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The Times from Hammond, Indiana • Page 17

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Hammond, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tuesday, November 20, 1956 THE HAMMOND TIMES Page 15 Stocks Mixed At Opening I mixed at the opening of trad- 1 trig today Numerous reptvsenttt-j Issues posted new a i a looses in extension of yeitertiny's slmrp drop, but other market fnv- onte.i made smn.ll gams. Trading activ American Telephone started changed Roynl Dutch off to 96, Chrysler lower ut American up to -U'-t. VVcsting- house higher at Du Pont uiu-hnnRrd at I'D. Kurd off at nnrl I a i a Telephone a at i I a i a Paper opened i nt 100. tj.

Strol win off nt Republic Steel mklH at Boeing was up to 56 Jeriey Standard lower ut $. Rubber off nt 4 i and RCA up at 33. In tne rails. Erie win off to 2l i. O.

'i higher at (9. Southern Railway up i at 43 New York Central lower nt I CHICAGO MVKSTOt'K CHICAGO UNS- Livestock: HOGS-- salable 10,000. strong C.lc higher. Early top 1023. 1 1-1175.

heavy 1350-M50; i 1450-1525; light lights 1250-1 HO: parking sows 1250-1350: pigs 775- emotional protest against Soviet deportations i9 TVT emuuiMiai piuicisi, ugaiuai OUVIBL 111 of Hungarian patriots. Russia's Dmitri Shep- 1 -f The situation in Hungary drew verbal fireworks throughout the U.N. general assembly session of Monday, with Cuban delegate Dr. Emilio Nunez Portuondo (left) making an ilov (right) defied Assembly demands for Soviet withdrawal from the country, denied the charge of deportation of Hungarians to Siberia and" said Russian troops would stay until the situation is "normalized." CATTLE-- salable steady- strong Calves salable 100. choice and prime steers ommon and choiee yearlings 3050.

i J350-25, bulls lt-14'iO: rahes Eden Tired; Butler Rules Parliament ion gntl 15 of LONDON I A. Butler took over temporary leadership of the British government today. A doctors' i a forced an exhausted Sir A Eden to dele- the "pick and shovel" work the prime mimstership to his 6-13; subordinates. The new "deputy prime minister." whose official title la Lord Seal, presided at this morn- lng'a cabinet meeting while Eden feeder steers 13-21. stox'kcr stcori 13-22.

co.vs find i i 16-1950. SHEEP -salable 3.000 steady. Choice and prime lambs No. 'wn- common and choice year- lingg 975-17. ewes 1-550.

GRAIN FVTfKKS CHICAGO I nprned a to I cent higher tndny nnd recovered some of ti-rilny's losses ranging to 5 i bushel. Other a i generally i lower wMIe soy brans v. rre 'i cent lower to I higher Wheat wiw to 1 cent While Eden will not preside at any cabinet sessions and take part parliamentary debate for at least three weeks, it was understood the Prime Minister will see the most i a cabinet papers. I WAS expected to hold a nts rm hand on nla policy decisions while Butler and other subordinates assume the tremendous i i i i vr A corn unchanged to off and mll! of day-to-day affairs which a Itlnlatjlfl A oats to cent lower. The prices: WHEAT Dec.

the Prime Minister has isnisted on a i personally. March i Official announcement of his en Sept 227. CORN 1.16'.-" a 3 Sept 112 OATS-Dec. March 7 8 Mnj' 76. July 72.

Sept. P.YE--Dec. 1ISW a March 257'a May 259-258 i July I i A in i a I 237-2JBV 225-1 tocccl rcst because of "severe overstrain" automatically relieves Eden responsibility for seeing every high-ranking visitor personally and leading every Commons debate. Never known for his ability to delegate a i i ordinary times. Eden had Insisted In personally following many Middle East crisis decisions in addition to making them.

Eden fit I I was said to be organically sound I and unlikely to enter a hospital. HARROW, England Observers were convinced he a i i a Harrow School song'Wm'M i to call the signals for tonight has subordinates carry the postponed benui.sr Sir Winston i ball Churchill Is ill i a told. It was announced today. i who a Harrow, lins bern the a i i a guest of honor for Ifi years, Import Yule Trees WASHINGTON The Agric a today predicted nbmit million Christmas trees i br usrd In the United States Calumet Region Obituaries Mrs. Alice Whitman Mrs.

Alice Whitman, 83, of 3107 Chicago South i a Heights, died Monday after a long illness. She was a member of the First Methodist Church of Hammond. Services will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Spindler and Koel- llng a Home, Chicago Heights. Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery, Hammond.

Survivors Include daughter, Mrs. Virgil Morton, and a grand- on. Mrs. Whitman was a member of the Rebecca Lodge. Mrs.

Gwendolyn Hard CROWN POINT--Services were held this afternoon for Mrs. Gwendolyn Hard, 61, Crown Point native and daughter of the late "John Donnaha, Lake Criminal Court bailiff. The Rev. Jasper Cox officiated at services. Burial was at Maplewood Cemetery in Crown Point.

Mrs. Hard, who died Sunday after a long illness, is survived by her husband, Pete; a son, John of San Francisco, and a brother Edward Donnaha of Munster. She was a member of the Crown Point American Legion Post Auxiliary and the Tri Kappa Club The Hard residence is at 200 N. Main St. Mrs.

Mary Dinga Mrs. Mary Dinga, 74, of 1018 169th Hammond, a resident of Hammond for'17 years, died Monday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Gerba of Whiting. Services will be held Friday at Da.m. in Baran Chapel, 1231 119th Whiting, and at 10 a.m.

in St. John Bosco Church, Hammond, with the Rev. John Bart officiating. Burial will be in St. John Cemetery, Hammond.

Surviving are three sons. Carl of Crown Point, Edward of Whiting and John of Chicago, a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Gerba of Whiting, and 15 grandchildren. Mrs. Dinga was a member of he National Slovak Society, Branch o.

398 of Chicago and the Catho- 124 of Chicago. The Junior Rosary Society of St. ohn Church of Whiting will meet the chapel at 7 p.m Wednesday. may call at the chapel ftcr 3 Wednesday. Living by The Stars By ESTRELLITA yrar.

For Tomorrow a said. About J7 i will a a influences a from i and li milllon somewhat mixed now. Take wise i br Imported Canada, precautions in all matters but do not yield to worry, anxiety or Irritability. Careful analysis of situations will help to prevent errors, and a sense of humor will see you through difficulties. During the evening hours, seek some quiet relaxation or try to improve a skill or taii'nt.

For the Birthday If tomorrow Is your birthday, Your Baby And Mine By MYRTLE MEYfiBELDRGD horoscope indicates that the coming year can be a banner one Questions which conic in without i yotl rauc goals with self- I i i the ngos of the child, I conf dl nc( tt enthusiasm. You rr any general health conditions, Rn rl rrcl i KOO cycle where or the presence or absence of nm a matters are con- or sisters m.ikr 't lf you mobilize your i to answer them i so Bs to by the truly i upon I ncroll you should i the a sisters, companions, etc. Mri K. i "Is It true i that i as FK result of emotional tension, are very I common among i I "Ii it not a for child to refuse a a hrfnri 1 going to nchool and if forced to cut it comes up again" "Can excitement nnd new experiences caugp a child to i your status considerably improved early in 1957. Between Miy and October the outlook will be i for social ac- under fine nugurles during the first six months of 1957.

A child born on this day will be endowed with great Insight, will power and ambition. ONE CAN very wrll sny yrs to TJ nil three questions, because in the I I CJtlltft first, children react more reiuli- ly to emotional tension and it Is the digestive i a to such tension INDIANAPOLIS (UP)-- Sales of S. Savings Bonds of the Series which reacts increased about i October over the figure for child dor-, not want corresponding month In 1955, go to school, i-s a there sn cs of crle and not doing well, he may refuse to bonds combined were almost two rat. a a if he 11 forced It Is against his will and his reaction to this a 11 to vomit. Yrs, excitement, new experiences.

In the case of a highly nervous, emotional child, can be so upsetting as to result 111 vomiting. What needs most to be corrected in this situation arc tho various causes of the emotional tension. Most children do not react adversely to the ordinary happening 1 of their flays It depends, some- a on what factors in the i which them so emotionally tnnsc. Is It jealousy of other i Is it the feur that parents do not care for Is it worry about trying to keep up with other brothers and sisters or playmates? INSTEAD of looking upon the digestive upheavals and vomiting something which are unusual- it would be better to discover what in the child's whole home climate MI i of emotional tension. Thry nren't a pro- vidr-d the child of but it is a for a child a to be continually reacting thia uay.

That is the thing i needs Improvement and If you arc either the child's mother, grandmother or aunt, Instead ef worrying about the reaction I'd worry about the muses and get someone to help unravel the environmental mess of i the child Is the phvious victim. Our leaflet No B2 "Ni-rvoui Habits may be Imd by i a stamped. srlf-arldresrd envelope with your It to Myrtle Meyer Eldrrd in rare of this newspaper Tomorrow "Mother of Two Worriri Because Shi Partial to Younger." IN SPA PERI million dollars lower. Julius Cergizan Julius Cergizan, 58, of 3833 Parrish East Chicago, a resident of the Twin City for 43 years, died Monday nt St. Catherine Hospital after a long illness Services will be held Friday at 9.30 a.m.

in the Prusiecki Funeral Home, 3831 Main and at 10 a.m. in St. Demetrius Church with the Rev. George Muresan officiating. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery, Hammond.

Surviving are the widow, Mary; two sons, EnSIS and Lindy, both of Hammond; three daughters, Mrs. Victoria Porter of East Chicago, MM. Mary Bochnicka of Valparaiso, and Mrs. Margaret Moisica of Fort Wayne; three brothers, George of East Chicago, Peter of Hammond and John of Gary; six sisters, Mrs. Lottie Elish, Mrs.

Daphina Tobra, Mrs. Violet Chulay, Mrs. Ann Saesan and Mrs. Mary Kovan, all of East Chicago, and Mrs. Helen Ganeheff of Hammond, and ten grandchildren.

Cergizan had been an employe of Inland Steel for the past 40 years and was a member of the Inland Steel 25-Year Club. Friends may call at the funeral home after 6 p.m. Wednesday. Parker Sets Vote Mark in Beating Zandslra INDIANAPOLIS Lt Crawford F. Parker white-haired Statehousp emerged today as the loader of the i i Republican state ticket in Indiana's Nov.

6 election. Parker piled up more votes than any of 47 candidates whose names were listed on four tickets of the state ballot, in his race with Dem ocrat Bartel Zandstra of Lake County for office of lieutenant- governor, PARKER is Indiana secretary of state. His plurality over Zandstra, nearly 238,000 votes, was the largest ol any margin stacked up by 14 GOP candidates who defeated their oeratie rivals. Parker received nearly 300 votes more than Harold Handley, who generally was conceded to be the Republicans' most popular candidate. Young Hobby Club Boys' and Girls' Own Miniature Newspaper "SOMETHING TO DO EVERY DAT" CAPP5f DICK, Editor PILGRIM'S-HAT NUT CUPS! Use Them on Dinner Table By C.M'PY DICK i handmade Pilgrim hats are fun for boys and girls to make as far vors for the Thanksgiving table.

The little novelties will be useful as nut cups, You will need some ordinary paper nut cups, some black construction paper and some gold paper. The later Is used to make buckles to be pasted on the hats as In Figure 4. First make a black brim Blade Hat Has Big Buckle of Gold. for the hat. The width of this brim should be governed, by the size of the paper nut cup.

A diameter of three Inches will probably be wide enough. Draw a circle of that llze on black construction paper and It out. Cut a round hole In the very center of this paper disc (Figure 1), i a i It just big enough to receive the paper cup as In Figure 2. Next, from the black paper cut a i to be fitted around the crown of the hat, making it about nine Inches long and two and I half Inches wide (Figure 3), Spread paste on the nut cup and attac! this (trip, overlapping the ends a the back of the hat. Finally cut a little buckle from the gold paper and paste it at th front of the hat (Figure 4).

Fill the crown of the hat wit: nuts and place beside a dinne plate'on the table. The name the guest who is to sit at tha place may be written on a pice of folded paper and rested on th brim of the upturned hat as i Figure Tomorrow: How to Win One Gappy Dick's New Prizes! (Copyright, 1956) nance was passed to transfer $6,000 from tile special street repair fund to take care of salary emergencies. Pohl reported a property com- mittee suggestion to either sell or lease a portion of city property to Globe Roofing Co. to be used as truck unloading space. He said tne Call Teace' Parley On Whiting Fumes Standard Oil Co.

Whiting refinery officials will be asked to a public meeting with Whiting councilmen and residents of Schrage avenue on the continuing complaint of fumes in basements along the avenue. Spurred by Councilman Frank Murzyn's comment; "Let the with reservations tormentors face the councilmen and Mayor William EJercik agreed Monday night to try to arrange a public meeting A ctftT whereby the residents along Schrage avenue can issue their com-, plaints directly to refinery representatives. Date for the meeting tentatively was sefc for Friday night, pending agreement of refin-1 would mean a piece of taxable land to the i Councilmen to a long-term lease on the ery representatives. Some 15 residents along Schrage avenue attended the meeting and complained that the'gas fumes still remained in their homes. They say the fumes come from discharge of oil products into the sewers from the refinery.

A. F. Endics, refinery manager, said this morning the company is Willing-to meet with representatives of the people and members of the council to discuss the problem. "We're trying to find out what the problem is," he noted "We've been ventilating the sewers and they have shown no signs of gas lately." MURZYN demonstrated a large brass and rubber stopper of a type which the refinery has offered to install free in the basements of all homes along Schrage avenue between 125th and 129th streets where there are no sewer traps. 'Schrage avenue residents objected that the plugged sewers would only mean the fumes would rise through the sewer pipes the homes and into the sinks.

"I have no faith in this thing," Councilman Frank Walsko said, noting the plug. "Should the holes be plugged up, it would onlv be a temporary stonpage. It's like a finger in the dike James DcCarlo of 2513 Schrage Ave, protested' Order of Foresters, Court No. "This is nothing but a pacifier The houses have been there for 50 years. This problem has been only in the last two or three years." COUNCILMAN Sam Cera said that, at a recent meeting with Bosses councilmen, refinery representa-j lives said they'd do everything the council suggested to stop the fumes.

Councilman Joe Dernay stated that "we've had meetings several times and it do all the planning and thinking." "That's the same reaction I get," added Mayor Bercik. Murzyn explained the company had dug test holes in some spots but that ho had no results of the entire tests. He agreed to arrange the citizens' meeting with management if management was willing to go along with it. "If they don't want to do anything, let's take action against them," Councilman Edward G. Pohl suggested.

A PROPOSAL of the Pennsylvania Railroad to put a spur track across 119th street to switch products of the new Calumet Nitrogen Products Co. was held over for further study. Councilmen continued objections to passing the ordinance to allow the spur on the grounds of explosion and traffic hazards. On complaints of residents, Walsko suggested council reword an ordinance stopping railroaders from shoving cars across street crossings. Dernay suggested no-switching clause be added to the ordinance to prevent tying up of crossings between 7 and 8 a noon and 1 and 4 and 5 p.m Council passed nn ordinance granting a SJ5 per month wage increase for nil full-time municipal employes.

Another ordi- Farmers' Income May Be Hiked WASHINGTON (INS)--The Ag- ricultuic Department today tore- cast a slight improvement in farmers' income next year but held out no hope for a break the cost- price s.queeze. The Department's agricultural marketing service pointed out a 4 per cent increase in net farm income during the first nine months of this year and said some further gam is "likely" next year. The increase was the first up- SANTA MONICA. Calif (AP) Ernest Borgnine, who won a mcome nce 1951. Academy Award for his role "Marty" on the screen, claims his studio bosses harassed him by of- fcring him a new film.

Borgnine won dcr in Superior walk on" lole in a against Hecht-Lancastcr tions. ALTHOUGH both expenses and receipts have gone up. the net farm income through the third quarter at an annual rate of 11 billion, a restraining or- 70Q i dollars compared with Monday billion, 300 million dollars for Produc- all of 1955 It was noted, however, that the 1956 income figure included gov- Court HE HAD asked that they be forced to suspend "any harassing' action pending trial" of his suit to break their contract. Borgnine claimed he received only for two loan-out roles, while Hccht-Lancaster got $150,000. and said the part they offered him In "Sweet Smell of Success" was a small one.

Producer Harold Hecht said the part, "although not a large one, is a vciy good one crnmont cheeks for about 300 million dollars cashed by farmers as new incentive payments for wool and soil bank participation which began in September. PROOF HOME--BUSINESS RENT--RENT--RENT for onlv A 7 a day Also for Sale Guard Lite--Property C.ll Ham'd A.Q007 Exchange I I H'SOO I LAKE ALARM Call between 10 A. M. and JO P. M.

5720 W. 26th GARY TRIBUTES $roo 5 Delivered in Calumet from HAMMOND FLORAL GO. Phone WE strnore 1-3490 7048 Hohman Avenue Step into the wonderful world of AUTODYNAMICS! It unleashes a hurricane of power! It tames tornado of torqus through vibration It In mastery of motion There are many fresh and exciting discoveries awaiting you in the wonderful world of Auto- dynamics. But none is more exciting than the exhilarating performance you'll experience behind the wheel of a Swept-Wing Dodge. This low-slung beauty takes off like a scalded cat, rips over hills like a hungry cougar, whips past slow-moving traffic like a gun-shy jackrabbit.

At your command is a mighty new aircraft-type V-8 engine with up to 310 lip. And this Swept-Wing Dodge introduces such important advances as Push-Button Torquc- Flite that packs a 1-2 punch silk-smooth, lightning-fast! Revolutionary new Torsion-Aire that sweeps you along in a "Realm of Silence," masters curves with race car torsion bar suspension. The greatest brakes in the industry, Total-Contact Brakes, unmatched for sure, safe, straight-line stops. This is the wonderful world of Autodynamics 11 here every tiling is new from road to roof. It's all yours in a lithe, lean master of motion only feet high.

You have never seen, felt, owned anything like it. BOHLING AUTO SALES, INC. 5425 Hohman Ave. Phone WE 3-0265 Hammond, Ind, MARCUS MOTORS, INC. 512 Chicago Ave.

Phone E. C. 5030 East Chicago, Ind..

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Pages Available:
130,205
Years Available:
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