Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 30 June 1959 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Biggest Peacetime Deficit On Record. WASHINGOTN .(URD — Uncle Sam today winds tip what probably has been his most financially trying business year in modern Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry Eat, talk, laugh or sneeze without fear of insecure false teeth dropping, slipping or wobbling. FASTEETH holds plates firmer and more comfortably. This pleasant powder has no gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Doesn’t cause nausea. It's alkaline (non-acid). Checks "plate, odor" (denture breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug counter.

F- ■"< " x ' MIOvOOL BfiSSSi m OFF ■Bi M |~| WITH THE NEW I ROOM AIR CONDITIONER 1 ■ ■ '' ' Z I ' L AS LITTLE AS IBM vBL/ I ••• fd ves greatest comfort yet - Z OR ,'1 I but takes 1//j leM ’P ace - li%ll* I Only 16 IZ 2* “thin”-no bulky pro- IglM jection inside or outside window! >vv g U p . ' FREE SURVEY OF TOUR HOME OR OFFICE US HOW I ■I FAGERg APPLIANCE and SPORTING GOODS 147 So. 2nd St. Phone 3-4362

— -V ■■ — 11 ‘ ~]WlMattress gf-AT|SCHAFERS r . ... , ... v , ... . j ’■ ■ t FOR THE FIRST TIME SCHAFERS AND W&LFE BEDDING COM- . \PANY OFFER YOU UNUSUAL SAVINGS ON WOLFE’S LUXURY INNERSPRING MATTRESS AND MATCHING BOX SPRING. \,.•■ W ■ / ' \ - , *- T ■ '-*'■ ' i ' • : THIS UNUSUALLY COMFORTABLE * KIGH QUALITY INNERSPRING MATTRESS AND MATCHING BOX SPRING * WILL GIVE YOU YEARS OF GOOD SLEEPING COMFORT. WOLFE’S LUXURY INNERSPRING MATTRESS ' a mattress you would expect to cost up to $44.50 252 tempered ,«teel coils heavy woven stripe borders French taped edges Metal handles and vents Deeply tufted H IB - or twin Matching box spring same price < ■ ■■ - - i ■ . . ■ z f Xx V<—olH t fl I * dUBN ~ OPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 ,. - - . ; . 1

times. In the past 12 months the gov-1 ernment spent nearly 13 bill! doonlars more than it collected in tax revenues. That is the biggest peacetime budget deficit on record. > -- It boosted the national debt to ernment spent nearly 13 billion dollars—so high that President Eisenhower has put debt reduction ahead of cutting taxes. The borrowing necessary to cover the deficit and pay the government’s bills has helped push the Treasury into a financial corner. It has told Congress that it needs permission to raise interest rater, on long-term bonds or it will be able to sell only short-term securities, which it considers potential inflation tinder. Concerned over the threat of inflation and the issue of “fiscal re-

I sponsibility,” the Eisenhower ad- | ministration has been prodded by the record deficit to a major effort to balance the budget for fiscal year 1960. which starts Wednesd°r Six months ago the changes of a black-ink fiscal 1960 were considered slim. Today, they, are thought good. Final figures on budget revenues and expenditures for the past 12 months will not be published for several weeks. They are expected, however* to show a red-ink gap of between $12,500,000,000 and 13 billion dollars. ’A The song “Aloha Oe” was written by Hawaii's last monarch, QueenJJliuokalani, whose regime was*mv€rthrown in 1893.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECA FUR, INDIANA

Cool Front Seeps Through Indiana United Press International • A cool front seeped slowly southeastward through Indiana today, dropping temperatures in the north and central portions, and creating a 20-degree variation between readings in the Lake Michigan and Ohio River areas. The relief started in the north Monday and the front moved through Indianapolis in the middle of the night on a journey, southward which downstaters; found painfully slow. At 8 am., it was 60 at South Bend, 71 at Indianapolis and 80 at Evansville. The relief came on the heels of the hottest day in some areas* in nearly three years. The Louisvftle area recorded a sweltering 100 dfeIgrees. Indianapolis recorded 95. i The Cincinnati, Evansville and Lafayette areas had 93 and Fort I Wayne 92. South Bend’s high was i a relatively low 85 and the Chi- | cago area was even cooler with an 83 top temperature. Overnight lows also varied considerably, ranging from 59 at South Bend to 68 at Indianapolis and 74 at Evansville. Forecasters said the cool front passed through Indianapolis at 4:05 a m. It was expected to drop j temperatures as much as 10 to 15 degrees from Monday’s highs. The forecast called for a high today ranging from 68 to 75 north, around 80 central, but .with mid-90 I readings south. It may be near dawn Wednesday before the cdbl front reaches the southern extremes of Indiana. When it does envelop the state, the cool front will recede in favor of warmer and more humid readi ings again Wednesday. But weafliermen said the outlook is for > a cooler trend again late Thursday. Two Are Arrested On Speeding Charges Two Adams county residents were apprehended*Satyrday night, charged with speeding in a 40-mile zone on state road 124 east of Bluffton, where a speed timing device was being operated. Donald R. Poling, 35, route four, and Jerry L. Gerber, 18, route one, Berne, were charged with driving through the zone at speeds more than 55 miles per hour. The cases were set for trial in Bluffton justice of the

Defense Plant Security Plan Held Invalid WASHINGTON (UPI)— Several senators called today for legislation to authorize the government’s industrial security program which the Supreme Court ruled has no legal basis. / Sen. Karl E. Mundt /(R-S.D.) said need for such a bill was clearly demonstrated by the high court's 8-1 decision late Monday striking down the program as not authorized by either Congress or the President. / About three millioh workers in private defense plants are covered by the program. I Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn.) acting chairman fit the Senate internal security / subcommittee, and Sen. John Marshall Butler <R-Md.), who has held hearings in the past on the issue, said the ruling called for a new look at the problem. /< /, The Supreme Court’s primary argument against the program as i it now stands is that alleged security risks are not allowed to confront their accusers—the people who supply damaging information leading to the determination they are security risks. Dodd said Congress now must try to come up with'legislation to protect “the rigftts of these people and still protec us from acual sectfrity risks. I do not think this is Incompatible.” Mundt said Congress must act before adjournment “to protect the security of this counry against the infiltration of spies and saboteurs into our defense plants.” The industrial security program was challenged in the high court gy William L. Greene, aeronautical engineer who was dismissed in 1953 from an SIB,OOO a year job as vice president of Engineering Research Corp, of Riverdale, Md. The firing followed Navy withholding of his security clearance. Greene was accused of past associations with Communists. The case was one of a last-day deluge unloosed by the high court before adjourning until Oct, 5. The output totaled 31 opinions. The justices also: ’ ' —Unanimously overturned, on free speech grounds, York state’s ban on the movie “Lady Chatterley’s Lover”, and by a 6-3 vote struck down the state law I which allows censorship of “Im[moral” films. —Ruled 5-4 that broadcasters [are not subject to libel suits for [.statements made by political canI didates. The decision was an im- ; portant prelude to the 1960 political campaign. | —Ordered a third round of arguments' next term on the consti- : tutionality of. the “membership I clause" of the Smith anti-Commu-nist law. I —By a 5-4 vote extended to lower federal officials “absolute immunity*' from libel suits in connection with statements made in the course of official business. —Agreed to rule term bn the constitutionality of that part of the 1957 civil rights act which permis the federal government to enforce Negro voing rights. The section has been found unconstitutional by a federal district judge in Georgia. —Refused to review the 1957 contempt conviction of segregationist John Kasper based on> his conduct during the 1956 school integration disturbance, in Clinton, Tenn. Social Security Office Closed Friday Christian H. W. Luecke, district i manager of the Fort Wayne social security office, announced today that the office will be closed Friday, July 3. This is in accordance with an executive order issued by President Eisenhower. The office will reopen Monday, July 6 at 8:30 a.m. Miss Jjuday A. Hott Undergoes Surgery Miss Juday A. Hott, 17 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hott of 312 North Tenth street, underwent facial surgery June 19 at Providence hospital in Washington, D.C. Miss Hott was seriously injured in a one-car accident in January of 1958. As a result of the accident, she received jagged scars on her right cheek and forehead. The excision of the scars was closed with a plastic procedure and she will possibly have to undergo another minor operation later before they will be completely removed. Trusty Walks Away From Reformatory PENDLETON, Ihd. (UPII—- — Edgar Howard, 26, sentenced from Cass County on a felony charge in 1955, escaped from an Indiana State Reformatory dairy barn early today. Howard was paroled in 1957 from a 1 to 10. year term but was returned to the reformatory for parole .violation. ’.,. ♦ If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.

Traffic Deaths In Nation On Increase CHICAGO (UPI) —The National Safety Council reported today that traffic deaths increased for the fifth straight month in May. The council said the “alarming” figures point to a 1959 death toll “significantly higher than in 1958.” “No one can help but be alarmed over the way traffic deaths are mounting,” the council said. It said the toll this year—l3,94o from January through May — was especially staggering now on the eve of the Fourth Os July holiday weekend, when hundreds of motorists are expected to die. — In the last two-da y Fourth of July weekend in 1953, a total of 271 persons were killed on the nation’s highways. The council said May traffic deaths increased by 8.. per cent d'iter May, 1958. 'Diere were 3,250 fatalities this May, compared with 3,010 in 1958. However, the council said the death rate remained at about 5.1 per 100 million miles of travel, the same as wist year when vehicle traffic was 6 per cent lower. Two Cars Collide At - Street I ntersection Two women drivers collided this morning at the intersection of First and Jackson streets, causing SSO damage to each car. City police reported that the accident occurred at 9:35 a.m. Rita Girard, 21, of route 6, Decatur, was making a left turn onto Jackson from First street with her machine as Marjori Fuelling. 20, of route 3, Decatur, was approaching the stop sign on the southwest corner of intersection. Parked automobiles on both sides of Jackson street made the passage way a little close for the cars as they hooked, damaging the left front of the Fuelling car and the left rear of the Girard car. , The Girard car was moving west onto Jackson, while the Fuelling automobile was moving in an easterly direction on Jackson. No one was injured.

I, • 11 1 '! i ' • £ I ' lllllfl * H B Mm /jr /) B B B /1 //r nB B| Jflllk ||L Jmm -sO tfiß 'OH- SMI ♦ |B ■ 7 I B x Bl . 188 BB Bl B ÜBL 11111 I/1 nl I sO I I 181 I R I I BI ■■ BB A ißi IWhI / x*/ Loan us your oldest “Sears and Roebuck Catalog” for display. The oldest “Catalog” will receive a valuable gift—Courtesy of our Decatur Office. • - „ Jlelp us celebrate Decatur’s 2nd Annual *x)ld Fashioned Side-Walk Sale Jubilee” Tuesday, JULY 7—9 a.m. to 9 p.m. "( ' ■ ■.:°• . .r \ crane 140 *' Sec ’ n<l sv y JtRK* rfcon* 3-3181

Senate Racket Group Probes Hoffa Friend WASHINGTON (UPD—The Senate Rackets Committee today unfolds another chapter in the checkered career of Benjamin Dranow, who seems to have made a business' of being James R. Hoffa’s friend. Chief Counsel Robert F. Kennedy said today’s episode would involve Dranow’s interest in some airplanes and efforts by Hoffa, president of the Teamsters Union, to obtain union loans for their operation. Kennedy said the planes were purchased from the U.S. government by a private group for possible sale to the government of Fidel Castro after the Cuban revolution. One of them later figured in a plot to fly arms to the Dominican Republic for Castro's old enemy. Fulgencio Batista. However, Kennedy said Dranow and Hoffa had nothing to do with this. Draonw, a former Minneapolis businessman, first came into the committee’s Teamster inquiry more than a year ago as the recipient of a million dollar loan from Hoffa's union. His department store went bankrupt before the loan was repaid but this apparently did not deter the unicm from rendering him further assistance. The committee heard testimony Monday that Hoffa channeled or-« ders for 26,495 Teamster jackets through Dranow, enabling Dranow to pocket $6,000 in commissions and $56,000 on a stock deal. Hoffa also apparently selected Dranow to help bail out another bankrupt project—the Sun Valley development in Florida which was •planned as a community for retired Teamsters. Witnesses said Dranow, who now owns most of the Sun Valley stock, promised to help them get Teamster loans if they would help salvage Sun Valley. The committee said two Detroit locals controlled by Hoffa purchased $341,841 worth of blue-and-gold jackets emblazoned with the Teamster crest for distribution to their members. Kennedy said “no

TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1959

bids went out, the contracts just were awarded hrough Benjamin Dranoto.” Revoke Registration I For Manipulations. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The brokerage registrations of a Chicago egg and poultry firm and one of its officers have been revoked by the Agriculture Department after a finding that they manipulated egg prices. Lesser penalties were imposed on two other officers of the firm, Fox Deluxe Foods Inc. The action is effective July 26. # The department’s judicial officer ruled after a hearing that Fox manipulated the prices of egg futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and> the prices of cash refrigerator eggs in interstate • commerce in December, 1953, and January, 1956. The department said the violations were “flagrant, deliberate 1 and extensive.” i One official, the department ■ said, made an agreement with an • egg breaking firm involving false I bookkeeping entries. Under the agreement, the department added, i the egg breaking company bought ■ all frsh eggs of deliverable grade ’ and quality sold on the “spot” ■ board of the Mercantile Exchange • just before the expiration of the January. 1956. egg “future.” Brokerage registrations of Fox I Deluxe Foods and of Harold W. ’ Fox, a vice president, were or--1 dered revoked. The registration of Bert E. Fox was suspended for ’ three months. « -. ' —3 — ’ ‘ -■ Jordan’s are about 1,- ’ 000 miles long, bift only five miles are on the water—the Gulf of 1 Aqaba. r Mashed Potato ;l I Biscuits f 39c doz. t ■ * : - Stewarts Bakery PHONE 3-2608 ’IH- — 1 — . fr,., — —— '