Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 22 October 1959 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
MOOSE FLOOR SHOW, SATURDAY, OCT. 24 AL STILES and DICK HALE together again—Dick's back from the Army in their famous NOTE and TOE RHYTHM SHOW ~ ’ / Dance to Speck Hobble’s Orchestra FRIDAY NITE, OCT. 23 SQUARE DANCE with The Melody Rangers and Lerion of Moose district meeting. Schmitt's Hickory ■ smoked Oft a I I HAMS lb. OvC I ■ Whole or Shank Half ■ Hickory Smoked H ■ jowl | BACON lb. *VV I FRESH - LEAN M I PORK GQa I I PATTIES lb. ws/V ■ au meat nn | SLICING BOLOGNA 4 b 1 | I 39c Th.— ors ■■ AU PORK—Hickory AA SMOKED O k 1 ‘ UU SAUSAGE Js 1 U 39c th.— or g FRESH - LEAN gfl ftft CASING X l 1 ■«« SAUSAGE <9 s X B 39c Ib. — or
flnMsi .Jink*. rC hhv <ca ml i wy v m EKFa i Jk JV joshes buSh *1 |H9BBr jdjfl A K|| ■MBH 0D“D _ D"DUOFOLD? Ej.3 >r BEGUN'S £ We have Amazing Duofold* Dual- KS9| Thermal Underwear. Just what V/ you need to beat the c01d... without 4 bulky, heavy outerclothes. Scien- Z>4 k\ tifically insulates with soft, light \ dual layers of cotton and wool. | M COTTO n\* . Jjg. Extra warmth without weight. Per- / inside \Vr V ' VM .• ’ . I ->, A Selected by (cntrfch) spiration s evaporated quwkly... \ u s ■■ ’ v« /«K| you’re warm-dry outdoors and in. 71 T ..m» for Perfect-fitting .. . easy washing. I \ Squaw Vailay Ideal for work and play 1 L Mjwinter Gama* BEGUN'S , Clothing Store 102 N. 2nd St. Phone 3-3208
Three Accidents Are Reported By Police The city police reported three , accidents today with two occurring I last night and one early this morn- ! ing. One driver, Fred Busche, 64, of 303 N. Ninth street, was cited for failure to yield the right of way. (and will apepar in justice of the peace court Friday at 7 p.m. '* | The Busche Vehicle was involved, in a $l5O accident at 10th and Mon-' I’ roe at 6:55 p.m. Wednesday with a I II car driven by Jay DeVoss, 17, of. 11 310 N. Fourth street. The Busche) I car was going south pn 10th street, ) I and after stopping for the stop I) sign pulled in front of the DeVoss j II car, which was traveling west on' | Monroe. Damage to the De Voss j I machine amounted to $350 with I SIOO to Busche car. I In a parked car accident, WilI liam Henry Johnson, 27, of route’ I 4, Decatur, drove his machine in-1 to the parked car of Eithel Ray, at L 916 W. Adams street, Thursday! ! (horning at 1:15 o'clock. Damage I to the Johnson car was $75 and 1 S2O to the Ray machine. Johnson I was traveling west on Adams, i j At 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at 157 h N. Second street, a car driven by Mary Catheran Gaffer, 25, pulled into the lane of traffic from a park-’ ed position and struck a car driven i : by Lula Fern, 63, of 1040 Schir- ! meyer street, causing S4O damage) to the Fern machine and $5 to her own car. Monthly Holiness Meeting On Sunday The monthly meeting of the j Adams county holiness association will be held at the Church of the Nazarene in this city Sunday afternoon. The Rev. Carl E. Greek, I pastor of the Berne Church of the Nazarene, will be the speaker, and song leaders will be Wayne and June Haas, of Cory. The public is invited to attend. I Papers Burning On Porch Bring Firemen The Decatur fire department answered an at the Kenneth Hirschy apartments at Five Points Wednesday at 1:25 to extinguish I some papers burning on the back I porch. The firemen returned at l:40i || p.m. reporting that only minor) | damage occurred with mainly | smoke damage. If you have something to sell or II rooms for rent, try a Democrat■ I j Want Ad — They bring results. I ! — . — i
* THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
UN Condemns I Chinese Reds' Acts In Tibet United Nations gave overwhelm- I I ing condemnation late Wednesday | to Chinese Communist actions in I 1 /Tibet and then turned today to I I the pressing problem of world I ■disarmament. I Jules Moch of France was listed I |as the principal speaker in the (I Main Political Committee debate ) I on disarmament. Also listed to I I speak were representatives of I Italy, Greece. Romania and Cuba.; l I France and Italy are members I ipf the 10-nation disarmament com- I I mittee, formed by the Big Four I foreign ministers, who will meet I lin Geneva in February to take up I the arms reduction plans dis- I cussed before the 82 - member I I world organization here. I Most veteran U.N diplomatic I circles admittedly were surprised I by the overwhelming margin for I I indirect U.N censure of the Pei-| 1 ping regime’s suppressions of hu-; I man rights in Tibet. The General Assembly voted, 45- I 9, with 26 abstentions, for an I I Irish-Malayan resolution calling I for "respect for the fundamentall I i human rights of the Tibetan peo- I pie and for their distinctive cul-1 1 tural and religious life.” The vote I came after two days of debate. The censure was an indirecti I one. The motion did not even men-) 1 tion Communist China by name. I The Peiping regime is not a I member of the United Nations and I many speakers, including US 1 1 Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, I conceded there was nothing the j I organization could to to help the i I Tibetans. The United States supported the I resolution. Great Britain and I France were among those which I abstained. Civilians Unpunished For Crimes Overseas WASHINGTON (UPD—The Jus- I tice Department told the Supreme! I Court today that a 1957 ruling on , I courts-martial has allowed civil-1 1 I tans to go unpunished for crimes I J committed overseas with the I I armed forces. Government attorney Oscar Da- I I vis gave this report to the high I | tribunal as arguments began on I j four cases dealing with the power ! I lof the military to try civilians 1 1 •abroad. He said there just isg’t j I | any "acceptable alternative" toil ithe military trialsShow Keen Interest I Chief Justice Earl Warren and! l (several of the associate justices! l showed keen interest in Davis’: l statement and asked for details. 1 1 The 1957 ruling held that in I capital case a service wife accom- I panying her husband abroad is I not subject to trial by court-mar- I tial. The decision was reached in I the cases of two wives convicted I of murdering their husbands. Justice John M. Harlan asked I Davis if the arrtied forces have I gone ahead with trials in non- I capital cases since the high I court’s ruling. Davis said the answer was yes I but that the military had been I "exhibiting a great deal of re- I straint.” In 1956, he explained I there were 121 overseas courts- I martial of dependents and other I civilians, but the number dropped I to 76 in 1957 and to 34 in 1958. I Offenses Increased "The number of offenses has in- I creased, however,” Davis said. | Warren asked if those not tried I by the military were brought into I any other court. “No, they were not tried at I all,” Davis answered. Justice Potter Stewart wanted I to know if these people commit- I ted “the less serious offenses.” Davis said in general this wjis I true, although some “minor lar- I cenies” may have been included I in the unpunished group. But he I added that "no capital cases or I homicides" have gone unpun- I ished. Thor Missile Fired By British Crew VANDERBERG AIR FORCE I BASE, Calif. (UPD — A British I Royal Air Force crew successful I ly fired a Thor intermediate I range ballistic missile Wednesday I from t.'-is central California coast- I al base. It was the seventh Thor fired I here by RAF crews. British crews I are being trained here to launch I the 3,500 - mile range weapon I which currently is operationally w deplbyed in Britain. Jupiter Missile Is Fired Lost Night CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPD I —The Army’s Jupiter intermediate I range ballistic missile, which first I put the United States in. the space I race nearly two years ago, was I successfully fired Wednesday I night. This was a tactical model of I the Jupiter weapon that will go | on dutv soon in the NATO Euro- I pean defense ring with its poten- I tial of sending a nuclear warhead I I deep into the heart of Russia, if I > necessary. J
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1959
