Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 294, Decatur, Adams County, 15 December 1958 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

* ' TV. Decatur Graduate' iWorks On Research Dr. Hoile Studies Geological History Dr. Paul E. 4 Hthte, a 1941 graduate of Decatur high school, and assistaift professor of biology at Worcester State Teachers colInga name for himself in research lege in Worcester, Mass.,'is makaddi"g , bistwy Prof. Hoile, srih of Mr. and Mr». OHb E. Hoile of Fort Wayne, is doing research on the salt marsh snail peculiar to the Shrewsbury, Mass., area. “What do. snails in Massachusetts have to do with geology in northern Florida?” The 35-year-old researcher has studied the distribution of ,Mlt marsh snails among the marshes of the Atlantic seaboard. v ' He hopes to bp. able to prove that the northern part of Florida was once Fsubmerged. This is already bel'eved by many geologist ’*• Studying snails from Cape Hatteras, I’. C. to the St Lawrence river, he has gathered several thousand snails, including some from South America, Bermuda, and the Carribean. Amateur collectors often send them in to him. Raised in Union township of Adams county, he was educated in the Lutheran parochial schools before attending Decatur high school. He is now married to-tort former Katherine Cole, of Nashua, _JN. H they have one daughter, Elizabeth, 3. Dr. Hoile received his A. B. degree from Valparaiso, and M. S.

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-and ‘Ph. D. degrees from Notre Damp? He joined the faculty of ‘ Worcester College last year after serving on the faculty at the University of New Hampshire. Prof. Hoile’s work with snails ty»s aroused much interest in biological circles, and may well prove a significant contribution to martaq study- Hardly any study has" been completed on marine snails. j Two Minor Wrecks Reported Saturday Only Mipor Damage Caused By Accidents Two minor accidents occurred within the city Saturday afternoon. causing only slight damages to the autos involved. The city police department was called to the scene of both mishaps to conduct investigations. Cars driven by Cloe Marie Parrish, 34, Decatur, and Eleanor Louise Miller, 17, Decatur, collided near the intersection of Jefferson and Second streets Saturday at 2:35 p. th. TUv ; Parrish auto was attempWngleft turn off Jeffersofi s&eet Onto Second street at the time of the accident. The Miller atfto was unable to stop in time* to avoid the accident due to the icy street conditions, and slid into the rear of the Parrish car. City patrolman Al Nern estimated the Parrish auto • srt $36 and no damage occurred to the Miller car. The second accident occurred at the intersection of Second and Jackson streets Saturday at 5:22 p. m. caused by icy conditions. Cars ariven by Herman Dierkes. 46, Decatur, and Beverly Joan Halberstadt, 19 .route five, Decatur, collided when the auto driven by Miss Halberstadt was unable to avoid the accident due to the slick pavement and struck the Dierkes auto, which was headed east on Jackson street. The demages were estimated by Richard Mansfield, city policeauto and $lO to the Dierkes veman, at SBO to the Halberstadt hicle. Driver's License Suspended for Year Robert Daniel Zeser, of route 6, has lost his diver's license for one year, effective Oct. 20, for driving while under the influence of alcohol, according to bulletin 189 from the Indiana bureau of motor vehicles.

i Nettie T. Emenhiser Is Taken By Death i Hodgland Resident Dies Here Saturday ■ Mrs. Nettie T. Jane Emenhiser, 86, of Hoagland route 1, died at 12:30 o’clock Saturday afternoon at the Adams county memorial hospital, where she had been a patient since Oct 21. A lifelong resident of the Hoagland area, she was a member of the Antioch Lutheran church at Hoagland, f . Surviving are two sons, Coyle Emenhiser of Hoagland, and Harry Emenhiser of Fort Wayne route I 7; one daughter, Mrs. Frances ■ Lehrman of Monroeville route 2: ■ 11 grandchildren and 22 great- ‘ grandchildren. L Funeral services will be held at, ’ 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Antioch Lutheran church at Hoagland, the • Rev. Robert Whitenack officiating. ’ Burial will be in the IOOF ceme- ’ tery at Monroeville, Friends may ' call at the Marquart funeral home • in Monroeville uptjl .tihie’ of the 1 services. . - . I Doubt Mao Ouster As Red China President Doubt Nationalist Reports Os Ouster HONG KONG (UPD — Diplomats here doubted today that Mao Tse-tung would be ousted as president of Red China, but they conceded he may relinquish the government joo to devote full time to running the all-powerful Communist Party. The diplomats said there was no evidence to support reports from high Chinese Nationalist intelligence sources in Taipei that Red Chinese leaders had rebuffed Mao and named Marshal Chu Teh to replace him as government head. Any move by Mao would be voluntary, the sources believed. The pointed out the Cpmmunist leader enjoys extremely high prestige among the. Chinese mainland’s millions. He has been recognized as the ntimber one Chinese Communist for years. The Taipei reports said the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee had rejected Mao as a candidate for re-election be- , cause of popular discontent over < the new system of communes and , the failure to capture the Nation-alist-held offshore Quemoy islands. Nationalist sources said the reports came from reliable sources on the Red-held mainland. California Cabins , •, .■ • T • , | Threatened By Fire Over 11,000 Acres Blackened By Fire SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Calif. I (UPD — Firefighters made a deI termined stand today to save some 50 summer cabins in the path of a roaring brush tire which already has blackened over 11,000 acres An undetermined number of people in the cabins plus boys in a youth camp at San Juan Hot Springs, about 13 miles east of here, had to be evacuated as the fire was pushed along on 30 to 40 m.p.h. winds. “We are not too optimistic about ' controlling it,” Elmer Ostermans, fire coordinator for the state Forestry Service. Firefighters , trim . as’ far north as the Oregon bordir wereoeiny flown in to fight the blaze which broke out Sunday add raced! owr the tinder-dry brush tinff trees in the Trabuco Mountains. Planes equipped with boratewater solution packages „ began “bombing" the area at dawn, the Forestry Service said. The blaze is concentrated mostly in uninhabited areas which are so rubbed with dipping canyons and steep mountains that bulldozers cannot get in to combat the blaze. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat A(/u,t Ad — They bring results 4~— ’ BUY NOW — FOR CHRISTMAS! • FRIGID AIRE APPLIANCES Small Down Payment NO PAYMENTS FOR 60 PAYS UHRICK BROS.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

• \ A > ■ 7 ■WI BOWUNO CHAMPIONS—Bd, Lu ba nski, 28. Detroit, Mich., and Charlotte Grublc, 34. Steelton. Pa., exchange congratulations In Chicago after each had won first place to the World’s Individual Match Game championships Lubanski pocketed $5,000 besides the trophy Miss Grublc received $2,500 check.

East Germany Boss Hints At Red Move Threatens Action In Blockade Move BERLIN (UPD — East German Communist Party Boss Walter Ulbricht hinted today that Red troops would invade West Germany if any attempt is made by the Wqst to break a Berlin blockade. He made the statement in an East ■ Berlin speech as the East German Communist newspaper “Young World" was warning that a single shot fired in defense of Western troops in West Berlin could start a world war. Ulbricht said today “every attack on the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) will be turned into a devastating defeat west of the Elbe and Werra Rivers” — the rivers between East and West Germany. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev declared last week that any Western military move against East German blockade measures would be considered an attack on East Germany and that; the Soviet and other Warsaw Pact allies would fight back. In that context, Ulbricht’s blast today was the most warlike threat since Khrushdhev launched his get-out-of-Berlin campaign in Moscow on Nov. 10. Ulbricht, hgad of the Communist Party and deputy premier* made his threats in a speech on his return from a six-day official visit to Poland. Another deputy premier, Hegip rich Rau, who greeted the delegation at the East Station, reiterate ed that “we will exercise our rights on air, land and water routes” — ancther threat of a blockade . The first completely automatic process for manufacturing tires was developed in 1924. An official survey determined that there are 3,762 motels in New England.

p j, <ObW iqfMl- < ja dSoft O - waif ® JF T Wr I ftu I ■ tawi 1 ' x r-®:* ’ FUspmm u lcii_AX*|,- ; - WBfw,. ■ |whbll? y* la ■|||||®|ir* ATTEMPT TEANSATLANTIC BAUOON KIOHT-Three men and a woman shoved off from Tenerife, Canary Islands, across the Atlantic on "Small World,” an aerial raft—a balloon with a gondola slung below it. Their goal waa America, about 3,000 miles away The balloon radioed "All was well aboard" to a listening point in the Canary islands. It is trying to retrace Christopher Columbus* path to the new world. At top. workers haul out the gondola tor “Small World." It is seaworthy and,, designed to act as a lifeboat If the balloon lands tn the sea. In center is a map of the “aerial adventure.” At bottom, left, is Colid Mudie, 32-year-old naval architect and pilot of the balloon. He is discussing the adventure with two fellow explorers, Arnold Elioart, and Mudle’a wife, Rosemary. Fourth member of crew making the trip is Elioart’s son, Timothy.

Manhunt Spreading I For Youthful Killer Manhunt Is Spread Through Southwest i EL CAJON, Calif. (UPI) — A • manhunt for a 16-year-old boy, bel lieved to have murdered a mother and her four children, spread today throughout the Southwest. Carl Eder, of Irondequoit. N.Y., who was befriended by the family, fled Friday shortly before Mrs. Lois Pendergast, 37, was found by her husband fatally shot in the hallway of their home. The couple’s four children, three i boys and a girl aged 2 to 9, were found in other parts of the house and an adjoining garage, with their throats cut. Two pPtfie children had been disemboweled. Thomas Pendergast, 39, the husband and father, said Sunday after undergoing a seven and a half hour lie detector test that he planned to devote his life to church and youth welfare work. The aircraft plant worker’s lie detector test results were being evaluated. Findings will be known sometime late today or Tuesday, Police Chief Joseph O’Connors said. “It is only fair to clear this man to strengthen our case against the other (Eder)”, O’Connors said. The police chief said Pendergast statements while being questioned with the polygraph ‘‘were consistent with what he told us before." v “I wanted the lie detector test,” Pendergast said after the ordeal. “I believe in lie detectors. It is my witness next to the Lord.” Cars were checked at the nearby Mexican herder for Eder. Roadblocks were manned at points along highways. Before World War, I, almost all optical glass in the U. S. was imported from Germany. A qualified pharmacist must be ’ able to compound and dispense about 40,000 different items.

Three-Car Accident Near Decatur Today Two Autos Badly Damaged In Wreck A three - car accident occurred one half mile south of Decatur on U. S. 27 today at 6:35 a.m. causing considerable damage to twqxrf the cars involved in the collision. A car driven by Chalmer W.- Snyder, 26, Willshire, 0., waiting in the southbound lane of traffic so make a left hand turn, was struck from the fear by a Oar driven by Jerome Francis Heiman, 34, route four, Decatur, who in turn was struck from the rear by a. car driven by Richard B. Lengerich, 34, also of route four* Decatur. Heiman stated to the officers he did not see any signal for a turn, and Lengerich stated he had no warning at all. Lengerich complained of a left knee injury as the result (of the collision. Investigating officer Robert Meyers, deputy sheriff, estimated damages to the Heiman vehicle at S6OO, $550 to the Lengerich auto, and no damages to the Snyder car. Secretary Dulles Reported Better Social Functions In Paris Are Avoided PARIS (UPI) — TTie drama- ’ filled atmosphere of Western talks , on the Berlin crisis seemed to- ■ day to have been just the medi- ’ cine for convalescing Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. , The 70-year-old secretary, only ; three days out of the hospital ; where he was treated for inflam- ' mation of the coton, looßpd grey and a bit peaked when he flew in from Washington last ,Saturday. But this morning his aides reported he was “feeling pretty f good” and that he "seemed -to be , getting into his old form again.” ' Dulles has been going at fairly full steam when there is actual , business at the foreign ministers ; meetings. But he has been sparJ tag himself on the social functions — skipping dinners where ’ rich and full menus were served. As an extra precaution, Col. . Benjamin Sullivan, an Army docfor of the Walter Reed Hospital, ; accompanied him here. U.S. sources said Dulles was following a bland diet because his ! ■ - ■ _ 1

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stomach still feels abit sensitive. Rubbing! elbows' with other Western ministers appeared to be agreeing with him. An kssoqiate suid this morning, “The secretary looks a little better than when we ftrst arrived from Washington. “He definitely has more bounce now that he’s been taking part in these meetings,” the associate said. "It’s like an old war horse Setting back into the gallop—even tough admittedly it may not be a full gallop yet." * J * 1 To Hold Hearing On Arkansas Eleclion Write-in Victory Under House Probe WASHINGTON (UPI) — The special House elections subcommittee 1 agreed to hold a public hearing today before deciding whether to investigate the write-in victory of a segregationist over Rep. Brooks Hays (D-Ark.) in Little Rock. -Hays--was defeated in the Nov. 4 election Ly Dr. Dale Alford. : Chair msfi., CWford David <DTfenn.)' announced the committee would hear testimony this afternoon from ' John F. Wells, publisher of a -weekly newspaper at Little Rock, who has charged that Hays was defeated through irregularities, violations of law, and a conspiracy involving Arkansas Gw. Orval Faubus. Alford ran as an independent but has announced he wants to sit as a Democrat Davis made his announcement as the committee went into a closed session to handle what he termed “soAe administrative details." Wells and Alford were present with newsmen when Davis made the announcement. Wells has charged that Faubus violated a pledge rto the Democratic Party by supporting and financing Alford's write-in campaign. The publisher told United Press International: “1 hope he won’t be able to escape an ac-

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MONDAY. DECEMBER 15, 1958

Driver Fined For Traffic Violation A driver appeared in mayor’s court this forenoon on charges filed against him Saturday night tty the Indiana stata police. Another violator is scheduled to appear in justice of the peace court next month for charges also filed aga> n ' st him by tl. state police Saturday- f Ifodsß Anderson, 19, Dlecatur, was arrested approximately two miles south of Monmouth on the Monmouth road Saturday at 11:35 p.m. for improper registration. He appeared in court at 10 o’clock today and pleaded guilty to the Charge. A fine of $17.75 was imposed by Mayor Robert D .Cole for the offeree, .. ; Kenneth L. Hawkins, 19, Decatur, ivas Arrested Saturday night at the intersection of the Monmouth road and U. S. 27 by the state police for driving a .car and not wearing corrective glasses as required on his driver'slicense. He is scheduled to appear in justice of the peace court to the charge January 20, 1959, at 7 o’clock. 1 ■ r-• ' —■ ■ - rv- ■ .I counting on this.” Alford told a reporter he would be present to answer any questions but would not testify unless the committee had questions to ask him. Alford said there is “no question” that he was fairly and properly elected to Congress.

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