Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 38, Decatur, Adams County, 14 February 1963 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

EVANS Sales and Service, Inc. SEDANS 1960 Pontiac 4-DOOR 1959 Pontiac 4-DOOR 1957 Pontiac 4-DOOR 1956 Pontiac 4-DOOR Special! Just What YOU Need For Your Second Car! 1954 PONTIAC Station Wagon Bargains Are Good, Clean Cars! 1959 FORD STATION WA6ON 1958 FORD STATION WAGON 1959 PONTIAC 9 PASSENGER STATION WAGON EVANS Sales and Service 126-125 5. lot St. Ph. 3-2506 or 3-4519

Church Women Meet On Friday Evening The Decatur Council of United Church Women, made up of 13 participating churches, will meet Friday at the First Methodist church Chapel, at 7:30 p.m. Slate of officers to be presented by the nominating committee, and installed if elected, are: president, Mrs. A. C. Underwood: vice president, Mrs. John Rosier: secretary, Mrs. John Butler; treasurer, Mrs. Arthur Beeler; chairman Christian world misisons, Mrs. Wesley Lehman. Other chairmen are; Christian social relations <May Fellowship Day), Mrs. Hubert Zerkel, Jr.; World relations, (world community day), Mrs. Robert McQuaid; publicity and leadership training, Mrs. Gerald Gerig. In addition to the business meeting a short movie, “Changing Africa,” will be shown. A coffee fellowship hour will be held in the church parlor. Officers whose terms are expiring, Mrs. Paul Daniels, Mrs. Lowell Smith, and Mrs. Gail Baughman, will assist Mrs. Underwood in serving refreshments. World day of prayer by the United Church Women of Decatur will be held March 1, 7:30 p.m. at the Zion United Church of Christ. This service is to be in charge of Mrs. Wesley Lehman, assisted by a committee of women from other churches. Offerings will go toward supporting the world day of prayer project for 1963, the Congo Polytechnic Institute. 746 Cuban Refugees Arrive In Florida PORT EVERGLADES, Fla. (UPD—A Red Cross mercy ship docked here today with 746 Cuban refugees — most of them women and children —from Fidel Castro’s Communist island. The 5,000-ton freighter, Santo Cerro, carried 10 stretcher cases among the 282 men, 304 women and 160 children. Today’s refugees brought to nearly 3,452 the total number of civilians evacuated from Cuba aboard three ships and seven planes since Dec. 27. American Red Cross officials, U.S. immigration and public health authorities and representatives of the United Fruit Co., owners of the freighter, were at dockside to process the refugees. Special buses waited to carry them to the parking lot of the Miami baseball stadium, 20 miles to the south, where relatives and friends awaited them. In addition to the civilian refugees 1,113 freed Cuban invaders were brought here after the United States agreed to ship $53 million worth of ransom supplies to the Cuban government. Besides this over-all total of more than 4,500 Cubans pouring into Miami by sea and air during the past seven weeks, there have been approximately 150 other refugees who made their way here after escaping in small boats from various parts of the island.

Be Sure and Watch the GEIGY FARM SEMINAR on TV Seminar No. 3 Soil Feb. 16-2-2:30 p.m. Saturday Channel 33 As advertised in Farm and Home Section Peterson Grain Co.

FINAL CLEARANCE ALL - REMAINING - “BALL-BAND” RUBBER FOOTWEAR <(PSU off For men, women I and Children reg. price dis. price 4 buckle Work Arctics 10.95 7.66 4 buckle Work Arctics 8.95 6.26 4 buckle Dress Arctics 6.45 .. .. 4.51 Zippers 5.95 4.16 Pull-over Boots 6.50 4.55 All Remaining Women's Ball-Band e99 Overshoes. Reg. $5 95 — ** All Remaining Children's Ball-Band s<^-AQ Overshoes. Reg. $4.79 —— Kaye' S Shoe Store “Quality Footwear”

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

One Key Issue In Cleveland Strike Settled By United Press International The key issue of union security was under settlement today in the long Cleveland newspapier strike but an international union president said the New York newspaper strike may be extended to Paris and the West Coast. The settlement of the union security issue could mean an end soon to the strike which has halted publication of the Cleveland Press and Plain Dealer since Nov. 29. The guild unit at the Press Wednesday accepted the publishers’ proposal of maintenance of membership for all present guild members with a seven-day escape period at the contract’s expiration. The management proposal also called for a two-year contract with a wage increase of from $7.50 to $lO per week. The guildsmen at the Plain Dealer were expected to accept the offer later this week. The issue of union security was not involved at the morning paper. Two unions already have come to terms with the newspapers. Nine others were without contracts, including five on strike. The striking Teamsters were reported on the verge of agreement. Elmer Brown, head of the International Typographical Union, said the New York strike might be extended to editions of the New York Times printed in Paris and the West Coast. Brown, in ITU headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colo., said the New York publishers were 1 using “pressure tactics.” He said the publishers had approached the Miami, Fla., Herald and places in Canada about printing papers in those places and then hauling them to New York. 1716 shutdown, 69 days old, is costing the city an estimated $4 million daily. The printers have asked a $34 package, and the publishers have offered $lO. A key issue of automation was reported settled. Goldfine Agrees To SaIeQUII Assets WASHINGTON (UPD— Textile magnate Bernard Goldfine has agreed to the sale of all his corporate and personal assets to settle federal tax claims of several million dollars against him, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy announced today. Goldfine said In a statement issued in Boston that he had agreed to settlement of the tax claims because he had neither the strength nor the money to continue a court fight. A justice Department announcement said the agreement was contained in three stipulations filed today in Boston, Concord, N.H., and Rutland, Vt. The stipulations will settle tax recovery suits filed in January, 1962, asking $3.5 million from Goldfine and his wife, Charlotte, and $6.8 million from his string of textile mills. Kennedy said all of Goldfine’s holdings will be sold. He said the exact amount the government will receive will not be known until after the sales. But, he said, the receipts are expected to satisfy most of Goldfine’s personal liability and at least half of the corporation’s liabilities. Goldfine, 73, had extensive textile holdings until Democratic charges that President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s assistant, Sherman Adams, accepted gifts from him. This led to congressional investigations during which Adams resigned and tax charges were triggered against the industrialist. Goldfine was sentenced to a year and a day in prison and

w a Miss Judy Brodbeck Miss Cyn tMa Gable QUEEN CANDIDATES—Two Depatur girls are among 26 candidates for queen of the mid-winter prom at International College, Fort Wayne. Miss Brodbeck, 1961 graduate of Decatur high school, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Bower, and Miss Gable, also a 1961 graduate of D. H. S., is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gable. Students will elect five finalists Friday, and the queen will be selected by the students on Feb. 22, the day before the prom.

Venezuela Ship Is Captured By Armed Reds CARACAS, Venezuela (UPD — Armed Communists who captured a Venezuelan freighter bound for Houston, Tex., on the high seas said today they are pursuing “peaceful political ends” and called for protection of international law. A government spokesman said requests were made to the United States and Latin American countries to help intercept and recapture the cargo ship. A radio message from the hijacked vessel Anzoategui to UPI in Caracas bore nine signatures of members of the Communist National Liberation Forces (FALN). The message said that all crewmembers were unharmed and safe. The ship apparetly was seized early Wednesday morning in the Caribbean Sea about 380 miles north of Venezuela. It left La Guair harbor near Caracas Tuesday on its way to Houston to pick ftp industrial machinery. » The rebel message which UPI via Curacao Radio did not give the Anzoategui’s position. Interior Minister Carlos Andres Perez said Venezuela has appealed to the United States and other countries including Mexico, Brazil, Colombia and Panama for assistance in capturing the rebelheld vessel. Perez said he doubted the hijackers would head for Cuba, because “the United States Navy is still maintaining vigilance around Cuba.”

He said the rebels would probably try to make port somewhere in the Caribbean and seek asylum. The 3,127-ton ship carried fuel for 12 days but food for only five days, Perez said. The seizure apparently was part of a Red terrorist campaign to embarrass President Romulo Betancourt and force him to cancel his visit to the United States next week. It came as Betancourt was celebrating the anniversary of his fourth year in office Wednesday. fined SIIO,OOO on June 6, 1961, after he pleaded guilty to tax evasion charges. He was paroled to a private hospital Feb. 23, 1962, and was discharged from parole June New Nuclear Station To Begin Operations WASHINGTON (UPI) —The Defense Department Saturday will begin operation of its fourth station to improve detection of underground nuclear explosions. The department said the new installation, called “Cumberland plateau seismological observatory,” is near McMinnville, Tenn., about 70 miles southeast of Nashville. Others are at Fort Sill, Okla., Baker, Ore., and Vernal, Utah. After Unpacking If some of your dresses are mussed and wrinkled from packing, try hanging them over a bathtub of hot water for an hour or so, and see if they will not be quite freshened and free of wrinkles.

YOU DON’T NEED 40 OXEN TODAY When cortisone was first developed, 40 oxen were required to supply the raw material to make enough of the drug to treat one arthritis victim for just one day. No wonder very few people could benefit. But today, the oxen have been replaced by fantastically complex equipment. It is possible now to make cortisone available — at a moment's notice—- — all who need it. That's why we say ... r < TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION IS THE BIGGEST BARGAIN IN HISTORY Kohne Drug Store

Deciding Vote Cast By House Speaker INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Indiana House Speaker Richard Guthrie cast the deciding vote Wednesday to pass and send to the Senate a bill providing for local governments to share the cost of erecting warning signals at railroad grade crossings. The roll call vote on the measure was 50-41, and 51 votes were needed for passage as a constitutional majority of House members. Another ibll designed to provide a measure of financial relief for railroads failed to pass by a 44-42 vote. It would provide for governmental units to share in the cost of maintaining highway underpasses beneath railroads. Reps. Spencer Schnaitter, IlMadison, and Herbert Kohler, RGreensburg, led the fight against both measures, saying they would increase local property taxes. At present, construction costs of underpasses are split between the railroads and the unit of government which controls the street or highway involved, but maintenance costs are borne by the railroad. Present laws require the railroads to bear all cost of erecting crossing signals. The House passed and sent to the Senate by a 69-13 vote a bill which would allow some county jail inmates to work at their regular jobs during the day and spend nights and weekends in the jail. Sponsored by Rep. James Hunter, D-East Chicago, the bill is aimed at providing for the support of the families of such prisoners. It was passed after being amended to include womrai prisoners. A bill to establish a 40-hour work week for Terre Haute policemen touched off a brief floor fight before it was approved by a 79-11 vote and sent to the Senate. Rep. Rex McCoy, R-Union City, contended the bill violated the principle of home rule. Schnaitter cited bills which had been passed to handle other problems peculiar to a particular city. “We’ve passed bills for other local governments,” Schnaitter said. “The people of Terre Haute want this, let’s give it to them.” Ambassador Kohler Returns To Moscow MOSCOW (UPD — U. S. Ambassador Foy Kohler returned to Moscow today from a two week briefing session in Washington on the Soviet Union’s post-Cuba position. Permits Signatures To Be Facsimiled INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — A bill designed to save insurance company presidents, vice presidents and secretaries from suffering from writers cramp passed the Senate Wednesday 47-1. The measure permits such signatures on stock certificates to be facsimiled. Sen. James Spurgeon, D-Brownstown, said he knows of cases where a company president had to sign his name 6,000 times at one siting. Trade in a good town — Decatur.

Spurs Development Os Voice Recorders

WASHINGTON (UPD — The mysterious crash of a Northwest Orient Airlines Boeing 7208 in the Florida Everglades Tuesday will spur development of indestructible voice recorders. Many air safety experts believe some means of recording pilot voices will help provide the key to crashes which are becoming progressively more difficult to solve. Experts believe the last words of a crew caught up in a life-or-death emergency might supply clues to the cause of the resulting crash. All jet-powered airliners and some piston-engine planes now carry flight recorders. 171686 supply data on such factors as speed, altitude, direction, G (gravity; forces encountered and attitude. They are required on high - performance airliners simply because such planes are extremely complicated—and complexity makes an accident that much harder to solve. The flight recorder on the Northwest Orient plane has been recovered and sent to Washington for analysis which may take several days or longer. But the device admittedly is second choice to a voice recorder placed in the cockpit. Rep. Roman C. Pucinski, D-111., has introduced legislation which would make installation of voice recorders mandatory on all airliners. While he has considerable support from pilots, airlines and both federal air agencies, experts point out that (1) more research is needed to perfect such a device and (2) they probably will be enormously expensive. One estimate gives SB,OOO per aircraft as the cost of a voice recorder that would be immune from impact, fire or water damage. The tentative bill for equipping about 2,000 aircraft would hit sl6 million. There is a third obstacle—the feeling of some authorities that the last words of a crew in trouble could mislead investigators.

Indiana Tech Names Thoma As President FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPD — Dr. Edward Charles Thoma, 45, professor of civil engineering at Purdue University, will become president of Indiana Institute of Technology here Sept. 1. The institute's board of trustees made the announcement today at a meeting of faculty and me mbers of the administration, naming Thoma to succeed Dr. Archie T. Keene, who announced plans last year to retire at the end of the fiscal year Aug. 31. Keene has been head of the school more than 26 years and will become president emeritus upon retirement. The board said it contacted 250 persons and made a 1 preliminary list of 116 possible candidates for president, boiling it down to -17 “worthy of further consideration” from which Thoma was chosen. Thoma is a native of Chicago and received degrees at Purdue and the University of Illinois.

i SUMNER 11 Ki Also S2OO w,ddins PHILLIPS $250.00 Wadding Rmg Wedding Ring 50 00 39.75 K GENUINE REGISTERED ■I eepsake PROTECTED AGAINST LOSS ... without charge, for one full year, In writing. Stunning designs...perfect craftsmanship...center diamond guaranteed perfect (or replacement assured). That’s Keepsake! SlM* «ahr«ol la An tail. ftta iadad, Fatal Taa. L_.. —- Other Locking Sets From $32.50 Up John Brecht Jewelry 226 N. 2nd Steeet YOUR AUTHORIZED KEEPSAKE JEWELER _

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1963

Pilots may not always recognize the source of an emergency and could give the wrong information. In one case on record, a crew radioed that a fire was raging in a baggage compartment. A fatal crash followed, but it turned out that the fire originated outside the baggage compartment—and the pilots' last message led investigators into a fruitless search down the wrong alley. It you have something tc sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results. ? ■ a ' B " ■MTcW' .'dr sH NEW FlND— Stathis Giallelis, a young Greek actor described as having the “hungry look,” is the discovery of producer Elia Kazan. He will be starred in the forthcoming film, "America, America!”

< ■ -zz-* z. zs 'V children's vitamins I on you/ j shopping tfte extra Vi-Sol VITAMINS Tri-Vi-SoP/Poly-ViSoP/Dett-Vi-Sol* first choice in chewable vitamins HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.