Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 100, Decatur, Adams County, 27 April 1960 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Federal Judge Disqualified In Hoffa Case W ASHIWCTOV (I’l*l *—Fed. r Judge F rhckia*** le*l» •*»* ing (Hrr * ’H*! <W TrjM'tMr Frmtoiani »- Th. Wbyoai <»M jwrht ach’d » rr JU.ffa a*cu«rd hitr .4 har*»*ti
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CM* eKntoltoiMr tor HtoMtonl wftm he mlu*toi money from to* I tlrti<<M Lk*l to ttotoun an Act»<ei( I in the Florid* MrC***bl Hmh <>f Fl* Hr then hnd on uftlton to buy b ; laroc K»Btr at toe etoHi to Ron I VtHey, Inc , a m*i ctoie venture, wh-eft itntorwrt • nnn )*** from to« «*>tw banL. but RRvc It! up to tote IM* One Man Is Killed In Plant Explosion I’RFFPOHT. Tn 'UPU — lino*-j tlg*t»r* through rubble of • iU»*«iio pruduettoa unrt ol the] t>« LTwitUcb! Co. plant today to] learn what rauaed a *rrle» of five ex|4<MHm« that kiUcd one man and injured nine other*.
Child Found Dying With Broken Nock VAI-PARAIAO. lad <UPD — I *um Lynn Jem*. 8, near Vai- ' pnnuan, wa« tomd <tv lag °f 0 I txuhoa neck Ttooday I* tto yard ,at tor tom*, victim of • <W* i with wtMch ato ••• playing Authuritoa aaid Sue»a. • ru*t ■ grader at Morgan Twp »<to*4 ; Ucd one end at tto raps tn a Mil I <* a new puech under cdMiruc* tfcwi at tor home. They said »to .litged and tto ottor end at tto rope laatod around a tond *he erne wearing, •napping tor neck Sto died tn Purler county I**ptlal •hortly after tor father, William fouxl tor.
Over Three Million In Taxes By Nipsco l A >t>n*< **• UtMaftmeni at . I more than UH million (0,814. MU Tl> tn real eatale and prCwwial I pngaorly la tea waa paid Ulla wee* try Northern Indiana Public tor I trice company as fta contribution toward tto continued succaaaful . operation of artoola. citiea. and . towna throughout tto northern third ot tto atatr. Dean H Mitch > ell. NIPSCO pc eaidmt. revealed , I Inday. "Tto payment represent* an In- ' I create of 5M3.134 SI over last year's Installment.'' Mitchell said ’ I making u» one of tto largeet J single taxpayers in tto state of ' Indiana .** Michael J Pryor Decatur dis- * trie! manager, said that local taxaa paid by tto utility in Adams I county amounted to 811.731 59. of which 98.90183 went to the city of Decatur. NIPSCO tax checks were >to local district managers writ l ahead of tto tax payment deadline tn make sure county treaaur- ' era received them in plenty of I time. Hundreds Os African Negroes Arrested CAPE TOWN. South Africa <UPl’—South African police arrested hundreds of natives todayin widespread raids on Negro settlements in the I-anga and Nyangi I areas near Cape Town and East London. The raids on Langa and Nyanga were carried out by several I hundred police and troops who arrested 33 Africans in Nyanga and 108 at Langa. Police said "piles of dangerous weap>>ns" were taken in the raids against natives living illegally in those sections. Tn the Eart London area police supported by troops in a threehour raid against the west bank location arrested 312 persons, bringing to 1.500 the number of natives seized in that coastal city in recent weeks Police have stated the raids were designed to weed out "undesirables'* and "loafers" and said most arrests were for minor offenses. No resistance was reported. A charge of advocating open rebellion threw the South African House of Assembly into ah uproar Tuesday nightDeputy Interior Minister PW. Botha made tto accusation against Douglas Mitchell, a memtor of the opposition United Party, during debate on the government's bill to call a national referendum on changing South Africa's status to that of a republic. PHONE _ Continued 1960. With subscriber toll dialing, the Argos subscribers will to able to dial a large number of subscribers in the United States and in some foreign nations without the intervention of an operator. | CANCER continued troni page one Barbara Cole and Mrs. Guy Koos; 14a. Mrs. Bill Porter and Mrs. Paul Hammond; 16, 16b, Mrs. Mel Weisman and Mrs. Robert Kruecketorg; 16a. Mrs. Paul Wolf and Mrs. Jerome Ginter;. 17, Mrs. Bessie Teeple and Mrs. Andrew Miller; 17a and b, Mrs. Doyle Collier, Mrs. Lloyd Bowman, Frank Lybarger, and Kenneth Watkins; and 18a, Mrs. Ralph Sauer.
■ aiw 'J~ —n ■- I a *"“’•[y I ■ if I ♦*— | Bl / ' ' GM H ail r\ ' OS [) f > I'll uwl^ i—— - « ° » 0 jfi 1 »IMO , ' »• * "Remember, when driving on toll road* It is a good idea to break pie monotony by letting someono also taJkl"
WEDNESDAY. APWH. ff. IM®
Light Voting Marks Primary In Two States Uatod Pre* laierwsUenal Vutcrt generally stowed alight tntomt Tunwlxy th MasaurtoeeMa •nd Pawns y I vania primary etoitw wtorr pnwtdMUal hnprtola had. lit to •< Mato but praxug* ton John F Kennedy won tto MaaaariMMMrit* election a favorHr wm but tto turnout was so light that some urged tto prealdtmual primary xyatum to Vice PrvMdenl Richard M Nixon |»>llcd a ruable vote in Pc<w>aylvanta wtorr chief intrrrrt waa focused on tto issue of parimutuel totMng on hamrar racing Kennedy outran Nixon Mo-3 tn Massachusetts where candidates name* had to to written la. H *’h 1.4 M out of 1,819 prednets counted. Kennedy bad 79.879 votes and Nixon 43 MO Both Kennedy and Nixon were unopposed in tto slats* of delegates to tto Democratic and. Republican national conventions Tto turnout was leas than 5 per cent of Masaactouaetta' 2.840.000 registered voters and was sure to disappoint top state Democrats who had campaigned for a big write-in vote for Kennedy to rtxsw that his home state was solidly behind him. Kennedy fell far short of • prediction by Democratic State Chairman Pat Lynch that he would top the record 270.000 writein votes given President Elsenhower in 1952. Nixon came surprisingly close to Eisenhower's record 951,000 votes in the 1956 Pennsylvania primary With 7.806 of the state s 9.013 precincts reported. Nixon bad 784.017 votes. There were no Democratic candidates entered on presidential preference ballot Pennsylvania Gov. David L Lawrence apparently wanted to go to the Democratic convention with the state s 81 votes to use with a free hand. Kennedy, however, showed astounding strength as a write-in candidate. He surpassed the 93.000 record write-in votes established by Sen. Estes Kefeuver in the 1952 Democratic primary With 7.333 of the state’s 9.013 precincts reported. Kennedy compiled 97.790 write-in votes. Adlai Stevenson bad 14.056; Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota had 7.298 and Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri 4,201. *ll 'T- 1 -'-'' 1 /’/-’'’, 'a' I ’-<*"% I HP' MODERN ISRAEL - While his neighbor still used a horsedrawn plow, this Arab citizen of Israel has a modem tractor to work his fields near Taibeh.
