Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 256, Decatur, Adams County, 30 October 1956 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SAVE 20c WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY SATURDAY and SUNDAY BORDEN’S ICE CREAM GIANT Regular 89c HALF IZUa all GALLON MATRAE I WE WILL BE closed NV 11 Uk. : ALL DAY THIS THURSDAY WE HAVE A LARGE SELECTION 0 4esh BOX CANDY FOR ALL OCCASIONS WERTZBERGER confectionery 144 W. Monroe St. ' Decatur, Ind.
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Gov. Craig Listed Accomplishments Governor Defends His Administration INDIANAPOLIS (V) — Governor Craig said Monday night that the “Democratic candidate for governor” has not “disputed” the achievements” of his administration. In a televised speech, Craig listed accomplishments of the Republican state administration during the last four years. “I hope no one loses sight of the fact that these achievements have not been disputed by the present Democratic candidate for governor,” Craig said. "Probably the inadequacy of his campaign stems from the fact that he has been unable to reduce his vague, general criticisms to any specific, concrete statements of fact.” “The people of Indiana, in their wisdom, have refused to be fooled or misled,” Craig said. Mayor Ralph Tucker of Terre Haute is the Democratic gubernatorial nominee. Accomplishments listed by Craig Included: 1. The Northern Indiana toll road. 2. Centralization of direction of state mental institutions for effective and efficient operation. 3. Establishment of a Department of Correction. 4. Improvement and expansion of state police and establishments
rm OECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
F*G|Br ** v'.JW? IMBSBI ibW* 1 * ” W r» ■ VI . V | 1 ' /SRRSi' EkL v 1 ■ I BwHw" fl f ’lt dßmw I fIH? ■ •- -- • - •■•■ -■ - " XEMEMBER Gloria Jean in the "Our Gang" comedies of yesteryear T Here she is, then and now. The "now” shows her in Pittsburgh, tn exotic dancer billed as Gilda. f International Soundphotos)
of new office of traffic safety. 5. Extensive highway improvements, with more contracts let “than in any previous four-year period.” 6. Stability of taxes. Craig credited the Eisenhower Administration with stopping the Korean War, improving the standard of living, checking inflation, ternal security, protecting and reducing taxes, strengthening infurthering civil rights measures and planning a far-sighted farm policy. Demand Ouster Os Russian Delegate Demand Expulsion For Aiding Refugee UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. («B) — The United States demanded Monday the expulsion of a member of the Soviet United Nations delegation for his role in helping a turnabout Russian refuge smuggle his American daughter to Europe. The demand was made in a note to Arkady A. Sobolev, Soviet permanent delegate, from U. S. Amr bassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. Tanya is the old daughter of Alexei Chwastov. Immigration officers tried to prevent her departure aboard the liner Queen Mary Oct. 3 on the grounds that Tanya is a U.S. citizen and was leaving without an American passport. Both Tanya and her tatter are now in London. They were prevented from sailing to Russia Oct. 12 under a British court order obtained by her mother, Mrs. George Diaczok, of Detroit, Mich, Mrs. Diaczok charged that Tanya was kidnapped. Trade in a Good Town — Decatui
i <. rZS *WW- ■ - *■ * * “■J jOl mßr -irf iitk ; •■* ~ > »* ± j- J AN ENTIRE VILLAGE In Fukushima Prefecture. Japan, consisting of 58 members of nine families, are shown (top) boarding a train which took them to Kobe where they will sail on the America Maru for Brazil. They decided to pioneer to the new world when their village of Nishiaizu was hit by a landslide, caused by heavy rains. The bottom photo shows the ruins of the village. (International)
Chicago Man Killed When Plane Crashes Businessman Dies In Richmond Crash RICHMOND, Ind. W — T h e wreckage of a small plane containing the body of Chicago businessman John W. Bourke, 61, was found today suspended from trees on a farm about a mile northeast of the Richmond Municipal Airport. Bourke, head of J. W. Bourke & Sons, an electronic equipment firm, had been missing since last Wednesday when he took off from a suburban Chicago airport. Officials said the last entry in the plane’s log was at 2:20 p. m. Thursday in Evansville. Mark Garrett, 33, owner of the farm, and his wife said they heard a plane nearby at about 11:30 that night.. - Garrett discovered parts of the engine in a field early today. He investigated and found the plane in woods about 100 feet away. At first authorities were uncertain whether it was Bourke’s plane. About 30 Civil Air Patrol planes from Illinois and additional units from Indiana attempted to trace his route over the weekend. They found no sign of the plane. Bourke s daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Kermer, said her father had flown his own plane for three or four years and was considered a good pilot. Bourke was last seen when he left Richton Airport near Chicago. Preble Firemen To Meet Next Monday The Preble fire department will hold its regular meeting next Monday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the Preble fire house. Frank Pirillo, of Gary, will present a resucitator demonstration and all department members are urged to be present.
Says Israeli Invasion Gives Lie To G.O.P. Stevenson Scores Ike In Failure To Tell True Picture By TOM NELBON United Press Staff Correspondent BOSTON (UP) — Adlai E. Stevenson charged Monday night that the Israeli invasion of Egypt gives the lie to the Eisenhower administration’s claims that “all is well in the world.” He declared the administration has not told the “whole truth” in a speech before a crowd of 9,000 in the Mechanic's building. Stevenson headed for Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania with his campaign caravan today. The Democratic presidential candidate said the developments in the Middle East were "ominous and confusing.” “The government in Washington has been continuously telling us that all is well in the world, that there is peace, that there is—as the President announced a few days ago—good news, from the Middle East,” Stevenson said. Stevenson said report of the Israeli Invasion of Egypt "confirms” that these reassurances "We’v got to be trusted," he said. “We’ve got to be ready to squarely and make the right de"have been tragically less than cisions. “And how can we, unless we know the facts, unless we know the whole truth about the world in which we live?” he asked. Stevenson said we have been "patted on the head and told that everything’s all right” under the Eisenhower administration. Stevenson spoke for 30 minutes over a nationwide television hookup and then talked off-the-cuff to the crowd for about five minutes. Stevenson’s schedule today opens with a Baltimore speech at midday followed by a talk at La uden, N.J., and two in Philadelphia. His major address will be delivered on the University of Pennsylvania campus at Philadelphia tonight. Band Os Tornadoes Hits At Midwest Twisters Set Off By Cold Air Mass By UNITED PRESS A band of tornadoes dropped from the skies and punched away at the nation’s breadbasket Moni day. The twisters were set off when a mass of frosty air stumbled into 1 a hot air belt. A frontier of thunderstorms was set up from the ' Dakotas southward into Kansas and Nebraska and into western Texas. As the front moved eastward Monday night, severe weather bellowed over most of the Midwest. A tornado dipped into Great Bend, Kan., injuring one man and causing at least $250,000 worth of damage. Police said some 30 homes were damaged when high winds removed roofs and puffed out windows. Don Bryant suffered minor injuries when another twister struck his farm at Rozel, Kan. A light airplane and several houses were damaged by the wind near Dorrence, Kan. Two farms near Halford, K?’’., were visited by tornadoes earlier in the day. Another man was seriously injured and several others believed hurt when two farms were flattened by a twister that struck near North Platte, Neb. A man identified as Ben Yates was hospitalized and the state safety patrol was alerted to prepare for more injuries. The same weather that stirred up the violent storms also whipped up dust and x showered certain areas with snow. The unruly weather was expected to growl eastward into the western Great Lakes region today and range southward, through Missouri into western Arkansas and northern Texas. Find Charred Body In Wrecked Truck FRANKFORT, Ind. (IP) — The charred body of Kenneth R. Van Duinen, 33, Grand Rapids, Mich., was found today shortly after his large truck apparently hit a bridge and caught fire on U. S. 421 north of Kirklin. Sheriffs deputies said Van Duinen apparently struck his head on the cab as he tried to leap out. Wedeking Attends Highway Symposium INDIANAPOLIS (W — Albert J. Wedeking, executive director of the Indiana Toll Road Commission, will take part in a two-day symposium on financing highways Nov. 8-9 in'Princeton, N. J. He will discuss the role of highway user revenues in financing the highway program. The symposium will explore the effect of the new federal highway program on state and local governments.
One Woman Killed By Poisonous Gas Gas Seeping From Main In Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH (W — Poisonous natural gas, seeping from a ruptured main in the heart of the city, brought death to a gas company emergency worker and hospitalized seven other men Monday. The toxic fumes caused one of the worst traffic jams In the city’s history as the gas wafted over the Point Bridge at the Golden Triangle. Police, fearing a spark would touch off an explosion, during the evening rush hour closed
PHILCO TRANSITONE Portable TV True Wg set perform- .n. "Tyri , ' vr. ance in a bantamweight package. i' “Outrigger” all-direc-tional aerial folds MM* fl down for carrying. M Aluminum-light SHI Ivory case, trimmed . • in Green, Flame or i Spice. ||flKp BRINGS YOU THE II I / CLEAREST PICTURE UNDfeR THE SUN I PHILCO 9004 Exclusive "Solarized” Filter Lena shrugs off glare. Gives you a sharp clear nicture — even in bright sunlight! “* | Q wn Pfti/co Portable TV for oalv CHANNEL $1 3Q' 95 - , ___J SHI W P HILCO 2002 HAUGKS HEATING - PLUMBING - APPLIANCES 209 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3316 For Honesty and Economy RE-ELECT L. LUTHER YAGER Republican Candidate for JOINT REPRESENTATIVE ADAMS-WELLS COUNTIES Acquainted by ex- - perience with the ''WmH problems of the farm- yWlflM er, laborer, businessman, conservationist ;-. V and veteran. As rank- ' ' " ’ ing member of the . W ’ J Mental Hospitals Committee made many investigating trips to our state in- ‘ stitutions, and have first hand knowledge ■ of the needs of those J;' 'W institutions. ? W fl Ik * Led movement in 1955 session of the Indiana General Assembly which defeated an attempt to add 114,000,000 to the state budget bill for undiscussed projects of unproved merit. * ■ • * Worked several years to successfully amend the Indiana Conservancy law to protect the taxpayers from being forced to pay for multi-million dollar projects for which they would get no benefit and against which they could not remonstrate. ♦ Authored more than twice as many bills which passed and became law than the average legislator. ♦ Have always supported every measure for stricter control of the sale and use of alcohol beverages with the exception of one which would tend to increase drunken driving and bootlegging. I promise to work for the good of all citizens and to continue to fight racketeering and favoritism to special interests. I wish to thank you for your support in the past, and hope you will continue to back my work at the polls on November 6. » -a Representative L Luther Yager Pol. Advt
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1956
the thoroughfare for four hours to an endless line of fcmewardbound traffic. While police struggled to free the downtown traffic tie-up, emergency workers from the Equitable Gas Co. sought to close off the gas . leak, apparently caused when heavy steel piles for a bridge construction job rammed a 20-inch natural gas ma!». Killed by the fumes was Julius Colosimo, 56, a gas company foreman who was sent to investigate the leak. Police Superintendent James Slusser said Colosimo leaned over an open manhole and. apparently sickened by the odor, toppled 15 feet to the gas-fiUed bottom. Trade in a Good Town — Decatn.
