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The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 2

Location:
Mitchell, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Pctgs Two THE DAILY REPUBLIC, Mitchell, S. Thursday, August 14, 1958 Britain Throws Her Full Support Behind Ike's iddle East Plan UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. fAPi, world, the economic aid program insisted, however, that first U.S. Britain today welcomed Prcsl-twon widest Initial support.

Arab iveiili njufi.y i rtent Eisenhower's Middle East diplomats indicated privately they peace plan as a solid foundation for "reconciling our points of view" and achieving constructive results. The British position was troops must get out of Lebanon and British forces must leave Jordan. were impressed with it, although onlv Jordan already heavil.vl Gromyko on Tuesday submitted dependent on S. aid gave asking the withdraw- endorsement. fata with U.N observers to check tllc out- Jordanian Delegate Monom on them.

The fourth and ast lined by Foreign Secretary Selwynifai told the Assrmbly peaker at yesterdays session, Lloyd before the emergency IES er proposals "fill our hearts withjForeign Minister Mahmoud of the 81-nation General Arv.ji, opr anc i satisfaction." jzi of the United Arab Republic, scmbly which was opened Wednes- soviet Foreign Minister the Soviet resolution, day by Eisenhower. Gromyko. who followed Eisenhow-jsaylng it was moderate and de- While throwing Britain's full' er to'the Assembly rostrum, saidjserved consideration. He made no support behind the President's six-j the economic aid program re-jcomment on Eisenhower's propos- point plan for bringing political I qu re careful consideration. He.als.

and economic stability to the Mid-1 The rile East, Lloyd expressed i speech. disappointment over the tone adopted by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko in the opening Soviet speech. Informed quarters said Britain i and the United States were in! Miif close consultation on a resolution, a Kill dealing with part of the Elscnhow- Ull JuCtUUI Dili pr program. This was understood In cover some political aspects.

House Committee Refuses Action tone jf like that of the Soviet resolution, surprised Asian and European diplomats. Some expressed hope that the lack of fireworks in both the U.S. and Soviet presentations presaged a smooth, constructive session. Ceylon and India were reported including the establishing of conditions which would make possible the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Lebanon and British troops from Jordan.

jpf Eisenhower's proposals, which includes a U.N. police force keep the peace in the Arab working on separate resolutions WASHINGTON 'AP) The calling for withdrawal of the U.S. House Labor Committee Thursday land British Forces U.N. police force was clearly illustrated by the threats to Lebanon and Jordan. The force should be large enough to enable Arab countries to stand up to armed pressure and subversion, he said, without specifying how large that would be.

Informants said he had about 3,000 men in mind. Some delegates expressed regret that Eisenhower was not more specific on security plans for Lebanon and Jordan. But many delegates voiced disappointment that Gromyko failed to offer any constructive plan at all. Eisenhower's program also included steps to halt the Middle East arms race, U.N. monitoring of international broadcasts in the area where President Nasser's United Arab Republic has been accused of inciting rebellion by radio, and development of water resources in the arid region.

Mansfield Sees Solons' Support Of Mideast Plan By ERNEST B. VACCARO WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) said day President 'Elsenhdwer willi i a i would continue cotton price would continue cinion yi iur eujj- wwum ports at from 75 to 90 per cent, ofitimated 250 million dollars ne parity during a 1959-60 year of operation. The period, with a drop to lower loss from the excise tax in 19B1-R2. sion bill is estimated at 42 mil 'trfoiiri cost thp rovernment an cs- more That will call nr i- wmild cost govermnc n1ore business firms to make anrl distribute the growing total of prn.

duction. At its average rate of over t.li» Hast 15 years, the gross national ilion dollars a year. Probe The largest of the'measures and product (the dollar value of tn( Th ll. total output of gooda and serv- (Continued from Page One) rtuUSt! LmUUI VyUIIlllMVU-c iimi.iv.c«.T refused to consider legislation put-i The Ceylonese proposal also ting new curbs on unions. called on U.N.

Secretary General; The decision left the way open for a floor fight Monday. Some members are talking of bringing up at that time a Senate- passed bill by Sens. John F. Kennedy CD-Mass i and Irving Ives (R-NY). That was one of the measures turned back in the committee today.

Rep. Clare E. Hoffman (R- moved to bring it up and the committee voted him down 22-7. Safe Driver i Gives Formula KANSAS CITY (AP) In 32 jxfars of driving trucks, Walter R. Miller of Kansas City has driven million miles without an accident.

Honored, yesterday by the Kan- fat; City Chamber of Commerce 1 its "Driver of the Year," he asked to pass on his formula publican committee members Rep. Graham Barden (D-NC), chairman, said he had been rapped by newspapers and others Dag Hammarskjold to take steps ito get the major powers into a conference on Middle East problems. Hammarskjold had indicated willingness to participate in a big power summit meeting suggested July 19 by Soviet Premier Khrushchev but it fell through. Whether Hammarskjold himself could drum one up was doubtful. The draft for which India re State To Receive $21.5 Million Aid For Road Work PIERRE iff) Gov.

Joe Foss said Thursday South Dakota will get $21,473,381 in federal funds for highway construction in the 1959-60 fiscal year. The amount will include loj- safety. Said Miller: "Just decide that you never have the right way. mittee Democrats in that vote. Then on a strict party division, 16-13 Democrats defeated a motion by Rep.

John J. Rhodes (R- Ariz) to consider a substitute introduced by Rep. D. Kearns (R-Pa) and backed by Re- portedly was seeking cosponsors 574 for called on Hammarskiold to make' another survey visit to the Middle East, which he last visited in June. Eisenhower said the need for a ''I've seen drivers die not giving the committee a tng their right of way." Youth Fails In Try To Corner token Market chance to vote on the question, and "I'm tired of it." Before today's vote, Kearns said If the committee approved his bill he believed the House would accept it.

The Senate bill, would require public disclosure of union finances and grant the secretary of labor power to subpoena records to assist him in enforcing compliance. vnov i vn iith II aiso would Umlt trusteeship of 7 any local union to 18 months and wfjh $5,000 started out to corner el of Market in subway tokens, it and ocal unlon officerSi was disclosed Wednesday with term llmlts of four for the 18-year-old decided subway (fl and three rs fares, now 15 cents, were going officers un. He began buying tokens with for 10CiU mceis the idea of selling them later at a hither price. filu mananov furious Transit Authority police, i'lcillclllcr utopped him about the time hisj pants pockets bulged with several UyAmnlafC 111 hundred dollars worth of tokens. JTI UlllUlCl A 111 Subway authorities, who withheld his name, advised him that If' the fare went up there would be' no profit in tokens no longer valid.

They promised to buy his back it' the going rate. Toss In Towel SIOUX FALLS 10 The chairman for the group pushing for the city manager plan in Sioux Falls nothing illeeali says ll ls glving up after a decifiion was noining megai Tl wori. Ibout what he did, and I suppose bothing morally wrong about it either." said Vincent Curtayne, Transit Authority member. by Circuit Judge Roy Burns Wednesday that the plan lost by one vote. Bob Reete said the group does wish I had had $5 000 not have enough money to carry an i just wisn i.

naa naa on when I was 18," he added. Cyprus Blamed For Breakup Of Payton Marriage LOS ANGELES island to be exactr-came between actress Barbara Payton and her fourth husband, says her; attorney. appeal to the supreme court and therefore is conceding defeat. This apparently ends and in-and out battle that began with a special election July 8. Reetz and his group sought to re place the three commissioner plan the city has had more than 40 years with a plan under which a nine-men council would set policy and a hired city manager would administer city affairs.

proposal passed by two-votes ijuly 8 but was later tossed out by Senate Group Approves SS Benefit Boosts Senate Finance Committee Thursday aproved the bill increasing social security benefits by 7 per cent. It voted to keep in it most of a pubic assistance provision objected to by President Eisenhower. The bill passed the House 375-2 July 31. Along with increasing the payments to the 12 million persons on the social security rolls, it would raise payroll taxes to pay for the higher benefits. Secretary of Welfare Arthur S.

Flemming told the committee last Friday he would recommend a veto of the bill if the group retained a House provision boosting public assistance grants to the states by 288 million dollars a year. The committee today rejected 9-6 a move to strike this section of the bill. But it did reduce the increase by 39 million dollars to a total of 249 million a year. The group also voted to make the increase in public assistance payments effective Jan. 1, 1959, instead of Oct.

1, 1958. as in the House bill. The bill is expected to come before the full Senate Friday. Miss Payton, 31, sued George A. the city commission, -on a vote Provis, 31, for divorce yesterday, charging cruelty.

They married in 1955. technicality. The commission was overruled in circuit court. Then the supreme court in effect overruled Her attorney Milton M. Golden tn circuit decision to clear the way explained: "You see, Barbara has an English background, while Pro- vas is of Greek descent.

They just couldn't reconcile their diverging viewpoints on how the Greek for a recount. The recount board held that the proposal had passed by five votes. Then this week, Judge Burns reviewed 81 questioned ballots and Turkish-English dispute should be'held that some that the board resettled." jected as spoiled were actually valid and vice versa. The revised total he produced gave the plan a SNAKE POISONOUS ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) vote defeat.

Dorothy Brown didn't get excited when she saw a snake trying to; enler a cage with her son's pet mice She picked it up behind the head and put it into a container. son later took the container CClIliSlCI 1 OOK tn, the woods and discovered Hit: snake was a poisonous copperhead. Witness Says Over Cab Firm lowan Is Held For Terrorizing Couple At S.C. SIOUX CITY Wl A 36-year-old Everly man was held here Thurs day by police as the man who terrorized the Myron Thebert home here Tuesday night. Detective Chief Harry Gibbons said that Harold C.

Hintz, whose police record includes charges al Sioux Falls and Minneapolis, admitted the armed holdup of Mr. anc Mrs. Thebert. They were held al runpoint in their new home for 2V4 hours. Hintz was arrested late Wed nesday at Leif Erickson Park in North Sioux City by two officers who were searching for him.

They said he had a .22 caliber revolvei and was lunching on food he had bought at a grocery. Gibbons said the gun and $150 had been taken in a breakin at a ser vice station in Leeds, Sioux City suburb, Aug. 2. Thebert identified Hinz as the man who accosted him and his wife in their home and stayed severa hours, helping himself to food cigarettes, a shirt and $5 before he disappeared. or secondary, $437,373 for urban and $10,547,000 for construction on nterstatc routes.

The amount for primary, secondary and urban construction is about the same as the original 1958- allocation. However, an emergency construction program was acked on to the 1958-59 amount bringing it to $15,520,662. The allocation for the interstate is the lowest given South )akota since the 1955-56 year At he time of apportionment, how- the Sioux Falls to Fargo portion of the Interstate system had not been included in the need ra- io, the governor said. When this lection is added, more interstate money will be forthcoming to the tate. Foss said the highway commission is well along on its 1959-6'j programming.

Completion of the is expected in October, tie The state will apparently be in good financial shape to match the 'ederal funds. As of June 30 the ilghway department has assets of 2V4 million dollars, after repayment of a three million dollar loan Tom the state general fund. "The balance of million dol ars indicates the departm was justified in borrowing money speed the construction program summer," Foss said. The loan was sharply criticized by some state officials and by Comptroller John C. Penne.

The financial report showed the highway department spent about million dollars during the 1957-58 fiscal year. A new punch card system of accounting permitted the department have its fiscal report com 1 pleted several weeks earlier than in other years. The electronic system delivered the report 14 days after books for the year were closed. Usually the final accounting is not available for four or five months. Latest firgures also reveal the department is making good headway on its current construction pro gram.

Of 62 projects included In -he 1958-59 program, 39 have been et to contract. The projects cost a total of $12,043,762. Estimated cost of the entire 195859 program is $46,267,000. have overwhelming congressional support for any immediate and bold steps to carry out his six- point Middle East program. Mansfield, assistant majority leader of the Senate, said the President should follow through on his address yesterday to the United Nations General Assembly "with hard and fast, proposals to implement each of his suggestions." The senator, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in an interview: "The President is on the right track and the peoples of the world will applaud our support of expanded U.

N. police forces to keep the peace, multilateral aid for economic development and technical assistance and all the rest. "Resolutions should be pressed immediately in the United Nations for approval of the program in concrete form. If any of them need congressional implementa- ion. I am sure the President can count on overwhelming support from Democrats and Republicans alike." If this is done, Mansfield said, Lhe pressure from peoples all over the world will be felt by the Soviet Union.

Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore), a critic of Elsenhower Middle East policy in the past, said he was "proud to be an American in the light of the Speech before the General Assembly." If prosecuted and convicted Goldfiue could receive up to one year in prison and a $1,000 fine. The decision whether to prosecute up the Justice Department. If it decides to do so, the case will be presented to federal grand jury, In urging the House to back Among its provisions, it would, ils group's lecommendation for Ve newspapers and magazines- contempt citation, Oren Harris (D-Jt, ne rlgM- to spread saibscription Ark), chairman of the subcommit-jj ncorne or more favorable tax that investigated over the period of the sked: subscription, rather than the "Is the Congress going to let an individual er the questions are relevant and! whisky dlst illers an addition pertinent? argued that "The legislative processes of this House tiave been thwarted." The only extensive argument against a citation came'from Rep. Thomas B.

Curtis (R-Mo). He said Court has overturned contempt citations on grounds 'exposure for exposure's sake Is not a prerogative of Congress." Both Goldfine and Sears said the House citation came as no surprise. Goldfine refused further comment. The President," Morse told the Senate, "laid down a program that will stand to the everlasting credit of our 'foreign policy." He too called for cgncrete steps to push It through the U.N. Sen.

Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Milnn), another frequent critic of administration, called Eisen- lower's proposals a program "for our own government, the United Nations, and. I might say, for Congress, and I personally support it." Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R-Ind) led the Republican rooters.

He called Eisenhower's presentation one of the greatest speeches he ever had heard. In the House too, Eisenhower's Mideast proposals drew bipartisan support. Among those praising it were Representatives John Vorys (R-Ohio) and Henry S. ReusS (D-Wis). Vorys Is a senior Republican on the House Foreign Affair's Committee.

McGovern WASHINGTON (AP. -The for- celd Hintz, who had been Russell Blasts Report Of U.S. Surrender Study WASHINGTON (AP)-A report that the Pentagon has been studying circumstances under which the United States might surrender to an enemy set off a furious blast today from Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga), the Senate's top military affairs man.

At the same time, however, the researchers denied they had gone into the matter at all. They drew backing from Sen. William F. Knowland (R-Calif), the Senate GOP leader. The affair already had sparked a White House-ordered investigation.

But press secretary James C. Hagerty said President Eisen- was TwoS.D.CAA Stations To Get New EcruiDment WASHINGTON (AP) The Civil Aeronautics Administration announced late Wednesday plans for spending a record 175 million dollars for new air navigation and traffic facilities. Nearly 2 million dollars will be spent in Minnesota, North and South Dakota. The program Includes: Installation of a new instrument landing system at Rochester costing $193,421. A new short range navigation system, called Vortac, at Grand Forks, N.D., costing $280,000.

Existing omnirange navigation; units, called Vors, will be combined with military developed tactical air navigation units to make Vortac systems, costing $208,000 each, at: Alexandria, Duluth and Redwood Falls, Bismarck and Minot. N.D.: Pierre and Philip. S.D. i. 11C IClt the most technically obscure-the revision of the 1954 Revenue Code "negligible" effect according to the have, revenue- wise, Treasury.

The technical revision bill, however, contained dozens of special benefits for particular groups of taxpayers. It was designed, according to its sponsors, to close loopholes in the law and eliminate ices) will go from its present billion dolalrs annually to mors than 700 billion dollars In the next, 15 years. A that money kicking around sound exciting? Just stick around and maybe you'll have a blcser hunk than present share of it. lUUpllUieS III Hie HUM unintended hardships and bene- Tomorrow. Aug.

15. J.OOfl. Senate (Continued from Pags 1) say to the Congress: 'I'm going to decide wheth- present. The excise tax measure would awards provided in its bill by adopting 46-42 an amendment, sponsored by Sen. John S.

Cooper (R-Ky). Reds (Continued from Page 1) fore being required to pay the $10.50 a gallon alcohol tax. The "forceout" period would be extended from 8 to 20 years. It also would ease the present 10 per cent admissions tax to exempt from tax all admissions less than $1. Although aimed chiefly at relief for movie houses, the would also apply to such things as ball games but not to horse or dog racing tracks.

This provision would cost 21 million dollars a year in revenue. The conferees kept in the bill a House-passed provision to exempt parochial schorls and other nonprofit educational institutions from payment of excise taxes on the troops in Lebanon. L'Human-isuch things as school buses and dividual scholarship grants In $250 a year, or a total of $1,000 for four years of college. But it would permit needy scholarship winners to borrow up to $750 a year from the government. The bill, as recommended by thr Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee, provided for scholarship grants of $500 a year, plus additional grants up to $500 a year based on need.

The effect of Cooper's amendment was to reduce the estimated cost of the scholarship program from 280 million dollars to 80 million. Sen. Lister Hill (D-Ala). chief sponsor of the bill, was joined by Senators Gordan Allott (R-Colo) ite, the French Communist organ, said "it is very pretty so speak of making flic Arab deserts blossom," but the Arabs want the foreign troops removed first. Both Pravda, the Soviet Communist party paper, and the Egyptian press denounced Elsenhow- er's plan because it was not based on immediate troop withdrawal.

The Cairo newspaper Al Ahram noted that the plan came a year and a half after the Eisenhower Doctrine, which it said proved a failure because it was unacceptable to "free Arabs." Peiping radio reported Gromyko's resolution demanding troop withdrawal but didn't mention Eisenhower's plan. The Voice of America said the Soviet Union heavily jammed its Soviet-language broadcasts of the Assembly debate yesterday, blacking out Gromyko's speech as well as Eisenhower's. communication bills. Crash (Continued from Page One) bies and a crew of 8 aboard. After hours of fruitless search across the wind-whipped Atlantic a British Royal Air Force rescue plane first spotted wreckage after getting a radar trace from a British Overseas Airways plane.

Tossing in the water were bb-i and Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn) in fighting Cooper's amendment. They argued that reducing the amount of the scholarship awards to $250 a year would defeat the purpose i of encouraging students to study harder and take tougher courses, and spurring schools to improve thoir curricula. Cooper, contended I amendment not only would cut the cost of the program but would have the effect "of bringing In more serious students, the ones who really want to go to college." amendment provides that UN (Continued from Page One) dent's proposals was favorable, sometimes cautiously favorable, except among the Arabs themselves. And the United States purpose was not to impress the rest of the world, but to impress the east of Gander, Nfld. Arabs.

Comment in Cairo was brusque and defensively hostile. Nasser still was using the Soviets as a potential bludgeon against the West. But in private, Arabs at the U.N., including U.A.R. representatives, indicated they were watch- mg and waiting for developments. Apparently they want something more.

winnerr'oT'naUonal defe'nsV arships would have preference in obtaining loans from the 315-mll- lion-dollar student loan fund authorized by the bill. Loans woud be made at 2 per cent interest, and a borrower who entered the teaching, profession would be f6rgiven his loan at the rate of one fifth for each year of teaching. The other major fight in long and at times bitter debate was over an amendment of Sen. Pat McNamara (D-Mich) to provide two billion dollars, to be matched by the states, for school construction and teachers' salaries. Several sponsors of the bill said adoption of McNamara's amend- iment would kill the legislation because of the unyielding stand taken by the House against grants for school construction in general.

The amendment was rejected 61-30. Besides providing for scholar- flated life rafts, the RAF reported. Apparently the big plane flew Into a terrific squall as she climbed away from Shannon. An American Trans World Airlines pilot, Capt. Everett Wolf, said in London Airport after flying from New York: "We hit a very bad squall and if that KLM plane had engine trouble she might really have been in a bad way.

"She would have been down in the lower strata where it was. really rough." A Pan American Airways cargo plane flying westward over the Atlantic reported it received an SOS radio signal at 9:08 a.m. The cargo plane was 450 miles Business (Continued from Past 1) 'ships and student loans, the Sen- things ahead for businessmen to ate measure would authorize grad- make and sell. Now for the reasons that America is going to get bigger and The Arabs are aware of the i more crowded and therefore need House (Continued from Pags One) ciedit me," McGovern said, mer manager of a now defunctiin various veterans hospitals in re taxi company testi-jcent years, was arrested here for fied today Teamster Union lead-'intoxication July 29. Officers quoted him as saying that after he left the Thebert home he wandered a- jbout Tuesday night and had spent lers took over the company before its president have iously.

vanished myster- jgry. Russell, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, de manded that Congress cut off all contracts for funds for such studies and for officials or employes involved. He introduced legislation to that end. Knowland joined Russell in the rider proposal, but at 'the same time said he had obtained a spe cial copy of the study, made by the Rand and studied it. Knowland said the study dealt with U.S.

policy in demanding VBC-uiu 4iiC) vi rt.iiioaiu naYt i preferred to accept the fabric ofj Hugh Wagner told the Senate: most of Wednesday taverns Communist lies rather than heed Rackets Investigating Committee 'here. ttie statement of a committee of I the unionists gave no explanation; Officers said Hintz had been plac- the Congress. This is the a but later complained of misman- ed on probation on a forgery charge warmed-over smear charge that agement by Dave Probstein, the, Minneapolis in 1946 and had serv- nfy political opponents leveled at president who disappeared in 1955 icd a year in jail on a similar me during the 1956 campaign. It and is presumed dead. charge in Sioux Falls in 1949.

He wes completely discredited then. Wagner's statement came after was fined in Sioux Falls in April mf bftt I decided not to resort to li-itestimony by Teamsters intoxication and passing bad surrender of Germany in World bM action at that time because Hi James R. Hoffa that he scarcely; checks. during the very bus i knew Probstein but had loaned -----------------phase of my election campaign." him $8,000. (the suit) is the only means The senators, who had spent Obi "510111 DOY I Jcnow of teaching these individuals; Wednesday trailing unsuccessfully: lesson.

It has always seemed toifor the identity of the higher-ups me that besmirching a man's pa- who squelched a 1953 House in- trtotism and loyalty is one of thejvestigation of Hoffa, switched sud- njofit cowardly and un-Ameiicanidenly to study of the taxi com- iffhftninffl KAll tactics that any human being caii'pany case. UlUIIIIIlIIU DU11 employ," McGovern said. Hoffa testified he and Owen (Continued from Page 1) and 65 per cent of parity. But the compromise bill eliminates proposed alternate price support floors of $1.18 a bushel for corn, 30 cents a pound for cotton and $4 a hundredweight for rice. It retains House provisions for continuing the 25-year-old concept of parity for computing support levels of cotton and rice.

It also gives corn farmers the choice of continuing i.ie present farm pro gram or accepting a new principle of calculating supports on the av erage of market prices for the hree preceding years. Corn grow' ers would also have the choice ol aking a floor of 65 per cent parity and no acreage allotments Parity is a legal standard deemed 'air to farmers in relation to their costs. The Senate bill would eliminate -he parity principle and substitute average market price method 'or calculating supports. It provides for a support floor of 60 per cent, with alternative floors of $1.15 a bushel for corn, 30 cents a pound for cotton, and $4 a hun dredweight for rice. Benson has called for lowering price supports to a range of 9( to 60 per cent of parity.

He also lias backed the "market price" meaning of the fateful contest. A key question is whether the area someday will come under Soviet economic or political domination. It would be difficult to find a bona fide Arab nationalist leader who wants to see Soviet Influence make significant gains. Even Nasser, for all his propaganda anci lis continued flirtation with Moscow, continues to fear the Communists. President Eisenhower now "ias reached for a safety vajve.

He las made a start toward relieving the dangerous pressure. What remains now is for the United States to build a climate of confidence in American intentions. Even before economic aid There are 114 million persons, Arabs need this psychological aid. driving age and based on illAil Hw IVlilCll Df Noal by Moulder a member of the un-American Activities Committee, ikying. a maiden names of their wives ion May 14, city park.

The youth, only son of Mr. and iMrs. William F. Vermillion, was have the highest respect! Hoffa said the money came, far George McGovern as one either the Hoburn or Tes tjBought to be on his bicycle the most loyal and patriotic Amer- Fleet two of their Michigan and as an able and outstand-j holdings, and that only $7,000 of ing member of Congress. (His con-1 it was paid back, sjtuents) should resent such unfair "i don't put nothing on my smear attacks made upon him by wife," Hoffa heatedly told the political opponents.

READ THE WANT ADS i I committee, ahen its chief coun- isel, Robert F. Kennedy, asked whether it would be necessary to jcall Mrs. Hoffa for questioning about the loan. near a tree when he was struck. Tun eon of Mr.

and Mrs. Bill Brosse, was standing about eight feet away. He was stunned but not believed seriously hurt. The Beresford fire department attempted to revive the Vermillion boy. The mishap was investigated by Union County Sheriff Ed Ekren and Coroner W.

Anderson. War I or Nazi Germany, Italy and Japan during World War II. He aid the report goes into the idea a different course might have been of advantage to the United States. That in general also is what the Rand an independent research firm, said in -a statement. "The question of negotiating with an opponent of the United States in a wartime situation treated solely in the context of termination of a war in which the U.S.

would be victorious," Rand said. Earlier, Hagerty told newsmen that Eisenhower ordered an immediate investigation of the surrender report. But Hagerty add; Uiate fellowships, as well as to the states for school laboratory institutes, and for establishing aptitude testing and guidance mJuch mo th nB3 yo -n-ams. The House bill has siml- already use or know about: ilar provisions. You nave only to project into At the request of Sen.

William time the millions of youngsters already born but still under marriage age to know that there will be a lot more families and a lot more' middle-aged productive workers 10 and 20 years from now. True, marriages and birth rates rise and fall as times turn exceptionally good or exceptionally bad. But remember, two million youths now turn 18 each year. Ten years hence there will be four million a year. And there's no reason to believe times will be bad in 1968.

E. Jenner (R-Ind), the Senate adopted by voice vote an amendment to exclude Indiana from the bill's terms and benefits. If that climate can be created, the Communists will have suffered an important defeat. The Arabs hint they are ready to listen. flsures of oresent will be'm Congress (Continued from Page 1) there wl11 have complex bills revising the -revenue Aesire ey laws, making adjustment in the excise tax laws, and setting up special tax relief for small business concerns.

The small business tax bill within 10 years. The auto industry confidently expects that the present 6 million families having two cars will have swelled to 12 milion by then. Industry leaders predict that just to take care of the greater population 15 years from now, with its added needs plus the add- to create, 22 million SEALED BIDS will be accepted to and including Sept. 6th, 1958, for Church building located 12 Miles So. 2 Milei East of Mt.

Vernon, on the Herman Wieczorek Farm Building size 30x50x12. Mail bids accompanied with ten dollars to CHRISTIAN UNITY PRESS 2301 Lincoln Ave. YORK, NEBRASKA Bids must be in by Sept. 15th. We reserve the right to reject any and all bidi.

support principle. Both House and Senate bills GUI ti PILES ir HEMMORHOID CONDITIONS PROMOTES HEALING LIFETIME GUARANTEE At Your Druggitl or nmlt to iox 1H, S.D. 1958 UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY! ed: "I would say the reaction was more one of curiosity than anger." Hagerty characterized the reaction that way when told that a senator, who asked not to be identified, had said "I've never seen the President so mad." WATH fYfflM FOR BEST STATEMENT "How 1 as a tenant established an agreement with my landlord to install a Pressure Water System." FOR BEST STATEMENT "How I improved my pressure water system." SEE US FOR COMPLETE DETAILS INTER COUNTY ELECTRIC ASS'N. Mitchell, S. D.

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About The Daily Republic Archive

Pages Available:
75,074
Years Available:
1937-1977