinals are favored over the Philadelphia Eagles by seven at Chicago. IKE (Continued from Page One) The cdrrent big question at the White House, in U. S. intelligence agencies and in the State and Defense Departments is what upheaval in the Kremlin caused Marshal Georgi Zhukov :lo lose his job as Soviet defense minister. Questioned prior to the President’s news conference, U. S. officials professed no knowledge of what Soviet Communist Party boss Nikita Khrushchev would do with Zhukov, or whether Khrushchev & Co. may have fired other high Soviet officals. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad— they bring results.

WHAT’S GOING ON IN THE CATTLE BUSIHESS? f' L L ' j/r X'OraHKSb ' w There’s lots of talk about many new things—hormone feeding and implants, urea, high protein supplements, antibiotic feeding—and what have you. Your problem is to decide what’s best foryow. What plan will make the most profit dollars jingle in your pockets? GET THE FACTS— The only way to decide is to get the facts. A dependable source ,of facts is the Purina Research Farm, where cattle have been fed for nearly 30 years.;. where new ideas are tried and tried again. STIEFEL GRAIN Co. .WAW.W.W.W.

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Two Indiana U. Players Dropped For Violations By UNITED PRESS Northwestern has lost -the services of all conference guard Al Viola for the rest of the season due to a pinched nerve in his neck. The loss was a blow to the undermanned Wildcats, but Coach Ara Parseghian said that after a conference between physicians it was decided that Viola should drop from the toam. Parseghiafi said Tuesday the injury leaves Viola’s right arm with “no strength, power or feeling.” and was a reoccurence of an injury which hampered Viola in practice this sea- _ son. . —j-t—y— P —— Viola probably could continue playing despite the injury, Parseghian added, “but it isn’t worth the risk.” Indiana, which also can “ill afford” to lose any players, will finish out the season without two squad members who were dropped Tuesday for disciplinary reasons. Acting Coach Bob Hicks said end Ted Aucreman, Lancaster, Ohio, and tailback Vic Jones, Clearfield, Pa., were dismissed for repeatedly breaking training rules. Both are sophomores. Hicks refused to discuss the nature of the infractions. However, he said the tWo had been warned previously. At Michigan, Coach Bennie Oosterbaan announced Tuesday that end Dave Bowers is definitely out of the lowa game Saturday and may.,be lost for the rest of the season with a dislocated shoulder. The senior end was injured in the Minnesota game. The Wolverines emphasized passing drills. Two members of Michigan States 38-man traveling squad, fullback Don Arend and guard Ron Rlckens, were sidelined with leg injuries Tuesday. However, six players hospitalized with respiratory ailments were expected to be ready to play against Wisconsin Saturday. The Spartans went through a hard-hitting, but unim-

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T c«w ih» »»**<►***• WCHr- zvx * d I “All right, let's huddle . . . one of you grab the rake and take out leases while the other one goes through with the mower and . . . !” pressive half-hour scrimmage. Two Ohio State players were down with the flu Tuesday, but Coach Woody Hayes said he expected them to be ready for Saturday’s game with Northwestern. The Buckeyes ran through a rugged practice session and Hayes said he was “real pleased” with the workout. lowa, hoping io snap a 33-year victory drought against Michigan, practiced in secret. The Hawkeyes haven't defeated Michigan since 1924. It was reported lowa Coach Forest Evashevski planned to hold secret sessions the rest of the week. Purdue Coach Jack Mollenkopf sent his squad through a hard scrimmage, emphasizing pass defense in preparation for the Illinois game. Gene Selawski moved up to first string tackle in place of injured Wayne Farmer. Bob Spoo alternated with Ross Fichtner at quarterback. / At Minnesota, Ji m Reese handled the signal calling chores in place of Bobby Cox as the Gophers worked for two hours on Indiana defenses. Coach Murray Warmath did not indicate whether he was giving Cox a chance to

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 195 T

rest his injured ankle or whether the change was due to merit. Illinois end Rich Kreitling, ace pass receiver, still was hampered with a bruised rib, during the mini’s drill for their battle against Purdue. Center Gene Cherney was bothered by a bad shoulder, but is expected to be ready by Saturday. Notre Dame put in a hard session on pass defense under scrimmage conditions in preparation for Navy. The Irish also worked on their own pass attack with quarterbacks Bob Williams. Don White and George Izo doing the passing. One of their receivers, end Gary Myers, will not see action Saturday due to a fractured hand. Roy Harris Is Winner Over German Fighter HOUSTON, Tex. W — R o y Harris, the quick-fisted schoolteacher from Cut and Shoot, Tex., added No. 22 to his unbeaten string Tuesday night with a unanimous 19-rdund decision over German heavyweight Willi Besmanoff. Harris, ranked third among NBA heavyweights, told Besmanoff after handing him his fourth straight defeat in the U. S. “you sure know how to hit.” ( But Besmanoff emerged from the fight bloody from cuts over the right eye and nose, while Harris was unmarked. There were no knockdowns. Asian Flu Probe In Death At Fort Wayne FORT WAYNE (IPI — Tests gre being made to determine whether a seven-week-old boy died of Asian flu. The victim, Joseph Martony, son of the Robert Martonys of Fort Wayne, was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Hospital Monday. Results of an autopsy will not be known for some time, authorities said. The infant apparently was found dead in his crib.