Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 69, Decatur, Adams County, 23 March 1959 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Ffirirw nuppn Os IVI lllvl Mllvvtl VI Iran Visits Rome ROME (UPD — Former Queen Soraya of Iran arrives' here today with her mother, and Rome society waited breathlessly to see if they would call on Italfan Raimondo Orsini and his mother. Rumors of a romance blossomed when Soraya, 27, and Orsini, 27, held • hands on the ski slopes of Switzerland. Northern Italian newspapers said flatly they would be married. Rome newspapers merely hinted at it. The rumors received a boost when Orsini visited Germany where the former Persian queen lives in Frankfurt with her mother. They received another boost when it became known the exqueen had taken rooms two blocks from the Orsini palace. Orsini’s mother. Princess Luisa Rignon-Orsini, could be expected to get together with Soraya at the family palace or at the secluded villa of friends in Rome. The Princess Luisa could well be the key to any possible marriage Her son, Prince Ralmond Umberto Maria Orsini, is a member of one of Italy’s noble families with a title that dates back to 431 A.D. The family has supplied

PHOTO FINISHING Films Left at Studio Before 5:00 P.M. Finished At Noon Next Day SERVICE GIVEN 6 DAYS A WEEK EDWARDS STUDIO

FOR YOUR PROTEGTION Have Your Insurance Policies Checked Against Today’s Values. COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY L. A. COWENS . COWENS 209 Court St. Phone 9-3 WI Deeator, Ind.

SALE of MATCHING Washer & Dryer 7^r"lHffl.gr "WWilfc A \ _ .. x .J—---MBX^^ '* HHf o ■ WilL ■ S o«« f> “ *- * - —i > 'I * ' \ ■ 2 ~~ — 1 mhhwmi " s s'‘ —— ' K * MOMW2II W ■ REDUCED AA W/VOO FOR i I I AS MUCH V/> I I THIS ■ > AS >. “■ ■ ” PA,R _/ 1. New! 195S‘’Li»V-Fr»*" Automatic 1 2. Matching Wrinkle-free Dryer. Washer. Only agitator washer New 5-minute de-wrinkling feawith “Ball Point Balance”-han- ture cuts ironing time almost in dies a 5 x 7 shag rug as easily as half. Works twice as fast as ora lightweight sheet! Has “fine dinary dryers yet is perfectly* fabric” cycle... water saver. safe for all fabrics. Philco-Bsndix Home Laundry Appliance* are brought to you by Philco Corporation. For A Better Deal On TV or Appliances See . . . U A ■ B#* l/fi HEATING HAUvKS *= 209 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3316

I the Roman Catholic Church with ;five popes. 21 saints and 40 caridinals. ‘ His marriage to Moslem Soraya would entail Papal dispensation. Also, Soraya was divorced by the Shah of Iran because she did not bear him a male heir, and the Italians are proud of their male offspring. Urges Full Parity To Average Farmer WASHINGTON (UPD — Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R-S. D.),proposed a new farm plan today which would give a farmer full parity price supports up to SIO,OOO a year on basic farm crops. - The bill being introduced today carrier a condition for such supports, however. In order to participate in the new program, a farmer would have to agree to take out ' of production at least, 10 per cent of his basic crop acreage above . I that needed to produce SIO,OOO inicome. I, I Mundt explained that any com-1_ I modities a farmer sold over the 1 SIO,OOO total would be sold on the ■ 'open market without price sup- , ports. He said his bill is designed to ' provide full parity of income for 1 average farmers, reduce farm surpluses, and take the government out of the farming business. Mundt said it would eliminate many rules and regulations on allotments and quotas about which farmers have complained. Charged With Murder For Fatal Stabbing INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — Police 1 held Clarissa Richardson, 36, In- 1 dianapolis, today on "a perliminary charge of murder in connection ' with the fatal scabbing of Willie Tamper. 34, Indianapolis, Sunday. Police said the slaying occurred in I Tamper’s apartment after a violent argument.

Kidnaper Fails In _= Attempt As Suicide CHARLESTON, WVa. (UPD — Kidnaper Richard A. Payne, who attempted to bargain with the governor of West Virginia for the lives of four hostages, was'recovering today from an attempt to take his own life with a razor blade. Payne was discovered Sunday bleeding from a deep cut inside his elbow, an apparent attempt to slash an arterial vein, authorities said at Kanawha County. W.Va., jail where he is lodged pending grand jury action on kidnaping charges. A letter written by the 22-year-old ex-convict said, “Today is the 22nd, the day I’m going to end it all." Payne, described by state police as “an extremely dangerous mental case,” apparently changed his mind fr6m his pledge last week that he was anxious to return to Moundsville. W.Va., Penitentiary to kill his “worst enemy,” Burton Junior Post. The ex-convict kidnaped Mrs. Elma Baldwin, 29. and her three children from their South Charleston home last Wednesday in an elaborate ransom scheme to trade their lives for Post’s “head.” Fails In Recovery Os Missile Nose Cone CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (UPD —The Air Force has failed in its third attempt to recover an experimental missile nß.se cone fired intercontinental distance into the south Atlantic. • An intensive air-sea search' for the little nose cone, which hurtled through space atop a Thor-Able test rocket early Saturday, was called off late Sunday. • »• City Government Payrolls Doubled

WASHINGTON (UPD — City government payrolls almost doubled during the past 10 years to hit a monthly rate of more than half a billion dollars. The Census Bureau said the big jump—from a monthly average of 266 million dollars in October, 1948, to 511 million in October, 1958—came in the face of an increase of only 25 per cent in the number Os city employe's."' If you have something to sell or | Want Ad —• They bring results. r — rooms for rent, try a Democrat

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

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DEATH FOR TEN— This tangled mass is all that’s left of the 1959 station wagon struck by a Pennsylvania railroad train near Xenia, O. Eight Girl Scouts and the mothers of two of them were killed, six outright. Four died within three hours.. The girls, all 12, had been on a study trip.

Warns Amateurs ' On Psychiatry By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor NEW YORK 'UPD — Amateur “psychiatrist” have a warning from a professional, qualified man that the business of digging deep into people’s minds can be dangerous —for the digger. Dr. Philip F.D. Seitz was advising general medical practitioners on whether they could properly engage in psychotherapy despite their lack of specific psychiatric training, but his remarks | applied as - well to the amateurs who, martini in hand, try to find out what makes another party guest tick. t Amateur Ranks Growing ’ Professional' psychiatristsam remarking, with amusement but also worry as 'to jjhe consequences; on the growing number of amateurs who have read a book or have had personal experience with psychoanalysis and try to work out on anyone who’ll, stand still. “It’s a psychiatric age,/ they say sarcastically. But “psychotherapy has he? Come a science with an established body of knowledge sufficiently comprehensive that it now requires years of study to maste r its principles and techniques,” said Mr. Seitz to the doctors who have mastered only medicine in general. As an example, Seitz told of a young non-psychiatric doctor who had heard of an experimental psychiatric technique'Mbr getting deep into the mind of a person' suffering from skin disorders of emotional origins. The young man got in deep all right, and put in a hurry-up call for Seitz. Should Have Training “He sounded upset and fright-1 ened." Seitz said. “I went to the 1 doctor’s office, where the patient I was found in a violent abreaction I of rage, with ( the very frightened < doctor trying to calm him. I had to take over the case because the ; doctor was clearly too terrified," The general physician can safely deal with an emotional disturbance 'which is causing aphysical ailment in his patient, if the disturbance is mainly because of something going on his life at the moment, he said. This kind of person has adjusted Well to his ( emotional problems in the past. . But persons “with long-standing illnesses and past histories of relatively poor adjustment throughout their liv,es are usually npf I good candidates for psychothera- >

•.<- "X-. ■• - •<>■• TJv so~ x~>\ Hik WWik :;W ' ia>££ ; I .z- «/> w ? ' .<_.*< ■ t - ■ J> '- > w ' - s ' '■< m J U" r’BRI-J8 **bhbbi ? \ _ C-- - - RADAR REACHES VENUS-Here la the Millstone Hill radar in Westford, Mass., which Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientists used to contact Venus by radar. The beam reached Venus 56,000,000 miles out there, and bounced back, the first two-way conUct with any eelestial body, beyond the moon. Part of the apparatus used is shown being prepared by DT. Robert Kingston at other noises to a level which permits detection of a signal as faint as the signal from Venus.

! py" from an.’Che but ! trists. Geheral physicians should have some special training even Ito undertake psychotherapy for the people whose emotional prob; I lems are largely on the surface, he said . Five Traffic Deaths Reported In State United Press International Indiana traffic accidents killed i five persons during the weekend. ■ all of them in the north half of the state and all during the first i 30 hours- bf the 54-hour period. The state apparently experienced a death-free 24-hour period Sunday. The last to die was Charles Duncan. 26 Lafayette, who was hurt in a motorcycle-auto collision on Ind. 43 south of Lafayette Friday night. Duncan died Sunday afternoon in .St. Elizabeth's Hospital at Lafayette. Creek, Mich., was killed when his car went off an Elkhart County road near Goshen and rolled over. A crash lolled Ronald Schafer, 21, Plymouth, Saturday, when his car smashed into a big truck on U.S. 30 east of Hanna. Delmar Beyerlein Jr., 18. Indianapolis, was killed when his borrowed car skidded off Ind. 267 south of Brownsburg and rolled over. Harold Scharton, 44, Muncie, was killed Friday night when his car slid into the path of a truck on U.S. 35 near Muncie. ■ ' ... ... Dr. Mel Weisman Attends Conference Dr. Mel Weisman of Decatur, is attending the annual midwest chiropody conference in the Morrison Hotel, Chicago. The three-day meeting of foot specialists took up the latest techniques in rehabilitat- • ing feet disabled by fatique, soreness and pain. It was emphasized at the meteing that periodic foot checkups can correct faulty conditions while they are still minor ones. The length of a meter was fixed by the Paris Academy of Sciences tn 1791 at one ten-millionth of what was then'believed to be the distance from the Equator to the Pole. Trade in a good town — Decatur

11 Seized By FBI In Puzzle Swindle WASHINGTON (UPD — FBI agents arrested 11 persons today in a crackdown on a nationwide swindle involving newspaper puzzle contests. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said the 11 were picked up on charges of conspiring to violate the federal mail fraud by wire statutes. Hoover said four were Seized in Oregon, three in Michigan, two in Pennsylvania and one each in Indiana and Wisconsin. Hoover said a man from Minneapolis, Minn,, also is being sought as a member of the conspiracy. Still another man in Canada also is involved, he said. Hoover said the FBI investigation showed that answers to two puzzle contests prepared by two New York City feature syndicates ware obtained, in advance and used in winning more than $45.000 from November, 1958rthrough February, 1959. The FBI chief said the ringleaders in the alleged conspiracy subscribed to the puzzle feature syndicate, using the name and address of a non-existent newspaper, “Suburban Publishers Ltd., 220 Epworth, London, Ontario, Canada. ” The FBI acted on complaints by two Portland. Ore., newspapers. The Oregonian and The Journal. Hoover said that, as is the custom in legitimate contests, the features services did not supply contest answers to the newspapers. Rather, he said, answers were sent to various banks Which were to hold them in confidence until the contest deadline had passed. Hoover said the ring leaders got around this by devising a -fictitious bank, called "The Middlesex Trust C 0.,” listing its mailing address as Post Office Box 699, Byron, Ontario, Canada. Hoover said all puzzles and answers sent to the non-existent newspaper and bank were picked up by the ringleaders in Canada. With the puzzle and solutions in their possession, the ringleaders induced persons in several parts of the country to submit entries. Winners, he said, were allowed to keep a small share of the prize money, but the bulk of the cash was sent by mail or telegraph to headquarters of the ring. Trade in a good town — Decatur

Six Negro Children Die In Home Fire GREENVILLE, Miss. fcUPI) - Six. Negro children perished in their flaming house Saturday when their mother had left them alone "to run into town.” A coroner's jury said the children, aged five weeks to 11 years, died accidentally when kerosene was apparently poured on a stove, seting the house ablaze. Supreme Court Is Reconvened Today WASHINGTON (UPD—The Supreme Court today tackles the question of whether broadcasting stations may censor a political speech for libelous statements. The nine justices return to the bench from a two-week recess. Before hearing arguments on the censorship issue, they will hand down opinions in other cases. Important state and federal cases dealing with contempt convictims of balky witnesses have been before the court a long time and could be decided today. To rule on the censorship question. the court must interpret part of the Federal Communications Act of 1934. The law requires broadcasters to give "equal opportunities” to all candidates for public office. The law bars the stations from exercising any "power of censorship" over the broadcast material. The court must decide whether this ban applies to statements the station manager thinks are libelous. If the court concludes that a broadcaster is powerless to make any changes in a political speech, it then may go on to decide whether he can still be sued for libel for what is said. The subject of politicking over radio and television came up earlier this month in a Federal Communications Commission ruling on the "equal time” provision. The FCC found the requirement applied to newscasts as well as to partisan speeches. It also held that candidates of small parties, as well as Democrats and Republicans, could take advantage of the law. President Eisenhower called the situation "ridiculous” and advocated a change in die law. Decatur Is Winner Os Dartball Title Decatur captured the Lutheran dartball championship Saturday at Van Wert, 0., winning three straight games from St. Thomas of Van Wert in the finals. Members of the Decatur team are Victor Bleeke. Ed Krueckeberg, Arthur Bischoff, Arnold Thieme, and Edgar Thieme. The scores of the finals read, 11-6,16-8, and 7-6, Decater's favor.

Reserve District No. 7 State No. 731 REPORT OF CONDITION OF The First State Bank of Decatur, of Decatur, Adams County, Indiana a member of the Federal Reserve System, at the close of business on MaAh 12 1959, 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, including reserve balance, and cash items in process of coUection ---$2,163,010.99 United States Government obligations, direct and guar- ? Obligattons of States and poiiticai subdivisions— 947-*2l Other bonds, notes, and debentures — Corporate stocks (including $21,000.00 stock of Federal Reserve bank) ------ <; 717 ana Loans and discounts (including $44.40 overdrafts) 5,317,803.24 Bank premises owned $41,643.60 Furniture and fixtures $34,168.87 ’5,812.47 Other assets -- — -- TOTAL ASSETS —- $15,999,866.01 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and ..-mmiii corporations - --$5,488,768.14 Time deposits of individuals, partnerships and corpor- ? Det»sHs S of "United States' Government (including postal savings) - Deposits of States and political subdivisions Deposits of banks — ----------116.982.50 Other deposits (certified and officers — 56,461.23 TOTAL DEPOSITS —.—514,855,142.36 ---- Other liabilities - 79,638.4/ ’ TOTAL LIABILITIES -——-$14,934,780.83 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS gffif UnSvided profits"— Reserves (and retirement account for preferred capital) 22,818.35 TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ——..—51,065,085.18 t TOTAL LIABILITIES AND-CAPITAL ACCOUNTS— $15,999,866.01 •This bank's capital consists of: First preferred stock with total par value of $ None, total retirable value of $ None. Second preferred stock with total par value of $ None, total retirable value of $ None. , Capital notes and debentures ....$150,000.00. Common stock with total par value of-. 5250,000.00. MEMORANDA Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for other purposes -$675,000.00 (a) Loans as shown above are after deduction of reserves of——— 172,040.15 (b) Securities as shown above are after deduction of reserves of None 4 H H. Krueckeberg, Cashier, of the above-named bank, hereby certify that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. H. H Krueckeberg, Cashier , Correct—Attest: T. F. Graliker, G. W. Vizard, Eart C. Fuhrman, Directors

MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1959

St John's Takes NIT In Overtime NEW YORK (UPD — Graduation will wreck St. John’s newlycrowned National Invitation Tournament champions, but Coach Joe Lapchick is expected to build another basketball powerhouse next season around “most valuable player” Tony Jackson. Jackson, the sophomore sensation who scored 21 points and grabbed 27 rebounds in the Redmen’s 76-71 overtime win over Bradley in Saturday's nationally- J televised finale, is the only St. John's starter returning next year. Gone will be Alan Seiden, who was a unanimous choice along with Jackson today on the All-NIT team picked for United Press International by 16 sports writers _____ who covered the 12-team carnival at Madison Square Garden. Named to-the all-tourney team along with Jackson and Seiden were Bobby Joe Mason of Bradley, Cal Ramsey of New York U., and Lennie Vhlkens of Provi- ' dence. Second team selections were Joe Billy McDade and Mike Owens of Bradley, Jim Peay of Denver. Bob Ferry of St. Louis, and Louie Roethel of St. John’s. St. John’s, after trailing Bradley by eight points during the opening minutes, didn’t catch up until five minutes from the end. The Redmen led briefly in the closing minutes but the scores was tied at 63-63 at the end of regulation time. St. John's led, 69-67, with 30 seconds left in the overtime when Gus Alfieri drove in for a layup and added a free throw for the winning point. Pro Basketball NBA PLAYOFFS Eastern Division Syracuse 120, Boston 118 (Saturday). „ Boston 133. Syracuse 111 (Boston leads best of seven series, 2-1). — Western Division St. Louis 124, Minneapolis 90 (Saturday). Minneapolis 106, St. Louis 98 (best of seven series tied, 1-1). Hockey Results SATURDAY’S SCORES National League , New York 5, Detroit 2. Boston 4, Montreal 2. Toronto 5, Chicago. 1. International Leagnez Louisville 4. Fort Wayne 1. Toledo 10. Troy 4. SUNDAY’S SCORES National League Toronto 6, Detroit 4. Montreal 4, New York 2. Chicago 4, Boston 1. International League Louisville 5, Fort Wayne 0. Toledo 3, Troy 3 (overtime tie). ■