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PAGE TWENTY-TWO
OHIO GOP SENATORS GREET IKE
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SENATORS George Bender (left) and John Bricker, both Republi
cans, greet President Eisenhower on his arrival in Cleveland during
a campaign swing. Later, in a speech, the Chief Executive angrily
accused the Democrats of spreadng “wicked nonsense” and “political •
bunk” in charging that his administration is for big business and
against the little man of the nation. (International Soundphoto)
SHOOTS GUARDS IN BANK DISPUTE
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SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Charles E. Wilson and his'secretary, Vera
Abbott, tackle a work backlog as the defense chief returns to his
desk at the Pentagon after an absence of several weeks. Wilson
underwent surgery at Walter Reed Hospital, Washington, for a
“benign prostatic condition.” (International Soundphoto)
KOREAN Gls ROOT FOR DODGtU
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BROOKLYN FANS are no more loyal to the Dodgers than there U.S.
soldiers 10,000 miles away in Korea. Near Seoul, they are shown
grouped around a radio listening to the World Series. When the urn- ■
f»:a rails “play bail.” it is their middle of the xngJjL Cln'^rnat^ual)
tUur Advertisers Are Assured Os Results)
4-H'ers Aim for 1956 National Club Congress
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FOR the 35th consecutive year the nation's top 4-H youth are settin
their sishts high to reach their goal and the National 4-H Ch
Congress in Chicago, Nov. 25-29, where they will be honored an<.
rewarded tor outstanding accomplishment.
More than 1300 boys and girls
representing over two million
4-H Club members from 4S states,
Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico
will attend the Congress.Jn addi
tion to an all-expense trip, these
state, sectional and national win
ners will receive other rewards
climaxing several years of dili
gent 4-H project work.
“While the annual value of
products resulting from 4-H
members’ projects amounts to an
estimated JI 15,000,000, this gain
is probably the least of the bene
fits arising from 4-H Club experi
ence,” said Guy L. Noble, direc
tor of the National Committee on
Boys and Girls Club Work.
“The greater and more lasting
benefits are the ptrsolal satis
factions derived from real
achievement such as making
friends, practicing democratic
procedures through organized
4-H Club work, and developing
spiritual values from day-to-day
living with 4-H ideals,” he stated.
Immediate rewards for the Con
gress-bound 4-H’ers will be 212
college scholarships worth $67,-
000; U. S. savings bonds valued
at $11,250; special cash awards
totaling $15,700. Many will be
presented with engraved watches
and other handsome gifts. All
will be entertained at gala break
fasts, luncheons, and dinners.
In the overall National 4-H
Award Programs a total of nearly
$360,000 is expended annually to
recognize boys and girls who
have excelled in "improving fam
ily and community living.”
These award programs are
made possible through the com
bined efforts Qf the Nation*!
Committee on Boys and Girls
EGYPTIAN COMMANDO WOUNDED
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INTERCEPTED BY AN ISRAELI patrol near the desert borne of Israel’s
Premier David Ben-Gurion, an Egyptian “suicide” commando is
treated for wounds at a hospital in Jerusalem. Two of four infiltra
tors were killed and the others wounded in a grim clash near Sdeh
Boker in northern Negev. At the time, Premier Ben-Gurion was in
Tel Aviv attending a cabinet meeting. (International Radicmhoto)
HEMINGWAY VISITS SICK MENTOR
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NOVELIST ERNEST HEMINGWAY, on a visit to Madrid, Spain, has a
bedside talk with his aged and ailing mentor, Pio Nessi Baroja. ’
Among gifts left by Hemingway v, ith his friend was a book carrying
this dedication: “To you, Don Pio who taught us so much when
we were young and wished to be writers." ilnternationaU
THE COVINGTON NEWS
Club Work, the Cooperative^ Ex
tension Service, civic spirited
individuals, ' business firms and
foundations.
Those providing 4-H awards
and support this year are: the
President of the United States, k
Mrs. Charles R. Walgreen, Thos
E. Wilson, Edward Foss Wilson.
Others are the Ford Motor Co.,
Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp..
International Harvester, Stand
ard Brands, Kerr Glass Mfg..
Coats & Clark, Inc., Larro Sure
Fesd Division of General Mills,
Carnation Co.
Simplicity Pattern Co.. West
inghouse Educational Founda
tion, Hercules Powder Co., Arca
dian Products Dept, of Allied
Chemical & Dye Corp., Kelvi
nator Division of American
Motors, American Forest Prod
ucts Industries, Whirlpool-
Seeger Corp., Tractor Group of
Allis-Chalmers, Montgomery
Ward, Eli Lilly & Co., Sears-
Roebuck Foundation, U. S. Rub
ber Co., General Motors, Singer
Sewing Machine Co., Firestone
Tire & Rubber.
American Oil, General Petro
leum, Pan-Am Southern Corp .
Standard Oil Foundation, Stand
ard Oil (Ky.), Standard Oil
(Ohio). Stanolind Foundation.
Utah Oil Refining, Wm. Wrigley
Jr.. Co., Pure Oil Co.. Colgate
Palmolive, Conrad Hilton Hotel,
Elgin National Watch, Massey-
Harris-Ferguson.
Also the Santa Fe, Chicago &
North Western, Chicago Rock
Island & Pacific. Illinois Central
Railroads.
Others are Chicago Board of
Trade, Cities Service Oil Co.
Cudahy Packing Co., Sunbeam
Corp. Armour & Co.
DOENITZ RELEASED FROM PRISON
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GRAND ADM. Karl Doenitz, 65, commander in chief of Germany's
navy and Hitler's successor as fuehrer, is shown with his wife in
Berlin after his release from Spandau Prison. He had served bis
full 10-year term for committing war crimes and planning and start
ing a war of aggression. Doenitz headed the Reich for eight days
until he was arre-’ -d bv Allied troops. (International R.adiophoto)
4<^WASHINGTOH
MARCH OF EVENTS ——
Minton's Supreme Court I Three Faiths Would Be
Successor to be Catholic? Represented on High Bench
Special to Central Press Association *e
TV’ASHINGTON — President Eisenhower may revert to an old
W precedent and name a Roman Catholic to the United States
Supreme Court.
It was reported in usually well-informed circles that the Presi
dent is thinking of selecting a Catholic jurist to fill the vacancy re
sulting from the retirement Oct. 15 of Justice Sherman Minton.
If he does, it will be the first time since 1949
that the nation’s three major faiths have been
represented on the high court. For years prior to
that the court included seven members of ths
Protestant faith, one of the Jewish faith, and a
Roman Catholic.
Frank Murphy of Michigan was the last Cath
olic to serve on the court. It had been anticipated
' that his successor would also be a member of the
same faith, but President Truman instead chose
Tom Clark, his attorney general and a Presbyter
ian, for the post. He also selected J. Howard Mc-
Grath, a Catholic, to succeed Clark in his Cabinet.
Catholics have served with distinction and high
honor on the nation’s top tribunal, two of them
as chief justices. In addition to Murphy, four
other Catholics have served on the court. Th#
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Eisenhower
first was Roger Taney of Maryland, who was named chief justice in
1836 by Andrew Jackson. Taney handed down the famous Dred Scott
decision.
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GROVER CLEVELAND APPOINTED the second Catholic, Ed
ward Douglas White of Louisiana, in 1894. White was named chief
justice in 1910 by William Howard Taft. When White died, he was
succeeded as chief justice by Taft, himself, in 1921.
The third Catholic to be named to the high court was Joseph Mc-
Kenna of California in 1898. William McKinley picked him from his
Cabinet, where he was serving as attorney general.
The fourth of his faith to be selected for this high honor was
Pierce Butler, who was chosen in 1923 by President Warren G.
Harding. When Butler died, President Franklin D. Roosevelt chose
Murphy to succeed him.
Upon Murphy’s death in 1949, the Court was without Catholic
representation for the first time in 55 years. The Jewish faith is
represented on the court by Felix Frankfurter.
* * * •
THE PRESIDENT has a large number of federal jurists from
whom to select a Catholic, if he so desires. Some of them are close
at hand.
Serving in the nation’s capital are five jurists of the Catholic faith.
They include Charles Fahey and . John A. Danaher of the U. S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, and
Matthew McGuire, Edward Tamm and Edward Cur- Other
ran, all federal district judges.
Fahey, a Democrat, is a former United States Cothelic
solicitor general who from 1941 to 1945 represented Jurists
the Justice department many times before the Su- *
preme Court. Danaher is a former United States senator from
Connecticut who was prominent for many years in the P.epublican
party. -
Other Catholic jurists from whom the President could make a se
lection include Edmund Warren Flynn, chief justice of the Rhode
Island supreme court; George Sweeny, chief justice of the U. S.
district court in Massachusetts; and Judge Joseph Smith of the U S.
district court in Connecticut.
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK By R. J. SCOTT
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(Largest Coverage Any Weekly In ine brat . — —
MAKES REPLICA OF CATHEDRAL
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USING ONLY a small pair of scissors, Franz Boehm, 63, of Wiesbaden,
Germany, created this model of the historic Cologne Cathedral in
his home. After spending two years putting it together with pieces
of cardboard. Boehm Is shown putting final touches on his creation.
UP IN THE AIR OVER CHURCH ART
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A CAPTIVE BALLOON Is used by painters seeking to rush work on a
ceiling for a new church in Yvtot, Normandy, which is to be offi
cially opened on Oct. 27. When work on the interior decoration was
found to be lagging, the artists turned to the aeronautic device. One
of them is shown perched atop the balloon, which "'ce t-et in
d meter, while another uses a platform. (i iim, > . ’
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WALTER EQUILS (right), an American from New Kensington, Pa., Ls
one of the three latest captains who have signed on as Suez Canal
pilots. With him are Georgio Murli (left), an Italian, and George
Bratson, a Greek. They are shown at Port Said watching a ship
as it is entering the waterway on the trip south. (International!
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK By R. J. SCOTT
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