Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 90, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1957 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

/lIURRAIIfef fit’s spring \again! /' CHAT TImT fOR A NIW KODAK CAMERA I ; ' 1 BiwUr apß* see our complete line of KODAK FLASH CAMERAS anil SUPPIItS . With a modern Kodak camera, indoor picture* and snap* at night are every bit a* simple and sure a* wnny-day snapshot*. Stop in soon and see our complete line of Brownie and Kodak camera*, film, fiashoiders, bulb*,, and photo aid*. Ea*y-doe«-it flash outfit*, tool HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. •

3cliciously ICE CREAM by U Strawberry ice cream I S’ Half Gallon WHY MAKE THIS UNUSUAL offer? &DF&IAL. JB w« w«»* »• ei»e you ■ ehaacc, »* B A. thia redueeo prica, to try thia delictSap*-* out Equity lee Cream flavor. It's a that Spring really You g can the strawberries, Jg •’ off the old strawberry patch with " every, luscious bite of Equity Strawberry iee cream. Buy several, without ' delay and save on each half gallon B you buy. At this special price, evenyone can enjoy really good Strawberry lee Cream by Equity. Rabbit Center I Rabbit Center :ce cream ROLL cream BRICK WU .... .Z* x \ Chocolate rab- / •ZjwW / bit in a er»«m,. ■ <n~i—-|. |A— VjLUllirf f / van 11 1 a iee / NSw* Nj VwWraE **‘ r t 0 8 Stenciled ice cream DESSERTS , For an Easter family treat or en- I tertaining, try this delicious ice B BOX OF 4 cream roll—chocolate rabbit cen- B T ter in vanilla ice cream, covered I with mixed* nuts, whipped cream B B eroam cups with ehoeoB tau - rabbits steneiled B I on.. Especially good for —-B large groups. No fuse I <* trouble. Fresh Strawberry SUNDAE Don't mies the ehanee to try this delicious fee .a3gy a .0; eream sundae at this special pries, a savings to ge you of 11c. Made with top quality ingredients ■ ap —* scoops of ereamy rieh vanilla iee cream, Vj |WReg.3of s “’'' — LONGHORN CHEESE \ / / Mild and mellow Longhorn cheese, prop- »mm On' / • r * y “•** flo “‘ flavor. yy\_ j_ j <✓ i————— ■ >— ■ AU EQUITY TOP OF OHIO DAIRY STORES 151 H. SECOHD STREET DECATUR, IND.

Expensive Parking NEW HAVEN, Conn. — tW — Restaurant owner Anthony Jawor found automobile parking expensive. Jawor left the car on the street. When he returned, he discovered that thieves had < taken . Bsoo< from the vehicle. Tonite, Wed., Thurs. FNOf&—Due to Holy Week” I No Special Event This j Week! Continuous Thurs- | day from 1:30. iTHE LIFE STORY OF A BOY “BORN TO BE HUNG" I True Story of Father Flanagan’s Famous Bays Town. ’ —io-0 Sun. A Mon. — "OKLAHOMA” Rodgers A Kammerstein Hit At Our Regular Low Prices. ■BimnnMiMaaßßanMmMaManMsaanaß

La Prensa Story On. Television Tonight Fight For Freedom Os Press On TV NEW YORK (UP> - Early in 1951, the presses of one of the world's great newspapers stopped in Buenos Aires. Argentina. After 24.475 editions, the voice of a free La Prensa was silenced. The struggle that led to that silencing—and the eventual victory of Dr. Alberto Gainza Par, publisher of La Prensa, to print a free newspaper again—will be told tonight on NBC-TV’s "Armstrong Circle Theatre.” It will be called “Slow Assassination: Peron versus La Prensa.” It will tell the story of one newspaper and its defiance of a dictator. But, its producers hope, it also will prove a vivid illustration of the might of free newspapers everywhere and the safeguards a free press provides against tyranny. Kent Smith, a veteran actor, will star as Dr. Gainza Paz in a script written by Irve Tunick and Cullen Moore. Bruce Gordon will play Jose Santos Gollan, editor of the paper, and Philip Bourneuf will play Dr. Manuel Ordonez, attorney on the side of La Prensa. John Cameron Swaze will narrate. An Authentic Product Dr. Gainza Paz, who returned to Argentina in late 1955 after Peron was deposed, will appear briefly at the end of the program. The show has a long time in the making, tt was almost a year ago that Robert Costello, producer of tonight's flfl-minute "actual,” decided to showcase the story of South America's largest and most independent newspaper. Costello has turned out such other “actuals” for Armstrong as

I* THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

the sinking of the Andrea Doria, the Poznan trials and the revolt of the freedom fighters in Hungary. Dr. Gainza Paz worked with the scriptwriters and Costello to give the finished product authenticity. To give tonight's show an on-the-spot flavor, some newsreel shots taken in Argentina will be worked to. t • The story tonight will trace - Juan Peron's efforts to throttle La I Prensa, beginning back in 1945. At ’ first the program will show how ■ the Peron government tried subtle methods—expropriating the paper’s I newsprint and burdening it under ' with paperwork. Freedom Won Battle • Or, as Swayze will describe it: "La Prensa officials were forced • to spend hour after hour on mountains of forms .. .* each in triplicate, each to be notarized before ' witnesses, countersigned by gov-! • ernment officials usually on vaca--1 tion.” That method failed, so the gov- . ernment forced La Prensa to Cut . down to 12 pages a day, hoping . perhaps that the limited space for advertisements would pose a financial problem for the paper. That [ failed, too. and so the government ’ turned to violence — with rioters ' attacking the paper and its em- ’ ployes. ■ The presses were, of course, , stilled. But, as tonight's program will show, Peron's victory was 1 only temporary. Freedom won the final battle. " “What is a newspaper?” asks ' Swayze. And the answer—"an al- ; manac ... a dairy ... a mirror of

_|. ' 1 _ . ~ ' — x - >■> JI I—— II"■Ml ■II I I , F— 1 " ""T ■"" "*"* ■" I FINAL WEEK- f Kncipct rri<s r*m* enter todayi i -I— 'CaJ- Big M Dream Car Contest K C-x ends April 2Oth— J| to• ■ • J • -* 15 free Mercurys, E drive, to ride in, I j Enter today at < to look at, j dTk-F’l/'H B'/'A wXTI ”■'< T nIST FRIZI-A FeMous Turnpike 1 Illi 111 I BI 1%/ Cruiser. 4-door model. Plus trip to w-M-y New York for two via American Air- ■ i lines. Special guests of Ed Sullivan B — — - - «t his television show. B v. * | 1. EXCLUSIVE FLOATING RIDE- 3. EXCLUSIVE DREAM-CAR DESIGN \ nixt Twizis_4^.Zr y Com- £ Mercury brings you the most —entirely new styling, complete- muter station wagon*. 2-door, 6- B effective combination of bump- ly distinctive, shared with no before 1n r Mercury’s°fidd! than *** A smothering features ever put be- other car. You can see the dra- ■ —— tween you and the road: for matic difference in the straightexaniple, unique new Full- line sweep of the-roof, the B Cushion Shock Absorbers, swept- V-angle tail-lights, the rear pro- NIXT V° Mercury Mon- ■ back ball-joint front suspension. jectues, the Jet-Flo Bumpers. u concealed side pillars. All the glam- ■ our of a hardtop! NJkt 50 prlxo*_General Electric V "Companion" TV sets. Portable, B 2. WIDEST, ROOMIEST CAR IN ITS 4. PRICED JUST ABOVE THE LOW- ” only 26 pounds! | FlELD— Biggest size increase in the PRICED THREE— Never before has Next 300 prixo»_Sheaffer’s White • * i*. a* a J Dot Snorkel Pen Sets—autographed A industry! Far more leg room, so much bigness and luxury cost \ by Ed Sullivan. W shoulder room and headroom « so little! And if you buy a new SIO,OOO Cosh for new Mercury I than ever before. Only Mercury Mercury during the Big M Dream buyers during contest, $2,000 Ca*h * for used car buyers—see rules. Go to ■ gives you more room in every Car Contest, you stand a chance your Mercury,dealer today! Bf important dimension! of winning a SIO,OOO bonus! l_ , f ■ ■ ' • • ■< '• '-Z-- ■ * ' - - / M ii iHliiiiiMrM ■■■'' _ . .m llli _ "! "" ■BBF!i7/<ABL I S X- .iAmvw. V//r a —-42_. 1 I4WIF *> - ’ J lun«nHr ■ v&lji s z' z ,<• .. «. z /.wvy w iv . . - • • ’ ■;'• Jg,i.. ,><L4_. ' - ' P —.. *_4 . . ... .•-*. i..- / ’ 5■ .J ' ' -O’-' - ---- * , prVTfO A • Mercury sales skyrocket again —up 25% in the past month. Here's your 1 proof that The Big M Is thq new yardstick of your money’s worth. ’ MERCURY with DREAM-CAR DESIGN || B Don’t miss the big television hit, “THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW,” Sunday evening, 8:00 to 0:00, Station WANE-TV, Channel 15. SCHWARTZ FORD CO., Inc. Third and Monroe Streets Decatur, Ind. ■ • lll.■ll■■■■ l —■» « i i in mi" ' - nq- r--,-*. .«T_-ri. 7 - 7 ; : . ... s .. ■ 1,1 r '""r' .

life, a chapter of history ... a time table of births engagements, marriages ... deaths .. . sales progress. It supplier relaxation ... amusement .... recreation .... knowledge. But most of all a free newspaper is a reservoir of facto.” And, over the long haul, that makes a free newspaper a tough opponents to beat anywhere. Investigate Report Os Theft Os Lumber Alleged State Park Theft Under Probe INDIANAPOLIS ®l — S t a t e parks director Kenneth R. Couglll said today he will wait for the results of an official survey before answering a published report of the theft of timber from Shades State Park near Crawfordsville. Conservation department engineers said it would take about a week to survey the 7,700 feet of questionable boundary line. This estimate depended on the weather and engineers said it was “very rough country.” A newspaper story charged the park has been ill-kept in tbe last year and “thousands of dollars” worth ot timber had been stolen. The timber allegedly was taken from an area near a shadowy boundary line. Commercial lumbering ii carried on in an area adjoining the virgin timber of the state park.

Tiny Helicopier Revealed Monday Enables Pilot Fly Like Grasshopper VAN NUYS, Calif. (UP) - The Bureau of Aeronautics has witnessed a flight demonstration of the "pinwheel” strafr<®- t he-back rocket - powered helicopter which enables its pilot to fly likd* a grasshopper. In a demonstration Monday by the Rotor-Craft Corp., pilot Dick Whitehead put the one - man aircraft, first of its kind, into the , air with a hop and then came down, literally landing on his feet , which dangled beneath the pinwheel blades Jwirltog over his head. The tiny 'copter, powered by two rocket engines weighing less , than a pound each, can be folded to fit a hangar “the size of a i telephone booth,” Rotor » Craft President Gilbert Magill said. ; Magill explained that the purpose of the little craft is “to fly an infantryman and his equipment about the battlefield and over terrain inaccessible to other helicopters.” The "pinwheel” was developed under a Navy contract and will be sent to the Naval Air Test Ceater at Patuxent River, Md., tor further performance demonstrations. Trade in a good town —»Decatur

Jailed Spy Suspect Native Os America Indicted In Sweden On Espionage Charge STOCKHOLM (UP)-Stockholm police said today that jailed spy suspect Robert Folks Damstedt is a native of the United States. They said he was born in Kear* ney, N.J., in 1929. Damstedt, an assistance secretary of Sweden’s Atomic -Energy. Commission, and Goesta A. T. Jacobsson, a naval employe, were Indicted Monday tor "grave espionage.” Police said Damstedt’s father was working for an American company in New Jersey when was born but that Damstedt was returned to Sweden when he was four years old. The Stockholm morning newspaper Morgonbladet which broke the case Monday repeated its charge that Damstedt is under suspicion of selling nuclear secrets to Russia. Police sources indicated the accusations included one that the men attempted to betray submarine secrets to Russia. FEDERAL (Ovntt- * rrft-- •<,«» omi progress of the investigation . . . and outline a course of future investigation.” In Washington, Sen. Albert Gore ■MMMMWMMIMMMK «q « M I !■ Ml ■«! II I I •■«■!>■•

TUESDAY, APRIL Isl, 1957

(D-Tenn.) told Indianapolis Times correspondent Dan Kidney that as chairman of the Senate Public 'Works Highway Subcommittee he will send two investigators to Indianapolis Wednesday to investigate right-of-way purchases involving highways paid <or in part by federal funds. Gore was speaker here last weekend at a Democratic party Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner. He said then he wanted to “put a national spotlight" on the Indiana “scandals." Brains Os Theft Ring Is Sentenced SOUTH BEND — (W — Charles M. Basham, 37, described as the "brains" behind a series of South Bend area robberies, was senr tenced Monday to 2-5 years in prison when he pleaded guilty to 1 burglary charges. Five other all leged members of the ring will be • tried later on their pleas of innocent. ' Television Dealer Is Shocked Fqtally DANVILLE — ffll — Chester Sallee, 54, Danville television dealer, was shocked fatally Monday and his brother-in-law Oliver Cowens, was injured as they installed a TV antenna. Cowens, who was treated in a hospital for burns, said the two were working 1 when the antenna touched a highvoltage power line. I