Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 30, Decatur, Adams County, 5 February 1957 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
CHARGE STATE <Q—r»— o—» • bit about the plan.” and heard "a much better discussion on the issue than I ever did before.” But he said his mind was not made up on the issue and doubted any pro-SUB bill would have an active administration label. eeekb Tonite, Wed., Thurs. j ourbicTdays! j Shows Tonite & Wed. at 7 > Continuous Thur, from 1:30 | BE SURE TO ATTEND! j MM*' SCREENFUL OF FUN! The low-down on dames with music! flßv aj® ®| mis <35 the Wife Janafe n MV [ Collins as the Goss ? ftM f W & is the Flirt IHal a ANN dHERIDAN as the Carter Girt E*k •»i ann J|> Miller * « as the Chorus Girt 144IHB8K»MKfKttMKT.. a tnauMK m wnitami l -0 Fri. it SaL-r-Tom Ewell “Great American Pastime*’ Riotous Little Leacue Comedy! -0 Sun. & Mon. — Rock Hudson "Written on the Wind”
NEW FORD TRUCKS - ■ ■ *■< Tha Ronchare! More than a cor more \ - than a track-it» a complexly new 4 triad of rrohida. A raol pock horse that HHHMMv handles more than half a ton. TAally new Tilt Cabtl Amer- K | R "1: j V> , r A icg s lowest priced,* most mod- •? i H . .11 1 l»l.l eawwWBgPSS. s ern Tilt Cab line. Six complete 'i;“|K new Series, upfo6o,ooo-Ib.GCW. R >*»■ ■"■'■ iSßCz:'' ■ * I *W W*""*"'.. -UII'IU.I» ntiMinsM s' I IfE.WT : -CEXMMr l , <■***? j BkMiBMiMMftW KM j | hyi tuw.fr ' New pickup with Styleside body, standard at no extra cost, gives you stunning style and the biggest capacity - and 8-ft. body lengths. They’re modern through and through Tlw boldlv modem styling you see just hints at how NEWcoba-completely new-stronger, roomier, NEW riding comfort) Big now roomy cob. , . j .» >(-7 Vnrrle roallv nrp! smarter! New wider windshield. New inboard completely newchassis suspension and mcreosec > deep-down modem the 57 Fords really are! H( D j venti|o)ioiu vilibility improv . hoftd | infl New Ranchero rides, handles and NEW hydraull c cbrtch standord in oil mod.!. NEW cho..!. strong*) Now from.., upto 13? £ em car. Its a.rugged truck that carries over halt a pickups to tondems. Easier to operate— stronger. New sturdier front and rear oxlesl Fs ton—more than many standard pickups. Fords all- works like hydraulic broke. Clutch and brale New higher capacity springs! . new Tilt,Cab Series brings modem design to the pedal, ore type! NEW powor Higher horsepower -,Z big-tTUCk field. It S America S lowest-priced I lit hew styletid* pickup bodies standard at freer breathing, higher compression ratios, nen V Cab line. no extra cost. America's biggest pickup bodiesl Super-Filter air cleaner. Short Stroke engim New Ford .pickups back up their modem styling *<• « f - • w * *’* h '" * id ’ h bod >'- mo4t>l with higher power, completely new cabs, a new kind of ride. Styleside bodies are biggest of any pickup. p Of , and the ye&rS ahead—• The trucks shown here just touch the sweeping _______ — B — ■ VAO changes in the new Ford line for '57. See your Ford WWW I |bbßEsßw Dealer for complete details on the truck to fit your job. ‘ IESS TO OWN... IfSS TO RUN .. . LAST LONGER TOO I SCHWARTZ FORD CO., Inc. Third and Monroe Sts. Decatur, Ind.
FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE MEET . www.vw.y, s y < * - ' * SHHMB ' i i .' ?i xt \ *8 J, X- < » ■ 1 WETRMWb b ».raOaaMi w em. MW : \ ' v X- 1 SiBIZJw v-sx 1 ’TI ®tn v .-r! i< I 111 > a. v'- wSIiMF X The Adams Lodge, No. 127, Fraternal Order of Police, met Monday in their regular monthly meeting. Pictured above are the new officers for 1957. The group met in the city court room. Officers are, front row, left to right. Vic Strickler, secretary-treasurer; sheriff Merle Aftolder. vice-president; Bob Hill, president: Grover Odle, conductor; rear row, left to right, lodge trustees, Karl Sprunger, Berne police chief; James Cochran, and Roy Chilcote.
Hungary Seals Off Yugoslavian Border Closing Off Traffic To Prevent Escapes VIENNA (UP) — Communist Hungary sealed its border with Marshal Tito’s Yugoslavia today and ordered mixed patrols of Hungarian and Russian soldiers to shoot anyone trying to escape. Budapest Radio announced that five counties along the border had been declared a prohibited area and could be entered only with special documents. > The radio broadcast an Interior Ministry announcement which said "thousands of persons” have appeared in the border zone recently with the obvious intention of crossing illegally’ into Yugoslavia. “This has endangered the security of the country, and the security forces therefore have received orders to close traffic in the Yugoslav border zone,” the announcement said. More than 16,000 Hungarians have fled to Yugoslavia since the start of the revolution in October. More than 170,000 others have
crossed into Austria. Refugees reaching Austria in the last 24 hours reported security precautions also have been increased along the Austrian border. They said they saw bodies of several refugees who had been shot by border guards in their escape attempts. Hie border crackdowns followed a public admission by Premier Janos Kadar that anti-Communist elements, particularly school children and university, students, are continuing to resist his regime. Cast To Resign As State GOP Leader State Committee To Meet Next Monday INDIANAPOLIS ffl — Indiana Republican party chairman Alvin C. Cast has called a meeting of the GOP state committee for next' Monday and plans to turn in his resignation. Cast, whose job has been tottering ever‘since Governor Handley - was nominated last June, indicated he wants no state or federal position ahd plans to re-
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turn to his home town of Kentland. "I’m going home and play golf,” he said. Cast's resignation had been forecast for months, particularly since Handley was elected last November and the state administration changed from one faction of the Republican party to another. Slated to succeed Cast is Robert W. Matthews, who has been Handley’s patronage secretary. Other executive offices on the state committee also may change hands. Mrs. Von Snyder of Indianapolis was expected to be replaced by Mrs. Martha Whitehead of Waldron as vice chairman, and Thomas Mahaffey of Indianapolis may yield his post as treasurer to George Stark of Indianapolis. Observers believed that John V. Sellers, Franklin, will be retained as secretary. The state meeting will be attended by three new members. Ivan Morgan, Jr., Austin, recently was elected 9th district chairman and Mrs. Frank Pope, Bedford, vice-chairman, in a factional shift of control. Russell Robbins, Richmond, 10th district chairman, will be replaced Saturday at a meeting in Richmond.
Man Finds Children i Drowned In Bathtub Wife Unconscious "LJ In Suicide Effort CHICAGO ffl — A father returned home from work Monday night to find his • three children drowned ipthe hathub and his wife unconscious in an apparent suicide attempt. Richard Puetz. 23, of suburban Park Ridge, told, the coroner’s office his house was filled with gas when he arrived. He said his wife was lying unconscious by a stove with her head resting ,on the oven door. Mrs Beverly Peurtz, 26, was revived and repored in good condition at Psycopathic Hospital. Her husband, an official of an Evanston department store, said she had been suffering from a nervous condition but was not under a doctor’s care. Authorities estimates .the children, 3-year-old twin girls Debra Lynn and Cory Lynn, and 5-year-old John, had been dead about four hours. Puetz said he called his wife early in the afternoon and she sounded “happy." He said he called again later, and hurried home when nobody answered. Three Unions Face Possible Suspension Executive Council Conducts Hearings MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UP) — The AFL-CIO Executive Council decides today whether a last-min-ute house - cleaning by two unions charged with mishandling of welfare funds should save them from suspension. Representatives of a third big international union, the Allied Industrial Workers, accused of similar wrong doing, were also to go before the council to plead their case. Charles Naddeo, executive - secretary of a Philadelphia Can Workers local who was expelled by the council last week along with the local's other officers for abuse of union funds, was to be given a hearing by the council today. The council, headed by AFL-CIO President George Meany, spent more than five hours Monday hearing from officials and legal counsels tor the Laundry Workers International and the Distillery, Rectifying and Wine Workers International. Meany said the council would hear from all three unions before deciding whether to suspend them, put them in a receivership, —or give' them a limited amount of time to clean house. The AFL-CIO Ethical Practices Committee found the unions guilty of failing to take action to clean up their affairs following a Senate subcommittee investigation two years ago in which the unions were accused of corrupt practices. Meany had hoped to wind up the Executive Council’s mid - winter conference today, but said there were still several important items on the agenda to be taken up after the charges against the three international unions and Naddeo’s hearing. He said the conference, which began Jan. 28, probably will not end until Wednesday. Holds Union Shop Clause Is Illegal * AUBURN, Ind (W — DeKalb Circuit Judge Walter D. Stump has ruled that a shop clause in a union contract is “void and unenforceable in the state of Indiana." ! ~- Stump made the ruling Monday in a case involving International Harvester Co., Fort Wayne, and the UAW-CIO. He said the union shop clause in the contract violates the public policy of Indiana as declared in a General Assembly act in 1933. The case was filed in Allen County Superior Court by nine Harvester employes who were allegedly threatened with loss of their jobs unless they joined the union. I RED PARIAMENT 'Continued fro-n rytft Qnei the state planning commission. The two chambers met ly and adopted identical agendas, including “questions affecting the international situation and the foreign policy of the Soviet Union.” The first item to be considered is an amended five-year plan and the 1957 state budget. More than 350 deputies were on hand when the Council of Nationalities convened. fj ' ' _ EGYPT (Oootlawed rrow. Pax* O»e> said Nasser and War Minister Maj. Gen. Abdel Hakim Amer “attended a discussion of military operations" held by the Egyptian chiefs of staff for three hours Monday and that* they had been meeting tor a week.
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