Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 121, Decatur, Adams County, 22 May 1956 — Page 7

TUESDAY, MAY 2|, IM .

These Stores Open ’till 9 P. M. Wednesday FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE! MANY BARGAINS FROM 6:00 to 9:00 ONLY! SPECIAL! WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY NIGHT NIGHT 6:00 to 9:00! SPECIAL! ..I, J... " *1 r . - FROM to 9:00 P. M. ONLY LITTLE LEAGUE FIBRE GLASS ' BATS FISH POLES M A B fe’it-w O CEDAR , mm iuiiii i , i...i ii 11 ii n...., J WESTINGHOUSE WATER MIX AM IRON PAINT fllfflK*B*» M Sa or 5 Pounds (12.95 «•”> 3G^ 4 * ■’!' M REGULAR $2.29 HAMMER SANDPAPER J f HANDLES f R«g. 15c pkg. i ' ! ; g 29c 2i6c ™ Y KI ENKS —-■ RLLRA9 first HHmHI OPEN WED. & SAT. NIGHTS UH 9:otf OP&N WE». « SAT. NIGHTS ’till 9:M. ■ -* ? - | | HaHHaaaaMHMaHHBHB . aaM m. aBM .MM| M^H ii aM miIWMMIMMaMI k,..,* - j ; li iKi;At (? y.i....... lll ,iin' 1 - ! i; w iWj.' ; 7, v l ,"' ' —r*i T7 — ■- - <•’ v ; J ■' ' . J A &p. A4 f e | FREE I>—- BALLOONS — FREE I 5 E ® N D FREE ! -—PLANTS — FREE! Helium dulled to The Fjrat ~ w g‘F lt f >W Jbjfe toLinwi iriitfe DON'T MISS THIS SFfC/AL I | fl ALUMINUM « KIDDIES' PITCHERS COTTON I o«,-..i, • I • I Pol|»hed. Ice Lip Guard. ’< ' SHORTS M Keep Drinks AWm ||Wa7* fl coot — j|S|f||L- Q er. po * ■ UNBREAKABLE MO. ■ PLASTIC BASIN CBAurE DAfW JHEMagnW ■-'•9-ww «..»«"'»>•' B v.‘ in B?« *”"** ” w ■' 'wl ' juvenile prints. Mode to ■ Proof and Dent Proof. Dam 95if m takp touflh IfootmenL, '-fl A6sorted *l*7 ** ■Jr Wajh * dry taii,y - Box,r B Col6r * * J . Four *p° n « e * in ■JL . os jorted colors in HURRY! THIS WEEK ONIAJ '< [ pliofilm pack. M wASIdfIHROk. 7 1000 Yds.—COTTON YARD GOODS-1000 Yds. Long Lasting Remembrance I PRINTS & SOLIDS JloHcua/ ‘lay I wvd. WV-jE wroaths U M Sllver>Green s4| ftO Ist Quality & 2nds. One Time Mill Remnant Sale. «w»cwWreoth,trimmed T g wfl *■ Wlt *' clMten ol pink ■ Glorious Assortment of Prints and Solids in Percale, while-pink cyco» .. „ ~ , . . i leaf, bow, metal easel. ■ Broadcloth & Novelty Cottons. Ideel for Your Suryimer , 7 ‘ Vht.SlleerMosnella CAAO ■ Sewing. Narrow W.dths. » lycopodium, trim- ?OmX J£. "»ed with pink wet. pan»ie», fern, ribbon g ~JB '' ~ 'A. bow, metal easel. ■■ I A yds - $1 go $1 58 ■■■P FAR * fl ’"T* 1 w i' h pink r VWI "' ■> Cornelia:, mle green ruicui, ribbon bo- ■ PAIR & A SPARE LADIES NYLON HOSE \| UDIES 4 MISSES Save! Buy A Pair •*?^ W *F- 4 ' Vfl oa® I MOCCASINS SHORTY PJ.’s nr,, s °“7’, R * ,W *.e, itnr.Sl.29 , 1 —————,- M Ladies Sixes 4tp 9. O ne -p w 0 pj ece H Misses sixes 11 td'3 ■ II Styles in Wonderful ■■■■ TRLCOLOR ■ Hand Laced, All | No Iron Plisse. SUGAR WAFERS | r.. m I ?:!£. MM I’ ■ •«"■ *•«■ Color.. | Tri „,. Fresh, Wholesome, M iaheai for Spring & * W> wW \ J Delicious Crispy — ■ Summer. Sizes S■M - L Wafers with Choc., „ ■ Van. & Strawberry »»• y BfllHMlflflflflflflflF Y 0 U R fllElAf DKDDVTC your . SELF SERVICE STORE 7 ' NE WW VEKK ■ 9 SELF SERVICE STORE

TH® DKCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBCATUR, INDIANA

U the young point ot view in shoes fk w9Ba d /s 1 ftf*’ 1 I tL wk?' - I 'm!x>Lx z< \ There's no limit to the places you'll wear these two-tone stunners... a smart "must" for your summer wardrobe. High or mid-high heel. "BUY SHOES IN A SHOE STORE” **££• BUSTER BROWN DECATUR - BLUFFTON OPEN WED. & SAT. EVENINGS

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PAGE SEVEN

Mizell Limits Giants To Four Hits For Win NEW YORK (INS) — When JSddie Stanly was fired as St. Louis manager last May, he ruefully remarked: “I would have managed this cljib tor nothing next year. That’s how good I think it will be." - Eddie mentioned the added experience the Cardinals* young players would have by 1956 and the return of Wilmer Mizell from the army. The Cards are justifying Stankys forecast and Mizell, the lanky left-hander from Vinegar Bend, Ala., is beginning to justify the Cards’ faith in him. The 6-foot-3, 200’-pounder has been troubled with torn nails on his middle pitching finger this year, failing to go the distance in six starts and recording two victories against two defeats. Monday, he was advised that a heavy coat of nail polish would supply the protection he needed to pitch nine innings and after applying same, he came up with Ms first complete game— a four-hitter and a 4-to-l victory over the New York Giants. More important, the victory enabled the Cardinals to leap-frog over Brooklyn into second place, a half-game ahead of Milwaukee in the crazy mixed - up National League race but still .019 points behind the Braves percentagewise. Brooklyn and Milwaukee were idle as was the rest of the major leagues, with one exception. The New York Yankees defeated Kansas City, 8 to 5, to take a NU game lead over Cleveland in the American League race. Only a home run by Doh Mueller In the seventh inning spoiled the shutout for Vinegar Bend, who was beaten by the Giants with a ninthinning rally in St. Louis recently. Don Liddle started for the Giants before a slim Polo Grounds crowd of 3,938 and, apart from a second-inning home run by Rip Repulski, was doing quite well until Wally Moon smashed a liner off his knee in the fifth inning. Before he left, Bobby Del Greco tripled home Moon and scored when Foster Castleman tailed to cover third on the relay and Bill Sarni made it three with a homerun. Examination showed a kneecap jbruise and blood clot but Liddle was to undergo X-ray exam- * {nation. The Cardinal bench worked umpire Stan Landis into a lather in the last of the second inning and he cleared the bench of all but two coaches, including manager Freddy Hutchinson. The Athletics out-hit and outhomered the Yankees before a ladies’ day crowd of 17,130 at Kansas City but couldn’t outscore them. The Yankees greeted Jose Santiago’s starting debut at Kansas City with a five-run outburst in the first inning, three on Gil McDougald’s home run. The A’s narrowed the gap with two runs in, the second inning, one on Harry Simpson’s first home rdn of the day, and two more in the second on back-to-back homers by Hector Lopez and Gus Zernial. But Mickey Mantle put it out of reach in the fifth inning with another king-size clout of more than 450 feet, his 16th of the year. That put him 11 games ahead of Babe Ruth’s record pace in 1927, when Ruth hit his 16th in his 43rd game. Simpson got his second homer in the eighth off winner Tom Sturdivant. The game threatened to end In a brawl when Billy Martin and Hank Bauer raced from the bench in the ninth inning to get KC relief pitcher Tom La Sorda. Umpires and teammates intervened. They complained he had dusted them in apparent retaliation for Sturdy's brush back pitches U> Rimpson and Jim Finigan. One Airman Burned To Death At Base NEW YORK HNS) — One airman was burned to death and four others were injured in a fire that, destroyed a barracks bousing 50 men at the hlghly-secret Ro«lvn, Long Island, air force base early today. The base Is headquarters- for the radar warning system for the northeast interceptor command. 22,000 Hoosiers Are Affected By Cutback INDIANAPOLIS HNS) — The Indiana employment security division today reported that nearly, 22.000 Indiana workers are affected currently by cutbacks in the automobile industry and related supplier plants. Reports to the division show 12.500 auto workers and 9,500 employes in the supplier field haven’t been recalled since they were laid Off their spring. -—-~4 . V-f Trade in a Good Town — Decatur.