Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1960 — Page 11
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21. 1960
MCI JM b J 1 >ll3 1929 £gS K PERS SVJ L a sf COME PERSONAL INCOME »WpL * BS - 88l >on HjS|BiipSr> * 3833 2 ,11,0n l s Servin V / 120 7 KsL l6 * i / xßr \ / l/FMjond Be,« ro# «W Other!.r,i«,\ /f«rd ■r>dJe«ra a «H r.’. I ’ J 9 Si Clorting fS LL u * # X ■ / Tl \ _ *s* idrfr. \ rWfr C 1(M >r ♦— TMMMnf,nßa . irrl Y—THE PERSONAL INCOME DOLLAR—Comparison between how Americans spend a dollar f J today and how we spent it 30 years ago reVeals some surprising facts. We’re spending i less out of each dollar today for food, clothing and shelter and most services. (The total 1 number of dollars is higher, however, because we have more dollars to spend.) Spend* •"’ ing for transportation and household goods is the same. Only taxes and automobile ’ costs are proportionately higher than in 1929. Data from Morgan Guarantee Trust Co. •
New Rough, Tumble Diplomacy School
EDITORS NOTE: UPl’b State Department correspondent offers some impressions of the new rough and tumble school of diplomacy which he gained in 100,000 miles of jet travel to 30 countries during the past year. Among his assignments were Khrushchev’s 1959 tour of the United States, President Elsenhower’s global “Peace Crusades,” the. ill-fated summit conference and other International meetings. By STEWART HENSLEY United Press International NEW YORK (UPI) — The bizarre has become commonplace in international diplomacy. The incredible seems almost taken for granted. Protocol officers are in less demand than police. Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev deserves a large share of the credit —or blame—for stripping the striped pants off international manners. But he’s had IW. — Looking back over the past 12 months there have been moments of high comedy and times of spine-chilling tragedy. Vicious mobs in Tokyo blocked President Eisenhower’s visit to Japan. Screaming demonstrators in New York are keeping Khrushchev, as well as Cuba’s Premier Fidel Castro, quarantined in their living quarters except when they sally forth under heavy guard to attend the United Nations, Khrushchev Sets Tone The Russian leader set the tone for the current deep freeze when he unleashed his Wood-curdling denunciation of the United States and Eisenhower before 2,000 of us reporters jammed into Paris’ Palais des Nations last May. This was a far different Khrushchev than the joly peasant who just a year ago this week led 300 of us on a chase across farmer Roswell Garst’s lowa cornfield. Khrushchev, welcomed to sunny Washington a year ago as Eisenhower’s - guest, came ashore Monday in a dismal rain at a leaky East River pier where not a single American official of consequence was on hand to greet
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him. Eisenhower’s far-flung “Peace Crusades” during the pest year to Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Europe and Latin America were not without their bizarre aspects. There was the night last December in New Delhi’s Connaught Circle when one and one-half million Indians, their features contorted by flickering torchlight, screamed a welcome to the “Prince of Peace” and scratched the paint from his auto in vain efforts to touch him. Swings Swagger Stick Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, infuriated by the inability of the presidential car to proceed, leaped from his seat by Eisen-
1 I *; •* ■ LX ~ t***/ a ON ACCOUNT—This Cubans airliner is being held at New York’s Idlewild Airport for an unpaid debt of $237,000. Harris & Co. Advertising, Inc., of Miami, Fla., is the creditor. Atty. Charles Ashmann and Patrolman Ruoy Fabrizio look over the papers pertaining to the seizure of the threemillion dollar plane.
hower and, in as futile gesture as man ever made, attempted to beat back the crowd with his swagger stick. Among the mass were Indian Communists under orders from Moscow to cheer Eisenhower in the “Spirit of Camp David.” Six months later, following the summit crash, Japanese Communists, instructed from Moscow and Peiping, carried out a series of murderous riots which forced Eisenhower to cancel a visit to that country. Cuba’s bitterly anti-American Premier Fidel Castro has added his own particular flourishes to the new rough and tumble school of diplomacy. Monday night I watched the bearded Cuban revolutionary, after a spat with the management of the Manhattan hotel where he was quartered, stalk into U.N. headquarters and demand that Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold put him up for the night. There was a time when I would have been surprised.
DBCATPR DAILY DSMOCftAT. DBCATUB, INDIANA
Many Indiana Banks Victims Os Fraud INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — FBI and Indiana law officials said today that as many as 20 to 30 Hoosier banks may be victims of a fraudulent cashier’s check operation which may already have netted the criminals a fortune. FBI special agent Edward Powers explained that so far 50 fraudulent checks have been uncovered, totaling $16,800, and these were all passed on two banks, one at Lafayette and the other at Evansville. But the FBI pointed out that the checks being used apparently were obtained in a burglary at the DeLuxe Check Printers, Indianapolis, and the number of checks is unknown. The printer provided police with a list of all
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banks for which it prints blank checks. —i— — .. Each of the checks detected thus far has been for either S3OO or S4OO and was an "exact duplicate” of a legitimate cashier’s check purchased from a bank earlier. The Purdue National Bank of Lafayette, on which 32 checks for S3OO each were drawn, discovered the phony checks. All were copies of one .purchased on Sept. 2 by a man using a fictitious name. The FBI said this process may have been repeated for every bank whose checks were stolen. Fred Yarborough, manager of the check-printing firm, said he does not know that any checks were stolen from his premises. But on the basis of information federal and state police have, they are proceeding on the assumption that a burglar obtained the blanks from the printing shop and that the break-in and theft went undetected.
“Our best hope now is that we get a break and someone in a bank will recognize a person or see something phony,” Powers said. The only description the agents have to go oh now is of a man. about 30 years old, 5 feet 7 inches tall. However, Powers said he has no information to indicate if the man is working alone or is part of a group. So far, all of the forged checks have been passed in banks in other states or in hotels. Some of these checks were cashed in Ohio, Kentucky, Mississippi, Minnesota, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Georgia. No complete list ot the banks for which the check-printing firm does business has been issued, but among them — in addition to Evansville and Lafayette—are understood to be Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, Hartford City, Muncie, Marion, Shelbyville, Terre Haute and Bloomington.
OLD-TIME TRACTOR—There’a life still in old steam trae» j tor which Clem Baudlson displays in Highland, HL Hewaa I one exhibitor of old-time farm machinery at a meeting of ] the American Threshennan Assn. X
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