Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 157, Decatur, Adams County, 5 July 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SPORTS

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Senators And Indians Little League Winners The Senators edged the White Sox, 6-5, and the Indians whipped the Yankees, 8-2. in Little League games Thursday night at Worthman field. The Senators, only undefeated team in the league, had to stage a two-run rally in the final inning to cop the opener. The White Sox took the early lead with final inning to cop the opener. The White Sox took the early lead with three runs in the first inning on an error, a double by Bill Puteet and Max Epicftt's three run-homer. The Senators tied the score with three in the second on Gary Schultz' lead-off homer, an' error, and singles by Dave Geimer and Tony Kohne. The Senators tallied one in the third on an error, and infield out and John August’s single but the White Sox tied with one in the same inning on an error and ElJiott>'« double.EJliott salmmed oui Wseedhb nutritet Os flSe tail game TODAY and SUN. & MON. Continuous Sat. & Sun. Feature Mon. Nite at 7:50 IT'S TRBMBNOOUSI | A DRAMA OF LOVE AND CONFLICTI M-a-M rntKNTS k IN MGM CAMERA 65 MONTGOMERY CLIFT /JT ▼ ELIZABETH TAYLOR ‘Jl'-JVA MARIE SAINT {rjuntree COUNTY yßlft NIGEL PATRICK • LEE MARVIN Print bv TECHNICOLOR* Admission 25c -75 c —o Merchants Free Show Tuesday Night—Get Tickets at Stores Displaying the Signs! DECAYS™?! r -AfeHHtenZß SUN. & MON. ;; S,; praoonto MMIWIItffIKstIffSSPMI , | — Plus First Run — With Hot Guns They Dared The Men of the West! “THE DALTON GIRLS” —o—o— TONIGHT—WaIt Disney’s “Perri” & Clark Gable. “Band of Angeis” Two Great COLOR Hits!

STOCK CAR RACES Sunday, July 6 — 2:30 p. m. Purse .$1500.00 New Bremen Speedway New Bremen, Ohio USAC Midgets July 27 - > T ~r- - •" ' ' Public Auction As I am moving to Syracuse. Ind., I will sell the following personal nroperty at 213 North Eighth Street, Decatur, Ind., on — SATURDAY, JULY 12,1958 1:30 P.M. ■ ’’ —• ' • - u.. •• _ - ; . 2-Piece living room suite; knee-hole desk with chair; Interantional oil heating stove with fan; Maytag gas range in good condition; Nesco electric' cabinet roaster; Servell gas refrigerator, good; Kelvinator electric refrigerator; 6 cu. ft. Kelvinator deep freeze, in good condition; Schaefer two compartment ice cream freezer cabinet; Antique Cherry drop leaf table; antiqiw davenport; antique, barrel back chair; 7 rockers; chaii and ottoman; set of 6 wood chairs; dining table; small dinette with 2 chairs; 15 straight chairs; kitchen cupboard; 2 burner oil stove; mirrors;' end tables; coffee table; hall tree; 5 dressers; 2 steel beds with springs; brass bed with springs; 2 bed springs ; 3 shelf wood cabinet; 20” rotary power lawn mower; fruit jars; screens; tools: large assortment of used lumber; small lot of Majestic stone siding; miscellaneous items. ,i TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. REV. LAWRENCE NORRIS, Owner Ed Sprunger—Auctioneer—Decatur, Ind. Phone 3-4742.

in the fifth for a 5-4 White Sox lead but the Senators won with a pair in the s.xth on an error, hits by Donnie Feasel and Geimer and two walks. In the nighcap, the Indians pounded out 11 hits while the Yankees obtained only one hit off Jim Ford and Ed Kohne. The Indians scored one in the first on hits by Tom Blythe and Kohne plus an error. Four more scored in the third on a walk, an error and hits by Kohne, Bill Blythe. Roger Landrum and Sam Blythe. The Yankees scored both their runs in the third on an error, two walks and Dave Anspaugh's double. The Indians wound up the scoring with three in the fifth on hits by Bill Blythe, Landrum, Steve Blythe and J Terrill Stultz Five Little League games are scheduled next week. Monday, the Indians meet the Senators at 6:30 p.m., followed by a Pany League game between the Decatur Braves and the Deatur Cardinals. Tuesday, the Yankees play the Senators at 6:30 p.m., followed by the White Sox and Red Sox. Friday, the Tigers play at Yankees at 6:30 p b., followed by the Indians and White Sox. Senators AB R H E Hakey, If 3 0 0 0 Schnepp, If 1 0 ...f1..,„,„0.| c uster. 3b 4 1 0 1 j Tookson, p 3 0 0 0 Schultz, c 3 11 fl August, 1b 3 0 10 Feasel, 2b 3 2 10 Geimer; cf 3 I 2 0 Gase, rs 2 0 0 0 Johnson, rs 0 0 0 1 Kohne, ss 2 0-1 0 Totals 27 6 6 2 White Sox AB R H E Callow, cf 4.1 0 0 Egly, 3b 3101 Putteet, c 4 1 10 Elliott, ss 2 0 0 1 Finlayson, rs 10 0 0 Kuhnle, 2b 3 0 0 2 Ray, lb ..... sS ... 3 0 0 0 Vanhorn, If 2 0 0 0 Green, If 0 0 0 0 Totals ’...... 25 5 4 5 Score by innings: Senators 031 002—6 White Sox 301 010—5 Run batted in Schultz, August, Kohne 2 .Elliott 4. Two-base Hits Geimer, Putteet, Elliott. Home runs Schultz, Elliott 2 Bases on Balls Cookson 4, Mineh 2. Strikeouts Cookson 4. Minch 9. Hit by pitcher By Cookson (Green) Winner Cookson, Loser Minch. Umpires Lord, Jackson. Iniana AB R H E Eiting, cf 4 0 0 0 Canales, cf 0 0 0 0 T. Blythe, 2b .... 4 1 12 Kohne, t, P 4 1 3 0 B. Blythe, ss, c 4 2 2 0 Landrum, rs .... 3 2 2 0 Ford, p, ss .... 2 10 0 S. Blythe, lb .... 3 12 0 Stultz. 3b 3 0 10 Cowans. If3o 0 0 Totals 30 8 11 2 Yankees AB R H E Sprunger, rs .... 3 0 0 1 Ladd, c 2 0 0 0 Anspaugh, ss .... 3 0 10 Lose, p - 3 0 0 0 Mies, 3b 2 0 0 0 Gonzales, lb .... 2 0 0 1 Lehman, cf ,2b 2 1 0 0 Hakes, If 2 0 0 0 Keller, if ... 0 0 0 0 Reynolds. 2b .... 0 10 0 Eichenauer, cf —1 0 0 0 Totals 20 2 , 1 2

Score by Inning: Indians 104 030—8 Yankees 002 000-2 Runs batted in Landrum, S. Blythe 3. Stultz, Anspaugh 2. Two-baSe hits Kohne, B. Blythe, Landrum, Anspaugh. Three-base hits S. Blythe 2 Bases on balls Ford 2, Lose 1. ' Strikeouts Ford 3, Kohne 2, Lose 13. Hits off Ford l.ln 5, Kohne 0 in 1. Winner Ford, loser Lose. Umpires Jackson, Lord. Althea Gibson Is Wimbledon Choice BULLETIN WIMBLEDON, England (UPI) —Althea Gibson of New York retained the Wimbledon women’s singles title — symbol of supremacy in amateur tennis —by defeating Britain’s stub- ■ born Angela Mortimer, 8-6, 6-2. WIMBLEDON, England (UPD —Top-seeded Althea Gibson of New York was heavily favored to retain the women's singles title today at the Wimbledon tennis tournament by defeating her chief British pval, Angela Mortimer. Miss Gibson has beaten Miss Mortimer only once in four meetings, But Althea’s powerful serves and net play are expected to give the U. S. the women’s title for ■ the 15th straight time. I Miss Mortimer,, iH for more than a year with a virus infection, is in the midst of a comeback and is the first unseeded woman to reach the final since Helen Jacobs did it in 1938 Miss Gibson ajso will try to win a share of the women’s doubles and the mixed doubles titles today. The last woman to pull this feat was Doris Hart of Miami in 1951. Althea ad Maria Bueno of Brazil, top seeded, will meet unseeded Margaret Osborne Dupont of Wilmington, Del., and Margaret Varner of Boston in the women’s doubles final. Althea and Kurt Nielsen of Denmark will bid for the mixed doubles crown against Australia’s Bob Howe and Lorraine Coghlan. Top - seeded Ashley Cooper and v Neale Fraser of Australia will meet Sweden’s S ven Davidson and Ulf Schmidt in the men's doubles final. Cooper won the men's singles crown Friday by defeating Fraser in the third straight all-Austraiian final in that division, 3-6, 6- 6-4, 13-11. rMINM American Association W. L. Pct. G.B. [Denver 49 31 .613 —' Charleston .... 50 33 .602 % Minneapolis .... 46 38 .548 5 Wichita 44 41 .518 7% Omaha.... 43 42 .506 8% i St. Paul 38 50 .432 15 ■ Indianapolis ... 36 51 .414 16% ! Louisville 32 52 .381 19 Thursday’s Results Indianapolis 5, Charleston 1. St. Paul 11, Minneapolis 1. 1 Denver 8, Omaha 5. 1 Louisville at Wichita, postponed, 1 rain. Friday’s Results i St., Paul 6-0, Minneapolis 4-7. J Charleston 3-0, Wichita 0-5. ! Louisville 4-10, Indianapolis 3-5. , Denver 7, Omaha 6 (2nd game ( postponed, rain). i 1 - Major League Leaders By United Press International National League Player & Club G. AB R. 11. Pct. Musial, St.L. 68 246 37 89 .362 Mays, S.F. 74 298 60 107 .359 Flood. St.L. 54 171 24 57 .333 Dark, Chi. 59 239 26 78 . 326 Skinner, Pgh. 71 267 48 86 .322 Green, St.L. 64 205 29 66 .322 American League Ward, K.C. 65 215 30 70 .326 Cerv, K.C. 69 256 54 83 .324 Fox. Chi. 74 291 37 94 .323 Vernon, Cle. ) 61 177 26 57 .322 Power, C> 67 265 46 85 .321 ' Home Runs National League — Thomas, Pi- ’ rates 22; Banks, Cubs 21; ' Walls, Cubs 17; Cepeda, Giants 16* Mathews, Braves 16; Mays, Giants 16. American League— Jensen, Red Sox 24; Cerv, Athletics 22; Sievers, Senators 19; Mantle, Yankees 19; Triandos, Orioles 16. Runs Batted In National League — Thomas, Pirates 66; Banks, Cubs 57; Cepeda, Giants 50; Spencer, Giants 50; Mays,-Giants 48. American League— Jensen, Red Sox 65; Cerv, athletics 62; Sievers, Senators 49; Lemon, Senators 48; Gernert, Red Sox 44. Pitching National League — McMahon, Braves 6-1; Farrell, Phillies 5-2; Phillips, Cubs 5-2; Worthington, Giants 7-3; Koufax, Dodgers 7American League •— Larsen, Yankees 7-1; Turley, Yankees 123; Ford, Yankees 10-3; Sullivan, Red Sox 6-2; Pappas, Orioles 5-2. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat > Want Ad — They bring results. f

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Phillies Beat Braves Twice In Twin Bill By JOHN GRIFFIN United Press International Baseball lore says it will be the Yankees against the Braves in the World Series for the second straight year, but first those world champion Breves will have to escape from the tightest National League pennant race in i history. The teams leading on the Fourth of July will win the pennants, according to the; old legend, and you can bet the rent ' money that the Yankees will I make good with their 10% games lead in the American League. But how about those Braves? Just when it seemed they were going to open a big National League -lead, they’ve lost four i straight games — including 5-1 • and 4-0 holiday losses to the Phillies — and now they’re only : 1%. games in front of secondplace St. Louis. From top to bottom in the N.L., the distance is only 7 games—and that’s the shortest ’ spread" in league history at this point. Until now, the tightest race on July 4 was in 1915 when the first-phtoe ahead of the last-place Giants.* ' Working Well But the Brayes can boost their morale by remembersing that the “jinx" has been working pretty good in recent years. Although the Redlegs were first in the league last July 4 and then ■ wound up fourth, actually the Fourth-of-July rule had held true in 10 of the last 12 pennant races in the big leagues. It was no secret what.happened to the Braves Friday. They just went deeper into their batting slump and now have scored only two runs in the last four games. Lefty Curt Simmons and reliever Dick Farrell held them to seven hits in the opener, and then Jack Sanford blaked ’em on , .just four ,in the nightcap as the Phils beat 10-game winner Warren Spahn. Ex-Brave Carl Sawatski made ’em moan in the opener by driving in three runs with a homer, double and two singles, and Eddie Kazanski paced the attack on Spahn with a triple and two singles. The Phils’ Ed Bouchee made his second day .back in the lineup another big one with five hits in seven trips. Easy For Yankees The Yankees swept Washington, 2-1 and 13-2. If they play only. .500 ball for the rest of the season, they’ll finish with 87 wins and the - second-place A’s would have to play .605 ball (compared to their present .521 pace) to match that. In other holiday action: The A’s nipped the White Sox twice, 6-5 and 4-3; Cleveland downed Detroit, 6-1, and then lost 3-1; Boston defeated Baltimore, 5-1, before Baltimore took the nightcap,' 5-3; Cincinnati came out of a batting slump to beat Pittsburgh twice, 4-3 and 8-3; and San Francisco rallied to beat the Chicago Cubs, 6-5, before the Cubs took their second game, 6-1. Los Angeles and St. Louis were not scheduled. Bob Turley of the Yankees;' the majors’ top winning hurler. posted his 12th win in their opener, hitting a homer in his own c a use. Then the Yanks , staged their top batting spree of the season with 22 hits in the nightcap, including five by Norm Siebern and four by winning pitcher Art Ditmar. Mickey Mantle of the Yanks and Roy'Stovers of the Senators each hit his 19th homer. ir< , Cerv Homers • Bob Cerv, who may miss the I All-Star game with a broken toe, I pinch-hit his 22nd homer with one ;on in the eighth inning to give ! the A’s their opening game win. ! Homers by Harry Simpson and Bill Tuttle and a -run-scoring ; ninth-inning double by Joe DeMaestri forged the second-game ; win although a two-run homer by ! Sherm Lollar of the White Sox in the ninth made it close. Larry Doby drove in four runs • with a homer and three singles to pace the Indians’ opening game win as Cal McLish staggered the distance with a 10 - hit job Doby also singled in his I first trip in the second game, his • seventh straight hit, but Billy Martin’s tie - breaking homer in the seventh inning swung that game in Detroit’s favor as exNational Leaguer Herm Wehmeier got his first A.L. win. Frank Sullivan's five - hitter gave Boston its opening victory, but Arnie Portocarrero won the nightcap with a nine-hitter On a two-run rally in the eighth. The Redlegs, who had only* three runs in the last five walloped five homers in their twin win over the Pirates. Ed Bailey’s homer, double and single helped reliever Alex Kellner take the opener. Then two homers by Gus Bell and one each by Jerry Lynch and Don Hoak assisted -Bob Purkey to his ninth win in the second. If you ba.t something to sen oj rooms torrent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results. 'X

Art Wall Leading Rubber City Open AKRON. Ohio (UPD — Easygoing Art Wall Jr., 34, Pocono Manor, Pa., led a field of 60 pros and 10 amateurs by a slim stroke as the $22,000 Rubber City Open went into its third round today. Wall, wielding an old, woodenshaft putter with an unorthodox baseball grip, carded a 65-67—132. 10 under par at the end of the first 36 holes. There were four major challengers to Wall's bid for his first tournament crown of the season. U. Open champ Tommy Bolt, Australian Open king Frank Phillips, two- time Canadian PGA titlist Al Balding and 18-year-old amateur Jack Nickalaus, Columbus, Ohio, were tied for second with 1335. Nickalaus, one of the most promising amateurs in the nation, registered six birds in his second 18 holes. Charles Si f ford, Philadelphia, regarded as the world’s greatest I Negro players, fired a seven-under-par 64 in the second round for a 70-74 —134. Tied with him were Jack Fleck and Mike Souchak. Masters champion ad defending RCO titlist Arnold Palmer remained in contention with 140. Palmer, the leading PGA money winner of the year shot a 68 Friday. He drove into the rough several times- b'.:*. J?ecovered with ’tme ’snots to the green. j Ed G riffiths, the Ohio Open champion and a virtual unknown on the touring pro circuit, fell off the pace with a'7s after tying for the lead with Wall in the first round with a 65. MAJORJ American League W. L. Pct. G.B. New York 48 24 .667 — Kansas City .. 38 35 . 521 10*4 Detroit 36 36 ' -.500 12 Boston 37 37 .500 12 Chicago— 35 38 .479 13*4 Cleveland ----- 35 40 .467 14*4 Washington „—, 30 44 . 405 19 National League W. L. Pct. G.B. Milwaukee 39 32 .549 — St. Louis 37 .33 . 529 SSn Francisco 39 36 .520 2 Philadelphia ... 34 34 .500 3*4 Cincinnati 35 35 .500 3t4 Chicago 37 39 .487 414 Pittsburgh 35 40 .467 6 ' Los Angeles -. 33 40 .452 7 THURSDAY’S RESULTS National League Philadelphia 3, Milwaukee 1. Chicago 4, San Francisco 3. Pittsburgh 2, Cincinnati 0. St. Louis 4-2, Los Angeles 2-3. American League New York 11, Washington 3. Baltimore 7, Boston 5 *ls innings). Chicago 7, Kansas City 2. Only games scheduled. FRIDAY’S RESULTS National League Cincinnati 4-8, Pittsburgh 3-3. Philadelphia 5-4, Milwaukee 1-0. San 6-1, Chicago 5-6. Onl/igames scheduled. American League * New York 2-13, Washington 1-2. Kansas City 6-4, Chicago 5-3. Cleveland 6-1, Detroit 1-3. Boston 5-3, Baltimore 1-5. j RUSSIA ; (Continued tram page one)£ Sadovski, a corresponding member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, told newsmen the West so far had told them “only generally known things.” Bethe described the exchange of views today as of. a “very high order” and said both sides were “free and forthright in their talks” Trade in a good town — Decatur.

ll— ’"“"“"""’I f" 1 " - MMMMfMWM ■MMMMMMI' [■>*' I ( fMOAW') TH* CLERK SAID DINAH WHAT A CRUMMY AIP WA LUCKY, % LUCK.' < ■ I 1 CHECKED OUT OF HER. HOTEL BREAK/THERE ) I MIGHT » V THERESHE ,S > ■I I / AN HOUR AGO... HE SAID GOES MY WHOLE I GUESS WHICH WJ /V ._ \ "EAD’*}® I { SOMETHING ABOUT HER. CAMPAIGN* ). WAY SHE'S .W \ D ( I ' J 7 /// -/■ A /|R ’ I A Z/ Sr 7 il ' ! - nrrlL-f / sW*3»:-. nl M 1/ ’iMl&.l \W IHiIIIk 1 .■ . Htmf ballX sure hope T(<SULP)uON I KNOW WHERE MY MEAL CLÜBIS CATCHING I CAN HOLD |k MAKE HER. At/SS THAT O| T J»6/ T^'^1 AO /I - - TRAIN/ W PORTY- I ON THIS /BN A S/X ’/ / LONG ROAD/ 1X t y<J A trip. • s AA*n I vW® K?hA\\vV/SsHHffiV rlk if V L b J C> - ■ '-• '.. ' ■ -._ t '.- " , . ; * " ■ ■ .-■ r* ■ ’ ' '• 1 • ... _ Zu—■'

Towed Wagon Breaks Loose, Hit By Truck Owen Lautenschleger, 28, of route 2, Van Wert, 0., son of Mr', and Mrs. Elmer Lautenschleger of route 3, was uninjured Wednesday when the wagon he was towing with a farm tractor broke looses and was hit by a truck. Lautenschleger was driving west on U. S. 30 2 1 miles east of Van Wert about 4:15 p. m. Wednesday. Three farm wagons were towed behind his tractor. The hitch on the last wagon broke, and the wagon veered to the south side of the highway where it was struck by a garbage disposal truck, also westbound.’ The right front fender of the truck was damaged, but only slight damage occurred to the wagon. Baseball Attendance Below 1957 Figures By United Press International Attendance at major league baseball games on the Fourth of July holiday was only about twothirds of what it was last year, due largely to the fact there was no action in the big Los Angeles Coliseum. Seven big-league doubleheaders this year drew a total of 139.065 fans — 72,241 less than last year’s grand total of 211,306. The largest crovjd of the holiday was in Milwaukee where 23.706 watched the Braves and the Phillies. With the Dodgers and Giants now on the West Coast, there was no major league baseball in New York on the holiday for the first time in 50 years. Umpires Are Named For All-Star Game NEW YORK *UPD — Commissioner Ford Frick today named Ed Rommel, Bill McKinley and Frank Umont of the American League and Jocko Conlan, Tom Gorman and Frank Secory of the National League to umpire the AllStar Game at Baltimore on Tuesday. July 8. Rommel will start behind the plate "with Gorman at first, McKinley at second and Conlan at third. After 414 innings Rommel and Conlan will change places. Umont and Secory will be on the foul line. LIGHT (Continued from Page one) unfavorable for crops such as to matoes, and with much loss of crops through flooding caused by .heavy rains. Total rainfall was 1 9.32 for Decatur, according to government weather observer Lewis Landrum. The total for May, in contrast, was 2.44 inches. These rains caused the St. Mary’s river in Decatur and the Wabash in southern Adams county to spill out of their banks. The St. Mary's reached its highest stage at 19.02, over six feet above the flood stage, June 14. Neighboring areas report over three times the normal rainfall for June, as Jay county received 13.94 inches, an excess of over ten inches for one month. In Adams county, Berne recorded 9.43 inches. This was the most rain received in June for Berne in almost 50 years. Trade in a good town — Decatur. DT ' cZc w : * “Take me out to the ball game, take me out with the crowd . . ”

Slays Family And Commits Suicide Believe Wife Had Approved Or Plan GLEN RIDGE, N.J. (UfD-A former drug executive willed four members of his family with a poisonous pineapple drink Friday and then swallowed a lethal dose , himself to complete a murder-sui- , cide plan that his wife may have approved. ’ “I’m sorry for what I’m doing." . muscular, good-looking Thomas H. MacDowell, 49, .said in a note ’ found by police. “I love my wife and children dearly but I think in the long run they’ll be better off,” the note said. “This is the best way out.” A neighbor sent to investigate the absence of the family from a July 4 picnic found the bodies , of MacDowelL his Brazilian wife, , Marta, 37, two sons. Donald, 7, and Robert 6, and MacDowell’s mother, Florence, 79, in second floor bedrooms. “What a shock,” Warren Hig-, gins, 33, of Alexandria, Va., said later. “They were a lovely family. . .wonderful neighbors.” All five had drunk pineapple 1 -juiee spiked with poison, according to Police Chief Henry G. Liebernecht. MacDowell swallowed some seconal tab’* 4 ' injected himself with deadly poison, Lieberi necht said. Apparently, M acDbwell arranged a midnight “snack” for his family in order to carry out the gruesome plan. “There is some indication he had discussed it (the murder-sui-cide) with his wife,” Lt. Leon Neidorf of the Essex County prosecutor’s office said. Liebernecht agreed Mrs. MacDowell "apparently knew of his plans.” However, the motive remained uncertain. u you have soinetning to sen oi rooms for rent, try a Democral Want Ad — They bring results

- harvest more grain, greater profits with a Cockshutt 422 Combine The 7-foot pull-type Cockshutt 422 Combine has the biggest threshing, separating and cleaning areas in its class to put more grain in the bin. less in the field. Internal are* is 66" wide, straight through, for less compaction of the straw on the walker, better separation of the grain. • One him of the hand crank • From tractor teat—control adjusts cylinder speed 75 rpm. header height, reel height, un- • Adjust air flow quickly, easily loading auger, power for extra-dean grain Let's make a date ... to demonstrate! Pull-type and self-propelled combines., ADAMS COUNTY FARM BUREAU CO-OP MONROE, IND. ■— ' > "

SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1958

Terre Haute Youth Is Drowning Victim ROCKVILLE, Ind. (UPD — Authorities recovered the body of Robert Butler, 15. Terre Haute, Thursday at Camp Gulick, two miles west of Shades State Park. State police said Butler fell from a raft while playing with six other Soys Wednesday, and drowned. , , V ■ I ■ Cross Donated OGDENSBURG. N. Y. — — The “Crux in Parasceve,” the silver life-sizeci crucifix fashioned more than 800 years ago by famed Benedictine sculptor Leopardus, was recently donated to and hung in Wadhams Hall, a seminary of the Roman Catholic Church’s Ogdensburg diocese. ’ FLOOD (Continued from page one) 700 persons daily in the disaster area. It said it fed 1,000 emergency workers. INNOCENT (Continued from page one) tentiary for slashing his arm with a razorttiade-two weeks ago in the Spartansburg jail where he was serving a five-year setencu for conspiracy in a safe robbery. His confession said he and two other men staged the robberykilUng of the Jefferson merchant. Foster had claimed innocence al) along, saying he had been drinking beer seven miles frpm the merchant s home at the time of the murder. But he was convicted, partly on idetification by ; the murdered man's wife. A fund to pay lawyers’ fees__ was raised by residents of the Jefferson area who believed in Foster’s innocence. Convicted in August, 1956, he was scheduled to die first on Sept. 17, 1957, then again on June 21, 1958. Both executions were delayed on appeals. The home of John Harvard’® mother at Stratford-on-Avon ir England was presented to Harvard University in 1909 as a rendezvous for American visitors. One of the treasurers preserved in the house !S Jefferson Davis walking Stic*