Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 114, Decatur, Adams County, 13 May 1960 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Aly Khan Dies In Crash 01 Car In Paris paKW <UPI> — R*jrt»"4«pk> mat Prune Alt Khan »U«1 >n thr erath nt ki» tert »pnrt* car I**l i»i»ht with the namr «rs a branth hi! woman cm hi* lip* Alt, til y— > <»M mrtUonairr *P*» of toe lat* Aga Khan, father nt thr perarwt Aga Khan and for-, ir»r huaband <rf Rita Hayworth, | war prmnunerd dead la a Pe*i*i bmpital thort’v before midnight after hl* Lancto eoHalcd hradmn With a French redan Witnrtw* raid hi* dying word* were "hm* l» Bcttift*" Hr Wg* a«kmg about thr beautiful French model who ha* brrn hi* ma«'ant companion tn recent rear* and who was bmidr him in th«- car. Al* wa* at the wheel, Medel Net Badb Hart Bet tin* and Aly * chauffeur, who wo* in the rear wat. were; not aerioualy injured m the crash Drraacd In a smart green evening gown ahe wa* hospitalised for »tltchr» in a head wound Then after bring told of Aly a death, she bravely rrturn«xi to help the poUcc mvwtigation Aly. famuu* for In* taatr in women, racehorses. and powerful •an. was driving the Italianmade car along a road near th<Long champs race track, one of. hl* favorite haunt* a* gentleman jockey and Thoroughbred owner Just across the Soin* River bndge. it met thr sedan driven b* Frenchman Herve BichaUm Witnesses said that Bichaton s, car was on the wrong side of the road Both drivers braked hard, but too late, and they collided 1 head-on Alv was thrown forward octo the plastic steering wheel It* impact against his body I* believed to have caused his death Bystanders carried Aly. still | breathing, into a nearby bistro and stretched him out to await an ambulance. Death Shock* Friend* The news of Alys death brought shock to those who knew him in his playboy days and in his later career as a serious andi able diplomat I Miss Hayworth, now the wife of Hollywood producer James Hill, said she was "deeply moved", and that Aly’s death "will be a tremendous loss to Yasmin,” the daughter of their IMS-1953 mar-1 riage “He had warm friends In all walks of life and was a most gen-. erous and considerate man," Henry Cabot Lodge, chief U.S. delegate to the United Nations, said "His death was a great shock to me and I mourn his passing.” Aly was Pakistani delegate to the United Nations and had recently been appointed Pakistan's ambassador to Argentina. The playboy side of Aly's character had been pushed into the background in recent years. He took his UN. work seriously and won widespread respect among his diplomat colleagues i for his brief and to-the-point: speeches. He generally backed i the Western position but did not i hesitate to voice independent j views on controversial subjects. Trade m • «oor town — Decata

CLEAN and STORE YOUR SULKY WINTER WOOLENS IN GIANT Box Storage FOR EXTRA CLOSET SPACE AT HOME! . NOTHING TO PAY til FALL! Everything you send beautifully cleaned, carefully stored on form-fitting hangers in our spacious vault, and immediately insured. Fill the Box we “furnish with all woolens you want returned clean in the Fall. WE WILL CLEAN YOUR RUGS . . . WALL-TO-WALL CARPET . . . THROW RUGS ... IN FACT ALL OF YOUR RUGS /?/„ FREE , ' L /nc / MOTHPROOFING MMF L * Y ~ Y f Sanex •tor.grZ- Sweepstakes You mav win an all-ex-pense paid vacation for two or one of the 1001 xJs'dG— other valuable prizes. I— No p urC ]j ase Necessary, punw 30 Second DETREX PROCESS _ the DRY CLEANING that gets out all the dirt! FREE PICK-UP A DELIVERY You’ll love the way we h*p4 til 9 d m looking just like new U S. 27 N. 13th St. even time.

481 County Farmers Seek Wool Payments With thr deadlier pest amtt* fw pavmrM* m thr nathwiai wtarf pmgratn for thr )•* market mg year, a total nt «i Adam* cording to Jerne* Garbndm. « f i<* t; It t if si I Uun and «an*ervaltod <rffk« Tha dradlinr for application* wa» Mai Application* received through «ut thr county Will now be used in c«mputing thr rate <rf payment after whhh paym.nl* will br mad. to grower* through their ARC of tier* Faymem* are expected t« be made »me tone after July I Under thr wool program. |m>» menta are made at the percentage rale nece«»ary to bring the nation al average farm price of wool u| to cent* a pound, which i* th* announced incentive level That percentage I* applied to each grow er * marketing* to calculate hl* payment fin unshorn lamb*, pay mcnt I* made at a rate bao-d nt thr wool rate For 1951. thr pay mrnt rate wa* 70 3 per cent for «hom wool and fl «? per hundred weight on unshorn lamb* Th. purpose of the pererntagtmethod of pavm.-nt. Garboden points out. is to encourage wool grower* to do the best possible job of marketing their clip Payment* under the wool program are mad. a* an incentive to growers hi bring about an increase in national wool production New Commandant Is Named At West Point WASHINGTON <UPI> — President Eisenhower today named a new West Point commandant and a new commander of the U. S Seventh Army in Europe as part of a high-level reshuffle prompted by retirements and promotions. The changes were announced in a list of nominations which the President sent to the Senate for confirmation. Eisenhower designated six officers for retirement in the rank of lieutenant general, elevated four major generals by one rank and! promoted a Navy captain to rear admiral. The White House said Lt. Gen. Garrison H Davidson, superintendent of West Point, would succeed, Lt. Gen. Francis W. Farrell as commander of the U. S. Seventh Army in Europe. Davidson would be succeeded at ♦he U. S. Military Academy by Maj. Ger. William C. Westmoreland. effective July 1 Farrell was one of the retiring officers nominated for permanent] three-star rank. Van Wert Residents Are Urged To Report Van Wert Chamber of Commerce officials are urging all residents of Van Wert county who may not have been counted in the official census to report themselves. Preliminary figures show that Van Wert county has a population of 28.563. compared with 27.353 teh years ago. Many feel that this does not reflect the growth of the county.

Red Weaknesses Reported Exposed

WASHINGTON 'UH' — The ‘ tellur* at • jet engine probably brought al**ut the nt < America'* V 4 »pr !»*•"• ®** r ! Hurtle, wRh result* thwt may 0, - bangs lb* course vrf htslory in J way* etlti ter from clear. Soviet Premier Nikita S Khr» ' .hchrv '• account -rs the capture i rs the plane and it* pilot. FranI cig G Poweri, is »u full of obviI OU* unllkelilumd* that it I* bring Idi > missed out of hand by trchni leal experts here President Etwnhowrr pointed |u> discrepancies in the Soviet | account* al hi* new* conformer • Wednesday Adding well informed supporttK>n to known farts, It now I* i I Widely accepted that Power* ean i blame hi* capture <>n a mechanical problem in hl* high flying plane — n»t on any "remarkable ' Ru»«lan rocket, a* thr Soviet* »aid. or on any other singular Soviet device F t poor. Ked W>»kne«»e» In fart. Puwerg* Hight la c<w»Mdered here to h«Vc exposed certain wv.ikne«»e* ratlwr than ■ strength* tn thr Red air drfoiwe. I IHr wa* caught. H is believed, only because he had to drop down to a relatively low altitude. From hl* reported takeoff in Pakistan on May I. Powers ' the extraordinary plane — in effect a jet-propelled glider—to an .altitude of 65.000 feet and headed [across Russia at a speed prob[ably exceeding 500 miles an hour Powers proceeded on a northBankers Convention Slated Next Week Approximately 1.000 bankers. I their wives, and special guests I will attend the 63rd annual con- ! vention of the Indiana bankers as- ' sociation at the French Lick-Shera-ton Hotel. Rrench Lick. Indiana. ' on Wednesday and Thursday. Attending from Decatur will be Mr. , and Mrs Herman H. Krueckeberg Decatur Driver Is Fined At Bluffton Dennis L. Scott. 16, of Decatur. 1 i was fined a total of sl9 75 in Bluff-! ton city court Wednesday on a charge of reckless driving against the property of another. He was cited as the result of an accident- | April 7. and the charge later was; transferred from justice of the ■ peace court. Acreage Limited On Reserve Farms Farmers who have placed parti l of their cropland in the conserva--1 tion reserve have an important crop acreage limitation to consider before completing their planting this spring, according to James Garboden, chairman of the county agricultural stabilization i and conservation committee. That limitation is the acreage of soil, bank base crops that may be planted on the farm. In general I the soil bank base crops include the grains, *row crops, and oil-seed crops. When part of the cropland on a farm is placed under a conservation reserve contract there is a permitted soil bank acreage established for the farm. The permitted acreage then becomes the ■ maximum acreage for soil bank base crops that may be grown under the contract. On farms where all the cropland has been placed in the program, the permittee acreage of crops for harvest is zero. In addition to the limitation of acreage devoted to crep production, the contract also provides that the cropland retired into the conservation reserve must not be grazed nor a crop harvested from it, nor can noncropland be brought into crop use.

r HR.ur IM 3 BIG DAYS! DRIVE-IN SUN. MON. TUES. I THEATER Children Under 12 Free He Was One of the Forgotten Few - Fighting a Forgotten War in the Burma Jungle! Terrific in COLOR! SIS loUUDBRM ul hlllimr wrai J-I ■im IIIF L“ <35; bwmi'NclJiiffl’Jiio [IM RM M MB 'MM ’JOIIIS PLUS — An Hour of Comedies and Short Subjects! O— — O — TONIGHT AND SATURDAY — When the Mob-Rats Ran Wild-He Was »he Wildest! "THE RISE AND FALL OF LEGS DIAMOND RAY DANTON., Karen Steele■, Elaine SJ*’ plr * . PLUS—The Story of the Town With the Dirty Mind. "RESTLESS YlAßS"—Sandra Deo, John Saxon

TO DtrATUR DATLT DEMOCRAT. DECATTTR. TNTMARA

erty rourve amt** th* center <rf

Huxia for I mite* to • tun near Svvrdfovtk. the Uto“» trial city iwrfrtnd the Urgl rain* ra*t «rs Mtwrow [ In th* hverdtovah regton. *amei thing went wrung Maybe Rrwantir Ipa Ung attack nr for * M»me other reaaon. attempted cv*«lV» aetton According to the tuppiMitton. hi* jet engine pr<*» • abh »offered a cnmpreaaor *t*U Dragped to <• ••• Feet In any event. Power* brought [the plane down to 35 000 to ttuoo fret If the belief that hl* engine "flamed out" l» correct, he prob--1 ably wa* trying to rratart it in thr drwer atmosphere. That I* Where, in one way or ' another, the Ru**lan* got him Hl* plane may have been struck and dcabled by fragment* lor ■ rocket Gonflrr of intererp - tor plane* could have damaged it It remain* to be answered why ’the Russian* allowed the U-l to get 1 3O> mile* Mjo their country, ts they had any way of stoppin* I the plane. . A conclusion heard here I* that. ‘ until It* mi*hap. the plane wa* flvtng cither too high for Ruasian rockets to reach, or over a course where there were no «uch air defense* ... *rrEither answer l» militarily encouraging. and both may be right There U additional support in the statement of authorities that this was the first U-2 brought down while on such a mission

ACP Funds Still Available For 1960 Two hundred and 89 fai niers have applied for cost-sharing assistance under the agricultural conservation program for 1»W. James Garboden. chairman of the ASC county committee reported today. To date, approximately 20 per cent of the county funds are still available for conservation practices. Farmers are reminded that a request must be filed in the county office on the proper form before the practice is started to be eligible for cost-sharing. Approvals. are made according to established policies, so all requests are not approved for payment. If approved. financial help is about half of the costs. The agricultural conservation program is a federally sponsored plan under which farmers obtain assistance for carrying out soil and water conserving practices on their individual farms. In the past years, the program has helped farmers to protect many thousands of acres of farmland from serious erosion, has assisted in promoting better pasture management and retarding flood conditions. Thousands of farmers have individually contributed : jn this national plan which has grown in signficance during the recent years of variable weather conditions. Organ Recital At Berne Sunday Night The First Mennonite church of Berne will present Jack Ruhl, of Fort Wayne, in an organ recital Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Ruhl, organist at the First Presbyterian church in Fort Wayne, will be assisted in the program by the hand bell choir of the First Presbyterian church. Fort Wayne, directed by Lloyd Pinkerton, choral director of that church. A free-will offering will be received. The public is invited to this musical presentation. Chamois Wash chamois leather in warm, soapy water to which a pinch of baking soda has been added. "You will find that this will keep the chamois in good condition.

Norway Files Protests Over Plane Incident

OSLO — Norway of America'* .teuiwh®«t NATO allt»« formally protested today ■gauwl on America* plan Io land • tr.n. Ru.»ian »p» plane in Nor way and demanded an and to »urh Incident* Fbrvign Mtateter Halvard M l-Ange. who announced th* pro Ir-at in parliament. rHxikrd Ru»ua at the »ame umr fo< threaten. tn g to obliterate American base* la fforway. It waa the flrat diplomatic action against the United State* by Norway since Norway Joined the North Atlantic alliance It followed a Washington admission that spy flights had been carried out . . _

lamgr said it had been proved” that pilot Francis G. Powers. ». Albany. Ga . had planned to crons Russia and land at Hodor Airfield in northern Norway on a flight from Pakistan He said he called in Mrs Francis WUUs. the US. ambassador, and lodged the prsXest with a demand that steps be taken to avoid repetition of such incidents lange said Norway had from time to lime allowed Allied planes to use Norwegian air bases for landing after flights over the Arctic Sea But h.- said this was done only on condition that such flights never violated foreign territory or came near the borders of foreign states.

Muncie High School Student Is Killed NEW CASTLE. Ind <UPI» - A car carrying five Muncie Central high school students who said they skipped school to attend a track meet here, collided with a truck Thursday and one of the youths was killed. Robert A. Haltons. 17. was killed when a car driven by Larry E Lee, was struck from the rear by a truck loaded with logs. Authorities said the car apparently stopped ab~uptly in front of the truck, driven by Albert Oxley. Blountsville, at the intersection of U. S. 36 and Ind. 103 five miles north of here. The truck overturned and Hawkins and Lee were pinned by fallen logs. Lee was reported in fair condition at Henry County Hospital here. Oxley and three other passengers in the Lee car were unhurt.

S£ sasg -?SB “~' '^~~~~~SiES.^ < .w- ■■ Nomad 4-Dr. 6-Patt. Station Wagon. ■ - No wonder wagons are number one with so many buyers ot 1960's numte.“ U^ G C 0 ° u A BODY BY FISHER. YoSr 6 S^d A dealer ean show you that SUSPENSION tot nd« YOU CAN T, BUY* AN g TR^KlONS°toluding IT’S A LOT LESS CAR. 5= , Sore-rigM now-My Sprint Fevtr SeUinff ” QUALITY CHEVROLET - BUICK JNC. 305 N. 13th STREET DECATUR, IND.

iw — ; ~ —’ . ■ < - * b BBL - wBBBBBBBBBk IB iB ® *<** WAR THREAT— Soviet Premier Khrushchev right. Mte foreign correepondenta American reconnaissance flights over Russia might teaO to an atomic war Ha thr ’ r ****** I further aggreaarao against the Soviet Unmo w 111 be met "with atom bomba to the Wat rew minute*.” As tor the UA flier, Francis O Power*. -We ahaU trv turn severely, as ■

City Party Leaders Silent On Campaign NEW YORK <UPI»—Sen John F Kennedy, his ipajor primary triumphs behind him, has moved his campaign back to the old-line, big-city political organizations Kennedy flics to Maryland today in an attempt to roll up a big total in that state's May 17 Democratic popularity primary. Thursday night he concentrated on a more crucial problem:' His need to win support from organization leaders over his presidential rivals who have by-passed the primaries. In New York he was cheered and applauded, but left without commitments from the top leaders. "No convention”, the Massachusetts senator told a dinner gathering of the Bronx county organization, "has ever nominated a man who avoided the primaries and elected that man president." It was clear he was talking about Sen. Stuart Symington (Mo.I, an announced candidate, and Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.), whose candidacy is generally acknowJ edged. Both are staying out of the primaries Tammany Hall leader Carmine G. DeSapio, who also is New York national committeeman, admitted Kennedy would probably

receive a majority of the state s ■ 114 convention votes on the first ballot at Los Angele* next July. But DeSapio. believed to favor j Symington, and state Democratic chairman Michael G. Pendergast refused to join the county leaders i who have backed Kennedy, and said they will voice no preference 1 until New York * delegates are , selected next month. Other party leaders in large northern states, such as Gov. David bawrence of Pennsylvania and Mavor Richard Daley of Chicago. likewise 4 remain uncommit--1 ted. » JEHOVAH'S Win-ESSES KINGDOM HALL Corner Monroe and Ninth Sunday. 3 p.m. — Watchtower Bible studv and discussion on the subject "Religious Attitudes When the Master Preached.” One of the scripture texts for consideration will be John 18:35. "Pilate answered: ‘I arn n °t a J ew - arn J’ Your own nation and the chief priests delivered you up to me. What did you do?’ ” <NW Trans.) Tuesday. 8 p.m.—Bible study ‘ using the study aid. “Your Will Be Done On Earth.” Friday. 7:30 p.m.—Theocrastic ’ Ministry school followed by Kingdom Ministry service meeting. ’ Over 2.600 D .ily Democrats are . sold and delivered in Decatur ’ each day.

FRIDAY. MAY tt. W

Stevenson Assails Ike Administration CHICAGO <UPD — Adlal E Stevenson Thursday night accused the administration of blundering on the eve of the summit conference and of selfishly seeking national security rather than world peace Stevenson said the downing of the U. S. spy plane in Russia and President Eisenhower's May 7 statement that the United States would resume nuclear testing may hurt chances of a nuclear test ban agreement at the summit. ”, . . Our government has blundered and admitted it And the blunder has made the President s task at the summit meeting more difficult," Stev -son said. "The discovery of the spy plane coupled with the simultaneous announcement that we were unilaterally resuming the nuclear tests can hardly enhance our image as a champion of peace in the world." he said. Stevenson, regarded as a darkhorse possibility for tju* Democratic presidential nomination, made a far-ranging foreign policy speech before Western intellectual leaders at the Conference on World Tensions.