Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 172, Decatur, Adams County, 23 July 1959 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

No Stale licenses For Miniature Cars INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The head of the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles said today his office would not license miniature autos because "I don’t want a boy run over with our sanction.” R. C. Gilbert told fellow members of the Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee that the problem of toe miniature car is increasing and "we are absolutely harassed” by persons seeking license plates for them. But Gilbert said he wanted to make it clear'"he did not mean small foreign cars. He said he refers to the type of little cars that usually are driven by children under 10 years of age. "We can’t license these cars because they don’t meet the proper requirements,” Gilbert said. "They don’t have lights, proper brakes, windshield wipers or other equipment we deem necessary.” Edwin H. Beaman, Governor Handley’s administrative assistant, and chairman of the committee, said some form of legislation would have to be passed to regulate the miniature cars. Fatality In Illinois "This thing is going to get bigger,” he said. "It’s not a 24-hour ’ problem.” Gilbert said the use of the tiny cars on regular tracks could not be controlled by his office. “That is a parental problem," he said. "But we certainly have a responsibility if they take to the highways." STAN KENTON Edgewater Park Celina, Ohio Sunday, July 26

I DECATUR DRIVE-IN THEATRE FRL SAT. SUN. MON. TUES.

So Furiously Funny, We're Showing It Five Days! —- MARILYN MONROE and her idny° CURTtf JACK i IfMMoN I f BiLtyWHPFR Br /H « SOME Wlf UkE & > iTHOT' JF *S» tin-» hb •»t imr'”

•••STOP . T-i A ,z z A t •*** -.■>•■■ \r '"’■’ '■ •/* / * sa"5 a" DREAMING... CAR sx Quality Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. Z -L-O-N-G TRADE «• ,I ■ . *<* ° ■ ■ • ■ z . Drift Out In A New Chevrolet QUAL I I Y CHEVROLET-BUICK, Inc. 622 N. 13th St. Decatur, Ind.

Altoough there have been no fatalities in Indiana due to the miniature cars, Gilbert said a four-year-old child was killed in Illinois earlier this week while driving one of them. State Police Supt. Harold Zeis ' also presented a problem he said ' toe committee should investigate. ■ Zeis said a 1957 state law sets a ceiling of $3,600 on the amount of fees a justice of the peace may collect. "Many of these justices, particularly in the north, have reached the maximum and are not around when we need them,” Zeis said. Court Closes Sundays He said the justices in at least one area have agreed to close court on Sundays and holidays. "What can we do with the traffic violator when the court is closed?” Zeis asked. "If it’s an Indiana resident, we give him a notice to appear at a future date. But if it's an out-of-state motorist, he either must put up bond to insure his appearance or be held. This is a hardship on persons going through the state without much money.” Beaman said the problem would be presented to the Indiana Legislative Advisory Commission for further action. Two County Farmers To Attend Institute Philip Moser, French township, and Joseph Kohne, of Washington ' township, will attend an institute at the University of Illinois, Urbana, August 9 to 12. They will be attending the American institute of cooperation, as guests of the Adams county Farm Bureau Coop. The topic of the 1959 institute ! will be "Gearing co-ops to serve modern agriculture.” ! 1 Trade It a nor 'own — Decating

O — O — Last Time Tonight — “Never Steal Anything Small” 1 James Cagney—ln Color A ELVIS PRESLEY “Loving You” —ln Color | A Buck a Carload! O O

STEEL FACT FINDER— Labor Secretary James P. Mitchell tella reporters In Washington that he will act as a one-man fact finder to investigate the steel strike. He said he will gather all facts relating to it, report periodically to the President. Calls For Steps To Half Waste In Foreign Aid WASHINGTON <UPI) — President Eisenhower sent to Congress today a report acknowledging waste and maladministraion in the foreign aid program and calling for steps to end it. The report also recommended that nations receiving aid seek to | guarantee increasingly honest government at their end. The report, prepared by a presidential study committee of former government officials, was transmitted to Congress by Eisenhower without comment. The committee, headed by William H. Draper Jr., also recommended long-range financing of the overseas development loan fund, a proposal that the President himself once opposed. Congress has approved a compromise bill—now on the President’s desk awaiting his signature — which authorizes $3,556,200,000 in foreign aid spending during the current fiscal year. But toe big foreign aid battle, in w'hich charges of waste and maladministration ■will play a large part, is still to come. The compromise bill merely “authorizes” expenditures and Congress still must put up toe actual money. » The presidential committee said its members were "aware of the charges of waste and maladministration made in connection with our aid program." but added: "While we believe that the administration and coordination of these programs has improved in recent years, there is no question but that some of these criticisms are justified. "However, the conclusion we reach is that the programs must be continued and bettere administered, not emasculated, or abandoned." It recommended creation of a single federal agency to administer all economic aid programs now scattered throughout the government under general supervision of the State Department. Over 2,500 D*uv Democrats art sold and delivered in Decatut each day.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

goodAear fights HI .Bsl —- INFLATION! Br jk WRITTEN GUARANTEE! BBWB BBJPRB B B WFBIB® |H TIRE PRICES REDUCED* MW On Original I* Qji On Our j||||gNk Equipment Rayon Z. Safety All-Weather & Nylon—White or Black /*-' Nylon—Black or White yp II” Tire Price i'cmpares Io 15” NYLON jMh K by B W&Bk and prised! 1 0BBBS3 F - ZgF . tube type plus 3K* | W tax and L.IBwaBR -brlr I recappable tue . gifltfSßU ft %UNI as »1| Triple-lough because it’s Triple-Tempered! That's fIP < I |j l SßjriL B right—Goodyear’s exclusive 3-T Nylon is lem~ nEßßßwMmnß^B^RbSh| : » ifoHl wlWb B pered by a process involving precisely controlled Bwiß tension, temperature and time. The result is m|MjIrTBWR» more strength, more resistance to road impact. And it has been proved on Goodyear’s high-speed / test track at San Angelo, Texas. With the price I as low as it’s ever been, no wonder we can say this 3-T Nylon by Goodyear is “Unquestionably the best NYLON TIRE value on the K A/I 71 A 'w market 1” Come in and deal. / All popular misos and atylaa at low low Prlcasl X *Lr ———l 1 Block MdawoU White SMawoU / J | jigjMr' SIU flti Th«»t Core T.WTm I TMm T.U Tm I Ttbttat J© Zk K A \ H( 1 tat w!ct«| mt rant* tut fßicfl sttt MIC r* X fin older models of |' , I |* CA HI ,m "“* aasasas “-m, 1 i__. -7 saw fits most newer models of | | v ▼ Gw 670x15 Plymouth, Ford, Chevrolet, 16.95 121.03 22.77 125.77 / k A- / < _______ Hud>on ' No>>, < Studeboker | |' £ f _._ ~ Dodge, Buick, Nosh, Olds, *v wi*' Z ,UKI3 Mercury, Pontioc, Hudson 2Q,g 6 23.33 25.53 28,57 / / \ 881 7 60x15 Chrysler, DeSoto,Buick,Olds, / A t—--6 Hudson, Mercury, Pockord 22,82 25.53 27.96 31.28 \w£ VfO'J \ a nr> Ik Chrysler, Olds, Cadillac, / §U< 11 £sSK Sftrfrw! 800x13 Lincoln,Podord 25.06 2842 30.72 34.83 I AA /STxJ •Pkts tax and recappable tire K \/ \/ Ssk{( ’ I MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTIjER KtNDt ~ BBBQm|| service store j m I I - | 222 N. 3rd St. Open Friday till t P.M. Phone 3-2009 g

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1959