Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 283, Decatur, Adams County, 2 December 1954 — Page 9

Buckingham Palace Will Have Theater Most Exclusive Os London's Theaters LONDON (INS).— London’i newest, smallest, and most exclusive movie theater will soon open — inside Buckingham Palace. The theater, designed to seat 88

get these outstanding Egfir si w-imww nims • THE EASY T Another GOODYEAR Special! A,t Pur P° se “ Full Siz e H” x 14” x 2'/ 2 ” W CUSHION 98c Regular $1.98 Value 1 * ( - BSIT 1 X~ 1954 GENERAL ELECTRIC S—- DELUXE DRYER (" REGULAR $229.95 p' ) - LIMITED TIME ONLY I si sl7 9’ 5 ss°down SAVE $50.00 d. <9 o iSEfflyjßii Model % JrOßs>' DA 520 General Electric Employees *P JBL A WEEK y&Sp Eligible and Welcome » H HIAA 'Ow H Wf' ■ . wi|h -~ SUMKBANITES iy GOWVEAHT • Up to 91 % more starting traction • Up to 39% more stopping traction This sensational traction • More rubber on the road for quieter operation — ' * s yours for longer wear . *IOO DOWN No need to shovel out ... or suffer costly delays. Get Only H TIRE! Suburbanites by Goodyear. The Suburbanite’s powerful- JI-—— — i 1 multi-cleatcd tread has 1856 knife-like edges that take As — hold in snow, slush and mud to pull you through. Stop little ■ iJ A WEEK! in — make your deal for the extra safety — extra traction » ■ of new Suburbanites by Goodyear NOW! . 11 —- I good/Vear service STORE I 121 N. 2nd St. Decatur, Ind. Phone 3-2009 B HOURS: Mon. Tu««. Wed. Frl. 8:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Thur*. 8:30 to 12 ■ SATURDAY: 8:30 A. M. to 9100 P. M.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

pernons, is being built largely as a result of Queep Elizabeth’s belief that educational films should play' an important role in the instruction of her children. When the theater is completed in April especially selected films will become part of the regular lessons .of Prince Charles and princess Anne. At the present the only private mevie projection facilities available to the royal family are (located a few blocks away from the Palace In Clarence House, resi-

dence of the Queen Mother and Princes® Margaret. The children now are rationed to one movie a week. Every .Thursday following their dancing class they are driven to Clarence House where they are shown a program that never fails to include their favorite, a Mickey Mouse cartoon. The Queen will also use the new theater to view-feature films as well as the home movies she and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, enjoy taking’* whenever they travel.

Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, December 2, 1954.

The theater, being built in a ground floor dining room formerly used by the household staff, will have a stage and orchestra pit in case Princess Margaret wishes to indulge in hier flair for theatrical productions. - International Falls—One year** _cut of pulpwood in Minnesota, if stacked-eord-style 4 feet wide and 4 feet high, would reach from the center of Minneapolis to the center of New York City.

Letters To Editor Popular In Russia Russ Readers Sound Off In Epistles MOSCOW (INS) — One of the best-read sections of a Soviet newspaper is the letters-to-the-edi-tor column. Published letters never deviate fropi the paper's — and the government’s — major policies. the mailbag columns day-by-day carry some sharp criticisms of other elements of Soviet life. Some writers indignantly call attention to violations of “Communist morality,’’ customers complain about the products they buy—or can’t buy — jtnd others sound off With personal gripes. Literary Gazette publishes a letter signed "D. Blatt” which scolds the souvenir-manufacturing artel (cooperative) in Essentuki, a North Caucacus resort town. The artel’s big items for the tourist trade are wine cups aijd vodka glasses inscribed with what Comrade Blatt describes as “illiterate verses in praise of strong drink.’’ he cites: “Before you sit aown for a bite, try vodka for the appetite.’* Sniffs Comrade Blatt: “A fine memento for a health resort. Who wants these trashy sentiments in his home — even if they are etched in glass’ B. Panov writes Izvestia about the tribulation of a Soviet motorcyclist. It s hard to buy spare parts, even wheel spokes, Panov grumbles. Filling stations are too far apart and some tow’ns bar motorcycles

O hw w/tf f/ey wtf?2 | !Kf D 0... and they’re here WfflM *L at BABER’S iUk- A £ irEnfiHA 4 WH m 3 Kffl 111 LO*D ELGIN OAKLAND 21 ~w,15 $Kn H’ H ’ M ' UK told cast. Paddld lerthtr strap. ’IjU T t iPLTn n rm n i9Kttb iady flow CAMCUIA Gractfu) sl9 E M '■ AW IflMDWfcfe AWftt Bb\ <Mt>< * '"**' la j ■ ■ BVWSKVHMMMMHM if ar£s?!%ss2»B9» — J IL IAO Y HOW IA VONNI2I l«w«h $7500 I . M .^ ln . ~ . , <■.-. HL Slack l«ia, iwirt and pi«M. bent,. */ J— I Jt/Tt OCtANSIM. 17 jawals. Shock- F I 7 K i»ft«< with watdf rniilant* c*M. *47 — V zfTSVw / V A ■ it ""| I. . * I r**° n *ASY f L 221 n "* , « I SHtIWOOO. Smart matchin| u- <J|O7S ( .L'SkHSLIJ Of pannon band. 17 jtwtl movamant *t7— | *"* ■> iT3lSttl.rS-RSMS« : faivnfry - , WuEV ’~W ■ -UL in n hi mu VtlM, *" MSY nKMS 10 diamond A* 1 kL --"SqEHpF I ou ETTe y r ~ ’x f,ic ** •"d- tm I vw nt ’■ iMHmm *frw<*d yWatf WATCH "THI HOIN HOU«".,. A Qnut Dramatic Uaw MTV 1 "" e " 1 fatroma •Fwr ogBMAg >oe nevkwiq. Jr — I V’» > «')v BABER S ‘ ®W 7” * ' • ® RMpur DECATUR FORT WAYNE J $5.00

r . — ' 1 I y* -k J[ -A B If wifcß la. Ta/fw?* ItsLß' W 1 >r*T’ «FJL<’ .a? z • , fl _^ ; y<] W • :■• >/ p r? jlhk. a ' < RhA kk. fa I nry^j% *ay ‘ > SIX LADS AND LASSES selected as 4-H Club health award winners are shown Iq Chicago, at the 33rd 1 National 4-H Club Congress and International Livestock exposition. From left: Bobby Smith, Bel- |; videre, N. C.; Gyla Ann Dewitt, LaGrange Ind.; Marvell Hester, Sycamore, Ga.; Jacqueline Provost, I Woonsocket, R. I.; Geraldine Fritz, Grantville, Kan.; Harold Berger, Hillsboro Ore. Each won a 1 S3OO scholarship, international Souitdphoto/ I

from main thoroughfares. Pans Actors Leningrad actor M. Kanevsky takes off on juvenile actors in a letter to Sovietsky Culture. In the first place, Kanevsky snorts, children can’t act. The best they can do is give a “more or less audible” reading of the lines. Making noises like an actor who’s just had one too many scenes stolen by a juvenile, Kanevsky asserts child actors develop an inflated sense of their own importance, stay up too late at night and neglect their school work. “What’s wrong," he suggests, “with having actresses play children’s parts’”

Soviet editors’ mailbag contrL buttons lambast everything from electric razors which wear out after a few weeks’ use to the failure of local party and government officials to stamp out moonshine vodka. Top government leaders never come under fire in the published Soviet letters-to-the-editor as they frequently dd In American and British papers. But the average Soviet citizen feels the mailbag column gives him a real — If minor — voice in public affairs. Sacramento — Four years after the American flag was raised at Monterey, California was admitted into the Union, thereupon becoming the 31st state.

SECTION TWO

“ 1 • 1 " -- "J—’ I - ■ I- - - -•-» Graham To Visit Scotland In '55 LONDON (INS) — Evangelist Billy Graham will launch his 1955 British "crusade” in Scotland. F. Roy Catteil, general secre* tary of the British Evangelical Ah' Hance, who has just returned from discussing next year’s arrangements with Dr. Graham, said Graham plAns to sail from New York March 13 and hold his first meeting in Glasgow' March 21. Kelvin Hall, scene of Industrial and other exhibitions, has been reserved for six weeks for Graham’s "All Scotland Crusade,” sponsored by the “Tell Scotland” movement under the chairmanship of the Rev. Tom Allan.