Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 176, Decatur, Adams County, 28 July 1955 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE

- J'J y. J ■■ ■ '■ Mt'eti ~w. ;.*>. VACATION NEEDS! I* ■ . ■ ♦ LARGE SELECTION OF SUN GLASSES KODAK FILMS — FLASH BULBS CARA NOME SUN BURN CREAM COPPERTONE SUN TAN OIL SHULTONS BRONZTAN ’ SEA & SKI TANNING CREAM SUN’N’SURF SUNBURN CREAM SWIM CAPS — LUNCHEON NAPKINS PAPER PLATES — PAPER CUPS INSECT REPELLENT CREAM, LOTIONS A BOMBS 1 Gal. PICNIC COOLER ...... $3.19 Keep* liquids Hot or Cold % Gal. PICNIC JUG $1.79. SMITH’S REXALL DRUG STORE WHATS THE BEST WAT TO CHOOSE PAIHT FOR MT HOME’ Jf-nAWM* Sf-nSHir - TOSS a ami : neighbm • benjamin hooie malh “See my Benjamin Moore Dealer” ... is right! Here's why we recommend Moore's House Paint ’ " It goes on quickly and easily... has high hiding qualities... lasts for years and years. And it's available in a MOUSC large choice of excellent colors at a Paint very reasonable price. Moored Consu/f vs aEouf your painting questions. e W7j PHONE 3-3030 -eLU 158 s - Second St

Kelly llry rh'iiiiiiis WILL BE CLOSED August Ist to 6th Ind. FOR VACATION! PUNT OFFICE WILL BE OPEN FOR RECEIVING ONLY! !| / " , . ' ' Kelly Dry Cleaning 427 N. 9th St. ’ Phone 3-3202

BLONDIE _ ■ •A?-;"-..: ' " . Illill Mi 11 mn <r 0 F course 1DO•• | IwtVES ARE DELICATE ANO Wil |W WELL WHAT IF SOME HE WOULDN'TJ** 1, C BuT WHy DO'Wives FRAIL LITTLE CREATURES ANO I t ( huSBAND SHOULD SAY 2 *-l •* J— D*CWOOaH KEEP ASKING TWEIR they have to BE constantly) i 1 DON'T LOvE YOu‘») ''‘"-'lt—-"' DO YOU <X HUSBANDS that REASSURED OF ThEiC? t— , TNO, I PON T LOVE YOU - STILL LOVE) < SAME QUESTION' HUSBANDS'LOVE j z* “ ' ?,<L ” -J I @r-3T? T---J z-Mj x , L RRBd-Z-ZZ-SSMB-J

1 % lAil> 4 LliWj» zvr-i* ■ >’ - - 'u' *- - - ; i lifii iilWl SEVERAL OF THE BOY SCOUTS from Decatur practice setting up the cook tent in anticipation of their upcoming trip to Beaver Island. Mich. Helping out are Steve Everhart and Dick Linn.

Miracles Missing TKLEY, England, (INS) — A British marriage expert has warned that marriage counselors are no wiser. than their clients and carinot “work miracles.” John H. Wallis told a meeting of British marriage counselors that “we are not in a position to tell (clients) how to run their marriage, still less can we do it for them.” Rare Bill WILMINGTON, Del. (INS) — There’s a display in the lobby of the People’s Bank and Trust Co. that's rarer than a $3 bill. It’s an 111 bill — with a |1 on one side and a $lO on the other — marked with proper signatures and serial numbers. Previously, one was picked up by a New York City bank and it's estimated 16 more of them are in circulation. Engineers Take Meat Temperature PHILADELPHIA (INS) Engineers have figured out away to take the temperature ot meat. Minimum internal temperatures of smoked meats —haras, bacon, shoulders and butts, wieners, sausage and balogna —must be maintained to kill off bacteria. Generally to be on the safe side — and not knowing the internal temperatures — meat processors overcook (or smoke) the meats, which causes the meat to shrink. The new system uses a needlelike thermometer, connected to an electronic recording instrument. Inserted in the meat during smoking it measures the internal temperature, eliminating the need for over-processing. In turn, this increases the meat quality, keeps the flavor properly sealed in. and improves the texture and shelf life I of the meat.

THE DWCATTTH DAH.Y DEMOCRAT, DWCATTTR, INDIANA

New Type Pavement Is Being Developed May Revolutionize Highways Os Future MARTINSVILLE. Ind. (INS)—A new type pavement developed by a Martinsville brick company president may revolutionize roads of the future by returning them to the past. Emmet Poston, president of the Martinsville brick company and the Poston Brick and Concrete Products company of Springfield, 111., is the developer of the pavement, which he calls Postonway. The four-inch thick ceramic pavement bears several times the shock and heat load sustained by 10 inch concrete surface. But the brick costs 13.46 a square yard compared to $3.55 for the concrete. In tests which led the U. S. navy to recommend the brick’s development on a “larger scale” it was learned that Postonway supported more than the 50,000 pound weight impact per wheel required by the navy which in turn is several times the minimum load, allowed on most state highways for all wheels on truck axle. It was further pointed out that the full economy of the substance won’t be realized until machines are developed for laying the brick and the brick itself is produced In mass. . During the naval tests at Wilmington, Del., it was learned that the maximum Hre loads for the brick were 65,000 pounds at 80 pound tire pressure and 56.000 pounds at 300 pound tire pressure On four inch subbase and 74.000 pounds and 60,000 pounds at these pressures over eight inch subbase. Exposure tests using a navy type F7U 3 jet with afterburner, showed temperatures of 417 to 511 degrees fahrenheit no damage to the pavement or joints. Detroit —Automobiles in 1025 averaged only about 22,000 miles before thjy were scrapped. Now the age at which motor vehicles are deemed useless has risen to an average of 85.000 miles. p Pt.,l Csm‘. I Ik * .... « A. VERDICT was withheld in tfnexpeetgd death of Mrs. Mary Donovan, 37 (above), daughter-in-law of Maj, Gen. William J. (Wild Bill) Donovan of World War n OSS fame. She wasfound dead in the Donovan summer home in South Dartmouth, Mass., by her mother- • i in-law. She was the mother ,ot I five children.— (intemationaO

Bowl Idea DALLAS (INS) — The Idea for beginning the Cotton Bowl Football game grew out of a trip to the Rose Bowl. Curtis Sanford, a Dallas oilman, originated the plan en

x si 1 jf /W //IS IS Jss / i 7— t ___ - BLk - r - - \ x -HMHI — wsSSSS«« 8 " ,s ■ -J ■■•- I I • ■ The Great Practi cal Luxury ! ■< • /This message is addressed particularly to those who to return its owner a larger share of hisoriginal investdhve been thinking about purchasing a Cadillac- ment than any other motor car built in the land, who, for one reason or another, have not con- Andthen consider Cadillac’s economy of operation. sidered acting on the impulse this year. <» „ /■ r The car will run as far on a gallon of gasoline as For you, there is interesting and valuable informa- most stan d ar d automobiles—and it is so soundly built tion in the paragraphs which follow. an( j so SOU ndly engineered that it is all but free from T i r ?■* l, any save routine service requirements. In the first place, there is no reason why anyone J should ever put off ordering a Cadillac—once the And here is the most interesting news of all: If you decision for ownership has been made. For a Cadillac ac t guick/y, the chances are that you can get early represents one of the soundest and most practical delivery of a 1955 Cadillac! investments in the automotive world. • of ordere _ but You can become the owner of a 1955 Cadillac for many of these are for future delivery or for special - . little more than you would pay for many so-called combinations not now available. medium-price cars. So—if you have thought of owning a Cadillac— And this is only half the picture, insofar as cost is come in now. Because of our low used car inventory, concerned. For when the time comes to sell your we are in an excellent position to make you a liberal ~ Cadillac, you will find that the car has held its value allowance on your present car. far beyond anything you could logically expect. a Ca< jj|] ac wa iting to give you the most Authoritative price figures, based on year-after- thrilling demonstration of your lite. Why not make year studies, reveal that a Cadillac may be expected it today? ZINTSMASTER MOTORS First and Monroe Streets I hone 3-2003

route to one of Alabama’s appearances at Pasadena. I>ater, he staged the first Cotton Bowl game, matching TCU and Marquette, In 1937. Englishman Tries To Protect Backs LONDON, (INS) — The ele-gantly-dressed editor of London’s “Tailor and Cutter” magazine says men should revive the old custom of wearing gloves to dances. John Taylor declared: “Women who wear low-cut dresses powder their backs, and it must be very annoying to have a big paw mark right in the middle.” Tough Skin Test SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (INS) — Skin divers are attempting to recover >5,000,000 in gold from the clipper Yankee Blade which sank off Point Arguello in the 1850 s. The Yankee Blade sank in 120 feet of water In “the graveyard of the Pacific,” so named because of its treacherous fog and currents . Mariners claim that skin divers will find it rough going because the hulk of the clipper is now believed to be buried at least 10 feet deep in the ocean bottom sand. Trade In a Good t own — Decatui

NOT $29.95 . ONLY *9.95 $3.00 FOR STAND ——— . — -T-- ■ /'J 1 """ /tzy CZ2 ”**" S j? Wi *■ - - - - S»SihIIIb SHOESTRINGS—CHOPS-SLICES The New Griscer, with its mirrored polished finish, takes the spotlight in the modem kitchen. An appliance which has an every day use in the preparing of meals the healthy way as all the natural vitamins and juices are retained. A time saver —labor saver and money saver. Easy to clean and easy to operate—rust proof and fully guaranteed. - _ . . ...

THURSDAY, JOLT 28, IMS