Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1958 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Ingrid Bergman May Marry Producer Refuse To Confirm Pions For Wedding GOTHENBURG, Sweden (IP) — Actress Ingrid Bergman and the 45-y ear-old theatrical producer who brought her here to meet his parents go separate ways Tuesday—but all signs indicated the separation would be only temporary. Miss Bergman, whose romance with Italian film producer Roberto Rossellini flowered on the Mediterranean island of Stromboli, told newsmen Sunday she will return to spend the summer on an island newly purchased by her Swedish bachelor friend Lars Schmidt. Neither she nor Schmidt would confirm “at present” that they intend to marry after her separation from Rossellini becomes petmanO O — Last Time Tonight — | First Feature at 6:45 Technicolor Smash! MARLON BRANDO "BAYONARA” Mlikl Taka, Red Buttons I ALSO — Shorts 25c • 75c I O O TUES. WED. THUR, o — o BARGAIN OFFER! CUp Out This Ad! ’ “My Man Godfrey’* Is So Fun- : nv, So Entertaining, We Want I Every One To See It! This Ad | and 50c Will Admit TWO ‘ A Units! I Offer Good Tues. Wed. Thnrs. i O . O “ThE HILARIOUS story OF A BUTLER WITH A VERY SUBTLE buttle/ ? O » ■ ; ' * ■' wiK I f —O-0 Coifctaf Bun. — Wonderful Show! !'Gdp 18 MY PARTNER!*’ — ■■ —
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ent. But they wouldn't deny it. either. Asked point blank about wedding rumors, Miss Bergman just smiled. Schmidt said: "I have to talk like a diplomat. I can neither confirm nor deny these rumors.” The pair apparently met while Miss Bergman was appearing in Paris in Robert Anderson's play “Tea and Sympathy," to which Schmidt has European production rights. They have been seen together in Paris and London frequently since Miss Bergman and Rossellini separated several months ago. Big Business Lashed By lowa Governor Loveless Speaks At Dinner At Evansville EVANSVILLE (IP) — lowa Gov. Herschel C. Loveless blamed “big business” Saturday night for "lousing up the government.” was headline speaker at a $lO-a-plate Jeffersoh-Jackson dinner, although supporters of Democratic Mayor Vance Hartke were more enthused at the apparent support for Hartke's senatorial campaign. The dinner attracted an estimated 4,000 party faithful, including five district chairmen and at least 25 county chairmen. Hartke is seeking Democratic nomination to the Senate in the June state convention. Loveless told the audience "when big business is involved in lousing up the government, it doesn't do a very good job of running business either.” Referring to Vice President Richard Nixon, he said: “Not since the period of Greek mythology has a dragon turned into a knight with greater speed and efficiency. But the result is the same old fairy tale situation —interesting but not true.” Robert Mitchner At Fort Wayne Wednesday Robert W. Mitchner; associate professor of English and director of the writers' conference at Indiana University, will ®speak on Geoffrey Chaucer in Fort Wayne Wednesday evening. Mitchner will be _the second speaker on the series of lectures being given by the Indiana University Fort Wayne Center an the Fort Wayne and Allen county council of- teachers of English. Mitchner’s lecture wfll be at 8:15 p.m. at the I.U. Center, with the public invited. Wednesday’s speaker is a graduate of DePauw University, with the Ph. D. degree from Indiana University, where he was the first recipient of the Herman L. Strauss fellowship. He has been on the I.U. faculty since 1946. Camels are essentially animals of the arid deserts and have a great aversion to water, only with difficulty being persuaded to cross even the smallest stream. Trade in a gooc xwr. — Decatu*
■ A*. I STUDENTS PLAN MODEL ClTY— Students at the' Cornell College of Architecture, Ithaea. N. Y., have designed a complete, modern city as a model of what they think the new capital that Brazil | is constructing in its hinderlands should look like. Top, left, capsules serve as storage tanks.' while wire staples represent warehouses. Top, I right. Government Ministries of Defense, Public Works and Treasury would be housed in these three structures being checked by Richard A.! x ~-.s ~ZT-.- ■ ' ; r *
High School Badly Damaged By Vandals North Central High Is Badly Damaged INDIAN APOUS (W — Vandals left SIO,OOO worth of damage in their wake at North Central High School Sunday night, and 1,000 pupils were given a vacation while maintenance crews showeled away the debris. Window and door glasses were smashed by axes, three of which , were found abandoned in corridors. Six typewriters were smash- , ed and two were missing and ap- ; patently stolen, alcng with labora- < tory equipment. 1 The cafeteria was a shambles. Holes were chopped in the doors of two ,big refrigerators. Fire hose was unwound and turned on and several rooms were flooded. Musical instruments were broken, including a saxophone, a trumpet and violins and cellos. Leonard Ruhl, buijding superintendent of the recently constructed consolidated school estimated the damage. School Supt. Everett Light said the loss “will run into thousands of dollars.” “It was about the worst case of? /vandalism we've ever heard of,” said Light. — g Boy's Body Found In Swollen River I Five-Year-Old Deaf Boy Drowned Sunday J BILLERICA, Mass. (UP)— The I body of a 5-year-old deaf boy who I might have been saved had he I known how to talk and call for ‘ help was found Sunday in a rainswolleny swamp river. ' A helicopter pilot discovered the body of Larry Bearse after 0 ,22-hour search by about 1,500 ■ police, firemen, airmen and volunteers. He had been missing since he strayed from his home Saturday. “If he could have called out he would have been heard from a private home not 100 feet away,” a searcher said But the boy could not call out. He knew how to speak only a few words despite long training at a school. He could not answer the calls of searchers because he was born deaf. His body was found in the flooded Shawsheen River more than two miles from his home. "The odds were loijsy,” said a discouraged searcher. “It didn't do any good to shout and he couldn't cry for help.” Larry and his 3-year-old sister Katherine wandered ajvay from 1 their home Saturday afternoon. • but the girl was soon found. She | said her brother had disappeared 1 into the swamp. T A search was immediately or- . ganized. ‘As night fell floodlights I were set up along the roads in I hopes the boy would see their ; beams' . . . - — I The search continued until the hovering helicopter spotted the boy's body in six feet of water | and guided ground parties to the scene in the morning light. Larry's father is a soldier stationed abroad. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
iwgWßfeu Wwmrww Wil ' Gryziec. Bottom, left, students who helped conceive the city go over the model. Reading clockwise from top to bottom are: Olga Duntuch, Sao i Paulo. Brazil; Michael A. Rubenstein, New York City. Walter R. Almond. Batavia. Bi. Y.; Kevin ' Cross, graduate assistant, Ottawa, Canada; Ste- ( phanie Gai] Woods. Grand Island. N. Y., and Clifford E Brew Jr.. Ithaca. N. Y. Bottom, right, , Stephanie and Olga work on details of a lagoon I fronting on a modern building. (Central Press)
Agreement By Dress Makers On Wage Scale Predict Settlement Os Garment Workers I Strike By Tuesday ‘ NEW YORK (UP),„— Representatives of 105.000 striking dress “makers and their more than 2,*XX) employers reached agreement on a wage package Sunday and predicted full settlement of their contract dispute by Tuesday The money package was reported to total nearly 13 per cent, and manufacturers said it would almost certainly increase prices of some Easter dresses. Direct pay increases were said to total 8 tier cent, the industry’s first wage boost in five jyears. Production in the billion-dollar-a vear industry, which makes three quarters of the nation's dresses, halted last W-ednesday in the first industry - Wide strike in 25 years. Involved are New' York City manufacturers and jobbers and the nlarits which do contract work for them in seven Northeastern states. David Dubinsky, president of the AFL-CIO Ladies Garment W’orkers Union, said the dressmakers would be back at their machines the day after full agreement is reached. Major points of !an economic settlement were reported reac h ed after 48 hours of intensive mediation by former Senator and Governor Herbert H. Lehman and Harry Uviller, chairman of the State Mediation Board and imoartial chairman of the dress industry. Still to be settled was the thorniest dispute between the two oarties — means of insuring enforcement of the contract in the industry’s intricate labor-p rice structure. Both mediators expressed optimism at the progress of talks and Dubinsky said he was •onfident that -if progress continued at the same rate the settlement will be reached Tuesday.
1 > < "1 L -- ~ ...»-. w -<-> - "<- ■ r i ■ Mffj&l L «r~ k- . ... WL jz- ■ IMk BKjWMWEgBHA. 7 ’ - ■ .; : * z vw $ - 7 a-" ' NEW, DIGNIFIED ROlE—Prince Aly Khan (right) is greeted by UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold in New York . on the playboy-sportsman’s arrival as Pakistan’s ambassat dor to the world body. Wealthy Aly’s salary is reported to • be one rupee (21 cents) a year, (/nternafional Sowndp/iofo?
More Rain Or Snow Predicted In Slate Five-Inch Snowfall In South On Sunday By UNITED PRESS A snowstorm swirled along a | narrow stfip in Southwestern Indi- ■ ana Sunday and left its calling | card in depths up to five inches in the Vincennes, Bedford, Shoals and Salem areas- ' Highway department maintenance crews reported the snowfall left' a few slippery spots in the areas affected but most of them vanished after “trcfmnent." The snow seemed to follow generally the route of U.S. 50. - • More snow or rain was expected today, tonight, — Tuesday and Wednesday, but for the five-day period ending next Saturday the outlook was for little if any precipitation north and .10 to .70 of lan inch south. 4— Temperatures remained cool and were expected to stay 3 to 5 degrees below normal the rest of the week with only minor day-to- ! day changs. Highs Sunday ranged from 33 at ; Fort Wayne to 40 at Evansville. Lows this morning ranged from 1 23 at South Bend to 29 at Evansville. Today’s highs will range from the low 30s to the mid 30s, to--1 night’s lows from the upper 20s to near 30, and Tuesday highs ■ from the low 30s to the mid 30s. If temperatures average 3 to 5 ■ degrees below normal as preI dieted, they will average about 34 ■ to 52 degrees at high points and I 20 to 34 at low points. [ Parrish To Preside In Jay County Case Myles F. Parrish, judge of the Adams circuit court, has assumed jurisdiction of a cast! now being held in the Jay circuit court. Par- ,' rish will sit as special judge in the . case of Mary E. Ward, administra- . trix of the estate of Ida May Nichf ols vs Lucy C. Bowler. The plaini tiff alleges that the defendant ha.< ■ funds which belong the estate ol ■ the deceased and demands an ac counting.
Study New Attempt To Launch Vanguard Vanguard Believed Set For Launching CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UP) —Scientists and Navy officials tried to decide today when to make another attempt to launch the much delayed Vanguard moon-carrying rocket The 72-foot Vanguard was believed ready to go as soon as weather forecasts are favorable and a place can be found for it on the Air Force Missile Test Center range schedule, which ofterr is crowded with checkouts of ground equipment as well as other missile firings. The problem was to be taken up at a meeting today. But the Navy probably will not announce what day it has picked for another Vanguard launching effort. It was not expected to be launched today. This third Vanguard scheduled for launching with a 6.4-inch spherical “baby moon’’ in its nose was originally to be fired nearly two weeks ago, but technical difficulties delayed the attempt. Then, after the Army failed Wednesday to put a second Explorer satellite into orbit with the Jupiter-C rocket, more technical problems and finally bad weather put off the Vanguard attempts Friday and Saturday. The Vanguard is given only an outside chance of putting the tiny satellite into orbit, and this is not the main purpose for the test lanuching. Techicians want to get information on flight,, performance of the three-stage rocket itself, which blew up on its pad Dec. 6 wheii launched the first time, and then was destroyed after dnly a minute of flight on the second try Feb. 5. Fort Wayne Papers Move To New Home FORT WAYNE (IP) — The Fort Wayne News-Sentinel and the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette will complete their move into a new building next weekend. The building has been under construction since July 26, 1956. Open house is planned; probably in May. INDONESIA (Continued from page one) : ings in Indonesia, said there was no movement of Stanvac families from its part of Sumatra. ' “All of our fields are in uncommitted areas,” the Stanvac 1 spokesman said, adding that so ' long as the present situation prevails, "we have nothing to worry about.”
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Rural Youth Plan Record Hop Friday A record hop, “The Shamrock Shake," will be sponsored by the Adams county rural youth Friday night. The hope will be held at the Decatur Youth and Community Center from 8 to 11:30 p.m. Dan Johnson will be spinning the records and all young peopKiare in--1 vited. Admission will be 25 cents single and 40 cents couple. Three More Enter lir Congress Races ’ Three-Way Contest For 11 th District i INDIANAPOLIS (IB—Three more ‘ candidates for Indiana congression- ' al nominations filed their official declarations with the secretary ®f state today. Donald Bruce, program director 1 of Indianapolis Radio Station 1 WIRE, filed on the Republican tick- ’ et in the 11th district, creating the first three-way contest for any nomination in the 11 Hoosier districts. Bruce filed for the seat now oc- , cupied by Rep. Charles B. Brownson. Brownson and John C. Bankett of Indianapolis previously filed as candidates. Fred Wampler, football coach at Terre Haute Gerstmeyer High School, filed for Congress from the 6th District on the Democratic ■ ticket, opposing Marion F. Steph--1 ens. Rep. Ray J. Madden (D-Gatyi became the last of the incumbents ’ to file for renomination and the ' first official declaration for Con- - gress in the Ist District. Madden’s Democratic colleague, Rep. Winfield K. Denton, Evansville. Bth District, and the nine Republican 'louse members, filed their declarations nearly two weeks ago. The filings raised to 27 the num- ' ber of cognressional candidates offTially in the ring, including 14 Re- ' publicans and 13 Democrats. ! , ■
I — — THE RIGHT AMOUNT? Unless your, insurance has been recently adjusted with today’s high values, you may be under-insured. Consult with us : today! I COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY ’ L. A. COWENS JIM COWENB 209 Court St. Phone 3-36 M Decatur. Ind. —
MONDAY. MARCH 10.
385 Mental Patients Rescued From Fire Attendants Praised For Heroic Action LINCOLN, Neb. (UP)B Officials today had high praise for attendants at Lincoln State Mental Hospital who led 385 patients, including 66 security inmates, to safety When fire started in the institution’s administration buildng. Among the inmates at the hospital is Caril Fugate, 14, companion of mass killer Charles Starkweather, 19, confessed slayer of 11 persons. However, the building in which she is held was not threatened by the fire. The two-alarm fire broke out Sunday morning in the four-story building. Firemen battled the blaze for more than two hours, preventing the f1 a me s from ’ spreading to other buildings on the grounds. The roof was destroyed and the top floor suffered considerable water damage. Hospital Supt. F.L. Spradling said he believed faulty wiring might have touched off the fire. Cool-headed attendants led all the patients to safety via inside stairways of the building within 20 minutes after the blaze was spotted. The patients were quickly distributed among other buildings to prevent exposure in the subfreezing temperatures. T ,• il' town Decatur MASONIC Regular Stated Meeting Decatur Lodge No. 571 F. & A. M. 7:30 P. M. Tuesday, Mar. 11th Ray L. Collins, W. M.
