Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 239, Decatur, Adams County, 10 October 1963 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Macmillan Gives Up Party Rule

BLACKPOOL, England (UPD— Prime Minister Harold Macmillan today surrendered leadersship of the ruling Conservative party for the coming general elections and said he could not hope to be prime minister “for any extended period.” He did not resign as prime minister, although that action was indicated for the future. In a. letter issued from his bed in a London hospital where he underwent a successful prostate gland operation this morning, Macmillan urged the Conservative party to choose a new leader. Macmillan’s decision was contained in a letter to Foreign Secretary Lord Home. It was read to the 4,200 delegates to the annual Conservative party meeting. They were stunned by the announcement. Macmillan’s letter said that even if the operation proved successful, “it is clear that I will need a considerable period of convalescence.” “I would not be able to face all, that is involved in a long electoral campaign,” he said. “Nor could I hope to fulfill the tasks of prime minister for any extended period, and I have so informed I the queen.” However, a Buckingham PalBe sure to see "A Letter to Nancy" at the Adams Theater, Sunday, 1:30, 3:30 & 7:30. No tickets needed. 239 3t

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Reserve District No. 7 State No. 731 REPORT OF CONDITION OF “The First State Bank of Decatur” of Decatur. Indiana, a member of the Federal Reserve System, at the close of business on September 30, 1963, published in accordance with a call made by the Federal Reserve Bank of this district pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Reserve Act. ASSETS Cash, balances with other banks, and cash items in process of collection .......$3,301,914.38 United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed ;..... 8,660,271.80 Obligations of States and oolitica! subdivisions 964,433.73 Other bonds, notes, and debentures 'including securities of Federal agencies arid corporations not guaranteed by U. S.) None Corporate stocks 'including $22,500.00 stock of Federal •> Reserve Bank' 22,500.00 Loans and discounts (including 182.10 overdrafts) 8,554,856.73 Bank premises owned $ 33,582.22Furniture and fixtures $113,313.55 146,895.77 (Bank premises owned are subjet to lieiis not assumed by bank) Real estate owned other than bank premises .. None Investments and other assets indirectly representing bank premises or other real estate. None Customers' liability to this bank on acceptances outstanding None Other assets ....---,-i— 6,873.10 TOTAL ASSETS .-. $21,657,745.51 « LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations „.„.....$ 7,682,648.41 Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations 10,664,781.55 Deposits of United States Government (including postal savings) ... 134,282.67 Deposits of States and political subdivisions 1,257.886.11 Deposits of banks... 214,165.20 Other deposits (ceriified and officers’ checks, etc.) 55 667 07 TOTAL DEPOSITS $20,009,431.01 (a) Total demand deposits .$ 9 269.649.46 (b) Total time deposits 1..510,739,781.55 Mortgages or other liens on bank? premises and on other real estate None Rediscounts, and other liabilities for borrowed money None Acceptances executed by or for account of this bank and — outstanding . _ JL...J...... None Other liabilities 205,205.25 TOTAL LIABILITIES ... $20,214,636.26 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Capital: (a) Common stock, total par value.... $250,000.00 <b) Preferred stock, total par value ..$ None • Total retirable value $ None ) <c) Capital notes and debentures .... $150,000.00 400 000 00 -- 500.000.00 Reserves (and retirement account for preferred capital) None TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS -...$ 1,443,109.25 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ... $21,657,745 51 MEMORANDA Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for other purposes .u...$ 550,000.00 (a) Loans as shown above are after deduction of reserves . —----- 275,320.44 (b) Securities as shown above are after deduction of valuation reserves of None I, Wm. R. Lose, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. WM. R. LOSE We. the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of condition, and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief is true and correct. T. F. Graliker, G. W. Vizard. L. M. Busche, Directors

ace spokesman said: “He has not resigned as premier.” The effect of his action appeared to be that he was turning over the reins of government to Deputy Prime Minister R. A. (Rab) Butler. The 69-year-old prime minister’s letter was sent to Lord Home in the foreign secretary's capacity as president of, the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations. Macmillan’s leadership has been under attack by some rank-and-file Conservatives since the Profumo sex-and-security scandal first rocked the government last June. Reports trom the conference said Butler had a slight edge among possible successors to Macmillan. The next election must be held within a year, and current speculation is that it probably will come in May or June. Ask Bob Kennedy Testify On Views WASHINGTON (UPI) — The House Judiciary Committee, whose subcommittee wrote a stronger civil rights bill than President Kennedy requested, today asked Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy to testify about the administration’s views on the strengthened bill. The call for the President’s brother to testify next week came after Negro officials charged that the Justice Department has been working against the subcommittee bill. The committee is close to voting on amendments to the subcommittee bill. One amendment would throw out the entire section on voting rights and the other would limit the section to federal elections as the administration’s original bill would have done. The subcommittee also went considerably farther than administration requests in the field of public accommodations and job bias. Trade in a good town — Decatur

TO FILE (Continued from Page One) are isisued. Will Issue Warrants If any or all of the three still refuse to pay the fines, a warrant will be issued for the violator and a hearing date will be set on the city court docket. If a hearing must be held and warrant issued, the fine will then go us to $lO and costs, or a total of sl9, as has been the procedure in past cases of traffic ticket violators. Nobel Peace Prize Winners Announced OSLO, Norway . (UPl)—American chemist Linus Pauling was awarded the 1962 Nobel Peace Prize and the 1963 prize was divided between the International Red Cross Committee and the Red Cross League, the Norwegian Nobel Prize Committee announced today. It was the second Nobel Prize for the 62-year-old Pauling who was born in Portland, Ore., on F ( eb. 28, 1901. He won the 1954 Nobel Prize in chemistry. The peace prize was worth $51,440 to Pauling. The 1963 prize, to be divided equally between the two Red Cross bodies, was worth $53,000. The peace prizes and official diplomas will be delivered to the winners at the traditional Nobel ceremony at Oslo University Dec. 10, the day commemorating the death of Alfred Nobel. The Nobel committee, as usual, gave no reason for its decisions today. The committee is appointed by the Norwegian National Assembly, but operates entirely independently. Its meetings are always behind closed doors, and no names under consideration for the prize or reasons for awards are ever given. _—:— Pauling's peace prize is the 12th to go to the United States, while the Red Cross has twice before received the award. Pauling won the 1962 award today after the Nobel committee decided last year that there was no suitable recipient. The 1961 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded posthumously to United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, who was killed in a plane crash while on a peace mission to the Congo. The 1960 award went to Albert John Luthuli, a Zulu chief and leader of the non-vio-lent opposition to the white supremacy policies of the South African government. Pauling was awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit in World War II for outstanding services to the United States. But he has been a controversial figure in recent years because of his outspoken opposition to nuclear bomb tests. His associations with ban-the-bomb organizations regarded as friendly to leftists caused the State Department in 1952 to refuse him a passport. Pauling joins an illustrious list oi American Peace Prize winners including Gen. George C Marshall (1953), Ralph J. Bunche (1950), John R. Mott and Emily G Balch (1946), Cordell Hull (1945), N. M. Butler' and Jane Addams (1931), Frank B. Kellogg (1929), Charles G. Dawes (1925), Woodrow Wilson (1919), Elihu Root (1912) and Theodore Roosevelt (1906).

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

Flora Churns Rapidly Out Into Atlantic Flora, leaving a death toll that MIAMI <UPI) — Hurricane Flora, leaving a death toll that may exceede 9,000 and damages of nearly SSOO million, churned rapidly today toward eventual death in the Atlantic Ocean. Forecasters said the twister’s 115 mile per hour peak winfis posed no threat to land but Would push gale winds and heavy surf against the British resort island of Bermuda today. Heading. northeasterly at. a speed of better than 20 m.p.h.. Flora was located at 6 a.m. EDT near latitude 27.0 north, longitude 65.0 west, or about 370 mUes south of Bermuda. Gale winds extended 400 miles in all directions “She’s not dead yet,” said a Miami forecaster, “but I would say maybe two days, then the cold air will kill her.” Flora, one of the most devasting storms of the 20th century, made her last strike at land Wednesday morning, passing "over the island of Mayaguana in the southeastern Bahamas. A Haitian seaman was drowned when his dingy overturned. Reports said 83 m.p.h. winds wreaked some crop damage and blew away a shop and dock, but did no damage to the U. S. missile tracking station on the island, 200 miles southeast of Nassau. The killer Hurriance opened its death-dealing foray by smashing the tiny island of Tobago off the northern coast of South America early last week, but caused the most damage in a swipe over Haiti and Cuba. Haitian Health Minister Girard Philippeaux has estimated 2,500 persons are dead or missing in the storm's path and another 2,500 possibly killed. CARE international relief agency estimated SIOO million in property loss. While only 227 deaths have been announced by the Communist government radio in Cuba, radio reports monitored in Miami indicated that 4,000 student workers are missing in the island’s eastern mountains which the storm lashed for four days without letup; r —— The students were apparently trying to save the coffee crop when the storm struck. The U. S. Weather Bureau says damage caused to crops and property in eastern Cuba will to* tai several hundreds of millions dollars. Busche To Speak At Monroe Church Sunday Martin Busche will be the speaker at the worship service at 9:30 a.m. Sunday at the Monroe Methodist church, during the church’s annual “Layman's Day.” Busche and his wife have just returned from a five week trip in Europe and he will use observations from this trip in his message. A former resident of the Monroe area, he now resides in Lafapette, but still owns a farm east of Monroe. The general public is invited to attend the morning worship. It vou nave something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results

Richmond Coin Club Holds Show Sunday The Richmond coin club will -sponsor its second annual coin show Sunday at the Rational Guard armory, West Main street, Richmond. The show is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. There is no admission charge. Conditions Al Indiana Girls' School Deplored INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The 1965 Legislature will be asked to take another look at a plan it rejected in 1963, in the light of a blistering report stating that buildings at the Indiana Girls’ School are in such poor condition they should be torn down. Commissioner Arthur Campbell of the Indiana Department of Correction, said that he felt sure the next legislature would be asked again to consider dedication of approximately $600,000 paid annually by counties to the state for maintenance of girls and boys sent to the two institutions, one near Clermont and the other at Plainfield. He said he had urged such a plan in 1963 as a means of building up a construction fund from which new buildings could be built al the two schools but because of overall financial problems, the lawmakers failed to act upon the bill. The suggestion that most of the buildings at the Girls’ School be torn down and replaced with new structures came in a report released Wednesday on an inspection of the institution by a threeman team from the State Department of Administration. It was the 10th in a series of reports on inspections of state institutions by Deputy Commissioner James H. Berg, Edwin Gibson, director of the department’s public works division, and A.P. Bayt, director of the supply division. Berg said, “A planned program of demolition arid replacement of the existing housing and administrative facilities is the only reasonable approach to the problems ot this institution. These buildings could all be replaced by a single functional unit.” He said he felt it was “unwise” to put any more money into rehabilitation or maintenance of the existing buildings, many of which date back to 1917. Gibson skid he felt 80-90 per cent of the buildings should be demolished. The inspectors recommended that the nine cottages be destroyed and replaced with better housing facilities for the inmates. Bayt suggested establishment of a central kitchen to replace the separate kitchens at each cottage. Gibson said the present buildings constitute fire hazards and Berg suggested that all employes be given “complete fire training”! and that fire drills be instituted for the staff and the inmates. Campbell agreed with the recommendation that the cottages be replaced and said he felt the ideal setup would be two housing units with individual rooms and with 150 girls in each unit. He said the population at the school ranges from 200 to 300.

Cuba Warns On Any Attack On Stricken land MIAMI (UPI) — While volunteers searched for bodies in the silt and rubble-filled towns of eastern Cuba, the Fidel Castro government warned Wednesday that any rebel attack on the hur-ncane-torn island would be wiped out “from the first to the last” man. The Communist newspaper Hoy —the official government organ—warned that Hurricane Flora had not weakened Cuba’s defense capabilities and exile “assassins, torturers, playboys and thieves,” had better take heed. ’ “Certainly the hurricane damage has been tremendous, certainly no one remembers a hurricane that has been so terribly long and so erratic —but Cuba is neither trembling nor suffering any irreparable damage,” Hoy said. The article did not give any estimate on the number killed by Flora, which lashed the island for four days, but radio reports monitored here indicated the tell may run into the thousands. Declined American Help However, a statement issued by the Cuban government told the people to disregard “unfounded rumors about the casualty total.” At the same time, the government released its first casualty list and said more would follow as victims are identified. The first list contained the names of 33 dead, including eight in one family. Six of the eight were children. The evening newspaper La Tarde reported eight persons, including a 6-year-old boy, drowned at Manzanillo. It was not known if the eight are included in the casualty list. The Cuban Red Cross, acting on Castro's orders, has declined help from the American Red Cross calling the offer "hypocritical.” According to a Havana Radio broadcast, the rriessage to the American Red Cross rejected the offer for help “from those who permanently seek to inflict misery and ruin on the Cuban nation with their blockades and attacks.” In another radio message, however, Havana reported that the government had thanked the League of Societies of the Red Cross in Geneva, Switzerland, for its offer of foodstuffs and medicines. The Miami Weather Bureau said the damage in Cuba would probably amount to “several hundred millions of dollars.” One radio transmission, sent from hard-hit Oriente Province, expressed fear that 4,000 persons may have lost their lives in flood waters around the foothills of the Sierra Crystal Mountains alone. If you have something to sell ot trade — use the Democrat Want Ads — they get BIG results

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LABOR UNION (Continued from Page 1) tax unconstitutional. “We have just begun to fight against this tax,” Sells told his news conference. “We will go into the political arena and seek repeal of the tax in the next legislature, if we do not get it out in the courts.” Would Back Opponents Sells said the union would back legislative candidates who are opposed to a sales tax. But he conceded “the position of some candidates change after they are elected.” “As long as there is a legal question, I don’t believe Indiana should be collecting something it couldn’t pay back,” Sells said with reference to state plans to start enforcing the law later this month. Sells said he blames three men equally for enactment of the tax —Welsh, Lt. Goy. Richard Ristine and House Speaker Richard Guthrie. “These three men are primarily responsible for the tax, which is certainly not a thoroughbred, but a mongrel,” he said. He said the union position was that Welsh should call another special session of the legislature in order to determine where money will come for state school

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1963

support and other expenses. Most Workers Oppose He said that although individual union members may favor the tax, he felt most members opposed it -and favored one single basic tax, rather than the multiple tax program. Sells charged the Welsh administration with “crying crocodile tears about education.”. He said the first thing the Welsh administration did after the Indiana Supreme Court ruling upholding the tax was to announce a $3 million pay increase for state employes. “And now Purdue is digging a hole deeper so they can put in more seats for football. I’m in favor of football, but I don’t think they have to spend $500,000 more to get additional seats,” he said. 1959 Buick LaSabre 2-door hardtop; Power Steering, Power Brakes. ZINTSMASTER MOTOR SALES First & Monroe Sts. Phone 3-2003