Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 23, Decatur, Adams County, 28 January 1960 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

SPECIAL! 9” 19" VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE ■ KIHSB

"Tl —ll Ml TRADE-IN DAYS izzloltases’ Friiliii LSiiliirdaj hz / 'JcW 0 *| ® 1 8 1 8 1 6 HBL_ £,, / living room suites Jt'irifiknr nM Hl With Reversible Foam Rubber Cushions One of our many fine values in Living Room Furniture, an./> H featuring high styling, foam rubber comfort and durByability with a fine frieze >44os cover. See the many other Re 9- MAW I "' ~* si | V Y° ur o,d ,uit * ’’ worth Trade-In 150.00 IflßjMHaSjiMfegJhlftlF “'V. 2 .“ ,„ sllo’s Your Trade uSdf :£ B ,s Your iwl 1 i-mB I '. down Bar I B l - TWFjy | gm |g HM ■ ' mbMPCTBI -< —lwjTilj t!?' a- ™Wa 4 f ■ 3-PC. BEDROOM SUITES! II ?*wl ■ Choose your Bedroom furniture from our huge stock of ■ fine quality Modern, Early American or 18th Century | IiBBBMB'/ IiLZI ■ designs. All at our low. low regular prices. Trade in y° . Hold suite, it is worth SSO - - ■.. iwlßiWTr • 1 j ■in trade. The suite shown Re - >IAU T gffigfc* —H ■» right is just one of Price ■ BBS ’ ’- .- r^ H H I't. . I ■„o„, ,0 <hoo>c 1..™, LESS H Only $2.00 YOUR 95 «wl I 'f| A Week PRICE jj/ # : H ... , . EARLY AMERICAN - Budget IlWww» 1 amflj»ll 2-pc. suite f»t fillll'. A »® s ■ ‘ '<o w vou can en .i°> e warm ncver ° OPEN H. HI H )H ■ .■ -.*. ' dated charm of Early American styling. Friday i H iH ■L . I usurious sofa and matching wing-back flpig LJS"®I ■ rfl IBM ft chair uith Rcg . n|(M|9s and ■ ■ ■ 111 «B jQLa h handsome Price B Saturday HH■ H■ ■rM INC.* ‘X SIAO?S 9PM yCj^g^ffIRNiTUHEI STORE PRICE I flw 4W ——— 239 N 2 n( J Sf^_^ecatur L

Hoffa's Attorney Feuds With Leader WASHINGTON 'UP!I — Tram■tert* Preatdrnt James R Hotfa will go u> trial <m contUctot interrot rhargw nr*t month without •«• attorney Edward Bennett William* at hi* •ide Reliable MMircea »ald today that Williams, general counaal of the Teamster*, ha* advised Hofta he would not represent him at the Federal Court hearing scheduled to begin Feb 23 Hoffa has picked a Detroit lawyer, James Haggerty, to defend him at the trial before Federal Judge F Dickinson Letts Williams, who successfully de- j fended Hoffa against a bribe-con-1

PUBLIC SALE I 1. the undersigned, due to the death of my husband and having I rented the farm, will sell at auction, located 2 miles north. 1 mile west I Uien' V« mile north of Berne. Indiana, on SATURDAY, JANUARY 30,1960 1:00 o'clock FARM MACHINERY I 1951 Farmall H tractor with cultivators, 1 set of wheel weights, on I good rubber in A-l shape; 2-14 in Massey Harris plow; New Idea ma- | nure spreader on rubber in A-l shape; International 7-ft. heavy tractor I disc: John Deere 10-hole grain and fertilizer drill; New Idea 4-bar side ■ (delivery rake; New Idea rubber tired wagon with 14-ft. grain bed; | steel wheel wagon with wagon box; Case 3-section spring tooth har- ■ row; 2- section spike tooth harrow; John Deere 5-ft mower; double cuKipacker; walking cultivator; hay loader; knife harrow; bob sled: ■ rhud boat; 2 walking plows; 275 gal. gas barrel with hose; fanning | mill; hay rake: cream seperator: lots of carpenter tools; wrenches; I double trees; tongues; and many articles not mentioned. HAY I 300 bales of mixed hay made without rain. | 175 bales of timothy hay. CAR I 1956 2-door Chevrolet 210 series, 6 cylinder car with 35.000 actual | miles on extra good rubber. ■ TERMS—CASH. Not responsible for accidents. MRS. HOMER STEINER, Owner | Phil Neuenschwander, Auct | Jeff Liechty, Auct. First Bank of Berne. Clerk ■ Miz Lehman, Auct. ’1 28 j

TH DKATVR DAILY DO4QCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

I *piraey ladlctmewt In UW, wa» l Io ba feuding *«> U»* tough talking union leader But that Id’ not thg rea*m be i I decided against .ppeartng la Hot ' fa's behalf, cloaa asawclatra *aid ! They »ald William* compared; him»elf to lhe counsel tor a bank > Who would not thmk Os rwpceaetll | mg a bank president charged with rmbetiling the bank's funds. , II Court-appointed mordton haw ' accused Hoffa <4 transferrins: 9430 out) of funds belonging to hi* lltoma local in Detroit Into bank account* bearing no intorcat. - — -- — 20 Yean Age |j Today •! — ' , Jan M 1940 was Sunday and no paper was published.

U.S., Russia At Stalemate On Lend-Lease WASHINGTON <UPD— A icw| U S -Runnlan eta ternate tod • J blocked any quick nettle mat»t of thr Soviet Union’* muHI-mlllloa dollar World War II lend • leaM debt to thia country. Negotiation* on a lend - tonne incttiemcnt collapacd here Wednesday whan the Soviet Union initiated that U.S trade restriction* I .igatnst Russia be eased In return I for any agrceipent. Barring an unexpected change In the KramI Un's attitude, the matter was dead f<»r the time being Soviet Ambassador Mikhail A. I Menshikov and State Ik partment Soviet affairs expert Charles E. Bohlen met for only 35 minutes before Bohlen announced that In view of the Soviet stand there was Ino point in continuing the talks. I The round of negotiations which began Jan. 11 never even got down to bargaining over a ihoney figure for lead-lease repayment. Menshikov demanded that the I United States extend to Russia its lowest tariff rates and asked for a long-term U.S. credit. He said he meant either a government ■loan or the right to seek private loans. ~ | Under the 1934 Johnson Act. no country in default of a debt to the United States may receive public or private loan credits In '1951. Congress denied Russia the 'benefit of tariff reductions negotiated with other countries under so-called “most favored nation agreements. | Bohlen insisted the talks be 'limited to the lend-lease debt He told Menshikov that any easing of I trade restrictions was up to Con gress. He said a lend-lease settle- ; ment was essential before the a- - would recommend a Russian trade agreement to Congress.

Youth Confesses To Beating Grandmother MARTINSVIUX Ind. 'UFI>~ A 30-year-old youth admitted late WodncMiay that he alruck hl* grandmother and knocked her down three days before bar froarn body was found on Um floor of her home Victor Bennett. Martinaville. signgd a statement admitting he brat Mm Myrtle Bennett 14. when ahe caught him trying to rob her home. Morgan County PnaMßtor Richard Bray Mid. However. Bennett denied that he killed the woman and told authorities she was alive when ha left the house early the morning of Jan 10. Mrs. Bennett's body was discovered about noon last Friday by her son. Vernon Bennett, an uncle of Victor. An autopsy showed her jaw was broken in four places and four ribs were broken. rasultUig in a hemorrhage in her chest. The pathologist’s report fixed the time of death between Jan. 18 and Jan. 11. Sheriff Victor Young said Victor Bennett was arrested the day after Mrs. Bennett's body was found. He was jailed on a non-support charge and questioned about the death of his grandmother. Bray said. Bennett, the father of a 15-month-old boy and a girl about a month old. was separated from his wife. He had been living with his mother and stepfather. Bray said. Bennet was quoted by authorities as saying he went to his grandmother’s home between 3 and 4 a.m. Jan. 19 to steal money. He said he pried open a window and climbed in. But Mrs. Bennett awakened and grabbed him. Young said Bennett admitted he hit her twice. Young quoted Bennett as saying he hit her when she grabbed him. and when she didn’t let go he hit her-agaln. She fell down. Bennett was quoted as saying, but he knelt beside her. heard her breathing heavily and felt her pulse which he said was normal. .... Young said Bennett told him he then searched the house for money but couldn t find any and left through a rear door. When authorities arrested Bennett. they invoked a suspended six-month sentence given him for non-support. Bennett was in arrears in his payments, Bray said. Bray said Bennett had been a construction worker but was unemployed recently. Young said a grand jury probably would be called early next week to consider the evidence against Bennett.

East Coast Covered By Winter Mixture United Press International A winter mixture of sleet, snow and fog covered the East from Maine to the Gulf Coast today. = An ice storm which plagued midwestern motorists Wednesday knifed across the Northeast from northern Ohio into sachusetts. Snow covered New England north of the ice zone and light rain drizzled through low clouds and fog from the mid Mississippi Valley into Alabama and Georgia and from New York into Florida. The U.S. Weather Bureau warned that highways would stay dangerous from Ohio to Massachusetts today. In addition, four to six inches of snow were predicted for southern Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. Rising temperatures helped take the icy glaze off midwestern highways, where seven persons died in winter-blamed auto accidents. Four brothers and sisters were killed near Emine nc e, Ind., Wednesday when their car slid into an empty school bus. Three other persons died on slippery lowa roads. Isolated rain and snow storms peppered the West and a rare winter thunderstorm soaked the Colorado mountains. The bureau predicted more light rain today along the East Coast, with light snow through the upper Mississippi Valley into the Rockies and scattered showers in northern California. Fifty families still were homeless in Dayton, 111., where ice jams sent the Fox River flowing over lowland areas. Young Hemophiliac Suffers From Cut Ronald Moelleriqg. young son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Moellering of Preble township, and grandson of county surveyor Herman Moellering, is suffering from a cut on his tongue which will not heal. The baby, a hemophiliac, has blood which will not coagulate when the .skin is cut. About two weeks ago he bit his tongue on the right side, and the cut will not heal. He was taken today to the Clinic hospital in Bluffton for another blood transfusion. The baby has a rare type of blond, and is dependent upon transfuejnns • for his life. Mrs. Wanda Oelberg. executive secretary of the Adamp county Red Cross, has provided a list of people with his type of blood who would be willing to donate blood. This* is part of the Red Cross' continuing efforts to provide the life-saving blood for those who need it.

Held On Charge Os Dieorderly Conduct Goorgr Coy. SO. <»f Kim Struct. Decatur. •»» arrvtoed at 10 p m Wedncaday by etty police I

fife put our heart in J GO s L n D o EN DANISH ___ “Breakfast” ““ ROLLS 74c ,OtU J: OLD FASHIONED . « . RED DEVILS ioi? FOOD CAKE 74c Dutch! Bread | i WWWMWMMIMIMMMWWIAAAAMrtWMAAAMmAMM DELICIOUS COOKIES • Butterscotch • Lemon • Oatmeal • Raisin • And Many More Stewarts Bakery _L r „ tn N. 2nd Street

CHOICE > CUTS ay T-BONE AOf STEAKS lb. SIRLOIN nQf I STEAK lb. wryy I LARD SPECIAL i 5 lb. Pail 10 lb. Pail 69c 1" eW’ a i i.w SIDE U * A I SCHMITTS HICKORY' mm SMOKED HAMS lb. V Schmitt’* Center Cut 'O "AS SLICED BACON lb. Oil — ■MMuawM— —•«—— li™*em» HICKORY A L A A SMOKED < « I,UW1 ,UW SAUSAGE ** SCHMITT'S LEAN L .QQ SIAD < • DACON w B * |

THURSDAY, JANUARY M. 180

on a dUordarly conduct warrant, signed by hto wife. Mm Vtote Coy. Coy to la lha county jail waiting lor a trial date to be net for hte can* in city court