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Logansport Pharos-Tribune from Logansport, Indiana • Page 24

Location:
Logansport, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Twenty-four Logansport, Indiana. Pharos-Tribune Record Stock NEW YORK (UPI)-The bone weary big men of business and the incredulous cleaning women of Wall Street were in total agreement: The bushels of ticker "tape littering brokers' offices were a WIFE NO. 3 OBJECTS TO WIFE NO. 4 ATLANTA (DPI) Tobacco millionaire R. J.

Reynolds, 55, honeymooned on his private island off the Georgia coast No. 4 today while spouse No. called on "the world to un- 'erstand what I have been forced to endure." Reynolds announced his marriage on the liigh seas to Dr. Annemarie Schmitt, 31, of Karlsruhe, Germany, in a four-page statement distributed Tuesday by a public relations firm here. They were married aboard the 'Tolland American Line ship S.S.

Rotterdam in the South China Sea 15 the day Circuit Judge Durrance ruled at Claxton, that Mrs. Muriel Marston leynolds of Toronto, was rot entitled to a new trial in her divorce from the cigarette king. Mrs. Muriel Reynolds' lawyers promptly announced they considered Reynolds had no right to remarry because they were appealing Durrence's ruling to Georgia Supreme Court. Said the third Mrs.

Reynolds in New York: "I am shocked. The world, no doubt, is beginning to understand what I have been forced to endure. I have every confidence that the courts of Georgia in which our case is still wiH see that justice is Jone." Reynolds had sued his third wife for divorce on the grounds Hn'iberatcly nagged him while he was sick. She demanded $6 in a cross-complaint but won only alimony of a month for 24 years. near record.

In one day Tuesday, more than 7 million shares of stocks had changed hands on the New York Stock Exchange million worth of business on paper. A considerable i of America's estimated 15 million shareowners (compared with 6.5 million five years ago) had been on quite a buying and selling Yet when it was all over, very ittle seemed to have changed. Price averages computed by different means showed only slight variations. In effect, the market didn't go anywhere. This meant that for just about ivery stockholder who wanted to sell, all across the country, there was someone who wanted to buy.

And it was impossible to out any major reason for the ex- pace, the way President Eisenhower's heart attack was blamed for the previous 7-million share day, Sept. 26, 1955. Market observers instesd of- 'ered a number of little reasons they hoped would add up to feverish total: --Some investors wanted cash 'or income tax payments. So they sold. --Some investors acted on word 'rom President Kennedy's chief economic adviser, Walter W.

Heler, that the end of the recession might be at hand. So they bought. --Some speculators may ave seen looking lor a quick profit. So hey bought and sold. A bitter proxy battle between Pennsylvania multi-millionaire Alan P.

Kirby and the rich Murchison brothers of Texas accounted for about -one-seventh of the total on the New York shares of Alleghany Corp. CUTOFF DATE ATTIPTON1S OCTOBER 1 Enrollment cutoff date for children at the Tipton township elementary school is Oct. 1 and not Dec. 31 as previously reported, Mrs. Carol Mclntyre stated.Wed- nesday.

This means those entering kindergarten must be five years old by this date to be eligible for enrollment and those entering first grade must be six, the county nurse said. The Tipton township Pre-school clinic will be held on May 12. The enrollment of pupils for the first grade is for those who have not been enrolled in kindergarten during the present school vear. Girl Bitten by Dog Tied in Own Yard Debra Jean, three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

David Gulp, of 1324 Libert was bitten by a dog on her left leg, two inches above her ankle, as she rlayed with neighborhood children Tuesday morning. According to city police, the dog owned by Delmar Gross, 1329 Chicago was tied up in the owner's back yard. The child wandered into the yard. The bite was serious enough to require medical attention, police said. Jim White Fire Insurance.

Ph. 2491 HOLLAND SANIVAC CLEANING SERVICE PHONE 3887 WE CARRY A COMPUTE LINE OF VAUGHANS SEED AND LAWN CARE PRODUCTS KASCH'S 524 E. Market PET AND IAWN SUPPLY STORE Phong 4328 Republicans Lose In St. Louis Voting ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Republicans ost their first big city election since November Tuesday despite a sizable effort to capture a Democratic stronghold.

Mayor Raymond R. Tucker, Democrat, defeated his Republican opponent, auto dealer Ben Lindenbusch, by more than 40,000 votes out of 160,000 cast. Complete returns from 601 precincts gave Tucker 100,801 votes 59,469 for Lindenbusch, politi- novice. The GOP National Committee supported i with money and effort in the hope that work and determination could overcome the traditional Democratic advantage in a big city. Incorporate Local Plumbing Company Articles of incorporation for the JWay plumbing firm, were filed in the office of George W.

Cline, county recorder, Tuesday. The paper lists John W. Alfrey, of rural route 4, as resident agent, and Frank Brutcher, 2114 Otto Earl R. Palmer, of rural route 4, and Alfrey as directors and incorporators. According to the articles, the firm has 1,000 shares stock and $1,000 paid in capital.

SMELT SUPPER 8th Walton American Legion Post 418 AYERS GROCERY CLOSED 11 a. p. m. Wednesday, April 5 STRETCH BUDGET DOLLAR WBM NOMI Mita Thursday-Friday-Saturday Specials Pur. 2 LBS 85c Blade Cut IB.

twin Meaty LB. 45c 19c GROUND BEEF CHUCK ROAST RATE BOILING BEEF SMOKED SAUSAGE HickorySmol 18 CENTER StICE HAM le 85c FRESH STUFFED SAUSAGE 18 49c WHOLESALE RETAM Open Man. thru Sat. 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Custom Butchering and Curing-Small Shop-Big Values STONEY PIKE MARKET E. Main Free Parking Phone 2316 WASHINGTON (UPI) Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy today awaited a report on the speedy deportation of New Orleans racketeer Carlos Marcello, who walked nto an immigration office to register as an alien and found iimself in Guatemala a few hours Kennedy, who didn't know about means used to get Marcello out of the country until it was accomplished, asked for a full report from the Immigration CLOSE SHAVE Joliet prison barber uses electric clippers Tuesday to shave the head of Chester (Rocky) Weger, 22, as the convicted slayer begins to serve life sentence for the murder of one of three Riverside, women.

The Old Joliet State Penitentiary is now used as a quarantine and re-assignment center. Weger will be eligible for parole in 20 years. (UPI) Mercury Remains in Low Readings By United Press International The mercury made exploratory excursions into the low 60s in ndiana Tuesday but backed away or a longer stay in cooler climes. It was 62 at Evansville at the day's high point and the upper 50s elsewhere over most of the state. However, chillier readings were scheduled for today, followed by a trend which will keep the emperatures in the 40s at high Joints Thursday.

It probably will remain cool into the early part next week. Temperatures will average 6 to degrees below normal highs of '2 to 62, and normal lows of 34 to 44, with little day-to-day change next Monday, according the five-day outlook. This would mean highs averaging 42 to 56 and A compilation of announced actory-suggested list prices of 1961 model cars shows that average prices are 4.5% lower than .960 models. Automobile manufacturers are traditionally among leading newspaper advertisers; they invest over $80 million a year in daily newspapers to in- the public of the latest developments and styles in their products. IPUOtSTERING einrom FURDITURE 201B NORTH STREET PHONE 4789 lows averaging 24 to 38.

Occasional light rain was scheduled for today, in fact, it was falling in the northern third of the state by dawn or shortly thereafter. The rain will end late today but will resume by Friday evening. More will fall Saturday or Sunday, and the central por tion may get light snow. Precipitation during the next five days will average .20 to .40 of an inch in the northern third, and .50 to .75 of an inch in the central and south. Overnight lows this morning ranged from 35 at South Bend to 51 at Evansville.

Highs today will range from 48 to the mid 50s and lows tonight from 30 to the mid 30s. New Orleans Racketeer Speeded Out Of Country JFK Disappointed In Test Ban Talks GENEVA (UPI) President Kennedy is disappointed with Soviet conduct at the nuclear weapons test ban conference here and considers it a setback for his attempts to replace fear with confidence. Sen. Albert Gore, said today. But Gore told of the Inter Parliamentary Union that the President still hopes the Russians will abandon their obstructive tactics and make possible an agreement to end nuclear testing.

Gore's remarks were made only a few hours before Vice President Lyndon Johnson was due here to take soundings on the changes for agreement at the talks which have stretched out for 2Vz years. Johnson tentatively was flying here from Dakar where he was Kennedy's special representative at Senegal's independence celebration. Gore, senior member of the joint Congressional CommjHee on Atomic Energy, sat in on Tuesday's meeting at which the Russians accepted four Western concessions designed to meet previous Soviet objections, but offered nothing of their own in return. The service said Tuesday that Marcello, called by law officials the kingpin of organized crime in Louisiana, walked into its New Orleans office to register as an alien, which he had been doing monthly for five years. He has been fighting deportation for nearly 10 years.

Marcello came out of the office handcuffed. Officers put into a car and whisked him off to a waiting airplane without his wife, children or any belongings. The Immigration Service plane immediately took off for Guatemala. Guatemalan officials agreed to accept Marcello on the basis of discovery of a birth record indicating he was born there. Marcello has claimed he was born in Tunis, and had a record showing the baptism of a Calogero Minacori there on Feb.

6, 1910. But the a a a record showed a Colgers Minacore born in that country on the same date. Los Angeles Mayor Faces Runoff Test LOS ANGELES (UPQ-Mayor Norris Poulson, seeking his third four-year term, failed to garner the needed 50.01 per cent of the vote over seven opponents in Tuesday's municipal primary election and must face the test of a runoff in the May 31 general election. On the basis of semiofficial returns from 3,500 of the "city's 4,712 precincts, Poulson's opponent appeared most likely to be former Congressman Sam W. Yort.y.

The incomplete returns showed Poulson with 132,569 votes, Yorty with 90,687 and the only other seri ous contender, City Councilman Patrick D. McGee, with 84,695. None of the other five candidates was in contention. Poulson, 65, is a Republican. Yorty, 51, is a Democrat.

CENTRAL DRUG CO. FOR ALL YOUR PRESCRIPTION NEEDS 4th at Broadway Phone 3131 Wednesday Evening, April 5, 196L ON ITS WAY The cement carrier John L. A. Galster inaugurated the 1961 Great Lakes shipping season at Petoskey, this week when it crunched through the harbor ice to Lake Michigan on its way to Chicago with a load of cement. The Perm-Dixie carrier crossed Little Traverse Bay Saturday from its winter quarters at Harbor Springs to load its cargo at Petoskey.

The ship arrived in Chicago Tuesday. For your added convenience and dining pleasure Cap't Logan Coffee Shop and Dining' Room Will Serve All Day Every Sunday 8:00 A. M. to 7:00 P.M. A complete 'meal including la carte orders, sandwiches and special dinners, expertly prepared and courteously served, will be available.

Sunday features will always include fried chicken and roast beef, vegetable, potatoes, salad, bread butter and drink. Modestly priced at $1.50 For a snack or complete meal 7 days a week, we invite you to visit The Cap't Hotel ROOF REPAIRS See Ross Reid Phone 3388 Shoe Salesman for LOCAL DEPARTMENT STORE Ages 20 to 50, experience desired, but will train. Give particulars in first letter as to qualifications and salary needed. Enclose snapshot if possible. Box A-6i Pharos-Tribune Press Why is one of these whiskies insured for One Million Dollars? $4-85 QT.

PT. The whiskey on the right is insured because it is Calvert's one million dollar "Standard of Excellence" the lightest, finest, best-tasting whiskey, we believe, ever created. The Calvert Reserve on the left--and every bottle you buy--must match this "Standard of Excellence" for lighter taste, finer taste, better taste. Taste that never varies. Always "good as gold." Shouldn't you enjoy it tonight? For lighter Calvert Reserve FULL 86 PROOF BUNDED WHISKEY 6556 GRAIH NEUTRAL SPIRITS HOUSE OF CM.VEBT.LOUISVILLE, KY.

BOLLEIS BONELESS BEEF STEW 69c U.S.D.A. CHOICE GOVT. GRADED CHUCK ROAST FRESH-ALl BEEF GROUND BEEF EMGES MILD CURE SLICED BACON BOILING BEEF IB. of fomovs 500 auto racers with packages of Pepsi-Cola iffffli take home an extra carton 6 BOTTLES FREE PEPSI COLA WHILE YOU SHOP FRIDAY and SATURDAY 9 m. 'til 6 p.

m. COMPLIMENTS OF BOLLEI'S SUPERETTE 'STOKELY SALE' Whole Kernel Yellow or Cream Style cans 303 for CATSUP 12 Bottles 49 GREEN BEANS FRUIT COCKTAIL No. 303 Cans OVC 49c OHIO NO. 1 POTATOES 0 9 BANANAS SOLID-YELLOW RIPE LB. 10 00, WHALE of CONTEST MINUTE MAID MARINELAND CIRCUS TV CONTEST Boys! Girls! Come in for 3 fQR 79c 6 or.

Mtmit. Mold Jvfct MINUTE MAID ORANGE JUICE 2 CANS 99C I A Crackers 23c FLAVOR KIST CHOCOLATE GRAHAMS PKG. FUDGE CRBMES PKG. FIG BARS IB. BOX 39c 201 BURLINGTON-IOGANSPORT.

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About Logansport Pharos-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
342,985
Years Available:
1890-2006