Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 44, Decatur, Adams County, 22 February 1960 — Page 1
Vol. LVIII. No. 44.
— - " r— ~~ —r- ■ V J* ■’7 '. > 1 t THEIB CUP OF TBA-Bovs play in the .now along the ?or‘‘thr'hr'T’^e'in truck, .tretchc. into the distance. A weekend .term led to closing m in. imm «• w its history __ ___ —-
Advertterr Par* Adams Central IHSA Tourney . 8 j Adams County Trailer Sales . 7A Adams Builders & Supply Inc. 7A I Adams Distributing Co. 6| Aumann Electric GA L. Anspaugh Studio .. 7A American Legion Post 43 .... 8A Adams & Decatur Drive In Theatres ---- 3. 8A Anderson Industry 7 Ashbauchers’ Tin Shop 6 Andy's Place <A| Adams Central High School . 2A I Adler Bros. Oarage 2A Adams Central Bus Drivers .. 2A Adams County Farm Bureau Co-op 2A Beavers Oil Service .......... 5,6 j Bower Jewelry Store 3, 8A Burk Elevator Co. —5, BA| Butler Garage 6] Briede Studio 3, 8A Burke Insurance Service - 2 Baker Plumber 4 Heating .... 6A Begun's Clothing Store 8A Bill's Corner 7A | Bob's- 6 Black Funeral Home 8A Bowers Hardware Co., Inc. ... 6 Burke Standard Service r 6A Burgett's Win Rae Drive In — 8A Blackstone Case BA Budget Loans -- G John Brecht Jewelry ®A( Bank of Geneva 4A> Bixler Insurance Agency 4A( Bahner's Barber Shop 2A Chalmer Barkley, Builder 2A Balsiger Super Service 3A Berne-French Township School 3A Berne Oil Co. ... ..... — 3A Berne Ice Cream Co. 3Ai Berne Lumber Co. 3A City of Decatur 1A Chic Laundry 4 Dry Cleaners . 7A Conrad's "66” Service ... 7A Cowens Insurance Agency —4, 7A Commercial Print Shop 6 Culligan Soft Water Service .. 7A Cardinal Inn 4A Cecile's Beauty Shop ... 2A Central Market 2A Converse Tractor Sales 2A Clauser Furniture r -- 3A Decatur Chamber of Commerce 7 ■ Decatur Antb Supply 8A Decatur Catholic High School . 6A Decatur Dry Cleaners 7A Decatur Hatchery 7A Decatur Sport Center 8, 6A Decatur Industries 7A Decatur Jr .-Sr. High School 7 A D.H.S. Booster Club 7 A Decatur 24-Hour Coin Operated Laundry 7A Decatur Equipment Inc. 6 Dick’s Grill GA Decatur Music House 6 Decatur Ready-Mix, Inc. 6 Decatur Iron 4 Metal Co. 6 Decatur Lumber Co. ■.......... 6 Decatur Farms — 7 D. 4 T. Standard Service .... 7 A Duo Marine, Inc. —7 ~ Dean's Body Shop ..... 5A Dale’s Store 4 Shoe Repair .. 2A Ellenberger Bros., Auctioneers . 5 B. P. O. Elks 7 F. O. O. Eagles —-—7 Fritz Ellsworth Garage 6 Eastern Indiana Oil 4 Supply Co. 4A R. H. Everett .... —- 4A Emick’s Bowl* 3A First State Bank of Decatur . 8, 7A Fager Appliances 4 Sporting Goods 7A Fairway —3, 8, 6A Franz Electric 8A Farmer Feed Mill —— 4A Food Bank ...... 4A _ Felber Machine 4 Welding Shop — 3A First Bank of Berne .... 3A Flick’s Body Shop 3A Goodyear .... 5 Gays Mobil Service 7A Gage Tool 4 Engineering Co. . 6A E. F. Gass Store 6A Gene’s Shell Service .......... 7A Gerber’s Super Market .... 7 Gillig 4 Doan Funeral Home .. 8A Gilpin Ornamental Iron GA Goodin’s I.G.A. Store 8A Gulf Super Service GA Geneva Locker Service 4A, 5A Gifford’s I. G. A. Store—.-— 3A Gilliom Lumber Co., Inc. 3A Holthouse Drug Co? —..2, 6. 8 Holthouse Futniture Store —— 2. 7 Pauline Haugk Real Estate .. 5..6 Hardware BA
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
ADVERTISING INDEX
Haflich 4 Morrissey Shoes ... fiA 1I I Willis N. Hakes. Contractor ... «■' j Haugks Plumbing. Heating and Appliances BA 1 P. N. Hlrsch 4 Co., Model Dept. Store .... — ....... 711 Home Dairy Products. Inc. ... 3A ' | Hartford High School SA 1 I ADD ADVERTISING INDEX 1 Ivan "Skip” Hakes SA 1 Hanni Furniture Co 4AI Hanni Plumbing Shop - 4A jl (Hofstetter Motor Sales. Inc. 4A ( Hakes Cabinet Shop 4A j 1 Habegger Furniture. Inc. 3A 1 .Happy’s Place 3A j 1 (Hendricks Electric - 3Ap (Indiana Motor Truck Ass’n., Inc. 4 11 ■ Ideal Dairy — ®|* (Jefferson Garage - 3A 1 (Kelly Dry Cleaners —3, 7A S Kaye's Shoe Store - 7A ‘ Knights of* Columbus «. - 6Aj‘ i Klenks — — —- ® A j S The Krick-Tyndall Co. — 6 I I Kocher Lumber 4 Coal Co 6 j S Kohne Drug Store 6 J Ken Hoffman Garage 2A< Lawson Plumbing 4 Heating ... 7 ‘ (Arthur H. Lengerich - - 6A I I Lute's Flowers -7 I Linn Grove Hardware 5A < j Lister's Store --—— —— 2A i | Lehman Feed Mills 3A f ; Lehman Heating 4 Plumbing .. 3A ( • Myers Cleaners .— 2 J (Mies Recreation —- 6A S Phil L. Macklin Co. 61 The Maier Hide 4 Fur Co. .... 6 < Miller-Jones GA f i Miller’s Grocery — 6 f (Mirror Inn 7 ’ ■Morris Barber Shop 6 ' IL. O. 0. Moose ——7 I Murphy’s Barber Shop 6A 1 G. C. Murphy Co. 7 Myers Home 4 Auto Supply .... 6 McMillen Feed Mills 6A 1 F. McConnell 4 Sons, Inc. ------ 6 1 Meshberger Bros. Stone Corp. .5A 1 Monmouth High School 5A ) McClain 4 Franks 4A ’ Marathon Service 4A 1 Mattax Auto Paint Shop 2A 1 Monroe Grain & Supply. Inc. . 2A 1 The Maytag Shop 3A 1 Northern Indiana Public Service 1 Co. 3 1 J. J. Newberry Co. 7 Nagel's Quality Flowers 3A ’ Old American Insurance Co. .... 2 ] Owens Building 4 Millwork 2A j Petrie Oil Co. 4, 7A J Parkway "66” Service 1 1
Delay Civil Rights Issue
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Prospects increased today that the Senate might set aside the civil rights issue temporarily and work on high-priority appropriations bills. Chairman Carl Hayden (DAriz.) of the appropriations committee has said he does not think the civil rights debate should be allowed to block- action the allimportant money billsThe likelihood of an interruption in the hot and- heavy Senate civil rights debates arose <sn the heels of a forecast that the House would pass its own bill by March 15, 5* Assistant House Republican Leader Leslie C. Arends (Ill.) has predicted that the House would beat down Southern opposition and approve what he called “meaningful” civil rights legislation by mid-March. Arends’ statement strenthened the strategy adopted by Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.) of waiting for the House to act first on the touchy election-year issue. Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen (Ill.), however, has urged that the Senate beat the House to the punch by approving its own bill
Peterson Grain Co. ............ BAI The Pioneer ................... 8A ■ Price Men's Wear 8A Peck Hardware 5A | Preble Restaurant 5A Preble Equity Exchange, Inc. . 5A The Porter House — 4A Pleasant Mills High School „v.. 4A Palmer House - — 3A Parr's Tire and Implement Service ......... 3A Poplar Drive Inn 3A Quality Chevrokft-Buick, Inc. .. 7 Rentz Florists 7A Riverside Garage 8A Riverview Gardens 7 Roop's Grocery j 8A Roth’s Electric — 2A Riesen 4 Schug Motors. Inc. .. 3A Schwartz Ford Co., Inc. — 8 L. Smith Insurance Agency. Inc. S Smith Drug Co 2. 4. 8A Shaffer's Restaurant 2 Sanitary Market — —... 8A Sears, Roebuck 4 Co. .—.— 8A Al Schmitt — 7 Sheets Furniture Co. 6 Shell Bros. Plumbing 4 Heating 8A Singleton Radio 4 T V. Service 8A Smith Pure Milk Co. 6 Kenny Singleton, Distributor .. 7A Stiefel Grain Co. 7 Stop Back News Stand — 8A Stucky’s Gas Appliances ._ r — 4A Shoaf Plumbing 4 Heating .... 4A Clark Smith, Builder 2A Stucky 4 Co. - 2A Schindler Electric Co. 3A Sprunger Shoe Store ...— 3A Shell Service Station 3A Stan's Men’s Wear 3A Swiss-Bilt Homes 3A Teeple ®, ®A Thomas Realty. Auction 4 Securities ....' 7A Teen Togs T 6A Tony’s Tap GA Two Brothers GA Town of Monroe 2A Uhrick Bros. 7 Veterans of Foreign Wars ...... 7 Victory Bar 1 ® A Vegamato Tomato Products .. 4A Walls Pastry Shop ... 8A Western Auto Store ..... 6A West End Restaurant ... 8A Wertzberger Confectionery ... 8A Wemhoff Memorials 6 Walbert Case — 3A Yost Construction Co., Inc. 6A Yost Gravel Readymix, Inc. — 7A Paul Yoder Garage 5A Zintsmaster Motors 6 Zwick Funeral Home 7 Zurcher’s Mobile Service 2A
In spite of his apparent wishes to sidetrack the civil rights action in the Senate, until next month, Johnson has announced the Senate would continue the debate, which has bogged down the upper chamber for a week, today —despite the usual procedure of recessing after a Washington’s birthday reading of the first president’s Farewell Address. The House met at noon to hear Rep. Charles H. Brown (D-Mo.) read the 7,641-word address on the 228th anniversary of Washington’s birth. Other congressional news: Taxes: It looked as if self-em-ployed persons Stood a 50-50 chance of getting a permanent break on their income taxes to ‘help them save toward retirement. Prospects rose with the disclosure that the Treasury is modifying its strong stand against a House-passed bill which would permit the self-employed to defer payments on income taxes on certain amounts placed in retirement funds. Committees: Senate appropriations subcommittees met to consider vote-catching public works appropriations and the budget for the Commerce Department-
OWLY DAILY NrWSPAFBB W ADAMS COCNTY
Dfhir, Indknw, Monjjiy, Ftb. 22 t 1960.
Rival Factions Greet President Eisenhower On Puerto Rican Stop
SAN JUAN. Puerto Rico <UPD I— Rival faction* ahoutiag "W<|Like Ika” and other* demanding (Puerto Rican independence greeted President Eisenhower today on i the safe completion of the first (leg of his 15.500 . mite Latin American tour. * A strong police guard separated (the rival demonstrators and kept (them 400 to 500 feet distant from the landing strip at San Juan's ultra-modern airport where the presidential 707 jet put down at • 53 a m. c.a.t. The President arrived in perfect Weather and he was refreshed by j a nap of an hour and a half en route. Eisenhower spent 49 minutes at the airport and then took off for Ramey Air Force Base on the other side of the island to spend the night. He landed at Ramey at 11 am. Person* on Hand In his remarks here, the President cited Puerto Rico as an outstanding example of the benefits to be gained in cooperation with the United States. He praised the island commonwealth in the Caribbean as having blended the ' best of two economic and cultural systems which makes it a symbol for other peoples seeking to raise their status. , In reply. Gov. Luis MunozMarin told the President that while Puerto Rico has the right to change its commonwealth relationship with the United States, the great majority of its people do not want to change the present status - . . The President’s journey will take him to Brazil, Argentina Chile and Uruguay in the days. His flight here from Andrews Air ' Force Base in Maryland took three hours and four minutes. A crowd of more than 5.000 persons was on hand to meet the President, kept under tight control by a strong police guard. Rival political factions displayed banners of greetings to the Presi-, dent and placards urging immediate independence for this island which has voluntary commonwealth ties with the United States Police Separate Groups About 10 minutes before the ' President landed, representatives . of opposing political factions shouted at each other across the ( road leading to the airport—where they had been kept at a safe distance. , ~ Each group darted across the ( road occasionally and threw pam- ’ phlets at the opposing faction — ‘ one of 'which wanted to continue ‘ Puerto Rico’s commonwealth ‘ status and the other which wanted L immediate freedom. But prompt ’ police action separated the groups r each time. i Eisenhower, smiling and re- ■ laxed. appeared to be unaware of the demonstrations as he told the crowd in his arrival remarks that he brought Puerto Rico “greetings from your fellow citizens of the 50 states of the republic.” Part of the crowd burst into a chant of "We like Ike” after he had inspected the guard of honoi and received formal greetings from Gov. Munoz-Marin. But there was no applause during the President’s speech for the simple reason that the crowd ! could not hear hirm There was ■ no public address system in--1 stalled. Microphones visible on the * field apparently were for local ‘ radio stations. > "Shield of Ptace” ’ Sunday night in Washington before starting on this trip to win 1 new friends for the United States ' in Latin America and to combat anti-Americanism stirred up by ■ misunderstanding and Communist agitation, the President pictured ! the United States a "an anchor . of free world security’ ana a “trustworthy shield of peace. He said the Communists were guilty of “blatant falsehood in J claiming that the United States “has held Latin America in a ' colonial relationship.” He promised that the United States’ “good partner” policy with | its Latin American neighbors was ’ a permanent one. t The President in his arrival . speech here cited Puerto Rico as an outstanding example of the ■ development at a Latin area in ' association with the United States. “niis island, in the Caribbean ■ waters between two great conti- • nental land masses. . has been i stirred by two mighty currents of ■ history, enriched by two great treasuries of culture,” he said.
I New Snow Storm Threatens Nation; I
[I United Pre** Internattenal A new snow storm churned up! 11 In the Rockies today, threatening ! I the nation with a fresh onslaught I »of winter. J “It has all the markings of another national storm.” the Chica-. Jgo Weather Bureau said. 'But ■ jit's too early to tell where the; 11 heavy snow will be.” The new snow warning came as j the Midwest and East struggled to dig out from under successive i (storms that swept across the I country over the weekend. The' Middle West and Plains | stales were hit by eight inches of ( [snow Sunday The storm center i moved into Canada today but ( some fre*h snow was expected in the Northeast. Despite new* snow up to six I inches, highway crews in Penn-1 sylvania kept the Pennsylvania | Turnpike open. A storm last week 'dumped up to two feet of snow on the state and forced the closing i of the turnpike for the first time since it opened in 1940 | A 170-mile section of the turn-, pike from Irwin to Gettysburg was closed for 36 hourii. stranding thousands of travelers. ( Last week’s storm also closed a 130-mile stretch of the New York Thruway between Buffalo and Syracuse when wind fanned drifts reached 15 feet. I More than 100 persons were still stranded at the thruway s JimMU " Ponds service area Bunday until 1 the superhighway was’reopened to traffic. They spent two nights sleeping on tables, chairs and n< Two leopards escaped from a circus truck stranded on the thruway but were recaptured two hours later without harm to anyThe new storm building up in the west caused two private plane Cr S“body of P.ul Noble. Otto J. Bieberich Dies This Morning Otto J. Bieberich, 72-year-old retired Preble township farmer, who resided three miles northwest of Preble, died at 4 o clock this morning at the Adams county memorial hospital. He had been hospitalized in serious condition, since suffering a cerebral hemor-. rhage five weeks ago. He was born in Preble towmship June 30, 1887, a son of John and Sophia Kiess-Bieberich, and was married to Adelinda Prange Apri ( 18, 1915. Mr. Bieberich was a member of St. Paul's Lutheran church at Preble. • Surviving in addition to his wife ; ich of U 0 w-2k rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrh are two sisters, Mrs. Otto Ehlerding of Preble township, and Mrs. George Schueler of Fort Wayne. I One brother preceded him in death. * , Funeral services wiU be held at 1:45 p. m. Wednesday at the ‘ residence, and at 2 p. m. atthe St. Paul's Lutheran church, the Rev. L. W. Schulenburg officiat- " ing. Burial will be in the church 1 cemetery. Friends may call at ’ the Zwick funeral home after 7 ( o’clock this evening, and at the . residence northwest of Preble af- [ ter 2 p. m Tuesday until time • of the services. Four Burn To Death ( In Florida Home ; BLUFF SPRINGS. Fla. (UPD — i A 66-year-old woman and threfe of her grandchildren burned to I death Sunday night when a gas 1 explosion ripped , through their 1 small frame home. The victims were identified as 1 Mrs. Little Mae Merchant. Kathy ‘ Adams, 7, William Boyd Mer- ; chant, 18. and Richard Merchant. 1 4. A neighbor who heard the exl plosion said he could “see people running around in the house and ( heard them screaming, but couldf n’t get close enough to help them.” i 16 Pages
lof St. George. Utah. A four-place Cessna airplane was missing and I presumed to have crashed war I Bozeman, Mont., with four aboard. Another low pressure area in . the Gulf of Mexico brought rain L j and a welcome touch of warm air I 'for the Southeast. Crossville, in northern Florida, recorded a midnight reading of 64. about 30 dc- : grfccs higher than the near freez-1 ing reading the night before. R. Clinton Hersh j Dies Al Hospital R. Clinton Hersh. 63, of 344 South First street, well known De-1 catur man, died at 11:15 o dock | Saturday morning at the Adams | county memorial hospital. He. had been in- poor health for some I time and hto condition had been | serious since he was taken to the | hospital Jan. 25. Mr. Hersh, a cost accountant for ■ the Central Soya Co., came to Decatur in 1943 frem Butler. He was a member of the Masonic lodge and the American Legion, having served in the U. S. ' Armv during World War - I.— He was born at Garrett July 20. 1886. a son of John B. and Alberta Ann Glover-Hersh, and was married to Elizabeth Mondhank Sept. 21. 1929. Surviving in addiiton to his wife are one daughter, Mrs. Karl (Elizabeth) Kolter of Decatur; two grandchildren, and one Sister, Mrs. Margaret E. Gephart of Louisville, Ky. Funeral services will be conducted at 10 a. m. Tuesday at the Zwick funeral home, the Rev. Harold J. Bond and the Rev. Benj. G. Thomas officiating. The bdcTy "will then be taken to St. Mark's Lutheran church at Butler and will lie in state from 1:30 p. m. Wednesday until services at 3 p. m. Burial will be in the Butler cemetery, with military rites by Adams Post 43, American Legion. Friends may call at the Zwick funeral home. Masonic services will be held at 8 o’clock this evening. Woman Is Critically Injured Last Night An Adams county woman driver suffered a basal skull fracture in a two-car head-on collision Sunday near Coppess Corner on U. S. 27, and was listed in citical condition this morning by the attending physician at the Adams county memorial hospital. The driver of the other car is also hospitalized with compound fractures to the right knee. Mrs. Sharlene D. Flueckiger, 24, of rotate 1, Geneva, is responding well to treatment, according to the hospital report this morning. but is still in very serious condition. Mrs. Rita Picard Demuth, 42, of Richmond, the driver of the southbound car. Is in satisfactory condition at the same hospital. State trooper Dan Kwasneski and deputy, sheriff Robert Meyer, who investigated the head-on crash, said this morning that the northbound Flueckiger car apparently fishtailed on the snowy roadway as the driver lost control, veering into the southbound lane ' wherfc the impact occured. The Flueckiger car was totally damaged, while damage to the Demuth car amounted to $350. The police listed the Flueckiger car at $450. Mrs. Demuth, who was returning to Richmond after visiting her husband who is in the Irene Byron hospital at Fort Wayne, has six children at home. The aeeident happened at 6:30 p. m. Sunday, the third in an hour and a half, investigated Jgv Kwasneski and Meyer. It occurred about a mile north of Coppess Corner on U. S,
Filing Period Opens Tuesday For Candidates INDIANAPOLIS 'UPD — A| I inonth-long filing period will open [Tuesday for political hopefuls who want to be nominated for public; office In the May 3 Indiana priI marie*. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of persons aspiring to offices rang-i ing from president of the United j States to county courthouse posiI tions will file declarations of | (candidacy during the period Feb. ■ 123 to March 24. Candidacies may be filed by I mail or in person. I Declarations will be filed for I purely local county offices with I I the county clerks. Those for judi- | cial, congressional, legislative and | I presidential preference primary | I races will be filed with the sec-. | retary of state in the Statehouse here. The presidential preference primary was expected to turn out to be a dull affair with Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Sen. •John Kennedy drawing no formidable opposition on the Republican and Democratic tickets, respectively. AH 11 Seek New Terms At least 14 congressmen or former members of Congress were known to be candidates for new terms, including all 11 of the present House members—B of them Democrats and 3 Republicans. I The list of ex-congressmen probably will be even larger. In addition to the congressional incumbents, at least three Republicans who wifl’e ousted in 1958 by Democrats are trying for a comeback Rep. Randall S. Harmon (D-lOth District), whose name has been mentioned as a possible entry in the presidential preference primary. was expected to face a stout battle for renomination. At least half a dozen other Democrats in the district have indicated they will attempt to win the nomination, and ex-Rep. Ralph Harvey of New Castle, a veteran Republican congressman who lost to Harmon in the 1958 Democratic tide, also will seek to go back to Washington. Rep. John Brademas (D-3rd District) also may have a repeat battle with former Rep. F. Jay Njmtz, South Bend Republican, if both win nominations, and a rerun of the 1958 election race between Rep. Earl Hogan (D-9th District) and former Rep. Earl Wilson, Bedford Republican, may Occur.
Defense Critics Answered By Ike
WASHINGTON President Eisenhower has told the nation thatthe United States has "indestructible, incalculable” military power ample for the present and tailored to meet the needs of the future- _ .... The President replied to Democratic critics of his defense program in a nationwide radio -TV speech Sunday night on his twoweek tour of South America. He leaves today on the 15,010 - mile trip. Reaction to the address was divided. A leading Democratic critic. Sen. Henry M. Jackson (Wash.), said the President had failed to come to grips with the real defense policy issues. He said Eisenhower failed to mention Soviet progress on missiles. Future Concerns Johnson Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.) said he agreed that the United States has a powerful defense force. But he said he would press Senate missile investigations because thp real issufe is “whether our plans are adequate for our needs in the forseeable future.” > _ Chairman Overton Brooks 'DLa.) of the House Space Committee said he was disappointed that the President did not mention U. S. defense against intercdntinental ballistic missiles or com-
lUinirr llardrn Out Two Republican* who to*t to Democrat* in tb* IW etmgrc*«tonal race* ware known to have decided against running again. I They are John V. Beamer of Wa- ; bash in the Sth District, and Mrs. Cecil M. Harden of Covington in the «th. Health and other factors I influenced Beamer and Mrs Harden ha* a good job in the Post Office Department in wash- . ing ton House minority leader Charles ' Halleck <R-2nd District), dean of .the Indiana congressional delegation who haa been mentioned , prominently as a possible vice I presidential nominee on a Nixon- , for-president ticket, will file tor Congress again. He ha* been there i since 1935. | The other two Republicans due Ito file for renomination are Reps. E Ross Adair <4th District) and William G. Bray <7th District*. The other Democrats expected to file are Reps. Ray J. Madden <lst District), seeking a 10th twoyear term: Edward Roush <sth District*, Fred Wampler <•».»»>. Winfield K. Denton <»th> and Joseph Barr tilth). 2.5 Inches Os Snow Recorded In Decafur City weather observer Louis , Landrum reported 2.5 inches of snowfall in Decatur this morning with a prospect of more of the same. , Old man winter apparently believed the old adage about the groundhog seeing his shadow and dumped snow from the Rockies to the east coast, seeing that Decatur got its share after a fairly mild winter, until early Sunday morning, that is. Landrum listed the river at 2 04 feet after a 2.34 foot reading on Sunday. The Saturday level was 2.18 feet. The snowfall abetted a senes of five accidents in the DecaturAdams county area in which a total of six persons were injured, one seriously. The snow was the third for the month of February, bringing the monthly total to 3.03 inches. INDIANA WEATHER Fair and cold tonight except snow flurries continuing near Lake Michigan. Tuesday becoming mostly cloudy, snow likely by afteinoon or evening. Low tonight 8 to 18 east and north, 15 to 22 southwest. High Tuesday 28 to 35. Sunset today 6:29 p. m. e. d. L Sunrise Tuesday 7:28 a. m. c.d.L Outlook for Wednesday: Partly cloudy, continued cold, snow mostly north. Lows 10 to 20. Highs 25 to 35.
pare U. S.-Soviet missile strengthEisenhower got Republican support. Senate GOP Leader Everet; M. Dirksen (Ill.) said the Chief Executive had “stated the whole case in nutshell.’’ He said the far to “disP 6l tha confpsidMjiver the defense proThe ggjjiraent did not refer to ' any otnis defense critics by ' name, but he said that unbiased observers recognized and respect- ’ ed this*, country's massive deter- : rent strength. J Missile Supply Increasing ' “We have forged a trustworthy . shield of peace — an indestructible force in incalculable power. - ample for today and constantly developing to meet the needs of . tomorrow’,” he said. > “Today, in the presence of con- ; tinous threats, all of us can stand • resolute and unafraid, confident in ; America’s might as an anchor of - free world security.” Eisenhower said the United ■ - States maintains hundreds of ,i bombers throughout the world and • thev are far superior to the air • fleet of anv other country. He al- : go cited U. S. aircraft carriers J and what he called the steadily Jincreasing supply of U, S. I missiles. ,
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