Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 168, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1960 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

R. J r x <s.i < ;dn njKfc ■ , X«. WLrf' x— ■■ CuMMLiIP i FITT flr sb x. Illi w •■■ pK- ‘ L Nfefc FI IMB ■L jtwai- '.■ ■ - W “ It' I JK< I I' ; wS •' ■KSF : 1 fe-.. v r ® JHHrxl Lol, ' STARS CONFER— Sammy Davis Jr., center, looks on as two 11 friends discuss the situation at the Democratic National Con- i vention in Los Angeles. At left is Peter Lawford, right, Frank i Sinatr* ~~ -

Ike To Brief I Sen. Kennedy

NEWPORT, R.I. (UPD—President Eisenhower today prepared to formally offer presidential candidate John F. Kennedy and his running mate tap-deck foreign affairs briefings but it was clear he would exclude intelligence fill-ins for Democratic go-betweens. The President scheduled an afternoon meeting here with his deputy assistant, Gerald Morgan, to work out the method of providing Kennedy and Democratic Vice Presidential Candidate Lyndon Johnson authoritative information on the “international scene.” White House Press Secretary * James C. Hagerty said- Sunday night, after talking with Eisenhower, that the formal offer would go forward “within a day or two.” Victim of “Misunderstanding” Hagerty said Kennedy was the victim of a “misunderstanding” when he assumed Saturday in Los Angeles that the offer already had been made. The press secretary also left little, if any, doubt that the President will not agree to Kennedy's announced idea of having former Illinois Gov. Adlai Stevenson and Connecticut Representative Ches--9 ter Bowles receive these "briefings” for him. Eisenhower plans, Hagerty said, to offer briefings by a “responsible official of the Central Intelligence Agency." The President envisages briefing on the basis he received in 1952 and Stevenson in 1956. These were “solo” deals, with no aides present or acting as liaison men. “Happy to Participate” Kennedy said in Hyannisport. Mass., where he is on vacation. WaT fie and Johnson “wiR be DRIVE-IN * THEATER . o '■ o — Last Time Tonight — Tremendous in COLOR! “BIG FISHERMAN" Howard Keel, Susan Kohner, ' John Saxon, Martha Hyer O O TUES. WED. THUR. The FUNNIEST Double Feature Program of the Entire Season! Two Top-Ranking Rib-Ticklers! Yeu’U Howl at Tony Perkins as the College Basketball Star With His Scientific Set Shot! And Jane Fonda is Yummy as the Gal Out to Get Her Man! JOSHUA+that College girU who* THIIIHW cant 11/111W Jv help Umßlh V ICMiri nfolVi 1 s *y U TONY PERKINS, Jane Fonda, Plus Comical Ray Walston. - ADDED LAUGHS - Yul (Naked Dome) Brynner is Hilarious in This Fast Moving, Wise-cracking Technicolor Riot! "ONCE MORE WITH FEELING" Yul Brynner, Kay Kendall —O O Frt. * Sat. — Color Shocker! "CIRCUS OF HORRORS”

BWSHT

i happy to participate in any confi- ‘ dential briefings the President or his administrative officers may suggest.” He made it clear that he had named Stevenson and Bowles as his liaison men with the White House with the knowledge that: only he and Johnson could per- , sonally have access to the ihtelligence briefing. Kennedy said he and Johnson ( wanted to take part in the brief- ! ings and fee emphasized that “they desire to cooperate in every , way during this period with the . President.” i Watermelon Supper Winds Up FFA Tour The Adams Central FFA members toured two members’ farms Friday, ending up with a watermelon supper at the Daniel Lantz ] farm. £ At the Arlen Gerber farm the J young men examined the hog pro- , ject, the five-acre corn plot, and 1 tire variety plots. At the Lantz * farm. Junior Lantz showed them I his steer project. A total of 17 4 boys made the tour. 2 Highway Blocked s Bv Railroad Car * The sheriff's department was called to the Adams-Allen, county line Sunday night as a railroad ! car was blocking the road. The * car was being moved on the Penn- * sy railroad when it got away, ’ coasted down the track and jump- 1 ed the track, coming to rest on ’ the roadway, splitting the county 1 line. Deputy Charles Arnold and Fort Wayne authorities set out c flares and guided traffic around i the car. - Youth Found Guilty, Sentence Postponed 1 Leon G. Hey, 19, Willshire, route * 1. was found guilty of malicious J trespassing in city court this morn- ’ ing but hLs case was contirfued d for two weeks, at which time he 4 will be fined and possibly sen- e fenced. 1 Hey was the youth who tore down part of the wall at the Drive-in theater July 9. After the accident he left the scene but was caught a few days later when his car was found in the barn at his home stripped of the damaged parts.

■.' iBBk «,*■..' I-4 tor*, -^ ; ■ W * JI - MBmL / ; > ”' -_ ”"■— . ovy X,.... «MWV +** ■ c?>w- / j - v | i‘ 4 ■f? IB CHINESE RED IN CUBA—Communist China’s vice minister of foreign commerce, Lu Hau Chang, left, is welcomed to Havana by Major Ernesto <Chei Guevara, who haads Cuba’s National Bank under the Castro regime.

Defense Loses Move In Morgano Trial KENTLAND, Ind. (UPD—T h e defense lost a move today for further delay in the trial of Tommy Morgano. 60, Gary, on charges he tried to bribe a Porter county deputy sheriff with SIOO,000 for vice and crime rights. Morgano’s trial opened this morning in Newton Circuit Court here, where it was sent on a change of venu. But before selection of jurors began, Morgano asked for a postponement in order to call Albert Steele, a Porter county carnival operator, as a witness. State's attorneys, however, objected. They said Mor ram bad l ”’d enough time to bring in Steele. ... S—..Ti-dgeßussell Gordon of Monticello overruled the motion. Thirty -two prosoective jurors were in the courtroom as. the trial started. By noon, however, preliminaries and earlv questionins of the panel had taken most of the time and no jury was selected. Dotson Funeral To Be Heid On Tuesday Funeral services for Mrs. J. M. (Bessie) Dotson, 67. of Van Wert, O . a native of Adams county and sister of Lewis Stump and Mrs. 1 Meade Marchand will be held Tuesday at the Alspach funeral home in Van Wert. She died Sat- I urday at 3:30 a m. in the Van Wert ' county hospital after a two-day illness. Mrs. Dotson, the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Stump, was born April 16, 1893 neqr Monroe, and moved to Van Wert, 0., in 1923 Surviving are her husband, whom she married March 16. 1912: „the brother and sister living in Adams county, and two half-sis-ters, Frances Martin, of Findlay, 0., and Cecil Vorside, of Dayton, O. Burial will be in the Middle Creek cemetery. Young Farm Worker Drowned In Wabash HUNTINGTON, Ind. (UPD—A young farm worker from Arkansas drowned in the Wabash River southeast of here Saturday as he was looking for a place to fish and swim. The victim was Eli Hampton, 26, Magnolia,-Ark. Authorities said Hampton slipped into the water below a dam at Markle as he attempted to cross the river with several companions. Hampton was working as a tomato picker at the Doyle Pusifall produce farm. SLIGHT BOOST (Continued from page 1) — — ■> I,! | - Decatur, D-R, 158 polls. D-W, 1,082 polls; real estate, DR, sl,927,910; D-W $6,444,710; personal, D-R, $829,290, D-W, $3,184,430; utilities, D-R, $89,160; D-W, $740,500; exemptions, D-R, $122,950, D-W, $881,510: net value, D-H, $2,723,410, D-W, $9,488,130; (D-R $2,707,280, D-W, $0,157,780). Geneva, 175 polls, real estate, $696,070; personal, $618,950; utilities, $63,570; exemptions, $134,380; net value, $1,245,210; ($1,191,140). Monroe, M-M, 75 polls, M-W, 14 polls; real estate, M-M, $289,590, M-W, $52,160; personal, M-M, $220,850, M-W, $19,630; utilities, M-M, $20,200, M-W, $6,550; exemptions, M-M, $58,490; M-W, $11,840; total, M-M. $480,150, M-W, $71,050 (M-M $453,830, M-W, $97,450), There were 3-887 polls in the county compared with 3,884 a year ago, a gain of just three. Polls are men between the ages of 21 and 50, not in the armed forces. Real estate and implement valuation in the county is $28,737,170, compared with $28,130,260 a year ago; personal proparty valuation is $14,734,880, compared with $14,917.320; utilities dropped to $5,137,400 from $5,304,570 Last year; exemptions were up, as was net value, however. WAMV MN** 5

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Hold Man For Death Os Elderly Father SOUTH BEND, Ind. <UPI)-St. Joseph county authorities held a New Carlisle man today in the slaying of his elderly father, Who was bludgeoned to death with a rolling pin late Saturday before the horrified eyes of his invalid wife. The victim was Samuel F. Butts, 86. New Carlisle. The body was discovered by Butts’ son, Morell, 48, when he returned home from work Saturday night. Butts’ other son, Howard, 56, was picked up at Michigan City on a public intoxication charge and taken to the county jail here. He was not charged formally with the murder, however. State Police said the old man died of mutliple skull fractures inflicted by< a rolling pin while his wife, Edith Mae, 80, looked helplessly on. Authorities said Mrs. Butts, who is unable to talk, could give them little information 1 concerning the slaying. <? Howard Butts confessed the slaying Sunday, police said. “I don't know why I did it,” officers quoted him as saying. “A feeling came over me." ST. MARY'S J Continued from page 1) future, with two*’teachers~ * i ~ Remodel Auditorium The present auditorium is now being remodeled to provide twoj extra classrooms, but the present I

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' a/' hIM j WIN . Ok X. Hr jRF'f ' BACK FROM THE CONGO— lnjured in riot-swept Republic of the Congo, a nun is removed from an evacuation plane at Brussels Belgium, as refugees continue to flee the strife-torn infant republic.

convention is inadequate for the needs of the 17 sisters al ready living there. It is extremely difficult for them to pray, study, andrelax briefly from their labors in such an over-crowded home. Even if more sisters were available, there would be no place for them i to live until the new convent is

completed. The present parish development program calls for pledges of $225,000 over a two-year period. Nearly hAlf has been given in the first six months, and pledges have been signed for more than $300,000.

CONGOLESE (Continued from pajfce D —Moroccan troops wearing the blue helmet and arm band of the United Nations were dispatched from Leopoldville to Matadi. at the mouth of the Congo which mutinous Congolese troops seized 10 day® ago from the Belgians. —U.N. troops from Tunisia and Ghana took up position in Leopoldville between Belgian paratroopers and Congolese roldiers. —Unconfirmed reports said the Polish freighter Stettin had arrived off the mouth of the Congo River with a cargo of 300 tons of Communist anms; Belgian troops took oyer the islands of Bula and Bamfba, presumably to try to intercept the reported arms shipment. These reports were questioned by Observers in Poland, who noted that Congo is not a normal -stop- for Polish ships. —The Soviet Union announced it was sending 10,000 tons of food including 1,000 tons of Cuban sugar to the Congo by plane and ship. The United States is supplying 18,000 tons of food. —The British Foreign Office announced in London it had received a request for recognition of Katanga, the mineral - rich province which announced its secession from the Congo Republic. The situation in Katanga was complicated by claims the assembly had “unanimously” approved independence for Katanga and by reports two members of the central Congo government had been arrested ,at the Elisabethville airport. —Henri Cools, Belgian ambas- ; sador to Moscow, returned to 11 ■- .. .

MONDAY, JULY 18, 1960

Brussels. He was recalled after the Russian ambassador to Belgium rejected a Belgian note as ; unacceptable because it contained ejapressions "offending the Soviet , government.’’ Recall of the am- . bassador was just one step short of breaking off .diplomatic relaI tions. A Leopoldville dispatch disclosed today that Andre Rijckmans, son of the former governorgeneral of the 1 Congo, had been shot by rebel Congolese tfroops. y— .. . If The Amount of The Policy Won't Cover The Loss . * 11' , WHAT GETS I LEFT OUT? i . ll' ■ It May Pay To Let Us Check Your Insurance Today! I ’ .' COWENS ■’ INSURANCE AGENCY LA. COWENS JIM COWENS 209 Court Street PHONE 3-3601 1