Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1953 — Page 10
PAGE TWO-A
f ' • *1 Here's the * : ENAMEL : : with a : : Pew deledflose: i r : ‘ ■ • ( * • ’*■ • • ** J ' ;l| • • That's DuiAMK—the semi- • • gloss finish for kitchenland • ‘ bathroom walls and wpod- * • work. Not dull—just enamel . • with the shine taken I of, • • and still washable. 1 * , BfMTOfll -ft . • — * TBS* I ' - * • * L; ' • • Easy to use. In 10 smart • • ■ • ■ rU i • e colors and white. Come in • and let us tell you about if. • • ■ V • ■ ■ - I H PHONE 3-303 Q. I 158 8. 2nd St. k . _
.New Location I - Dr. H. R. FREY [ \ OPTOMETRIST " . i —— 145 S. Second St. H First Floor Duke Bldg. Eyes .Examined 1 Glasses Prescribed and Vitted > • “ - ' . ' ' v it 11II' 1.. r . . ill LTHTTDQ* 9:00 A- M. to 5:00 P. M. Daily IP nvLlus. CLOSED THURSDAY AFTERNOONS. I £ Phone ik-2517 for Appointment. i . Public Auction 3 REAL ESTATE AND BUSINESS PLUMBING - HEATING - SHEET METAL - APPLIANCES “TO BEHOLD IN ONE UNIT” . h ’I P AS A GOING BUSINESS ( I Friday Evening March 6th - 7:30 P.M.. LOCATION—3OO Ea.t North Street, Dunkirk, Indian#. V \_ This business is well established and hoes larj?e volume. It is toe at led ih a 56x45 two, story building that is like new. The first floor has a modern display room for appliances, etc., that has all plate glass windows, plenty of room for ; parts department, officii equipment, etc. There is a storage room, tool room. Modern sheet metal shop with the best of equipment, lavatory, and stool, automatic furnace, all cement floors, recessed lighting. , The second floor is ultra modern apartment with beautiful large living room, extra large bedrooms, modem kitchen, large bathroom, plenty ot large closet space and wardrobes and cupboards. Inlaid linoleum in kitehen and bath, deep pile carpet over the rest of the house and Stairway. Automatic furnace and,hot water supply. The building Is part frame and part block with built up roof over store, standing seam roof over shop. Front "entrance from street and private stains from the shop. There is a rbof garden off the kitcijieh. The entire building is .insulated. There- a 5 room modern horni* op the same lot tor rental income. It has ifull bath on first floor, lavatory, stool, show er and laundry tubs in the basemeat, fruit room ahd'recreation room.’ Built in cabinets and breakfast nook in kitchen, enclosed back porcl with sink, good cistern, The : jnside is in good repair and has colored plaster walls. It is fully insulated and surrounded by nice shade. The business consists of plumbing, heating, sheet metal work an? appliances. It has franchises (for such items as American Standard: G. E. Appliances'; Crane; Kahler; Briggs; Eljer, etc.. Round Oak Bryant and Lenriox furnaces. The office is well equipped with two Globe Warner de|sks, Typewriter .desk. Safe. Adding several files, office chairs, stools, electric clock. etc. There are two Ford Truck? \ j- • t The Invoice of merchandise can be arranged to suit purchaser, but at present it runs about |8600.j The building, equipment, involc-e, extra home, etc., will sell as a going business and the owner will accept tlTc cash or eell on contract,’ < Possession of Business at once and the home days. TERMS —20% Cash on day of sale and balance upon delivery of Clear Title; or if purchased oh contract, we will try an 4 drrange terms to suit the purchaser. ?■. ■ ? ■ 1 \in Inspection can be, made at any time by contacting either the owners or auctioneers. '' '■ 1 l-L Mr. & Mrs. Chester L. Haley, - Owners i . • . .!| . — I ' ' I *. Gerald Strickler and D- S. Blair—Auctioneers C. W. Kent—Sales Mgr. , Sale Conducted by Tlie Kent Realty & Auction Cc. v Decatur. Indiana Phone 3-3390 Not responsible for accidents 20 26 ’ -’I ■' * -2? ' * ' U .. ' ’ • III' ' .0 :
Dream Submarine Never Leaves Land EAST HAMPTON, Conn.. UP— Renato Valli has a dream boat in bis back yard. It’s a submarine that never left home. Dreaming of adventure on the high seas, the Italian immigrant started building his submarine back in 1919. He riveted steel plates together by hand. Gradually, the craft took shape. It was hard wort. The lights burned tar Into the night in VaHi’s private shipbuilding plant. The novice shipbuilder began looking for someone to join hhn on hie planned adventures. Friends came to look at’the shell of steel that was beginning to look like a submarine, but most laughed at Valli’* dream, i Several years w-ent by and the factory worker began putting in less and less time on his project Discouraged by the lack of funds and the attitude of friends, he finally gave up the work. That was more than 20 years ago. By then, the! submarine was 27 feet long, looking a bit like a long sausage—open at the top —with a (pointed nose. Eventually, he would have built a windrotor and glass “windshield" on top. The rotor blades would have been geared to thd propeller shaft for use if the engine failed. Valli designed the craft so it could submerge a few feet under the waves, taking in air from a steel pipe. When visitors marvel ait the engineering skill apparently put into the craft, Valli tells them: “I’m no engineer. I don’t really know' much about ships. I had a' dream . . . that’s all.'' Now 62, Valli still talks wistfully about his dream of adventure. He hopes someone will take up the job where he left off. He wants to see his submarine in water before he dies. In the meantime. ’ the. factory worker is a practical man. When the fuel oil man to Valli's house, he goes to the little ship-building plapt in the back yard. It’s almost as though the’. Valli submarine were being refueled for a voyage as the oilman pumps his product into the hull. Valli’s dream boat is now a fuel tank. ■ ' \
\ . I I. By CHAR LIB KUHN VyES, BELIEVE t ’DIQ fwELL.WE KNOW MOW ISO IF YOU DELIVERED 1 I THERE'S NO USE OF US TRYIhH ’ DELIVER A Biqk T» MAD IT MAKES HER T’l A BILL THIS MORNIN’-J T’ TALK HER OUT O’ANY « j i uh mS 1 ! /cX ■ A* j j\ I pw» Ute *»*<*<*• !*«. w " r ' l Kuwff'
Methodic Vice, I Crime Cleanup For Coronation \ LONDON, UP — Wth little fuss and publicity, Londons police, aided by allied officials, are /moving into the "picked West End” for 4 big igspe-coronation cleanup of vice and < time: With typical British conservatism, London authorities decided to spread the camps gn over six months —i gradually, 'weeding put the bad elements ~—»o as not to cause newspaper headlines focusing attention on London’s vice and crime. L The plan is already showing signs of success. few days one newspaper or another carries a small paragraph tO the effect that street women halve been barred from certain hotels, that some overseas, of seas criminals have'ifyeen jailed, overseas, or returupd-from-over-ed out of bounds toy servicemen. Coming so irregularly these notices attract little attention. Scotland Yard has issued to police forces throughout Britain a “'black book” of than 300 criminals to be appn»hen<ied or kept under survetllaisi® .between now and the end of Mhe _ coronation festivities. b|; A special police “gwieral staff’’ has been set up at Yard to deal exclusively wit’lii coronation matters and is holding conferences under Police :<tpmmissioner Sir Harold Scott. Police and immigration ojfficers will cooperate to keep a .dose check on foreign, and others who might toe inspected to make some demonstraitibn against the Queen, enquiries be made into the background <£ everyone buying a seat in the frauds or a window view to watcbl,jfhe procession. Hl ■ i ; For a month before *||ie coronation. no workmen engaged oin the renovation and,cleaning of Westminster Abbeys the ceremony will be held, will .fee allowed in unless they have be|n satisfactorily screened. i||i Police already have Started the cleanup of the West Hfjd. known as Britain’s "square mi|p ofi sin.” The thousands’ of prostitutes in this small area are one |pf the biggest coronation problems. : The .women already have barred from many hotels in tli« ( area and landlords have been askjed to keep them away from American servicemen, who look on London as a week-end leaye An immediate result of this move was the hotels’ orrfer that no unaccompanied women i|would be served in West End brils. Senior American officers are now considering a plan.|o declare the "square mile of out of bounds to GJ.’s as a niunter to the growing number,of g*|tls, many from the provinces andLilhe continent, who arc finding way into the West End and: prostitutes. Stiff sentences have jwien handed out in the courts to iHphy Criminals caught while b taping up their operations in propagation for the c.oronatio'n. hi I I. 1 p, Democrat Wait Ads Britig Results dHH K dII i ; '•« ' * j ZHARLES E. BOHLEN, 49.'>ho as die late President' Roosevelt's rranslator is the only American who knows precisely wtyjt FDR ind Joseph Stalin said ■ ijo each other at the Tehran ana. Yalta conferences, has been accepted by i Russia as the new U. S.'-ambas-I sador. Bohlen (above) 'succeeds i jeorge F. Kennan
i . ■ u. • I , 1111 THE DECATUR. DAIW a DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
HK' r 'W" 1 F 'IB- wiß > •< - 'dMSt ’ w - '-Ok. wyw|g. / ■ I -V i * iL.i^^Biß9^B^^... QUADRUPLE AMPUTEE Airman 2/c Clarence Mosley of Paterson, N.J, Biti, up in bea at Walter Reed hospital, Washington, and practice* smoke ring*. Cigaret ia in holder stuck through bandage on what ia left! of one of his hands. The in which he was a gunner in Korea wan shot down over Communist lines and he spent, five days exposed to cold before the underground led him to friendly territory. Mosley, 22,1 {he U. 8. Air Force’s first quadruple amputee of the Korean war, Umtphfa feet and all fineers of both hands f Internationali C
Larceny : : NE\V HAVEN. Conn,, UP — Police i''figured it was the work >of SWtiimuscled men. They arrived aiitnrit conclusion after thieves eqtWedj a- stove repair shop and iremdved intact a 900-pound oil burnajh arid boiler valued at $212. ; I jii ! +— ': *1 j A hlorhmission was first appointed in 1522 by the Ohio Legislature t<j examine the practicability of a crinal; connecting Lake Erie with thq wii° River.
I Look at you . ; _ : ! -way out I l! : H l-M.U k I j! ‘ VVwlni W --r-kJ \ - irWiiiiiHiiimiiiilKii. | M ■ Wbl W MP \ T«/evi»ion treot-the BUICK CIRCUS HQUI-wry foertk Iwtoay. i’ I • 1 i, . 1 s ■ / i I JU 1^- J ■ I v ' • ' ■ ' • ' L THE oriEATEST I DIIIAIT NN N ,s a new k* n d of V 8 Engine-the first Ftrebajl that brings the 1953 Buick SPECIAL up to 30 h JBBf raßFUimk 1 VB—and the world’s most advanced VB, mfih in fewer seconds than the mighty 1952 IN 50 GREAT YEARS I * n an ? passenger car to reach B.S to 1 Roadmaster. i Jb H , compression. In every Special is a newly n . _ , _ . I . designed F-263 Fireball 8 Engine with the But theae Golden Anniversary Botcka put THB getaway of any 1953 Buick-Special, highest horsepower and compression ever \ “ e “ < * ,n more ,han tllne and Super or Ro ADM ASTER-* is* in one offered in this Series. Ij p word, dazzling. ’J j To get fullest benefit from these brilliant X ou .* rc T* 7 out ? ront in Bty,e ’ in oomfort * Hj; Two things Recount for this. First: increased engines, Buick engineers designed a new ease-and. very defiI horsepowers i and compression ratios. D*naflow with two turbines instead of one. nitely, in value. Second: Buick’s pew Twin- Turbine Result: flash-fast getaway-less sound-and ( We’d like toprove that to you—while you’re ■I I ? Dynaflow Drive.* improved efficiency—added to the infinite sampling any one of the greatest Buicks in ii I I In every SUPER and ROADMASTER for 1953 smoothness of this power transfer. Getaway fifty great years. Why not drop in thisweek? | o» Ronlmaster, optional et extra cost on other Series. ■ ' WHEN BETTEE AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM Saylors Motor Sales ! N. 13th St. Phone 3-2710
Copper Coup CAiNTON, N. Y.. UP-The V. S. Steel Corporation has bought 287 acres of Ignd near Pyrites, where large deposits of copper pyrites have been reproted. The land is in the foothills of the Adirondack*. Colchester, in Essex, Britian’s oldest recorded tow|n. dates from about 40 A.1)., and is said to be the home of the mythological Old : King Colri. according to the British Travel Association. ■ '. • i\ \ I
Two Cities Compete For TV In Italy MILAN, UP — A. dispute toi; -dominance in television is rapidly developing in Italy, with the Milan and Rome headquarters of the Italian radio monopoly at loggerheads. The dispute was touched oft recently by Rome headquarters of RAI. the government -i controlled outfit running radio arid TV programs. It purchased a new television station and a huge building to house it as a first step towards extension of TV programs, so far limited to the northern regions of Piedhiont and Lomlbardy, to central and southern Italy. R j; RAl’s Milan headquarters, wliich did the pioneering work in this field and inaugurated last April the first regular prograifis in Italy regarded the move as an attempt to take over complete control of tV. . > i Milan’s TV authorities immediately gave an order to rush construction of a new big TV studio at the local RAI headquarters, ostensibly as a means of expanding the present’ three-hour daily programs to nine hours daily. Whatever thej outcome will be of this north-south dispute, the progress <>f television in Italy remains conditioned this year, as it 'was last, to the amount of tax money the government will throw into construction of qualified communications between northern rind southern Italy. Because of the mountainous character of the country, the possibility of extending TV r to increasingly more subscribers is subordinate to creation of a series of expensive “radio bridges” and to the laying of hundreds of miles of eO-axial cables. Some 5.G00 subscribers to TV programs were listed in Milan and Turin at the end of lrif>2, the subscription fee temporarily having heen set at 9.000 lire ($14.25) Annually. i ! The consist mainly Os old films,' but RAI has already suc-
cessfully experimented with transmitting sports events, pending the training of talent for other types of Sl|o>WS. The enthusiasm of local radio industrialists who have been investing large sums In production of TV sets, was dampened by a statement of Sergio Pugliese, head of RAl’s television branch, that in 1953, Italy can count on 50,000 Itol fan-produced sOtri and 50,000 imported sets. The industrialists pointed out that these quantities are far abov\e the real purchasing power. They fear 50,000 foreignmade sets in 1953 would chase them out of the market since sets produced in countries where man.j•> \ ■ \
B E E F.. Roast 39k SWISS EO C SIRLmM T-BONE SKfu. CLUB ■ n " 7 '•*'< ‘’ L "I ■ " ■ • 4'Center Cut Slices ; \ BACON. ■ S— 39c PICNIC NAM . 39c Whole or Half-Sliced FREE •> \ * BACON Briskets «>. 25c Try Some Today ' Jumbo Size Blue Goose Brand Pascal Celery Maine Potatoes ■J.i9c sta ik Mellow-Mild Soft-Light Brown Burco Coffee > Sugar ; 77c rh - 2 ms -23c Goodin’s Food Market NEXT TO CORT THEATRE
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1953
ufacturers already have amorlxed their special equipment are cheeper. The complaints at Italian Industrialists may induce the government to correct , the import quota. So far only 5,000 licenses for 1953 have been issued, and they still lack ratification. Democrat Want Ads Bring Result* TEEPLE ' MOVING a TRUCKING Local and Long Distance ' PHONE 3-2607
