Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 22 August 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

amount of purchase, I take up to .. jf J SPEC! AL-Look! linlH W® TV VALUE! agljß : 3-T SUPER-CUSHIOiN by < NEW 1958 II! U GOODYEAR CE - [OSH ||PH ] Tire value unmatched at TOP'TlinillJ | W-JC|reL J liiifiisi I ; i a rock-bottom orice / .fIM [I A TABLE MODEL ;i S 4 ■■" O1 TU "j;-" ‘ t J ■ I W of viewable area j J is < H s-To *is ; ■■ JL ■ ■ vgraly : ' — I ■■ tax * nd fe======< IW ~ ii “ ,21W5 Xljr - Introductory Offer , „ s|lm si|ho „ elte „ a Fits most Plymoufhs, Fords, Chevrolets, > 'tS • New 110 s Aluminized Hudsons, Noshes; ond Studehohers. ;iS B Picture Tube • Exclusive 3-T Cord Body is more resistant to-shocks , • “ JL • Clearer Reception and bruises! ! • • Tough, durable construction means longer, safer ; ! • • stopourt traction from famous Slop- i; 9 *®‘ <f«wn s2’B® weekly Notch tread design! ' ’ WWWMMMMMWMM ®*®®MWWWWWUWWWWWUWWUVUU SEE THE NEW 1958 M|| GENERAL ELECTRIC PORTABLES /"X P* <F WZ / I • CTr-ShlHSe .1&1, ■>,. recoppoble tiro iJZf/Z *2933|B^HBhK^ tr " a KHI3 sue 7.i0 xis tn* 9k H xl ( Dodge, Buick, Noih, || Old>, Mercury, Pontiac ’> , »■=]> and Hudson. ’ 1 II M II | SK • tire- , (I U v--r /W\ I FOUR for as little as $1.25 a weekl 'I I \ /g^\W H '~ MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND! //J \ \ WBAAAAAAfUWUWWBAMWUWWWUWWWUVWVVVUi L> 7 /i ST W ; ' • NEW COMPACT SHAPE V\ AUTOMATIC I • clear reception Wx., Fl FCTRIP • BUILT-IN ANTENNA 14-INCH PORTABLES ’ ONLY $1.25 WEEKLY iWfGj/ tLtV 1V ]!• LIGHTER WEIGHT — choice of colors RANGE I WEIGHTS ONLY 24 lb. SC.OO ;! WThvß 11 J® BIGGER PICTURE — down °* thi * j ; rpmnv/ihlp nvpn dnnr 108 SQINCHES $2-4® AUTOMATIC IviV I vIIIUVCIUIv Uvwll tlUti I CWUWUUUUWUWMAMUWUUUUUWWUUUWWWVUWWUVUUtf -Mil rT IL LOOK! CLOSE-OUT J A n ; I Ls=?S*il Floor SPECIALS Demonstrators Hl 11 ffltl ft l 11;" ; I Mode,s VlfcVlflUW tmra-vtalon. l i lIUMrS H ; 1 ONLY—2I” G.E. Table Model Ultra-Vision T.V. Set BNH H - H ■ A "’ ®v«n cleaning i R KWHKwB 1 1 d^:.^%^'XToVen^; I; Regular $279.95 Now $229.95 Ip U *lß| ■■ x'•^'< J,<> * < 1 ®B, poet back on w»Hy. < ( M Cmß>itWS ![ 1 ONLY—2I” G.E. Metal Table Model T.V. Regular $259.95 Now $209.95 DASHER I ONLY_I3 Cu Ft. G.E. Upright Freezer VZ iiW . 1 RkJ -VNn\ cwitr-Timus shun couking pstiode 7 it’| Regular $369.95 Now $319.95 - ’ ! r*lV ** i ~4. “”■* ,o w wnutut—and aounds a ,• | WASHER H b ” ~‘ H; I ONLY—I H.P. G.E. Air Conditioner J :Kw ONLY Regular $249.-95 Now $189.00 ONLY I DOWN BRAND /jßwkt - $ 7o O NEW GUARANTEED WEEKLY MERCHANDISE GOODYEAR service store 'A I a2l N. 2nd St. OPEN 8:00 A. M. - 5:30 P. M. — FRIDAY Till 9:00 P. M. PHONE 3-200 S

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Berne Planning For Kindergarten Class Jeanette Hahnert Is Named Teacher Miss Jeanette Hahpert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hahnert of this city, has accepted a position as teacher of the Berne-French cooperative ' kindergarten classes, now being planned. Miss Hahnert is a graduate of Decatur high school, and has had two years study at Ball State Teachers college, where she majored in elementary education. For the past summer she was one of the assistants of the speech clinics, which were conducted in Decatur and jn Berne, and she has had i several years experience in teach- : ing Sunday school to kindegarten age children. Tentative plans are for Miss Hahnert to conduct the private kindergarten classes only one season, after which she plans to continue her college education. Classes will be held in the basement of the Walter Zeurcher home in Berne, starting October 1, and extending until May 1, 1958. Enough children are presently enrolled to conduct a morning class, and with enrollment left open until September 1, it is hoped that enough children will be enrolled to hold afternoon classes also. Governor Defends Stale Road Program Declares Program Is On Firm Ground INDIANAPOLIS ffl — Despite a federal aid bottleneck, Governor Handley says Indiana’s highway program is on “firmer ground than any other state." Handley made the statement to newsmen Wednesday after huddling with his highway commission and other state officials on how to restore the flow of federal matching funds from Washington. He said the meeting “resolved any differences" on how the logjam should be broken. ... __l Federal officials cut off right-of-way funds when the highway scandals broke. Federal funds also were depleted because the state budget did not include anticipated federal aid, and a method of receiving it has not been worked out. But Handley said the commission has made great strides in wading through “shallow water" to get its huge construction program underway. “I think that we’ve got this highway construction program on firmer ground now than any other state in the Union,*" he said. The governor blamed the shortage on “unrealistic" actions of the previous commission headed by former chairman Virgil Red Smith. That commission went ahead with construction plans even though “right of way hadn’t even been purchased," Handley said.

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THURSDAY. AUGUST 22, 1957.

Confidential Trial Recessed To Friday Top-Secret Sources Os Stories Revealed HOLLYWOOD (UP) — A recess was called today in the spicy Confidential criminal libel trial in the heat of a defense move aimed at proving Mae West possessed a passion for boxers and singer Dorothy Dandridge made love in the woods with a bandleader. Top-secret sources of lurid stories in Confidential and Whisper magazines were disclosed Wednesday prior to the adjournment of the trial until Friday. The defense maintained that affidavits were obtained to substantiate stories on such film celebrities as Clark Gable, Maureen O’Hara, John Carroll and Producer Paul Gregory. Fred Meade, operator with his wife of a Hollywood “listening post" for Confidential, was the defense counsel’s “bombshell” witness of the day. Meade told of persons who tipped him off on prospective stories about the offscreen life of movie stars. * Miss West was introduced into testimony when Meade was asked about the Confidential story titled, “Mae West’s Open-Door Policy." The story claimed Miss West was not kidding when she said “come up and see me some time" and alleged that her chauffeur took her up on the offer. Meade testified that Miss West had an "affinity" for prize fighters and often hired them as chauffeurs. The defense witness, also a defendant in the trial, said he obtained a letter signed by a “Dale Wright” and an affidavit from onetime featherweight champion Albert (Chalky) Wright to authenticate that Miss West allegedly had other than business relations with her Negro chauffeur identified only as “Jones." The defense prior to the start of the trial three weeks ago indicated it hoped to prove that “Jones" actually was Wright. Bandleader Daniel Terry was identified by Meade as the scandal scout who obtained most of the material for the story titled. “Only the Birds and the Bees Saw What Dorothy Dandridge Did in the Woods." Meade testified that Terry and the sultry singer dated while both were appearing at a nightclub in the mountain resort town of Tahoe Village, Nev. The story alleged that the Negro singer and “a male companion” spent intimate moments together in the woods surrounding the lake. The defense claimed that an affidavit signed by "one of the principals,” Terry, was obtained before the story was splashed across the pages of the May, 1957, issue of Confidential. Meade said Terry also produced photographs taken of the bandleader and Miss Dandridge taken at the resort city. Meade admitted that he and his wife, Marjorie, niece of Confidential Publisher Robert Harrison, received “tips” and then gathered material for some stories. He said Harrison donated $5,000 to set up Hollywood Research Inc., the “listening post" for Confidential. Trade in ■ good town — Decatur