Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 216, Decatur, Adams County, 13 September 1956 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Polio Case Total Now 204 In State Lowest Incidence In Any Year Since 1951 INTMANAI'OLIS (UP) — Indi-I « polio case total climbed ‘ to *M las, week with the addition i or 19 ne* ’uses during a sevenday period on off icla I record ot the state board of health. \ llut the 204 was well below the , 3W eases reported tip to the same OH, MY | ACHING BACK Now I You cnn trrt the fast relief you need from nasarius Iwkwhe, headache and muscular aches and pains that often cause restless nijdita and miserable tired-out fcelinK*. When these discomforts come on with overexertion or stress ami strain — you want relief —want it fust! Another disturbance may be mi hl bladder irritation following wrong food and dunk— often setting up a restless uncomfortable feeling. For quick relief set Doan's Pills. They work fast in 3 separate ways: 1. by speedy pain-relieving action to ease tonwn of nagging backache, headaches, muscular achesand pains. 2. by their soothing effect on bladder irritation. 3. by their tnild diuretic action tending to increase output of the li miles of kidney tidies. Find out how quickly this 3-way medicine goes to work. Enjoy a good night’s deep and the same happy relief millions have for over 60 years. Ask for new. large sue and gave money. Get Doan's Pills today I
ll| SATURDAY VS/K’ Si IB Bkß \ Makes 2 Great Factory I M lIW UWswS>-Purchases at Terrific Savings iTo You! 11 Wk _ JMtMBM S 650 TABLES -K 6O AT UNHEARD OF LOW PRICES! VALUES FROM S3O TO SSO Three big beautiful groups to select from—all are Phenomenal Bargains. Mast groups include corner, end. cocktail. -■ lamp, step-end and occasional styles in all the wanted finishes. Some have leather and formica tops. B 1 W. f C^°' ce V if I /x. _ sci I t a as \ 1 CRO " P 2 , I \ J.’;"Ti« wTswi® 3 B l —l 500 CHAIRS I —7 ' / i /77ri r "T < • ,< —> t > TP— 1- w I Q, C-I&r—ffijqgba I ’ n „ I g omp 1 \’ - fL -■ ™ ■ a \ ■''Till 11 $ 9“ 1 SI 00 DOWN Atl three 9 r oup* ’ r « outstanding S ML( ... ... I - values and most include platform rockers, ■ ■ INC» lounge and occasional chairs, some with swivel V—z | ' base—covered with a large selection of plastic and cloth fabrics. k__S -.3 —' 1111 l Many with foam rubber. Come in today while you still have a large group to choose from. A small deposit will hold your selec- . tion for future delivery. 239 N. Second St. Decatur, Ind. Phone 3-3778
(late last year, and lhe lowest for I any year aince 19ul. Nu no*' deaths were added on I the 'official records during the 1 1 week and the count of confirmed , leases reaching the central office lat Indianapolis remained fct 10. I However, at least seven other oolio deaths have been reported officially 1 or unofficially in various countierf: I The 19 cages added last week .compared with 27 added during a corresponding week in 1955. The number of new cases represented a drop from 29 new cases allied in the last preceding week. No new counties were added to the 195« incidence group last week. The list of counties which have I' had at least one polio case this year stands at 46, exactly half of 1 the state's 92 counties. Six new cases were added last week in Lake county, which leads the counties with 23 cases Hated by the health board. Four were added in .Marion county, which is second, with 31 cases so far this year. Two were added In Allen, thirdranking county with 19 cases, and Sonp'H water will clena u|i your feet-—hut they won't clear up ATHLETES FOOT Make thia eaay teat. Get lualanttlrvlua T-4-L at any drua store. Thia powerful fuiiKielde will Hive relief I3i ONK HOI It or your H»c back. Today at Kohue Drue Store.
! one each in. Adams, Grant. Jay, St. Joseph, Steuben and Tipj pecanoe. " BOWLING SCORBS American Legion League Burke Insurance won two from .Mies Recreation, Ashbaucher won ‘*•oßant. Burke Std. with thrte from Gallmeyer. W L Pts. Burke Std. 3 if 4 Burke Ins. 2 1 3 Ashbauchers ...J. 2 13 Mies Recreation 12 1 First State Bank ...x.... 12 1 Gallmeyers 0 3 0 200 scores- 0. Burke. 210-203. H. Strickler. 200-203, Mies 249. Hoffman 20S. Merchant League W L Slicks Tastee Freezes 1 Zintsmaster Motor 5,1 —ao'w»w»o w> W, wwiat ar ow to wwa-waTFrs Krick-Tyndall 4 2 Beguns ;3 3 State Gardens 3 3 Citizens Telephone 2 4 Painter ----- 2 4 Blackwells 1 5 • aid Crown 1 5 200 games—P.- llodle 200, G. Sheehan 210. D. Mies 233. ’ If you uave sometnmg to sell or ■ rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. it brings res mu.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Secretary Benson 1 On Indiana Tour Agriculture Head On Two-Day Tour UNION JMILLS, Ind. (UP) — ’ Agriculture secretary Ezra Taft Benson came'to Indiana today for a tw<>-day tour of a key midi western farm ' state, obviously 1 hoping to help sew up HousierI land for the Republicans il the i November election. Beason was booked to appear, in this small town in LaPorte county, in the heart of the rich muck crop giving area, as first stop in 'a 32-hour trip over, northern Indiana. Benson will speak or appear at Union .Mills, Goshen, a farm near Bremen,■ Lakeville and Lebanon! today,' and spend Friday iu La-1 fayette. home of Purdue Univer-i sity,* one of the midwest's outstanding agricultural research centers. ' j In connection witn Benson’svisit, a Democrat who once held) his job and now seeks a senate! seat issued a prepared statement saying Hoosier farmers will listens to Benson “to discover whether
1 he offers programs or platitudes." Clayde R. Wkkard, who served -as agriculture .secretary in the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration, issued a statement he said was "in connection with the so culled non-political appearance", of Benson at Purdue. "Benson will visit Indiana on his campaign stumping tour directed at convincing farmers . that they cannot have both free- . dom and fair prices — and that . they must choose one or the other," Wickard said. . Benson’s Union Mills speech was a 15-niinute affair, Afterwar” he was due to fly to Goshen for a chicken barbecue rally at the courthouse park at noon. Visits to the “typical Indiana farm" of Robert Birkey near Bremen and a speech at the Lakeville general store were on “ the afternoon program. F~ r~o - hT , South Bend. Benson was to fly I to Lebanon for a dinner and rally. After an overnight stay at Lafayette, Benson planned to remain on the Furdue campus all day addressing 2nd district Re- ♦ publicans at a breakfast rally, j visiting swine research laboratorj ies and addressing a state swine | show audience. | Democrat Want Ada Brin® Results
White Parents Urge Teachers Boycott School Mayor Says Negroes Will Not Remain In City Schools By UNITED PRESS White parents urged teachers today to boycott a Clay, Ky.. school until national guardsmen bivouacked on the grounds to enforce integration are withdrawn. Mayor Herman Z. Clark of Clay said the enrollment of two Negro children would be only "temporary." He said city officials will keep the school segregated after the troops leave. "We went to bed a peaceable, law-abiding community and awakened tpjhid our town looking like a police state in Russia." Clark said regarding the surprise arrival of the troops two days ago. "We don’t want the races mixed at all." he said. “They won’t keep the soldiers here forever and we're going to try to keep the school white if we can." The parents had spontaneously formed another sort of boycott by keeping their children from the school Wednesday after 500 national guardsmen escorted the Negroes to class past a crowd at 400 whites. Until national guardsmen marched into town from nearby Sturgis two nights ago the crowds had prevented the children from reaching the school. Wednesday night some 500 parents signed a petition that teachers join the student boycott. Only two white pupils arrived Wednesday after the Negroes were admitted and they left. At Sturgis, a former scene of racial riots 11 miles away, things returned to normal. Eight Negroes attended classes at the nei’ly integrated high school without incident Wednesday after the soldiers had pulled out. This was their first day without bayonet armed escorts. The once-troubled town pf Clin, ton. Tenn., also settled down to normal school routine with a dozen Negroes attending classes along with nearly 700 white students. All but about 60 of the hundreds of white students who had at first boycotted the Clinton school had reenrolled and attendance officers were investigating the remaining absentees. The school board at Mobile. Ala., got the surprise problem of a socially prominent white woman's request to enroll her Negro “foster child” in a white school. Mrs. Dorothy D. Da Ponte, a wealthy, middle-aged widow, said 12-year-old Carrie Mae Me Cant has beenr educated with whites in European schools and is qualified in every respect for “integration.” The school board, authorized by new Alabama laws to assign Negroes to Negro schools for sociological and psychological reasons, turned the application over to an attorney. The pupil assignment law enacted in 1956 had been considered an effective way to sidestep court-or-dered integration because assignments, on their face, would not be made on purely racial grounds. Off The Street CHARLESTON, W. Va.—(UP)— Muncipal Judge Duffy Horan asked Grover Cleveland Worley of Charleston why Worley had ridden his motorcycle "wide open” on a sidewalk in the downtown business section. Worley said “the street was wet.” Cost $27.Trade in a Good Town — Decatu* « ■ w IH Os STATIONED in Japan with the First Marine Aircraft Wing, U. S. Marine Sgt. Jean Pinquet is a bit confused about his future as a career Marine after receiving his draft notice for induction into the French army. (International)
Rochester, Montreal Win Playoff Games By UNITED PRESS The Rochester Red Wings have narrowed the gap today that separates them from repeating as Governor’s Cup champions in the International League playoffs. They clobbered four Miami pitchers tor 20 hits in a 12-3 romp Wednesday night in their semi-final' set of the playoffs. The Wings now have a commanding twb - game lead. Two more wins will enable them to move into the final set of the playoffs against the winner of the Montreal-Toronto series which is now knotted up, 1-1. Montreal beat Toronto, 3-1, Wednesday night. Major League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE A Club GAB R H Pct. Mantle, N.Y. 135 492 120 173 .352 Williams, Bos. 120 347 60 J2l .349 Kuenn. Det. . 130 527 84 175 .332 Nieman. Balt. 115 387 56 128 .331 Maxwell, Det. 125 440 89 143 .325 NATIONAL LEAGUE Player & Club GAB R H Pct. Aaron, Milw. 138 542 101 178 .328 Virdon, Pitts. 143 526 71 169 .321 Moon. St. L. 135 488 84 155 .318
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THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1956
Schdnst, N.Y. 116 430 53 136 .316 Musial, St.L. 139 530 75 165 .311 HOME RUNS — Mantle, %gnks 47; Snider, Dodgers 38; Robinson, Redlegs 38; Adcock. Braves 87; Mathews, Braves 35; Kluszewskl, Redlegs 35. RUNS BATTED tw — Mantle. Yanks 118.; Kaline. Tigers 116; Kluszewski. Redlegs 101; Muslal, "Cards 100; Adcock, Braves 99. RUNS — Mantle. YankU 120; Robinson, Redlegs 116; Snider, Dodgers 103; Aaron, Braves If)!; Fox. White Sox 98. HITS — Aaron. Braves 178; Fox. White Sox 176; Kuenn, Tigers 175; Mantle, Yanks 173; Kaline, Tigers 169; Virdon, Piuites 169. PITCHING — Newcombe. Dodgers 23-6; Ford, Yanks 17-5; Pierce. White Sox 19-7; Brewer, Red Sox 19-7; Freedman, Redlegs 13-5. Cool Cops NORTH HAVEN. Conn. — (UP) — For the first time in North Haven’s history, police this year were permitted to.dress cooly during the summer months. A new regulation permitted poliecman to remove their neckties. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur.
