Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 169, Decatur, Adams County, 19 July 1958 — Page 3

SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1958 "■■■■-

FRIENDSHIP VILLAGE CLUB MEETS THURSDAY A meeting of the members; of the Friendship Village Home Defla.onstration club of Blue Creek township was held Thursday at the Kimsey school, with Mrs. Carl Schug opening the meeting by having the members repeat the club creed.. Psalm 91 was read by Mrs. Lulu Raudenbush for the devotions, followed by tile group singing “On the Banks of the Wabash” under the direction of Mrs. Carl Kuhn. Lessons were presented by Mrs. Charles Burkhart on cooking meats, and Mrs. Ivan Fox on fixing a simple company meal. Mrs. Glen Sehaadt gave the citizenship lesson and Mrs. Oscar Young chose as her health and safety lesson, “Diabies and Polio.” The president, Mrs. Carl Schug, presided during the business meeting and Mrs. Lester Sipe, secretary, called the roll call and read the minutes of the last meeting which were heard by 25 members t and' one guest. After the group had repeated the club collect, refreshments were served by Mrs, Albert Tinkham, Mrs. Charles Shoaf, Mrs. Apstin Merriman and Mrs. Noris Riley. PLEASANT MILLS WSCS MEETS THURSDAY NIGHT Mrs. John Bailey presented both the devotions, which were taken from the 10th chapter of Romans, and the lesson for the Thursday evening meeting of the members of the Pleasant Mills Methodist Women’s Society of Christian Service. The meeting was held at the J home of Mrs. Leland Ray with Mrs. Lawrence Ehrsam and Mrs. Ned Ray as hostesses. President, Mrs. Clyde Jones, opened the meeting after which the devotions and lesson were pressented by the leader who was assisted by Mrs. Donald Everett, Mrs. Elmer Golliff, Mrs. Murray Holloway and Mrs. Charles Morrison. Prayer led by Mrs. John Bailey, closed the lesson and the members sang “We’ve A Story to Tell” following the prayer. A special reading from a newspaper clipping about a St. Patrick's day party that occurred 40 years ago at the church was read by Mrs. John Baliey. Mrs. . Donald Everett closed, with prayer, the meeting which was attended by 17 members. Members of the Christian Women’s Society of the First Christian church will meet at the church at 7?!» ’with Mrs. Ava Kraft as study leader. The executive committee will meet at 7 o’clock. - ’* Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock, the members of the Kirkland Ladies Club will meet at the Adams Central school. Mrs. Ed Borne will be leader Week’s Sewing Buy Printed Pattern y /fv TV Z -klho. (* \ ■ F®W * pm > I jC f W I 1 9287 * SIZES 12-20 urn** Am THaSlvm Cool off in the breezy sundress — cover up with the but-ton-on capelet. Truly a 24-hour fashion, and easy-to-sew with our Printed Pattern. Choose gay print with a frosting of white. Printed Pattern 9287: Misses’ Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 dress takes four yards 35-inch; capelet, one yard, Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send Thirty-Five Cents (coins) this pattern—add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Decatur Pally Democrat, Pattern Dept. 232 West 18th St, New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.

Calendar items tor today’s pubication must be phoned in by U a.m. (Saturday 9:30) Phone 3-2121 Miss Marilou Uhrick , SUNDAY . Smitley reunion, Lehman Park, Berne, 12 p.m. Sing bee, Greenbrier church, 2 p.m. Fourth district meeting of V. F.W. auxiliary, post home, 2 p.m. St. John’s Lutheran Walther League, church grove, 8 p.m., ice creamsocial. Limberlost Archery and Conservation club, outdoor range west of Decatur, 1:30 p.m. MONDAY V.F.W. Auxiliary, post home, 8 p.m. Decatur Weight Watchers club hat party, 704 Dierkes St., 8 pm. TUESDAY Root township Home Demonstration club, Mrs. Richard K. Moses, 1 p.m. Sunny Circle Home Demonstration club, Preble township community building, 8 p.m. Jolly Housewives Home Demontration club, Pleasant Mills school, 7:30 p.m. Eta Tau Sigma sorority, Mrs. Richard Arnold, 8 p.m. Kirkland Ladies club, Adams Central, 7:30 p.m. Olive Rebekah Lodge No. 86, Odd Fellows Hall, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY Home Demonstration club of Union township, Mrs. Fred Marbach, 1:30 p.m. C. W. S. of the First Christian church, church, 7:30 p.m. Ruth and Naomi circle, Zion E. and R. church, 2 p.m. THURSDAY St. Anne's Discussion club, Mrs., Carl Steigmeyer, 1:30 p.m. for the regular meeting of the Ruth and Naomi Circle of the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church, which will meet Wednesday at 2 o’clock in the social room. Hostesses for the meeting of the Olive Rebekah Lodge No. 86, which will meet Tuesday at 7:30 o’clock in the Old Fellows hall, are Mrs. Ralph Merriman and Mrs. Orval Reed. All members of the degree staff are to be present for practice and Three Link will meet following the lodge. Among seven cases heard Thursday in Van Wert municipal court was that of David M. Kitson, of Decatur, who was rearrested for reckless driving. He was fined SSO and costs, with $25 of the fine being suspended, and his driver’s license was suspended for two months. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Fry left today for a three weeks’ vacation at their cottage on Turkey Lake near Stroh. The Welcome Wagon club manbers entertained their husbands with a spaghetti supper at the home of Mrs. Herman Krueckeberg with Mrs. Dan Tyndall as co-hostess. Prizes were won by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith and Mrs. Robert Gage. A Rose Hill Dairy truck driven by William C. Rowden, 23, Monroe. struck a bridge abutment on a county road near the Wells county state forest, causing, an estimated SSOO damage to the truck, which was upset in the accident.

4£\SOVIET V g_ Xg/ UNION p ANKARA •' \ [ turkey ItaANONj <<V \ g? «!• A —r —v ,RAN ~ 4?»a SYRIA / Z* 7 .Z ( : tI,UT /">/ BAGH g* D \ iz=zs<ATZM M ?E. & I IRAQ c EGYPT (a|\O \ SAUDI ARABIA IS ) Y> __l 6,000 LEATHERNECKS NOW IN LEBANON - While United Arab Republic President Gamal Abdel Nasser was confer* ~ ring with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev in Moscow, two more battalions of U. S. Marines landed—one by air from the U. B.—tn Lebanon, bringing the Leatherneck peace force to more than 6,000. In addition a small force of U. S. paratroopers was flown to Beirut from Adana, Turkey. It was announced that the U. S. had completed the buildup of a powerful, self-contained nuclear air striking force at Adana, wily SOO miles from Russia and 250 miles from Damascus. Broadcasts from Egypt made it clear that nation was supporting Russia fully. The British airlift continued to fly Red Devil paratroops into Amman, Jordan. » Arrows indicate Russian “maneuvers.” (Central PreuJ

LED IRAQ COUP — Thia photo of Iraqi' rebel leader Abdel Kerim el Kassim was taken from a Syrian newspaper. He led the coup which overthrew the government of Iraq. King FeisaJ and his uncle, Crown Prince Abdul fflah. were. a» sassinated during the uprising. M -• .« .v -Tirt —r. .. I .*■» At the Adams county memorial hospital: A boy weighing five pounds and 12 ounces was born at 7:15 p..m. Friday to Carl and Geraldine Johnson Johnson of Wren, Ohio. Richard and Sally Gerardot Wiseman of route 5, Decatur, are the parents of a baby girl born at 2:45 p.m. Friday and. weighing five pounds, 14% ounces. Admitted Darwin M. Myers, Monroeville, j Dismissed Mrs. James Gotch and baby girl, Decatur; Mrs. Edna Spahr, Decatur. Gehardt Lehman Is Home From Hospital Gerhard Lehman, of Berne, who was seriously injured in an auto accident June 4, was dismissed Wednesday evening from Parkview memorial hospital, Fort Wayne. He is now convalescing pin his home on West Franklin street. Berne, from the accident which claimed the life of his father-in-law, Ernest Balsiger, in a two-car collision in French township. Lehman was admitted to the Adams county memorial hospital after the accident, suffering multiple fractures of the chest, a concussion, and abrasions. His condition, reported as serious, was slightly improved when he was transferred June 25 from the Adams county hospital to Parkview, to undergo further treatment. Washington's Library BOSTON — (IP) — George Washington’s private library—B3s books and pamphlets—has resposed in the Boston Athlenaeum for the past 110 years. In 1847 Henry Stevens a bookselldr, bought the books from a grand-nephew of the first President. Soon afterward a group ofß oston businessmen raised $3,800 and bought the library for the Athenaeum.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

World's Fair Cold War Battleground U.S., Reds Are In Open Competition By ROBERT S. MUBEL United Press International BRUSSELS (UPD—Beneath the glitter and the gaiety, the fairyland pavillions. and the rainbow lights, the Brussels World’s Fair has developed into a major battleground of the cold war. On both sides of the Iron Curtain experts are trying to assess who is ahead at this point of the six-months struggle, in which the United States and Russia are in direct and open competition for one of the few times since the end of the wartime partnership. This is summing-up week, the half-way mark in the fair which opened April 17. Gross admissions have passed 17,000,000 with the holiday half of the fair yet to come. So the final total in October may be near 40,000,000. Both nations have recognized in this multitude a unique chance to promote good will and public relations on a mammoth scale. The question they have been asking themselves this week is: How well have we seized it? Can’t Please Everyone With characteristic lack of guile the United States is conducting its summing up mostly in public. Congressmen have attacked the American exhibit as incomplete, misleading or inept. American tourists have complained so often there is a wry saying around the American pavillion: Scratch a taxpayer and you’ll find a critic. President Eisenhower asked George V. Allen of the U.S. Information Agency to fly over for a look. He liked most of what he saw. Former President Hoover, who used to deal with fairs as a federal officer-, came over and said the U.S. display was “magnificent.” Defenders and detractors made such a hullabaloo they missed the cries of anguish from the Soviet Pavilion where Russia, too, was conducting a midway clinic. A few days ago a glum member of the Soviet staff complained private, “You can’t satisfy everybody.” It might have been coinci--1 dence that a few hours earlier Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, had departed for the-Kremlin after some reportedly harsh criticism of the Sputnik exhibit. Architectures Difefr This proud centerpiece of the Soviet building —a real Sputnik which was to have gone up if the first failed to orbit, and a full ' scale model of Sputnik Two— is displayed completely with out im- \ agination. Furthermore Russian ’ tourists seem to be just as critical—though not agressively so — as American tourists. The Russian building is a glass and steel rectangle the size of an armory. American architect Edward A. Stone fashioned for the U.S. a beautiful circular building, and there is not the slightest doubt that architecturally the American Pavillion overwhelms the Russian building. Even Russian technicans have been heard admitting this many times. But the exhibits are more important propaganda than the buildings. Russia has poured 50 million dollars into hammering home the folowing message instantly and bluntly to whoever crosses its threshhold: Forty-five years ago Russia was a land of wooden plows — today it pioneers the space. All over the vast hall the theme of the great advance is repeated—l9l3 against 1958—in housing, in education, in industry and the arts. Pulls The Crowds But Brussels is the soft sell, and the one milion season ticket holders and the multitude of others who come more than once seem to find the American Pavillion more rewarding than the Russian. It has three of the biggest crowd pullers at the fair ■%.. an hourly

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r’Wl I ? "BL MRrßKiaPuW' ilr . I M || w , 'SLAYER* MEETS SLAYER- While police link up evidence that » could result in freedom for a man sentenced to die for the S slaying of a merchant in Jeffers-m, Ga., the convicted man and the confessed slayer meet tn Atlanta. James Fulton ’ Foster (left), twice sentenced to death, shakes hands with 1 Ig? Charles Paul (Rocky) Rothschild, who confessed in a South | Carolina prison. Said Foster, “I owe you quite a lot.’* ’

display of inexpensive fashions by| beautiful models, “Cinerama,” a circular screen color film of a trip across the United States, and American voting machines. The American Pavillion is the only one open after 7 p.m.—till 11 p.m. It is the only one with free washrooms — and don’t think there isn’t propaganda value in that! It has the most guides—2oo young .men and women from every state in the union, all linguists. Visitors enjoy talking with them — whereas it is difficult to find anyone to explain something in the Russian Pavillion. Since the fair opened, United Press International correspondents have spoken to hundreds of tourists from many lands about the Russian-U.S. rivalry. From these , talks it appears that women nearly always prefer the American Pavillion to the Russian. Farmers, laborers and technicians are more impressed with the Soviet display. White collar workers, students and professional men prefer the American layout. It’s Neck And Neck ; It is difficult to find unbiased visitors since even many Swedes and Swiss have EJast or West sym- ; pathies. But one neutral, Andre ■ Berguer, press attache of the ; Swiss exhibit, said: “I don’t understand the, criti- ; cism of the American Pavillion, i It’s the most beautiful of them all • and better than the Russian Pavil- > lion, inside and out.” , The American and the Russian t pavillions are drawing two and • '.three times as many people a day s as any other popular exhibitH- . such as the British, Dutch, Swiss [ and Czech. United Press International cor- • respondents, spot checking visi- > tors to each pavillion, found a I slightly larger number in favor of : the American display. What it appears to add up to at this halfway mark is that at Brussels it’s a neck and neck East-West race with the next three months telling the story. Pouring To Start At New Silos On Monday Pouring on six of the 12 new silos planned at the Decatur Central Soya plant will start Monday, Clark W. Smith, of the Decatur Ready-Mix Inc., said today. The new silos, 80 feet in diameter, and as tall as the present silos, will increase the capacity of the local plant by nearly 60%. They will be the largest silos in the

United States, and will make the Decatur plant by far the largest single soybean processing center in the United States. Your advertising dollar buys more in the Daily Democrat.

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