Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 89, Decatur, Adams County, 14 April 1960 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

British Will Retain Atomic Striking Force WASHINGTON <VPh— MiM tw’rr hwiav foßi atomic ttriklng force I* • ( xaerw-d cnr*rrw«* ’* r»C Hri’am • ttafma* rmUry and Ww* cttuniry ha.' w> in let* live at duONt away with it to rrly rttiirrlv on America They mad* *hr •tatrmmt in rlaty *«t*n« aa London *• anmiunrrnw«N Wrinrxltj that. Brtta»'» roily long«cangr ballifttte iro»»il* project wa« bring cancelled aflrt invert mrot of 192 million dollar* That artion by Prime MiiHrr Hamid Macmiltan’’ government wa* Ktrrprrted widely a* herald Ing the end of Britain'* age-old pokey of maintaining mdependent rtrategu power T.w pow*r wa» exemplified tor centuries t>v tor Royal Navy and Ji rrrmt year’ by the nuclrar-armed Royal Aw Force The cancelled mb’ilr wa* the Blue Stroak. a 2.500-milc range weapon that had been >totcd to become ttw RAF*- new hydrogen bomb earner, complement mg and replacing some of jts Valiant Vulcan and Victor bombers. The Blue Streak, like so manyi -weapons in this tart-moving mill-1 tary era. was struck down by a cumbmaticn of technological advance and fnancuil squeeze It promised to be an insufficient degerreert weapon by the time it could be deployed and its cost would be prohibitive. But its cancellation "certainly does not mean that we arc going out of the deterrent business.’ a high British official here said Britain may turn to America to buy parts of its deterrent system, such as rockets to carry' its hydrogen bombs and missiles so its bombers and ship Over 2.50 u Da“*y Democrat* ar< •old and dellve .* in Decatueacb dav

THE SHRIMP The Shrimp is a slender, fastswimming relative of the lobster. Biologists believe that the mother shrimp lays her eggs to seaward of ocean passes, and as the little shrimp are hatched they swim shoreward, spending the first months of their life in the protected waters of the salt water creeks and bays. The plankton abundant in these areas—where fresh or bra kish water moves to the tea—provides ample food, and the shrimp grow rapidly. Although their life span is probably about a year, the prolific females lay about 750,000 eggs, assuring an annual harvest for the shrimp trawlers of the Gulf and South Atlantic states. This huge production is necessary to furnish enough fresh and french fried shrimp used daily at Fairway Restaurant.

mirim... .delicious! I — I / . 1 f r"T- 11 r—« 1 I fl «S!r-R< I I 11 TREATS DECORATED •gßa EASTER WP CAKES SPECIAL! WICKER ““10' SMALL EASTER EGG CAKES *1.20 | MASHED POTATO BISCUITS r «• ' Stewarts Bakery

High Temperatures Forecast In State t'oMed Freo* to4erwaU«w«l High Ml Itw land tow Mb warn in atoee tar tadiana ogam today and Mm proapen ivminuad that tori' would prevail t ba feat of tor week . Rrattorod rttowrr* wero ex ' uatey, taltowed by • oneIday ton wvnilwr flurry Friday I and fto* Ukvltaoud of a few »how I cry rfgam Saturday Ibr outtonk f«» E**4rr Sunday I woa not ctonr. Fivoday forecaav | iMurd Wednesday Indicated »bo» or• '' about Uw weekend. * ’ Trmprratow* reached TV at ' EvnnaviUa. 71 M South Rend. 77 utt Fort Waynv. 7S at Indiana poll* Land 73 at Lafayette Wedneodav and the low Mh in the Und«vtllr I iMWI RRPBH Overnight town found Evamvilh- , the ronk-A deiqwtr Ito for-woith * location. It was 49 tarrv, 55 at ' Indomapolß. 57 at South Bond and j Ijg *t Fort Wayne. Tiday's highs will range from j the low 70s to about Ml. tonight's i low* from 47 to near 80. and Fri- j (day’s highs from the mid 70s toj the low 80*Rom was falling at Chicago this morning and it was cloudy over all of Hoosiertend Although soil morsture is ample to surplus over Indiana. w«wxiI lands and brush areas wtjvarams parts of the state were <toy from lack of heavy or moderate rain I since the March snows melted Numerous fires were reported, particularly m MMithern Indiana Call For Probe Os Union Money Waste WASHINGTON <UPI>—A group of House Democrats • has called for a congressional investigation of what they termed the waste of union money by the Teamsters •‘watchdog" board of monitors They also charged that federal Judge F. Dickinson Letts, who named the monitors to supervise a union cleanup, was thwarting the will of rank-and-file Teamsters. Rep Jamas Roosevelt <D-Calif.l Wednesday accused Letts of an "arbitrary denial of plain judicial justice" m refusing to say yes cr no to a petition of 160,000 Teamsters members to intervene in the count’s consideration of Teamster President James R. Hoffa's regime. Roosevelt suggested that the House Judiciary Committee consider action against Letts—“possibly including impeachment’’—if the committee found he overstepped his bounds. Rep. John H. Dent (D-Pa> touched oft the round of remarks by proposing creation of a special committee to investigate the monitors’ expenditure of union funds. He said they had cost the members more than cne million dollars so far and that their outlay could reach two million dollars fl vol- u»v -mi.etr.mg tc sefl <r <Yade In a good sewn — IX-catt ■ach day ’ .——.

New Protest Planned In South Africa J(MIANNFSBtfRG South Africa I'UPI 1 — Thr outlawed African ! National Chnfroaa tan buinrtwd i iMidrrground mow tar a new i native rtay-homr protrat agawv-l I South Africa'• racial diacrtmina* -taai law*. It wa* di*ck>ard !<«tav Police broke a almilar (tonxm- , «trattan laM week by raiding th* I native mwn«hip of Nyanga an a*vI < ral day* and beating black* whn 1 r«-tu»rd to go to work Ix-aftaU algnrd by ao "rmrrgrt»-| |cy commrttrr of the African Na-i tkinal C<*Mtrv*» were found m MoIfoto. 10 mtira north of Johannesburg They called on African' to puU a week-king stayAtom* prot«*t Marling neat Monday The move wa* aem likely to touch off a new round of violence for South Africa Thr country has been relatively ■ quit< nine* a white a**a*.*in shot ; and seriously wound«"d Prime! Munster H«*ndrik F. Vcrworrd last Saturday Both thr African National C<w»- i grew* and thr Pan Africanist C<r> grv*s have b<*rn outlawed by the | government until next April Most ( of theto top leaders have been, Cabmet member Paul Sauer assured the nutavi ai a formal statement Wednesday night that ] the government hod the situation *■<•ll in hand and thai there was no r««son to fear more violence apart from occasional isolated incidents Ask Nol-For-Profil Law Strengthened INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — The Indiana Legislature was asked today to enact a "strong” not-for-profit corporation law and provide a staff of investigators to see that it is enforced. James F. Kelley, assistant coroaration councel in the office of »he Indiana secretary of s'a.te. told the organizational meeting of the Legislative Not-for-Profit Corporation Study Committee that there "is an urgent need” for revision of oresent statutes covering flhe subject. “Over 30 corporation statutes a-e cn the books',' Kellev said. “Many of them are duplications and do not cover changes which have occurred in the past decade.”

Kelley said the basic fault of Indiana corporation law is “its vague language.” “The law is especially vague when it comes to not-for-profit corporations,” he said. “We don’t know where to draw the line.” Kelley said his office "has refused" to charter so-called not-for-profit organizations when their prime motive is profit. "For example.” he said, "we refused to charter a group of shippers who got together to pool their transportation resouces ’ because the motive was to save money. But we have chartered country clubs tinder the not-for-orofit act, even though members do reeeive goods and services at a lower cost than they would pay on the open market. “We have to use our judgment when an organization asks for a not-for-profit charter. We would prefer to have the exact limits spelled out in law.” Kelley said his office is "badly understaffed.” "With the small staff we have.” he said, "we just barely get the necessary work done. We have no ■lime for regulating or investigating.” Kelley said his office has a backlog of 8,000 defunct corporations it is trying to process. He said some of the corporations failed to file mandatory annual reports for more than five years, “but are still on our books.” Kelley said there is a provision in Indiana Law that the state gets the assets of defunct corporations. "But as far as I can determine the state has never collected a penny,” he said.

f WLIHWV W 1 FRI. & SAT. f A W Continuous Sat. from 1:30 URuXQmSnDQQLs ONLY 25c -60 c Kisses, crime and violence shock the lives of a boy and girl in love on gSFgPgEpgS fIIHKRTIHHHHHHHHBC y—WIAWJ^ I yx t • 7 I" i k I ifc jjjM wK***~ s RANDY VENETIA DICK JESSE .jjjo* &•««», >«e,SAO. BMI-N Lc>**»l. E« w ’\ ADDED-That Picture About the Bone-Chilling HOWL! "HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES" Sherlock Holmes is Back—Story by Arthur Conan Doyle! Never Has the Niffht Known Such a Beast—ln COLOR Yet! O O Sun. & Mon.—"CASH McCALL” James Garner, Natalie Wood

THE DECATUR DAH.V DFMOCHAT DECATVR INDIANA

GOP Highway Use Is Scored By Welsh BEDFORD, tad ITPI' — Bi<ue Arm E W«4«h taub tda <amgoitgn ftw <br DtotaxvaUc gu* to>ro«tartal auminaltan to ttadh*d Wnttwaday togbi and acruand Uw ■tale CX>P adminMrattan nf u«ing thr highway aunatruettan progtem • “privato campaign *»■»! " WrUh «ald to • «»tom*n« pmparvai tar drtarory to l-awn-m-v ('<naHy Young Dvmornabi dial tor R<-I««bliran arfirtnWrdlw la t** •«-Utog Ihr Job highway lAfsictmn di*v* anywhar* in ttw wtotr Hr atod Indiana, by thr end at 1958 had romplatod taw than ie mitaw of intrratate highway. •» compared with 270 mile* tn Obw> and 200 to Michigan "Not only ha* thr Indiana Republican admWuMrolkm uhown rta i tnabilMy to build road*." Wrldi! iM*rrtrd. "but tbow it dor* buikl •rr foe murr rxpmalvr than tbr ■ national average,* Hr said Indiana I* 27th in proposed rood construction and 12th in road cost* Wrtah then charged that high- | way construction i* uaed a* a pt*’ vate campaign tool of the Repot* bran P®Hy. "It i»." hr wud. “a weapm of political action rather than a means to serve the needs of the people " Bank Holdup Suspect Is Held In Kentucky GRAVEL SWITCH. Ky. <UPl>— An Indianapolis man was arrested bv Kentucky police W<dnesday on | charges of robbing the People s Bank here of about SB,OOO The suspect, who identified himself as Floyd E. Elliott. 49. Indianapolis. was arrested at a state police roadblock east of Springfield less than 20 minutes after a bandit robbed the bank. Witnesses to the robbery said the bandit entered the bank shortly after noon, talked with customers for about 15 minutes, then pulled what later was described as a toy pistol and forced a teller to hand over the cash. Authorities said all the money was recovered from the car driven by Elliott. Gravel Switch is located on Ky. 337. near Lebanon in Marion County. Police said Elliott has a police record and was free on $7,500 bond in the S7OO holdup of a foan company at Indianapolis last October.

Says Program To Aid Retarded Is Phony EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UPI>-Sec-etary of Strfe John R. Walsih today labeled Indiana’s emergency program for housing mentally retarded children as "phony as a three-dollar bill” and pledged a “sane, sensibe and sympathetic” program if he becomes governor. Walsh made the statement at a Democratic meeting here. He referred to an announcement last week after a conference in Governor Handley’s office that space would be found for 520 children in Hhe next 18 months. I "I have had numerous calls from various people in Indiana interested in mental health,” Walsh said, “and without exception everyone protested that the (news) release (of the meeting) meant nothing with the possible exception that at last the Republican administration has felt the political necessity of taking some kind of action to relieve the pressure.” Walsh criticized Dr. Stewart T. Ginsberg, state mental health commissioner, for saying that “every state has neglected its mentally retarded.” “I am ashamed that he would accept mediocrity in the mental health program,” Walsh said. “He represents the thinking of the Handley and Gov. Crawford Parker kind of leadership that have been satisfied to see Indiana sink to its lowest level in mental health. public roads, school construction and genuine leadership.”

.fl B ■ RTt'ART LEHMAN. of Rrrne. will be guest .peaker al the community Earter .unriw .ervire nt I the Adam* Central school Sunday morning al 8 o'clock The service! will be held outdoor* it weather' permit*, otherwise io the school gym. < I Adam* Central students will j present several musical number* ; A bra** ensemble will play | Christ Arose.” the high school choir, directed by l<con Gerig. will! ting "God So Loved the World" and "All Had the Power of Jesus' Name " Don Gerig. Adam* Central band director, will | sing "Open the Gates of the Tern- [ pie " Churches of the Monroe community, sponsors of the set-, vice, invite the public to attend

Butler Says Truman Party’s Grand Man LOS ANGELES <UPI> — Paul Butler, chairman of the Demo- 1 cnatic National Committee heard reports of Harry S. Truman's I criticism of him and graciously Robertson said his on-the-scen* I replied Wednesday night that the former president is "the grand old man of the Democratic ■ Party” Butler, refusing to take offense, did make a point of saying that “Mr. Truman has forgotten 1948 when he divided the party and was elected president.” Truman in New York Wednes- j day accused Butler of trying his best. “ . . . but he has wound up spending too much time trying to j break the party apart.” Butler, here for a meeting of the Democratic convention ar-, rangements committee, said he did not agee with Truman's as-, section that the nomination of Adlai Stevenson would weaken the party. "I think Governor Stevenson is one of the men in the Democratic Party who could be elected —if he is nominated,” said Butler. “This is not to say I think he will be nominated, but the man who is nominated at the Democratic convention will win <n 1960.”

Beauty-on-a-Budgret Printed Pattern 9080 Ase I sizes JBRw* I 10-18 IB tyr-»Mr i/O j L-- /j/ • w" • ■ XzZ — — l/-L" r -' v i * I sS £.. 1 * — B.? fe 1 * ‘ Vr-.jfe t V. ~79) f F'' 1 ~-l I ' 4 I- « I— - fl I J - M LU 1 r i V.. ■•■•■■** Ready to go at the ring of the phone —a sleek, slick basic to belt or not, dress up or down depending on the invitation. Whip it up easily in a weekend to wear with joy all summer. Printed Pattern 9080: Misses’ Sizes 10, 12* 14, 16, 18. Size 16 takes 2% yards 39-inch fabric. Send FIFTY CENTS (coins) for each pattern for first-class nailing. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New Yord 11, N. Y. Print plainly your Name, Address with Zone, Size ind Style Number. JUST OUT! Big, new 1960 Catalog in vivid, full-color. Over 100 smart styles . . . all sizes . . all occasions. Send now! Only 25c Spring and Summer Pattern Trade in a good town — Decatur.

House Group Votes Space Agency Fund WASHINGTON <UPD - The Haute App«priatton. CmmiMw told Ihr Mwtl .par® agency today to ttop hiring » many to•euliwa and .pending to touch <*» budding. but granted every cent •< tt* rwjurrt for ro*krts and mono •ImHa The romtoitt** approved the National Aeronautics and Mpa<r Ad minlrtrstlon • b.idgrt of »7T7 gM • (no for rocket development in fto* cal year starting July I, Part of the bind, are earmarked for the Saturn .pace vehicle which NARA plan. U» combine with a nuclearpowered upper Mage to try a "toft" landing an the m«m in ala. or seven yean. The hind* were contained In an ll.lMfg7.toO money bill tor ft Independent government agencies The committee Cl. ItTOHSiK

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Ftetodtot Etotobodwr'a tooueat. hut the committee noted that the amuiMrt tt approved waa gi .IM.3M. gnu moew than the agenctea received M Uw currtot ftaral year The committee »a*d NASA a gegttouartrr. here la over.tatted with high paid personnel II <»M> ped 3H )nba from the agtocy’. plan to add S.MI new poalltan. 1 || alao ordered NASA to P#T 1 "cbawr attmttan" to cost* ot n- ' search and development contract* i because Tht* ta the field that in-' vile, the moat wart* " And It »ald Ihr agency'a crwutructiaa mat* were high f Two Infants Killed In Apartment Fire NEW .YORK «UPD — Two . fanta died to a fin that awrpt a I basement apartment Wednesday A third child waa rescued by a neighbor wlki said he had fell hr "owed some child a life" sine*hi* x>n waa rttcurd from drown t Ing __ '

TMVMDAV APRIL M. tMI

Bottle Ground Fire Station h Domogod tIATTLE ORtHJNO. Tod «UPD JJr. UlUto C nomp-i. Uh ayrtte, rltmbod into Mt car W«g HMday alter viaHibg ft lead* She >wat«d goodbye «od »teppnh «• the |m* But the car waa to rmrw gear and it smashed into the Hal Ik Ground fin station Damage eattmatrd al S.-tott to car and budding, Sunrise Service At Willshire Church The Wiltshire. 0., Union BUB church will conduct Barter aunrtar services at • • " • ■ r "’ rd ] n «J ,o the Rev Richard M Wgad. Th* youth fellowship group la in charge of arrangement* (Xferr nervier* will *** a m for morning wonhip. including baptism and reception of member* Sunday school will follow at 10 » am. but no evening aervleva will I* conducted.