Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 208, Decatur, Adams County, 3 September 1959 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Ignores Labor Pains To Become Citizen ARLINGTON, Va. (UPl>—Kore-an-born Dorothy Lee Drell ignored labor pains, climbed out of her maternity ward bed and appeared in Alexandria Federal Court Wednesday just in time to become an American citizen. “I’ve been waiting for this day ao long 1 just didn't want to miss it,” said Mrs. Drell, 29. wife of a school teacher. She was among 71 persons naturalized. . Clutching her citizenship certificate, Mrs. Drell returned to Arlington Hospital. Wednesday night she gave birth to a boy.

I DECATUR DRIVE-IN THEATRE Time Tonight — | Technicolor Shocker! “WOMAN OBSESSED” | With SUSAN HAYWARD Carload for a Dollar! FRI. & SAT. "K‘ darrisf xJO MORROW-JACK JONES f ' ** BRIAN DONLEVY j aWfimtStv X GEORGEJESStt THE EARL 6HAMT TRW THE NITWITS JOHNNY WK*THE TREMENS i - ADDED THRILLER - The Most Dangerous Gun in the West Faces a Killer With a Badge! Technicolor! “GUNSMOKE IN TUCSON” Mark Stevens, Forrest Tucker —o Sat. Bonus—“ESCORT WEST” ——o-ou— Sun. Mon. Tues.—Debbie Reynolds "Say One For Me”—Color Bing Crosby, RobL Wagner

I FOLLOW THE CROWD ’ I FOLLOW THE CROWD OF THRIFTY MEAT SHOPPERS ■ S TO THE BUSY SCHMITT MEAT MARKET Where You ■ ■ Will Find Large Fresh Displays of Meat AT BIG K 9 BARGAIN PRICES! '■ j| WHY PAY MORE? ||; FRESH GROUND OL A4-10 I HAMBURGER %b Y 1 I 1 ■ 39c lb. or s ■■ I ■ I*U PORK HICKORY L A 4 .00 I I SMOKED SAUSAGE Sby> 1 I I 39c lb. or S ■■ I I AUMEAI 164 .00 I I SLICING BOLOGNA < B 9 | I I 39c lb. orS "I I WITH A NEW FLAVOR L A 4 'OO ■ FRESH BULK D S ■ I or CASING B Y | | SAUSAGE S " ■ CHOICE GRADE-CHOICE CUTS I SIRLOIN or T-BONE MA I I STEAKS LB. WV V I

Says Russ Space Flight Advanced LONDON (UPD -An authoritative American scientist said today he had good reason to believe the Russians have advanced their manned space flight program to one of the last technical stages—keeping the crew of the capsule steady as it re-enters the atmosphere. “When they solve this, if they haven't already, they'll be ready to go,” said the source, one of 600 scientists attending the 10th International Astronautical Congress here. i “I would say they had a lead of some months on us at the moment. But this doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll be first." He said if the capsules “enter earth's atmosphere properly, manj can withstand tremendous gravita-j tional pressure. If they don’t, he’s liable to be scraped off the walls.” According to the scientist, the matter of recovering a crew capsule once it lands on earth is a “bigger problem" to the Russians than to the United States. He pointed out that the American and allied navies could blanket the oceans for a relatively easy pickup should the crew capsule land in the sea. "Russia doesn’t have this naval capability,” the scientist said. “They’ve got to make sure their capsule lands somewhere in accessible areas of the Soviet Union or China where it can be easily , reached.” “Until they’re sure of this, they won’t try,” he concluded/ - .

Arrests Follow Up Bombing Os Palace PNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPD —Authorities investigating Monday’s palace bombing have ordered the arrest of “a number” of membeus of the anti-govern-ment underground, it was reported today. The arrests resulted from a palace guard officer's report that he received a letter signed by the underground last week advising him to resign his post because “we are going to wipe out the whole royal family.” Prince Vakrivan, chief of palace protocol, and two other members of the royal staff were killed when a package addressed to King Suramarit and Queen Sisowath exploded while it was being unwrapped. The king and queen escaped Injury because an appointment called them away from the room where the package was being unwrapped about two minutes before it blew up.

Donald M. Nelson Shows Improvement LOS ANGELES (UPD — Donald M. Nelson, 70-year-old former World War II war production board chairman, continued to show improvement today from a stroke. Nelson, hospitalized at Good Samaritan Aug. 23, was in a coma and extremely critical condition for several days following the stroke.

Party Discipline Upheld Ike’s Veto WASHINGTON (UPD — Party | discipline of the kind that rarely j is seen on Capitol Hill was credI ited today with keeping intact ! President Eisenhower's record of ' never having a veto over-ridden. Republicans lined up nearly solidly behind the President Wednesday as the House upheld his Veto of a $1,206,748,549 public works appropriation bill. 'liie 274-138 vote to override, one shy of the required two- thirds majority, was a stunning setback for Democratic leaders who thought they had the votes to win. Only 11 Republicans voted to override. Some of the GOP members who supported the President did so even though his veto was aimed directly at elimination of funds for water development projects in their home districts. Democrats charged that the administration had secretly promised these Republicans that the President would include funds for their projects in next year’s budget, if they voted to uphold his veto. GOP Leader Charles A. Halleck (Ind.*, who engineered the Eisenhower victory, said he knew of no such promises. “What really did it,” Halleck insisted, “is that we’ve been building up all session a spirit of loyalty and esprit de corps. We’ve been trying to work with the President in maintaining fiscal responsibility.” The House Appropriations Committee was called into session today to draft a new bill more acceptable to the President. I Indict Detectives In Dope Crackdown. CHICAGO (UPD— Three crack detectives were to be arraigned today on charges of protecting and working with a coast-to-coast dope ring. The detectives were among 21 persons indicted by a federal grand jury in a move hailed by the Justice Department as the death blow to one of the nation’s largest heroin and cocaine operations. Charged with “giving protection to the large ring” were former Chicago Narcotics Bureau Detectives Sheldon R. Teller, 39. Miles J. Cooperman, 30, and Richard E. Austin, 38. Teller, the son of a Rabbi, and Austin were recently transferred from the Narcotics Bureau to the continuing investigation of the unsolved Grimes sisters’ murder. The transfer was regarded as a promotion for the often-commend-ed pair. Cooperman has been on sick leave with a kidney ailment. The three were long considered star members of the Narcotics Bureau. They had won a total of 26 creditable mentions for their work, and Teller and Cooperman were the heroes in the slaying of a Chicago dope peddler during a 1956 gun battle. • Also indicted was Edward Richardson Gayles, a Negro lawyer and from 1950 to 1952 a federal narcotics agent. All were charged with tipping off the ring to police plans. In addition, the detectives were accused of conspiring with 10 others to sell narcotics. Teller and Cooperman were charged with selling one-fourth of a kilogram of heroin to convicted narcotics peddler Otis Sears in 1958. Max Goldschein, a special U.S. attorney general who led the investigation resulting in the indictments, said the ring had been based on Chicago’s South and West sides since 1952. The detectives first became involved in narcotics traffic in 1954, Goldschein said. The ring’s tentacles reached out from here to Gary, Ind., Detroit, Cleveland, Miami, Los. Angeles and San Francisco, he said. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.

MOOSE FLOOR SHOW-SAT. NITE-SEPT. 5 BIG DOUBLE FEATURE 808 COCHERILLE & AL STILES SINGING -> DANCING — FUN with Speck Hobble's Orchestra for your dancinr pleasure. MEMBERS ONLY.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

Khrushchev Again Blasts Resolution NEW YORK (UPD — Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev blasted the U.S. congressional “captive nations” resolution again today and suggested that Texas, Arizona and California might be considered cptive states by the Mexican government. In an article in the current issue of Foreign Affairs Quarterly, Khrushchev showed his continuing irritation at the recent congressional resolution calling for the liberation of 10 “enslaved” socialist states in the Soviet Union. He first protested the resolution to Vice Presiden Richard M. Nixon in Moscow but today he gave his prtest a new twist. “IKT WOULD BE INTING TO “It would be interesting to see how the authors of the resolution would have reacted if the parliament of Mexico, for instance, had passed a resolution demanding that Texas, Arizona and California be “liberated from A merit an slavery,” Khrushchev wrote. “Apparently they have never pondered such a question, which is very regrettable. Sometimes comparisons help to understand the essence of a matter.” The article, written at the request of the American publication, said continuing talk in the West of violently “rolling back” Communism apparently was based on the false assumption that the capitalist system is “uperior and more efficacious” than the Communist system and that man can be happier under capitalism. "It is impossible to prove this," Khrushchev said. The Russian premier said American statesman and public figures travelling in Russia have had full opportunity to convince themselves that "there is no hope of showing strike between the Soviet peeple and the Communist party and the Soviet government, and of influencing them to rebel against Communism.” - B -

Envisions New Types Os Autos In U.S. DETROIT (UPD — The new compact cars to be 1 introduced by the "Big Three" of the auto industry may be only the first in a series of new types of cars the industry will introduce in the future. . This was the impression left b Henry Ford 11, president of Ford Motor Co., Wednesday when jie aridresspd an estimated newsmen in a televised press conference at the first showing of Ford's new compact car, the Falcon. “One thing seems clear,” Ford said. “We are on the way to providing a still wider variety of types, sizes and shapes of automobile...to meet the varied need of a people of constantly rising standards of living, both at work and play." ~ He tld newsmen watching on a closed circuit television network in 21 cities that Ford has nothing on the planning boards beyond the Falcon but said his company was “on the way to providing truly new cars that give substantially greater value and performance for each automotive dollr." The Falcon is just such a car, Ford said. He revealed these details of the first American-built compact car to be unveiled by a member of the "Big Three”: Six-passenger, six-cylinder, 90 horsepower, overhead valve engine, 109.5-inch wheelbase, 181.1 inches long overall, 54.5 inches high, 70 inches wide, 2,366 pounds and capable of 30 miles per gallon “under normal driving conditions.” Ford said no price had been set yet, but talk in the industry has placed the beginning price of the Falcon and Its competitors under $2,000. Over 2,500 Dally Democrats an sold and delivered in Decatur each day

- “When HE says he pitched a no-hitter, he means, he went nine innings without hitting a batter!”

SILVER DOLLAR l^P > SPECIAL SALE! Goodyear Xtra Mileage New Treads! I 8.88 I . fIBBM RecapImWtT!" ■”n w Lz^ ;| WwiH ' ’ r * I MOST ALL *Z'o.‘ I SIZES ! 11 1 «-22 U 1 ~* Applied on Sound Tire Bodies EASY TERMS Or Your Own Tires. ONLY 4 SILVER DOLLARS DOWN! Buy 4 — Pay $1.25 Weekly I MW 17” Designer TV <b ■ .95 I Model 17T2411 OLD T.V. WILL MAKE | trade THE DOWN PAYMENT Ml Pay Only $3 Weekly ■ I IS™ li. E. Freezer Si IHp buy NOW! big savings to YOU! I -Wl ★NO CRAWLING INTO CHEST I ★ bonus door storage iftSil J9@B * FITS INTO ONE square yard of space I * G E EXTRA - SLIDE OUT BASKET ★ HOLDS 637 POUNDS OF FOOD I Pay Only $4 Weekly! ONLY 10 SILVER DOLLARS DOWN! I 12 Guage Shot Gun EXTRfI SPEC,AL! I mso q* Mumra MEW - a (-99 I WHILE THEY LAST I ONLY 2 SILVER DOLLARS DOWN ’ ‘ WF I and 31.25 WEEKLY LIMIT ONE TO A CUSTOMER! USED TIRE SPECIALS! I USED REFRIGERATOR I Matched Set of 4 Tires |~ o n n °J" SW* 5 "7 I LIKE NEW ‘ ■ DOWN “ WEEKLY I 7.10x15 White Walls—This. I— —, ■■■ .—”7-—-. — , -w aa I Used Tire Special 4-7.50x14 Black | SIOO.OO I WWO«N >ir M EASY VALUE . ■_ ■ NOW ULJ Exch. I NOTICE! We Sell and Install I AP MUFFLERS & TAILPIPES NO MONEY DOWN. PAY $1.30 WEEKLY g Easy Terms. Up to 6 Months to Pay! ,z Goodyear Sen iff Store |

■ THURSDAY, SEPT. 3, 7959