Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 17, Decatur, Adams County, 21 January 1960 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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Death Toll Is Mounting From Severe Storm United Pre*. latrni.Ueasl The death toll mounted today In the wake of one ot the worst ice and * now .torms of the season I Three children, all under 3 years of age. died when fire swept their family’s four-room frame home in Smelterville. Idaho. A woman and two children were killed when their car was hit by two trucks on icy U.S. SO near Emporia. Kan. Their deaths brought to 31 the number of fatalities blamed on the storm, which swept from Colo- ' i ndo to the cast coast earlier this week, leaving sub-zero temperatures and ice-glazed roads in its path. •» Nebraska reported 12 storm 'deaths. Kansas had 7. Texas 8. Colorado 5. Oregon and Wisconsin 14 each. Missouri 3. New York 2 □nd Illinois. lowa. Louisiana. Maine and Michigan 1 each. Most of the victims died in auto accidents, froze to death or suffered heart attacks while shovel--1 ing away heavy snows. Not even Florida and California escaped the storm's bite. Tourists shivered in 48-degree weather in Miami and the mer|cury fell below freezing in northern Florida towns normally warmed by balmy Gulf breezes. Hundreds of thousands of Californians were hit bg a flu bug I which concentrated in the Los AnI geles area. The U.S. Weather Bureau predicted more cold weather today east of the Mississippi, but said warmer temperatures would move I from western Texas into Nebraska and westward across Missouri into eastern Kentucky and Tennessee. Warmer readings also were expected over the central and northjern Rockies and throughout Moni tana, where ,the temperature rose 20 degrees early today—almost to • zero. - The weathermen said snow flurries would fall from the Rockies across the northern plains to the Appalachians, with rain expected in northern and central California and the Pacific Northwest. Stock Market Fails To Boom As Foreseen NEW YORK (UPI) — Wall Street today measured the stock market performance of the first 13 days of 1960 — unlucky days that brought to mind vigorously the old financial district adage: “When any group is unanimous in anything it usually is wrong. Wall Streeters recalled how they had ignored that adage but noted the stock market didn’t. It declined in 11 of the 13 sessions in the industrials which lost 4178 points or 6 per cent Before the New Year began everyone — economists, business men, market traders, brokers, and even the little fellows who make the big markets — had predicted a boom in 1960, the first of the golden sixties. There wasn’t a dark scloud in the sky. Few Were Ruffled Such things as tight money high prices for stocks, the good news of the steel strike settlement. bigger demand for some U.S. Treasury securities, foreign selling, institutional selling, and a dose of anti-inflation didn t ruffle a single prognosticator. Almost to a man — they had plotted a rising curve for the market that would bring the industrials to 750 or higher against the 1959 close to a record 679.3 b. Things started fairly well. Prices moved higher but a dip before closing in the first session left the industrials a mite lower. But the rails gained 3.13 points, and market men said that was a good omen. They looked for new leadership in the 10-year old bull market from the carrier shares. In the second session, industrials and rails both made new highs for the year—industrials at a record high of 685.47 and rails at 160.43. Utilities Best Behaved At the close Wednesday night, the industrials were down to 643>69, a new low since Noy. 19. Rails at 155.13 were off only 5.30 points ot 3.3 per cent and would have made a much better showing had not Chesapeake & Ohio fallen $10.50 a share. . Utilities behaved best of HU. rising four times to the! 131 sessions and losing only 190 points or less than 2.2 per cent in the period. The brokers were hard put to make buying recommendaitons. One suggested buy the “walflowers,” the stocks of good caliber that hadn’t moved in a long time. - • .-- " Another said buy the “comfortable stocks,” the ones that could be relied upon to show good earnings and some price appreciation regardless of what happened. .. Glossy Finish Add a little borax to the water in which sateen or cotton materials with a glossy finish are rinsed, and it will help retain the shiny surface..
Judge Ru.ael W Smith Judge Russell Smith To Seek Nomination Judge Russell W Smith, presently a member of the Indiana appellate court, announced this week that he will seek his party’s nomination for the office of judge of the Indiana appellate court at the Democratic state convention to be held June 21 of this year. Judge Smith is a close friend and associate of Judge G. Remy Bierly. who has served this past veer'oft the appellate court with the I ji Porte county judge. Newly Appointed A resident of LaPorte, Judge Smith has been active to Democratic politics for many years. He represented LaPorte and Starke counties as joint representative in the Indiana general assemblies of 1927. 1931 and the special session of 1932. In 1934 he was elected judge of the LaPorte county superior court and was re-elected in 1938 He served as attorney for the Indiana legislative bureau for ten years and then was appointed as a member of the appellate court in March of 1959 The 1959 Indiana general assembly provided for two additional members of the appellate court to be appointed by the governor, serving until the next general election. The appointees were to be a Democrat and a Republican: Judge Smith was appointed as the Democratic member.* Practiced Law From 1923 until 1935, Judge Smith was engaged in the general practice of law in LaPorte. associated with the firm of Smith, Rees and Smith. His father, Ralph N. Smith, a prominent Democratic official and attorney, was a member of the firm until his election as a member of the appellate court in 1932. A member of the 1917 graduating class of the LaPorte high school. Judge Smith attended Indiana University until his induction into the United States Army during World War I. Following his release from service, he attended the University of Michigan, gradutaing from the law school of this institution in 1923. A member of the Indiana state ’ bar association, American bar I asociation, the American Legion and the Methodist church, he is i married and has a step-daughter i and three grandchildren. British Socialist - Leader Is Critical , ’ 1 ! LONDON (UPI) —-Aneurin , (Nye> Bevan, 62-year-old fiery ’ symbol of British Socialism, I struggled for life today in a London hospital. An official statement said his condition was a I cause for grave anxiety. Bevan underwent a major abdominal operation Dec. 29 and his ■ apparent failure to snap back has been consistently apparent in cautiously-worded hospital COm- ’ muniques. His wife, Mrs. Jinnie 1 Lee, also a noted Labor MP, has been a daily visitor. i Messages of sympathy and ’ cheer have poured in from all I over the world, including one from Soviet Premier Nikita Khru- • shchev. Queen Elizabeth has been ' in almost daily touch with Mrs. : Lee and the hospital. Exact nature of the surgery undergone by Bevan, deputy leader of the Labor party, has not been ' announced. But his doctors in elude specialists in duodenal and > gastric ulcers. Reports Bevan [ might be a victim of cancer were denied recently by Hugh Gait- , skell, the Labor party chief. That Bevan was in a crisis stage first was disclosed late ’ Wednesday when a hospital bulle- ; tin spoke of his doctors’ grave I anxiety. The possibility of a blood transfusion was mentioned. Late Wednesday night Bevan’s sur- > geon, after calling on his patient at the Royal Free Hospital, said ■ there was “no Change.” But he • said “we are not worried for the I night.” t Woman Driver Dies ! As Train Hits Car ELKHART, Ind. <UPI> — Mrs Geneva S. Francisco, 44, Elkhart, was killed at midnight Tuesday when her car was hit by a New . York Central Railroad passenger . train at a crossing here. Her death was the 49th traffic fatality ’ in Indiana this year, and the first reported since Sunday evening.
Sen. Kennedy To Seek Votes | Os Wisconsin MILWAUKEE F Kennedy plunged Into the Wisconsin presidential primary today, with a charge that his chief competitors for thr Democratic nomination are staying ‘'safely on «* aide lines' in hopes of manipulating the convention Kennedy announced that he will wage an April 3 primary battle against Sen Hubert Humphrey 'D-Mlnn.» in Wisconsin, the heart of Humphrey a strength tor the Democratic presidential nominetkm . . •’! am fully aware of the risks and difficulties that course involves.” the Massachusetts Democrat said In a prepared statement. In an implied jab at Humphrey, who is not running against him in | i the New Hampshire primary. Kennedy said: “No other candidate, real or unannounced, has indicated a willingness to enter any primary adjoining the home state of another contender —including New Hampshire, which is next to my own state pf Massachusetts." But Kennedy said that "never-| theless. the people of Wisconsin should not be denied their right to help select the Democratic presidential nomihee merely because their state happens to adjoin Minnesota.” The latter Is. Humphrey's home state. “The Republicans of Wisconsin have frequently in the past been given a wide choice of presidential contenders,” Kennedy said. “In | 1960. they will not have such a choice. The Democrats must.”
ELKS LODGE SATURDAY, JAN. 23 Entertainment 9:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. DANCE—Ray Giant Orchestra.-10 P. M. to lA. M. ELKS and INVITED GUESTS! | NEWBERRY’S < GIGANTIC S 3 i YARD GOODS SALE IS BEING CONTINUED - THROUGH SATURDAY! “ iTmifciry 11 FRESH LEMON-ORANGE . CAKE MS . 74c -- MWMAAAANMMMMMAAfWWMAAAAAAAAMWMAANA ; Dutch Bread ' CAKE .. e . Our Specialty — ■ Especially - Decorated fy-Q Oakes! a •_ £— •• ■ 7- I. ■ I Try Oar Delicious DANISH “Breakfast” ROLLS! Stewart’s Bakery 229 North Second Street
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Without nwOTtornng any names. Kennedy pointedly said: "Evon my cM cnmprtme. in th«- convention remain ..My on the aide Hot. . hoping to >ain ihr nomination lh»'xr<h manipulation of toe convention. 1 cannot follow the advice of those urging me not to enter this or other representative primaries " Cass County Sheriff Dies Os Heart Attack I LOGANSPORT. Ind ' UPI ' ” Case County sheriff Ixxuvie Hall. 4g. collapsed in the hallway of the courthouse Wednesday night and died of a heart attack He took office only • yr«r ago,* after his I elect 100 as a Republican in 1958 Hall was a member of th< lx>gansport Police Department tor 20 I years and once was chief. WEEKEND SPECIALS! Ground Beef ---- Ib. Potatoes 10 lbs. 39c Pork Patlies Ib. 49c Hoad Meat t Souso, 1b 39c Slicing Bologna 3 Ib. $1 00 Wieners and Garlic Franks -----—- Ib. 39c Frosh Side A Sausage Ib. 25c Young Beef livor -_ Ib. 39c Pork Livor Ib. 19c Minute Steak — Ib. 69c T-Bone Steak —— Ib. 69c Round Steak Ib. 69c Sirloin Steak Ib. 69c OPEN FRI. A SAT. till 9 P. M. SUDDUTH’S Meat Market 512 S. 13th St. Phone 3-2788
