Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 23 May 1958 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

L>r iMX; _ ..J BEES LIKE THAI BIG CAR FEEL—Mrs. Fred R. Priolcau parked her Caddy in downtown Little Rock, Ark., and when she got back that colony of bees had taken up residence. That's Gib Wilson, who keeps bees as a hobby, removing the swarm. Barehanded, too. ( International Sounrlphotoi

Children Help To Capture Abductor Alert Children Are Credited By Police CHICAGO (UP'—Authorities today credited three alert children with helping them capture the abductor of a V-year-old girl before he had a chance to possibly harm her. Three playmates witnessed Doras coax Linda. Beatty, a first a high speed chase through suburbs south of Chicago. Richard Doras, 31, who said he recently was released from a mental hospital, was arrested Thursday afterjnoon at the end of grader, into his car as she played during the noon recess near SS. Peter and Paul Roman Catholic school. ■A man in a green car just kidnaped Linda, ’ the children told Sister Hubert* at the school. One SUNT& RSn. ” First Decatur Showing of 2 Smash Entertainments I. ®>wsmw i J couoct —ADDED EXCITEMENT—■M ttAUINQ JOHN SAXON V7 IUOT EDITH l n)«s! W «** ’*» I ' A, «*« »msu>» «s3| win K( ■MHHhwkSM —o—o— Tonight & Saturday Brand New — The Year’s Funniest Comedy Howl! “TEACHER’S PET’ Clark Gable, Doris Day & “HIRED GUN” Rory Calhoun, Anne Francis

| SUN. & MON - & £ • W S Continuous Sun. from 1:15 y ONLY 25c -50 c i«[r3!3l ÜBiflSINAUTHE W OENI6W ams wJl®| EOI " mw AW! WM Eff® hot wi unimdi o o — TONIGHT ONLY — ON STAGE IN PERSON—WGL “HOOSIER HAYRIDE” Famous Radio Stars — Western and Country Music; Rock N’ Roll; Comedy; Talents Search! ON SCREEN — Hour of Cartoons and Comedy. '* Adults 75c Kids 25c; Box Office Opens at 6:4s—Come Early! —o o — SATURDAY ONLY — Two Exciting First Run Action Hits! “THE SAFECRACKER” Unusual Story of a Crook Who Became A Commando! With RAY MILLAND & “FORT BOWIE” America’s Frontier Becomes an Apache Massacre-Ground! With Ben Johnson.

of the youths was able to give a surprisingly good description of the car, and police immediately issued an all points alarm. Policeman Emil Flores, 38, of suburban Calumet Park, spotted the car near the Calumet Sag Channel and gave chase but lost it. Then Policeman George Heitmann of Blue Island saw the car and took up the pursuit, joined later by Chicago Police Sgt. Edward Cooper. They managed to stop Doras and with drawn guns seized him. “I didn’t harm the girl,” Doras said. Police Thursday night questioned Doras about several unsolved slayings of juveniles in the Chicago area, but indicated, he was not a good suspect Doras told authorities he had been drinking and had stolen the car earlier this week. An unemployed tool and die maker, Doras said he had oeen on relief since his release ’from the Illinois State Mental Hospital in Jacksonville 28 days ago. Authorities said Doras would be charged with abduction of an infant, which carries k maximum penalty of life Imprisonment. Linda is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Q. Beatty, who have another daughter, Karen, 3. Beatty is an accountant with Armour & Co. Evansville Marine Killed In Accident 15 •/'KINGSBURG. ■ Calif.- - W Marine Cpl. Paul Arnett Townsend Jr., 21, Evansville, Ind., was killed Thursday night when his automobile swerved off U. S. 99 and struck a tree three miles south of here. Townsend was thrown from thecar. Cpl. Noble Kissinger, 23, Oakland, Qalif ~ was injured. Both were stationed at Twentynine Palms, Calif. •GRADUATION - (Continued from Fege one) ’hen entertained the graduates. Ither club members who aided in the program were Mrs. Kreps, Dick Kershner, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Teeter and Mr. and Mrs. Al Beavers. At 4:45, nearly 90 of the seniors and their guests were still going strong, and entered the Lions den at the American Legion home. Here magician Dick Ryan entertained the class members with the help of John Shaffer and several other guests. The Dixie Catz band furnished the music. Following the entertainment the. group was served bacon and eggs, by members of the Decatur Lions club. L. E. Anspaugh was master of ceremonies. Class president James Baumgartner thanked the Lions cltfb members and others who participated in the all-night program for their interest in the senior class. The party ended about 5:45 a m.

Eisenhowers Spend Weekend At Farm WASHINGTON -(W President Eisenhower will fly by helicopter to Gettysburg, Pa., Friday for a weekend at his farm, but Mrs. Eisenhower will make the trip by automobile. The White House announced the President would take-off from the south lawn Friday afternoon for the 35-minute flight. It will mark the President’s first use of a helicopter to go from the White House to the farm. LABOR ~ (Contlnued from Pay one)

Board said a single federal agency should supervise both military and commercial aviation to enhance safety. He testified before a Senate subcommittee investigating recent air collisions and near misses involving military and civilian aircraft. Alaska: Supporters of Alaska statehood said the opposition is about to give up. JET (Continued from Page one) _ serve as a cure-all to the 'problem of air collisions. It woud do much to avoid the menace of militaj y-scheduled airline collisions, they said, but would not involve private planes. The President directed that: —All military jets flying from one base to another must file flight plans in advance with the CAA in both good and bad weather. —Jet planes making operations flights over civilian airways will be under civilian control and wil be required to fly under instrument flight rules. , —Jet planes flown by student pilots on civilian airways must be under CAA control and under instrument flight rules rather than visual flight rules. —Jet pilots making proficiency flights must stay off civilian airways. —All jets coming from a higher to a lower altitude must be off civilian airways. When crossing Chilian airways, jet pilots will come under civilian control of under 25,000 feet. JANE (L’onll nued from Pay one) teTof Mr? and Mrs. Hilton Swearingen of 409 North Third street, also was, awarded a scholarship to Indiana university by the board of trustees of that institution. She won her right to the scholarship in a competitive exam. Miss Judy Lane, daughter of Mr. - N; Fifth street, was awarded a state scholarship to Ball State Teachers College. The scholarship, won in competition with other seniors in all parts of the state, was granted for scholastic achievement, personal qualities, promise for the future, and on recommendation of the principal of Decatur high school. No one in the present senior or junior class has a perfect attendance record which would warrant the presentation of an attendance trophy, Andrews stated. Several in the lower grades are reported to. ■ be working towards, an attendance 1 trophy, however, he added. Last , year a trophy was awarded to a ■ student who had completed four 1 years of high school without missing one day for any reason. ; INDUSTRIAL (Continued from Page one) 34, compared to 27 for the month , of April. I increased consideri ably from 693 a year ago to 887 in March and 1,089 in April. Car- , loadings out decreased 108 over W month of March and is still short ’ 761 over a year ago. Building permits were two short t of the March figure and three high- . er than a year ago. The value of . the permits in April was $11,825 as I compared with the previous month , of $11,256 and considerably lower t than April of 1957, when the permits were valued at $37,100. There were 50 births and eight deaths reported, as compared with ? 51 births and eight deaths in March and 50 births and 16 deaths a year ago.

JEHOVAH’B WITNESSES Kingdom Hall Corner Monroe and Ninth Sunday. 2:30 p.m.: ‘‘Why Spiritual Famine in Time of Plenty?" public Bible lecture by P. E. Gerber, local Watchtower representative. Sunday, 3:45 p.m.: Watchtower Bible study and discussion on the subject, ‘‘A New Song for All Men of Good Will." One of the scriptures to be considered will be Isaiah 42:10, American Standard Version, “Sing Unto Jehovah a New Song, and his praise from the end of the earth; Ye that go down to the sea, and all that is therein, the isles, and the inhabitants thereof” ■ Tuesday, 8 p.m.: Bible study using the study aid, "This Means Everlasting Life.” Friday, 7:30 p.m.: Theocratic ministry school followed by Kingdom Ministry Service -meeting. To the Pueblo and Navajo Indians of New Mexico, com is a sacred substance, used as a symbol for all fertility. Corn meal, ceremonially ground, is scattered in various directions on most ritual occasions.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

Limit Debate On Statehood For Alaskans ■ 1 . Supporters Claim Opponents Wearing Down On Statehood WASHINGTON (W — Alaskan statehood supporters claimed Friday their opposition is wearing down and have decided to give up attempts to block action on statehood. Rep. Wayne Aspinall (D-Colo.) made the statement after an agreement was reached to cut off House Rebate on the bill at 5 p.m. e.d.t. Monday. "The opponents know that filibustering techniques don’t work in the House of Representatives,” Aspinall said. “Now we can get on with an orderly debate and proceed to an early vote on the merits of the bill.”

Aspinall is floor manager of the statehood measure which was brought up in the House Wednesday under an unusual procedure by-passing the “traffic-cop” rules committee. Rep. Howard W. Smith (D-Va.), rules committee chairman and a leader of the opposition to statehood, has been instrumental in instituting a series of time-consum-ing roll calls over the past two days to delay the bill as long o$ possible. , The surprise agreement to limit debate came late Thursday, ft was accepted by Smith, Speaker Sam Rayburn, House Republican Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr. (Mass.) and Democratic Leader John W. McCormack (Mass.) Smith made it clear he did not regard the pact as a “capitulation” of the opposition. “In fact I negotiated it,” he said. The Virginian said the agreement “will give us sufficient time to present our side of the case.” “The only thing we have been after is to make sure that everyone understands what is in this bill,” he said. Smith has contended the Alaska proposal is not simply a bill to admit the territory to the Union. He and other opponents have called it a giveaway of the natural resources. ■-> 40 Deer > . SOUTH PORTLAND, Me. — Wl — John W. Morrill, 69, has bagged 40 deer in the last 45 deer hunting season. In 1918, the last season in which Maine law permitted a hunter to shoot two deer, Morill scored a double. He retires next year after 51 years with the Boston & Maine Railroad. “That’s retirement from railroading, not from deer hunting." Morrill said. “I’ll never retire from that And next year I’ll be shooting number 41.” Water from the Amazon River freshens the Atlantic ocean as far as 100 miles out to sea, the National Geographic Magazine says. The Amazon’s discharge is greater than that of the world’s three next largest rivers combined. Trade in a good town — Decatig

FERTILIZER!! Free Flowing Green Belt Fills Full your Grain Bins! See Our Agents or The GREEN BELT CHEMICAL CO. Bryant, Ind. Save also on WEED KILLERS at GREEN BELT 2,4 D 2,4,5 T MCP TCA Alanap 3 — Bandox Amino Triasole (for Thistles—Weedasol) Before You Buy, See GREEN BELT

Indiana AFL-CIO Merger Is Assured Merger Apparently Only A Formality INDIANAPOLIS (UP)-The long awaited merger of the Indiana CIO with the state AFL appeared to be only a formality today in the wake of action taken at separate conventions of the two unions here Thursday. About 800 delegates attended each convention and both groups voted unanimous approval of the agreement to merge and a proposed constitution bindind the two groups AFL and CIO officials will meet in joint session Saturday to give formal approval to the merger and elect AFL-CIO officers for the next two years. The CIO will get control of the merged group for the first two years under the proposed plan since the presidency is to be given to a CIO selection. Dallas Sells, present Indiana CIO head, apparently will get the post. The AFL will name the secre-tary-treasurer and each union will elect a vice-president. Overall control of the Indiana AFL-CIO will be in the hands of d 12-man executive board based on one per 25,000 union members. The CIO will have seven members on the board and the AFL will have five. Under the new agreement, convention votes will be distributed according to the number of members instead of the number of o-_ jcals. Die plan favors the CTO* which has # more members, jfrut fewer locals than the AFL. The AFL meets today to select its choice for .secretary-treasurer and vice-president of the new group. The CIO will name its rhnt'.A for rvpsident and vicepresident Saturday. Carl Mullen, AFL president, announced earlier his retirement from union activities and said he would not be a candidate for any office in the merged union. Trade in a t'- town — Decatur

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Woman Dies From Accident Injuries ' LAPORTE, Ind. — (W — Mrs. Locke Wagner, 84, Indianapolis, died in Holy Family Hospital here late Thursday, sever al hours after an automobile accident at the junction of U. S. 421 and U. S. 6 at nearby Westville. Mrsr. Wagner was ri d ing in a car driven by her grandson, Jack Barrett, 28, Indianapolis, when Barrett apparently ran a stop sign and collided with* a semitruck driven by Leroy G. Harrntan, 24, Leesburg. .The car then rammed a utility pole. DE GAULLE (Continued from Page ono) was “collaboration with the Communist plot.” De Gaulle himself remained- at his country home awaiting a call from Paris. An authoritative source said he was standing on his decision to return to power only by overwhelming demand of the French Parliament It appeared this would not come unless bloodshed erupts in France. Pflimlin’s constitutional reform bill was approved Friday evening by the Cabinet Today he was appearing before Parliament with a resolution stating the desirability of constitutional amendment Next week he hopes to railroad the actual bill through Parliament. The bill was designed primarily to strengthen the powers of the government and to make it that much more difficult for de Gaulle to win office. De Gaulle himself has demanded such reforms, and the bill was intended to take much of the wind out of his sails. But the powers Parliament, was being asked to surrender were so sweeping that many observers wondered if Parliament would swallow it—even though Pflimlin’ existence depended on passage. As a result, in his haste to bludgeon the bill through the Chamber of Deputies, Pflimlin might well bring down his own government and touch off the final explosion that could bring de Gaulle to power. Trade in a good town — Decatur

Pro-Western Japan Government Winner Huge Majority Won By Nobosuke Kishi TOKYO (ff) — Japanese voters returned the pro - Western government of Premier Nobosuke Kishi to power with a majority almost as huge as he held before, election returns showed Friday. Final but unofficial returns from the nationwide election to fill 467 seats in the House of Representatives gave Kishi's LiberalDemocrats 287, the Socialists 166, the Independents 12, the Communists 1 and a minority party 1. The election was held Thursday. Ten of the independents were expected to vote with the Liberal Democrats and two with the Socialists. Kishi’s party had 290 seats in the old House. The Socialists had

Public Auction Notice is hereby given that by order of Adams Circuit Court, the undersigned will sell the following items of personal property at Public Auction at the late residence of Miranda V. Bollinger, 1 mile south and % mile east of Monroe, Indiana, on THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 29,1958 Startins at 6:30 P.M. y D.S.T. RCA 21” console model television set; Motorola table model radio; Duo Therm space heater with blower; 9x12 rug; library table; 2 rockers; upholstered rocker; wardrobe; dresser; single bed, complete; rollaway bed; bedding; stand and chair; buffet; apartment size electric range; Frigidaire refrigerator; M. W. 6’ home freezer; kitchen cabinet; table and 4 chairs; kitchen utensils. TERMS—CASH. E. W. BAUMGARTNER, Executor of the Estate of Miranda Bollinger CONSIGNED TO SALE: Radio; studio lounge and chair; boy’s 24” bicycle; new hand lawn mower; power lawn mower; kitchen sink; pitcher pump; scales; bird cage and stand. TERMS-CASH. _ „ Sale conducted by MEL'S REALTY AUCTION CO., Berne Mcl Liechty—Auctioneer First Bank of Berne—Clerk 23 28

FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1958

158, the Communists two and the Independents two. There were 15 vacancies. "Die diet, composed of the House of Representatives and the House of Councillors, will elect a premier, almost certain to bo Kishi. He was expected to form a new cabinet that would stick to an anti-Communist, pro-Western policy. The slight Socialist gain was not enough to affect the nation’s policies. But the failure of Kishi’s party ’ to Increase its majority to twothirds — which would have meant winning 312 seats — wrecked his hopes of revising the constitution to facilitate a build-up of the nation’s defense force and give the emperor more prwer. A colorful hew set of postage stamps issued.by the Turks and Caicos Islands, a dependency of Jamaica, contains marine life designs from the National Geographic Society’s “Book of Fishes.”