Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 9 July 1959 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
r ORDER FROM HOME BY PHONE WHEN YOU ARRIVE YOUR “BROASTED CHICKEN” will be ready SHAFFER’S RESTAURANT ' PHONE 3-3857 ,
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' First Rabies Death Reported In State INDIANAPOLIS IUPD —The I first rabies death in Indi[ana in more than two years was reported toddy by the State Board iof Health. I The victim was four-year-old Paris Smallwood of near Sullivan. I The yeupgster died only minutes
after, .being admitted to James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children Tuesday night. Dr. Louis W. Spolyar, director of the board of Realty's Bureau ot Preventive Medicine, said a smear test of the boy’s brain tissue was positive, indicating that he had been exposed to rabies. However, Spolyar said further tests would be necessary to confirm the diagnosis. That will take 10 to 12 days, he said. Hospital officials said the boy was believed to have been bitten by a dog about five weeks ago. Rabies takes four to six weeks to develop after exposure to the disease. I State health officials said Sulli|van County authorities kept the dog Much supposedly bit the boy I under observation for two weeks, (but the animal showed no signs lof rabies. But the board said the youngster may have been bitten by another dog. The boy was the son of Mrs. I Irene Smallwood. His father died I last February. The last recorded rabies death | was in 1957, when one person i died. There was also one rabies death in 1955. ; Refuses To Return Pinball Machines INDIANAPOLIS (UPD - Marion County Prosecutor Phillip Bayt served notice today that he may go all the way to the Indiana Supreme Court to avoid returning 89 pinball machines confiscated two . months ago. The hassle over what to do with I the machines came to a head TuesI day when Municipal Judge Joseph . Mazelin ordered them returned to i their owners by Wednesday afteri noon. i But Sheriff Robert O’Neal, with I Bayt’s blessing, refused to return I the machines on grounds that they ! are “contraband" and should be ' destroyed. The owners, James Peachey and Richard Gunn, were acquitted Monday on charges of violating the Hasbrook anti-gambling law and were told they could have the | machines if the devices were takj en out of the county. In the meantime; 1 Peachey j stayed up all night Wednesday keeping an eye on the machines, whrnh were stored in a warehouse near the city asphalt plant. “They've got my life savings in there and I'm going to sit here uritll I get ’em or something happens?' he said.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Demand French GovermentTo Explain Effect PARIS fUPD—A National Assembly deputy demanded today that President Charles de Gaulle's government explain what effect the pullout of 200 U.S. fighterbombers would have on the security of France. The demand was put in a subtle form and it was possible the government could head off a major political debate. But there also was a possibility it could touch off a national uproar. The French action brought comment from the London Daily Mail that France had about quit being 1 an active member of NATO. The first German reaction came from West Berlin where a newspaper ‘ said the action would leave a gap in Western defenses. Deputy Jsan Paul David, a middle-line politician without formal affiliation, asked Premier Michel Debre in writing if he "intends to inform the country of the eventual consequences...for the security of France.” The United States notified the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Wednesday it would transfer t six of its nine atom-bomber squad- , rons in France to Germany and the other three to Britain. The . bases were-built in France at an estimated cost of 60 million dol- ’ lars. The- move was forced by De Gaulle's refusal to allow nuclear stockpiles in France unless and until Washington and London met 1 his demands for a bigger voice ’ in NATO policy and a share of ' Anglo-American atom secrets. In an emergency, planes base in France would have to fly to ' Germany or Britain to pickup ' nuclear bombs. Now they can be stationed right beside them. The move is scheduled to start in the next couple of weeks and . | probably will take about six I months to complete. It involves 1 200 planes and several thousand airmen. Both De Gaulle and Debre were in Madagascar when the news broke and issued no statements, Kozlov Pays Visit To Chicago Today CHICAGO (UPD — Soviet First Deputy 'Premier Frol R. KozlgsA gets an official greeting at City Hall today and spends the rest of the day seeing how American farmers live and work. Russias No. 3 man got a routine handshake from Mayor Richard J. Daleys representative Jack Reilly when he arrived at Midway Airport Wednesday. He was scheduled to receive an official welcome from the mayor today. Then Kozlov and his party were to go by automobile to Grundy County, southwest of Chicago, for a tour of a half-dozen dairy, grain and livestock farms. The Russian leader ended a rapid tour of the Gary-East Chicago, Ind., steel mill area Wednesday night by telling a group of American steel executives that the Soviet Union does not want to “impose its social structure on any people or nation. He said he believed the United States, *also, was not trying to force others to accept its way of doing things. Kozlov compared U.S.-Russian relations to an ingot of steel. Just as an ingot often has imperfections that must be cleared away, he said, so will threre be disagreements between ,the Americans and Russians. He said a steel ingot sometimes must be discarded entirely if it has too many imperfections. It would be a “catastrophe, he said, to allow the “ingot of American - Russian relations to be thrown away. Kozlov made the comments during a 10-minute, off-the-cuff speech before 25 of the nations top steel officials and 50 handpicked guests at a dinner in the plush South Shore Country Club in Chicago. While waiters served a dinner of jellied consomme, roast beef, baked potatoes, avocado salad, grapefruit and orange supreme, three pickets stood outside the door handing out pamphlets telling of the "starvation of Hungary. Take Mom and the Kids to the Park this week-end, and take along HAMBURGERS 6,., I®® from 1 WIN-BAE DRIVE - IN North 13th St.
Extension Os Free Highway Opposed INDIANAPOLIS /UPI) — The executive director of the Northern • Indiana Toll Road Commission said tod ay««f forts will be .made to head off federal extension of a federal extension of a free highway which would greatly reduce revenues from the Hoosier super- ; highway. Charles W. Cook Jr., said a 20 per cent anticipated loss in rev- ■ enue would be “disastrous.” Cook said engineers estimated ■ that the toll road would lose more ■ than two million dollars a year • if the present Tri-State Highway > is extended from Gary to the Ini diana-Michigan border. The toll road collected 9% mil- ■ lion dollars in tolls last year. I Cook said toll road officials ; woud go to Washington within : the next two weeks to ask the U. i S. Bureau of Roads not to approve • further extension of the Tri-State > Highway which now runs from Chicago to Gary, about 5 miles i south of the toll road. "We are going to try to con- • vince the Bureau of Public Roads ■ to not finance the Tri-State High- • way beyond its persent terminus,” ■ Cook said. Extension -of the Tri-State Highway from Gary to the Porter- ■ Lake County line would cdst the ■ toll road an of ■ $970,000 a year, Qook said. I In other action at thecommis- : sion’s regular meeting, John Keni dall, Danville, was reelected chair- ■ man. Governor Handley eartier appointed Kendall to a new four- ! year term on the commission. • Robert E. Kirby, Indianapolis, 1 was reelected vice chairman and t Lawrence F. Crosbie, Indianapolis ? was reelected secretary-treasurer, f New four-year contracts also were issued to Farwell Rhodes ? Jr., Greenwood, the commission’s > director of public relations, and > Herman D. Hartman, chief engin- ; eer. Their present contracts expire Aug. 26. t ; New Government Is l Formed By Sukarno ! JAKARTA, Indonesia (UPI) — President Sukarno today formed a tight new government for this crisis-torn young nation and gave three of its cabinet posts to military men. But Sukarno, who dissolved the nation’s Western-style government last Sunday on grounds it wasn't ' workable for Indonesia, did not in- ' elude any Communists or Commu- > nisi sympathizers in the new government, despite their loudly proclaimed support of him. Sukarno last Sunday threw out the democratic constitution adopted in 1945 and assumed near dictatorial powers. In the cabinet he formed today to implement his concept of “guided democracy,” which will do away with parliamentary democracy, Sukarno will serve as president and prime minister. Sukarno gave the important Defense Ministry post to Army Chief of Staff Lt. Gen; Abdul Haris Nasutfon, considered one of the country’s most powerful men. Two other posts in the so-called "inner cabinet” of nine ministries also went to Army men. The new government, Indonesia’s 18th in its 14 years of existence as an independent nation, represented a drastic reduction of the rambling bureaucracy of outgoing Prime Minister Djuan-da, who ran a 27-man cabinet. Included among the seven exofficial ministers —in an “outer cabinet"—will be chiefs of staff of the army, navy and air force, the police commandant, attorney general, deputy chairman of the national advisory council and chairman of the national planning board. Atlanta Integration Program Is Ordered ATLANTA (UPI) — A federal judge ordered the Atlanta Board of Education today to produce by Dec. 1 a complete plan for a “prompt and reasonable start” toward desegregation of the city’s public schools. Federal Judge Frank A. Hooper based his order on a non-jury, trial last month of a suit by 10 Negro parents who sought to break segregation barriers in the Atlanta city school system. At the conclusion of the trial Hooper had ordered an end to segregated practices, but he had set no date for the presentation to his Court of a plan implementing the order. Judge Hooper, apparently taking into account Georgia’s strict state laws requiring segregation in all public schools, said today the School board could submit its desegregation plan “contingent upon the enactment of statutes permitting such plan to be put into operation.” The Atlanta system is bound by state law under which any integrated school would be closed and itsstate funds withdrawn.
What’s Your Postal I. Q.? [ DEAD LETTERS TRUE O NEVER FIND FALSE O THEIR WAY HOME/1 place\ V W / GIVES MEI V I /the creeps! I Um-Uli r L GO,N ?f LLIILR A \ HOME .*4l wmittihm %>*; *y ,/y WjH nwo on-/ [/ ifc V W* ju • ’ *1 l ix -V* ‘ \lA** »• v
' FALSE. Dead letters are opened ' at dead letter post offices in an attempt to determine the correct ' name and address of either the ad- ' dressee or sender so that they may be delivered or returned. Only those employees especially designated to open dead letters are allowed to open such matter and . then only under supervision. When r the correct name and address of either the sender or addressee can . be determined from the contents, . the dead letter is sent to one or the . other under official sealed cover ■ and a 10 cent fee is collected for . this service. Letters containing cash or valuables in excess of $1 , are kept on file one year. If unl claimed by that time they become ; the property of the U.S. government. Letters with thoughtful par- » ents never end up “dead” because i they bear the complete name and ; address of both sender and addresl see and will be either delivered as • intended or returned to sender. ■ 2. IS A BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT FIRST-CLASS MAIL? YES and NO. If a birth announcement is mailed in a sealed envelope, or if it contains handwritten or typewritten additions such as the baby’s weight, name, date born, etc., it is first-class mail and; the postage required is 4 cents per j ounce. However, if the announce-/ ment is entirely printed and is malied in an unsealed envelope, it | ' is third-class mail and the postage I ’ is 3 cents for the first two ounces, j First-class mail is all matter wholly or partly in writing; matter ealed against inspection; unsealed matter (including p a r cel s) endorsed “First-Class Mail”; and post and postal cards not larger than 3-9/16 by 5-9/16 inches or ■ smaller than 2-3/4 by 4 inches. Post and postal cards require postage of 3 cents each. First-class mail travels faster, receives priority service, and is kept in locked pouches when enroute from post office to post office. For answers to other questions about the postal service call Leo Kirsch, Decatur postmaster. Make It in a Day Printed Pattern uI y V p ’ >• / / 11 11/"wit-r / I/* */ S ■LIA */* * Jl\ \ f i i ol i — nf* till *b*i J * Wr siX? I 3* *1 1 Jf/WD 9385 //o® sizes 14%-24% / ly Marvel of fashion and sewing I ease! Sew this slimming style in I less than a day — it’s designed to fit the shorter, fuller figure. I Smart in silk or cotton. Tomor- I row’s pattern: Child's playset. < Printed Pattern 9385: Half Sizes 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% takes 3% Jards I 39-inch fabric. I Printed directions on each pat- I tern part. Easier, accurate. I Send Thirty-five cents (coins’ I for this pattern — add 10 cents I for each pattern for first-class I mailing. Send to Marian Martin, I Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern | Dept., 232 West 18th St, New | York 11, N. Y. Print plainly I Name. Address with Zone, Size | and Style Number. >1
State Meeting Os —- Roadside Council Tuesday, the Indiana Roadside council have their statewide summer meeting, Mrs. R. C. Hersh, new director of the Fort Wayne district, announced this morning. Any members or interested area residents are welcome to attend, at the Sportman's hotel, Monticello, Tuesday., The board meeting will begin at 9 a.m., and registration will begin at 9:45 a.m. The general session will be from 10 a.m. until 2:45 p.m. Monticello is near the junction of state roads 421 and 24, almost due west of Decatur in North Central Indiana. Trade <a a good town - D e ?ur
LAST CHANCE! ORDER NOW! &. BLACK and RED I BMW RASPBERRIES IN TINS b SWEETandSOUR | CHERRIES DEWBERRIES - Evan.ng - CALL NOW! Phone 3*3703 HAMMOND FRUIT MARKET 240 N. 13th Street OPEN 7 DAYS X WEEK-8 A.M. to 10 P.M, t■’ - ■ I EXTRA SPECIALS I JUST A SAMPLE OF SAVINGS TO BE MADE WHEN 1 YOU SHOP AT SCHMITT'S FOR ADAMS COUNTY CHOICE QUALITY MEATS. TRY SOME THIS WEEK-END, YOU WILL BE PLEASED! I I SMOKED SIRLOIN I I SAUSAGE STEAKS I 11« 45c lb 79c| B Schmitt'* LEAN _. _ " W |S Old Fashion ALL MEAT ■ W Hickory Smoked , H ■ Slicing ■ I SLICED * I I BACON BOLOGNA I I lb. 45c lb - 45cl I I ■HNi ' HE ■ ■’ u.
THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1959
Labor Board Issues Order Against Firm WASHINGTON (UPI) — The National Labor Relations Board announced today it has issued a “broad cease and desist” order concerning unfair labor practices by the Bowmar Instrument Corp., Fort Wayne, Ind. The board affirmed a trial examiner’s recomnymdations for the action on the grounds that the company “interfered with, restrained and coerced its employes,” in connection with organization efforts by the International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers. Hearing Expert Returns to Decatur ( SONOTONE’S HEARING EXPERT, Mr. J. M. Friend, of Fort Wayne, will conduct Sonotone’s regular monthly hearing center pt the Rice Hotel, Decatur, this Saturday, July Uth from 2:00 to 5:00 p. m. Anyone who has a hearing problem, or difficulty in understanding is invited to consult Mr. Friend without charge. Those doing so will be given, in privacy, an audiometric hearing test following medically accepted practices and an analysis of the individual’s hearing loss. _ Investigate the Sonotone plan for better hearing. It employs the latest transistor and research developments for compensative correction of hearing impairment. Home consultation by appointment. Free booklet on request.
