Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 32, Decatur, Adams County, 7 February 1963 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Russians Step Up Propaganda Drive

MOSCOW (UPD — The Russians pushed a propaganda campaign today against the spread of Western nuclear weapons, particularly to World War II enemies Germany and Japan. 3-1961 Cadillac Coupe DeVilles All with full power, 1 with air conditioning. Zintsmaster Motors

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' 1 Expressed fears that the new i ■ Franco-German treaty may open , f the way for nuclear arms for ' ■ West Germany inspired tough So- ; ; viet protests against the pact this , week. Similar worries appeared the r basis for the Kremlin’s objection • to U.S. nuclear-powered subma- 1 rines calling at Japanese ports. ' A Soviet statement delivered in Tokyo warned that Russia would take appropriate “defensive meas- < ures” against military prepara- i tions near its frontiers. 1 ( Mention Canadian Crisis , The official news agency Tass . directed some of its propaganda fire at the Canadian crisis caused ' by the nuclear issue. Tass claimed t the U.S. government worked for , the fall of Prime Minister John , Diefenbaker’s government in Ot-

tawa because of American desires to have Canadian armed forces equipped with nuclear weapons. One of the most persistent fears expressed by Russia since World War II has been the rebirth of German militarism that has sent armies deep into Soviet territory twice in this century. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev repeatedly has complained that NATO military preparations encourage the West Germans to seek revenge for their defeats. Soviet notes to Bonn and Pfifis Tuesday stressed the military aspects of the historic FrancoGerman treaty signed Jan. 22. Excludes Nuclear Arms While the treaty excludes nuclear arms cooperation, and West Germany is forbidden by NATO agreements to develop nuclear weapons, the Soviet notes warned Bonn against attempts to acquire such arms. The Soviet note delivered in Tokyo Wednesday claimed that the proposed visits of U.S. submarines would be a preparatory step to introducing nuclear wea-

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

i pons into Japan. It said the visits ■ would lead to further expansion of military cooperation between Japan and the United States. i I The Japanese prime minister ! reaffirmed to his parliament that : he will allow U.S. nuclear-powered subs to call only if they are not carrying Polaris missiles. Josephine Stucky Is Taken By Death Mrs. Josephine Stucky, 93, ol Geneva, died Wednesday at the Clinic hospital in Bluffton. Surviving are one brother, Joseph Luginbill of Fort Wayne, two sisters, Mrs. Ellen Barker of Berne, and Mrs. Rufus Schindler of Geneva; four grandchildren, 10 greatgrandchildren and one great-great-grandchild. , Funeral rites will be held at 2 p. m. Saturday at the Hardy & Hardy funeral home in Geneva, with burial in Gravel Hill cemetery near Bryant. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 ■ p. m. today.

: E. U. B. Church Men I Plan Ladies Night l Rev. Ervin E. Petznik will pre- ; sent “The Challenge of Marriage” at the Decatur E. U. B. church men’s club annual “Wives and Sweethearts Night,” Tuesday, February 12, it was announced this morning by Dave Wynn, president of the men’s club. ! The affair will be held at the s local Youth and Community Cen- • ter Tuesday night, beginning at l 6:30 o’clock. Reservations for the ■ “Wives and Sweethearts Night” . must be made no later than Sun- • day, Wynn said. > Tickets may be purchased from ■ Wynn or Norman Koons and Tom Cole, also officers in the men’s , club. Presently a counselor at the Fort Wayne marriage counseling ’ and educational center, Rev. Petz- . nik is a dynamic speaker, Wynn said today, and his talk promises to be quite interesting. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba,

Canada, in 1917, Rev. Petznik received a B. A. degree from the University of Manitoba in 1943, and he also attended Evangelical Theological Seminary at Naperville, 111., where he received his B. D. degree in 1946. He served as pastor of the Evangelical United Brethren church in Kendallville for seven years, beginning in 1945, and was assigned to the First E. U. B. church in Fort Wayne in August of 1952, where he served 10 years. He attended a United Nations seminar in December, 1953. Married and the father of four children. Rev. Petznik toured Europe in the summer of 1954, with the Sherwood Eddy seminar, visiting important places in England, France, Germany, Yugoslavia, Italy and Switzerland. He is the president of the board of directors of the adult psychiatrci center of Northeastern Indiana, is a Red Cross director, a membar of the board of the United Chest council, and vice president of the delegate body of the United Chest council.

M J V Rev. Ervin E. Petznik

Faith In God Imperative In Daily Lives WASHINGTON (UPD — President Kennedy said today that only faith in God can bring Americans safely through the present era of “immense perils.” —— —— Speaking at the annual presidential prayer breakfast sponsored by International Christian Leadership. Kennedy said he is daily made aware in facing the problems of the presidency of the “limits of mere human endeavor.” “We cannot depend solely on our military power, our economic strength or our intellectual abilities to see us safely through,” he said. “We need faith the kind of faith that has guided this nation through 175 years.” The President said all men and women in public or private life who are striving to “build the future” must know the truth of the Biblical admonition: “Except the Lord build the house they labor in vain who build it.” International Christian Leadership is a layman’s organization which enrolls many men in public life. Today’s presidential prayer breakfast was tied in by television to similar governors breakfasts in most state capitals. Attending the breakfast in the Mayflower Hotel here were Chief Justice Earl Warren and other members of the Supreme Court, most of the members of President Kennedy’s Cabinet, Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass., and some 200 other congressmen. Evangelist Billy Graham urged the President “to lead this nation back to the God of our fathers.” Graham, in a prepared statement, predicted the United States would face crises which would make the recent Cuban affair “pale into insignificance.” Such a crisis will test “the moral and spiritual toughness of this nation as it has not been tested since the Civil War,” he said. To face the coming events, Graham said the nation and its leaders should “rededicate ourselves to the moral and spiritual principles that have undergirded this nation from the beginning. I

i'’~' ■- £< E' V' n| * ' ■kraw .w E&' 9te win *'~ Whfc < ATTENDS COMEDY—Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy leaves a Broadway theater after attending a hit comedy in New York City with her sister, Lee, center, and brother-in-law, Stanislaus RadaiwilL

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1963

Controversial Issue Aired At Hearing INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Backers and opponents of the “Liberty Amendment” pending in the Indiana Legislature threshed out the pros and cons of the controversial issue Wednesday night at a public hearing in the Statehouse. Organizations and individuals for and against the movement to outlaw -federal income taxes for individuals and take the federal government out of business spoke at the hearing. Applause, jeers and boos freI quently marked the statements of witnesses until the chairman clamped down on such outbursts. Willis Stone, chairman of the Committee for Economic Freedom, urged the legislature to pass resolutions putting Indiana on record as favoring the amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Dallas Sells, president of the Indiana AFL-CIO, said the amendment would ruin the nation’s space program and place control of space in the hands of Communists. Dr. James L. Doenges, Anderson, state chairman for the CEF, said the amendment would “return to Indiana workers the products of their labor,” possibly $1 billion a year. Mrs. Wayne Weber, president of the Indiana League of Women Voters, opposed the amendment as an “arbitrary limitation on the taxing powers of Congress.” George Feldman, Evansville businessman who said he represented no organization but expressed his own philosophy, said in opposition to the amendment that “our system of government has evolved to its present form not through carelessness or neglect, not by conspiracy or sleight-of-hand, but through the wishes of a dominant majority of Americans.” challenge you here to lead this nation back to the God of our fa- . thers.” After speaking to the men’s group, Kennedy went across the i hotel hall to the congressional wive’s prayer breakfast. He told a gathering of hun- ; dreds of women that he thought • the breakfasts “serve a most useful cause in uniting ourselves. . . i in which we look not to ourselves : but above.”