Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 5 August 1958 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Primary On Today In West Virginia Two Democrats Seek Pplitical Comebacks CHARLESTON. W. Va. (ijPDTwo Democrats bid for political comebacks today “as they seek nominations for U.S. Senate seats in West Virginia primaries. West Virginia is the only state in the union electing two United States senators this year. The prize plums are the unexpired two-year term of the late Sen. M M. Neely and a full six-year’term. both held by. Republicans facing no party opposition for re-election. Also at stake are . West Virginia's six seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. Four of five incumbentts have no primary opposition. The only incumbent with party opposition is veteran Republican Will E. Neal, who is favored. Former Gov. William C. Mar- [ land and one-time Cong. Jennings I Randolph aim for the “short' term Senate seat now held by John D. Hoblitzell Jr. Marland lost two years ago in a bid for the Senate when he was defeated for the unexpired term of the late Harley M. Kilgore. The ..yjctor.,jwas Sen. Chapman,.Rvercomb. Charleston Republican. Revercomb, unopposed on the GOP ticket, is running for reelection to a six-year term. On the Democratic primary Cong. Robert C. Byrd is favored over Fleming Alderson, of Charleston Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? Don’t be embarrassed by loose false teeth slipping, dropping or wobbling when you eat. talk or laugh. Just eprlnkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. This pleasant ppwder gives a remarkable sense of added comfort and security by holding plates mors firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feellitg. It's alkaline (non-acid). Get FASTEETH at any drug counter.

KsE? N ICE I No trays to fill,spill, empty or refill! f | ©iST You get ice automatically from this new t. .7"” ■' fl. J 1 ” 8 .. ~ ''-—-g; i!| Automatically replace* I each cube! New halfj moon Ice-Circles! W 80. EKB9 i |i]m ivKl I hUtm I Like clockwork! Clock 1 > defrosts it! Evaporates : water! _—j, J \BBBIBBBBBBHIBB _■ A A tiny gas flame l /a does all the work! 11/ 111 refrigeratorl IK- ■• - Tfc— iJF StJuisiki ».»»»- ■ - ■—- w*.. ■ ■ ■ ■ I > r ' STAYS Three great appliances in one 10-cubic-foot ; • - . beauty! Big 8.3 cu. ft. refrigerator defrosts b I L t N I itself while you sleep—beautifully fitted with e special compartments and deep, deep door AeTC shelves. Big 49-pound freezer section is LASTS separately insulated. Automatic ice-maker, ■ f\k] r t D too. See the Imperial EGM-10 now. L</l /7Zre GAS Companij NORTHERN INDIANA FUBUC SIR VI C E COMP AN Y

and Jack R. Delligatti, of Fairmont. The Marland - Randolph battle enlivens an otherwise quiet primary in the “off-year.” Some political observers believe ..Arnold M. Vickers. Montgomery lawyer and former State Senate president.' may be a dark horse. W R. Wilson, of Fairmont, also bids for the Democratic nomination. ’ West Virginia’s Democratic reg- . istration is about 200.000 greater ‘ than the Republican. Latest fig-1 ures show 660,850 on the Demo- i cratic rolls to 410,929 Republicans.! Polling places open.at 6:30 a.m. I and close at 7:30 p.yi. e.s.t. Stale School Head Rips Congressman Charges Falsehoods To Winfield Denton INDIANAPOLIS <UPI) — State i School Supt. Wilbur Young today accused a Hoosier congressman of “falsehoods” in connection with I statements concerning education in Indiana and Russia. Young, a staunch foe of federal aid to education, made the charges in a letter to Rep. Winfield K. Denton, Evansville Democrat. Young took particular exception " to two statements made by Denton July 28. Denton said at that time that “there is no strife in Russia among the various agencies of government as to which one will carry out” the function of education, and added that science and mathematics required subjects in the Soviet Union for students in the final four years of secondary schooling. Young said Denton’s views indicate he is “deploring home rule and individual freedom in the United States.” He said the statement about required subjects “is a falsehood, for only those Selected by the government can make educational

; / ' ,pi Mr ■ I m /-A w BL-A 1 * * 1b SERGEANT WITH THEM KILLED— Pfc. Thomas Mitchell (left) . of Lucasville, 0., and S/Sgt. Thomas H. Sharp of Philadelphia sit in truck tn which they were riding in Beirut when a sniper’s bullet killed Sgt. James R. Nettles, riding with them. Nettles, 20, was from Olustee, Fla. (Radiophoto)

progress.” “Federal control of America’s | schools would lead eventually to! extinction of all vestiges of lib- : erty,” Young said. “We, the people of our great nation, cannot . thrive as mechanical machines I operated by remote control; and; federal aid would mean jusFiEatT’j In Sgt. Joseph’s hospital. Fort. Wavne, Mr. and Mrs. King Sul-.i he,in. Fort Wayne, became the parents of a son. Mrs. Sullivan is the former Betty Anspaugh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Anspaugh, formerly of Decatur, and who now reside in Fort Wayne. At the Adams county memorial hospital. At 12:10 a.m. today, a sevenpound, four-ounce son was born to Richard and Rita Velez Bales, Berne.

DECATUR DAILT DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Gary-Chicago Area Faces Gas Shortage 10 Teamster Union Locals Vote Strike ! GARY, Ind. (UPI) — The Garyi Chicago area faced a possible j shortage of gasoline today after 10 [Teamster!) Union locals voted to j strike. ±;..T-h«- dispute- involved major oil companies and independent oil transport haulers. Teamsters officials and management representatives were scheduled to meet in Chicago today. Michael Sawochka, secretarytreasurer of Lake County Teami s Union local, said the dispute involved an attempt by companies to change the five-day work week. Teamsters had been working a Monday through Friday schedule with overtime pay for weekends. Companies sought to stagger the work week with no compulsory weekend overtime. Sawochka said today’s meeting was a, “final attempt to settle our differences before we schedule a I walkout.” A strike would stop oil and gasoline deliveries to Lake and Porter Counties along with Chicago and several Illinois cities. Wilson Packing Co. Head Dies Monday ‘ WAUKEGAN. 111. (UPD —Thomas E. Wilson, 90, board chairman, of the meat packing firm of Wilson and Co., died at his farm home near here Monday night. Wilson entered the -meat industry in 1887 as a car checker in the : -Chicago stockyards- By; 1913 he had worked his way up to president of Morris and Co., an early meatpackin firm. He switched jobs three years later to head another packing firm, Sulzberger and Sons, later the same year renamed Wilson and Co. He became chairman of the board in 1934. Wages No Longer Accurate Measure WASHINGTON (UPD The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says wages are no longer an accurate measure of a worker’s income nor of an employer’s cost of doing benefits have become major business. The reason: “fringe” items in the worker's receipt | from his boss. Dr. Emerson P. Schmidt, director of economic research for the chamber, said a survey showed average fringe benefits totaled S9Bl in 1957 compared to $162 in 1955. He said the survey included 1,020 firms and was ' the “most complete of its kind.”

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U.S. And Canadian Leaders In Meeting Nike Anti-Aircraft Site Is Inspected WASHINGTON (UPI) — Canadian Defense Minister George R. Pearkes visited a Nike anti-air-craft side today in the wake of conferences expected to qualify his country for the first purchases of U. S. atomic weapons. Pearkes spent Monday in sessions with Defense Secretary Neil H McElroy; Gen. Nathan F. Twining, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and leaders of the Air Force. An official announcement said the sessions concerned “mutual defense.” Pentagon sources said there was full agreement t h a, t both the United States and Canada should be defended with nuclear anti-aircraft missiles, both airborne and ground-launched. Meanwhile, the United States and Britain exchanged notes restoring Anglo-American cooperation in the field of nuclear weapons. The exchange formally put into effect an agreement signed at the White House July 3 under which the United States will help Britain bttild a nuclear -submarine.....and. share other highely confidential atomic secrets. The agreement ■ was made possible by a recent amendment to the Atomic Energy 1 ‘Act. — — Minnesota Ripped By Tornadic Winds Sections Os State Ripped By Tornadoes United Press International Tornadic winds and funnel clouds ripped sections of Minnesota Monday night, injuring at least one person and causing widespread damage. Near Alexandria, Minn., high winds, hail and rain cut a fourmile path of destruction. Two, inches of rain swamped the area in a 40-minute period and quarterinch hailstones flattened crops. Buildings were damaged by the 60-mile-per-hour winds, trees were uprooted and power was cut off. St. Cloud was drenched wit h about four inches of rain in less than an hour, touching off local flooding. One street intersection was flooded by six feet of water. The storms began at Moorehead. Minn., where one man was struck and burned by lightning. T h e severe weather pushed eastward, lashing Minneapolis and St. Paul where two funnel clouds were sighted. The funnels swept into Wisconsin, toppling power lines at Somerset, before disappearing. More than 1.5 inches of rain fell at Minneapolis and 2.25 inches hit Redwood Falls, Minn. Rainfall elsewhere in the country was light during the night and confined to scattered showers in the central Plains, the central and southern Rockies, the desert southwest, Florida and parts of the Gulf Coast. Movie Executive Is Seriously Injured CANNES. France <UPI) — Jack L. Warner, U. S. movie executive was seriously injured in an autojnobile - truck collision while on route home today frpm> a casino here. Police said Warner, who was 661 Saturday, collided headon in his open sports car with a coal truck. He suffered a concussion, a possible skull fracture, severe cuts and possible broken bones. Doctors at Cannes Hospital said his condition was “very serious.” They said he was in a coma.

re 'KK.I *■i t * JS«Kn jHEiKtilsigL JT 1 -* OMBBMMMjBWag. r ' Hs|| v- • ’ L : - > /aggßjfy» \ >\ .<.’••» . I-.-X "5».. ■ ■ I■“ ' W|T- • : . • ■»■■, ' * WBATurft ■. i ~ WEATHER BUREAU ■ * < s '., "i . . ■■ wr wwv» . A ,. . ’ EXPERIMENTAL TORNADO DETECTION RAOAR • ■ ■* •<; ' ifilDt Att •-! a ■■rhnif MH s jL> V- "* ■* TORNADO DETECTOR -This trailer in Wichita, Kan., houses the Weather bureau’s unique new Doppler radar installation for measuring wind speeds in the vortex of a tornado. Aim, bettei warnings.

I (F 1 how Admitted Master William Thatcher, Decatur; Mrs. Anna Bulmahn, Decatur; Miss Susan Gillman. Decatur; James Cowan. Willshire, Q .. .. .. .. Dismissed Mrs. Willard Stetzel and baby girl, Decatur; Mrs. George Ober and baby boy, Decatur; George

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Rothgeb,Hoagland; W. H. Morrison, Willshire, O„ Mrs. Viola Taylor, Monroevill. Monthly Report Mode By Sheriff Affolder The month report for the month or July was released by the sheriff’s department today. According to the report given by sheriff Merle Affolder, 14 accidents occurred during the month, and six persons received personal injur- | ies as' a result of the mishaps. A

TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 195$

total of seven arrests were made by the department. The total of property damage was estimated at >4,530. The report also shows 13 local residents were involved in the accidents, three non-residents, and six-state residents. The accidents investigated by the department bring thee total a 79 for the year. The problem of today is not one of improving a personality here and there but of elevating the personalities of an entire civilzation. — Link.