Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 247, Decatur, Adams County, 20 October 1958 — Page 3
Monday, October 20, 1958
*■ ‘ <S -<* - M A■, •t A : \ 4 A i ‘ ' »■■■■■■■» IB ■Bf'Laß J TO SEPARATE—Movie star Cary Grant, 54, and his wife of 1 nine years, actress Betsy Drake, 33, have agreed to separate. ! They announced in a press release issued in Hollywood, Calif., f that they are separating because “our marriage has not ’ brought us the happiness we fully expected and mutually / desired.” They also said that they had no plans for divorce. Th# film actreu ia th# motion oicture idol’s third wife. '
Sales Are Increased In Farm Machinery Industry Sales Up 10 To 15 Per Cent CHICAGO (UPI> — Farm prosperity is giving the farm equipment manufacturing industry a shot in the arm. Farmers getting higher prices for bigger crops in 1953 are investing a sizeable chunk of their returns in new tractors and implements, industry spokesmen report. R.S. Stevenson, president of Allis Chalmers Manufacturing Co. and president of the Farm Equipmen Institute, told the institute’s convention in Atlantic City recently that industry sales are up 10 to 15 per cent. Frank W. Jenks, president of International Harvester Co., said the farmer “is in a better frame of mind to buy new farm equipment." Sales Are Up A United Press International check today showed: —Deere and Company's farm equipment sales for the first nine months of its 1958 fiscal year were up 15 per cent over the same
We’re here to Help ■ Bring your Doctor’s prescriptions to this Family Pharmacy—and ba sure to turn to us for your varied needs in drugs and other health items. Here you, and all mem* hers of your family, are assured prompt, courteous service, ample stocks and uniformly fair prices. HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
DO YOU REMEMBER HOW HIGH DRYCLEANING PRICES WERE B. M. C.? (Before Myers Cleahers). THEY WERE CONSIDERABLY HIGHER THAN THEY ARE NOW. MYERS CLEANERS INTRODUCED LOW COST, HIGH QUALITY, PRODUCTION DRYCLEANING TO NORTHEASTERN INDIANA MANY YEARS AGO AND HAVE NEVER WAVERED FROM THAT BASIC PREMISE OF DOING BUSINESS! GIVE THE PUBLIC THE BEST POSSIBLE SERVICE AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE COST. WE ARE STILL DOING BUSINESS THAT WAY AS YOU CAN SEE FROM THESE LOW PRICES! LADIES’ LADIES’ PLAIN DRESSES, PLAIN SKIRTS, SUITS & COATS BLOUSES & SWEATERS MEN’S MEN’S SUITS, TOPCOATS TROUSERS, SWEATERS & OVERCOATS & SPORT SHIRTS CLEANED |V||//| CLEANED •|||O ANO ||l|W i AND -kit 1 1 PRESSED IffVV PRESSED MtlV MEN’S HATS—-CLEANED & BLOCKED SHIRTS LAUNDERED —2O c EACH CASH and CARRY MYERS CLEANERS Cor. Madison A Second Sts.
period a year ago. —The Oliver Corporation's sales of farm equipment in the United States and Canada for the first nine months of 1958 totaled 351,723,000, an increase of 18 per cent over the first three quarters of last year. —Ford Motor Company's production of tractors so far in 1958 is 16 per cent above the comparable period of 1957. —J.I. Case Co. earned $2,933,000 in the first nine months of this year, against a loss of 3993,805 in the same months last year. —lnternational Harvester showed a 1 per cent boost in farm equipment sales in the first nine months of the 1958 fiscal year despite the fact that its two tractor plants were shut down from six to eight weeks for model changeovers. —Allis-Chalmers’ ' farm implement sales have been "eminently satisfactory and 1959 should be a good year, too.” Buy Bigger Equipment An Allis-Chalmers spokesman Said “the ending of the drought in the Southwest and the record wheat harvest are two big factors. Better crops in the Southwest and Midwest and better markets have meant increased income for farmers.” Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson reported recently that average farm prices in September stood 5 per cent above those re-, ceivd by farmers in September, 1957. He said net farm income for the first nine months of the year was running 19 per cent above 1957. L. E. Dearborn, general sales manager of Ford’s tractor and implement division, said the company has recorded increased sales of most items. The firm produced 33,404 tractors through Sept. 30. compared with 28,689 during the first nine months of 1957. A Deere spokesman said farmers are buying bigger equipment than formerly. He said Deere's new six-row planters and cultivators are "selling well’’ on today's market to farmers who formerly settled for four-row implements. Quadruplets Born To Virginia Woman RICHMOND, Va. (UPD —Quadruplets were born today to Mrs. Laura Englehart, already the mother of six girls. Mrs. Englehart, 35. and the quads—two boys and two girls—were reported “doing fine" at Johnson-Willis Hospital. A hospital spokesman said the four had not yet been weighed but appeared to weigh no more than 3 pounds each.
Off-Duty Officer • Kills Four In Bar New York Patrolman Critically Wounded NEW YORK (UPD—Two policemen sat at the bedside of, fellow Patrolman James B. McDermott today, hoping he would revive long enough to say why he stepped into a Broadway restaurant on his beat Sunday morning and killed four men sitting at the bar. McDermott, 36, a patrolman who was popular with his fellow policemen and with the people on his beat, lay near death at Roosevelt Hospital. He was shot five times by police from his own station house in a running gun battle on and off Broadway near Times Square. Police said McDermott, a “nice and pleasant guy,” father of four, and a church usher, had been under supervision of a Police Department physician for head injuries suffered in an accident in the line of duty. He had complained recently of severe headaches. They said his ill health could have made him go suddenly on a bloody rampage that killed four men and wounded another, patrolman James Roden. Three of McDermott's victims had arrest records, and one of them was known as a gambler an<J loan shark, police said. They said it was possible McDermott was being “bled” by the loan shark, Edmund Leahy, 53, who was first to be shot. McDermott began his minute of terror in the Pic-A-Rib restaurant at 1:40 am. Sunday. Manager Louis Olman said McDermott, who often frequented the place, stalked in in street clothes and stood at the opening of a partition that separates the bar room from dining tables. “He came in, he said nothing.” Olman said. “He did not have anything to drink. He opened fire.” All four of •McDermott’s victims were shot in the head. First he picked off Leahy, who fell backward off his stool to the floor. Then he shot Gene Cronin, 60. of Jersey City, N. J., who also fell backward. His next victim was Thomas O’Hare, 55. who sank kicking and screaming to the floor. -McDermott swung his ,38-caliber service revolver past an unidentified man and theatre usherette Helen Collins, 27, who also sat at the bar. The only other person at the bar, Lawrence Davion, 63, was having his nightly second shot of whisky when a bullet crashed into his head. As the four men lay writhing in their own blood on the floor. McDermott turned to'waiter James Todd, 42, and asked, “anybody else?” Then he ran through the restaurant and plunged head-on through a glass door into the street.
Quick ’n’ Easy Printed Pattern j W 5 J 9117 7v fV SIZES V>ylo-18 nV\ Cl t / \ A* e \Yz O »/ e * IwAd* r«r®c i BWz ln| TlTmlcvh To&*r£«« New! Team the overblouse with a slim skirt. Presto! the combination has fashion's new, relaxed look. Bptton-fronter has hip-band back-bow; paneled top has easy lines, flip-up collar. Printed Pattern 9117: Misses’ Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 top style takes 2 yards 35-inch fabric; lower, 214 yards. v Send Thirty-Five Cents (coins) this pattern—add 10 cents for each pattern if you wish Ist-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number, ——
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
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