Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 90, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1963 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Sweet Treat Printed Pattern ' **✓ / /•t. •* */.* *\*n /• •/ • \ ll* J • • •• • I f"' I I I / SIZES H /— S-10-12 M—l4—l6 9051 L—lß—2o Sweetheart neck and eyelet frost-ing—dress-up touches for a kitch-en-handy apron! Make several versions in gay polka dots, plaids, solids. Printed Pattern 9051: Misses’ Sizes Small <10,12>; Medium (14, 16i; Large <lB, 20). Medium 2'4 yards 35-inch. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainlv Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. FREE OFFER! Coupon in Spring Pattern Catalog for one pattern free — anyone you choose from 300 design ideas. Send 50c now for Catalog. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.

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Six College Students Hike Through Decatur

Six students of Western Ohio, a Celina-based community college, were resting quietly and cooling off sore “tootsies” today, after a 54-mile hike which took them through Decatur Tuesday afternoon. The six young men left Celina at 5:30 am. Monday, and trudged to Fort Wayne, a "jaunt" of some 54 miles. Making the hike were: David Klingshirm, 24. Burgettsville. O.; Richard Stein. 21. Fort Recovery, O.: Bob Schroer, 18, St. Mary’s O.; Dennis Ream. 18; Greenvillle, O.: Michael Folkerth. 19, Greenville; and Dewey Goidenetz, 19, St. Mary's. Leaving Celina at 5:30 a.m., they were in Rockford at J:3O am. and Willshire at 12:10 p.m. They arrived in Decatur at 3:20 p.m. stopped for soft drinks at a local tavern, and were on their way again. Ends at 9:20 At 9:20 o’clock Monday night, they arrived at the city limits of

Security Leak In Britain Is Probed

LONDON (UPD—Prime Minister Harold Macmillan took a personal hand today in the investigation of a security leak which became the theme of riotous i weekend ban - the - bomb demonstrations Macmillan returned to London from an Easter holiday in the country and immediately conferred for 65 minutes with Home. Secretary Henry Brooke. Brooke gave the prime minis-. ter a full report on government 1 inquiries into the leakage of the secret data on Britain’s preparations to cope with a nuclear war, contained in pamphlets distributed to the peace marchers. Security units were reported preparing a series of raids throughout the country to track down a group called “Spies for Peace.” The group printed the pamphlets listing 12 underground regional seats of government pur-, portedly planned for use in case I of nuclear attack. Some of the ban-the-bomb | State Traffic Toll Nearing 380 Mark By United Press International A Gary man was killed in a spectacular traffic crash early today, raising Indiana’s 1963 toll to at least 295 compared with 268 ( this time last year. Frank Estrada. 38, was killed when his car hit another auto in Gary’s downtown area, then careened out of control and smashed into a car-wash garage, imbedding itself in a wall. Daniel Valdivia, 33, Gary, who was riding with Estrada, was hospitalized in critical condition. It took firemen 20 minutes to free the two men from the wrecki age. A Terre Haute man was killed in a car-truck collision near his hometown Monday night. Authorities said Russell Roberts, 40, was killed when his car collided with a tank truck carrying inflammable fluid. There was nc fire. Rodney Fussnecker, 11, Aurora, was killed earlier when an autc wrecker in which he was riding overturned near Aurora as the driver, Stanley Walston, 16, Aurora, swerved to miss a car. Joe Young, 60, Martinsville, was killed Monday when struck by a car while walking along an Indi-

■ i .. j.i-. htbcac. , Jt~ -tJ Mmyuf-ig-r.-.T.-mv»y>y» flk 'll t ‘<>, ;> . ** W Bhi fl fl Ji; 'jfllL'CiW** •Jm A £S* ff F WMiK x‘ . V « * \ K K’- ' ■ / OWI ■ 0 Wfe ■ ' U afe />■ Jf <* >' fli * * v ’ " IMPyw aWIWMIk jMEitEaia...ggr gs - ift II Mffi> firMgWMF - -SSm ADMITTED KILLINGS—Roger Foster, center, a 17-year-old student from Griffin, Ga., admitted he killed the Captain, Doug Trevor, and his son, Edward, of the fishing boat “Dream Girl.” He is held by Sheriff Henry Haskin*, right, and FBI agent, left, as Coast Guard cutter which intercepted him near Cuba docked at Key West, Fla.

Fort Wayne quite tired and weary, but happy — happy the hike was over. M While in Decatur, one of the young men explained “we just wanted to see if we could do it.” One of the driving forces behind their successful hike was a bet they had made with their resident director at Western Ohio. The director had said he would purchase for them th: sweatshirts they were wearing, if they made the entire trip. • •« Carry Foot Powder All carried packs on their backs and canteens of water. At each stopping point on the trip they would change socks, after powdering their feet with foot powder they were carrying. Three were wearing tennis shoes the othr three regular shoes. The consensous of opinion was, however, that tennis shoes were the best type for such a hike. — . Each had the same bit of advice to and others contemi lating a 50mile mike — “don't do it.”

marchers Monday sang “I’ve got a secret, a lovely official secret” to the tune of the old Scottish song, “I. Love a Lassie." Others shouted the location of one supposedly secret command post in Berkshire, named it on banners and had the location painted on jackets. _- Although the majority of the estimated 35,000 marchers were orderly, there were numerous clashes between police and an element of jeering “beatniks.” Police arrested 72 persons, including 6 wpmen. Two policemen and two civilias were reported injured. The demonstrations wound up with a rally of more than 70,000 persons at Hyde Park Corner, climaxing the annual four-day peace, march from a nuclear weapons research center at Aldermaston. About 16,000 marchers entered London at the end of the march Monday. ana 37 bypass at MartinsvilleThe car driver, Delbert L. Hickey, 22, Martinsville, was not held. Fred Nedoff, 42,, chief of the housekeeping division at the Marion Veterans Administration Hospital, was killed in a head-on collision of two cars in Indiana 37 near Fort Wayne Monday. Police said Miss Dorothy Schliesser, 18, Mark Center, Ohio, tried to pass a I tractor and collided with Nedoff. Nedoff’s two daughters, Nanette and Natalie, were injured critically. Their father was taking them to Berwick, Pa., where their mother lives, after they spent the Easter vacation with him at Marion. Police also reported the death Saturday of Janet Brown, 58, R.R. 6, Shelbyville, from injuries in a two-car crash April 10 on Indiana 44 in Rush County. Two Autos Damaged In Accident Monday Two cars were damaged in an accident at the intersection of Adams and Eleventh streets Monday afternoon. Jerry Lynn Davis, 18, 922 N. Eleventh St., was westbound on Adams street and as he attempted to turn left onto Eleventh, his auto was struck in the rear by a car operated by Jerry L. Murray, 22, 421 Madison St. Damages were estimated by the city police at $175 to the Davis car and $125 to the Murray auto.

THE DECATUR

■■ • I tr® .. • i ■ ... / .. ■ : 1 ... . g" OH MY ACHIN’ TOOTSIES— David Klingshirm and Dennis Ream rest their blisters in a Decatur tavern before continuing their 54-mile hike to Fort Wayne Monday. Six Western Ohio students started from Celina at 5:30 a."m. and arrived in Fort Wayne at 9:20 p. m. In keeping with President Kennedy s physical fitness program (and a bet they had made) all six completed the hike. (Photo oy Mac Lean) ~7| * ■jw’l/ ”< A .Jt HIKERS STOP IN DECATUR— Six Western Ohio students pause in downtown Decatur at 3:20 p. m. Monday, enroute to Fort Wayne. The six students of the Celina community college, hiked from Celina to Fort Wayne Monday, a 54-mile trip. Shown in front, left to right, are David Klingshirm, 24; Richard Stein, 21; and Bob Schroer, 18. In rear, Dennis Ream, 18; Michael Folkerth, 19; and Dewey Goidenetz, 19.’ P. S.—They made it!—(Photo by Mac Lean).

Woman Editor To Be Program Head By HORTENSE MYERS United Press Internationa INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—A verbal arrow shot into the air by a speaker at an Indiana High School Press Association convention years ago ignited a career which has led to woman’s editor of one of state’s best known newspapers. Mrs. Virginia Hill, woman's editor of the Indianapolis Times, recalled that as a Shelbyville High School student she attended one of the IHSPA meetings. She was so influenced by a speaker, Frances Eward, now of Richmond, but then a journalism teac er at Greensburg, that she decided whe wanted a career in jouralism. “She made a tremendous impression,” Mr.s Hill explained. “There was another speaker there too who made a big impression and helped me decide on journalism. I believe it was Evelyn Seward of Columbus.” Miss Frederick Speaker Indirectly, Mrs. Hill is now repaying that debt by serving as chairman for a program Friday featuring another influential news

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speaker—Pauline Frederick, nationally known television and radio news commentator. Miss Frederick, United Nations correspondent for NBC, will speak at a banquet in Indianapolis sponsored by alumnae of Theta Sigma Phi, journalism fraternity for women. She was -the only new addition this year to the Gallup Poll’s list of “20 most admired women” in the wrold, a list which includes among others Jacqueline Kennedy and Queen Elizabeth. Mrs. Hill, daughter of a dairy farmer, studied journalism at Franklin College and finally got started on her chosen career with her hometown Shelbyville newspapers. “We didn’t have a separate woman’s page and I covered all kinds of news. I remember going to cover the Jeffersonville flood in 1936 and getting an extra $5 for it. I think I was working for sls a week then,” she said. Read Entire Newspaper Mrs, Hill believes' that more ' and more women try to be wellinformed and therefore read the entire newspaper, not just the section labeled “women’s department.” “Some people used to think a woman’s page should be nothing I but sweetness and light,” she commented. “But now domestic

problems, social welfare, and other subjects are considered a part of the woman's pages ” Mrs. Hill is president of the board of the Children’s Bureau of Indianapolis and has an inside look at many social welfare problems She also served recently as director for a trip to Hawaii sponsored by the Times. “The first thing that went wrong happened to me,” she laughed. "We got to Los Angeles and found out some luggage was missingmine.” Workers Added To G.E. Second Shift Between 20 and 25 workers have Been added to the second shift at the Decatur General Electric plant, George W. Auer, plant manager, stated this morning. This absorbs all of the male employes who have been laid off, and includes some new employes, he said. In addition, t h e local General Electric plant worked the Saturday before Easter, and will work again this week, adding a large amount of ready cash to the city's economy. Between 700-800 employes work at the local plant. Gilpin Ornmental Iron and several other local plants are also i adding workers at the present time.

Cuban Exiles Are Scored By Administration WASHINGTON (UPD — The Kennedy administration cracked down today on what it called Cuban exile efforts to drag the United States into war over Cuba. In an unusually harsh statement, the State Department accused Dr. Jose Miro Cardona, president of the Cuban Revolutionary Council, of “gross distortion of recent history.” i It said Miro was demanding commitments that "almost certainly" would bring war, and the United States did not intend to put its foreign policy at the mercy of foreign refugees. Charges Promises Broken The statement was issued Monday night in reply to reports from Miami that Miro had accused President Kennedy of breaking promises for an invasion of Cuba and of adopting an attitude of “peaceful coexistence” with the Fidel Castro regime. Sources in Miami said the charges were made in a 23-page document outlining what Miro claims were his dealings with Kennedy as chief spokesman for the Cuban exile groups in this, country. _ The document, according to sources on the Revolutionary Council, charges that on April 20, 1961 — the day the Bay of Pigs invasion failed — Kennedy personally “formalized” a pact calling for a new invasion. "In that pact, the Cubans were assured of a place in the vanguard of the armed attack and their leaders were assured of participation in the preparation and supervision of those plans,” the document said. Calls It “Gross Distortion" James Greenfield, deputy assistant secretary of state for public affairs issued a statement terming this "a gross distortion.” He said the department had memoranda of Kennedy-Miro conversations to prove it. In a counter-charge the U.S. statement said that Miro had demanded “at least SSO million to permit exile leaders to recruit an army and wage a war-’’ The unforeseeable consequences of such action, it said, “would almost certainly have to be borne ultimately by U.S. armed forces, or would engage the United States now to wage a war.” Youth Confesses To Setting Fatal Fire PORTLAND, Ind. (UPD — Authorities said today a small boy has confessed setting a fire in which an invalid young woman was killed last week. , They said the boy, of pre-school age, was taken into custody by juvenile authorities Monday night and told enough that they are certain he touched off the blaze in which Miss mary Jane Scott, 22, was killed last Thursday night. Authorities had determined previously that the fire was set deliberately. They speculated it was started by throwing kerosene on the kitchen floor. The boy has a background at playing with matches, police said, and lived in the neighborhood of the Scott home. They also said the boy was suspected of setting at least one other fire. Miss Scott, who lived with her ■ widowed mother, was alone at the i time. She was found dead by fire- ' men sitting in a chair by a window. ■ • Authorities said the boy would i remain in custody pending disposition of the case.

TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1963

After years of research and expenditures Fairway is now able to add to an already tremendous menu this Continental Cuisine: CHICKEN ALOHAORIENTAL RICE The bridal dish of Hawaii. Legend has it that the dish was served by the Hawaiian bride on her wedding night. A boneless breast of broiled Chicken, with a piquant sauce, garnished with fresh coconut, shaved almonds, and chunk pineapple. BEEF BERGUNDY, BUTTERED PARSLEY NOODLES A specialty for many years of the French Flag Ship, the He de France. A subtle blend of prime beef, onions, mushrooms, a touch of garlic, all simmered in rich Burgundy wine. BEEF STROGANOFF, BUTTERED RICE This classic dish was created for Count Alexis Stroganoff by a famous Parisian chef. A delightful combination of choice beef strips, gently braised, then simmered with beef stock, tomatoes and seasonings—at the last moment sour cream is added to the sauce. SHRIMP CREOLE—PARSLEYED RICE Like a breath of the bayou. A delightful combination of tomato sauce, celery, green peppers, onions and selected Gulf Shrimp served on a bed of parsleyed rice. e HUNGARIAN BEEF GOULASH, EGG BARLEYS The great chuck wagon dish of Hungary. A hearty combination of beef chunks with onions, tomatoes, a blend of seasonings, and the world famous rose paprika combine to make this robust dish. The Egg Barleys make it authentic. SHRIMP IN CHEDDAR SAUCE, BUTTERED RICE Fresh Gulf Shrimp in an aged cheddar cheese sauce. Flavored gently with dry white wine . . . a new dish . . . created especially for the Continental Cuisine. YANKEE POT ROAST, BUTTERED NOODLES Tender slices of choice pot roast in a rich Van Dyke gravy garnished with garden peas and carrots. A generous portion of buttered noodles is included. IMPERIAL CHOW-MEIN, HONG KONG RICE NOODLES A strange and wonderful dish from the heart of China. An exotic’' blend of beef, Chinese mushrooms, water chestnuts, and seasonings. The rice noodles are imported from Hong Kong and are delicious. LOBSTER NEWBURG, PARSLEYED RICE Nova Scotia Lobster meat saut'ed gently in butter, cream, and Pedro Domecq Sherry—a New England classic. BREAST OF SLICED ROAST TURKEY, DRESSING Slices of Roast Turkey are combined with rich turkey giblet gravy. A generous portion of herb dressing is included. As Always, Served to You at Popular Prices. FAIRWAY - RESTAURANT