Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 118, Decatur, Adams County, 18 May 1960 — Page 10

PAGE TWO-A

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Chiang Kai-Shek Virtually Ignored

fly FWIL NEWSOM t'P! Fwoflrw ratter A man •*»<«■ powerful In world [council* «iu virtually ignored toMrr. . ._ A , Scarcely • butter eumpir of « changing world could be found 'then (knersUMimo Chien* KaiUm* of NaikmalM Oune Srveotorn years ago snoSteur Big Four :hgd for Its member, hip the Unilrd State*. Britain. Rueala and Nationalist China | France, prewtrate then, baa taken China - * place tnday and the gcncrabaalmo find* himself out of dep with the ume*. While Beat and W**t *eek wmr . form of co-exi* fence. Chiang Kai 1 ibek cling* to hl* belief that dark inuss o'er the world can be lifted • only by the total eUminatloa of communism. In IMS. be helped the late Presdent Rrxuievr-M end former Prime j • Minister Winston Cburehdl draft | Allied goal* in A»la In World War Todav. among the Big Four. I only the United State* and France recognize Chiang* Kuomintang administration aa China * legal government Bed* laaoe Warning* Today, a* world leaders talk of peace. Chiang’s navy and Quemoy garrison are under a new emergency alert against a surprise attack from Communist China As in the summer of 1958 Chiang's aides are issuing new warnings of a Communist military buildup on the Chinese mainland They claim the Reds are moving supersonic MIG IPs. jet bombers and submarines into the Formosa Strait area. In Quemoy, the Reds have an almost fool - proof sanctuary for igniting world tensions. They can shell the offshore islands with an impunity based on the expectation that the United States will not retaliate and that the Nationalists will no bomb mainland China bases. Any such attack on Quemoy • probably would be for propaganda reasons without any real attempt to seize the islands. Out of World Councils Nationalist military sources say ' privately the offshore Wands, less than a mile from the China mainland, are of little if any tactical value to the Reds. If the Chinese Communists realily were looking for a fight, they i easily could bypass Quemoy and [attack Formosa directly.

I But wbauwr Chiang’• opinion. I .nrt whatever the Common ret* I intent. ««ukl council* no k*g>-> 'include th. lonely man I# Tglpei Instead be must face the UteuN hood Wat not in the IbruMvabir Mur* will either he or bi* armiu* return to the Chin* mainland And that, g* the world grope* sue peace. R*d China must b* recognized a* a force to being No amount of summit conference* oc any disarmament agreement reached at Geneva can have real mcamng. nor can world ten.tans be ea*ed. without the full accord of the men In Peiping. Chiang * bitterest encmle*. Advice to Parents BURLINGTON. Vt. <UPI»-It’» normal for cljMraa—to f* ar U’e dark. «av* University of Vermont j human relation* specialist Dr. ' Dalton Vernon. He said. "Your child needs re--1 assurance, not sternness. when he j first become* aware of the dark. I Let the children have a night light they can turn on and off I themselves. Gradually fear will recede and darkness will become a friendly thing." Xjof ' II SALES OF RECORDS SOAR joo. Moot '♦» i» jC_ a» • r~y — 1 ~ ir ' JH If J- * Jvl '' 100 m ■■■ L- ————- “■ ““ Mi |gj Kg-i fe* Ssi aft __ __ - J? WO '52 ‘M 'S* 'M 5» A FAST CUP — H® cord sa,es have moved right along for the past 10 years. CBS. figures show that 1959 sales were 318 per cent of those in 1950. Big jump after 1955 was caused by introduction of record clubs, popularity of hi-fi and increas-I tag demand for Broadway show albums. H My Fair Lady” alone sold over three million.

’ THE DECATUR DAILY OBROOUT. DETATUE. DfDUNA

Ovcrblousefor Wear* With Narrow. Pants ( i < *a r "TA T ~ / - - CflL II | i Mr l ■ ev \ Wrggy r' > jBT » fl X L r jJe k W. [ K w p < '■*» • SSSi-SsS sSSswss prise Women’s Editor.

GOP National Chairman May Gain 2nd Spot By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International ■INDIANAPOLIS <UPI> — One of the ablest GOP leaders in Indiana said today that Hoosier Republicans may. greet their next nominee for vice-president in Indianapolis Thursday. He is Sen. Thruston Morton of Kentucky. GOP national chairman, who will deliver the chief Republican speech at the annual

Eridtron dinner of the Indianapoli Press Club Thursday night. Speaking for the Democrats that night will be Sen. Lyndon Johnson. Senate majority leader, who also will take advantage of his chance for Hoosier support in his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Morton and Secretary of Labor James MttcheU are two national leaders who have been mentioned as possible running mates for Vice-President Richard M. Nixon. I who seems to be a cinch for the White House nomination The Nixonites have striven with might and main to induce New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to run for vice-president, but he appears to have closed the door when he announced that he will not even attend the national convention of his party in Chicago. Morton hails from the neighboring state of Kentucky and his speeches have been in Une with the conservative thinking of the Hoosier GOP chiefs. He has spoken in this state a number of times in recent years and is regarded as being much more sympathetic to the sentiments of national committeeman Ralph r • Gates, former governor, than was his prwecessor, Meade Alcorn. It seems certain that Nixon will be the man to select the nominee and that Morton will be high on the list, especially in view of the fact that the Republicans have some hopes of annexing a border state or so this fall. At any rate, the news conferences of both Morton and Johnson, if staged,.are sure to draw a full complement of reporters from all types of media. One of the greatest worries of ,a -number of GOP politicos is the thick silence of Lt Gov. Craw ford F Parker who appears to have the gubernatorial nomination of the party in the bag. A number of these observers believe that Parker should be assailing the DemocraU who won by 250,000 votes in 1958 and triumphed handily a S al " in the 1959 municipal election. However the Parker lieutenants maintain that he is holding fire until after his nomination and then will pour it on the Demo**Farker, who has been contacting the county leaders quietly for some time, has stepped up his oratorical schedule in recent days however, and his aides contend that his policy is sound. The margin of Nixon over Sen. John F. Kennedy in Indianais /residential primary has cheered the GOP chiefs, but others have jSntSa out ttei tte »■“» ™‘«’ lead cannot be reckoned as a Re publican endorsement. He Liked the Mural DALLAS, Tex. (UPD — Movie actor Russ Tamblyn is taking home to Hollywood an expensive Dallas memory—a 500 pound war Tamblyn’s wall has a mural by Bill McCauley on it. The been a part of the Eighth Day Coffee House, but owner Don Jackson decided to enlarge the room, so Tamblyn asked him to ship the entire wall to his home. Pooch Was Husky CHEYENNE. Wyo. (UPD '-A Cheyenne housewife asked television station KFBC for help in finding her dog. which had jumped the fence and wandered off in zero weather. However, no one was to surprised when the dog was found, none the worse, a few hours later. It was a 54-pound full-blooded Alaskan Huskie.

I f I \ 1 BHKIk ' ■ ■ ’ lx, Be As Proud W7//JT Os The Wf LETTERS 1 You Mail As You Are Os Your • Personal _ Appearance! Does Your Letterhead worthily reflect the prestige and porJ tonality of-yovr business? .If not, |et u * desi o n antl print on ® *’ that will! J. - , -. ... ■ — -* • - ' - - • If You Meed Printing In Your Business Let Ils Quote Our Prices! PRINTING OF ALL KINGSI .. : ' . ' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT PHONE 3-2121 '

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