Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 126, Decatur, Adams County, 28 May 1958 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Ask Contributions For Heart Surgery Only S4O Donated To Date For Fund Contributions have amounted to only S4O in the Aaron Yoder heart operation fund, to help the Decatur man secure special trained heart surgery nurses, and incidental expenses during his operation June 17. More than enough blood donors have volunteered to make the Tonight & Thursday First Decatur Showing of 2 Great Action Hits! Exciting in COLOK! “THE TALL STRANGER” Joel McCrea, Virginia Mayo & “THE WORLD , WAS HIS JURY” Edm. O’Brien, Mona Freeman —o Fri. Only—Disney’s “Bambi” A “Gun Fever” Mark Stevens Big Holiday Family Show! —o Sat Only—“ Rockabilly Baby” & “Ride Out for Revenge” —o Sun. & Mon. — “April Love” Pat Boone & “Diamond Safari”

Four Big Days! p frl, SAT., SUN., r » iTWiIfW 4 . * MON. Never Before Has This Great Picture Been Shown at Such Low Prices — Only 25c -50 c B M THE picture that belongs to I YOUNG lOVHS Os THIS GENERATION! ■= Marjorie v l-‘kf>\Morningsfar K\ Warner Color *•* » z GENE ... NATALIE Kelly-Wood £ cca.hr to tvtcETT , TREVOR • WYNN ■ SLOANI J MAPTV CAROLYN w>»rt GCORQC TOP I MILNER • JONES MODuCiO RY MILTON SPFRLINO ttiPfCTEO BY

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trip to Indianapolis to give blood for use with the heart-lung apparatus which will be used during the difficult operation. The patient must furnish his own donors for the operation, as regular stored blood cannot be used. A bus to transport the donors by the Teeple Trucking company, to Indianapolis will be furnished and the Adams county, Heart Fund will supply meals for the blood donors. YodCr was sent to the Indiana university medical center by his Decatur physician, and the operation on his heart was recomthere. A native of the Berne area, he is an employe of the Krick-Tindall Tile Mill. Donors ’so far to the fund have been Walter Augsburger, Raymond Bluhm, Adolph Kolter, Florence Schnitz, Mrs. Dale Death, Nellie E. Winnes, Lester Lawrence Kohre, a friend, and Mrs, Joseph Hunter. Donations r.ay be given to Wendell Macklin at the Phil L. Macklin Co., or to Mrs. Wanda Oelberg at the Adams county Red Cross office in Decatur. In Berne, donations may be taken to the Berne Witness office.

Yost Construction Co. Low Bidder On Bridge The Indiana state highway department opened bids Tuesday on more than 11 million dollars worth of road and bridge projects throughout the state. The Yost Construction Co., of Decatur, submitted the low bid of $22,716 for a bridge on a county road over Blue Creek, three miles north of state highway 118. Trade in a good rewn — Decatui

Local Students To Science Institute Invited To Attend Institute At I.U. Miss Phyllis Schmidt and Terry Marbach, Decatur high school students, have been invited to participate in the high school science institute to be held at Indiana university June 15-28, Hugh J. Andrews, principal, announced today. Both students will be seniors at Decatur high school next fall, and both are students in chemistry and physics classes taught by Harry Dailey. Miss Schmidt is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Edgar Schmidt of Decatur, and Marbach is the son |of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Marbach of route 5. Sixty outstanding science students were selected for the institute. It is considered a distinct honor, since there were 220 applications for the scholarships. The program is sponsored by the Indiana university departments of anthropology, astronomy, bacteriology, botany, chemistry, geology, mathematics, physics, and zoology. The purposes of the institute are to acquaint students with the many fields of science, to allow them to see basic research being carried on by distinguished scientists, and to do laboratory and field work under the direction of outstanding professors. The participants will be housed in the university dormitories, and many social and recreational activities ha”? been planned for them. The Lving expenses of the voung m-r and women will be paid for by the Lilly endowment foundation. David Eichenauer, recent Decatur high school graduate and son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Eichenauer, attended the 1957 institute.

Aulo Workers Seek Federal Mediation Mediation Opposed By General Motors DETROIT (UPI) — The United Auto Workers today asked the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service to step in to end deadlocked, final-hour bargaining with General Motors, but the company said it is opposed to mediation. UAW Vice President Leonard Woodcock said mediation is needed because General Motors has stood pat on a two-year contract extension offer and refused to bargain on the union demands. Woodcock said he saw no hope at this time for a settlement before the contract covering 325,000 GM workers ekpires at midnight Thursday. He asked that the contract be extended on a day-to-day or week-to-week basis while ne-. gotiations continue, Immediately after Woodcock called for outside bargaining help, General Motors Vice President Louis Seaton said, "Based on our experiences, we are convinced that intervention of a third party at this late date would make no contribution to a peaceful and equitable settlement prior to the expiration date of our agreement.” Bethany School Has 104 Children Enrolled There are 104 children enrolled in the vacation church school at the Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church. There are 35 in kindergarten, 30 in primary and 30 in the junior department. The filmstrip, “At Home in Nazareth” was shown in each department Tuesday. There will be no school Friday because of the holiday. The school is staffed with 20 workers and any child not attending another church school is invited. The missionary project this week is "Operawn Chick Lift,” with the offering going to help send baby chicks to needy families in foreign countries.

OPEN ALL DAY MEMORIAL DAY I Potatoeslo lbs. 49c Pork Ribs —, — lb. 49c .Lean * Sliced Bacon lb. 49c Fresh Sidelb. 45c Fresh Sausaee Ib. 45c Center Cut Sliced Smoked Ham lb. 79c Pork Patties Ib. 69c Minute Steaklb. 69c Round Steak lb. 69c , T-Boneslb. 65c & 69c Sirloin lb. 69c SUDDUTH’S Meat Market sl2 8. 13th St. Phone 3-270A

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A, ’"MMUmI*' Ralph L. Cimino, missionary to Nigeria, West Africa, will speak at the Assembly of God church, 1210 Elm street, at 7:45 o’clock this evening. He spent three years in Nigeria under appointment in 1954 by the Assemblies of God headquarters in Springfield. Mo. He served as principal of the Nigerian Bible institute for two years and for one year had charge of 70 churches in Ogoja orovince. The pastor, the Bev. George Yarian, invites the public to attend.

New Execution Date Is Set For Slayer Peters Execution Set September 8 The fifth district court of appeals of the state of Ohio has set Sept, f as the new date for the execution of Cleo Eugene Peters, 20, convicted of the July 18, 1957 holdupmurder of Amish farmer Paul Coblentz. The murdered man was a relative of several residents of Adams county. The court last week denied Peters’ appeal for a new trial. Peters previously was slated to die in the electric chair at the Ohio penitentiary April 10 for the fatal shooting of the 25-year-old farmer. Now in death row at the Ohio penitentiary, Peters was expected to appeal to the Ohio supreme court. His companion in the crime, Michael Dumoulin, 20, bf Wooster, 0., is serving a life sentence.

MOON (Continued from Page one) produce “much valuable scientific information.” Porter said the satellite radioed data to earth for 15 to 25 minutes after it was fired “and possibly for as much as a half hour.” He said the thifd stage of the pencil - Slim rocket apparently fired at too high an angle to the earth. He said this may ’have been caused by an error if the “attitude" of the second stage at the time the final stage of the rocket ignited. Porer said the third stage was ignited by a signal from the ground rather than by automatic controls within the rocket. But he said this did not necessarily mean anything went wrong with the automatic firing device. Will Try Again Porter said another satellite containing the same instruments as Tuesday night’s ill-fated moon, probably would be fired withn a month. He said scientists would not know what happen until they evaluated all data received from the ill-fated Vanguard. He said he satellite’s radio signal was picked up at these points: Cape Canaveral; Antigua; Havana, Cuba; Ft. Monmouth, N.J.; Blossom Point, Md.; Ft. Steward, Ga.; and Aberdeen, Md. « ' Porter said the satellite could have been off course as much as 90 degrees. Die satellite, he said, carried no life of any form.

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Democratic Leaders Attend Muncie Rally Rally For Handley Attended By 800 MUNCIE, Ind. (UPD—Marshall E. Hanley, a young Muncie lawyer who aspires to the U.S. Senate, added a few thousand dollars to his campaign coffers Tuesday night at a $7,-a-plate party rally dinner featuring appearances by many high-ranking Indiana Democrats. Flanked by such party dignitaries as former Gov. Henry F. Schricker, retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sherman Minton, and three 1956 gubernatorial candidates, Hanley faced the largest audience since he opened his drive for the senatorial nomination several weeks ago. Among more than 800 persons at the dinner in Muncie Fieldhouse were Mayor Ralph Tucker of Terre Haute, the Democratic nominee for governor two years ago, and Roger Branigin of Lafayette and State Sen. Matthew Welsh of Vincennes, who challenged Tucker down to the wire in a red-hot fight at the nominating convention. Mayor Phillip L. Bayt of Indianapolis, mayors from many other Indiana cities, and party chairmen from at least 25 per cent of the in Hoosierland, also attended. State Chairman Charles E. Skillen and two other executives of the state committee also were there. The main speakers were Hanley and Minton. “Judge Jr ton has shown the -ourage tr f»ht for any cause in which he believes, regardless of ibstacles encountered,” Hanley said. He said Schricker’s “white hat was a symbol of integrity after he went out of office even more than it was when he went in.”

“Each of you knows," said Hanley, “how much I want to be the oarty’s choice for senator. But there is something I want more than this. And that is to have the confidence of such persons as Shermsn Minon and Henry Schricker.” Minton praised Hanley, who once served as Minton’s law clerk, as a man who could help lead the nation out of a ersis. Both Minton and Hanley mentioned the Indiana highway scandals which have plagued the Republicans the last 13 months. “We now have no new highways, just right-of-way,” Minton

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said. “(Schricker) gave us highways instead of highway scandals,” Hanley said. Acquit Ex-Boxer On Assassination Charge Accused Os Effort To Murder Costello NEW YORK (UPD—An allmale jury "fuesday night acquitted Vincent (Chin) Gigante of the attempted assassination of gambler Frank Costello. The blue ribbon panel deliberated 6ft hours before deciding that Gigante, a former heavyweight boxer, was not the fat, waddling gunman who creased Costello’s scalp with a bullet as the gambler entered the foyer of his apartment building May 2, 1957. If convicted of the attempted murder charge, Gigante, 30, could ‘have received a maximum prison sentence of 25 years. The jury’s verdict, returned shortly before midnight, in effect repudiated the testimony of the prosecution’s star witness, Norval Keith, the doorman in Costello’s apartment building. The only witness to the shooting, he had identified Gigante as the gunman who followed Costello into the foyer, snapped “This is for you, Frank,” and fired one shot at close range. Defense counsel Maurice Edelbaum stressed to the jury, however, that Keith has extremely poor vision in one eye and that the sight in Ji ether eye was impaired. Costello, t rtffying for the prosecution, maintained he did not see his assailant and had no idea why anyone would want to kill him.

Brunton Initiated By Honor Society Phillip Brunton, san of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Brunton of 109 South Fourth street, has been initiated into the Alpha Zeta chapter of the Rho Chi society at Purdue university. Rho Chi is the national pharmaceutical honor society, and only 18 senior members at Purdue university were so honored with invitations to membership this year. Brunton will be graduated next Sunday in pharmacy. REFUSES ANALYESIS (Continued from Page one) learn foreign languages.. He said this is a vital requirement for American diplomats.

Two Are Fined For « Traffic Violations Delmar J. Harkenrider, 19, Fort Wayne, paid a fine of $16.75 in justice of the peace court Tuesday evening on the charge of driving a vehicle left of the center line. The charge was filed against the driver Saturday by the state police. Charles R. Johnson, 25, Decatur,

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 195 R

arrested Saturday evening by state police on two charges, reckless jjriving, and disorderly conduct, was tried in mayor’s court and found guilty of the charges. Johnson was fined $16.75 on the traffic charge, and sls on the disorderly charge, also a 60-day suspended sentence at the Indiana state farm. If you have something to sell <*t rooms furrent. try a Democrat Want An — They bring results.