The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 October 1957 — Page 4

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TOtTHFTL rFHSI^TENCE JOLWAUKEE, Wis. UP — Jf'rime Shimck'a suit against Gu.'iave C. Ivirson, a corporation pica : nt. dragged through the c :r s 16 month but Shimek j 1.: .? won hi-t ca^e. The court | t it that I^arson didr^t pay the 11-y ar-old Shimek Enough for cutting his grass.

Dag Hay Be Sent To Middle East

UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. UP — Ireland today proposed a new summit conference to reduce the world's political tension as a possible first step toward disarma-

ment.

QUITS POST

| gained support. Syrian Foreign Minister Salah El Bilar, still adamantly rejected the mediation offer of King Saud of Saudi Arabia, visited Hammarskjold and discussed the

situation.

Boland told the political committee there was little to be gainer! in passing resolutions endorsing disarmament stands that had been rejected by one side or

Irisih Ambassador Frederick * ' r ot ler t -^ le P r i va t e talks of H BoUnd made Uie proposal for ' : d tnriament ’aubconMnlttee political discussions amonfj the ° L ^ e ^ nited States. Russia, gieat powers, “ and nHn-, a riivr ! Britain, France and Canada.

! der an isolated farmhouse, was postponed Wednesday from next Monday to Dec. 2. Circuit Judge Addison Beavers of Boonville respecial judge. Two doctors who set the date after qualifying as

WINS NOBEL PRIZE

STOCKHOLM UP—Dr. Danirl Bo vet, a Swiss-Italian pharmacologist, was awarded the 1957 Nobel Prize for medicine today for his work in discovering anti-

examined Watson reported he is I histamine drugs and for hamess-

; sane. Watson is charged with killing Mrs. Pearl Hartlage in 1954 and burying her remains under a house near Crawfordsville.

powers. " and primarily

between the United States and the Soviet Union," in the United Nations political committee’s de-

bate on disarmament.

Elsewhere in the U. N., plans to send Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold to the Middle East to investigate the crisis between Turkey and Syrian rapidly

Main talk in delegations was the plan to send Hammarskjold to investigate the Turco-Syrian

crisis.

WATSON TRIAL DEC. 2 EVANSVILLE (UP)—The trial trial of Clifford Watson, 41, on charges of killing his mother and hiding her dismembered body un-

ing the dangerous Indian poison

curare for medical use.

Bovet, 50, announced to reporters that the Nobel Prize i Foundation in Sweden sent him

COSTLY OVERPASS GIFT formal notification of the award

_ Wednesday night.

EAST CHICAGO (UP)—The

! —

| East Chicago Board of Public Workfi and Safety has accepted an offer from five railroads and Inland Steel Co. to build a four million dollar overpass spanning 13 sets of railroad tracks as an

access to Inland's big plant and CHICAGO (UP)—Here it is a, Lake Michigan lakefront park. ’ Nat . onal Thrift Week and the Inland will pay nearly 95 percent avera?e American family is of the cost and the railroads the about three montha away from

rest.

i bankruptcy.

Take Dim View Of Thrift Week

| This dim view of family finances comes from Helen White, executive secretary of the National Thrift Committee, and Jack Olson, an insurance executive. Their comments were based on a recent survey conducted by leading insurance companies on the financial status of middle class Americans. Olson, vice president in charge of the disability department of Combined Insurance Company of America, said the average family is “just 90 days from disaster," financially speaking. Miss White and Olson said few families accumulate a financial cushion to carry them beyond a three-month period if the breadwinner should lose his job or get

sick.

‘‘We’re living from pay day to pay day,” said Miss White. She said this creates marital discord, and tension and anxiety

among the children. "In many < . ■ paycheck is tossed f"i * latci ..1 pass the minute the bi...viu .:merge ts it," Olson said. "It's cashed or deposited, and the money must be paid out at once to < ver bills and current subsis* n •‘Families in this utu; : • >n haw a financial sword of Damo les hanging over them.” Despite continuing fn flat ion. Miss White and Olson i then are concrete steps the a\eia.re family can take to build \i .:s ICic ' is for a practical bi i. t b so 1 on the obvious fact that • atyo must never exceed in, >nn\" ‘‘A business soon g« s bankrupt if it isn't sot up on a .- ..nd financial has - . 1 serves set aside sy t . rr. for future exigencies,’' she ,dd In like manner .a fun ly sboulc set aside a regular amount < *ch

THE DAilY BANNW TIH RS., OUT. 24, 1957. Pag* * GREENCASTLE, IND. . . _ ^ pay day. v } “The average family without dequate reserves in the form of savings in one kind or another f s the constant threat <4 1 mkruptcy in 10 to 12 weeks ill the event of emergency^'* sht said.

HYBRID CORN

AND HYBRID SORGHUM

mg

ALBERT SOLOMON Rainhridge, Indiana Phone 20 R II

t Tam* ■ it 1.1 owned, Jr., who has held the post of 1J. S. Attorney General since the start of the Li^enhower Administration has resigned to return to private law j . n t i e. President Eisenhower announced he veil! name Deputy ho in v General William F. Rogers Lo succeed Brownell.

ROY A. RHODES, 40, the U. S. Army Signal Corps master sergeant who admitted doing some spy work for Russia while stationed in Moscow, and receiving $2,500 to $3,000 from tjie Reds, is shown in Brooklyn,iL Y., federal court. Rhodes testified in trial of Rudolf Ivanqvnli Abel, charged with being «» Russian spy. (International)

HE DIDN'T KNOW

Ff

! d

. ' y

J.iluo* C. (Toss, president of the l.dkors' Union tells the Senate 1 jckets committee currently grilling Nathan Sheffcrman, Chic ago labor relations specialist, tr.ht he had n<> direct knowledge of'Shefferman's rde in organizinj; the Morton Frozen Food cHnpany’s Webster City, Iowa 1

RED

deMnd

^■hiet E-oreign Minister Andrei G&unyko virtually demands to a 1 iie tfiidod N it:>' s ‘‘condemn” the I’aited States and Turkey for i 1 "pLirning i^ggresj ion' against oyria. In one of the most inputting speeches ever delivered 1 ■ (in Uie Assembly rostrum, G:Pmvm WMngd of-^frightening < iHnt" if-t!ie UN TaiiJ to act di ci*ively.

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