Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 168, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1956 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Goodyear Workers Win New Contract DAYTON. OHo (UP)Workers nt 10 Goodyear tire and Rubber Co. plants. including those nt
FURNITURE Smoothly Sanded and Ready To Stain or Paint Big Storage Chest 45x30x16... 23.50 Four Drawer Chest 36 x 30 x 16 20.95 Utility Chest 30x 15 x 10 9.95 Five Drawer Chest 36x21x12 13.95 Eight Drawer Chest 33 x 33x13 22.50 Eight Drawer Dresser 36 x 42 x 15 .... 29.50 Nite Stand With Shelf 6.95 Student Desk 19.95 Twin Bookcase Headboard 12.95 Full Size Bookcase Headboard 16.50 Large Dressing Table ...... 9.95 Utility or Book Rack 4.50 W' . eW r»,. •„ J.’ ' ’ 1 ■ tS?* '* z'v. » . • /- zy rj i>74 J S- •» _ — i-« FJt
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„ ±_ Sparkling Chromsteel Dinette has wonderful plastic top in choice of colors in wood-grains or decorator patterns ... double tube Chromsteel legs are highly resistant to scuf- ' sing and dents . - . genuine brass accents o;i leg ferrules, plastic feet. ' You’ll enjoy the convenience of the extension top that expands from 36”x48” to 36”x60”
Come in soon to see this smartly styled dinette, and many others at ... * W Y__
Muncie.. won a new wage pact Tuesday providing for a 6.2 cents hourly wake increase. The agreement is similar to one reached last week with the B.F. .Goodrich Co. ...
Cool, Dry Weather Surprise In State Temperatures To Be Below Normal By UNITED PRESS — • Cool dry weather washed Indiana from head to foot today and planned to stick around the rest of the week. Temperatures front Thursday through next Monday wllj average 6 to 8 degrees below normal highs of 89 to 92 and normal lows o? 63 to 67. • The 5 day outlook issued by the weather bureau also indicated rainfall will be slight, averaging from .15 to-SO of an Inch as scattered showers Thursday or Friday. Movement of the cool front over the central and south portions caught the weatherman by surprise. On Tuesday, he forecast three warm damp days in a row with temperatures between S 3 and 89. and scattered rain throughout the period. But Tuesday highs were held down in the 70s. Prospects for today were for highs ranging from 75 north and central to 81 downstate and for Thursday tops of. 78 to 80. The outlook indicated Thursday will be cool and Friday and Saturday "slightly warmer." Lows tonight will range from 58 to 65. Lows this morning reached far down into the 50s. The lowest of the 5-city daily check points was South Bends 54. Lafayette had 55. Fort M ayne 57 and Indianapolis 60. Tuesday high marks ranged from Lafayette’s 69 to Indianapolis’ 76. Infant Is Killed „ In Freak Accident —N»W ORLEANS (UP) A babv left on the floor for a nap was hedged about with pillows for safety but nevertheless was killed by a freak accident Police said the child. 13-month-old Carolyn TrjadWay," of Dallas, Tex., inched ovdr the pillows just far enough to touch a re di tor and floor lamp al the same time and \*as electrocuted. Polich said the lamp arrently was defective. J/The parents, Mr. and Mrs. M’HHam TreadWify Jr wyrajHsHing in ite of f Heads- in New Orleans. - . .. .... - ■ ti Trade In a Good Town — Decatur J
with 12” self-storing leaf . . . table easily ’ seats six or more. ~■ .—- Stunning color combinations can be achieved ' in chair upholstery to match, harmonize or contrast with table top. The washable vinyl plastic upholstwy Ofeans easily. Matching Chromsteel chair 'legs also have genuine brass ferrules and plastic glider feet.
TUB DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA
JMfr fW J i * ) U’ I*' 1 *' It t SSBS3 EVERYBODY LOOKS happy in tills ceremony in Detroit, as former Tigers owner Spike Briggs hands the Tiger to one of the new owners, Fred Knorr. Another of the buying syndicate, John EL Fetzer, looks on. Knorr and Fetzer are Michigan radio executive* Also In the syndicate is Bing’ Crosby, a part owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National league, f International Soundphdto)
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION • W. L. Pct. G.B. Denver 58 36 .617 Minneapolis —4B 42 .533 8"' Indianapolis —46 42 .523 9 Omaha J— 48 47 .505. St. Paul 43 44 .494 11% Louisville 42 48 .467 14 Wichita 40 51 .440 16% Charleston 39 54 .419 18% TUESDAY’S RESULTS Minneapolis 2, St. Paul 1. Only game scheduled. Braves Infielder Fined By Manager MILWAUKEE (UPi- Milwaukee second baseman Danny O’Connell was’ $25 pooror today because he failed to run out and infield grounder against the Pittsburgh. Pirates Mpuday night. Manager Fred Haney fined OX’ouneir because the infielder stoppeid after running about 65 feet to first base on whgt ’rdutlua- out. As . it. vtnunred out, first ’ baseman '■ pale Lppg jussJeM the’ ball antUpitcltes Kline had to make the putout .. | '(
Decatur To Receive $2,405 Distribution Quarterly Share Os Taxes Onße ver ages VN&MkX APOUS A V V) gks. for $853,810.31 were prepared today for Indiana cftles and towns in a quarterly allocation of state alcoholic beverage gallonage taxes. The distribution was nearly SIOO,000 higher than that of the last previous quarterly distribution in April when $754,389 w’as handed out. . . Checks were expected to be in th mail by the first of next week. —4nehrded in the checks was one for Terre Haute for $21,241.15. But state auditor Curtis Rardin said Tuesday that check would be held up and subjected to a SIO,OOO deduction of thpcityfailed to show intention, of repaying a $20,000 loan to a state planning fund. Other checks included: Decatur, s2,4os;‘Bluffton, $2,0.09, Auburn, $1,944; Columbia City, $1,569; Fort Wayne, $44,195; Gar, ret, $1,419; Hartford City, $2,399; Huntington, ftSST; KendaWviile. $2,024; Bum , » • 4 McKEON ORDER ((onUuufd from Paar Oae) etied raptly from the spectators’ stand in the base school auditorium. pries- . ' Berman’s statement; Maj. Charles B. Sevier, the prosecutor, told the court of officers the government’s case would be presented by a reconstruction of events the day the sergeant orde red 74 members of platoon 71 to get out of bad and march into the waters of Ribbon Creek. —News of a defense effort la find out whether night marches were extraordinary touched off a flood of calls to Parris Island in support of McKeon. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It-brings a 1 m X tSil 4SI A ’ > 7 ' wM ' 7 J# 1-- X4&JAHR MRS. BEATRICE WEINBERGER, Westbury, Long Island, N. Y, t is shown in Brooklyn felony court after, charging Mrs. Shirley Ginsberg with giving false information in the kidnaping of month-old Peter Weinberger. Mrs. Ginsberg, a former mental patient, is alleged to have informed the Weinbergers that they could find the baby at address of the First Methodist church in Stamford, Conn. Behind Mrs. Weinberger is Detective John Farley. fZntemaffOHdfZ
Medical Supplies I Rushed To Chicago Extra Equipment To Aid In Polio Fight CHICAGO (UP) — Medical authorities today battled the city’s mounting polio outbreak with an additional 14,126 hypodermic syringes and needles. The extra equipment was rushed to the Chicago board of health by the National Foundation for Intantile Paralysis hnd the Illinois department of health to bolster a dwindling supply at free inoculation centers. Dr. Horman N. Bundesen, president of the board of health, reported 25 new polio- cases in a 24-hour period to raise the year's total to 194. Four persons have died from the disease this year compared with two deaths last year when 35 cases occurred during the same period. Bundesen said more than 2,800 expectant mothers and children ranging in age up to 19 years old
have streamed into the inoculation centers since they were opened. received free Salk polio vaccine because they were unable to afford doctors. Most of the new cases continued to appear on the city’s West Side where the early polio upsurge has been concentrated. . - The Chicago area has been hit with the highest polio- rate in the nation yci ording. ..Bistaw. T for the Polio Foundation. The foundation reported Eleanor E. McGuire, director of nursing services, was on her way from New York to discuss the possible need of more nurses to care for
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I. ...L..-, ;..j ON HER TOOTH birthday, Mra. Katherine Zwlck reads greetings from President Eisenhower at home of her niece, Mrs. John Brown, in Albany, N. Y. Part of her caka, which carries 100 candles, can be seen. CDiternationaD paralyzed polio victims. The foundation provides free care for polio patients in need of it. Bundesen sr.id nurses also were got to have more nurses to aid in the free vaccination program," he said. Trade in a Good Town — Decatut
WEDNESDAY. JULY 18, 1956
New Scoreboard At Worth man Field Is Formally Presented The new scoreboard was formally presented to Everett Hutker. president of the Decatur school board, by John F. Welch Tuesday night at Worthman field. The ceremony took place between games In the Little League, with a large crowd in attendance. Welch, acting as chairman of the civic group which made the SoncltlatJons. presented a check for $2058 which was the total cost of the board including the cable. Prior to the presentation, most of the members of the committees met at the General Electric company for dinner, which was followed by a discussion of further projects of a similiar nature. It was agreed that Lowell Harper would serve as chairman and Clerk Mayelln would act as vice-chairman for any further projects. » Those who attended the meeting and the later presentation included; Dr. Harry Hebble W. Guy Brown, Carl Baxter. Hugh J. Andrews. D. Burdette, Custer, H. H. Krueckeberg, John F. Welch, Lo- • well Harper. Ferd Klenk, Clark Mayelln, Bob Worthman. D. T, Dorwin and George Auers newly appointed plant manager at (General Electric. Railroad Brakeman Is Fatally Injured GREENCASTLE, Ind. (UP) — k UM»naxd Upder, 31. Lafayette, a Monon Railroad brakeman, died in Putnam county hospital Tuesday night of injuries sustained three hours earlier when he fell beneath the wheels of a railroad car being switched to a lumberyard siding. t
