Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 145, Decatur, Adams County, 20 June 1957 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
W»-T-■■■■ WITH GHAT BRITAIN fS"i JMOAN CLOMS F*.: 7 < SY h ■”* fes?~ CAISO tMGASSY «. iffiOl 1 '2.?...».>.. . x IRAN ISRAEIJS;^ m . IRAQ > ;Z, , , SAUDI 1 ARABIA W J I BOY’! MIUTABY IBYST MUITABY ATTACH ***4 oVfoMWOnA KICKW OUt Os UtYAON „ j | ™ -J ACCUSATION OMTUIBtNG ' ! V —-~A a? us ttouau and I - .. n A ki t J £= bisnitutiNO *»*» J • u w A n / J . . '" '” **""* f” ,' *%I=LA J ,<c*™z=. I \/ MOAN ACCttSU < \< X \ X=Z~ i gj=; tow o’ I \ ¥ f \ I jEg Trass? \ A •«<>« . / AJ ULm > C, \ ETHIOPIA 7 if" ” *n '•* * / : ,• Th v » .—' jSwdunl . » '•***\ ~. z "H X x r •N-a z ” jfesQCfAN | ImP - - ■- r “ '‘- j ■ ■--■■■ — T|gs MO points up a few of the reasons why the “Cairo - Damascus Axis” II out of Miter tn the iSdU East Indications are that the influence of Egypt and Syria is waning among Arab nations.
Outing Wednesday For Shrine Club -1 AppflMcimately 40 members of the 4dams countv Shrine club at»j outing at the Clark W. tidlince, south of Decatur, y evening. ~ t luncheon was served at Unwed by participation in ictivities, including croquet;’ badminton and ping pong. »• —4a—< — i
BLACKWELLS — OPEN —- ALL DAY THURSDAY . JRIN 9 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. f jOb/J Take one glance at our group of fashion-wise 1 ■ / / w JswiirtsuiU. You’ll know immediately ... you v/Vy /l W\ fl)' can figure on drawing second (and third!) / ./ jy* l ' glances every time you wear the swimsuit of fl . / \ 1 9Hr f your choice. We’ve styles to flatter every If * t Fl /) A / Z I I n| figure .. . priced to please every budget. If JIIJ 111 [/ / \ k\ .J / 1 WJHL Come on in. the selection’s fine. £9B g. 98 J. 98 LX J Wn * \ 1 I f / y/'l. • I / • Finely Tailored Cottons or Figure-hugging y y \ 1 f .Lastex Suits. And The New OHon Knit Suits, VI 1 \ Sizes 32 to 40. theSC } 1 \ ’ are the / / / # EXTRA SIZE SUITS BB.H |7 [/ A Group of Exira Fine Suits of Lastex, that . ZX. „ Foam Rubber Padded Bras. All correctly HrfiW • r fl Styled and W.QC *0.94 **** - w a // / Tailored > to ?F second glances! ■ 1 Ili——■■■■■■ 11l fiwim Sui*c Ob Boy s s w ' ffl ® ><■■■■ VI ■Sr J/i-T" /JI m M Brief or boxer styles H,l( \ 1 -59 /1-98 GIRLS and TODDLERS ; >astßX, Cotton Poplins or Girte Cotton Print TorsO Style Suits /'Ol jMiZZ/ Prints. ,S|zes 4to 18. Rayon Lastex Suits z MEN’S t L • aa. a a 9Kf>Sl CABANA SETS I jOgg UJa fuex 1-9# yy&r SWIM TRUNKS W|® •Sizes t 9 aft »w.OB /I 1/ *iJKk “ i l h J Ha ‘ c J; nf[ T " 1 ’ C/ > .'W>< T.oi. 2-98. J. 9» n L -9« s..< A Subteen 99.Q|A i fef 1U * Siieß 28 <0 44 ■ I 10 uu 3‘9» - 4*» 'A/ p — JMhL|M rm, BUCH I.CKHS -a ; «« ™«« s I jf ’ H Rayon Satin Lastex Briefs. \ ,: p h? H) IZCS 2*9® - 3*9® J > Cotton Twill or Poplin Boxers M/1 R \ H i * .mJ. .win i irw Ik,,' iiiiiiiiiHM v Plaid Semi-Boxers or Satin ”J" HMM TOWELS •r,r"a":»i ifTR | . large Thirsty towels waist sizes 28 to 44. . " v< */ rS POLKA DOT or PATTERNS '2 .T ‘ .... 98c *1.98. *2.98 ea MEN ’ 5 • ,L,M£ R0B « 5498 U ..: .. . MEN’S TERRY ROBES $7.98 — $8.95 ■ - ■ ’ II UirfiH'. If Illi I 1 I .11. ">■. . / 11 1 111 ini I r> f | SHOP and SAVE at ARRANGE ■JFUM >■■ ■ ■ AIR CONDITIONED fW %|kf l| I ACCOUNT ■ WWW COMFORT f OPEN FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9:00 p. M. — ALL DAY THURSDAY. ■ ■■—■■■ —— — :
Doyle Rich was chairman of the committee to make arrangements for the meeting, which was the final meeting until September, and he was assisted by Lewis Smith. $ : Parsonage Painting Project Postponed Harold Thieme, chairman of the board of trustees of Zion Lutheran church. West Monroe street, re- « - , -’*— *—- """"'> ' ' """
ports that the proposed plan to paint the Lutheran parsonage Saturday has been postponed until next Saturday, June 29. All the men of the Congregation who plan to assist on the project are asked to bring a paint bnish, bucket, and rags. The delay until June 29 is suggested because of the wet weather. Trade m a good town — Decatur
Tn RKATn DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIARA
Farmers Voting In Wheat Referendum Two-Thirds Vote To Approve 'ss Quotas Washington <up> — Farmers in 36 commercial wheat states voted today in a national referendum on whether to accept marketing quotas for thejr 1958 crop. Upwards of one million farmers were eligible to vote. Agriculture Department officials predicted about 300,000 would cast ballots in pcflling places set up and maintained by county Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation offices. Two-thirds of those voting must approve quotas before they can become effective for the 1958 season. Heretofore, farmers have approved quotas handily lor the four preceding seasons. But department officials predicted today’s vote would be close. They said the outcome would be affected by a series of dry years in the Great Plains and the drop in the price support rate for the 1958 crop. The 1958 rate is $1.78, down 2J cents from the 1957 ratels quotas are approved, all farmers in commercial wheat states with'fnore than 15 acres of wheat will be subject to quotas, excess wheat will be subject to quota penalties, and price supports at a national average rate of $1.78 cents a bushel will be available to producers who do not exceed their acreage allotments. If quotas are not approved, acreage allotments will remain in effect, and price supports will drop to 50 per cent of parity, or sl.lß a bushel, for producers who comply with their farm wheat allotments.
JOHN F. SCHENCK, son of Mr. ,and Mrs. John C. Schenck, of Mexico, N. Y., and formerly of Decatur, has been named valedictorian of his graduating class of Mexico Academy and Central school. The young man completed his high school with an average of 90.9. k " Schenck was awarded the Thomas Watson merit scholarship award, the New Yofk state regents scholarship, and was named a recipient of a Schnepp foundation award. Graduation exercises will be held June 25, at which time special recognition will be given to the youth. His mother, the former Mildred Blosser, was graduated from Decatur high school, and his father was graduated from Pleasant Mills high school. Following graduation, Schenck will attend the Resseleor Politech Institute in Troy, N. Y., where he will major in physics.
Three Boys Found Guilty Os Murder Chicago Suburban Motel Owner Slain CHICAGO (UP) — Three teenagers branded by prosecuting attorneys as "young rattlesnakes" today faced prison terms of 99 to 110 years for slaying a suburban motel owner. The youths were found guilty Wednesday night by a Criminal Court jury. The mother of one of the defendants collapsed when the verdict was read, and other relatives sobbed The jury of 10 men and two women found Robert Mastowski. 16, and David Clark. 15, both of Chicago, and Gerald Pelzer, 10, of suburban North Riverside, guilty after deliberating £ hours and 40 minutes. t The jurors fixed sentence for Mastowski., the accused triggerman, at 110 years, and recommended sentence of 99 years each for Pelzer and, Cl,irk. The three were charged with Slavin* Charles Styrsky, 48, Chicago, last March 8 during a robbery spree. , The youths heard the verdict impassively, but Maslpwski later collapsed as ( he was led from the courtroom. His mother cried cut, "My Bobby, my Bobby,” and collapsed on a courtroom bensh. Asst. State’s Atty. Robert J. Cooney demanded the death penalty for Mastowski and said the youth's companions were “equally guilty" and deserved heavy penalties. I o Cooney blasted the defendants as “young rattlesnakes" in his closing arguments before the jurors in Judge Henry W. Dieringer's court. Thaddeus Tudor, Mastowski’s attorney, argued that the boy’s gun went off accidentally during the attempted robbery. Attorneys for the defendants immediately filed motion for a new trialMastowski would be eligible for parole after serving 36 years and 8 months, and Clark and Pelzer could be paroled after 33 years each.
ft? X F JR JACOB 0. BEAM (above) is President Eisenhower’s nominee to succeed retiring Joseph E. Jacobs as ambassador to Poland. Beam, 49, a foreign Service man since 1931, currently is deputy assistant secretary of state. (International) i ” V n A I LJ* jOBw ■' JI t FMlsiw ww John S. Graham X. r«vlpf**i „ *■ ><: ilk W***®?* iA.iv t-- . 4 z «... John F. Floberg TWO FORMER Truman administration men are President Eisenhower’s nominees for the Atomic Energy commission. John S. Graham, a former assistant Treasury secretary, now is a financial consultant in Washington. John F. Floberg, a former assistant Navy secretary, is a Washington attorney. Graham would fill vacancy caused by death of John Von Neumann, and Floberg would succeed Thomas ~fc Murray, who has been a center of policy - controversy. (International) ...
. W'u* -.oih saMSr ■ ~ < ■ HH ’..S Wo ' • ■ Hanging from main cables are suspender ropes to support 86 stiffening trass sections comprising roadway. Motorists will be at about same elevation as photo. Point is St. Ignace, Michigan.
Secret Talks Over Refugee Problems United States Is Acting Mediator NICOSIA, Cyprus (UP) —Secret Arab-Israeli talks on the explosive Palestine refugee problem afe now going on in New York and Rome with the United States acting as mediator, a high diplomatic source reported today.. The source said the quiet contacts between Israeli representatives and "some” of the Arab states have been In progress how for about two months. I The diplomat said the main points under discussion are the Arab refugees driven into neighboring states in the 1948 Palestine war. "Die talks concern the resettlement of a limited number in Israel and compensation for all of them. The United States was said to ‘ have offered a large loan to Israel . to enable it to pay compensation. Arab countries accepting refugees for resettlement also would receive American financial assistance, the source said. The diplomat emphasized the talks could not yet even be described as “formal negotiations." But if they succeed, he said, it can remove in one stroke one of the major obstacles to a final peace settlement in the Holy Land. The diplomat declined to name the Arab countries involved in the preliminary contacts. But they were believed to be from among the states with friendlier relations with the West—Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. There was no suggestion Egypt and Syria were involvedThe bite of the short-tailed shrew is poisonous, owing to a secretion in the salivary glands.
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THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1657
• C jb I i A era JsAjE| s - no HI IWWI CANADA'S Progressive Conservative leader, John Dlefehbaker, whose patty administered the first beating Prims Minister Louis St. Laurent’s Liberals have suffered in 23 years, displays a catch of pike at Lake La Ronge in Saskatchewan. Diefenbaker will become premier, (International)
Bethany E.U.B. Youth Fellowship ■ ICE CREAM SOCIAL THURSDAY, 6 -9:30 p.m. Tickets._2sc Coffee . . Popcorn . . Pop Cake . . Ice Cream . . Pie
