Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 23, Decatur, Adams County, 28 January 1959 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Cuban Trials And Executions Halted Call One-Day Halt For Honoring Marti HAVANA (UPD — The revolutionary government halted its “war crime trials” and executoday for a nationwide ob-

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servance of the 106th birthday of Jose Marti, the "George Washington” of Cuba. They resume Thursday. Revolutionary leader Fidel Castro who has not appeared in public since his return Tuesday from Venezuela, was expected to lead the Marti memorial observances here. In S mtiago, the stronghold of revolutionary sentiment which has been the scene of the bloodiest "war crimes" executions, trials and shootings were postponed

if Tuesday as well as today. They i- are expected to resume Thursday, e In Havana, the Supreior War Board deferred judgment on the i- appeal of Maj. Jesus Sosa Blanco, i- Cuba’s “war criminal No. 2," a against the death penalty imposed d on him last week. His attorneys s have asked permission to introduce new evidence. f Maj. Pedro Morejon Valdes, s who was sentenced to Tuest,day in the second of three scheds uled "show trials,” was allowed i extra time to decide whether he

THE DECATDR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

wants to appeal. Sosa and Morejon occupy adjoining cells on death row in the grim Cabana Fortress-prison overlooking Havana Harbpr. Lt. Col. Ricardo L. Grau, third of Cuba’s major "war criminals,” has not yet been tried. The Strategic Air Command’s B-25 Superfortress can fly faster than 650 miles an hour and higher than 50,000 feet. It can travel 6,000 miles without refueling.

More Bad Weather Forecast In State Rain, Drizzle And Snow Are Forecast United Press Internatienal Another round of rain, drizzle and snow lay ahead for Hoosiers today while river experts ap- - — -fe., *r-T~ .—M. - J-r— ” i*'Tg'— l ■"-N.ww 1..-

praised the possible flooding effects of melting snow in the state’s south portion. The latest forecasts called for light rain or drizzle Thursday, changing to snow Friday. Meanwhile, temperatures were due to rise above freezing throughout the state today, hjgh; enough to melt a snowfall up to six inches deep which harassed! the flooded Southern Indiana area. Flood crests from last week’s heavy rains were mostly in the southwest and the crises posed up-

state along the ice-jammed Wabash River were generally lessened considerably in the last 24 hours. ' A rapid runoff of melting snow might cause additional complications along the White River, where Auch of the water from torrential rains a week ago today has concentrated. / * I Great expanses of farmland were newly flooded in the southwest as White River spilled over its banks well above flood stage. Many schools in the southern por-

, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23. 1959

tion of the state remained closed because of bad roads and flooding in the wake of last week’s rains and this week’s ice and snow storms. Temperatures ranged from 29 at Lafayette to 33 at Evansville Tuesday at their high points and dropped to a range of 9 above at South Bend to 18 at Evansville overnightly. Highs today will range in the 30s, lows tonight in the 20s and highs Thursday from about 35 to 45. The outlook for Friday was colder with rain changing to snow. The five-day outlook indicated temperatures averaging 3 to 6 degrees below normal through next Monday with Friday’s colder trend reversing in a warming pattern Sunday and Monday. Precipitation of three to six-tenths of an inch was expected, heaviest in the south, with more snow and rain Monday. Deficit Is Shown By Erie Railroad The decline in freight traffic coupled with steadily increasing wages were blamed for the Erie Railroad’s 3.6 million dollar deficit for 1958. The previous year, a net income of 3.6 million was recorded. t ___ SENATE Continued trona page on* “Since interest has accumulated throughout the state, every senator sheulß have an opportunity to sit in on the hearing, ask questions and testify,” Christy said. Democratic leaders said before the floor action that if Christy’s motion failed, "we will take some other course of action after a party caucus.” The Democratic move was an c obvious effort to speed action on the bill, which has been nestled in the labor committee since it was introduced on the opening day of the 61-day session Jan. 8. HISTORICAL (Continued from pay on*) Other scenes shown, were: i The monument to Ouiatenon, four miles south of Lafayette, the first fort in Indiana; the George Rogers Clark monument in Vincennes dedicated in 1936 by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt; the. statue of Francis Vigo, who financed Clark's expedition to save the northwest from the British; the Lincoln bridge built where Abraham Lincoln left the state when 21 years old after living here 14 years; the Liberty Bell of the northwest territory * ' the Rappite and Owenite settlements at New Harmony; the Angel Mound archeological site, where much interesting history of early Hoosier cultures is being excavated by Dr. . Glenn A. Black, archeologist of the state historical society; the battleground at Tippecanoe; the statue commemorating the Pigeon Roost massacre during the war of 1812; the Ernie Pyle Memorial; Grouseland, William Henry Harrison’s home; the home of Lew Wallace at Crawfordsville, the Athens of Indiana; J. F. D. Lanier home at Madison — he helped Morton finance the Civil War effort in Indiana; the Shewsbury mansion there, built by the “king” of the flatboat owners; Jarpes Whitcomb Riley’s home at Greenfield, with the original furniture; his Indianapolis home; Edward Eggleston’s home at Vevay; Levi Coffin’s home, where more than 5,000 slaves from three “underground railways” stopped on their way to freedom in Canada before the Civil War;' Gene Stratton Porter’s Limberlost home and her cabin at Rome City; T. C. Steele’s home east of Bloomington; Benjamin Harrison’s home; the Whitewater canal memorial on a nine mile section oi the canal restored by the state historical society; Johnny Appleseed’s grave at Fort Wayne; Frances Slocum’s grave—she was the “white rose” of the Miami Indians; the statue to Menominee, last great chief of the Potawatomies, who led them on the “trail of death” when they were forced from the state; The grave of Samuel Wilson, who during the war of 1812 stamped “Uncle Sam” on quartermaster packages leaving Troy, N. Y., and is credited with originating the national symbol. Uncle Sam. Monday, February 9, Holycross will speak and show slides on the life of Chief Little Turtle of the Miami Indians for the Wells county historical society at Bluffton. QUALITY PHOTOFINISHING AU Work Left Before Noon on ThursdayReady the Next Day, Friday, at HOLTHOUSE DRUB co.