Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 24 May 1960 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DjjCATUK DAILY DEMOCRAT FMMMM ®*W? l»«u*8 ta**ta> ‘V TUB MOCATUB MAHA LMMUCAAt (XE. iMC. *am< m*• D*ceua. tad. Fuat Uttta M *KUM CtaM Mattar iMca D IMtar. Jr . rrtataM* Jute 0. Maltar . VlHfeftMMlMl Ckaa M-Wta—ir-t ~-■, Macratery Traaaurar Swimming Pool Rumors The rumor that there would be • charger l« use ut the awlmmitig jkk>l Ihm summer hi •baolutrlj* not true. Maj or IMm Gage, when aakod about the aubjccl tixlaj, •aid there were no plana to charge fur the pool thia year, a* the coata are no greater than laat year. .Major Gage aaid that Hubert Zrrkrl, Jr., will manage the pool thia year aa he haw for ae% er al * yearw paid. and he will be aaaiated bj Robert Doan, who replace* John F. Rosier, who had previously been the amdalant. The swimming pool will open sometime after school closes June 3as usual. The hours have not yet been an* nounced. Last summer several adult and family' nights were tried, and proved very successful. With hot summer days not far off, the Decatur swimming pool will provide welcome relief for the hundreds of area swimmers. . For five or six years the city council has, each summer at budget-making time, considered charging admission for swimming at the city pool. But each time, so far, it has been defeated. The cost of the swimming pool charge could well exclude some of the children who need it the most. The revenue raised by charging would not be great. It would seem that some other way of raising city funds can be developed to keep Decatur as one of the very few cities in the country with a free city pool The earliest that the pool has opened in recent years has been June 4, and the latest, June 16. The city park and street department is now beginning to clean the pool. The actual opening date will depend on the number of leaks found, and the repairs necessary. Parents are cautioned not to allow young children to go to the pool unaccompanied by a responsible adult. The two life guards cannot possibly watch 1,000 children all the time. They are available when needed, but cannot “nurse” the children, as some of the younger ones occasionally require. In the phst, some parents have taken advantage of the swimming pool, like other city facilities, to abandon their children. The pool is for the use of every one, of course, but parents should use their good judgement in allowing their children to swim when they cannot accompany them. *- I The Time Has Come Decatur residents are anxiously awaiting the final sign of good weather—the placing of the park benches around the court house and in the city parks by tlw city street department. Some have been wondering if the benches will be seen near the court house this year, because the front lawn is now protected by a row of new shrubbery. Undoubtedly some solution to this problem will be found. Most of the benches have always been on the extra-wide sidewalks, <y»yway.

TV PROGRAMS

WANE-TV Channel 15 TUESDAY Evening 6:oo—Life Os Riley 6:3o—Tom Calenberg News 6:4s—Doug Edwards-News 7:oo—Hotel De Paree 7:3o—Bishop Sheen Program B:oo—Dennis O’Keefe B:3o—Dobie Gillis 9:oo—Tightrope 9:80 —Red Skelton 10:00 —Garry Moore 11:00 —Phil Wilson News 11:15 —This Thing Galled Love WEDNESDAY 7*3o—Peppermint Theatre 7:4s—Willy Wonderful 8:00—CBS News B:ls—Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Coffee Cup Theatre 10:15 —Debbie Drake 10:30 —On The Go 11:00—I Love Lucy ——— 11:30—December Bride Afternoon 12:00—Love Os Life - 12:30—Search For Tomorrow 12:45 —Guiding Light I:oo—Ahn Colone 1:25 —News I:3o—As The World Turns 2:oo—For Better Or For Worse 2:3O —H o usepa rty 3:oo—The Millionaire 3:80 —Verdict Is Yours 4:oo—Brighter Day 4:15 —Secret Storm 4:3o—Edge Os Night s:oo—Dance Date Evening 6:oo—Life of Riley L 'o—Tom Caienberg-News 6.ls—Doug Edwards-News 7:oo—Lock' L T p 7:30—8e Our Guest 8:30 —Men Into Space 9:oo—Millionaire 9:3o—l’ve Got A Secret 10:00—Circle Theatre 11:00—Phil Wilson News 11:15—Hangover Square WKJG-TV Channel 33 TUESDAY j’oo—Gatesway To Sports 6:15 —Jack Gray-News 6:2s—The 'Weatherman 6:30— Yesterday’s Newsreels 6:45— Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Brave Stallion 7:3o—Laramie B:3o—Startime 9:3o—Arthur Murray Party 10 JHi—M- Squad 10-86 —Phil Silvers Show ji : oO_News and Weather WEDNESDAY Classroom

Central Daylight Tjpie 7:oo—Today aum—Engineer John 9:4s—Th« Editors Desk 9:s4—Faith To Live By 10:06—Dough Re Mi 10:80—Play Tour Hunch 11:00—The Priee la Riglta 11:30 —Concentration Afteraooa 12:00—News and Weather 12:15—Farina and Farmin,g 12:30 —It Could Be Tou I:oo—Truth Or Coneequeinceß 1:30 —Burns And Allen 2:oo—Queen For A Day 2:3o—Loretta Young Theatre 3:oo—Young Dr. Malone 3:3o—From These Roots 4:oo—Fibber McGee and Xtoßy 4:30—Bono Show Eveatnc B:oo—Gatesway To Sport* 6:ls—Jack Gray-News B:2s—The Weatherman 6:3o—Yesterday’s Newsreels 6:4s—Huntley-Brinkley Repont 7:oo—Tombstone Territory 7:30--Wagon Train Price Is Right 9:oo—Perry Como Show 10:0»i—This !, Tour —- ToT3o—People Are Funny 11:00 —News and Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20—Jack Paar Show Channel 21 TUESDAY Evening 7:ls—Tom Atkins Reporting .4 7 :30 -Sugarfoot <:30 —Wyatt Earp 9:<>o—Rifleman 9:3o—Coronado 9 10:09 —Alcoa Presents 19:30 —Promenade 21 11:30—Jubilee V. S. A. WEDNESDAY Morning , 11.30—Homemaking Afternoon 12:00—Restless Gun 12:30—LoVe That Bob I:oo—About Faces 1 30—L Spy 2:00 —Day In Court 2:30-—Gale Storm 3:oo—Beat The Clock 3:3o—Who Do You Trust 4:oo—American Bandstand s:3o—My Friend Flicka Evening 6:oo—Popeye And Rascals Club 7:15 —Tom Atkins Reporting 7:3<>—Listening Post*:3o—Orxie & Harriet —Wednesday Night Fights 10:00—Hawaiian Eye 11:09-—Woman in the Dark MOVIES DRIVE-IN * . ’’Operation Petticoat" Sun. lion. A- Tues, at 9:15

Debate Opened On Public Works Bill WAMNiNtHtW <UPH — Tb<* lluuw era* wfcadutad tn tw«tn <w«a»ir tottay <m Uta fouiJallam <foller pubUr work* MU. aad el ! Iceel MW ImtuKi* r <ogf r-aan* an WM ptopet'Ml to oppn battle tor prefect* elimatatad toy the ••s*'» prtatton* mmmmw Ttoc conwnttto* appeared ■ 000 cuMatevrUoa torwl* tor tatolic work* and UtULfIUO la ptonaing lurid* t<« Indiana to artdAto*. •• r***>mm«Mdad a uWoppinf ■» 000 c«>truru<m toudu<'l tor th** Markland loch* and Dam <m Ito* it»diar»»Ken•..nkyUtou burd.-r. ami slto<M» t.aitnma muncy tut Uw Indiana K.nunto Cannelton LuCto* and , Da n The Indiana mnrro monel dele•Kir " toX Cb mX. ‘dX’* tor ! building and planning within Ute I *tat<* wai* »ch«xSulcd to confer on whcUur to attach amendment* to i the committee'* bill R<-p Frwd Wampler. a Democrat. ilrssdy was armed with a j gise eon amendment He nought to | provide an additional $83.«1h» for Levee, and SIOO,OOO for ■ proteclUon project at West Terre Haute "West Terra Haute ha* been flooded out for three consecutive I years,” Wampler said in making J hi* ptoa for the 2i»-mllc earth levee. . . . Enlargement and improvement of the Sugar Creek earth levee k needed to protect about 1.500 acres of farm land, he *aid His chances of winning House approval were considered slim. I Members traditionally are reluctant to override the Appropriations Committee anji open the door to demands from emigres*men whose pet projects were not j given as much money as rei qU R«)’ d William G Bray, a Republican. was disappointed by the Committee's failure approve the funds to begin building the Niblack Levee. Engineering work I progressed faster than was anticipated. he said, and it would have 'been possible to begin cunstruc|uon a year earlier than sched Democratic Reps. Winfield K. Denton and Earl Hogan indicated they were satisfied with the comI mittee’s budgets for their districts. ’ Denton said changes in the j planned flood control wall at Evansville limited the amount of money which could be used there next year to the recommended SIOO,OOO. ~ „ Hogan succeeded in P ers ’^“ ing • the committee to add SIO,OOO for a study of the Whitewater River • Basin, and said he was P le * se d with the Markland construction budget and the $275,000 ear-, marked for construction work on the Monroe Reservoir. Plan Month's Trip To Europe, Africa Miss Helen Haubold, Decatur music supervisor, and Mrs. Virginia Thomas,of Louisville, Ky„ will leave New York June 8 for a month's trip through Spapn. • _ They wdl fly 6y jet to Pans, and drive’from there to Barcelona, and then go to Padua on the island of Mallorca. Miss Haubold will be looking for soots of musical interest, folk songs, the tarantella in Sorrento, and other special music forms. Mrs Thomas, whose hobby is working with the children in free art classes at the art center association in Louisville, will study the art of El Greco in Paris and MadAfter visiting Marseilles and Barcelona, the tourists will take a bus to Gibraltar, then go to Africa* and Tangiers. fly back to Madrid, and then to Lisbon. Portugal. From there they will fly home by jet July 15. Show Tillage Field Day Films Wednesday Films of the minimum tillage field day at Berne last Friday will be shown on the Wayne Rothgeb show at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday. Leo N. Seltenright. county agent, announced this morning. — Rothgeb was able to get quite close to the field day events, and get good shots, since the main demonstrations were on a parking lot which had electrical outlets for the TV cameras. jKgpfflßaaiMvv Happy Hustlers The Happy Hustlers of Washington township, met May 17 at 7‘:00 at the Adams Central school. S andy Strickler was in charge of thte meeting with Gyneth Schnepp an d Emma Heare leading the pk viges and group singing led by Do*ina Shoaf. T he roll call was taken by Sue Stri* rkler and Emma Heard. A demonstration was given by Gret then Yost and Diane Rich The I next meeting will be held May SI, at 7p. m.'at the Adams Central school. ' . Reporter; Judy Irwin

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Cadillac Display At Zintsmaster Motors •Elegant simplicity” i» the phrase that best characterizes the styling of the 196 U Cadillac automobile. Residents of the D< catur area will have a special opportunity to inspect the iB6O Cadillac *tyling at a special salon display at ZuUsmaster Motors, May 26 and 27. The newness of the Cadillac j stylus is emphasized by the traditional but more restrained tail fins, the wider and lower front end appearance and the most dis-; tinctive rear end lighting arrangement ever offered by Cadillac All 13 models of the 1960 Cadillac, in three standard and one custom series, retain their basic. dimensions of last year s models ! The wider and lower front end ap-1 pearance results from the elimm- < ation of the center bumper bar and the addition of a fine horizont-1 al bar between each rpw of jewel- : like ornaments in the grille. .The , lower, more restrained tail fin, j which reflects the influence of the Eldorado Brougham, gives a side, view silhouette of one long sweeping line from the hood through the entire length of the car. Careful-1 ly fitted taillamps in the rear face of the tail fin enhance toe overall trim appearance and provide excellent side and rear illumination. .*... Highlighted by rich metallic tones, the 15 basic acrylic paint colors offer the Cadillac customer the individual selection to which he has grown accustomed. There are five additional exclusive finishes available for the Biarritz and Sevlle models. Inside the 1960 Cadillac, Florentine leathers and harmonizing fabrics in 103 distinctively styled combinations satisfy every discriminating taste.' The new steering wheel presents a tr immer appearance since, instead of a horn ring, a chrome horn bar ha&J>een contoured into each spoke. elimination of the horn ring provides better visibility to the new* recessed instrument cluster which has a new curved glass facing for maximum driver visibility. Engineering-wise the major advancement for 1960 involves the brakes and braking action. New ' finned rear brake drums increase 1 rear brake cooling which reduces front brake loads and gives better cooling at all wheels. Additionally a self-adjusting feature automatically adjusts the brakes whenever the car is operated in reverse gear. This compensates for lining wear and eliminates brake adjustment. . -— The last factor of the brake story evolves from another Cadillac first—a vacuum released parking brake. With the engine running, the brake automatically is released when the car is put in gear. Thus, it becomes impossi- | ble to drive the car with toe parkI ing brake applied. Performance, responsiveness, smoothness and economy keynote the 1960 Cadillac engine. The ~ cbrnpresslon ratio remains at 10.5 to 1 and the horsepower is unchanged in the two engines—a 345 horsepower engine for the Eldorado series and a 325 engine for all other models. The 345 horsepower engine can be obtained as optional equipment in all other models. Two Men Are Killed As Auto Hits Tree SCOTTSBURG, Ind. <UPD —Two men were killed and three were injured Monday night when their car missed a curve on a Clark County road south of here and struck several trees. The dead were identified as Donald Eugene Kelly. 21. R.R. 1, Underwood, the driver, and Bill Crum, Scottsburg. The injured were Leonard Kelly, 55, who suffered a leg fracture; Otto Horn. 37. Scottsburg, broken ■ back, and Arnold Goble, 26, Un- ] derwood, broken ribs.

Former Nazi J Officer Held In Jerusalem * JERUSALEM. Israel (UPl»—lsrael today kept a top-secret label on the case of Adolf Eichmann, former Nazi SS colonel charged I with the murder of millions of Jews. Premier David Ben-Gurion disclosed Eichmann's artest in Pari liament Monday, but most details |of the case remained secret. The 54-year-old Eichmann, a fugitive since 1945. was being held in an undisclosed jail Nothing was I known of his capture or place of I t Eichmann, who could toe sentenced to death if convicted, stood ! i stiffly at attention in a Jaffa i j court Monday when the charges against him were read. He wa; clean-shaven and well-groomed. Tunis Pale at Charges Chief Magistrate Yedidya Levy ‘told Eichmann he was charged “with causing the death of millions of Jews in Germany and the enemy-occupied countries in the ! years 1938 to 1945." Eichmann turned pale when the charge was translated, but his only answer to the court was to confirm his name and request counsel. He was remanded for 14 days. Eichmann could be given the death penalty under a provision of Israeli law aimed at Nazis and collaborators. No Israeli court has yet imposed such a penalty. War. Trials Over Lin West G«tnany, only the defunct Allied war crimes courts sentenced war criminals to death, and the maximum sentence now is life imprisonment. > Eichmann headed the Nazi Bureau of Resettlement of Jews, the agency that directed Jews to the concentration camps, and in the majority of cases, to death in the mass extermination chambers or <by starvation and disease. Eichmann was present at the Wannsee conference in Berlin in the early days of World War 11. The conference decided on the secret “final solution to the Jewish question”— extermination. Eichmann escaped arrest with other high Nazis at the end of the war and had been reported living in Egypt, Kuwait, ana South America since then. His . capture had been the top priority job of the Israeli Security Service ever since its formation.

COURT NEWS, Estate Cases In the Frances E Andrews estate, proof of mailing |o all persons interested in the estate was filed. The schedule was submitted, finding the total value of the estate to be $1,971.34. There is no inheritance fax due. In the Michael Bibersteirt estate, the last will and testament was probated and placed on record. A petition for probate of will and the issuance of letters was filed. The affidavit of death and proof of will was filed. The bond was filed in the penal sum of $12,000. In the estate of Jesse E. Lautzenhizer, the proof of mailing to all interested persons was filed. The inheritance tax appraiser’s report was filed, finding the net value of the estate to be $32,316.45, and there is a total tax due in the siim of s2463%Court further ordered that Adams county be allowed the sum of $19.71 as appraisal fees to be certified to the county treasurer, being 8% of the total tax due. Answer Filed In the case of Clarence A. Hunter vs Jerry Baughman, an answer in general denial was filed. Set For Trial In the case of Glen Burley vs Agnes Burley, attorney Severin Schurger entered a general appearance for the defendant and withdrew a plea in abatement, which was filed on June 5. 1958. The cause is set for trial May 31, at 10 a.m.

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