Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 289, Decatur, Adams County, 8 December 1960 — Page 9

THURSDAY. DECEMBER 8, 1960

Raggedy Ann Doll Kennedy Favorite ‘By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK < UPI)-©avid Carton hasn’t met Caroline Kennedy. All he knows about the tiny daughter of the president-elect is that she’s a charmer In looks and that what seems no be her favorite doll definitely is his favorite. Carton hopes it continues to be. He is president of toe company which has exclusive rights to making the Raggedy Ann doll, a soft end cuddly cloth fey which is almost as much of a classic in the nursery as the tieddy bear. In the tost few days, pictures of

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3-y ear-bld Oaunline out walking with her father and pushing a carriage with a rag doll in it. and the United Press Intennaitionial ctoae-up of Caroline with daddy bringing up the near holding a rag ddH. have hit front pages across the country. ft Which, says Canton, promises a whole new interest in the redhaired toy inspired by a series of books for children. “Maybe not a big boom this year,” said Carton. “It’s too close to Christmas and most stores long since have stocked up. But wait’ll next year.” Incidentally, lest John F. Kennedy Jr. be neglected, Canton has dispatched him .a Raggedy Andy, brother of Arm. The true Raggedy Ann is based lon a series of books by John Gruelle, an Indianapolis - born

writer and artist who started Ann in 1918. He died in 1968, said Botobs-MerriH, the publisher which now puts out toe Ann aeries. High Westerlies Changing Course WASHINGTON (UPI) — The high westerlies have changed course again, and instead of a generally mild winter it looks as though we’re in for a generally nasty one. The high westerlies have a lot to do with what kind of weather we have. They are great air currents which swirl around the northern hemisphere from west to east.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

During toe first half of November they blew straight and fast across toe northern U.S. border, fending off invasions of cold air from toe polar regions. If they had stayed on that track, the continental United States would have enjoyed a gen* ■rally mild winter — “generally mild” being a term meaning “oe* casicnally mean." But .they didn’t Jeroma Nemias said today. Ntamias, chief of toe Weather Bureau’s extended forecasts section, said the westerMffll took to meandering about 10 days ago in great north-south loops. As a result, cold adr from Alaska and Canada has broken through to trigger an eiarly onset of winter. This is in conthast to last winter when toe bad weatoer held off generally until toe midFebruary to mid-March period.

Welsh Victory Nothing New In State Politics By BOYD GILL United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — When Matthew E. Welsh successfully battled a traditional Republican presidentiatl sweep, it marked toe ■third time in 20 years toait a Democnat was elected governor while lhe Hoosier electoral votes went to the GOP nominee. Welsh, 45, (takes office Jan. 9 after two terms of Republican rule come to an end. He was elected by 23,000 votes despite toe fact Vice President Richard M. Nixon carried Indiana by more than 250,000. But that was nothing new in Indiana. Although no Democratic presidential nominee has carried ■this state since Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936, (three times since , then a Democratic governor was elected. The other times were in 1940 and 1948, and toe Democrat was Henry F. Schricker bath times. Welsh is a personable politician, and despite his youth he already ■has 20 years of public service behind him. He was elected to the : House of (toe Indiana Legislature ■ in 1941 and re-elected in 1943. Upon his return from .the war, Welsh became U.S. district attorney for southern Indiana. He was elected a state senator in 1954. During two terms which came to am end when he resigned to run for governor, Welsh was minority leader in the 1957 and i 1959 sessions of the Senate. Welsh waged his campaign on two main changes against the two preceding GOP state administrations—a series of Hoosier highway scandals in toe administration of former Gov. George N. Craig which resulted in 10 persons, mostly ex - officials of toe state highway department, being convicted on criminal charges, and changes that Gov. Harold W. Handley’s administration kept Indiana Lagging far behind most states in toe. interstate highway prognam. No Military Value In A-Bomb Pictures ♦ WASHINGTON (UPI) — At 8:14 a.m. on Aug. 6, 1945, a Jone American 829, toe “Enola ) Gav,” . dropped qn • Hiroshima, Japan, a single black bomb 120 inches long, 28 inches in diameter, weighing 9,000 pounds. It was nicknamed “Little Boy.” It killed 70,000 Japanese and maimed 70,000 others. For the nexit 15 years the world did not know what that first atomic bomb dropped in war looked like — the bomb that hastened toe end of World War II and opened a new era of hope and horror. Model T Types But now ithe Hiroshima, bomb and toe different “Fat Mam” bomb that killed 36,000 persons in Nagasaki three days later are “Model T” types compared to toe later nuclear death weapons. So, Tuesday— ithe eve of toe 19th (anniversary of toe sneak Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor —the Defense Department and Atomic Energy Commission, with reluctant State Department agreement, released the first photographs of toe type of bombs dropped on Japan. The pictures disclosed that the awesome weapons were not elaborate const ructions from the pages of science fiction. Rather, they looked much like ordinary fiawtailed bombs. « The . statistics revealed that modem American nuclear missile warheads weigh only one-fifith as much but release 130 (times toe explosive power of the HiroshimaNagasaki bombs. No Military Value Officials said toe photos of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs had been kept secret for toe past 15 years because of fears of possib 1 e diplomatic repercussions, particularly in Japan, now a U.S. ally.

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I fIES p 11 Hr * ■ BL ' Mr z s K* * BKbml -/W » ■ ■ km n SUCCESSOR MEETS PREDECESSOR—President Eisenhower greets President-elect Kennedy at the White House. ~ JI.;

Fear Reds Perfect Deadlier Weapons

By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst On Sept. 22, 1949, sensitive U.S. devices testing toe earth’s atmosphere picked up information which American scientists had known was inevitable sooner or later. Russia had exploded its first atomic bomb. It ended the United States monopoly on the weapon and catapulted toe world into a terrifying era where friend and potential foe each held in his hands a weapon of total destruction. There were other important On Aug. 12. 1953, the Soviets exploded their first hydrogen weapon. On Aug. 26, 1957, Moscow Radio ■announced ithe successful test of an intercontinental ballistic missile. Scarcely a month later, on Oct. 4, 1957, the Soviets launched their first successful earth satellite and Western experts admitted the U.S.S.R. had missiles with the power to hit any spat on earth. Three Uses ®f Weapon A weapon may be used offensively, defensively or as a deterrent. The United States, behind on both missiles and satellites, still had its deterrents — toe atomic bomb-carrying potential of its Strategic Air Force and its ring of bases around toe Soviet Union which .made any Soviet city vulnerable. In man’s progress toward destruction, there was another important date. That was Feb. 13, 1960, when France exploded an atomic device in the Sahara. It meant that toe exclusive atomic club now was less exclusive and that its membership could be expected to increase Still more. One new member would be Red China. Sweden announced it would develop its own atomic weapons if world disarmament failed. Switzerland, another traditional neutral, also began looking toward atomic weapons for its defense. 15 Years of Talk These were some of toe fruits of failure of disarmament and atomic control talks which now have dragged on tar 15 years. (Last June, from a room in another monument to main’s

frustrating efforts toward world peace—toe old League of Nations in Geneva—Soviet delegate Valerian A. Zorin led Communist delegates out of the 10-nation disarmament conference. Behind him, French delegate Jutes Moch shouted angry charges of "scandal” and “holliganism.” The conference has not been resumed. This week, in a slightly mere quiet atmosphere, toe United States, Britain and Russia agreed to recess their nuclear test - ban talks until after U.S. Presidentelect John F. Kennedy takes office. A major stumbling block to agreement in toe two- year -old talks had been Russia’s refusal to agree to controls to prevent cheating on hard-todetect underground nuclear tests. The West fears toe Soviets have used an informal moratorium on the teats to perfect their own weapons at toe West’s expense. American Exports Scored Major Gain WASHINGTON (UPI) -* Commerce Secretary Frederick H. Mueller reported today that American exports scared a major gain this year, helping to ease the drain on American dollars and. gold. He held out hope that further increases would be possible in 1961 even without some of toe forces which fueled the 1960 export boom. For toe long iron. Mueller declared “we must raise our export trade by at least *3 billion a year.” To do this, he urged the 95 per cent of American manufacturers who sell only in this country to gat into foreign markets. "There is a basic receptivity

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for American goods abroad,” Mueller said. "The sales climate is better now than it has been for many years.” . If you doodle dollar signs, it indicates you are money-conscious, Helen King claims in her book, “Doodles and What They Mean.’* The Allergy Foundation of America predicts that advances in the treatment of asthma and hay fever may be expected to follow current research.

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