Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 33, Decatur, Adams County, 8 February 1962 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
New Look In GOP Guard For Indiana By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD-There’s 1 a new look in the Indiana Re-1 publican Party. A host of new party officials* have been chosen since the last reorganization of the Hoosier GOP on May 19, 1960. Since that time i the Republicans have lost the governorship and the office of state superintendent of public instruction but have retained other state offices and a favorable congressional lineup. The changing of the party guard includes one national committee- f man. three state officials, three of * the district chairmen and 16 of j the 184 county chairmen and vice- 1 chairmen. I When for mer Gov. Ralph F. Gates. Columbia City, resigned as national committeeman, he was succeeded by Walter R. Beardsley. | wealthy Elkhart industrialist. Mrs. ■ jlone Harrington, Chesterton, re-1 ; mains as national committeewom- | an. Gallmeyer Became Chief Thomas A. Gallmeyer, Fort Wayne attorney, was elected state i chairman, succeeding Edwin BeaI man. who resigned to join the Washington staff of Sen. Homer E. Capehart. Mrs. Esther Guthridge, Fowler, replaced Mrs. Martha Whitehead, j Waldron, as vice-chairman, and ; Stanley H. Byram. Martinsville, j owner of the world's largest goldI fish hatchery, succeeded George I Stark, Indianapolis meat packer, j as treasurer. James T. Neal, No- * blesville Ledger editor, retains the ] secretary post. ■ The new district chairmen are' ! John J. Wargo, Ist District: Robert E. Gates, son of the former i governor, 4th District, and Ken- * j neth Marlin, f ormer st ate con-! i servation director. 10th District. I New faces among the county j | chairmen and vice-chairmen are | I True M. Andrews. Adams County; | j Orvas E. Beers, Allen: Robert O. j Crankshaw, Blackford; Frank IJ.t-' ley, Gibson; Virgil Ritter and Mrs. Morris Ramsey. Grant; ■ Claude L. Hughes and Mrs. Helen Himsel, Hendricks; Walter Mea,d. Howard; Mrs. Emalee Moore, Jasper; Ardee Helm, Sr.. Jay; Howard K. Menser, Marshall: Leslie Akers. Newton; Harry Ray Hesler, Parke, and William J.
Mangum, Perry. Most of Them Resigned . J Bette McKinley has resigned as Knox County vice-chairman, but has not yet been replaced. Resignations have accounted for most of the changes. When the Democrats took over the governor’s office, a number of party officials lost their state jobs or their avenues for garnering state purchases and other emoluments. Other party officers decamped because they feared ouster by younger blood and quit while the quitting was good. Still others flew the coop ■because they were weary of the grinding routine of their poasts—absence from their families night after night, taking the polls, passing the tambourine for financing campaigns, listening to long, boring speeches; helping persons to get jobs, actual electioneering and other demanding but poorly recompensed tasks. Chicago Boy Denies Setting Big Fires 2 ztsl ARSON RB4oa 2-8 CHICAGO (UPD—A 13-year-old suburban Cicero boy, reported to have confessed starting the 1958 Our Lady of the Angels fire that took 95 lives, denied Wednesday that he set any major fires. The boy appeared in Family Court to answer a delinquency pe tition charging him with setting 11 fires in Chicago and Cicero, not including the school blaze. A lie detector expert, John E. Reid, testified the youth had signed statements admitting the fires. Under questioning by his attorney, John Cogan, the boy said: “No sir, I didn’t start those fires.” He admitted setting only two small trash barrel fires at an apartment house. He said he “made up a story” because Cicero investigators were so persistent. “A policeman was squeezing my arm,” he said. Family Court Judge Alfred J. Cillela refused to permit Reid to offer any testimony other than his statement that the boy had signed the confessions and that the boy’s mother had Brought him to his office “to get the truth.” The Chicago Tribune reported in a copyrighted story last month that the boy had confessed starting the Our Lady of the Angels fire during questioning by Reid. The Tribune said the boy had signed an eight-page statement. Wednesday’s hearing did not consider the parochial school fire that killed 92 pupils and three
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NO BUS TO WORK FOR HIM—A chauffeured limousine carried Antony ArmstrongJones, the Earl of Snowdon, from Kensington Palace to his first day of work on the London Sunday Times. Husband of Princess Margaret, Lord Snowdon, himself a photographer, failed to greet any of the 80 cameramen and newsmen on hand to see a member of the royal family join their ranks
KJ > Berlin’/ JI <3 Il 1 — West Jg East bel, g e Rsm a n yJ • vT BONN e ~>VOELKLINGER *\CZEC FRANCE / Jas./’* Munich ; : C
SITE OF MINE DISASTER— An explosion and fire trapped hundreds of miners in a coal mine at Voelklinger, West Germany. Newsmap locates site of Saar disaster.
nuns Dec. 1, 1958. A separate delinquency petition that mentions the date of that fire will be heard Feb. 15. Sgt. Drew Brown of the Chicago police arson squad said earlier the boy is a “good suspect” in the school fire. The boy was a fifth grader at Our Lady of the Angels when the fire occurred. IndianupolisLivestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPD - livestock : Hogs 6.800; unevenly steady to weak, and 25 lower: 190-225 lb 17.35-17.65; bulk 180-240 lb 16.7517.35; 240-270 lb 16.25-17.00; 270320 lb 15.75-16.25; sows steady to strong; 300-400 lb O lb 14.00-14.75. Cattle 900: calves 50: steady to strong; choice steers 26.00-26.25; good and mixed good and choice 23.50-25.50; standard and good
CgSffIPRICE
I FRIDAY ONLY 1 ■ SPECIAL GROUP J I COTTON PRINTS I ■ HUGE SELECTION 1 I PERCALE, BROADCLOTH, PRINTS 1 I FIRST QUALITY vn VQ< B ■ LENGTHS TO 10 YDS. TU * B B B IF FULL BOLTS 39c Io 49c YD. j| B ®Er. - B
i heifers 21.00-23.00; cows fully ■ steady: utility and commercial i 13.50-15.00; carmers and cutters i 12.00-14.50; bulls steady to 50 higher; utility and commercial 18.00-19.00; vealers steady; individual choice 36.50; good and choice 29.00-36.00. Sheep 200; strong to 50 higher; choice and mixed choice and rpime wooled lambs 17.00-18.00; good and mixed good and choice 14.00-16.50. Chicaao Livestock CHICAGO "(UPD—Livestock. Hogs 6,500; steady to 25 higher; closing mostly steady; mostly No 1-2 190-225 lb 17.50-17.85; 37 head No 1 230 lb 18.00; mixed No 1-3 190-240 lb 17.00-17.50; 230-260 lb 16.50-17.00; No 2-2 240-285 lb 16.2516.75; couple loads largely No 3 328-330 lb 15.50. Cattle- 1.000, calves 25; slaughter steers and heifers steady to weak, most offers grading good and below; vealers steady; two
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8,1962
loads choice 1125 and 1200 lb slaughter steers 26.25 and 26.50; few loads mixed good and choice 25.00-25.50; good 22.50-25.00; load choice 1000 lb heifers 26.00; good 22.25-24.50; few standard and good vealers ’ 20.00-2700 === Sheep 1,200; slaughter lambs fully steady; three decks choice and prime 97-109 lb fed western wooled lambs 18.50; choice and prime native wooled slaughter lambs 18.00: good and choice 16.00-17.50; three decks choice and prime 103 lb shorn fed lambs No 1 and fall shorn pelts 17.50.
FEBRUARY TASTE TREAT BlAffl Wfl CHERRY fW CREAM VS OIL / EQUITY \ ' JUG MILK 1 78* W GAL. 39c...% GAL AT YOUR NEARBY EQUITY STORES
