Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 201, Decatur, Adams County, 26 August 1958 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
4-H Fair Winneis Visit Moor Man Plant ■i - SMBs H Hl^^k X * ■ !r®hs ■u >rx^ywfcf, J H ■ f ■ i fl , f I -' Ri i First row—left to right: Hoy Fuhrman, Dean Beer, Joan Brown, Gyaeth Schnepp. Helen Rumple. Second row—left to right. Leo Seltenright, Mrs. Kenneth Beer, Mrs. Robert Broun Third row--left to. right: Martin Steiner, Leonard Soliday, rfomer Winteregg.
Five showmanship winners in ' the Adams county 4-H fair were presented with a trip > Quincy.: ' 111., tpyisitthe plant and research J farm of the Moort lin < n i any in, recognition of th 4i e'h: nT“~~ The trip was In id- A'r I •. v nth , and eighth. The group spent : 1 ht ■ the : seventh 'in Quiiii. • th' i-'T-' i EFArtcarvec t || DIAMOND RINGS | i bower ! || JEWELRY STORE =
SEE THE BRAND NEW Admiral. Built In REFRIGERATORS • * 110 I * jggrg ' H'" it: J \ •== •;. 1 \ i;. ■ 't; j: ■* — Model CA 1155 ★ r? tic Defrosting .-Strong Shelves iv n Grisper w < Door Shelves x Freezer Chest k- ' '..: $ 169- 95 IHighway 27 — North|
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next morning, started on their tour. After inspecting the dairy unit, they drove to the plant and had - -bieakfast in the- plant cafeteria. J Then they were conducted on a j tour of the plant and office and j saw experiments and tests in pro--i gie s in the research department, j At a question and answer period, company officials told about feed manufacturing and advances in L eding and nutrition theory and ; practice. After lunch in the cafeteria, the group visited the company research; farm. Here they saw the theories: anct improvements tested and put ’ nt - the products. Tlr county youths who attended meeting were: Helen Rumple J ■ 2. Berne; Gyneth Schnepp.: rc.uit- 1. Monroe; Roy Fuhrman, i route 1, Decatur; Joan Brown, route 4. Decatur; and Dean Beer, route 2. Berne. Also accompanying the young people were Leo Seltenright, county agent, and Mrs. Robert Brown and Mrs. Kenneth Beer, two of the parents. The entire affair was planned by Moorman representatives in and around Adams county. They are -Martin St .finer:: district sales -nw ager. and Leonard Soliday, Homer Winteregg and Paul-Brehm, sales-, men. I Juliette Gordon Low was foun- ■ der of the Girl Scouts Os the U.S.A. I She organized the group in 1912 at ■ Savannah, Ga.
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Skysweeper Sputniks May Clear Radiation Deadly Ban Now Bars ; Man From Space AMSTERDAM (UPD — A U.S. | expert said today special “sky- | sweeper" satellites might be able to clear away the band of deadly | radiation that now threatens to l bar man from outer space. Prof. Fred Singer of Maryland University told the International Astronautical Congress he believes ! the radiation belt, which took thousands of years to build up, could be cleared away in a matter of months. Singer emphasized the “skysweeper” idea is a corollary of a theory he has developed which I requires further confirmation before it can be accepted as fact. The Maryland space specialist's report was the scientific highlight of a day during which congress delegates speculated about the nature of a secret “top priority" program mentioned Monday by the Russians. Western scientists ibel i e v e the project involves shooting a man into space. Russia Injects Politics The Soviet spokesman who mentioned the secret program would tgive no details, but an American r fsetcntist-had -reported—earlier—thatrt Soviet Sputnik expert Peter Kapi- | ; tza is working on a plan to get, a man into space — and bring' him back alive. American officials were seething over Russia's effort to inject politics into the_deliberations of the IAC by trying to bar Nationalist China from membership. I "The congress provides Russia; with the Cheapest propaganda platform in the world,” one angryI American said. “By claiming to have only 20 members lin its I Space Society), Russia pays mini-i s mum dues of sls a year and gets ! i millions of dollars worth of pub- j licity. “By contrast, the American! Rocket Society pays more than | SI,OOO a year.” A Deadly Threat Singer Russia's hypotheti-j cal spaceman would be in trouble if he ventured more than 250 ( miles from earth — the lower: limit of the radiation belt. He said data collected by, . America’s satellites, especially: Explorer IV. . indicate the radia-! tiun belt: i —Extends from 250 miles to 40p- 1 1000 miles up, with its maximum! : intensity at 600 miles and its, greatest thickness over the earth's : equator, , — Was formed during many thousands of years by protons dislodged from the earth’s atmosphere by cosmic - ray bombard- : ment. Some of these particles ■ carry charges as high as 400; million volts, making them a deadly threat to life. Could Be Reduced A man in the radiation belt, j Singer said, would be the target ■ in three hours of as much ardia-1 tion as he could safely absorb in a lifetime. Even IVj inches of! lead armor — which would add 5■ !tons to the weight of a space ship; ;12 feet in diameter — would pro-! ' tect him for only 30 hours. i He added, however, that un-1 manned satellites of proper de-1 I sign, orbiting within the radiation belt, probably could absorb i enough protons in a few months ito reduce the radiation to-"toler-l able limits.” j Once swept out. Singer believes, it would take thousands of years! ! for the radiation belt to build up to the danger level again. ♦ Minor Brain Damage Now Causes Death 23 Years Os Bumps Cause Hemorrhage ROMFORD, England <UPD— A coroner's jury ruled Monday' a man died from accumulated in- ! juries caused by bumping his head on the low roof of his garden shed over a 23-year period. A verdict of accidental death j was returned in the case of Bertie Cunnell. 55. a grocery clerk who ; died in a hospital from brain hemlorrhage. , Relatives testified Cunnell. who was tall, often bumped his head lon a low beam when he went into (the shed in his garden. Dr. Cyril ! Raeburn, a pathologist, said the I man’s condition following repeated (blows, on the head was “comparable with the condition found in boxers who were punch drunk.” Coroner Louis Beccle said Cunnell apparently caused small inI juries to his brain over a 23-year period. L “They were very minor injuries, 'which he would not take notice . of at the time.” the coroner said. "But they all added up and produced this condition. There is no (other explanation than this low beam in the shed which would account for it." Trade tn a good town — Decatty :
tfOX DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBCATCR, INMIOm
Triple Entente To Study Arabs For Four Weeks Adenauer, Others May Disagree On Main Policy BONN, Germany (UPD—Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, in meetings with the premiers of Italy and France during the next four weeks, will attempt to reach an agreed assessment of the Middle East situation. Adenauer, his advisors say, feels any attempt to prepare a Western plan for future treatment of the Arab world is fruitless unless there first is agreement on the present situation there. There remains basic disagreement on this point of departure. It remains despite U.S. Secretary qf State John Faster Dulles’ and Italian Premier Amintore Fanfani’s blitz visits to see Adenauer late in July and early in August. To Meet Fanfani The West German chancellor ! will receive Fanfani for asecond meeting at the former’s vacation : residence on the shores of Lake I Como Aug. 31. He also will have his first meet- ' ing with French Premier Charles (de Gaulle since the latter took office in De Gaulle’s Lorraine home on Sept. 14. Dulles and Fanfani both have conferred recently with De Gaulle, the former just before and the latter just after the Iraqi revolution which caused the U.S. to land troops in Lebanon and the British !to do the same in Jordan. : The apparent air of compromise I around the United Nations headquarters in New York has somei what eased the sense of urgency i in diplomatic circles in Europe. Iron Out Details Fanfani. Italian sources report. ! feels the Middle Eastern economic I development scheme President EiI senhower proposed to the United Nations incorporated many of ; Fanfani's own thoughts. But many details remain to be ! ironed out. and here is where both i Adenauer and Fanfani and, pre- ! sumably. De Gaulle, believe there ■ first should be -an—agreeeL *ssess- | ment for the Arab problem. Fanfani, the sources say, be--1 lives the main aim of Western policy should be to prevent the j Arabs falling under Communist governments. On this point, Adenauer is in complete agreement. Fanfani believes, however, a ries of non - aggression pacts ; among the Arab states is neces- | sary to preserve peace in the area. Here, Adenauer disgrees Adn- i auer is said to believe in the inevitability of complete Arab un(ion under the leadership of 'Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser The | German believes any Western attempt to stern this process is fu- : tile. Suffers Broken Hip When Hit By Truck Elroy Stauffer, 72. was admitted to the Adams county memorial hospital after an accident Saturday forenoon. When hit by a large truck at the ! Berne Ready Mix plant. Stauffer, a truck driver for Mcshberger’s, | received a fracture of the hip socket. He had jumped out of the cab of his truck when he stepped into the path of a truck being backed into an adjoining driveway to load concrete. Von Broun Out Os Orbit - Bad Back AMSTERDAM (UPD Dr. Wenther Vonßraun. the U.S. Army’s! missile expert and the man behind the explorer satellites, was bed-' ridden today with a suspected slipped dlisc suffered when he bent over to pick up an object at the International Astronautical Congress here. Big Wheels Changed At Big Wheels Co. NEW YORK (UPD — The General Motors Corp., the world’s largest manufacturing company, will be run under a new top management team beginning next Monday. Harlow H. Curtice, who was 65 on Aug. 15. will retire then as president and chief executive officer, he announced Monday. Frederick G. Donner. 55. Was named chairman and chief executive officer. John F. Gordon. 58. was elected president. Curtice did not bold the ( post of chairman, which is being vacated by Albert Bradley, 67. who also is retiring next Monday. New Hampshire's state legislature is the largest in the United States with 400 representatives and 24 senators.
Life Aboard Nautilus Is Very Pleasant Lack Os Sunshine Is Only Complaint ABOARD THE USS NAUTILUS (UPl)—Life aboard the atomicpowered submarine N a u t i1 u s, whether going under the North Pole or ion a routine run, is quiet, relaxed and efficient. The 12 officers and 97 men who regularly serve on the Nautilus ’ know their job and know it well. ’ But they have a problem that is ' unique—weeks underwater without ’ setting daylight. ‘ The Nautilus has been designed to take care of this problem as . much as possible. To an almost ’ unbelievable extent it has worked, , mainly because it has so much ' more room, due to its nuclear ’ power plant. The inside of the ship itself is done in soft colors specially designed to be easy on the eye. ; Among other things it has I —A photographic darkroom and enlarging facilities, plus one of the best caameramen in the US. forces. John J. Krawczyk, 34, Eaton Rapids. Mich. —A coke mac hi n e and ice I cream machine. / —A juke- box' with its -system , extending throughout the ship. It has a selection of 100 records and is free. —A mess room that converts ’ into a movie theater for 50 per- , sons in five minutes. —A tape recorder and a tele- . vision set that may be used in port. —A 600 volume library. —An automatic washing ma--1 chine and dryer. [ The men serve four hours on duty and then eight hours off . There is a large program to help them pass time during the long underwater voyages, including one . or two movies every day. ‘■Most of us watch the movies, play cards, chess or something else,” said Chief Hospital Corpsi man John A. Aberle. Springfield j Gardens, N.Y. “Some of us just I i sleep.” ‘•Yeh. and a lot of us spent I most of the time slinging bull,” ,! put in Hercules H. Nicholas. , I Portsmouth. N.H. Value Os Farms Grows With Debt Land, Buildings, Stock Value, Debt Grow WASHINGTON (UPI ’ —The U.S. : farmer is worth more today than ever before. . The Federal Reserve System reI ported that the value of all U.S. ! farm assets last year rose to an ! all-time peak of $86,700,000,000. | That is a 5.7 per cent increase in a year. The Federal Rerserve also reported that farmers owed a record lebt by the end of 1957 of $20,200,000,000 —a 700-million-dol-lar increase. But even with the increased debt taken into account farmers still, were., worth a record total of crease of $166,500,000,000 or 5.9 per cent. Farm assets include the financial assets, automobiles, and household furnishings and equipment owned by farmers as well as all the assets used directly in i farm production. These include I farm land and buildings, livej stock, tractors, motor trucks, 'farm machinery and inventories of crops. Trade in a good town — Decatuf NEW! FASTER! ggj COLD RELIEF |jM| SUPER IwJanapac 1 Ml—with Now added to the Anapac formula ! of antihistamine, aspirin, phenacetin and caffeine are citrus biflavaI noid and vitamin C. They work together to help build better resistance i against cold symptoms at any stage. I Bottle of 12 ONLY 98‘ • Bottle of 30... 1.70 ; SUPER ANAPAC, Jr. I Cold-fighting formula safe for I children. Bottle of 24 < jr e SMITH DRUG CO.
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Hartke Says Musical Chairs Os GOP Fails Senate Nominee Warns Hoosiers , Os Wild Bill BEDFORD — The Republican ; ‘‘game of musical chairs” will fail. ’ predicted Mayor Vance Hartke tonight. I The Democratic candidate for . U. S. senator told a Lawrence j County meeting in a speech prepared for delivery tonight that they i can help keep William Jenner a private citizen of Bedford by upsetting the GOP game in Indiana. i “Our junior senator does not in- ■ tend to retire. It is quite obvious that his intent in not running this year was to establish himself in I Indiana in order to boost his can- • didacy for governor. “Bill Jenner realized this a poor year for a member of the Hoosier Republican ruling clique to place his name on the ballot. He knows that Hoosiers are tired of inaction on unemployment, recession, small business failures, flood control/ 1 highways, and aid to farmers. He knows that Hoosiers are sick over the scandals which have rocked Republican state administrations. “So, Bill Jenner told the man he made governor—High Tax Harold Handley to get into the race this year. If Jenner had figured a Republican victory was so important or a probability, he most likely I , would have run himself. Instead, I i he ordered his man, Harold, to ii make the race. ! “Then they cracked the whip ■ I over state employees and forced the nomination. They got permission of the Supreme Court for the governor to run. And they have set out to have Harold run the errands in Washington. “Then Jenner can go ahead with his plans to be governor and their state chairman. Bob Matthews, can go on with his plan to tear tip the party further by unseating Senator Capehart. “Along the line there is to be other chair-swapping, according to the boss’ master plan. "I predict, however, that the people of Bedford will join other good j Hoosiers in keeping Jenner at I home, Handley in Indianapolis toj the end of his term and electing Vance Hartke as the man to fill the j vacant Senate seat. “The game of musical chairs will end before it can begin.' ’ One of the few soapstone quar-' I ries ever worked by New Eng-( land’s Indian tribes is located ini Johnston. R. I. i iggtera- ffl i I •-•■.J ! RAND-McNALLV M WORLD MAP 'T// 50< Value H //I Get better grades tn cur||7/ \ rent events, geography, \ Bl * 36 * IB’/z »n. map in | six colors. Yours free H Ik Wlth 9 HOO purchase of || Rexall School Bell Spe- » II ctals now on display. What every boy needs! ‘xA/ LITTLE SCOUT I -i - , 2 HIKINGKIT Z $1.09 Value ' \\v SAVE 21* Antiseptic Rex Salvine burns: Little Wernor Quik Bands and a comV pass —m a pouch l Worn on belt AT OUR i?e«att DRUB STORE SMITH DRUG CO.
Don Truex Recovers Missing Bicycle Don L. Truex, 108 South Second street, reported to city hall Monday afternoon to receive the Royce Union (Holland) bicycle city police recovered Friday afternoon. The red boys’ bicycle, in good condition, had come into the office about 3:17 p. m. Friday, and Truex came to claim it about 5:30 Monday afternoon. Hot Freezer Motor Brings Fire Department City firemen were alerted when a motor on a freezer caught on fire at the Mirror Inn, Monday afternoon. Only damage done to the establishntent, at 148 North Second, was to the motor, which overheated and caught on fire. Although there was a lot of smoke, there was not much damage. Firemen returned to their station about ten minutes after they deceived the call, at 3:50 p.m. Farm Marketings Up Over Last Year Increase Shown In Farm Receipts Too WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Agriculture Department said today farm cash marketings totaled $16,600.000,000 in the first seven months of 1958. This was 11 per cent more than for the same period last year. Prices averaged 7 per cent highI er and the volume of marketings , was 4 per cent larger, the depart- : ment said in its publication, “The Demand and Price Situation.” Cash receipts from livestock and products of $10,600,000,000 were 11 per cent more than in the corresponding period of 1957. mostly because of larger receipts from cattle, calves, hogs, eggs and broilers. Crop receipts totaled six billion dollars, up 12 per cent, reflecting increases in receipts from wheat, corn, citrus fruits, and potatoes. Cash receipts in July were about $2,700,000,000, up 7 per cent from July, 1957, because of higher prices and larger marketings. Receipts from livestock and products were SI,SOO.(M>O.P(>O. 6 per cent above July of last year with ■ higher prices for cattle, hogs, and : eggs. Crop receipts of about sl,200.000.000 were 9 per cent above last year, largely because of in- | creased receipts from the record wheat crop. — . —.— e Parents... is your youngster joining the band? — INSIST ON A BUNDY INSTRUMENT commended by PARENTS’ 1 parents) I Magazine Bundy Band Instruments have earned the Parents’ Seal of Approval because they are made with features which niean easier playing and fastor progress for beginners. Which Bundy instrument should your child play? Have him ask the bandmaster at his school, then bring him in to select from our complete stock. MODESTLY PRICED AND EASY TO OWN. Small down payments, easy terms to fit your budget. DECITIJR MUSIC HOUSE 136 N. 2nd Street!
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Rogers Blasts Reds For Hungary Conduct States Views On Court Publicity LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Atty- ’ Gen. William P. Rogers condemned Russia's suppression of the Hungarian revolt in a speech Monday night to the American Bar Association’s 81st annual convention. Rogers was the object of an official protest by the Russians last year for his comments on Soviet actions in Hungary. “The real significance of this ridiculous protest by the U.S.S.R. is this—it demonstrates that the Soviet leaders are extremely sensitive to world opinion which casts them and the system they administer in its true light.” The attorney general said the Russians represent what happened in Hungary as progress. “The fact is, that never has the total brutality of the Soviet system been made more clearly apparent to the whole world than in the massacre of unarmed Hungarian freedom fighters by Soviet tanks and the subsequent murder of Premier Nagy.” Earlier in the day. delegates attending this city’s first ABA convention tn nearly a quarter of a century adopted a resolution condemning the trial and execution of Nagy. In other action, the ABA’s House of Delegates postponed immediate action on a proposal to ban photographers and broadcasters from the nation’s courtrooms. The proposed revision of Canon 35 would have held that photography and broadcasting “introduce extraneous influence which tend to have a detrimental psychological effect on the participants and to divert them from the proper objectives of the trial; they should not be permitted.” Joseph Costa, chairman of the board of the National Press Photographers Assn., said the adoption of a revised Canon 35 would "set back bar-media relations another 20 years.” “We are going to continue to try to convince the legal profession that the decision to restrict th« flow of news must not be generalized but must be made by each individual judge and only in special circumstances,” he said. ! the fast, way! r B • Pasted • Trimmed • Plastic coated • Soap and water washable If yon can stamp a letter, yon can do • beautiful job with Quick wallpaper. Just wet it and bang it! No muss, no fuss... it’s the easiest, ready-to-apply wall covering in the world. See our wide choice of beautifully styled patterns and colors. ' wr| 158 S. 2nd St. PHONE 3-3030
