Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 53, Decatur, Adams County, 4 March 1954 — Page 10

PAGE TWO-A

New Panel System Speeds Up Housing New Development At U. Os Illinois CHAMPAIGN, 17 Hl., UP -v The University of Illinois Small Monies Council has announced development of a new panel system for erecting exterior walla of one-story houses of almost any design. The system is intended to simplify home building and cut construction coats, the university said. It was developed under a grant given by the Lumber Deal-

MB ’* bey 0 I Ti’ Ml Ml PURPOSE ENAMEL/ PHfcburgfc \ ENAMEL I U Outs> jLl Lee Hardware PITTSBURGH PAINTS-Kop that lIKTHWTBI look long"

VUmtUc Control ■l' 2 ■ *- yeaM yteafat Awfa 1 ALL THIS AUTOMATICALLY: • One knob tunes ALL 82 VHF-UHF Channels ... automatically • Switches in the VHF or UHF antenna ... automatically • Selects the proper VHF or UHF circuit . . . automatically • Switches in two extra UHF amplifiers ... automatically • Shuts out annoying picture interference . . • automatically • Electronic shielding stops radiation .. . automatically — ■ - -a ■ k. ? '■ Iw Ky ~ ** //,/ '■ Jt gs ' . ... tum-yMsy **• — — as eti Wfcs'Mh ** < \ — — • | ■--— z - .• WMwilWl' __2. 2~_l_.'__‘ ... the BILTMORE Model UC-2142 ... Functional design open-faced console cabinet in Limba wood honey Blonde finish. Vu-matic control and single-knob tuning of all VHFUHF channels. Crystal clear 21" picture. Xfwwgz Performance • Engineering • Styling! _ . 4...-, ■. : . - — - - „. i .irnMji 3 more reasons why it will pay you Tho FAIRMONT Model UC-2144 .. . “ n e D c TV Luxurious, period-styled Mahogany finish Replace With Raytheon Big Screen TV. ““ Ole Ml,in " 'i* and" Vo., oid „H. ,OV. >od. In-2 year. I> «onal door-pulls. Vu-matic poyt 5 days home trial - y&MHI Houwktepint/ j ng o f o || VHF-UHF chan- ; I ne | s Lif e .|ik e 21" picture. zsD RIEHLE’S I NEW 1954 LIME! A . ...... 1.,.. <' ~ ~y-- -— — - ■’2--r- 7- '•_ :■■ -• ■■■ ■— Just West of 13th Street on Nuttman Avenue Decatur, Ind.

era Research Council. The system was shown at a short course in home construction to building* material dealers, builders and contractors. The panels, which can be assembled completely by lumber dealers or builders and trucked to the site, are designed so they can be used for a large variety of house plans. Two-Man Job Previously, panelisation of exterior walls had been tied to a specific house plan or to the operations of a specific builder, the university said. . . With the panels, two men in a single day can erect the exterior walls of a house approximately 1.000 square feet in slxe, according to Profs. James T. Lendrum and

BLONDIt — ' ” MT'LL BLONDIE |THE LABELS WERE Jl' u VoX] I BUT WITHOUtJI 'TIXBE A J"" I AT SOME iS THE BARGAIN WASHED OFF, SOpy lABELS. WE V I SURPWSE ) \ DRIED PRUNES X(SURPRISE! I GOT IN THESE I GOT THEM' W»T KNOW( AN ° ® ASY FOOO -) V^L 2 «s>' CANNED GOODS FOR WHAT’S a 7Jt" o z> ■ PRICE V 1 Zjr -aTHeMrz* 2>--Z Ir* — T “Mr J Sk'n Er »■<! 3

Rudard A. Jones, who directed the research. Carpenters do not have to cut and fit studs, plates, sheathing or siding on the Job. The panels essentially are a stud wall framework covered with sheathing and siding, The panels are tied together into a wall by a continuous header, a double 2 x 6 fastened to the top of the panels around the entire perimeter of the house. f~ Twist Os Fate PROSPECT, Conn.. JJP — When Mrs. Eva McCarragher was told that her husband. Steven had suffered a cerebral hemorrhage, she collapsed. They were taken to a hospital in the same ambulance. Mrs. McCarragher died; her husband recovered. Scrupulous Thief WAPAKONETA, 0., UP — A burglar who robbed a local grocery probably had some scruples. He failed to take containers for the March of Dimes contributions, which contained several dollar bills.

THE DECATUR DAIL? DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

i J** I*"*** 1 *"*** Idl WEfrß Tjf -W- y v-z* Jg x '■ • W '•SHr*'? '* .. B. . • A "CHIAP DIAL" la the way Capt. H. E. (Tom) Collins describes this Russian MIG-15 jet plane after flying it at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, O„ where he Is shown standing in front of it, Collins, from Port Arthur, Tex., also flew the plane In tests on Okinawa. This Is the " plane landed in Korea by a North Korean pilot, who received a $l«0,000 reward from the U. S, government The plane ia smaller than the F-8« Sabre jet, costs an estimated |IOO,OOO to build. It lacks much of the safety equipment and many other features of the Sabrejet (International J

Teachers'Politics - Hot Issue In Japan Youthful Democracy Facing Tough Test TOKYO, UP —Japan’s youthful democracy is facing one of its toughest tests in, a dispute over political activities of teachers. The government wants a strict law banning the teachers from classroom support of any political party or belief. But the teachers’ union charges that the government actually is proposing thought control and a return to World War 11 Fascism. .The argument resembles somewhat the wrangling in America over whether teachers Should be required to take anti-Communtst oaths, but one important difference makes the question more vital to the free world in Japan than in the United States. The Unitea states nas a wealth

COMPLETE CLOSING OUT Public Auction We, the undersigned, will sell at Public Auction on the John iiilgeman farm, 7 mites West of Decatur, Indiana on U. S. 224 to Magley then 1% miles North to the Salem Evangelical and Reformed Church, then first farm West, on ■ -—r-. —-—-— SATURDAY MARCH 6 - 1954 At 10:00 A. M. CST 23 — HOLSTEIN CATTLE — 23 T. B. & Bangs Tested 2 Registered Cows, 6 yrs. old, milking 60 lb. each: Registered Cow. i yr. old, will freshen in April; Registered Cow, 9 yr. old, milking 40 lb., pasture bred; 4 First Calf Holstein Heifers, were fresh in Novem-’ her, milking good flow; 2 Holstein Cows, 7 & 8 yrs. old, due to tfreshen In April; 3 Holstein Bred Heifers, freshen this Spring; Yearling Open Heifer; 4 Holstein Heifers, 4 to 6 months old; November Bull Calf; 1 Holstein Steers. MILKER & DAIRY EQUIPMENT Surge Two Unit Milker with Extra Pail; 39 Gallon Hot Water Heater; Sunbeam Electric Clippers and Grooming Brush; Several TO Gallon Milk Cans. - HOGS —6 Poland & Hampshire' crossed Gilts, farrow last of March. HAY & STRAW— 2OO Bales Clover, Alfalfa & Timothy Mixed Hay, wire tied; 400 Bales Wheat Straw, wire tied. TRACTOR, COMBINE, BALER, PICKER, IMPLEMENTS Minn. Moline Model “U” 1950 Tractor, fully equipped, in Ist class condition'T~’‘Heat Houser” tor Model *‘U”; MM 3 Bottom Tractor Plow, •on rubber;" Cobey 9 ft. Pick Up & Carry Disc, on rubber, new in 1952; MM Rotary Hoe; Dunham 8 ft. Cultimulcher; MM Side Delivery; MM 16-7 Grain Drill with fertilizer attachment, new last Fall; MM 69 Harvester 1950 Combine; MM 2 Row 1949 Corn Picker; MM 3 Section Spring Tooth Harrow, mew; MM 12 Disc Fertilizer Grain Dr|ll, good; Case Pickup Bailer, good condition. FORD TRACTOR and EQUIPMENT Ford Tractor, 1952, with 310 Hours Use; Cultivators; Heavy Duty Industrial Type Ford Manure Loader: Utility Blade; Pick Up Box; Dearborn 7 ft. Power Mower, new in 1952; Ford 2 bottom 14 inch Tractor Plow; Blackhawk Corn Planter with Fertilizer Attachment, for Ford, new in 1952; Dearborn Buzz Saw, for Ford; Heat Houser for Ford; Set Ford tire Chains. ...J . —~ IMPLEMENTS and MISCELLANEOUS Gpod Factory Made Rubber Tire'Wagon with extra good 16 ft. Rack; New 16 ft. Wagon Pack; GI Tractor Manure Spreader; Forney Electric Arc Weldink Outfit; Weber French 8 Hole Hog Feeder; Winter Ttpe Hog Fountain; 2 Compartment Hog House 9x15; Brooder House 12x14; 6 ft. Water Tank; Portable Paint Sprayer; 295 Gallon Gas Storage Tank; Oil Drums; 2 Steel Tire Wagons & RAcks; Chicken ■'coders & Fountains; Appleton 4 Roll Corn Shredder; McDeering Corn Binder; 2 Wheel Trailer with Stock* Rack, good; Double Hog House 9 by 15, on skids; Small Tools and other articles. NOTE—THIS MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT IS IN GOOb CONDITION. POWER SAW —30 inch Craftsman Power Chain Saw.' \ TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. JOHN HILGEMAN & . —Owners KARL SNYDER • , . • . ••• • . Roy S. Johnson and Ned Q. Johnson —Auctioneers — Vance Wilson, Ossian State Bank.—Clerk Lunch will be aorved Uy Ladieo of the Church? ' ?5 1 4

of experience in protecting individual liberties, but Japan is only three years old as an independent democracy and is taking Its baby steps in the very shadow- of Communism's second strongest world power, ißed China. One faltering step and the island empire could stumble and fall to CommunismMinister's Warning In their youthful enthusiasm to make freedom work, some Japanese government leaders frankly suspect the teachers’ union, representing all public school instructors. of spreading left-wing sympathies contrary to democratic education. Until less than a generation ago, Japanese educators accepted their government without question and taught, students the . policies laid down by military dictators. Now-teacners, like all other Japanese, are free to think and vote the way they desire, but the,, government fears the union has gone too far. The parliament's vice minister for education, Isamu Fukui, charged the union is “an organization of teachers with distorted political

views" which “is guiding and wielding sway over the education circle of the country." He warned that teachers’ political activities have made controling legislation “imperative.” Union's Answer ” Not so, said the chairman of the union's central executive commit* tee, Takeshi Kobayashi. He warned that the government bilb, soon to be introduced into the Diet, is a front for “the ominous bugaboo of Fascism.” “Should the bill be given legislative approval, teachers would be considered as maintaining neutrality in the realm of education only when they are giving lectures exactly in accordance with the policy of the government then in power,” he added. Bet Weft these two extfenies, tlie president ofrespected, mis-sionary-supported Rlkkyo University said teachers’ “restrictive. Jaws” are “inevitable” in Japan because of what he called a “cancer that is frustrating the effort to build up a democratic society.” The university head, Junzo Sasaki, said many Japanese show a ’ 'Jack of gooff Jsenke” in adopting democratic ways. “The fundamental reason for the absence of this sense,” the educator said, “is to be found in the fact that the Japanese had neither training nor knowledge of the individual .dignity, truth and freedom that are the fundamental’concept of democracy.” At the same time, he cautioned the government against excesses that would “place all educational departments under its control.” Kicking Gong Around MILFORD, Conn., UP — The board of education deliberated for hours on whether to use horns, bells or gongs in a new fire alarm system. After it agreed on gongs it was learned the plans called for horns. The board reconsidered and , voted for horns. .. .? — ' ■ ■ Potatoes And Radiation LARAMIE, Wyo., UP'— University of Wj’Sming extension service pathologists are testing the ef-fects-of radiation on ring rot bacteria that affects potatoes. 1 Gifts & for You — WELCOME WAGON fmm Your. Friendly Business Neighbors end Civic Social J i*rv Un th* occasion oft The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthdays EngagementAnnouncemanta Change of residence Arrivals of Newcomers to City j Phone 3*3190 or 3-3966

FARMERS ATTENTION The Following Grade* of Fertilizer Are AVAILABLE NOW 12-12-12 3-18-9 8-16-16 3- 9* lß 5-20-20 3-12-12 5-10-10 0-20-20 4-16-16 5-10-20 10-10-10 2-12-6 0-20-0 20.6 7, and 33 1/3% Nitrogen Also All Kinds of Field Seeds NOW AVAILABLE THEO. BULMAHH Phone 3-9106

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