Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 139, Decatur, Adams County, 13 June 1957 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

DON’T SCRATCH THAT ITCH! IN ITTST 15 MINUTES Y««r 40* Hw* art aay «r«* atm* If aot pl*M*U. Raay-to-apply. IWH-MR-WOT Made™ It eh la MIMTEII hllla |«r>M <>a COfTAtT. Ma* fee eeaeaaa. rlnswarm. iaaeet hl tea, toot Iteh and ether aarfac* Itehea. tlaaraateed locally by Kohae Dre* Stere.

>*' AcL'bwx /' PATTIHSON.SAROtNT ® HOUSE MINT COVERS MORE FOR LESSI ' GIVIS EXTRA PROTECTION AT RO ADDITIONAL COSTI KfwDrWf WaoAorrMuionl and mode to lost LI UfMICC I I lengar, BPS Houm Paint covert more L1 91st kx lea ... Hoyt brighter lor moey year* Io come. Malte your home a standou) your BPS House Point. US ID AND AFFROVID I TRY W>B> " IWMSraWS* FIRST AU AH MONDAY: 12 Neon to 5:36 P. M., SliUr" TUES.. THI'RS., SAT. 8:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. W1BW " " WEDNESDAY A FRIDAY 8:30 A. M. to 0:00 P. M.

._ UJ _ ~. , JM Q WEEK-END BABER S speciiu! teStaßu 9 it \ MADE IN STEEL BY . | j| i fn THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY 'I ' NEW! lr I 111 Homecrest Pattern I M 1 A CRISP LINES AND SUBTLE SW’.RLS REFLECT ■III CASUAL ELEGANCE ON ANY TABLE Milk GlftSS 11:1 I 24 Pc. Service for 6 Tidbit Tray nVil w:th Sculptured Handle Knives Regular $1.98 111 ONLY SB-95 98 c 111 ■ II in beautiful III' k M- S ,^box I I | L .... All , CONTENTS fl B Ei 1 \V& BB R. ** I 4 Sculptured Handle \ ■i7 ft "V ■ 1 l:>r- Dinner Knive* \ I//liIlM 1 1 ■ 1 I ( Dinner fork* A ■■ • </4mW \ B 1 8 -a~ * Teatpoont fIVL « Dee,*rt Spoon. JM| ' ? RIMa Yi^Vd>lg«L¥AlMLw* 1 / t ‘ r Wr ' nf wWmw &• v- 1 V K fffl ■ ‘ Wai® / 11 ! 1MWflKßipP®*®’ * A wonderful opportunity to own beau- . <. Bl rlil IfBI ‘M I tifully graded Mainlesa steel tableware Bl 111 HH I f° r more leisure hours! Each piece Bl 111 Hfl / gracefully sculptured .. . mirror-finish WiMI Bm I shines without polishing for a lifetime ■ lift i Wl/1 / care l*’ ee ,ablc beauty at modest price. , 1 See it soon. LAMP lER ’ Uni Glass Base pi-4 Completely Electrified w cor< * Regular $2.50 Famous for GIFTS ~ DECATUR *

Ibakepgoops] <*** «\

Interrupted Meal LEBANON, Ore. — (IB — Some 125 firemen and their wives gathered here for the annual volunteer firemen’s banquet. Twice during the evening alarms called the men to duty.

Father's Day Cakes #LL SIZES Pecan Fudge Cake 74c

FOUR GENETICISTS stand at blackboard In Washington, where they testified before the congressional joint atomic radiation subcommittee that fallout from nuclear weapons tests so far inevitably will take a toll in disease, deformity and shortened life spans in the next and future generations. They are (from left) Dr. H. Bentley Glass, Johns Hopkins university: Dr. A. H. Sturtevant, California Institute of Technology; Dr. Herman J. Muller, Indiana university; Dr. 4pmes F. Crow, University of Wisconsin. (IntemationaJ SoundpkotoJ

Oldest Firm NEWBURYPORT, Mass., (UP) — Massachusetts’ oldest business firm is the Towle Manufacturing Co., established here in 1690. This firm of silversmiths is one of 128 Massachusetts companies that are more than 100 years old.

DON’T TAKE A CHANCE TAKE PLENAMINS Smith Drug Co.

THE DIBCATUII DAILY DMEOCMAT, DBCATUIt, INDIANA

Russell Jones Again Behind Iron Curtain Noted Correspondent Gives Impressions Os Poland Today Editor’s Note: UP correspondent Russell Jones, who covered the Hungarian revolt, is behind the Iron Curtain again, this time in Poland. He has spent several weeks there after driving from Vienna across Chechoslovakia. Here are his first Impressions. By RUSSELL JONES United Press Staff Correspondent POZNAN. Poland (UP) — This is Poland today: Packed Catholic churches, a Communist government, stomachwrenching poverty, a million dollars worth of vodka drunk daily. People who make no bones of their dislike for their Russian neighbor to the east, but feel the black depths of hatred toward their German neighbor to the west. A country whose own Communist leader himself so recently knew the Red prison. One where Josef Cardinal Wyszynski, Roman Catholic primate of Poland, is virtually as free and influential as in pre-war days. Twenty-eight million people with only 150,000 trucks and cars among all of them. Too poor to buy one suit in five years, but cooking in butter. Drunkenness rso widespread all vodka shops are closed paydays so at least some money gets home. Steal To Live People speaking with astonishing candor of their Communist government and about the Russians. yet a Parliament with no electoral opposition to the Communists. A nation with an almost fully socialized economy, yet one where 2 million dollars in goods

I A . . I. ■■ * I x j . * wx A' I >3Kk MmI M ,jJ IT'S A "CORPORAI LOADER," a carrier which can pick up, transport and raise the Corporal radar missile. This one is shown at the R. G. Le Tourneau plant in Longview, Tex. Le Tourneau is building them for Britain. The Corporal can carry conventional or atomic warhead. (international Souiidphoto)

are stolen every day by people who must steal to stay alive. A strange country of contrasts and contradictions. It was in this city of Poznan a year ago this month—June 28 — that the workers rose against the Red regime. Fifty-three were killed and more than 300 wounded. But the spark of Poznan brought Wladislaw Gomulka, “Poland’s Tito,’* back to power from a prison cell. The spark jumped national boundaries — it helped ignite the bloody revolt in Hungary. I drove here from Vienna across Czechoslovakia. On the trip you can see the full range from free Austrian democracy to Czech Stalinism to the Polish “road to socialism.” After Vienna, its streets teeming with cars and hardly a uniform in sight, the Czech frontier came as a brutal reminder that we still live in two worlds. Poland A Contrast As I drove up to the Czech border, soldiers trained their tommyguns on my car from behind accordions of barbed wire. Steel rails barred the road to any would-be escapees. Not one Czech showed more than a sullen curiosity at the new German-made car and its American driver on the 200 miles across Czechoslovakia. ' What a contrast once in Poland! The people were interested in the car and its driver. What kind was it and how much fuel did it burn? Would it be possible to sit for a moment in the car. Would onq.dare to ask for a short drive?' Where was I going and why? Here in Poznan I met Bronislaw Lentzner at his workbench at the Cegielski factory. It used to be called the “Stalin works.” Lentzner is a machine tool operator. He is one of the men who went into Poznan’s street a year ago, his arms linked with those of men, women and students who braved the rifle and machinegun fire. Was Poznan worth it? Lentzner Holds Future Lentzner will decide that. The future of Poland really rests cm his shoulders and those of men like him. Lentzner is a thin, tired-looking man of 49. He supports his wife, year-old son, daughters, 10 and 12, and his aged mother. I asked him why he staked his life in the up-

rising. *1 just didn’t care,” he told me. Is life any better now? „'T make 300 zlotys (eight dollars) a month more thah then,” he said. “But wages are still too low and it is difficult to live?” What about new freedoms of press and speech? Enjoys Conversation “Well I don’t read much, but it’s a good feeling to talk to you, and anyone else, without thinking that someone is listening and reporting. “You know, the change I like best is films from the West. Before they were Soviet films and too dull to sit through.” Would Lentzner dare to protest openly again? He smiled, slightly. “One must remember,” he said, “that Poland is a small country with great neighbors” He obviously meant Russia and West Germany). “We can not do exactly what we want and when we want. We have made a start. Things are better than they were. We must go slowly." Liberate, Presley Set Back Fashions Foul Up Campaign Os Dress Designer HOLLYWOOD (UP) —/A young New York designer who made Jayne Mansfield's neckline famous accuses Liberace and Elvis Presley of fouling up his campaign to get men into more interesting clothes. “Liberhce and Elvis have set men's fashions back 20 years,” fumed Elg«e Bovee, at 22 one of the country’s top designers. “When you try to get men to wear more interesting clothes they’re afraid of appearing feminine. Liberace’s frilly shirts with gobs of lace kill men’s wear. He looks like a ruffled layer cake. “I’d like to see some of those sloppy slobs like Marlon Brando get into more attractive clothes. Most of these new clothes I designed for myself (he gets an award in Chicago June 20 as one of the country’s best-dressed executives). I had so many requests for copies that I’m manufacturing my clothes for national distribution.” Bovee’s ideas —revolutionary for men’s wear—include evening shirts decorated with crocheted edges (but not frilly) and Sunday shirts of fancy white-on-white fabric. He also hopes men will buy Ids bright red velvet dinner jackets, wool jersey suits (lined to prevent itching), black satin tuxedoes with matching shoes, broadcloth coats with fur collars, ties copied after a bullfighter's and even fur hats.” So far the designer has noted “some resistance” from stores that retail his creations. But he has a happy customer in Fernando Lamas. Eveh Jayne's boy friend, muscle king Mickey Hargitay, goes for Elgee’s evening ties that conist of a satin ribbon criss-crossed but not tied into a bow. “I’m also starting coordinated wardrobes for men and women,” the designer said. “When a woman goes to a party in a blue satin dress her escort should wear a blue satin tie. I’m creating a wardrobe like that for a Cary Grant movie.”

Father’s Day Special! FRIDAY - SATURDAY ONLY! S GROUP L Nunn-Bush Shoes FOR MEN ' NOW $1 Reg " hr WUW $18.95 to $23.95 SIZES—IN—THIS—GROUP WIDTH T 9 I 9 ' 10 11 > b , ! I ~~TTT ii i ili Ii i ■ • C i1|.21 I|i | 2 2i,2 |2 | D 2|2| 1| 1 i ill*l I1 I 1 KAYE'S SHOE STORE “QUALITY FOOTWEAR” 4 doors So. of Bank—Deeatur OPEN WED. & FRI. TILL 9:00 P. M.

CITY OFFICIALS watch closely the flow of water from the new city well in testing operations. Above, Clarence Smith, well driller, looks on, as Ralph Roop, city engineer, plots the flow of water hour by hour. Looking on from the right are Floyd Moody, driller; Mayor Robert D. Cole,' and Walter Kessen, of the city water department. — (Staff Photo)

Birds are able to slep in perching position without tumbling off a twig because of the. way their toe grip automaticaly locks, Indian rhinoceros horn, reduced to powder, brings as much as $l5O a pound. Many Asiatics believe the horn has wondrous powers for solving almost any problem, mental or physical. ATHLETE’S FOOT GERM HOW TO KILL IT. IN ONE HOUR. If »ot plesae*. rear 4Ge back at ear 'cauater. TM« STRONG Krrmlcldr uloaafcw off tafeetMl akin. Kx|M»aM more irerma to ita klllinic action. t’ae iaataat-drylag T-4-L day or might. New at Kohae Drag Store.

Public Auction

As I have sold my farm and am moving to Preble I will sell the following at Public Auction Vi mile South of the Freidheim Church then Vi mile West then Vs mile South or 3Vs miles North of Magley, on FRIDAY, JUNE 14,1957 Evening Sale 6:30 P. M. Evening Sale TOOLS — EQUIPMENT — HOUSEHOLD GOODS MISCELLANEOUS Simplicity Garden Tractor with Cultivator and Mower; IHC Steel Manure Spreader; Two-wheel trailer; Steel ,Tire Wagon; Platform Scales; Hand Truck; Poultry Equipment: Two Heavy 5 ft. Hog Troughs; Butchering Kettle; Big Copper Kettle; Steel Fence Posts. Electric Post, and 3-inch Pipe (for brace): Swamp Hooks; Bench Vise; Large Galvanized Feed Tank; Heavy Log Chains; One H. P. Motor and Two Vi H. P. Motors; 225 Bales Clover Hay; Double Trees and Tongs; 12-Ton Hydraulic Jack; One lot of Hardwood Lumber and one lot of Cypress. Lumber; License Plates from 1913; Cocker Spaniel Dog Porch Swing; Heating Stoves; Antique Comer Cupboard; Electro Mode Electric Heater; Zenith 17 inch TV Table Model; Oak Table; Glass Door Cupboard; Kitchen Cabinet; Library Table; Small Steel Office Safe: Table Radio; Wicker Setee and 2 Chairs; Mattress and Spring- Corner Shelf; Oak Dresser; 2 Boys Bikes; White Porcelain Kitchen Stove; Fill Gas Bottle Gas Stove; Dishes, Fruit Jars, Crocks, and many* articles too numerous to mention. CONSIGNED BY LOUIS F. BULTEMEIER—Two Beds complete with spring 8c mattress; Antique Hanging Lamp; Kerosene Lamps; Single Bed- Davenport: Commode: Library Table; Coffee Table; 2 Dressers; 2 Rockers- 2 End Tables; Pedestals; 2 Table Lamps: Small Buffet; Lounge & Straight Chairs: Damper Control; Crocks, jars, flower pots, cooking utensils and miscellaneous items. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. HAROLD GALLMEYER, Owner Roy S. Johnson. Ned C. Johnson — Auctioneers , . Ladies Aid of Freidheim Church Refreshment Stand.

Stewarts Bakery PHONE 3*2608 "'lft . j . •

.J THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1961 f

The Greenland ptarmigan molts three times a year. It has black and yellow feathers in the spring, gray in the fall, and is pure white each winter.

"INE MNNTY MMEI* nawamaa . waaoiMioiw